John Sitton
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | John Edmund Sitton[1] | ||
Date of birth | [2] | 21 October 1959||
Place of birth | Hackney,[2] London, England | ||
Height | 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)[3] | ||
Position(s) | Defender | ||
Youth career | |||
1972–1974 | Arsenal | ||
1974–1977 | Chelsea | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
1977–1980 | Chelsea | 13 | (0) |
1980–1981 | Millwall | 45 | (1) |
1981–1985 | Gillingham | 107 | (5) |
1985–1991 | Leyton Orient | 174 | (7) |
1991–1992 | Slough Town | 4 | (0) |
Total | 343 | (13) | |
Managerial career | |||
1994–1995 | Leyton Orient (co-manager) | ||
2000–2001 | Enfield (assistant manager)[4] | ||
2003 | Leyton (assistant manager)[5] | ||
2006 | Leyton[5] | ||
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
John Edmund Sitton (born 21 October 1959) is an English former professional footballer and former coach and manager of Leyton Orient.
He is considered a cult hero for many fans of 90s football, particularly noted for key phrases such as “all I’m sayin’ to ya” and “it’s come off Brooksy’s shins”. He is said to be a significant inspiration on Portsmouth band ‘The Social Contract’.
Playing and early coaching career
[edit]Sitton's playing career began at youth level at Arsenal and Chelsea. He turned down an approach from Crystal Palace before signing professional terms with Chelsea in 1977. After making several appearances, Sitton fell out of favour with then-manager Geoff Hurst,[6] and, after turning down an approach from Wimbledon, transferred to Fourth Division Millwall for £10,000 in February 1980 under George Petchey. Sitton enjoyed his time at Millwall but new manager Peter Anderson took an instant dislike to Sitton and sold him to Third Division side Gillingham in September 1981 and spent four seasons there under manager Keith Peacock before being signed by Frank Clark for Fourth Division side Leyton Orient on a free transfer in July 1985 where he was made club captain.
Sitton started to work on his coaching badges in 1988, staffing coaching courses via the London FA at the FA training centre at Lilleshall under the FA Coaching Education Scheme until 1997, alongside such future managers as Alan Pardew and Kenny Jackett. At Lilleshall, Sitton coached youth players such as future Tottenham Hotspur and England player Ledley King.
In the 1988–89 season, Sitton captained Leyton Orient to promotion to the Third Division through the play-offs, and in all made over 200 appearances for Orient in all competitions.[7] After his release in May 1991, he started working for Orient's School of Excellence Academy as a youth coach whilst making a few appearances for Slough Town in the Conference. By the end of his playing career, Sitton played in all of the top five divisions of English football.
Managerial career
[edit]Sitton was appointed joint caretaker manager at Leyton Orient with Chris Turner in August 1994, following the departure of Peter Eustace, and helped the team avoid relegation from the Second Division by earning four points from their last two matches. The co-managership was Sitton's idea, as he did not know many of the first team players since he moved into coaching in Orient's youth setup, and knew that Turner had more knowledge about them. The duo were given the job permanently that summer after the board received positive feedback from the players, and continued throughout the difficult 1994–95 season in which Sitton had to work in six different roles within the club whilst on a youth coach salary. The squad size was cut in half and the club was on the verge of liquidation, with the PFA paying the players wages for several months whilst chairman Tony Wood tried to sell the club.
During this time, he became one of the few football managers to feature in a Channel 4 documentary, Orient: Club for a Fiver (sometimes known as Leyton Orient: Yours for a Fiver), made in 1995 by Open Media and chosen in 2020 by Forbes magazine as one of its "Top Five Sports Documentaries": "the highlight of a golden era of fly-on-the-wall football documentaries from the 1990s, when it appears anyone who was anyone in English football was willing to let the cameras in to capture their incompetence for posterity".[8] The programme highlighted Sitton's well-known passionate language and managerial style, and featured a half-time team talk given by Sitton on 7 February 1995, after Orient had fallen 1–0 down in a league match at home to Blackpool. After sacking defender and fan favourite Terry Howard on camera in the dressing room, Sitton addressed two other players and offered to fight them, saying:
- "You, you little cunt, when I tell you to do something, and you, you fucking big cunt, when I tell you to do something, do it. And if you come back at me, we'll have a fucking right sort-out in here. All right? And you can pair up if you like, and you can fucking pick someone else to help you, and you can bring your fucking dinner. 'Cos by the time I've finished with you, you'll fucking need it."[7]
External videos John Sitton, "bring your dinner team talk"[7]
Speaking about the event later, Sitton said, "Terry's an ex-teammate of mine who I like very, very much. He's good company when you go for a night out – but as a manager and a coach, he's not what I'm looking for. I may have lost a friend, but by tomorrow I would have recovered."[9]
Orient went on to lose the match 1–0, and after winning only one of the next 15 games, both Sitton and Turner were sacked two months later. Orient won just seven of 47 games under the pair. After the pair left, the side lost the following three games and finished bottom of the table.
