Connect with us

English Football

Joey Barton appointed Fleetwood Town manager

Published

on

Joey Barton has been appointed Fleetwood Town manager

Joey Barton will become the new manager of League One side Fleetwood Town this summer – one day after his ban for betting ends.

Barton, 35, was suspended for 18 months by the Football Association in April 2017 after he was found to have placed 1,260 bets on matches over 10 years.



His punishment was reduced by five months on appeal and ends on 1 June.

“I’m very excited by the challenge,” the ex-England, Manchester City, Newcastle and Burnley midfielder said.

Advertisement

“It’s a club I’ve known for a long time, and a chairman I already have a very good relationship with.

“My first job in management was always going to be a big decision and I’m delighted. I’m joining a club with big ambitions.”

READ: Manchester City players dominate PFA team of the year

John Sheridan, who replaced Uwe Rosler as Fleetwood boss in February, will leave at the end of the season.

Advertisement

It is understood there are to be no changes to the backroom staff at Fleetwood, who are 14th in League One.

‘I’m convinced he is ready’

Barton’s last appearance was in Burnley’s 2-0 home defeat by Manchester United in April of last year and he was released by the Turf Moor club at the end of last season.

Earlier in his career, he almost joined Fleetwood on a six-month loan deal from Queens Park Rangers in 2012 to expedite a 12-game ban for violent conduct.

Advertisement

Chairman Andy Pilley said he is “convinced” Barton is “ready to make the step into management, and that he will be a huge success”.

He added: “Joey will be able to build on the fantastic work done by John Sheridan during the last couple of months, one he deserves huge credit for.

“Today’s news signals a new chapter for Fleetwood Town which starts on 2 June, and one which we are all excited about.”

Fleetwood have won six promotions in 10 seasons to climb from the ninth tier to League One.

Advertisement

They came close to automatic promotion to the Championship under Rosler in 2016-17 but ended up finishing fourth – the club’s highest ever placing – before losing to Bradford City in the play-off semi-finals.

Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Copyright © 2015 - 2024 ChronicleNG

Discover more from Chronicle.ng

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading