Skrevet av Emne: Ex-spiller: John Sheridan  (Lest 17178 ganger)

0 medlemmer og 1 gjest leser dette emnet.

stefan

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #60 på: Februar 12, 2007, 18:08:26 »
Fint med mimring. Men etter Wise så vil jeg ha en utenlandsk manager som kan dra inn litt kontinental drikkekultur, og kan få litt ut av spilerne, som faktisk kan drille inn en formasjon med klare definerte roller. Som ikke handler inn fotball invalider som må hviles annenhver kamp, og som er villig til å bruke akademiet som den ressursen den faktisk er. Klaging slutt...

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auren

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #61 på: Februar 12, 2007, 18:18:45 »
Her er jeg helt uenig. Vil ikke ha inn en utenlandsk trener. Jeg vil ikke at Leeds skal bli et lag som nesten kun har utenlandske spillere på sitt lag (les Chelsea, Liverpool, Arsenal). Jeg ønsker et slikt lag vi hadde under DOLs storhetstid. Unge britiske talenter, ispedd noen få utenlandske stjerner. Utvikle egne spillere samtidig som man er flink til å snappe opp unge lovende spillere fra andre klubber.

auren

Leeds
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I
Die!
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samadhi

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #62 på: Februar 12, 2007, 18:30:47 »
Dennis Wise har vært vår manager i ca 4 måneder og jeg synes det blir helt feil å snakke om hvem som blir vår neste sjef. Etter så kort tid mener jeg vi er helt nødt til å gi mannen tid. Det snakkes hele tiden om at Wise ikke skaper nok kontinuitet på spillersiden - jeg tror i allefall ikke det blir bedre om vi ikke skaper oss litt kontinuitet på managersiden først.
Vårt neste managerskifta kommer an på Wise sin suksess og det kan gå alt fra 1-10 år for det vi vet!

marching on together,
derudaf forever...
marching on together,
derudaf forever...

baste

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #63 på: Februar 12, 2007, 20:34:28 »
Next..om det blir noe skifte..Trond Sollied...Ville likt se han som manager i Leeds.

kjelvi

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #64 på: Februar 12, 2007, 21:16:01 »

Når man diskuterer ny manager kikker man ofte på ex-players som drømmekandidater. McAllister er min!

Har laget en oversikt over ex-players som har eller har vært manager i britisk klubb i 2006-07.

Her finner du blant annet Andy Ritchie, Simon Grayson, Mickey Adam, Adrian Heath, Nigel Worthinton, John Sheridan, Tommy Wright, Terry Venables, Paul Hart, Adrian Boothroyd, Brian Flynn, Roy Aitken, Andy Watson, Ian Baird, Gary McAllister, Andy Crosby, Gordon Strachan, Terry Yorarth, Joe Jordan og Gunnar Halle.....

Ligger på Ex-player News: http://www.luscos.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=6926&whichpage=19

veteranen

  • Gjest
Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #65 på: Februar 12, 2007, 21:31:37 »
quote:
Originally posted by berlin

Hvorvidt Shez, Jewell eller McAllister vil gjøre det bra ( og bedre enn Wise ) er et åpent spørsmål. Hadde vært kult med Shez eller Macca,
men ikke fullt så kult hvis de ikke får det til.


Vi kan vel være enig om at det er mye kulere med managere som får det til, enn med managere som ikke får det til - uansett hvor de tidligere har spilt! [8D]

Når det gjelder vår klubb så kan vi vel trygt si at det har vært heller dårlig med kule managere... [:I]

agehvitstein

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #66 på: Februar 12, 2007, 22:59:25 »
Sheridan vil alltid være mitt førstevalg, men jeg ser at jeg er litt innhabil grunnet min
nesegruse sans for spilleren Shez. Uansett er det artig å følge tidligere Leeds spillere fra 80-tallet. Baird var vel kunt ment som en obeservasjon, ikke noe ønske om han som ny manager på Elland Road. Fokuserer på all støtte til Wise. Hører du Veteranen!
 

oak-tjome

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #67 på: Februar 12, 2007, 23:33:26 »
fint med mimring, men jeg synes det er unfair mot de som kjemper med klubben vår til enhver tid og alltid prate om "andre" som skulle ledet laget vårt. Mimring kan få oss på andre tanker når alt går ræva, men denne uka ervi topp fordii vi vant i helga!! Seier mot Cardiff i vente!
 

