Andy Preece

Andy Preece
Personal information
Full name Andrew Preece
Date of birth (1967-03-27) 27 March 1967 (age 57)
Place of birth Evesham, England
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)
Position(s) Striker
Team information
Current team
Chorley (manager)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1986–1987 Worcester City
1987–1988 Evesham United
1988–1989 Northampton Town 1 (0)
1989–1990 Worcester City ? (?)
1990–1991 Wrexham 51 (7)
1991–1994 Stockport County 97 (42)
1994–1995 Crystal Palace 20 (4)
1995–1998 Blackpool 129 (35)
1998–2003 Bury 166 (27)
2003–2005 Carlisle United 40 (10)
2005–2007 Worcester City
2010–2012 Northwich Victoria 1 (0)
Total 505 (125)
Managerial career
1999–2003 Bury
2005–2007 Worcester City
2009–2012 Northwich Victoria
2012–2016 Airbus UK Broughton
2017 Southport
2022– Chorley
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Andrew Preece (born 27 March 1967) is an English football manager and former professional footballer who is the manager of Chorley.[1] After serving as Chorley's director of football, he became the club's manager in May 2022.

As a player, he was a forward[1] who played over 500 games as a professional.[2] He notably played in the Premier League for Crystal Palace, and in the Football League for Northampton Town, Wrexham, Stockport County, Blackpool and Bury. From 1999 onwards, Preece combined his playing duties with various coaching and management positions. He became player-manager of Bury in 1999, also going on to manage Worcester City, Northwich Victoria, Airbus UK and Southport.[3][4]

Playing career

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Worcester City

[edit]

Born in Evesham, Worcestershire, Preece began his career as a junior with Worcester City, making his debut as a substitute against Runcorn in the Conference aged 16.[5] "It went backwards from there," he said in 2020. "I got glandular fever; they released me, and I had to work my way back. I'd half given up on football. I played a lot of cricket, including going out to play in Australia for six months."[5]

Evesham United and Northampton Town

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He subsequently played briefly for Evesham United, then planned to return to Australia; however, someone at the club knew Graham Carr, manager at Northampton Town. The wheels were put in motion, and Preece joined the Cobblers in August 1988 on a non-contract basis.[5] He made one appearance, as a substitute, before being released at the end of the following season.[4]

Worcester City and Wrexham

[edit]

In July 1989, he rejoined Worcester City briefly, and in March 1990 signed for Wrexham, for whom he scored his first known goals. In 51 league appearances, he scored seven times.[4]

Stockport County

[edit]

In December 1991, Preece joined Stockport County for a fee of £10,000, with Preece later saying he was unsure what County manager Danny Bergara had seen in him at Wrexham.[5] At Edgeley Park, however, Preece enjoyed the most prolific period of his career, scoring 42 league goals in 97 league games, and forming a partnership with Kevin Francis. He impressed enough (including scoring the winning goal in a giant-killing feat against Queens Park Rangers in the FA Cup) that he signed for Crystal Palace in June 1994, as strike partner to Chris Armstrong, for a fee of £350,000.[4] Preece credits Ray Wilkins, who joined QPR just prior to Preece's arrival, with Alan Smith's signing of the striker. Of his spell in the capital, Preece said: "It was the high point of my career. I scored four [goals] in a week. I scored the winner against Everton, two against Coventry City and the winner against Leicester, but ultimately I don't think I was good enough for that level."[5]

Blackpool

[edit]

Preece struggled to establish himself at Selhurst Park, in what was a struggling team (they were relegated at the end of the season),[5] and returned to the North West to join Sam Allardyce's Blackpool, for a fee of £200,000, in July 1995. He turned down Burnley — having been sold on Owen Oyston's ambitious plans for Blackpool which ultimately did not materialise — and also missed a call from Barry Fry at Birmingham City while he was doing the paperwork on the Fylde coast.[5]

Preece played in the forward line with the likes of Andy Watson, briefly, then Tony Ellis and James Quinn,[4] and under Nigel Worthington in 1997–98 he was made captain for a period.[5]

Bury

[edit]

In July 1998, Preece joined Bury on a free transfer and went on to become player-manager.[6]

Carlisle United

[edit]

After leaving Bury in December 2003,[7] Preece returned to playing with Carlisle United.[8] Although Carlisle were eventually relegated to the Conference, Preece chose to remain with the Cumbrians for the following season.[9][10][4]

Worcester City and Northwich Victoria

[edit]

He returned to Worcester City, as player-manager, in 2005, where he remained for five years, before finishing his playing career with Northwich Victoria in 2012. He became the club's manager in 2009, remaining in the role for three years.[4]

