List of Ipswich Town F.C. managers

From 1878 to 1936, Ipswich Town Football Club was an amateur side and the team was selected by committee. After turning professional in 1936, the club appointed Mick O'Brien as their manager who led them to immediate success in winning the Southern League. His sudden departure left the club managerless for 11 matches until Scott Duncan was placed in charge, remaining with the club for almost 18 years. Duncan retired in 1955 and was replaced by Alf Ramsey who led Ipswich to further success in the league. This included back-to-back league championships, winning the Second Division in the 1960–61 season followed by taking the First Division title in 1961–62 season. Ramsey was appointed England manager in 1963 and went on to win the 1966 World Cup.[1]

Kieran McKenna the current manager of Ipswich Town.

Managerial turnover at Ipswich was low with only six full-time appointments in 46 years, but after Bobby Robson left the club in 1982 to manage England, the club employed six full-time managers in the following 25 years. David Sheepshanks became chairman of the club in 1995 taking over a club recently relegated from the Premier League and in financial difficulty.[2] Under George Burley, the club failed in three play-offs before finally winning promotion back to the top flight in 2000 after a 4–2 win over Barnsley at Wembley Stadium. Relegation followed two seasons later after a brief spell in Europe and Burley was replaced by Joe Royle. After nearly four seasons, Royle left the club and in June 2006, Sheepshanks appointed former Ipswich player Jim Magilton as the manager of the team.[3] Magilton was sacked nearly three years later after failing to lead the club to either play-offs or promotion.[4] He was succeeded by Roy Keane, who had managed Sunderland to the Championship title two years previously, who became only the club's 13th full-time manager during their 74-year professional status.[5] He was sacked on 7 January 2011 and was replaced by Ian McParland in a caretaker capacity before Paul Jewell took over as manager on 13 January 2011.[6]

Jewell left the club by mutual consent in October 2012, with Ipswich bottom of the Championship, and leaving Chris Hutchings in a caretaker role.[7] After a single match, Hutchings was replaced by Mick McCarthy on a full-time basis.[8] On 29 March 2018, the club announced that Mick McCarthy's contract, which was due to expire at the end of the 2017–18 season, would not be extended.[9] McCarthy announced that he was quitting during the post-match press conference following a 1–0 victory over Barnsley on 10 April 2018.[10] He was replaced until the end of the season by Bryan Klug as a caretaker manager.[11] On 30 May 2018, Paul Hurst was announced as manager; he and his assistant at Shrewsbury Town, Chris Doig, signed three-year contracts.[12] Less than five months later, on 25 October 2018, Paul Hurst was sacked, with Ipswich having won one match from fourteen league games.[13] Former Norwich City manager Paul Lambert was appointed two days later.[14] Ipswich's relegation to the third tier of English football was confirmed on 13 April 2019, the first time since 1957.[15] Lambert left the club by mutual consent on 28 February 2021.[16] Paul Cook was appointed as manager three days later.[17] Expectations were high ahead of the following season, but following a series of disappointing results, Cook was sacked in December 2021.[18] On 16 December 2021, Kieran McKenna, assistant manager at Manchester United, was appointed to replace Cook, with Martyn Pert as his deputy.[19]

Managers

As of match played 27 April 2024. Only professional, competitive matches are counted.
NameNationalityFromToDuration (days)MatchesWonDrawnLostWin %HonoursNotes
Mick O'Brien  Ireland29 May 193611 August 1937439392595064.1Southern League champions 1936–37
None12 August 193711 November 19379111713063.6
Scott Duncan  Scotland12 November 19377 August 19556,487505205113187040.6Division Three (South) champions 1953–54
Alf Ramsey  England8 August 195530 April 19632,82236917675118047.7Division Three (South) champions 1956–57
Division Two champions 1960–61
Division One champions 1961–62
Jackie Milburn  England1 May 19638 September 196449656111233019.6
Jimmy Forsyth  Scotland9 September 19644 October 1964257223028.6Caretaker
Bill McGarry  England5 October 196423 November 19681,510196806254040.8Division Two champions 1967–68
Cyril Lea  Wales24 November 196812 January 1969497304042.9Caretaker
Bobby Robson  England13 January 196918 August 19824,965709316173220044.6Texaco Cup winners 1972–73
FA Cup winners 1977–78
UEFA Cup winners 1980–81
Bobby Ferguson  England19 August 198217 May 19871,7322589761100037.6
John Duncan  Scotland17 June 19875 May 19901,053161732959045.3
John Lyall  England11 May 19905 December 19941,669231777579033.3Division Two champions 1991–92
Paul Goddard  England6 December 199427 December 1994214022000.0Caretaker with John Wark
George Burley  Scotland28 December 199411 October 20022,84441318896129045.5Division One play-off winners 1999-2000
Tony Mowbray  England11 October 200228 October 2002174112025.0Caretaker with Bryan Klug[20]
Joe Royle  England28 October 200211 May 20061,291189814860042.9[21]
Jim Magilton  Northern Ireland5 June 200622 April 20091,052148564151037.8[22]
Roy Keane  Ireland23 April 20097 January 201162481282528034.6[23]
Ian McParland  Scotland7 January 201112 January 201152101050.0Caretaker[24]
Paul Jewell  England13 January 201124 October 201265085291838034.1[25]
Chris Hutchings  England24 October 20121 November 201281001000.0Caretaker[7]
Mick McCarthy  Ireland1 November 201210 April 20181,9862791057896037.6[26]
Bryan Klug  England11 April 201829 May 2018484112025.0Caretaker[11]
Paul Hurst  England30 May 201825 October 201814815177006.7[27][28]
Bryan Klug  England25 October 201827 October 201821001000.0Caretaker[11]
Paul Lambert  Scotland27 October 201828 February 2021855113372848032.7[29]
Matt Gill  England28 February 20212 March 202121100100.0Caretaker[30][31]
Paul Cook  England2 March 20214 December 202127744131714029.5[32]
John McGreal  England6 December 202116 December 2021104022000.0Caretaker[33]
Kieran McKenna  Northern Ireland16 December 2021Present864129733620056.6EFL League One runners-up 2022-23

References

General

  • "The management". Pride of Anglia. Archived from the original on 14 October 2007. Retrieved 16 April 2009.

Specific