Everything about Jerry Kerr totally explained
Armadale
| countryofbirth =
Scotland
| dateofdeath =
| cityofdeath =
Dundee
| countryofdeath =
Scotland
| height =
| currentclub =
| clubnumber =
| position =
Left back
| youthyears =
| youthclubs =
| years =
–1937
1937–1939
1939–1947
| clubs =
ArmadaleMotherwellAlloaSt BernardsDundee UnitedRangersBerwick Rangers
| caps(goals) =
| nationalyears =
| nationalteam =
| nationalcaps(goals) =
| manageryears =
1953–1954
1955–1959
1959–1971
1974–1976
| managerclubs =
Peebles RoversBerwick RangersAlloaDundee United F.C. Forfar Athletic
}}
John 'Jerry' Kerr (
1912 -
November 8 1999) was a
Scottish football player and manager, best known as manager of
Dundee United from 1959 to 1971. He is credited with taking the club from relative obscurity to being mainstays in what is now the
Scottish Premier League.
Playing career
A native of
West Lothian, Kerr was a
full back in a playing career which began at
Armadale and took him to
Motherwell and
Alloa Athletic before joining
St Bernards in 1937. He captained the
Edinburgh side to the
Scottish Cup semi-finals in his first season at the Gymnasium, where they eventually lost to fellow Second Division side
East Fife in a second replay. He became one of new Dundee United manager
Bobby McKay’s first signings during the close season of 1939 and again was made club captain but only four League matches of
season 1939-40 were played before the competition was abandoned. Kerr was one of only three players who remained with United after the outbreak of war, and played as his team progressed to the final of the Emergency War Cup (effectively the Scottish Cup, but with relaxed registration rules due to the
Second World War). He was, however, unlucky to sustain a shoulder injury in the semi-final which kept him out of the final against
Rangers, at
Hampden. Kerr briefly played for Rangers after the war before moving towards a coaching career.
Move into Management
It was in the field of football management where Kerr's true strengths began to emerge. His first post was as player/manager with the
East of Scotland League club
Peebles Rovers, followed by a spell at
Berwick Rangers before being appointed manager of
Alloa Athletic in 1955, a club where he'd spent time as a player. He became known as having an eye for a good player, also having a theory that the bigger the club, the worse the talent-spotting. When at Alloa he assembled a partnership of inside forwards
Dennis Gillespie (who he'd later take to
Tannadice) and
John White. Two years after Kerr had sold White to
Falkirk,
Tottenham Hotspur spent £20,000 to lure him to North London, an indication of the talent Kerr had for finding good young players.
In
1959 United manager Andy McCall – their fifth in less than five years – had just resigned after leading the part-time club to third bottom place in
Division Two and there was little expectation that fortunes would improve significantly. Dundee United advertised for a new manager; Jerry Kerr was the man given the apparently thankless task of reviving the club in April that year.
Success in the '60s
Kerr first policy upon joining United was his insistence that his players be full-time. A gamble that could have cost the club dearly. He also insisted that there had to be a properly constituted reserve side and an end to the previous policy of buying in over-the-hill First Division players. In the summer of 1960 the gamble paid off, after beating his former club Berwick Rangers at Tannadice, Kerr's United had secured second place in Division Two and promotion to Scotland's top flight. The records show that Kerr had more than doubled attendances at
Tannadice in his first season in charge.
They doubled again the following season as United retained their place, and with players like
Ron Yeats and the striking partnership Dennis Gillespie (who Kerr had brought with him from Alloa) and Jim Irvine scoring 21 and 23 goals respectively not only did United finish a highly creditable ninth, but they topped their city rivals by a point.
Kerr was also imaginative and inspired with some of his signings. With Hal Stewart of
Morton, he was the first to see the possibility of tapping
Scandinavia for cultured players at an affordable price. And by
1964,
Lennart Wing,
Finn Døssing,
Mogens Berg and
Örjan Persson were Tannadice stalwarts.
Off the field, Kerr was just as remarkable. He had been greatly taken by the success of
Warwickshire County Cricket Club in raising money for the rebuilding of
Edgbaston through the medium of a football pool. The English county made hundreds of thousands of pounds from this idea and a conversation with their secretary, Les Deakin led Kerr to set up
Taypools, which, for about a decade, brought money cascading into the club. Using his great capacity for lateral thinking and an ability to adapt and even improve the ideas of others he helped secure the finance of the growing club. As well as raising money to invest in the squad Kerr's
Taypools helped rebuild some of Tannadice, building the new West ("The Shed") and North stands and the opening of, what was at the time the state-of-the-art, Main Stand which was later, fittingly, renamed The Jerry Kerr Stand.
Kerr is also credited with another landmark moment in the club's history, he led United into their first ever European tie in 1966, an astonishing 4-1 aggregate victory over
Barcelona in the
Fairs Cup, which included a 2–1 win at the
Nou Camp.
Retirement
By 1971, Kerr (then aged 59) had taken Dundee United as far as he reasonably could. In November of that year he assumed the post of general manager, the job which he'd transformed into one of the most sought-after in Scottish football going to
Jim McLean who would build upon Kerr's successful base over the following seasons. It seems Kerr was never comfortable with his new duties and he left the club, with the minimum of publicity, at the end of season
1972-73 with a legacy hard to exaggerate. He is remembered for taking a small club, third from the bottom in Scottish League Football to a secure place in the top division, consistently finishing above clubs with larger reputations at the time like
Hibernian,
Hearts and
Aberdeen. He later managed
Forfar Athletic from 1974 to 1976 before retiring from football completely.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Jerry Kerr'.
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