- Harry Gregg
Infobox Football biography
playername = Harry Gregg
fullname = Henry Gregg
dateofbirth = birth date and age|1932|10|25
cityofbirth =Tobermore
countryofbirth =Northern Ireland
dateofdeath =
cityofdeath =
countryofdeath =
height =
nickname =
position = Goalkeeper
currentclub =
youthyears =
youthclubs =
years = 1952-1957
1957-1966
1966-1967
clubs = Doncaster Rovers
Manchester United
Stoke City
caps(goals) = 094 0(0)
210 0(0)
002 0(0)
nationalyears = 1954-1964
nationalteam = Northern Ireland
nationalcaps(goals) = 025 0(0)
manageryears = 1968-1972
1972-1975
1975-1978
1986-1987
managerclubs = Shrewsbury Town
Swansea City
Crewe Alexandra
Carlisle UnitedHarry Gregg, MBE (born
October 25 ,1932 ) is a Northern Irish former football player.Harry started his career with
Windsor Park Swifts F.C. , thereserve team of Linfield, before signing for his local club Coleraine. At the age of 18 he earned a move across theIrish Sea to Doncaster Rovers, before transferring to Manchester United in December 1957. He earned 25 caps for the Northern Ireland national team. At the time of his transfer, he was the most expensive goalkeeper in the world.Gregg was voted best goalkeeper of the tournament at
1958 World Cup . At the time the All-star team was voted on by the journalists covering the tournament, and Gregg got 478 votes - way ahead of closest competitorLev Yashin with 122 votes.Gregg was a goalkeeper who had 48 clean sheets in his United career. He is sometimes called 'The Hero of Munich' because he pulled some of his team mates from the burning plane during the
Munich Air Disaster includingBobby Charlton ,Jackie Blanchflower andDennis Viollet . Among those he helped was Vera Lukic, the pregnant wife of a Yugoslavian diplomat and her daughter, Vesna, as well as his badly-injured manager SirMatt Busby .Harry Gregg is rated by many as one of the the best goalkeepers Manchester United ever had, yet he achieved no medals to justify this claim - made all the more frustrating for him by the fact that he played for the club during one of their most successful periods. He was ruled out of the 1963 FA Cup victory due to a serious shoulder injury, and a succession of injuries meant that he could not play enough games to qualify for a league championship medal in the 1964-65 and 1966-67 title-winning campaigns. He was transferred to Stoke City in the summer of 1967. He left Stoke City to manage Shrewsbury Town.
In November 1972, he became manager of Swansea City, resigning in February 1975 to join Crewe Alexandra where he remained until 1978. He then had a spell with his old team Manchester United at the invitation of
Dave Sexton as goalkeeper coach, where he stayed until Sexton left. His next club was Swindon Town as assistant manager toLou Macari , helping them win the Fourth Division title in 1986. During the 1986-1987 season he had an uneventful spell as manager of Carlisle United, failing to prevent them from suffering a second successive relegation that pushed them into the Fourth Division for the first time since the 1960s.For some years after this he owned a
hotel (fittingly called The Windsor Hotel) in the town of Portstewart on the North Antrim coast of his native Northern Ireland.He received an MBE in 1995 and has appeared in a number of recent television programmes about Manchester United and the Munich Air Disaster, including "Munich: End of a Dream" - a documentary televised in 1998 to mark the 40th anniversary of the Munich tragedy. He was voted best goalkeeper of the tournament in the
1958 FIFA World Cup according to the FIFA documentary "FIFA fever". On the 50th anniversary of the air crash he appeared in the documentary "One Life: Munich Air Disaster" in which he returned to the scene of the crash for the first time and also met the son of Mrs Lukic who she was pregnant with at the time of the disaster. He expressed disappointment at never been able to meet Mr Lukic, who had died in 2007.External links
*cite web |url=http://www.pr-inside.com/manchester-united-goalkeeper-harry-gregg-r422175.htm |title=Manchester United goalkeeper Harry Gregg recalls saving lives at Munich air crash |accessdate=2008-02-06 |author=Associated Press |date=
5 February 2008 |work=PR-inside.com |publisher=
*cite web |url=http://www.sportingo.com/manchester_united_tragedy_why_my/1001,2349 |title=Manchester United tragedy: Why my old pal Harry Gregg is still my sporting hero |accessdate=2008-02-06 |last=Smith |first=Phillip |date=15 February 2007 |work=Sportingo |publisher=
*cite web |url=http://observer.guardian.co.uk/osm/story/0,,871607,00.html |title=Triumph and despair |accessdate=2008-02-06 |last=Campbell |first=Denis |date=12 January 2003 |work=The Observer : Observer Sports Monthly |publisher=Guardian Unlimited
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