Brian Ernest Talbot (born 21 July 1953) is an English former football player and manager. He was capped six times for the England national team.
Talbot played in midfield for Ipswich Town, Arsenal, Watford, Stoke City, West Bromwich Albion, Fulham and Aldershot of the Football League, for non-league club Sudbury Town, and for the Toronto Metros of the North American Soccer League. He then went into management with West Bromwich Albion, Aldershot, Rushden & Diamonds, Oldham Athletic, Oxford United, and two Maltese clubs, Hibernians and Marsaxlokk.
Between 1984 and 1988, Talbot was chairman of the Professional Footballers' Association.
Club career
A midfielder, Talbot began his football apprenticeship with Ipswich Town in 1968, during which he spent two seasons on loan with Canadian club Toronto Metros of the North American Soccer League, turning professional in 1972. He made 227 appearances for Ipswich, and won the 1977–78 FA Cup with the club. In 2013, Talbot was inducted into the Ipswich Town F.C. Hall of Fame.
In January 1979, Talbot moved to Arsenal for a fee of £450,000. He went straight into the first team and played for the Gunners in that year's FA Cup final, scoring in a 3–2 victory over Manchester United, the first player for more than 100 years to win the FA Cup with two different teams in consecutive seasons. The following year he set a club record, as an ever-present in Arsenal's marathon 70-match 1979–80 season;
Because of his stamina and fitness, Talbot missed "at most, a handful" of Arsenal's first-team matches. In all, he played 327 first-team matches for the Gunners, scoring 49 goals, and was voted in at number 23 in a 2016 poll of Arsenal's greatest 50 players. where he helped the Potters climb the table only to fall six points short of a play-off place.
International career
Talbot played as an over-age player in England's first match at under-21 level, a goalless friendly with Wales in December 1976. He made his senior debut on 28 May 1977, as a second-half substitute in a 2–1 win against Northern Ireland in the 1976–77 British Home Championship, and his first start on 4 June in the same competition against Scotland at Wembley. He started England's next three matches, on a South American tour later in June. and made his sixth and final senior appearancethe only one he made as an Arsenal playerin May 1980 against Australia in Sydney.
Managerial career
Talbot's managerial debut came with West Bromwich Albion, where he served as player-manager from February 1989 to January 1991. His tenure started well, with the side challenging for promotion. But a collapse during the final weeks of the 1988–89 season meant they failed even to qualify for the playoffs. The following season saw the team only narrowly survive in the Second Division, and the struggle continued into the 1990–91 season. Talbot was dismissed by Albion after a 4–2 FA Cup defeat at the hands of non-league Woking; the team ended the season with relegation to the Third Division for the first time ever. After leaving Albion, he joined Fulham and played five times in the Third Division, scoring once, before being appointed player-manager of Fourth Division strugglers Aldershot, who were deep in debt. After a dismal start to the 1991–92 season, Talbot left the Shots in November 1991 and was succeeded by Ian McDonald; four months later the club went bust and were forced out of the Football League. Talbot then led Maltese Premier League club Hibernians to the league title in 1993 and 1994.
Talbot succeeded in keeping Oldham in Division Two in 2004, then the following season he took them into the third round of the FA Cup, in which the Latics produced a shock result to beat local Premier League team Manchester City 1–0 thanks to a goal from Scott Vernon. But results in the League were not the same: following a defeat to Bolton Wanderers, the team went on a seven-match losing streak which led to Talbot's departure by mutual consent on 24 February 2005 following a 5–1 defeat at Bristol City. He signed a two-year contract as manager of Oxford United before the final game of the 2004–05 season. After an unsuccessful stint in charge, Talbot was sacked in mid-March 2006 with the team 22nd in League Two, having not won since 2 January and destined to lose their League status at the end of the season.
Talbot made a quick return to management in Malta with Marsaxlokk, and guided them to the domestic league title and a place in the UEFA Champions League.
In February 2011, he joined English Premier League club Fulham as European scout.
Personal life
Talbot has a son, Daniel Talbot, who is also a footballer.
