(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Graham Allner - Wikipedia

Graham Allner (born 7 September 1949) is an English former football player and manager.

Graham Allner
Personal information
Date of birth (1949-09-07) 7 September 1949 (age 75)
Place of birth Birmingham, England
Youth career
Birmingham City
Walsall
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Paget Rangers
Managerial career
AP Leamington
1983–1998 Kidderminster Harriers
1998–1999 Worcester City
2002 Cheltenham Town
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

He was manager of Kidderminster Harriers from 1983 until 1998, winning the FA Trophy in 1987 and the Conference Premier championship in 1994.

Early life

edit

Allner was born in Birmingham, England.

Playing career

edit

Allner started his playing career as a schoolboy at Birmingham City before signing amateur forms at Walsall playing reserve football. After being released he drifted into non-league football, firstly at Paget Rangers, where he won the Midland Combination under the guidance of manager Rhys Davies. Allner had a trial with Aston Villa during the 1970–71 season.[1] He then rejoined Davies at Alvechurch, winning another Midland Combination title in 1971–72. During that season Allner played in all 6 FA Cup games against Oxford City. Two years later he scored the winning goal against Exeter City in the FA Cup before eventually being knocked out by Bradford City. A trial at Hereford United followed in 1974 before signing for Stourbridge in September 1974 under Allan Grundy. He only spent a season at Stourbridge before moving to Redditch United, then quickly moving on to Bromsgrove Rovers.

He joined Stafford Rangers in 1976, spending two seasons with them. He joined Worcester City in 1978; in his first season they won the Southern Football League but injury sidelined him for most of the first Alliance Premier League season.

Allner then made his first entry into coaching, being appointed player assistant manager at Cheltenham Town.

Managerial career

edit

Allner began his managerial career with AP Leamington. He led AP Leamington to the Southern League Premier Division in 1983. However, Leamington were denied promotion to the Football Conference, their place being taken instead by the club that had finished second that year, Kidderminster Harriers. Soon after this, Allner left Leamington and took charge at the Worcestershire club. Kidderminster quickly established themselves as a top non-league side under Allner's management, winning the FA Trophy in 1987 and reaching the final in 1991 and 1995, in addition to making the final of the Welsh Cup in 1986 and 1989. Their most successful season came in 1994–95 when they reached the fifth round of the FA Cup, knocking out second-tier side Birmingham City (Allner's first club as a player), and Preston North End. They also won the Conference title that season, but were denied promotion because their Aggborough ground was not deemed up to Football League standards.

Kidderminster almost made it to the Football League in 1996–97 after leading the Conference by 15 points at Christmas, but a storming run by close contenders Macclesfield Town pushed them into second place.

Allner quit in November 1998 after almost 16 years in charge, and was eventually replaced by Jan Molby. A brief tenure as Worcester City manager followed.

He later worked as a coach under Steve Cotterill at Cheltenham Town and helped them win promotion to Division Two in 2002. When Cotterill moved to Stoke City a few weeks after the promotion triumph, Allner was promoted to the manager's seat but was sacked on 13 January 2003 with Cheltenham heading for relegation. His successor was Bobby Gould.

He is currently working for the Scouting Network.

Honours

edit

As a player

edit

Paget Rangers

Alvechurch

Worcester City

As a manager

edit

AP Leamington

Kidderminster Harriers

References

edit
  1. ^ "Allner's Aston Villa profile".
edit