Promotion 2010

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #68 på: Februar 12, 2007, 23:51:47 »
quote:
Originally posted by oak-tjome

fint med mimring, men jeg synes det er unfair mot de som kjemper med klubben vår til enhver tid og alltid prate om "andre" som skulle ledet laget vårt. Mimring kan få oss på andre tanker når alt går ræva, men denne uka ervi topp fordii vi vant i helga!! Seier mot Cardiff i vente!


OK... Min favorittmanager er Dennis Wise!!! [8D]
Min første Leeds-kamp:
Strømsgodset vs Leeds, 19.september 1973

berlin

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #69 på: Februar 13, 2007, 00:07:59 »
quote:
Originally posted by veteranen

quote:
Originally posted by berlin

Hvorvidt Shez, Jewell eller McAllister vil gjøre det bra ( og bedre enn Wise ) er et åpent spørsmål. Hadde vært kult med Shez eller Macca,
men ikke fullt så kult hvis de ikke får det til.


Vi kan vel være enig om at det er mye kulere med managere som får det til, enn med managere som ikke får det til - uansett hvor de tidligere har spilt! [8D]

Når det gjelder vår klubb så kan vi vel trygt si at det har vært heller dårlig med kule managere... [:I]



I det hele tatt så er managere jevnt over ganske "ukule", he-he.
Jeg tenkte mest det at jeg gjerne vil beholde deres Leeds-status
ubesudlet av en manager-karriere-fiasko. [:I]

kjelvi

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #70 på: Februar 25, 2007, 23:15:15 »
Sheridan keen to end losing run

Oldham boss John Sheridan is desperate to end a run of three defeats which has threatened to halt their promotion bid.
Having gone top of League One in early February, the Latics have since lost to Millwall, Port Vale and Bournemouth.
"You can't afford to give teams a two-goal start like we did against Bournemouth," Sheridan said.
"The goals we are conceding at the moment are a bit of a joke.

-----------
But I don't like losing - I hate it, and I hope the players hate it as well."
-----------

Sheridan's build-up to the Bournemouth game was hampered after striker Chris Hall broke his leg in training on Thursday - joining Neil Wood, Stefan Stam, Matty Wolfenden, Moussa Dabo and Terry Smith on the injured list.
The Latics were also without suspended trio Les Pogliacomi, Will Haining and Neal Eardley - and on-loan Coventry defender Ben Turner now faces a ban after he was sent off in stoppage time on his debut.
"For some reason, since we went top of the league, we should be full of confidence - but we aren't," Sheridan added after his side slipped to fifth in the table - their lowest placing since early December.
"We should be looking down on everyone else and thinking we're going to win every game, but we haven't done that.

------------
We've got to perform better than we have done for the last three games
John Sheridan

------------

"I'm not going to cry about injuries and suspensions, but we've missed big players and it's costing us. And at the moment, we haven't got a squad big enough to cope."
Oldham have an early opportunity to make amends when they host Lancashire rivals Blackpool, who still entertain play-off hopes themselves.
"It's simple - we've got to win games, and if we don't we'll find ourselves slipping down the table," Sheridan said.
"We're on our worst run of the season, but we shouldn't have lost three games on the spin the way we've been playing.
"I'm going to stay positive, but we've got to perform better than we have done for the last three games.
"We've got Blackpool on Tuesday and whoever's fit is going to have to roll their sleeves up and get on with it."


Kilde: http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/o/oldham_athletic/6395105.stm
« Siste redigering: Februar 25, 2007, 23:24:22 av kjelvi »

Peter7

Re: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #71 på: Februar 27, 2007, 00:27:56 »
Virker ikke som Sheridan har de wiseste kommentarene når det går dårlig, han heller.

