- Roy McDonough
Roy McDonough (born
16 October 1958 ) is a former professional football player and manager in the English football league. His surname is occasionally misspelt in the media as "Roy McDonagh".Playing career
McDonough, a native of
Solihull ,England , was dubbed "Donut" or "Big Roy" by his fans. He clocked up some 80 goals in over 400 appearances in the professional and semi-professional (or "non-league") competitions in England. While he turned out for a handful of national clubs, he spent the majority of his career in the county ofEssex .A tall, imposing forward (though he played as an orthodox centre-half on a number of occasions) he had a reputation as one of football's "hard men" and rarely shied away from the physical aspects of the game. As a result he is the record holder for the most dismissals in a career, 21, and for red cards in the Football League, 13, an unenviable mark that he holds jointly with Steve Walsh [http://football.guardian.co.uk/theknowledge/story/0,13854,1463437,00.html "The Guardian" 'The Knowledge' April 20, 2005] ] [ [http://football.guardian.co.uk/news/theknowledge/0,9204,984768,00.html "Away penalties at Old Trafford"] , Sean Ingle, Barry Glendenning and Matt Cunningham,
The Guardian ,26 June 2003 ] [ [http://www.football-league.premiumtv.co.uk/page/RecordDisciplinary/0,,10794,00.html "Football League Records: Disciplinary"] ,The Football League , "accessed04 December 2007 "]He began his career at Colchester United, moving as a youth player from Chelsea in 1980. Roy went on to make some 88 appearances, scoring 24 goals in his first spell at
Layer Road before moving to local rivals Southend United in 1983. In 22 appearances for the "Shrimpers" between '84 and '85 he scored 4 times.Between 1985 and 1986 Roy moved first to Exeter City(21 appearances, 1 goal) and then Cambridge United (32 appearances, 5 goals) before returning to
Roots Hall and Southend. In his second spell at Southend, Roy became to some fans a cult hero [http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/football_focus/3656952.stm BBC Sport Cult Hero Nominees - Southend United] ] . In around 186 appearances he scored 30 times, however certain sections of the crowd were not always enamoured with his playing style [http://southendunited.rivals.net/default.asp?sid=970&p=2&stid=8053384 Southend Supporters site - SUFC Hard Men] ] .In July 1990 he returned to Colchester United making 63 appearances, many of them as
player-manager ("see below") and scoring 16 times before leaving in 1994 for Dagenham & Redbridge and later Chelmsford City amongst others.Managerial career
Roy took the managerial position at Colchester United for the
1991/1992 season, followingIan Atkins ' departure in the Summer of 1991 and achieved legendary status at the North Essex club by guiding them to aFootball Conference andFA Trophy 'double' , promoting them back into the fullFootball League .During his period in charge, McDonough stoked the bitter rivalry with
Martin O'Neill 's Wycombe Wanderers that had developed during both clubs' time in non-league's 'top flight', culminating in the dramatic promotion season of1991/1992 when Colchester advanced into Division Four on the last day via a superiorgoal difference . While Wycombe and Colchester played out a mini-league of their own (both clubs finished some 21 points ahead of their nearest rivals) Big Roy had on occasionstaunt ed the Wycombe players and staff and antagonised them by un-sportsmanlike tactics [http://sport.scotsman.com/topics.cfm?tid=844&id=525612003 "Scotsman" Article from 2003 describing the history between McDonough and O'Neill] ] .Commenting on an incident where Colchester United hooligans attacked home supporters during a Conference championship deciding match in 1992 at
Adams Park , he was infamously quoted as saying, "It takes two to fight, one to punch, the other to stand there and be punched." [http://wycombewanderers.rivals.net/default.asp?sid=947&p=2&stid=8025503 "When Skies are Blue" fanzine article on the rivalry between Colchester United and Wycombe Wanderers, in which McDonough features heavily.] ]Arguably it was his confrontational style, carried over from his playing days, that ultimately saw him leave Colchester and move through the non-league ranks with Dagenham & Redbridge, Chelmsford, Canvey Island and Heybridge Swifts amongst others.
References
External links
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