Ray Wilkins

Ray Wilkins

Football player infobox
playername = Ray Wilkins
fullname = Raymond Colin Wilkins
nickname =
dateofbirth = birth date and age|1956|9|14|df=y
cityofbirth = Hillingdon
countryofbirth = England
height = 5 ft 8 in (1.73m)
position =
youthyears =
youthclubs =
years = 1973-1979
1979-1984
1984-1987
1987
1987-1989
1989-1994
1994
1994-1996
1996
1996-1997
1997
1997
clubs = Chelsea
Manchester United
A.C. Milan
Paris St. Germain
Rangers
Queens Park Rangers
Crystal Palace
Queens Park Rangers
Wycombe Wanderers
Hibernian
Millwall
Leyton Orient
caps(goals) = 179 (30)
160 0(7)
073 0(2)
013 0(0)
070 0(2)
155 0(8)
001 0(0)
021 0(0)
001 0(0)
016 0(0)
003 0(0)
003 0(0)
nationalyears = 1976-1986
nationalteam = England
nationalcaps(goals) = 084 0(3)
manageryears = 1994-1996
1997-1998
1998-2000
2001-2002
2004-2007
2008-
managerclubs = Queens Park Rangers
Fulham
Chelsea (assistant manager)
Watford (assistant manager)
England U21 (assistant manager)
Chelsea (assistant manager)

Raymond Colin 'Butch' Wilkins MBE (born 14 September 1956 in Hillingdon, Middlesex) is an English former football player, now assistant first-team coach at Chelsea and an occasional TV pundit. He is the brother of former Brighton & Hove Albion manager and player Dean Wilkins.

He was a key midfielder for the England national football team during the 1980s, and enjoyed success at club level with clubs including Chelsea, Manchester United, AC Milan and QPR.

Architect of the 'crab' style of passing - a ball passed directly to the left or right side of the football pitch, traversing parallel with the goal line.

Career

Early career

The son of an Army footballer, defensive midfielder Wilkins (nicknamed "Butch" from childhood) made his name in the 1970s with boyhood club Chelsea, whom he joined as an apprentice, progressing to his first team debut against Norwich City in October 1973. His brothers Graham and Stephen also joined Chelsea around this time, though did not achieve the same heights in the game as Ray. He made sporadic further appearances for the rest of that season before establishing himself as a fixture in the side the following year.

In 1975, following relegation and the departure of many of the club's established players, an 18-year old Wilkins was handed the captaincy of Chelsea by new manager Eddie McCreadie, taking it from long-time Blues captain Ron Harris. He took to the role well, maintaining it for four years. He emerged as Chelsea's key player in this period, leading a team of mainly young players to promotion again in 1976-77 and consolidation in the First Division in the next season. His rapid success, along with his dark good looks, also saw Wilkins becoming a regular feature in British teenybopper magazines, mostly as a pin-up. However, the sudden departure of McCreadie was a massive blow to the club, and Chelsea were relegated in 1978-79. Shortly afterwards debt-ridden Chelsea accepted an offer of £800,000 from Manchester United and Wilkins headed north.

Wilkins was called up to play for England for the first time in 1976 by coach Don Revie and quickly made his debut against Italy during a mini-tournament in the U.S.. He was to become a permanent fixture in England squads for a decade to come.

Golden era

Maligned in some quarters for supposed "negative" play (he was deemed more likely to pass a ball sideways rather than forwards - earning him semi-affectionate nicknames like "Squareball Wilkins" and "The Crab"), Wilkins nevertheless became one of his country's most sought-after players. His first season with Manchester United was uneventful, with domestic honours continuing to elude him, but he achieved one of his career highs after helping England qualify for the 1980 European Championships in Italy - the first tournament England had reached for a decade.

During a group game against Belgium, Wilkins scored a memorable goal when he lobbed the whole Belgian defence and, in one movement, latched on to the ball (thereby breaching the Belgians` obvious offside trap) and delivered a second lob, this time over the head of the goalkeeper and into the net to put England ahead. The Belgians swiftly equalised, though, and a disappointing England failed to make progress from their group.

Wilkins remained a fixture for England through a successful campaign to qualify for the 1982 World Cup in Spain, which England exited at the second group stage.