"we've got to win games, and if we don't we'll find ourselves slipping down the table"

***
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Vi skulle aldri ha solgt Terry Cooper til Middlesboro'

Promotion 2010

Sv: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #72 på: Mai 28, 2015, 21:09:20 »
Ble vel aldri noe av han her?

@APOPEY: Plymouth Argyle have cancelled the last year of former #lufc player John Sheridan’s contract as manager.

 ::)
Min første Leeds-kamp:
Strømsgodset vs Leeds, 19.september 1973

Kato

Sv: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #73 på: Mai 31, 2015, 02:41:35 »
Ble vel aldri noe av han her?

@APOPEY: Plymouth Argyle have cancelled the last year of former #lufc player John Sheridan’s contract as manager.

 ::)

Sheridan gjorde en meget god jobb i Plymouth. Tok over og berget klubben fra nedrykk. Løftet de til middelhavsfarer første hele sesong. Videre fremgang til play-off denne sesongen.

Ønsket å flytte nordover igjen, og avsluttet kontrakten, MOT klubbens vilje.

Så noe langt annet enn at det ikke ble noe av han. Dårlig research.
 

Leedsfan

Sv: EX-Spiller: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #74 på: Januar 02, 2017, 22:53:53 »
LLLLLLLLL

It's all over for John Sheridan at Notts County.

Full story: bbc.in/2i3gLrW


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I scored 24 goals helping my side win promotion back to the Premier League aged just 22. Then in my first season in the top flight I had bagged an impressive 15 goals by the end of January. My form earned me an England call-up. Am I a £35m striker? No. I am Michael Ricketts, February 2002.

Kato

Sv: EX-Spiller: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #75 på: Januar 02, 2017, 23:04:07 »
LLLLLLLLL

It's all over for John Sheridan at Notts County.

Full story: bbc.in/2i3gLrW


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Trist. Gjorde det glimrende i Plymouth og Oldham sist. Helt krise i høst.
 

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Sv: EX-Spiller: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #76 på: Januar 20, 2017, 16:46:26 »
Wow...


Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan

lojosang

Sv: EX-Spiller: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #77 på: Januar 20, 2017, 17:02:58 »
Hvis han dommeren har tatt julepresangene til unga til Sheridan har jeg en viss forståelse for at han var sint, men han burde absolutt jobbe med å utvide vokabularet sitt.
Det finnes mange flotte ekspletiva i det engelske språk.
- Leif Olav

Jon R

Ex-spiller: John Sheridan
« Svar #78 på: Januar 20, 2017, 19:00:51 »
Endret trådtittel til noe som er mer i tråd med realitetene.  ::)
Jon R.

RoarG

Sv: EX-Spiller: John Sheridan - Fremtidens sjef på Elland Road
« Svar #79 på: Januar 20, 2017, 21:49:04 »
Wow...



Ikke bare, bare å være sjef i Notts County, ser jeg.
"Jeg tror ikke på Gud, men etter Bielsas ansettelse må jeg nok revurdere", Roar Gustavsen, januar 2020

Kato

Sv: Ex-spiller: John Sheridan
« Svar #80 på: Januar 20, 2017, 22:05:34 »
Nettopp ansatt som manager i Oldham, hvor han har tryllet tidligere. Første de gjorde var å vinne for første gang på hundre år.
 

Promotion 2010

Sv: Ex-spiller: John Sheridan
« Svar #81 på: Mai 29, 2019, 22:36:48 »
Leeds United Centurions - John Sheridan was a beacon of hope for the beaten generation

In the latest of our series looking at Leeds United's greatest-ever players, Jon Howe remembers the 1980s cult hero

11:00, 29 MAY 2019Updated11:15, 29 MAY 2019
In the latest of our series looking at Leeds United's greatest-ever players, Jon Howe remembers the 1980s cult hero

Elland Road in the 1980s was a microcosm of the widespread hopelessness and austerity that had Thatcher’s Britain in a death grip. Some people might have been making lots of money somewhere, but none of it was here.

There was no money in football full stop, and Elland Road was an arena doused in hostility; emitting only the cold indifference of bare concrete terraces and brutal policing. The ghosts of Revie hid in every nook and cranny of this fading emblem to a glorious past, and our former citadel echoed to the anguished cries of a fanbase still overwhelmed by injustice and now gripped by mediocrity.

