Hubbry Logo
search
search button
Sign in
Historyarrow-down
starMorearrow-down
Hubbry Logo
search
search button
Sign in
John Smith (football chairman)
Community hub for the Wikipedia article
logoWikipedian hub
Welcome to the community hub built on top of the John Smith (football chairman) Wikipedia article. Here, you can discuss, collect, and organize anything related to John Smith (football chairman). The purpose of the hub is to connect people, foster deeper knowledge, and help improve the root Wikipedia article.
Add your contribution
Inside this hub
John Smith (football chairman)

Sir John Wilson Smith CBE DL (6 November 1920 – 31 January 1995) was the chairman of Liverpool F.C. from 1973 to 1990.[1][2]

Key Information

Liverpool F.C.

[edit]

John Smith was chairman of Liverpool Football Club for 17 years from 1973 and during this period they embarked on their most successful era. By the time he stepped down in 1990, the club had amassed eleven Football League championships, four European Cups, two UEFA Cups and three FA Cups. He first joined the Liverpool board in 1971 as a director and ran the club in tandem with longtime club secretary Peter Robinson. Smith was a stout defender of The Boot Room system of promoting managers from within the club, he appointed assistant manager Bob Paisley to succeed Bill Shankly in 1974 and followed this by appointing Paisley's assistant Joe Fagan to manager in 1983. The appointment of club centre forward Kenny Dalglish to player manager in 1985 broke away from the line of succession but heralded in another period of unbroken success. Dalglish had been signed as a player by Smith in 1977 and was described as "the best we ever had". Smith also played a pivotal role in the acceptance of shirt sponsorship in British football in the early 1980s. As well as overseeing Liverpool's glories of the 1970s and 1980s, he also oversaw the Hillsborough disaster in April 1989, which claimed the lives of 97 Liverpool fans at an FA Cup semi-final tie.[3]

Personal life

[edit]

John married Doris Mabell Parfitt in 1946, to whom he had one son, Colin. He remained married to her until his death in 1995.

Smith was made a CBE in 1982[4] and knighted in the 1990 New Year Honours list "for services to sport".[5]

Quotations

[edit]
  • "We’re a very very modest club. We don’t talk. We don’t boast. But we’re very professional"
  • "There is something they call, The Liverpool Way"
  • "The ground was not good enough for an ordinary match, let alone a final."

Honours

[edit]

References

[edit]
Add your contribution
Related Hubs