David Flitcroft

David John Flitcroft (born 14 January 1974) is an English professional football manager and former player who was most recently the assistant manager at Bolton Wanderers. He is the younger brother of the former Blackburn Rovers and Manchester City player Garry Flitcroft.

David Flitcroft
Personal information
Full name David John Flitcroft[1]
Date of birth (1974-01-14) 14 January 1974[2]
Place of birth Bolton, England[3]
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)[2]
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
1988–1992 Preston North End
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1992–1993 Preston North End 8 (2)
1993Lincoln City (loan) 2 (0)
1993–1999 Chester City 167 (18)
1999–2003 Rochdale 160 (4)
2003–2004 Macclesfield Town 15 (0)
2004–2006 Bury 100 (4)
2006–2007 Hyde United 5 (0)
2007–2011 Rochdale 1 (0)
Total 458 (28)
Teams managed
2012–2013 Barnsley
2013–2016 Bury
2017–2018 Swindon Town
2018–2019 Mansfield Town
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

A midfielder, he began his career at Preston North End, where he turned professional in May 1992. He enjoyed a brief loan spell at Lincoln City but failed to establish himself in the first-team at Preston and was allowed to join Chester City in December 1993. Chester would achieve promotion out of the Third Division at the end of the 1993–94 season, though were relegated out of the Second Division the following season. In all he played 190 league and cup games before joining Rochdale on a free transfer in July 1999. He spent four seasons at Spotland, playing 188 league and cup matches and being named as Player of the Year, before joining Macclesfield Town in July 2003. He moved on to Bury in February 2004, where he would feature in another 108 first-team games and be named as Player of the Year for the 2005–06 season, before signing with Hyde United of the Conference North in November 2006. He made a swift return to the Football League though, as he returned to former club Rochdale as assistant manager in January 2007. He would feature in two competitive games for the club, bringing his playing career to a final total of 29 goals from 527 appearances in all competitions.

Having spent over four years on the coaching staff at Rochdale, Flitcroft followed manager Keith Hill to Barnsley in June 2011 and was appointed caretaker-manager following Hill's sacking in December 2012. He was given the job on a permanent basis and kept the club in the Championship at the end of the 2012–13 season, only to be sacked in November 2013. He was appointed as Bury manager the following month and quickly found success, being named as Manager of the Month for February 2014. He led the club to promotion out of League Two at the end of the 2014–15 season and kept the club in League One the following season. Despite being named as Manager of the Month for September 2016, he was sacked two months later following a poor run of form. He took charge at Swindon Town in June 2017, before he changed clubs to manage Mansfield Town in March 2018. He was sacked in May 2019 after the club were beaten in the play-off semi-finals. Keith Hill named him as his assistant at Bolton Wanderers in August 2019, though the pair were not retained beyond the 2019–20 season.

Playing career

Preston North End

Born in Bolton, Lancashire,[2] Flitcroft spent time as a child with Manchester City before he began an apprenticeship with Preston North End at the age of 14.[4] He signed professional forms with the club in May 1992. He was to spend the following season briefly involved in the first-team at Deepdale, making his debut under caretaker-manager Sam Allardyce.[5] However he had a brief loan spell with Lincoln City and then was allowed to join Chester City in December 1993.[6]

Chester City

Flitcroft was to make eight appearances as Chester pipped Preston to promotion from the Third Division at the end of the 1993–94 season. He credited the competitive dressing room spirit put together by manager Graham Barrow with getting the club over the line.[4] However the "Seals" would last just one season in the Second Division and were relegated at the end of the 1994–95 campaign. Flitcroft was a regular in the Chester midfield under manager Kevin Ratcliffe, who took the club to an eighth-place finish in 1995–96. Flitcroft scored six goals in 34 games during the 1996–97 season, as Chester reached play-offs, though lost out to Swansea City at the semi-final stage.[7] He featured 49 times in the 1997–98 campaign, scoring five goals, though the club dropped down to 14th-place.[8] He scored six goals in 48 appearances during the 1998–99 season and left the Deva Stadium when he rejected the club's offer of a new contract and instead joined Rochdale.[9]