But while money was scarce, we would have paid all of the little we had just for a hint of a guiding light. And that came in the form of John Sheridan; a street smart role model for kids who played football until it got dark and a beacon of hope for the beaten generation of Leeds fans; stung by Paris and relegation and struggling to come to terms with different standards and acute financial thrift.


Sheridan signed his professional forms in 1982
John Sheridan’s Leeds United career leaves only a meagre impression in the record books; it spanned the ‘wilderness years’ of the club’s raucous and often deplorable sojourn through the wastelands of the Second Division. There was no deliverance, there was no moment of triumph. This was remorseless graft and slim pickings, but John Sheridan was absolutely essential in offering a fallen fanbase ‘something’ and dragging a fallen football club through the dirt and towards the light on the other side.

If you played football on the streets when you were a kid, John Sheridan was the player who, probably even at five years old, simply had ‘it’; that indefinable gift of swagger, a hint of arrogance and a bucketful of natural ability. It was a combination that would bewitch a Leeds United fanbase desperate for new heroes and ready to cling onto anything that served as a reminder of better times.

 
Sheridan quickly evolved from a raw youth prospect into a fully-fledged paradigm of what every teenage Leeds fan wanted to be. A casual pin-up who could have stepped straight out of the Lowfields Pen 4, Sheridan was our golden ticket out of here, and he carried that responsibility with the kind of nonchalant disinterest that only endeared him further.

Discarded by Manchester City as a youngster, Sheridan signed professional forms for Eddie Gray’s Leeds United in March 1982, and a year later he was already in the first team. He survived a broken leg at Barnsley in October 1983 to swiftly establish himself as the lynchpin of an evolving side that mixed youthful promise with functional dependability. It was Sheridan’s artful craft that rose above the painfully conventional and offered Leeds fans some aspiration for better things, at a time when all aspiration seemed to be gone.


Sheridan would overcome a broken leg in 1983
Sheridan became the single, biggest individual influence I have ever seen on a football team, becoming the natural leader and the architect of every corner, free-kick or penalty and indeed the source of anything positive you could take from watching Leeds United. Sheridan was the player your dad would insist you watched, simply to further your education, not just on football, but on life and taking responsibility and having the essential personal qualities to take a situation in both hands and recognise that you could control it.

The 1986/87 season was Sheridan’s zenith as a Leeds United player and a nine-month period that he clearly identified as his calling in life. It was a season littered with spectacular goals and images of Sheridan sashaying through beleaguered defences, crunching into unforgiving sliding tackles and dragging his teammates and the awestruck inhabitants of Elland Road along with him.

Leeds United nostalgia

 
Remember the good old days? Whether it's the Revie Era, Sgt Wilko's last champions or O'Leary's young guns, we've created a Facebook Group to share you memories of all things Leeds United.

Join the group here and take a trip down memory lane.

 
For Billy Bremner’s Leeds United, Sheridan was the ultimate icon, and in that season he was central to a play-off surge and FA Cup semi-final run that awoke the club from a decade of deep slumber. That the most striking and powerful image of Sheridan as a Leeds United player – reeling away with a maniacal sense of disbelief having scored the most casually brilliant free-kick to put us 1-0 up in extra-time in the play-off Final replay versus Charlton Athletic – should be indelibly tarnished by the tragic turnaround in the scoreline is so brilliantly Leeds, so brilliantly Sheridan and so brilliantly 1980s. This humdrum existence was a dour venture by design, where nobody won and nobody was meant to. It was a war of attrition that somehow, all these years later, feels like it was absolutely necessary in making us the club we are and the people we are.

Sheridan displayed masterful technique and, like so many similarly gifted players before and since, always seemed to have time and space and the poise to be able to look up and deliver, even with a six foot defender homing in on him like a scene from Jaws 3-D. With an economy of effort, Sheridan could dictate the pace of the game, it was his game and every other player was just making up the numbers. He was a showman, a diamond in the rough, a hint of finesse and delicacy in a workshop full of benchtop vices and lump hammers.