Career statistics
As a player
Source:
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|-
!rowspan="2"|Club
!rowspan="2"|Season
!colspan="3"|League
!colspan="2"|FA Cup
!colspan="2"|League Cup
!colspan="2"|Other
!colspan="2"|Total
|-
!Division!!Apps!!Goals!!Apps!!Goals!!Apps!!Goals!!Apps!!Goals!!Apps!!Goals
|-
|rowspan="7"|Ipswich Town
|1973–74
|First Division
|15||3||1||0||0||0||2||0||18||3
|-
|1974–75
|First Division
|40||8||9||0||5||1||2||1||56||10
|-
|1975–76
|First Division
|19||2||3||0||1||0||0||0||23||2
|-
|1976–77
|First Division
|42||5||3||0||3||0||6||1||54||6
|-
|1977–78
|First Division
|40||4||7||3||3||0||6||1||56||8
|-
|1978–79
|First Division
|21||3||0||0||1||0||4||0||26||2
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!177!!25!!23!!3!!13!!1!!20!!3!!233!!32
|-
|rowspan="3"|Toronto Metros (loan)
|1971
|NASL
|10||2||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||10||2
|-
|1972
|NASL
|10||2||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||10||2
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!20!!4!!colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||20!!4
|-
|rowspan="8"|Arsenal
|1978–79
|First Division
|20||0||6||2||0||0||0||0||26||2
|-
|1979–80
|First Division
|42||1||11||2||7||1||10||0||70||4
|-
|1980–81
|First Division
|40||7||1||0||4||0||0||0||45||7
|-
|1981–82
|First Division
|42||7||1||0||5||0||4||1||52||8
|-
|1982–83
|First Division
|42||9||7||1||7||0||2||0||58||10
|-
|1983–84
|First Division
|27||6||1||0||1||0||0||0||29||6
|-
|1984–85
|First Division
|41||10||3||2||3||0||0||0||47||12
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!254!!40!!30!!7!!27!!1!!15!!1!!327!!49
|-
|rowspan="3"|Watford
|1985–86
|First Division
|41||7||8||0||2||0||0||0||51||7
|-
|1986–87
|First Division
|7||0||0||0||1||0||0||0||8||0
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!48!!7!!8!!0!!3!!0!!0!!0!!59!!7
|-
|rowspan="3"|Stoke City
|1986–87
|Second Division
|32||3||5||1||0||0||0||0||37||4
|-
|1987–88
|Second Division
|22||2||2||0||1||1||2||0||27||3
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!54!!5!!7!!1!!1!!1!!2!!0!!64!!7
|-
|rowspan="4"|West Bromwich Albion
|1987–88
|Second Division
|15||2||0||0||0||0||0||0||15||2
|-
|1988–89
|Second Division
|39||2||2||0||0||0||1||0||42||2
|-
|1989–90
|Second Division
|20||1||2||0||3||1||1||0||26||2
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!74!!5!!4!!0!!3!!1!!2!!0!!83!!6
|-
|Fulham
|1990–91
|Third Division
|5||1||0||0||0||0||0||0||5||1
|-
|rowspan="3"|Aldershot
|1990–91
|Fourth Division
|10||0||0||0||0||0||0||0||10||0
|-
|1991–92
|Fourth Division
|1||0||0||0||1||0||0||0||2||0
|-
!colspan="2"|Total
!11!!0!!0!!0!!1!!0!!0!!0!!12!!0
|-
!colspan="3"|Career Total
!643!!87!!72!!11!!48!!4!!39!!4!!803!!106
|}
: A. The "Other" column constitutes appearances and goals in the FA Charity Shield, Football League Trophy, UEFA Cup and UEFA Cup Winners' Cup.
International
Source:
{| class=wikitable style="text-align: center"
|-
!National team!!Year!!Apps!!Goals
|-
|rowspan=2|England
|1977||5||0
|-
|1980||1||0
|-
!colspan=2|Total!!6!!0
|}
As a manager
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center"
|-
!rowspan=2 width=150|Team
!rowspan=2 width=120|From
!rowspan=2 width=120|To
!colspan=5|Record
|-
!width=30|G
!width=30|W
!width=30|D
!width=30|L
!width=40|Win %
|-
|align=left|West Bromwich Albion
|align=left|2 November 1988
|align=left|8 January 1991
|-
|align=left|Rushden & Diamonds
|align=left|1 March 1997
|align=left|8 March 2004
|-
|align=left|Oldham Athletic
|align=left|10 March 2004
|align=left|25 February 2005
|-
|align=left|Oxford United
|align=left|6 May 2005
|align=left|14 March 2006
|-
!colspan="3"|Total
|}
Honours
As a player
Ipswich Town
- FA Cup: 1977–78
- Ipswich Town F.C. Hall of Fame: 2013
Rushden & Diamonds
- Football Conference: 2000–01