Rochdale

Flitcroft was sent off for a second yellow card in his home league debut at Spotland, a 2–0 victory over Southend United.[10] He went on to start 40 league games in the 1999–2000 season, featuring 53 times overall in all competitions as Rochdale posted a tenth-place finish in the Third Division.[11] He featured 44 times in the 2000–01 campaign, picking up 12 yellow cards and one red card, as "Dale" finished eighth in the league.[12] He signed a two-year contract extension in the summer.[10] He later described Steve Parkin as the best manager he had played under.[4] However he lost his first-team place at the start of the 2001–02 campaign due to the central midfield partnership of Gary Jones and Michael Oliver and came close to a move to Shrewsbury Town, though ended up staying as Jones instead left the club.[10] He started 21 league games, making 43 appearances overall.[13] Rochdale qualified for the play-offs under the stewardship of John Hollins, but were beaten by Rushden & Diamonds in the semi-finals. The 2002–03 season proved to be his best in Rochdale colours, and he was named as Player of the Year after scoring two goals in 48 appearances.[10][14] Paul Simpson took the club to the fifth round of the FA Cup, where they lost 3–1 to Wolverhampton Wanderers.[15] However Flitcroft left Rochdale in the summer after the club's directors told him that he needed to impress during a pre-season trial in order to win a new contract and by the time new manager Alan Buckley was appointed Flitcroft had already decided to leave.[16]

Macclesfield Town

Flitcroft signed a two-year contract with Macclesfield Town on 9 July 2003 and was immediately installed as captain at Moss Rose.[17] He played 15 Third Division games for the "Silkmen" before losing his first-team place when John Askey replaced David Moss as manager in October.[18] His contract was cancelled by mutual consent in January 2004.[19]

Bury

Flitcroft joined Bury on non-contract terms in February 2004. He played 17 games for the "Shakers" in the second half of the 2003–04 season.[20] He scored his first goal for the club in a 4–0 win over Kidderminster Harriers at Gigg Lane on 30 August 2004, though was sent off later in the match after picking up a second yellow card.[21] He was sent off again for two yellow card offences in a 2–0 defeat at Northampton Town on 28 December.[22] He signed a one-year contract in July 2005 after making 40 appearances throughout the 2004–05 season.[23][24] He played 46 games during the 2005–06 season and was sent off in the FA Cup against Scunthorpe United.[25][26] He was named as the club's Player of the Year for what the Bury Times described "his wholehearted and consistent displays in the Shakers' engine room".[27] He also won the club's Goal of the Season award for his long-range goal at Darlington on 22 April – his only goal of the campaign.[27] He signed a new one-year contract in June 2006.[28] He left the club in November 2006 after falling out of favour with manager Chris Casper and admitted it was "a massive wrench" to leave the professional game, saying that he had been focusing too much on mentoring youngsters during the 2006–07 season and had neglected his own performances.[29]

Hyde United

Flitcroft joined Conference North club Hyde United and made his debut for the "Tigers" in the FA Trophy on 28 November 2016, playing "a superb game" in a 3–0 win at Chasetown.[30] He made his home debut at Ewen Fields on 9 December, picking up an assist for Paul Gedman's equalising goal in a 1–1 draw with Scarborough.[31] He played his final game for the club on 1 January, in a 7–3 victory at Stalybridge Celtic.[32] He played a total of seven games for Hyde, three of which ended in victories.[33]

Return to Rochdale

But Flitcroft returned to Rochdale as assistant manager to Keith Hill midway through the 2006–07 season.[34] Towards the end of the 2008–09 season Flitcroft came on as substitute in the last scheduled game of the season at home to fellow play-off rivals Gillingham.[35] The following season, he started a Football League Trophy game against Bradford City in what proved to be his final match as a professional.[36] After retiring as a player, Flitcroft joined the coaching staff at Rochdale.[37] Rochdale were promoted out of League Two at the end of the 2009–10 campaign and posted a club record high finish of tenth in League One in the 2010–11 season.[38]

Style of play

Flitcroft was a tough tackling midfielder.[5] His limited skill set meant he rarely featured above the fourth tier, though his work-rate and consistency kept him in the professional game.[10] He was nicknamed "Flicker".[39]

Coaching career

Barnsley

On 1 June 2011, Flitcroft was appointed assistant manager at Barnsley after following manager Keith Hill from Rochdale to Oakwell.[40] He was made caretaker-manager of Barnsley after Hill was sacked on 29 December 2012.[37] He said "Hilly getting sacked... really floored me" and that he had intended to leave but Hill persuaded him to stay on as caretaker as the two men remained close friends.[4][39] After two wins in three games as caretaker-manager,[37] Flitcroft was appointed to the position on a permanent basis on 13 January.[41] The club had come close to appointing Sean O'Driscoll and Terry Butcher but resorted to Flitcroft after those negotiations broke down.[4] Promising centre-back John Stones was sold to Everton at the end of the month.[42][43] Flitcroft brought in striker Jason Scotland, who had secured his release from Ipswich Town, and signed Chris O'Grady on loan from Sheffield Wednesday, who would later be signed permanently for £300,000.[44][45] The "Tykes" reached the quarter-finals of the FA Cup, where they were beaten 5–0 by Manchester City at the City of Manchester Stadium, with Carlos Tevez scoring a hat-trick.[46] Flitcroft guided Barnsley to Championship safety on the final game of the 2012–13 season with a 2–2 draw at Huddersfield Town and stated that it was "Mission Impossible achieved".[47]

