Roy Coyle

Roy Coyle
Personal information
Full name Robert Irvine Coyle
Date of birth (1946-01-31) 31 January 1946 (age 78)
Place of birth Belfast, Northern Ireland
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
East Belfast
Ballyclare Comrades
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1966–1969 Ballymena United 38 (3)
1969–1972 Glentoran 128 (6)
1972–1974 Sheffield Wednesday 40 (0)
1974–1975 Grimsby Town 24 (1)
1975–1980 Linfield 125 (4)
Total 355 (14)
International career
1973 Northern Ireland 5 (0)
Managerial career
1975–1990 Linfield
1990–1991 Ards
1991–1993 Derry City
1993–1997 Ards
1997–2006 Glentoran
2006–2007 Newry City
2012 Glentoran (caretaker)
2015 Glentoran (caretaker)
2016 Glentoran (caretaker)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Robert Irvine Coyle (born 31 January 1946) is a former Northern Ireland international footballer. Coyle is the most successful manager in the history of the Irish Football League.[1] He is the Director of Football at Glentoran.

Playing career

[edit]

Coyle was a "teak tough" wing-half with Ballymena United, Glentoran, Sheffield Wednesday and Grimsby Town. He won two Irish League titles and played in Europe six times while with Glentoran before winning five Northern Ireland international caps while playing for Sheffield Wednesday.[2]

Management career

[edit]

Linfield

[edit]

Roy Coyle became player-manager of Linfield in 1975. In his first couple of years at the club, Coyle got Linfield into the Irish Cup final but lost to Carrick Rangers A year later they lost in the Irish Cup final again, but this time to Coleraine F.C. The Linfield board decided to give Coyle another chance and that decision proved to be one of the best decisions ever made in Irish League football. Roy Coyle won 31 trophies with Linfield and left the club in 1990 after his contract was terminated.

Ards

[edit]

In 1990, Coyle was appointed manager of County Down club Ards after leaving Linfield but he resigned the following year.

Derry City

[edit]

Coyle was appointed manager of Derry City in 1991. He stayed for two years and won the League of Ireland Cup as well as guiding the team to the runner-up position in 1991–92. In 1993, Coyle left and returned to Ards.

Return to Ards

[edit]

Coyle returned to the County Down side in 1993 and won two trophies, the County Antrim Shield and the Irish League Cup. Coyle stayed at the club for four years.

Glentoran

[edit]

Roy Coyle shocked the Irish League by becoming the new manager of Glentoran after the sacking of Tommy Cassidy. Even though Coyle played for Glentoran, it took some of the fans a while to get used to him after managing their bitter rivals Linfield. Coyle brought that success he had with Linfield and became Glentoran's most successful manager ever by winning 16 trophies with Glentoran. In 2006, after winning the league, Glentoran started to have a string of poor results. The fans started to turn against Coyle and the players. Then an away match to Armagh City saw Glentoran crashing to a 5–2 defeat at Holm Park. At the final whistle, Glentoran fans booed the players and as Coyle walked by, some of the fans nearby shouted "Coyle Out!" Coyle resigned that evening. He was replaced by Newry City manager Paul Millar.

Newry City

[edit]

Coyle swapped clubs with Paul Millar who went to be Glentoran's new manager. Coyle only stayed for a couple of months and decided to retire. A year later Coyle was linked to a move to Glenavon but the job went to former Cliftonville and Coleraine manager Marty Quinn.

Return to Glentoran

[edit]

Coyle returned to Glentoran as the Club's Director Of Football when Scott Young was appointed as the new First Team Manager for the East Belfast club. Coyle took charge of the team during Glentoran's Europa League qualifications while Young was completing his coaching badges. On 14 January 2012, Young resigned from the club, and Coyle was put in charge for Glentoran's game away to Ballymena United a match where the Glens won 3–0 in his first game back at the helm. Coyle also agreed to be caretaker manager at the club until they appointed a new manager. Coyle was in charge of first team duties until 22 February when former Cliftonville manager Eddie Patterson was appointed new Glentoran boss. Coyle returned to his duties as Director of Football.

After Eddie Patterson was sacked as Glentoran Manager on 17 October 2015,[3] Coyle, still at the club in his role as Director of Football took the reins as Caretaker Manager once again whilst the club searched for a new manager. In August 2016 when Alan Kernaghan resigned as Glentoran manager, Coyle also returned to the role of Caretaker Manager.

Managerial statistics

[edit]
Team Nation From To Record
G W D L F A GD Win %
Linfield  Northern Ireland November 1975 April 1990 748 504 122 133 1,677 724 +953 67.38
Ards  Northern Ireland May 1990 June 1991 49 21 10 18 81 65 +16 42.86
Derry City  Ireland June 1991 September 1993 68 29 25 14 77 49 +28 46.03
Ards  Northern Ireland October 1993 November 1997 191 76 32 80 329 316 +13 39.79
Glentoran  Northern Ireland November 1997 February 2006 446 279 77 90 891 410 +481 62.56
Glentoran (caretaker)  Northern Ireland January 2012 February 2012 4 2 1 1 7 5 +2 50
Glentoran (caretaker)  Northern Ireland October 2015 November 2015 3 2 1 0 3 1 +2 66.67
Glentoran (caretaker)  Northern Ireland August 2016 August 2016 5 2 0 3 3 7 -4 40
Total 1,514 915 268 339 2,971 1,504 +1467 60.44
As of 23 February 2024


Managerial Honours

[edit]

Coyle is the most successful manager in Irish League history and has won 50 trophies in a success-filled career, mostly with Linfield and Glentoran

References

[edit]
  1. ^ The Irish League's Most Successful Managers Irish League Greats, 26 December 2007
  2. ^ Roy Coyle at National-Football-Teams.com
  3. ^ "Patterson sacked as Glentoran boss". BBC Sport. 17 October 2015. Retrieved 24 October 2015.
[edit]
  • Roy Coyle Northern Ireland's Footballing Greats
Preceded by Newry City FC manager
2006-2007
Succeeded by