english affiliation football musician and director ( born 1977 )

Edward John Frank Howe ( behave 29 November 1977 ) is an english professional football coach and erstwhile player, who is the principal bus of Premier League club Newcastle United. A defender during his playing career, Howe spent most of his playing career with AFC Bournemouth, coming up through the young organization and spending eight years with the club, before returning for a second three-year spell to end his career, and retiring from the professional game in 2007. He entered management the adopt year, taking charge of a Bournemouth side facing relegation to the Conference National in January 2009 as the youngest director in the Football League. [ 2 ] Under his guidance, Bournemouth were able to survive relegation during his first season in charge, having started the season on minus 17 points, and were promoted to League One the following campaign.

Reading: Eddie Howe

After a abbreviated spell as coach at Burnley, Howe returned to Bournemouth and led them to two foster promotions in three seasons, taking them to the top division of English football. He was subsequently named Football League Manager of the Decade in 2015 following three promotions in a seven-year menstruation. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Bournemouth survived in the Premier League for five seasons under Howe, before suffering delegating to the Championship in 2020. He resigned as director of Bournemouth after the club ‘s delegating. At the time of his deviation, Howe was the longest serve coach in the Premier League. [ 5 ] After a class off from the game, Howe returned to management in 2021 when he was appointed as heading passenger car of Newcastle United .

Playing career [edit ]

Howe was born in Amersham, Buckinghamshire. [ 1 ] When very young, he moved to Verwood in Dorset, and subsequently began his footballing career with local young person teams Rossgarth [ 6 ] and Parley Sports [ 7 ] before starting his master career at AFC Bournemouth. [ 8 ] He made his first-team debut in December 1995 against Hull City. [ 6 ] Howe established himself as an crucial player in AFC Bournemouth ‘s defense and in 1998 he was selected for the England Under-21 team in the Toulon Tournament. [ 6 ] In March 2002, Portsmouth signed Howe for £400,000, making him new director Harry Redknapp ‘s first base sign. concisely after signing, a knee injury on his introduction against Preston North End [ 9 ] ended his season. He returned for the afford game of the 2002–03 temper against Nottingham Forest, but he injured his knee again after entirely nine minutes [ 10 ] and was ruled out for the stallion crusade. He did not return to entire fitness until January 2004 after 18 months out. He was loaned to Swindon Town on transfer deadline day in March, although he did not sport for the cabaret. Portsmouth loaned Howe back to AFC Bournemouth for the first gear three months of the 2004–05. He proved to be successful on his render to his foremost club after two injury-ravaged seasons with Portsmouth. With the club in a very poor fiscal state, supporters joined together to create “ Eddieshare ” to fund a remove fee. Within days of creation, £21,000 was raised which funded the command permanent wave transfer fee. [ 6 ] After a far three seasons and over 270 appearances, injuries forced his retirement as a actor in 2007 and he then moved into coaching with the reserve squad. [ 6 ]

Managerial career [edit ]

In December 2006, at the old age of 29, Howe was promoted to the position of player-coach by director Kevin Bond, and handed the tax of coaching AFC Bournemouth ‘s reserve team, though he continued to play in the first team. He retired from football in summer 2007, after he was ineffective to recover from a knee wound. [ 11 ] In September 2008, Howe lost his occupation when Bond was sacked as coach. [ 6 ]

AFC Bournemouth [edit ]

Howe returned to AFC Bournemouth as a young bus under Jimmy Quinn and took over as caretaker coach when Quinn was sacked on 31 December 2008. [ 12 ] tied though his two games in charge as caretaker director were away defeats, he was hired as the permanent coach of the clubhouse on 19 January 2009 and brought the club out of the relegation zone despite a 17-point deficit. In the startle of the 2009–10 temper, Howe won eight out of the nine games, a golf club criminal record. In November 2009, Championship club Peterborough United approached Howe to replace Darren Ferguson as their director but Howe rejected their approach. [ 13 ] Despite the golf club ‘s transfer embargo remaining in station for the rest of the temper, AFC Bournemouth secured promotion to League One after two years in the one-fourth tier of English football thanks to a 2–0 away win at Burton Albion on 24 April 2010. [ 14 ] In early on 2011, Howe was approached by several other clubs but on 11 January announced that he was staying at AFC Bournemouth. [ 15 ] however, on 14 January 2011, Howe became the new Burnley director after the cabaret agreed a recompense deal with AFC Bournemouth. [ 16 ] [ 17 ] He took charge of his 100th and final AFC Bournemouth match of his foremost time with the golf club, late that day in a 2–1 frustration away to Colchester United. [ 18 ]

Burnley [edit ]

On 16 January 2011, Howe was announced as the new coach of Burnley after signing a three-and-a-half-year contract at the Championship club. [ 19 ] His beginning game in charge of Burnley was away to Scunthorpe on 22 January 2011, which ended in a 0–0 draw. [ 20 ] Burnley finished 8th in the Championship in season 2010–11 and 13th in season 2011–12 under Howe. [ 21 ] [ 22 ] He left Burnley in October 2012 citing “ personal reasons ” for his passing. [ 23 ]

render to AFC Bournemouth [edit ]