In addition to O'Grady, spent £250,000 on Dale Jennings from Bayern Munich II in June 2013.[48] Included in his free signings were Lewin Nyatanga, Jean-Yves Mvoto and Marcus Pedersen, whilst Paddy McCourt and Peter Ramage signed on loan.[49] On 30 November 2013, Flitcroft was sacked after a 3–0 home defeat by Birmingham City left Barnsley bottom of the Championship.[50]

Bury

Flitcroft was appointed as manager of Bury on 9 December 2013, who were then 20th in League Two.[51] He told the press that his team were too inexperienced and he wanted to bring in "that middle range – that bracket of 25 to 30-year-olds that have been around the game and know the game, but are still dynamic".[52] However he also acknowledged that the squad was too big and that players would have to leave.[53] In the January transfer window he released five players – Gareth Roberts, Shaun Harrad, Marlon Jackson, Euan Holden and Jessy Reindorf, and renovated the defence by signing Pablo Mills, Robbie McIntyre, James Burke, Freddie Veseli and Jim McNulty.[54] He was named as League Two Manager of the Month for February after overseeing an unbeaten month that gained the club 11 points, including a 4–1 win at Mansfield Town.[55] Bury ended the 2013–14 season in 12th-place.

Backed by ambitious owner Stewart Day, Flitcroft signed experienced players such as Kelvin Etuhu, Nicky Adams, Ryan Lowe and Shwan Jalal; Flitcroft said that "we’re in League Two, but we try and behave like a Championship club".[56] The club spent £100,000 on improving the pitch and dressing rooms, whilst long distance coach journeys were replaced by flights.[56] Bury enjoyed a positive start to their promotion campaign, though Flitcroft said that "I don’t know who thinks we’re going to win every game this season. They're deluded, they're unintelligent and it’s not going to happen".[57] He signed Hallam Hope in November, initially on loan, and dismissed questions over the club spending beyond it's means.[58] He was nominated for another Manager of the Month for February as the team went the month unbeaten to close the gap to first-place to six points.[59] Flitcroft led Bury to promotion into League One with a 1–0 win over Tranmere Rovers on the final day of the 2014–15 season, securing the third automatic promotion place behind Shrewsbury Town and Burton Albion.[60]

Flitcroft strengthened for the 2015–16 League One campaign by signing strikers Leon Clarke and Tom Pope, midfielders Jacob Mellis and Danny Pugh, as well as defenders Peter Clarke and Reece Brown.[61] Bury went ten league games unbeaten in September and part of October.[62] Bury ended the season in 16th-place. In preparation for the 2016–17 campaign, Flitcroft released six players and brought in a number of new signings, including: Antony Kay, Greg Leigh, Leon Barnett, Neil Danns, Paul Rachubka, Chris Brown and James Vaughan.[63][64] Flitcroft was named as League One Manager of the Month for September 2016 after overseeing five wins from five games that the League Managers Association described as "guided by Flitcroft’s beliefs in attacking play and some shrewd moves at the end of the transfer window".[65] On 16 November, Flitcroft was sacked after a run of 11 games without a win.[66] Gareth Southgate's promotion to England manager left a vacancy for the head coach role of the under-21 team and Flitcroft applied for the position, making into the final four of the interview process, though the job instead went to Aidy Boothroyd.[5]

"I have been proud to manage Bury Football Club, taking the club from the bottom of the Football League and leaving it in a healthier position of five points off the League One play-offs and I’m sure the club will have a real chance of reaching the play-offs when the injured players return and there is competition in the squad."

Flitcroft gave a statement upon leaving the club in which he thanked the chairman, players, staff and supporters.[67]

Swindon Town

On 5 June 2017, Flitcroft was appointed as manager of Swindon Town, who had sacked Luke Williams following the club's relegation into League Two.[68][69] A club statement said that: "David has been given a very competitive budget and will now begin the job of putting a squad together with the aim of competing at the top of League Two."[70] In the summer transfer window he signed goalkeeper Reice Charles-Cook; defenders Olly Lancashire, Ben Purkiss, Chris Robertson and Kyle Knoyle; midfielders James Dunne, Matthew Taylor and Amine Linganzi; and forwards Paul Mullin, Donal McDermott and Kaiyne Woolery.[71] He further strengthened his front line in the January transfer window by bringing in Marc Richards and Keshi Anderson (who was already at the County Ground on loan).[72][73] The "Robins" were seventh in the table when Flitcroft was appointed as manager at League Two promotion rivals Mansfield Town on 1 March 2018, who paid Swindon a compensation package to secure his release.[74][75]

