Paul Jewell

Former

Birthday September 28, 1964

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Liverpool, England

Age 59 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 5 ft 8 in

#54377 Most Popular

1921

The following season City came 21st in Division One, avoiding relegation with a 3–0 victory on the final day of the season against Queens Park Rangers.

A year later, with 13 points from a possible 15, City were top after five games.

In his 21 games in charge, Jewell won six games and drew five to guide City to 13th, their highest position since Jewell had joined the club.

He was rewarded with a permanent contract when others expected Richmond to recruit a higher-profile replacement.

1964

Paul Jewell (born 28 September 1964) is an English football manager and former player, who was most recently director of football at Swindon Town.

Jewell began his playing career with Liverpool, continued at Wigan Athletic and concluded in a ten-year spell with Bradford City, apart from a short loan spell with Grimsby Town.

When his playing career ended, he became part of the coaching staff at Bradford City.

1984

In December 1984, Jewell moved to Wigan Athletic for £15,000.

He made his league debut for Wigan against Rotherham United in a 3–3 draw.

He appeared 137 times for Wigan, scoring 35 goals, before moving to Bradford City in an £80,000 deal.

1988

Terry Dolan brought Jewell to Valley Parade in June 1988 as part of a re-building exercise after the club failed to win promotion to Division One in 1987–88 and had lost Stuart McCall and John Hendrie to Everton and Newcastle United, respectively.

He spent a decade as a player at City scoring 56 league goals in 269 appearances, and forged a successful partnership with Sean McCarthy for four of those seasons.

1992

Jewell's most successful spell occurred in 1992–93 when he scored 16 league goals to McCarthy's 17 in the first season of new player-manager Frank Stapleton's tenure.

Jewell had a brief loan spell at Grimsby Town before returning to Bradford.

1995

Jewell started his coaching career long before he retired as a player, joining City's coaching staff during the successful 1995–96 campaign.

1997

He retired as a player in 1997–98 when Bradford won promotion from Division Two in 1995–96 under manager Chris Kamara.

1998

Jewell was appointed manager in 1998 and took City to the Premier League before resigning and becoming manager of Sheffield Wednesday.

However, performances declined from there, and chairman Geoffrey Richmond sacked Kamara on 6 January 1998, three days after a 2–0 FA Cup defeat to Manchester City.

Richmond turned to Jewell, already Kamara's assistant manager, who then won his first game 2–1 to Stockport County.

Richmond wanted to make a promotion challenge, so Jewell broke the club's transfer record twice within the first week of the 1998–99 season, first with the £1m acquisition of Lee Mills and then the £1.3m purchase of Arsenal youngster Isaiah Rankin.

He also brought back Stuart McCall from Rangers.

After a poor start, when City won just one of its first seven games, they picked up momentum and were second behind Sunderland for most of the latter half of the season.

Jewell added Lee Sharpe on loan and a third £1m signing, Dean Windass, as City held off Ipswich Town and Birmingham City to finish second.

With promotion to the Premier League, Bradford had returned to top-flight football after an absence of 77 years.

1999

Bradford struggled in the Premiership during the 1999–2000 season, but their survival was secured on the last day when, against expectations, they beat Liverpool 1–0 at home, a defeat that cost their opponents a UEFA Champions League place.

2000

Jewell had been hoping to mount a promotion challenge in 2000–01 with Wednesday but after enduring a torrid eight months in charge was sacked in February 2001 with the debt-ridden Hillsborough club struggling near the foot of Division One.

His highlight was the 2–1 League Cup victory over local rivals Sheffield United and victory over Premier League club West Ham United.

2001

In June 2001, Jewell made his return to management with ambitious Division Two club Wigan Athletic.

2002

In his second season as manager (2002–03) the club won the Division Two championship and entered the upper half of the English professional football league system for the first time ever.

2003

They were near the top of Division One throughout the 2003–04 season but were pipped to a playoff place on the final day of the season by Crystal Palace—who went on to win the playoffs.

2006

He returned to Wigan Athletic to win a second promotion to the Premier League, but resigned a day after he kept them up in the 2006–07 season.

2007

He later joined Derby County on 28 November 2007, before resigning 13 months later.

2011

He was appointed manager of Ipswich Town in January 2011, but departed following an unsuccessful reign in October 2012.

2015

He briefly took up assistant coaching roles at West Brom in 2015 and Oldham Athletic in 2017 before being appointed as director of football at Swindon Town in December 2018.

Jewell left Swindon in July 2021.

Born in Liverpool, Lancashire (now Merseyside), and educated at De La Salle School, Jewell began his career as an apprentice with home-city club Liverpool.

2017

Jewell handed in his notice after Richmond called City's 17th-placed Premiership finish "a disappointment".

Richmond refused to accept Jewell's resignation.

He contended that Jewell had already lined up a job at Sheffield Wednesday whilst still contracted to City, and placed Jewell on gardening leave.

However, Wednesday worked out a compensation package with City, and Jewell was installed as the new manager of the relegated club.