In October 2012, he re-joined his former club AFC Bournemouth as director. [ 6 ] He won the League One Manager of the Month for November after guiding the club to three league wins and two draws, arsenic well as an FA Cup victory. On 20 April 2013, he secured forwarding to the Championship with AFC Bournemouth finishing runner-up and one detail behind champions Doncaster Rovers. [ 24 ] [ 25 ] In the 2013–14 season, Howe ‘s AFC Bournemouth finished 10th in the Championship, six points outside of the play-off positions. [ 26 ] On 19 April 2015, Howe was selected as the Manager of the Decade at the Football League Awards. [ 27 ] On 27 April 2015, he secured AFC Bournemouth ‘s forwarding to the Premier League. [ 28 ] AFC Bournemouth beat Bolton Wanderers 3–0 at the Goldsands Stadium, a win which whilst not guaranteeing Premier League football for the 2015–16 season, required one-third place side Middlesbrough to overcome a 19-goal finish dispute with one game left in the temper. Howe said of the promotion and of AFC Bournemouth supporters, “ It should n’t be them thanking me, it should be me thanking them. It is a family club and deserves its moment in the sun. ” [ 29 ] AFC Bournemouth confirmed their promotion on the last day of the season, 2 May 2015, with a 3–0 victory at Charlton Athletic and, ascribable to already-promoted Watford ‘s failure to win their final match, were crowned champions of the league. [ 30 ] Howe guided AFC Bournemouth to Premier League survival in their foremost season in the circus tent flight football, with a 16th-place eat up seeing them five points clear of the delegating partition. [ 31 ] An even better campaign in 2016–17 proverb AFC Bournemouth finish up ninth. [ 32 ] A year subsequently, he took them to 12th place in the Premier League to secure a fourth straight campaign at this charge. [ 33 ] Howe ‘s side finished in 14th in the 2018–19 Premier League, but the club ‘s 5-year stay in the Premier League ended in 2019–20 after AFC Bournemouth finished in 18th seat. [ 34 ] On 1 August 2020, AFC Bournemouth announced that Howe had left the club by common consent, after eight years in charge. [ 35 ] He became noted at Bournemouth for bringing in young players, improving them and selling them on at a profit. [ 36 ] In May 2021, Howe rejected an offer to become the coach of Celtic. [ 37 ] A club argument blamed factors “ outwith both his and our control ” for the breakdown in their negotiations. [ 37 ]

newcastle United [edit ]

Howe was appointed to replace Steve Bruce as the coach of Premier League club Newcastle United on 8 November 2021, signing a narrow until the summer of 2024. [ 38 ] Howe watched from the stands as the club drew 1–1 with Brighton & Hove Albion, [ 39 ] in which Graeme Jones was acting as caretaker coach, who was retained as first team adjunct coach as part of Howe ‘s modern coaching staff, which besides included Jason Tindall, Stephen Purches and Simon Weatherstone, whom he worked with at AFC Bournemouth, angstrom well as retained Newcastle goalkeeping bus Simon Smith. His appointment at Newcastle besides reunited him with former players at AFC Bournemouth, such as Callum Wilson, Matt Ritchie and Ryan Fraser. [ 39 ] On 19 November 2021, Newcastle announced that Howe had tested positive for COVID-19 and would miss the first game in charge. [ 40 ] He watched his beginning game as coach from a hotel room as Newcastle drew 3–3 with Brentford on 20 November. [ 41 ]

personal liveliness [edit ]

Howe and his wife Vicki have three sons. [ 42 ] On 5 March 2019 Howe was awarded the Freedom of the Borough of Bournemouth by Bournemouth Borough Council. [ 43 ] [ 44 ] [ 45 ] He is an Everton fan. [ 46 ] During the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, Howe became the beginning Premier League coach to take a yield cut. [ 47 ]

career statistics [edit ]

As a actor [edit ]

Club

Season

League

FA Cup
League Cup

Other

Total

Division
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals
Apps
Goals

AFC Bournemouth
1995–96
Second Division

5
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
5
0

1996–97

Second Division

13
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
13
0

1997–98

Second Division

40
1
3
0
2
0
5[a]
0
50
1

1998–99

Second Division

45
2
4
2
4
1
3[a]
0
46
5

1999–2000

Second Division

28
1
0
0
5
0
0
0
33
1

2000–01

Second Division

31
2
3
0
1
0
0
0
35
2

2001–02

Second Division

38
4
2
0
1
0
1
0
42
4

Total

200
10
12
2
13
1
9
0
224
13

Portsmouth
2001–02
First Division

1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0

2002–03

First Division

1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0

Total

2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
2
0

Swindon Town (loan)

2003–04

Second Division

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

AFC Bournemouth

2004–05
League One

35
1
3
0
2
0
0
0
40
1

2005–06

League One

20
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
20
0

2006–07

League One

15
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
16
1

Total

70
2
4
0
2
0
0
0
76
2

Career total

272
12
16
2
15
1
9
0
302
15

As a director [edit ]

As of match played 4 December 2021

Managerial record by team and tenure

Team

From

To

Record

Ref.

P
W
D
L
Win %

AFC Bournemouth

31 December 2008

16 January 2011

102
51
18
33
0 50.00
[12][49]
Burnley

16 January 2011

12 October 2012

87
34

Read more: Swansea City A.F.C.

19
34
0 39.08
[49]

AFC Bournemouth

12 October 2012

1 August 2020

356
143
77
136
0 40.17
[49]
Newcastle United

8 November 2021

Present

4
1
2
1
0 25.00
[49]

Total

549
229
116
204
0 41.71

Honours [edit ]

director [edit ]

AFC Bournemouth

individual [edit ]

References [edit ]

Read more: Real Sociedad