Coaching and management career

[edit]

Bury

[edit]

In 1999, Preece was appointed join player-manager (with Steve Redmond)[4] of Bury.[11] David Nugent was signed by Preece after unsuccessful trials with Crewe Alexandra and Northampton Town, and went on to net Bury close to £1 million.[12] Preece kept the team in League 1 for two seasons until the collapse of ITV Digital[13] forced the sale of several players and administration for the club in 2001,[14][15] resulting in their relegation to League Two. Preece's Bury reached the League Two play-offs in the 2002–03 season.[16] Preece was released in December 2003 as Bury again tried to cut costs.[17] Bury director Roger Barlow said that Preece's departure was for financial reasons and nothing to do with results on the pitch.[7]

Worcester City

[edit]

In February 2005, Preece joined Worcester City as player-manager[18] and led the side to three consecutive top ten finishes in the Conference North then, in 2006, to the second round of the FA Cup.[19] He left the club in October 2007.[20]

Northwich Victoria

[edit]

Preece became caretaker manager of Northwich Victoria on 25 February 2009.[21]

In the 2009–10 season, he led Northwich to the second round of the FA Cup, a considerable achievement, and saw his side defeat former Premier League side Charlton Athletic in the process.[22] Preece won manager of the month for April for his achievement of six successive wins.[23] In the same season, he saw his side finish 12th in the Conference North in his first season in charge; however, financial issues saw his side relegated to the Northern Premier League Premier Division. In spite of relegation and financial uncertainty, he stayed at the club along with his assistant Andy Morrison.[24]

On 21 August 2010, at the age of 43, he returned to football action for the first time in three years by coming off the substitutes' bench in the 90th minute, in a game which Northwich won 1–0 against Retford United on the opening day of the 2010–11 Northern Premier League Premier Division season.[25] On 17 February 2011, he scored a seven-minute hat-trick as Northwich defeated Barnton in the Mid-Cheshire Senior Cup.[26]

He resigned from the club on 16 January 2012, along with the rest of his management team, with the club reporting that he was expected to be appointed Director of Football at Welsh Premier League side Airbus UK Broughton the next day.[27]

Airbus UK Broughton

[edit]

As expected, on 17 January 2012, Preece was appointed to the Airbus UK role.[28] He led the part-time side to runners-up in the Welsh Premier League in his first full season qualifying for the Europa League . This was the first time Airbus had finished in the top half of the table and the first time that a black English manager had led a team into Europe.[29] In Europe, Airbus were only eliminated on away goals by Latvian side Venspils.[30] The following season Airbus finished runners up again to full timers TNS. They qualified for the Europa league losing 3–2 on aggregate to Norwegian side FK Haugesund.[31] Preece became the first Black English coach to lead a team into Europe in two successive seasons.[29]

Preece left Airbus in August 2016 by mutual consent.[32]

Southport

[edit]

On 8 February 2017, he returned to the North West to become the new manager of National League side Southport, replacing Steve Burr,[33] until the end of the season.[34]

Chorley

[edit]

After a spell coaching in Vietnam, Preece moved into his current role of Director of Football at Chorley, combining first-team coaching with leading the club's education programme.[1][4] Preece was appointed manager of Chorley on 28 May 2022 following the departure of Jamie Vermiglio.[35] In April 2023 he took charge of his 750th match as a manager.[36]

Personal life

[edit]

Preece's wife and daughter were only a couple of rows behind Crystal Palace supporter Matthew Simmons when the Eric Cantona kung-fu kick incident occurred at Selhurst Park in January 1995.[5] After this incident, in 2020 Preece explained that he once jumped into a small group of fans during a Blackpool reserves game with Leicester City (who had a young Emile Heskey in their team) after one fan had racially abused him for the entire match. "After the game, I've run over and jumped in and confronted him, and then thought, 'Whoa, what am I doing?' I was pulled away, but it was too late — the FA got hold of it. It was front page of the Daily Sport. You know: Million-pound star does a Cantona." About forty Blackpool fans wrote to the FA in defence of Preece, saying the racial abuse he received was horrendous. The FA gave him a slap on the wrist. "I will always be grateful to those people who wrote in and supported me at that time," Preece added.[5]

In 2021, Preece named the best XI he had played with. They were: Nigel Martyn (Crystal Palace), Lee Todd (Stockport County), Chris Coleman (Crystal Palace), Andy Morrison (Blackpool), Gareth Southgate (Crystal Palace), David Frain (Stockport County), Micky Mellon (Blackpool), Dean Gordon (Blackpool), Terry Dunfield (Bury), Chris Armstrong (Crystal Palace) and Tony Ellis (Blackpool).[4] As for the best player he has played against, he chose Manchester United's Gary Pallister. "He was quick, he was strong, he was good in the air, he was good technically. You're just searching for a weakness. There was nothing you could do to get an edge on him."[5]

Preece's best friend is Andy Morrison, who was his teammate at Blackpool and with whom he has worked in coaching and managerial roles thereafter.[5]

He is a regular guest on the Preview Show, Blackpool's weekly in-house Tangerine TV production, alongside Ged Mills.

