Bob Glendenning (1929)
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Personal information | |||
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Full name | Robert Glendenning | ||
Date of birth | 6 June 1888 | ||
Place of birth | Washington, County Durham, England | ||
Date of death | 19 November 1940 | (aged 52)||
Playing position | Wing half | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
Washington United | |||
1908–1913 | Barnsley | 141 | (1) |
1913–1915 | Bolton Wanderers | 73 | (0) |
Accrington Stanley | |||
Teams managed | |||
1923 | Netherlands | ||
–1928 | Koninklijke HFC | ||
1925–1940 | Netherlands | ||
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only. |
Robert Glendenning (6 June 1888 – 19 November 1940) was an English professional footballer, who played as a wing half for several English clubs prior to and just after the First World War. He later went on to coach in the Netherlands, including coaching the Dutch national side.
He started his career at hometown club Washington United before transferring to Barnsley sometime prior to 1910. He played in both FA Cup finals that Barnsley reached, in 1910 and 1912. In the first Barnsley lost in the replay to Newcastle United. The second also went to a replay but Barnsley won, defeating West Bromwich Albion by one goal in extra time. The Manchester Guardian praised his play in the first match, and in the replay Glendenning won the ball from a West Brom player and passed it to Harry Tufnell to score in the last minutes of extra time.
In March 1913 he transferred to Bolton Wanderers, for whom he played a total of 83 games as club captain. Bolton reached the FA Cup semi-finals in 1915, in which they were defeated by Sheffield United captained by George Utley, Glendenning's fellow wing half from Barnsley. In the 1916–17 season, Glendinning appeared as a wartime guest player with Burnley. After the war he played for Accrington Stanley.
After the end of his playing career he took up coaching and moved to the Netherlands. He had a short spell, only one game, a 4–1 victory over Switzerland, as coach of the national side in 1923. He then coached Koninklijke HFC until 1928. He was made the permanent coach of the Netherlands in 1925, holding both coaching positions until the 1928 Summer Olympics when he chose to focus on the national team. He remained the manager of the Oranje until 1940, leading them to the World Cup finals in 1934 and 1938. The tournaments would be disappointments, exiting in the first round on both occasions, to Switzerland by a score of 3–2, in 1934, and then to Czechoslovakia by 3–0, in 1938. Glendenning managed the Oranje through 87 games, with 36 wins, 36 losses and 15 draws.