Bert Johnson Sports manager

William Albert "Bert" Johnson (born June 4, 1916 in Stockton-on-Tees, Durham, England), is an English football player, manager and highly influential coach who played as a wing half in the Football League. He played in both the 1946 FA Cup Final for Charlton Athletic.However, he is perhaps most noted as an influential coach at Leicester City under Matt Gillies. He was originally signed by Gillies as head scout in 1959, but soon become Gillies assistant manager. He was influential in the signing of both Dave Gibson and Mike Stringfellow, both of whom would become key figure in Leicester's success during the 1960s. Johnson is often credited as having come up with a tactical innovation of switching the positions of Frank McLintock and Graham Cross, upsetting the traditional 1-11 formation. This hugely influenced Liverpool manager Bill Shankly.Gillies said on the innovation: "confused opposition" as opposition players would often be asked to mark "our [Leicester's] number eight, so they thought Cross was their man, when McLintock had replaced him" as "players hadn't got beyond thinking about numbers then."

Personal facts

Birth dateJune 04, 1916
Birth place
Stockton-on-Tees
Date of deathJune 30, 2009
Place of death
Evington

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Football manager

club
Leicester City F.C.
Welling United F.C.
Cambridge United F.C.
position
Midfielder
teams
Charlton Athletic F.C.
Welling United F.C.
Cambridge United F.C.
Spennymoor United F.C.

Bert Johnson on Wikipedia