Harry Gregg

Player

Popular As Henry Gregg

Birthday October 27, 1932

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Tobermore, Northern Ireland

DEATH DATE 2020-2-16, Coleraine, Northern Ireland (87 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 6 ft

#43726 Most Popular

1932

Henry Gregg (27 October 1932 – 16 February 2020) was a Northern Irish professional footballer and manager.

A goalkeeper, he played for Manchester United during the reign of Sir Matt Busby, with a total of 247 appearances for the club.

1954

Gregg also played for Doncaster Rovers and Stoke City, as well as making 25 appearances for the Northern Ireland national team between 1954 and 1963, including at the 1958 FIFA World Cup.

He later went into management with Carlisle United, Crewe Alexandra, Shrewsbury Town and Swansea City.

Gregg was born in Tobermore, County Londonderry to William and Isobel Gregg, who soon after moved to Coleraine.

While working as an apprentice joiner, he started his football career with Windsor Park Swifts, the reserve team of Linfield, before signing for his local club, Coleraine.

At the age of 18, he earned a move across the Irish Sea to Doncaster Rovers.

He made his international debut in March 1954, playing against Wales.

1957

In December 1957, he transferred to Manchester United for £23,500, at the time a world-record fee for a goalkeeper.

He is sometimes referred to as "The Hero of Munich" for his actions in the aftermath of the Munich air disaster, pulling his teammates – including Bobby Charlton, Jackie Blanchflower and Dennis Viollet – from the burning plane.

Among others he helped were Vera Lukić, the pregnant wife of a Yugoslav diplomat and her two-year-old daughter, Vesna, as well as his badly injured manager, Matt Busby.

George Best, who used to clean Gregg's boots, said, "Bravery is one thing but what Harry did was about more than bravery. It was about goodness."

Gregg played in United's first match after the disaster, a FA Cup fifth round tie with Sheffield Wednesday.

Gregg featured as Northern Ireland won 3–2 against England at Wembley in November 1957, and helped them qualify for the 1958 FIFA World Cup.

He was voted the best goalkeeper of the tournament, in which Northern Ireland reached the quarter-finals.

1958

He was a survivor of the Munich air disaster in 1958.

United won 3–0 and went on to reach the 1958 FA Cup Final, which they lost 2–0 to Bolton Wanderers.

The second goal in the final was scored in controversial fashion as Nat Lofthouse barged Gregg, and the ball with him, into the goal.

United finished ninth in the league that season, as their league form declined after losing so many players in the Munich tragedy.

He was unable to earn a winners' medal with United, despite playing for the club during a successful period.

1963

He was ruled out of the 1963 FA Cup Final victory due to a shoulder injury, and a succession of injuries meant that he could not play enough games to qualify for a league championship medal in the 1964–65 season, and he was sold during the first half of their title-winning campaign in 1966–67.

During his United career, Gregg kept 48 clean sheets in 247 appearances.

1966

Gregg was transferred to Stoke City in December 1966.

He played twice for Stoke, with mixed success; in his first match, he conceded four against Leicester City as Stoke lost 4–2, and then kept a clean sheet in a 2–0 victory over Blackpool.

He retired at the end of the 1966–67 season.

Gregg won 25 caps for the Northern Ireland national team.

1968

In 1968, Gregg was appointed manager of Shrewsbury Town.

1972

In November 1972, he became manager of Swansea City, resigning in February 1975 to join Crewe Alexandra where he remained until 1978.

1981

He then had a spell as goalkeeper coach with his old team Manchester United at the invitation of Dave Sexton, where he stayed until Sexton left in 1981.

His next club was Swindon Town, as assistant manager to Lou Macari.

1985

Macari used a direct style of play, which Gregg disapproved of, and they were both sacked by Swindon in April 1985 after the disagreement between the pair became public.

1986

Macari was reinstated after a fan protest, and went on to lead Swindon to the Fourth Division title in 1986.

Gregg then joined Carlisle United, initially working for manager Bob Stokoe.

During the 1986–87 season Gregg succeeded Stokoe as Carlisle manager, but he was unable to prevent them from suffering relegation to the Fourth Division.

1987

Gregg left Carlisle during the autumn of 1987.

1998

Gregg appeared in a number of television programmes about Manchester United and the Munich air disaster, including Munich: End of a Dream – a 1998 documentary that marked the 40th anniversary of the crash.

2007

Gregg expressed disappointment at never having been able to meet Mr Lukić, who had died in 2007.

2008

On the 50th anniversary of the air crash he appeared in the documentary One Life: Munich Air Disaster, broadcast 6 February 2008 on the BBC, in which he returned to the scene of the crash and the hospital for the first time and also met Zoran Lukić, the son of Mrs Vera Lukić, a Serbian woman (the wife of a Yugoslav diplomat) who was pregnant with Zoran at the time of the disaster.

It was Gregg who had saved Mrs Lukić (and her unborn son) from the wreckage, as well as Vera's baby daughter Vesna.

Gregg made an emotional account of the disaster on a TV programme entitled Munich Air Disaster: I Was There on the National Geographic Channel.