New owner Barry Hearn had briefly considered retaining Sitton on a three-year contract, before hiring Pat Holland as Sitton and Turner's replacement.
Since 1995
[edit]After leaving Brisbane Road, Sitton battled depression and had therapy. He was passed over for many club coaching jobs and his application for a youth coach position at Charlton Athletic was rejected due to how he was perceived in Club for a Fiver, leaving him very disillusioned with football. He spent eighteen months applying for coaching jobs without success despite being an otherwise well regarded coach within football due to his earlier coaching work at Lilleshall and with the Leyton Orient youth team.
In 1997, Sitton began learning The Knowledge in order to become a London taxi driver, completing it in 2003 and becoming a licensed black cab driver, which Sitton does to this day. He also had a brief spell as a scout for Manchester City, where he was sent to scout and later recommended Arjan de Zeeuw, Tim Cahill and a young Frank Lampard to the club, before Joe Royle cleared out the backroom staff on his arrival as manager in 1998.
Sitton had a spell coaching at Haringey Borough whose budget at the time was £40 a week.
Sitton had a short spell as assistant manager at Enfield under manager Tom Loizou, with the club owned by controversial chairman Tony Lazarou, and later briefly worked as assistant manager at Leyton. A few years later, Sitton was brought back to the club by popular demand from the players. As manager, Sitton started well in the league with three wins in four games, but pressure from chairman Costas Sophocleous after a draw in the fourth game made him decide to leave after the following match. Leyton ended the season in 15th place.
Sitton also worked at the Press Association, compiling statistics for Arsenal matches for the Actim Index, and had also spent some time as a martial arts instructor.[6][10]
Sitton currently works as a taxi driver, and is a regular Twitter user. From 2012 to 2014 Sitton did several interviews with television producer Vernon Grant on YouTube[11] in which he discussed his playing career and his time as Leyton Orient manager. Sitton related his hopes of creating a Wimbledon-style Crazy Gang mentality at Leyton Orient, coupled with youth development along the lines of Dario Gradi's work at Crewe Alexandra.
Over 2013 and 2014, Sitton and Grant made regular videos via Skype in which Sitton discussed current events in football, told anecdotes and made score predictions. From 2012 the pair had collaborated on an autobiography. The book was delayed numerous times throughout 2013 and 2014, only for the collaboration to dissolve acrimoniously in October 2014, which effectively cancelled the biography just weeks before it was supposed to be released. Sitton and Grant refunded the pre-orders separately. Grant also removed all the interviews he did with Sitton from his YouTube account.
Sitton worked on his autobiography from scratch throughout 2015 with assistance from his family and had largely completed it by the end of September 2015. It took over a year for the book to get published and in November 2016 Sitton's A Little Knowledge is a Dangerous Thing: My Life in Football was released.
Sitton has also appeared on Pitch Talk's YouTube channel,[12] discussing his life and career, and has also appeared several times on the Talksport[13] radio station.
Sitton has a wife and three children. They live in Chingford, London.
In July, 2019 John received a fine for breaking speeding laws.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ "John Sitton profile". Worldfootball.net. Archived from the original on 8 March 2016. Retrieved 18 November 2016.
- ^ a b "John Sitton". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
- ^ Dunk, Peter, ed. (1987). Rothmans Football Yearbook 1987–88. London: Queen Anne Press. p. 214. ISBN 978-0-356-14354-5.
- ^ ""Sitton optimistic about E's future" from East London and West Essex Guardian". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 30 April 2013.
- ^ a b ""Cab driver Sitton has football knowledge" from East London and West Essex Guardian". Archived from the original on 14 February 2015. Retrieved 30 April 2013.
- ^ a b ""Tough times for Barry Hearn" from The Observer". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 26 March 2017. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
- ^ a b c "Leyton Orient: The Complete Record", N Kaufman & A Ravenhill, Breedon Books, 2006 p.99
- ^ Forbes magazine, Mike Meehall Wood, Top Five Sports Documentaries To Binge During Quarantine Archived 3 April 2020 at the Wayback Machine, 31 March 2020, accessed 17 April 2020
- ^ Gillatt, Peter (30 November 2009). Blackpool FC On This Day: History, Facts and Figures from Every Day of the Year. Pitch Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-905411-50-4.
- ^ ""What John Sitton did next" from guardian.co.uk". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 20 February 2017. Retrieved 11 December 2016.
- ^ Word of Sport TV's channel on YouTube
- ^ Pitch Talk's channel on YouTube
- ^ "talkSPORT – Extra Time". Archived from the original on 27 March 2014. Retrieved 26 March 2014.