jeudi 12 mai 2011

Liverpool manager Kenny Dalglish

May 12 (Reuters) - Factbox on Kenny Dalglish who signed a three-year contract as Liverpool manager on Thursday.





                                                                   

Born March 4, 1951 in Glasgow, Scotland.



                                                                   





                                                                   

EARLY CAREER



                                                                   

Dalglish joined Celtic in 1967 and after establishing

himself in the first team he went on to win four Scottish league

titles.



                                                                   

He made his debut for Scotland in 1971 and scored his first

goal for his country a year later in a 2-0 victory over Denmark.



                                                                   





                                                                   

LIVERPOOL



                                                                   

Dalglish signed for Bob Paisley's Liverpool in 1977 as a

replacement for Kevin Keegan for a then British record fee of

440,000 pounds.



                                                                   

He made his debut, wearing what became his famous number

seven shirt, in the season-opening Charity Shield against

Manchester United. He followed that by scoring seven minutes

into his league debut.



                                                                   

He became known to Liverpool fans as "King Kenny" and went

on to score 172 goals in 515 appearances for the club.



                                                                   

Dalglish was a central figure in a successful period for

Liverpool in which they won five league titles, three European

Cups and five domestic cups between 1978 and 1985.



                                                                   

On the international stage, he made 102 appearances for his

country, making him still the most capped Scotland player. He

also holds the joint scoring record of 30 goals with Denis Law.



                                                                   





                                                                   

PLAYER/MANAGER



                                                                   

Dalglish became player-manager at Liverpool following the

Heysel stadium disaster in 1985 and enjoyed instant success,

winning the club's first league and cup double in his first

season in charge. 



                                                                   

His iconic status was cemented during his six years as

manager with the club winning three domestic league titles and

two FA Cups.



                                                                   





                                                                   

HILLSBOROUGH



                                                                   

Dalglish was manager of Liverpool at the time of the

Hillsborough stadium disaster in 1989 in which 96 Liverpool fans

were crushed to death at an FA Cup semi-final match against

Nottingham Forest.



                                                                   

Dalglish was personally affected by the tragedy and left the

club on health grounds in 1991 following a 4-4 draw with Everton

in a FA Cup fifth-round replay.



                                                                   





                                                                   

BLACKBURN 



                                                                   

Dalglish returned to club management eight months after

leaving Liverpool with then second division side Blackburn

Rovers.



                                                                   

The club were owned by steel tycoon Jack Walker who made

large sums of money available for Dalglish to spend on players.



                                                                   

Dalglish guided the Lancashire club into the Premier League

in 1992 and after investing heavily on the likes of Alan Shearer

and Chris Sutton he won his fourth top flight title as a manager

in 1995.



                                                                   





                                                                   

NEWCASTLE AND CELTIC



                                                                   

Dalglish joined Newcastle as manager in 1997 and guided them

to second place in the Premier League that season. 



                                                                   

The following campaign, however, he finished 13th and

despite reaching the FA Cup final where they were beaten by

Arsenal, he was sacked.



                                                                   

He joined Celtic in 1999 initially as director of football

but was appointed manager following the sacking of John Barnes.

He guided the club to the Scottish League Cup final where they

beat Aberdeen 2-0 but left the club shortly after. 



                                                                   





                                                                   

RETURN TO LIVERPOOL



                                                                   

He returned to Anfield in the summer of 2009 to work as an

academy and club ambassador.



                                                                   

He applied for the job as manager following the sacking of

then boss Rafael Benitez but was overlooked in favour of Roy

Hodgson.



                                                                   

Hodgson struggled to win over the fans and was sacked in

January following a string of disappointing results.



                                                                   

Dalglish was initially appointed manager until the end of

the season with Liverpool languishing in the bottom half of the

table.



                                                                   

The Scot galvanised the club and oversaw an impressive run

of results with Liverpool winning 10 and losing only three of

his 16 Premier League games in charge.



                                                                   

Liverpool are currently fifth in the Premier League,

occupying a Europa League qualifying spot, with two games of the

season left to play. 



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