Everything about Dave Bassett totally explained
David "Dave" "Harry" Bassett (born
4 September 1944 in
Stanmore is an
English football manager, whose most recent job was being No. 2 at
Leeds United.
In his career he's managed
Wimbledon,
Watford,
Sheffield United,
Crystal Palace,
Nottingham Forest,
Barnsley,
Leicester City and
Southampton.
Playing career
As a player Bassett was a defensive midfielder at semi-professional level, playing for
Hayes,
Wycombe Wanderers,
Walton & Hersham and later
Wimbledon.
He was a member of the Wimbledon team who forced a famous draw in the 4th round of the
FA Cup against reigning League Champions
Leeds United in 1975. He retired from playing soon after Wimbledon entered the Football League in 1977 (after just 35
Football League appearances), and became a coach with the club.
Management career
Wimbledon
Bassett was promoted to first team manager following the departure of
Dario Gradi in
1981, and guided their rise up through the Football League during the 1980's. The team won promotion from the
Fourth Division in
1982–83. In June 1984, Bassett had agreed to take charge of Crystal Palace but never signed the contract. Within 72 hours after accepting Palace's offer, he changed his mind and returned to Wimbledon.
In
1985–86, they finished third in the
Second Division and were promoted to the
First Division after a mere nine seasons of league football. They briefly topped the league in September 1986, and although their stay at the top of the division was short-lived they still managed to finish in an impressive sixth place.
The team's style of muscular, direct "long ball" play, termed by Bassett as "route one football" (as in the most direct route to goal) was disliked by the footballing press and pundits but brought great success and was difficult to play against. Whilst hugely popular with both the club's fans and his players, Bassett nevertheless felt that he'd taken the club as far as he could and resigned as manager in 1987 to take up an offer from Watford, handing over the reins to
Bobby Gould.
Watford
Bassett's reign as
Watford manager was short-lived. The team had just finished ninth in
1986–87 under the management of
Graham Taylor, who had left to take charge of relegated
Aston Villa. Before Bassett's arrival, Watford also sold
John Barnes to
Liverpool but, instead of retaining the nucleus of the successful side of the mid-80s, he sold several other first-team regulars including
Kevin Richardson,
David Bardsley,
Lee Sinnott and
Mike Woodward. Their replacements didn't do as well, and Watford started the
1987–88 season terribly and the blame was placed squarely on Bassett, who was sacked in January 1988 when relegation to the Second Division looked certain.
Sheffield United
In 1987–88, Bassett became one of the few managers to have the dubious honour of being involved with two relegated clubs in the same season. On
January 21,
1988, just days after leaving Watford, he took over at
Sheffield United. Despite bringing many new players, he was unable to prevent a weak team from sliding into the
Third Division after losing the double-legged play-off with
Bristol City 2–1.
However, with the Bassett bringing his own backroom staff during the close season and more new players brought in, he took them back up at the first attempt in
1988–89. A second successive promotion following in
1989–90, and First Division football returned to
Bramall Lane in the
1990–91 season for the first time since the 1970's. The most influential player in this team was striker
Brian Deane, who was capped three times by
England.
Sheffield United failed to win any of their first 16 league games in 1990-91, and went into the new year at the bottom of the
First Division. But a rousing resurgence in the second half of the season saw
the Blades climb up to a secure 13th place in the final table. They did even better in
1991–92, finishing ninth in the First Division and securing a place in the new
Premier League.
Sheffield United's Premier League debut was reasonable. They finished 14th in the final table, reached the semi finals of the
FA Cup, and condemned
Nottingham Forest to relegation by winning the penultimate game of the season. However, when Brian Deane was sold to
Leeds United during the 1993 close season, without him the Blades struggled. Bassett's luck finally ran out on the last day of the
1993–94 season. Needing a single point to avoid relegation, they lost 3–2 at
Chelsea, having led 2–1 with 5 minutes remaining. An eighth place finish in the
1994–95 Division One campaign wasn't enough for a play-off place, and Bassett resigned the following December with relegation looking more likely than promotion and protests against the board mounting.
Crystal Palace
Bassett took over at
Crystal Palace in early February 1996, taking charge of a club which was standing in 16th place in Division One and had lost most of its players the previous summer. Dave Bassett set about rejuvenating the side, and a storming run meant that automatic promotion was still a possibility until the penultimate game of the season. In the end, they finished third in the table and reached the playoff final where they lost 2–1 in extra time to
Leicester City.
Nottingham Forest
In March 1997, Bassett left Crystal Palace to take joint charge of Premiership strugglers
Nottingham Forest with former Forest and England player Stuart Pearce. He was unable to prevent them from being relegated, but they were promoted back to the Premiership at the first attempt under his sole charge after winning the
1997–98 Division One championship with some ease. But Forest had a terrible start to the
1998–99 Premiership, and Bassett was sacked in January 1999. Forest were unable to avoid the drop under Bassett's successor
Ron Atkinson.
Barnsley
Bassett succeeded
John Hendrie as
Barnsley manager in May 1999. In his first season at the helm Barnsley reached the
Division One play-off final but missed out of promotion to the Premiership after losing to
Ipswich Town. Bassett left in December 2000 after failing to mount another promotion challenge.
Leicester City
Bassett became
Leicester City manager in October 2001. For a while it looked as though Bassett could save Leicester's Premiership status, but a four-month winless run from December condemned the team to relegation from the Premiership after a six-year tenancy. After a 1–0 defeat to
Manchester United which confirmed Leicester's relegation, Bassett became
Director of Football, handing over his managerial duties to assistant
Micky Adams. He took over as manager again on
11 October 2004 after Adams' resignation, but left his Director of Football role after
Craig Levein was appointed as Adams' replacement.
Southampton
Bassett was appointed as assistant manager to
Harry Redknapp at
Southampton in the summer of 2005, after the departure of
Jim Smith. When Redknapp left in December 2005, Bassett became the caretaker manager, in a shared role with
Dennis Wise. He left the club with some acrimony after
George Burley was eventually appointed full-time manager of the Saints. Bassett stated that he'd been led to believe by the chairman that he was the players' choice as next manager. During his brief sojourn in charge at
St Mary's, Saints played three matches, with one victory, one draw and one defeat.
Leeds United
On
31 October 2007 Bassett was appointed as assistant manager to
Dennis Wise at
Leeds United for the remainder of the
2007–08 season.. On 29 January 2008, it was reported by the Yorkshire Evening Post that Bassett had left the club, following Dennis Wise's resignation as manager.
Further Information
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