 | Jack Charlton: Encyclopedia II - Jack Charlton - An honorary Irishman
Jack Charlton - An honorary Irishman
Charlton drifted into the distance to enjoy his pursuit of field sports - he was devoted to hunting, shooting and fishing - before a call came from the FAI to take on the job of managing the Republic of Ireland. Ireland had some great individual players at the time - Liam Brady, Ronnie Whelan, David O'Leary among them - but had no history of qualifying for major tournaments. Charlton, with a little luck, some industrial tactics and a crafty stretching of the recruitment rules, duly changed that.
He approached players with little hope of playing for their nation of birth to hook up with the Republic after uncovering Irish ancestry - the Oxford United pairing of John Aldridge and Ray Houghton, both of whom would later become great players for Liverpool, were among them after discovering they both had Irish grandparents. Ireland qualified for the 1988 European Championships in Germany - and were then drawn against England in their group.
Suddenly the World Cup winner with England found himself plotting their downfall as a manager, and he duly did. England were poor, but Ireland still deserved their 1-0 win, given to them by an early Houghton goal. They subsequently drew 1-1 with the USSR but went out when, just needing to avoid defeat, they lost to eventual champions Holland and left the tournament in a blaze of glory. Charlton was awared the runner-up prize in the World Soccer Manager of the Year contest at the end of 1988.
Charlton developed a taste for his job and the Irish life, and the people of Ireland replicated this. His team qualified for the 1990 World Cup, the country's first ever, and again they played England in the group phase (this time it ended 1-1). In an eventful competition for them, they qualified from the group, defeated Romania in a famous second round match which went to penalties, met Pope John Paul II at the Vatican and went out (in glory again) to the hosts Italy in the last eight.
Ireland missed out on qualifying for the Euro 92 but got to the 1994 World Cup in the USA, where Charlton infamously had a pitchside argument with a linesman who was delaying a substitution. Aldridge, the sub, also delivered a volley of abuse and both were later fined. Ireland, who famously defeated Italy during the group phase, went out to the Dutch in the second round.
After failing to qualify for Euro 96 thanks to a narrow play-off defeat at Anfield against the Dutch, Charlton quit. His involvement in the game since has been restricted (by his own choice) to punditry and speaking.
Other related archives1935, 1950, 1950s, 1952, 1953, 1957, 1960s, 1961, 1962, 1964, 1966 World Cup, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970 World Cup, 1970s, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1977, 1982, 1983, 1988, 1988 European Championships, 1990 World Cup, 1994, 1994 World Cup, Alan Ball, Alf Ramsey, Anfield, April, Argentina, Arsenal, Ashington, Billy Bremner, Bobby, Bobby Moore, Brian Labone, Celtic F.C., Chelsea, Colchester United, Czechoslovakia, David O'Leary, David Webb, Denmark, Don Revie, Dublin, Eddie Gray, England, English Football Hall of Fame, Euro 92, Euro 96, European Championships, European Cup, Eusebio, Everton, FA Cup, FAI, Fairs Cup, First Division, Footballer Of The Year, France, Freeman, Geoff Hurst, Gordon Banks, Helmut Haller, Holland, ITV, Ian Hutchinson, Italy, Jackie Milburn, John Aldridge, John Charles, League Cup, Leeds United, Liam Brady, Liverpool, Manchester United, Martin Peters, May 8, Mexico, Mick Jones, Middlesbrough, National Service, Newcastle United, Nobby Stiles, Norman Hunter, Northumberland, OBE, Old Trafford, Oxford United, Paul Reaney, Peter Lorimer, Peter Osgood, Pope John Paul II, Portuguese, Ray Houghton, Republic of Ireland, Roger Hunt, Romania, Ronnie Whelan, Scotland, Sheffield Wednesday, Terry Cooper, Torres, USA, USSR, Uruguay, Vatican, Wembley, West Germany, Wolfgang Weber, World Cup, ancestry, apprenticeship, coal mine, fishing, grandparents, hat-trick, honorary Irish citizenship, hunting, one-club career, police, shooting
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "An honorary Irishman", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |