Gary_Roberts_(footballer_born_1960)

Gary Roberts (footballer, born 1960)

Gary Roberts (footballer, born 1960)

Welsh footballer and manager


Gary Paul Michael Roberts (born 5 April 1960) is a Welsh retired professional footballer who played as a forward and winger. As a player, he is best remembered for his six years in the Football League with Brentford, for whom he made over 220 appearances and is a member of the club's Hall of Fame. After retiring as a player, Roberts turned to management and spent 13 years as manager of Cambridge City.

Quick Facts Personal information, Full name ...

Club career

Brentford

Roberts was born in Rhyl, Wales.[1] He began his career at Isthmian League First Division club Wembley and secured a £6,000 move to the Football League with Third Division club Brentford in October 1980.[2][3] He made 19 appearances and scored three goals in the 1980–81 season.[4] Following the departure of David Crown, Roberts was a regular during the following season, playing as a left winger, despite being right-footed.[5] He also served as the club's PFA representative.[6] Roberts came to the fore during the 1982–83 season, scoring 17 goals and amassing a career-high 58 appearances.[4] He followed up with another 15 goals in 1983–84 and won the Midweek Sports Special Goal of the Month award for his finish in a 4–1 League Cup second round first leg defeat to First Division club Liverpool.[5]

During the 1984–85 pre-season, Roberts suffered a fractured ankle under a heavy challenge from Tottenham Hotspur defender Graham Roberts during a friendly match.[3] Roberts played the entire season with the aid of cortisone injections and painkillers and scored 18 goals in 15 appearances.[4] He scored a hat-trick against Gillingham and scoring four in the 6–0 rout of Newport County in the Football League Trophy Southern Area final, which included a three-minute hat-trick either side of half time.[5] Needing to raise transfer funds,[7] Roberts was transfer-listed by manager Frank McLintock and moves to Derby County and Bradford City fell through.[3][5]

Following rehabilitation on the ankle, Roberts again had to resort to painkillers and managed just three appearances during the 1985–86 season.[3][4] He retired from professional football at the end of the campaign and made 224 appearances and scored 63 goals during his six years with the Bees.[5][7] Roberts received a testimonial in May 1989, which raised £7,000 and was he inducted into the Brentford Hall of Fame in February 2020.[8][9]

Non-League football

In 1986, Roberts dropped into non-League football to sign for Conference club Barnet in 1986, but he was only a bit-part player during the 1986–87 season,[10] which saw the Bees narrowly miss out on promotion to the Football League after as finishing runners-up to Scarborough.[11] Spells with other Conference clubs Maidstone United and Welling United followed before Roberts dropped down to the Isthmian League Premier Division to sign for Hitchin Town late in the 1987–88 season.[12][13] He signed for St Albans City in 1988 and three goals in five games before departing the club.[14]

Concurrently with his non-League career, as a serving officer, Roberts turned down an offer from Metropolitan Police and instead played for the Hertfordshire police team.[3] He represented both the British and English police teams, captaining the former.[3] Alternating spells with Stevenage Borough and Baldock Town followed from the late 1980s to the mid-1990s.[15][16] Spells with Southern League clubs Cambridge City and Braintree Town followed,[15] plus a second spell with Hitchin Town,[13] before Roberts retired from football in 1996, following a short stint with Bishop's Stortford.[16]

International career

Roberts won one cap for the Wales U21 team.[5]

Management career

Baldock Town

Roberts took over as joint-manager of former club Baldock Town in 1999.[6] Working alongside Steve Cook, the pair managed the Southern League First Division East club , winning The Herts Senior Cup just prior to it folding in 2001.[6]

St Albans City

Roberts again returned to one of his former clubs, St Albans City, to take over as joint-manager alongside manager Steve Cook in 2001.[17] A mid-table finish followed in the 2001–02 season,[18] but the pair were sacked in December 2002, with the club top of the Isthmian League Premier Division table.[6]

Cambridge City

Roberts took over as manager of Cambridge City in January 2003.[12] In what remained of the 2002–03 season, he steered the club away from relegation from the Southern League Premier Division.[19] An eighth-place finish followed in 2003–04, before a restructuring of the non-League pyramid in 2004 saw the Lilywhites playing in the newly formed Conference South for the 2004–05 season.[19] Roberts led the club to a second-place finish, but the season ended in a defeat to Eastbourne Borough in the playoff semi-finals.[19] The season also included a club record-breaking run to the second round of the FA Cup.[20]

Roberts kept City in the Conference South for three further seasons before getting demoted back to the Southern League Premier Division in 2008, due to irregularities with the club's Milton Road ground.[19] Over the following six seasons, Roberts guided City to five top-six finishes and a memorable run to the first round proper of the FA Cup in the 2012–13 season, taking League One club Milton Keynes Dons to a replay before being knocked out.[19] He stepped down as manager during the 2016–17 pre-season.[21]

Personal life

Prior to becoming a professional footballer, Roberts worked as a bricklayer.[3] During his time with Brentford, he settled in Baldock.[3] After dropping out of professional football in 1986, Roberts worked for an insurance company in London and joined the police in June 1988.[3] He served with the Hertfordshire Constabulary until he took early retirement in 2014.[3] As of October 2022, Roberts was living in Rutland.[3]

Career statistics

Player

More information Club, Season ...
  1. Appearances in Football League Trophy
  2. Appearances in FA Trophy
  3. Appearance in Herts Charity Cup
  4. 1 appearance and 1 goal in Isthmian League Cup, 1 appearance and 1 goal in Herts Senior Cup
  5. 1 appearance and 1 goal in Herts Charity Cup, 1 appearance in A.C. Delco Cup
  6. Appearance in Loctite Trophy
  7. 4 appearances and 2 goals in Isthmian League Cup, 1 appearance in Isthmian League Full Members' Cup, 1 appearance and 1 goal in Herts Senior Cup, 1 appearance in Herts Charity Cup

Manager

More information Team, From ...

Honours


References

  1. "Gary Roberts". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  2. Croxford, Mark; Lane, David; Waterman, Greville (2011). The Big Brentford Book of the Eighties. Sunbury, Middlesex: Legends Publishing. pp. 331–332. ISBN 978-1906796716.
  3. Long, Dan. "Kings of the Castle: Gary Roberts". www.brentfordfc.com. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
  4. White, Eric, ed. (1989). 100 Years Of Brentford. Brentford FC. pp. 396–398. ISBN 0951526200.
  5. Haynes, Graham; Coumbe, Frank (2006). Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006. Harefield: Yore Publications. p. 135. ISBN 978-0955294914.
  6. "PC Robbo's At Ease And Happy To Go It Alone". The Non League Football Paper – Daily football news. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  7. "First, Best, Worst: Gary Roberts". www.brentfordfc.com. Retrieved 28 April 2019.
  8. Griffin Gazette: Brentford's Official Matchday Magazine versus Crewe Alexandra. Quay Design of Poole. 6 April 1996. p. 20.
  9. "Gary Roberts enters Hall of Fame". www.brentfordfc.com. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  10. "Gary Roberts". Downhill Second Half – A Barnet FC Archive. Retrieved 25 December 2020.
  11. "Cambridge City F.C. – Manager". Archived from the original on 11 September 2016. Retrieved 22 October 2010.
  12. "Gary Roberts". fishpondersfactsandstats.info. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  13. "Season 1988–89 appearances". St Albans City F.C. History & Archives. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  14. "Stevenage Player: Gary Roberts profile". BoroGuide. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  15. "Gary Roberts – Cambridge City Football Club". Archived from the original on 2 July 2017. Retrieved 15 November 2014.
  16. "Non-League: St Albans look to Jennings". The Daily Telegraph. 28 January 2002. Retrieved 22 October 2010.
  17. St Albans City F.C. at the Football Club History Database
  18. Cambridge City F.C. at the Football Club History Database
  19. "St Neots looking to cause upset in Emirates FA Cup". The Football Association. Retrieved 13 December 2023.
  20. "Gary Roberts steps down as Cambridge City boss after 13 years in charge". The Non League Football Paper – Daily football news. Retrieved 12 November 2016.
  21. "Fixtures 1980–1989". fishpondersfactsandstats.info. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  22. "Fixtures 1990–1999". fishpondersfactsandstats.info. Retrieved 23 February 2020.
  23. "Gary Roberts". St Albans City F.C. History & Archives. Retrieved 13 December 2023.
  • Gary Roberts at Post War English & Scottish Football League A–Z Player's Transfer Database

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