Sheridan celebrates alongside Ian Baird against Plymouth in 1987
But the beautiful quality that Sheridan held above anything else, was that he understood. He knew Leeds, he knew the fans, he knew the culture. He knew when we wanted to see a nasty streak, when the referee needed an earful, when a sly tackle on the opposition’s mullet-haired flash-in-the-pan would rouse an 18,000 crowd into a frenzy of bloodthirsty cheers, foaming mouths and gnashing of teeth. Sheridan was the people’s footballer. He was one of us. He just knew.

Howard Wilkinson swiftly discarded Sheridan and what felt like a seismic shock at the time, in retrospect, feels absolutely right. Sheridan had already bedded David Batty into the first team – a similarly enchanting melting pot of craft and devilment – and it feels now like his work was done. Not for Sheridan the glamour and the plaudits of tangible achievement, just a legacy of illuminating a dark tunnel and being the conduit to lead us through leaner times.

John Sheridan was pivotal to the club’s survival in the 1980s and a timely reminder that football could enrich lives and offer a sense of purpose. Without him, a generation could have walked away forever, and missed the magnetising antidote to our post-Revie despair, missed the nervous fumblings of discovering our first hero, and missed that one second of brilliance that lit up many a cold and cheerless Saturday afternoon, usually in Oldham.
Min første Leeds-kamp:
Strømsgodset vs Leeds, 19.september 1973

Kato

Sv: Ex-spiller: John Sheridan
« Svar #82 på: Mai 29, 2019, 23:34:30 »
Flotte ord om min største favoritt.
 

Jon R

Sv: Ex-spiller: John Sheridan
« Svar #83 på: Mai 30, 2019, 00:36:50 »
En av mine tre all time favoritter sammen med Tony Currie og Mark Viduka.
Jon R.

Kato

Sv: Ex-spiller: John Sheridan
« Svar #84 på: Mai 30, 2019, 08:38:10 »
En av mine tre all time favoritter sammen med Tony Currie og Mark Viduka.

Overblikk, taklinger, flair, frispark, dribleraid, straffespark, pasningsfot.

En diamant blant mange gruvearbeidere.

Første straffen jeg noensinne så han bommet på (skjøt alltid til høyre for keeper), var da han skiftet hjørne. Mot oss, for Sheffield Wednesday.

Frisparket i 87 da han chippet ballen opp til seg selv. Ikke sett før. Ikke sett siden.

Fryst ut av Brian Clough umiddelbart etter at han kom dit. Spilte en kamp for Forest. Banens beste.

« Siste redigering: Mai 30, 2019, 08:40:17 av Kato »
 

Promotion 2010

Sv: Ex-spiller: John Sheridan
« Svar #85 på: Mai 30, 2019, 11:00:48 »
En av mine tre all time favoritter sammen med Tony Currie og Mark Viduka.

Overblikk, taklinger, flair, frispark, dribleraid, straffespark, pasningsfot.

En diamant blant mange gruvearbeidere.

Første straffen jeg noensinne så han bommet på (skjøt alltid til høyre for keeper), var da han skiftet hjørne. Mot oss, for Sheffield Wednesday.

Frisparket i 87 da han chippet ballen opp til seg selv. Ikke sett før. Ikke sett siden.

Fryst ut av Brian Clough umiddelbart etter at han kom dit. Spilte en kamp for Forest. Banens beste.


Clough hatet virkelig alt som hadde med Leeds å gjøre!
Min første Leeds-kamp:
Strømsgodset vs Leeds, 19.september 1973

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Sv: Ex-spiller: John Sheridan
« Svar #86 på: Desember 29, 2020, 17:52:04 »
Uff, denne må være tøff :( :(  :(

Waterford FC
@WaterfordFCie

Waterford FC would like to share its deepest condolences to former manager John Sheridan on the passing of both his mother and father over the Christmas period in what was no doubt a very difficult time for him. Our thoughts and prayers go out to John and his family.

Tell me - I've got to know
Tell me - Tell me before I go
Does that flame still burn, does that fire still glow
Or has it died out and melted like the snow
Tell me  Tell me

Dylan