Jerry Kerr

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Full name John Kerr
Date of birth (1912-06-01)1 June 1912
Place of birth Armadale, Scotland
Date of death 8 November 1999(1999-11-08) (aged 87)
Jerry Kerr
Personal information
Full name John Kerr
Date of birth (1912-06-01)1 June 1912
Place of birth Armadale, Scotland
Date of death 8 November 1999(1999-11-08) (aged 87)
Place of death Dundee, Scotland
Position Left back
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Armadale Thistle
Motherwell
–1937 Alloa
1937–1939 St Bernard's
1939–1947 Dundee United
Rangers
Berwick Rangers
Managerial career
Peebles Rovers
1953–1954 Berwick Rangers
1955–1959 Alloa
1959–1971 Dundee United
1967 Dallas Tornado
1974–1976 Forfar Athletic
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

John "Jerry" Kerr[1] (1 June 1912 – 8 November 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 third bottom of the Scottish League to being an established side in the Scottish top tier. He became the first manager of a British club to win a competitive game in Spain when United won home and away against F.C. Barcelona in the 1966-67 Inter-Cities Fairs Cup.

Armadale Thistle / Rangers

A native of West Lothian, Kerr enjoyed a lengthy playing career as a full-back, predominantly as a part-timer or amateur.

From the age of 15, Jerry played for his native Armadale Thistle. He joined Rangers at the age of 17 but played just one game for the Ibrox club.

Motherwell and Alloa Athletic

His senior playing career began at Armadale Thistle before he joined Motherwell and later Alloa Athletic.

St Bernard's

His next club was St Bernard's 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.

Dundee United

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.

Rangers

Kerr spent two years with Rangers after the war before moving towards a coaching career.[2]

Management

Honours

References

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