Mansfield Town

Flitcroft was appointed as Mansfield Town manager on 1 March 2018, following the resignation of Steve Evans.[74][76] Flitcroft presided over a poor run of form with the "Stags" picking up just three points from his first seven games in charge.[77] The team failed to win a game at Field Mill in what remained of the 2017–18 season, and though they did go unbeaten in their final five matches home and away they finished three points outside the League Two play-offs in eighth-place.[78] At the end of the season, amidst pressure from fans, Flitcroft promised to build a "promotion winning squad".[79]

Eight players departed, whilst Flitcroft brought in defender Matt Preston and midfielder Neal Bishop on free transfers, whilst spending undisclosed fees to bring in attackers Otis Khan and Craig Davies.[80] The most crucial signing proved to be a loanee however, as Nottingham Forest's Tyler Walker would finish as top-scorer with 26 goals in all competitions.[81] Mansfield went on to finish in fourth-place, winning praise for their entertaining football whilst also keeping 18 clean sheets.[82] Flitcroft was sacked on 14 May 2019, two days after Mansfield lost a penalty shoot-out to Newport County in the play-off semi-finals.[83]

Bolton Wanderers (assistant)

On 31 August 2019, Flitcroft was named assistant to new manager Keith Hill at his hometown team, Bolton Wanderers, the duo working together once again after spells together at both Rochdale and Barnsley.[84] On 12 June 2020, Bolton Wanderers confirmed that both men would not be given new contracts after the club's relegation out of League One.[85]

Style of management

Flitcroft has been described as "creative... articulate, engaging and big on lateral thinking", citing Steve Jobs as an influence.[86] He is flexible in his use of formations.[87]

Personal life

He is the younger brother of the former Blackburn Rovers and Manchester City player Garry Flitcroft.[5] The brothers ran a property development business with their father, John.[88] He also has ran a football academy in Bolton called FC Strikerz, which he set up in 2007 following the death of his father.[89][86] He married Joanne.[90] They have two sons, Billy and Bobby, who are both former Barnsley mascots.[86]

Career statistics

Playing statistics

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League FA Cup League Cup Other Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Preston North End 1992–93[91]Second Division 8200101[lower-alpha 1]0102
1993–94[91]Third Division 0000000000
Total 82001010102
Lincoln City (loan)1993–94[92]Third Division2000100030
Chester City1993–94[91]Third Division 81000081
1994–95[91]Second Division 32020102[lower-alpha 1]0370
1995–96[91]Third Division 9100301[lower-alpha 1]0131
1996–97[91][7]Third Division 32620103[lower-alpha 2]0386
1997–98[8]Third Division44420201[lower-alpha 1]1495
1998–99[9]Third Division42610401[lower-alpha 1]0486
Total 16718701108119319
Rochdale1999–2000[11]Third Division43230205[lower-alpha 1]0532
2000–01[12]Third Division41000201[lower-alpha 1]0440
2001–02[13]Third Division 35020204[lower-alpha 3]0430
2002–03[14]Third Division412601000482
Total 1604110701001884
Macclesfield Town2003–04[20]Third Division15000001[lower-alpha 1]0160
Bury2003–04[20]Third Division170000000170
2004–05[23]League Two36320101[lower-alpha 1]0403
2005–06[25]League Two431201000461
2006–07[93]League Two4000001[lower-alpha 1]050
Total 10044020201084
Hyde United2006–07[94]Conference North5000002[lower-alpha 4]070
Rochdale2006–07[93]League Two0000000000
2007–08[95]League Two0000000000
2008–09[96]League Two1000000010
2009–10[97]League Two0000001[lower-alpha 1]010
2010–11[98]League One0000000000
Total 1000001020
Career total 4582822022025152729
  1. Appearance/s in Football League Trophy
  2. One appearance in Football League Trophy, two in the play-offs
  3. Two appearances in Football League Trophy, two in the play-offs
  4. Appearance/s in FA Trophy

Managerial statistics

As of match played 12 May 2019
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team From To Record Ref.
PWDLWin %
Barnsley 29 December 2012 30 November 2013 45 14 13 18 031.1 [6]
Bury 9 December 2013 16 November 2016 157 64 39 54 040.8 [6]
Swindon Town 5 June 2017 1 March 2018 42 21 3 18 050.0 [6]
Mansfield Town 1 March 2018 14 May 2019 68 26 25 17 038.2 [6]
Total 312 125 80 107 040.1

Honours

As a player

Awards

Chester City

As a manager

Awards

Bury

References

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