Terry Venables, former England, Tottenham and Barcelona coach, has died aged 80
- The death of Venables was announced on Sunday in a statement by his family to British media, saying he died on Saturday after a long illness
- Former England captain Gary Lineker called Venables ‘the best, most innovative coach that I had the privilege and pleasure of playing for’
Terry Venables, a former England football player who led the national team to the European Championship semi-finals as a charismatic coach and won trophies at club level with Barcelona and Tottenham, has died. He was 80.
The death of Venables was announced on Sunday in a statement by his family to British media, saying he died on Saturday after a long illness.
The English Football Association and Tottenham, one of the clubs he coached, were among those sending tributes to Venables. Former England captain Gary Lineker called him “the best, most innovative coach that I had the privilege and pleasure of playing for.”
Charming and popular, Venables, who was born just outside London, played for Chelsea, Tottenham, Queens Park Rangers and Crystal Palace – all clubs in the capital – in a 16-year senior career that included two caps for England.
Palace and QPR were the first teams he managed before he moved to Barcelona for a spell from 1984-87 where he led a team containing Lineker to the Spanish league title in 1985 – its first since 1974. He also led the Spanish team to the European Cup final in 1986, where it lost to Steaua Bucharest on penalties. During his time at Barca, Venables oversaw the sale of Diego Maradona to Napoli.
As Tottenham manager from 1987-91, he won the FA Cup in what proved to be his final season and then became chief executive before his relationship with then-chairman Alan Sugar gradually broke down and he was fired. Later in 1993, the BBC’s Panorama programme alleged misdealings connected with Venables’ businesses, to which he responded by threatening libel action.
Venables then turned to international management and his proudest moment was coaching England from 1994-96, including at Euro 96 on home soil where a talented team that included the mercurial Paul Gascoigne and Alan Shearer lost to Germany in a penalty shoot-out in the semi-finals.