David Irving (footballer)

David Irving (footballer)
David Irving
Personal information
Full name David Irving
Date of birth 10 September 1951 (1951-09-10) (age 60)
Place of birth Workington, England
Playing position Striker
Club information
Current club Wilmington Hammerheads (Head coach)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1970–1973 Workington 65 (16)
1973–1976 Everton 6 (0)
1975 Sheffield United (loan) 2 (0)
1976–1977 Oldham Athletic 19 (6)
1977–1978 Shamrock Rovers 15 (6)
1978–1980 Fort Lauderdale Strikers 72 (27)
1979–1980 Fort Lauderdale Strikers (indoor) 6 (5)
1980 Tulsa Roughnecks 7 (3)
1980 Atlanta Chiefs 11 (2)
1981 San Jose Earthquakes 15 (2)
1988 Oulun Palloseura ? (?)
Teams managed
1990–1991 Miami Freedom
1994 Carolina Vipers
1998– Wilmington Hammerheads
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

David Irving (born 10 September 1951 in Workington, Cumberland, England) is a former professional football striker. His childhood ambition was to play for then Football League side Workington. He is currently the head coach of USL Pro side Wilmington Hammerheads, having joined the Hammerheads at the beginning of the 1998 season.

Career

He started his professional playing career with Workington AFC before signing for Everton in the old English Football League First Division for £30,000 - the highest youth transfer fee of the time. Later on he moved to Sheffield United on loan and Oldham Athletic. In the mid-1970s he crossed the Atlantic to play in the United States for the Fort Lauderdale Strikers. Whilst with the Strikers, he played alongside such legendary players as Gordon Banks, Gerd Müller, Guy Newman and the late George Best. He also played against footballers like Pelé and Franz Beckenbauer. After Fort Lauderdale, he featured for other American teams such as the Tulsa Roughnecks, the San Jose Earthquakes and the Atlanta Chiefs.

He signed for Shamrock Rovers in October 1977.[1] He made his debut on the 23rd at Milltown scoring against Drogheda United. He netted a hat trick at Galway on his fourth appearance and scored further goals against Home Farm and against St. Patrick's Athletic on his last appearance in the famous green and white Hoops. In total he played 16 times scoring six goals.

After retiring from professional football, Irving earned himself an FA coaching badge. He began his manegerial career with Oulun Palloseura where he was the player/assistant manager for a season. He moved back to the United States in 1989 when he rejoined the Fort Lauderdale Strikers as the assistant coach, helping The Strikers to the Pro Soccer League National Championship title in 1989.

In 1990, he became the head coach of the Miami Freedom of the American Professional Soccer League. That year the Freedom finished 8-12. He continued with the club into the 1991 season, but was fired after nine games with the team at 1-1-7 (win-draw-loss).

Irving was the Head Coach of the Carolina Vipers of the now defunct Continental Indoor Soccer League in 1994.

At the beginning of the 1998 season, Wilmington Hammerheads found themselves needing a new coach and managed to get Irving back into management. He brought success to the Hammerheads, winning them the USL Second Division title in 2003. He also tries to get English football clubs to play pre-season friendlies against Wilmington, most recently attracting Sunderland and Sheffield Wednesday. He has a good record at the club with 86 wins, 37 draws and just 12 defeats in eight seasons and has an excellent player recruitment track record, identifying many players from combines and try-outs. In the USL-Pro 2011 season he recruited five such players from combines in California as well as the 2011 USL-Pro 'Rookie of the Year' Luke Mulholland.

References

External links


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