Ian Holloway

Player

Birthday March 12, 1963

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Kingswood, Gloucestershire, England

Age 61 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 173cm

#35682 Most Popular

1963

Ian Scott Holloway (born 12 March 1963) is an English professional football manager, former player, media personality and television pundit who was most recently the manager of Grimsby Town.

A midfielder, he notably played in the Premier League with Queens Park Rangers where he made just under 150 league appearances in a five-year spell.

He spent most of his career at boyhood club Bristol Rovers where he had three spells which included the start and finish of his playing career.

1981

Holloway began his playing career as an apprentice with his hometown team Bristol Rovers, turning professional in March 1981 and making his league debut the same year.

He usually played on the right side of midfield, and made his name as one of the more promising players in the Third Division (now League One).

1985

After four seasons at Rovers, he was transferred to Wimbledon in July 1985 for £35,000.

Holloway's stay at Wimbledon was a short one.

1986

He was part of the Wimbledon team that won promotion to the top flight in 1986, a place they would remain for the next fourteen seasons.

He also played in the Football League with Brentford and Torquay United.

In March 1986, after less than one year at the club, he was sold to Brentford for £25,000, where he also spent just a little over a year.

1987

In January 1987 he joined Torquay United on loan, playing five times.

In August 1987, after two years in London, Holloway returned to Bristol Rovers for a fee of £10,000.

Back at Rovers, who were now playing "home" games at Twerton Park in Bath, and under the wing of new Rovers manager Gerry Francis, Holloway flourished.

In four seasons, he missed only five games.

1991

When Francis was appointed manager of First Division side QPR in 1991, one of his first signings was Holloway, for a fee of £230,000 in August 1991.

1996

Holloway spent five seasons at QPR, playing more than 150 games for the club, before returning to Bristol Rovers for the third time in August 1996, this time as player-manager.

Holloway took over a club that was struggling both on and off the pitch.

1998

The 1998–99 season ended with a somewhat disappointing 13th place.

Holloway retired as a player following that season, having played more than 400 matches for Bristol Rovers, to concentrate fully on management.

1999

During his third spell back at Bristol Rovers, he became player-manager before ending his playing career in 1999.

In 1999–2000, his last full season at the club, Rovers finished 7th, narrowly missing the playoffs.

2001

In February 2001, midway through the 2000–01 season, Holloway was appointed manager of QPR, where he was given the task of keeping the team in Division One.

He failed to do so, as QPR finished second from bottom and were relegated to the third level for the first time in 34 years.

Despite the relegation, Holloway stayed on and rebuilt the side.

After steadying the ship in 2001–02, and a near miss in 2002–03, Holloway and QPR were promoted back to the second level in 2004, finishing second behind Plymouth Argyle.

2003

He has also managed Queens Park Rangers (where he won promotion from Division Two in 2003–04), Plymouth Argyle, Leicester City, Blackpool, Crystal Palace and Millwall.

2013

As he did with Blackpool three years earlier, Holloway managed Crystal Palace to promotion to the Premier League in May 2013, but after the club had won only one of their opening eight games he left, by mutual consent, on 23 October 2013 after less than a year in charge.

2014

On 6 January 2014, Holloway signed a two-and-a-half-year deal with Millwall; this was terminated in March 2015.

2016

He rejoined Queens Park Rangers as manager on 11 November 2016.

2017

In his first season in charge of Rovers, he led the club to 17th place in Division Two (now League One).

The next season, however, Bristol Rovers gained fifth place and made the playoffs.

Despite taking a first-leg advantage of 3–1 against Northampton Town, Rovers subsequently lost 3–0 in the second leg and went out 4–3 on aggregate in the semi-finals.

2018

A native of Kingswood, near Bristol, Holloway grew up in Cadbury Heath, where his mother, Jean, lived in the same council house until her death in April 2018.

Holloway went to Sir Bernard Lovell School in Oldland Common at the same time that Gary Penrice was at Chase School for Boys in Mangotsfield.

They still remain close friends today.

His father Bill – an amateur footballer – worked as a seaman and a factory worker.

2019

In December 2019, he joined Grimsby Town as a manager and club director after committing to purchase shares in the club.

He resigned just under a year later.

He is known by the nickname "Ollie", which is also the title of his autobiography.

Holloway has a reputation amongst football fans for his West Country accent, off-the-wall interviews and amusing answers to questions from the media, with a wide selection of quotes and soundbites being printed.