Honours

[edit]

Individual

References

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  1. ^ a b c Andy Preece Archived 4 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine - Chorley F.C.
  2. ^ "Chorley assistant Andy Preece has the experience to help navigate Magpies to even greater glories in the FA Cup | Lancashire Evening Post".
  3. ^ "Andy Preece | Football Stats | No Club | Age 56 | 1987-2005 | Soccer Base". www.soccerbase.com.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Focus On.....Andy Preece – Southern Football League, 16 March 2021
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Andy Preece Talks Tangerine"Deidcated 2 U podcast, episode 21, 12 November, 2020
  6. ^ "Bury Former Managers" – Bury F.C.
  7. ^ a b "Bury show Preece door"The Guardian, 16 December 2003
  8. ^ "Preece joins Carlisle". BBC News. 19 December 2003.
  9. ^ "Former favourite Preece joins BBC". 5 August 2008 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  10. ^ "Preece to stay at Carlisle". BBC News. 9 June 2004.
  11. ^ "Bury former managers. Bury F.C Website" https://www.buryfc.co.uk/history2/former-managers/
  12. ^ Buckley, Will "A nugget like Nugent keeps Bury from being dead and buried" 15 July 2007 [1]
  13. ^ "ITV Digital woes bring football crisis". 28 March 2002 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  14. ^ "Shakers putting their faith in buckets"The Independent, 8 March 2020
  15. ^ "Clubs in the danger zone". 16 May 2002 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  16. ^ "Stalemate at Gigg Lane". 10 May 2003 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  17. ^ "Bury release manager Preece". BBC News. 16 December 2003.
  18. ^ "BBC - Hereford and Worcester - Sport - Andy Preece is City's new player-manager". www.bbc.co.uk.
  19. ^ "Worcester boss Preece plots upset" – BBC Sport, 30 November 2005
  20. ^ "City say little on Preece compensation". www.bbc.co.uk.
  21. ^ "League Managers Association - ANDY PREECE". leaguemanagers.com.
  22. ^ Brown, Oliver (8 November 2009). "Northwich Victoria 1 Charlton Athletic 0: match report". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 30 September 2010. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
  23. ^ "Preece wins manager of the month" – BBC Sport, 7 May 2009
  24. ^ "Appeal Against Relegation: Andy Preece has his say". Northwich Victoria F.C. Archived from the original on 15 January 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
  25. ^ "Northwich Victoria manager Andy Preece says his team were worthy winners at Retford United". Northwich Guardian. Archived from the original on 28 August 2010. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
  26. ^ Smith, Steven (20 February 2011). "Vics 10–1 Barnton". Barnton F.C. Retrieved 6 December 2015.
  27. ^ "Preece quits as Northwich Manager". NonLeagueDaily.com. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 16 January 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  28. ^ "Airfield stability the lure for Preece". Welsh Premier League. Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Retrieved 17 January 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  29. ^ a b "Europa League: Andy Preece makes history in breaking colour bar and targets the top"The Independent, 4 July 2013
  30. ^ "Airbus UK bow out of Europa League" – via www.bbc.co.uk.
  31. ^ "Europa League: Airbus UK boss Andy Preece praises team" BBC News. 4 July 2014. [2]
  32. ^ "Mutual parting of the ways for Airbus and Andy Preece". airbusfc.com.
  33. ^ Lopez-SOU, Jamie (8 February 2017). "Southport FC appoint former Bury player/manager as new boss". southportvisiter.co.uk.
  34. ^ "Preece Says Thank You To Supporters And Sponsors As He Happily Returns To The Terraces From June 30th". Southport F.C. 17 May 2017. Archived from the original on 1 May 2018. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  35. ^ "Preecy takes charge | Chorley FC".
  36. ^ "'24 years as a black manager & nothing has changed'" – via www.bbc.com.
  37. ^ Lynch. The Official P.F.A. Footballers Heroes. p. 150.
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