In 1983, Wilkins scored in the FA Cup final for Manchester United to put them 2-1 up against Brighton and Hove Albion. It was a goal of great quality and also some rarity - it had taken Wilkins three years to get his first United goal.

A Brighton attack broke down and the ball reached United midfielder Arnold Muhren just inside his own half. Wilkins made a run to the right to give Muhren an outlet, and was forced to control the Dutchman's pass on his chest after the slippery Wembley surface caused a bad bounce.

Wilkins finally trapped the ball on the right hand side of the area and instinctively cut inside to look for a square pass across the 18 yard box. No team-mate had matched his run in time (even though Wilkins was a player with a quick brain rather than quick legs) so Wilkins instead curled a left-foot shot of great accuracy into the top corner of the Brighton net. He was so enthralled that he sprinted to the back of the stadium to celebrate with the United fans - something he immediately regretted as it rendered him exhausted for the rest of the game which ended 2-2 after extra-time. He got his winners' medal after a 4-0 victory in the replay.

Over the next season, Wilkins continued to play for England under new coach Bobby Robson but they failed to qualify for the 1984 European Championships. The same summer, United accepted an offer of 1.5 million pounds from Italian giants A.C. Milan. Though Wilkins and his family settled quickly in Italy, it wasn't a successful era for Milan (even though they reached the final of the Coppa Italia in 1985). Wilkins was allowed to leave in 1987 to join French outfit Paris Saint-Germain.

However, Wilkins was still an England regular and he was chosen for the squad which qualified for the 1986 World Cup in Mexico. He played in the opening defeat against Portugal but didn't last the full 90 minutes in the next group game against Morocco after receiving a red card for the first and only time in his career, making him the first England player to be sent off in a World Cup finals match. In disagreeing with a decision made by the referee, Wilkins threw the ball towards the official - but hit him with it. He was suspended for the next two games and was not reinstated by the time the quarter final against Argentina came round, which England lost 2-1. Wilkins made his 84th and final England appearance in November 1986. He had scored three international goals and had been captain on ten occasions.

On leaving Paris after just four months, Wilkins joined Rangers for 250,000 pounds and won two Scottish league titles and one Scottish League Cup, as well as scoring a memorable goal in an Old Firm derby against Celtic which Rangers fans continue to talk about.

Next stop for Wilkins was QPR after his family decided that a decade away from London was long enough. Wilkins spent four years with QPR before very briefly joining Crystal Palace. He returned to QPR as player-manager just months after he'd left.

Wilkins left QPR at the start of the 1996/97 after the club was bought by media tycoon Chris Wright following the relegation from the FA Premier League. There followed spells at Wycombe Wanderers, Hibernian, Millwall, and Leyton Orient before he finally retired from playing.

Fulham and beyond

In 1997, Wilkins became the manager of Fulham, with former England teammate Kevin Keegan as "Chief Operating Officer" under him. Wilkins managed to take the big-spending side to the Second Division play-offs, but was sacked by chairman Mohamed Al-Fayed before the first game took place after Fulham lost the last three games of the regular season. Kevin Keegan, who replaced Wilkins, failed in his bid to guide the side through the play-offs that season. The two, once close England team-mates, have had frosty relations since.

After leaving Fulham, Wilkins worked as a coach at Chelsea and Watford as a coach under Gianluca Vialli, on both occasions being sacked along with Vialli (in September 2000 and July 2002 respectively). He spent the next year working mainly as a pundit before joining Millwall as assistant manager to Dennis Wise in October 2003. Wilkins left the club along with Wise in May 2005, but returned in a consultancy role from March to October 2006. He continues to work as a pundit with Sky Sports.

Wilkins famously provided the voice of the nonplussed pundit ("Super, Ralph") on the ads for the soft drink Tango in the 1990s. The ads were memorable for a large orange man slapping people who were consuming the drink, as if to emphasise the orange flavour. This was later changed from slapping to kissing after complaints from the public. The voice of the over-excited commentator alongside Wilkins was provided by comedian and mimic Hugh Dennis.

Ray Wilkins was assistant to Peter Taylor with the England under 21's until Peter left in early 2007. Ray was not retained by incoming head coach Stuart Pearce.

In September 2008 he was appointed as assistant first team coach to Luiz Felipe Scolari at Chelsea, following Steve Clarke's departure to West Ham United.

External links

*soccerbase (manager)|id=1061|name=Ray Wilkins


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