Neil Warnock: Record| Net worth| Wife| Documentary

140
0

Neil Warnock will break Dario Gradi’s record for most professional games managed in England when Middlesbrough play Luton. Today we will discuss about Neil Warnock: Record| Net worth| Wife| Documentary

Neil Warnock: Record| Net worth| Wife| Documentary

Neil Warnock (born 1 December 1948) is an English football manager and former player who is currently the manager of Championship club Middlesbrough. He is also a television and radio pundit. In a managerial career spanning five decades, Warnock has managed sixteen different clubs from the Premier League to the Non-League. He holds the record for most promotions in English football with eight.

Personal information
Full name Neil Warnock
Date of birth 1 December 1948 (age 72)
Place of birth Sheffield, England
Height 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
Position(s) Winger
Club information
Current team
Middlesbrough (manager)

Record

Neil Warnock: Record| Net worth| Wife| Documentary

Fiver wouldn’t be where it is today without proper soccer men like Neil Warnock. The Middlesbrough manager is often ridiculed as the old-fashioned meat-and-two-vegan manager who has cut out his football reception. And while this is usually what we’re scoffing at we also argue that he has as much in common with write-on Silicon Valley types as he does with prehistoric long-ball traders. You see, it’s been a prolific digital content provider over the years thanks to its preference for telling it what it is. It’s not bad that the internet wasn’t even invented when they commandeered their first games. He has spent only half of his managerial career helping to fill a large website with bountiful content, which spans almost four decades. He has come out of retirement more often than some managers oversee games.

Net worth

Neil Warnock Net Worth: Neil Warnock is an English footballer football manager who has not disclosed his net worth figures to the public. Cardiff City FC Manager since 2016 Neil probably gets a hefty salary!

Not only was his game kneading the dough, but with his managerial career and mega-contracts, Neil is also negotiating handsome deals. With his recent win to lead Cardiff City to the Premier League during 2017-2018, he is piling up some hefty cash!

Dashing Neil Warnock is a manly man! With his height, balanced weight and fit physique, Neil is indeed a handsome guy and just oozes class and charisma.

Neil has been gorgeous over the years and still hasn’t lost that raw charm of a cheeky smile and friendly personality. He’s in his 70s now, but still retains that guy-next-door good looks and ongoing enthusiasm.

Wife

Neil Warnock: Record| Net worth| Wife| Documentary

“If Sharon had a choice between me and the dogs, they would have won. I would come away from each other!”

Warnock has been promising to spend more than a decade in a managerial career spanning 40 years.

He had aimed to finish with Sheffield United, but was not happy with how his time ended in 2007 – following the Carlos Tevez-West Ham dispute with chairman Kevin McCabe and relegation out.

Since then, he has held ‘one last job’ at Crystal Palace, QPR, Leeds, Palace (again), QPR (again), Rotherham, Cardiff and now Middlesbrough.

But Warnock revealed that he had actually settled on retirement five years before his month-long caretaker charge at QPR following the dismissal of Chris Ramsay… until his missive had other ideas.

Documentary

Neil Warnock is a joke. On one hand he is the embodiment of English football in the eighties, nineties and the Noughties, a crumbling building built largely on a touchstone phrase: “Get stuck, boys!” On the other hand, you could see him as a really underrated serial winner. He’s been the manager, ffs, since 1980, and has hardly stopped working. This in itself is amazing.

As the Premier League moves further and further away from the old ideologies of his homeland, Warnock, now in his seventies but still in demand (he is the Winston Wolff of football), looks like a man out of time. Looks. of course he does. But, perhaps watching this documentary for the first time in a decade makes you realize that Warnock is no idiot. He is a smart, funny man. He ticked off English football in that era as well as anyone (he played a part in eight promotions, a remarkable record): constant swearing, hearts, rattles, etc. In the center of this temple is a picture of Terry Butcher with a bandage covered in blood on his head. That’s the obvious stuff. He had that cover. But it is not enough. Warnock is, clearly, an expert at shaping opponents. The human side of the game is where he excels. You see it throughout this movie. He’s the type of boss who pisses you off all the time, but eventually you’ll run through a wall for him, even though he built the wall the same way you saw it.

Case in point: Sheffield United’s bustling, insane win at Millwall (in 26 minutes) in 2003, which ended with Phil Jagielka on goal. You see how Warnock ousted Kevin Muscat for the benefit of his players (“Sly”, “a shithouse” – he’s not wrong), then it is reported in the dressing room that Muscat had taken keeper Paddy Kenny (both Headbutted to) was dispatched). Then, on the final whistle, Warnock couldn’t help but rub it into one of Millwall’s players: “You deserved the musket.” He often can’t help himself, Neil.

Ratings