Army service, and introduction to management Buckley went to war with the 17th
Middlesex Regiment (where he commanded the
Football Battalion), seeing action and receiving wounds to his lung and shoulder in the
Battle of the Somme, and rose to the rank of
major. On his return, he was appointed manager of
Norwich City. The Canaries had been so debt-ridden that the receivers had wound the club up, but following an extraordinary general meeting, the club was resurrected; Buckley was placed in charge in February 1919, and returned the club to
Southern League football. Despite having retired from playing during the war, he played one game for Norwich in September 1919, when he was the club's secretary-manager. Once again, his stay was short; by July 1920 he was gone, financial disputes precipitating a wholesale change of personnel.
Blackpool He returned to football management with
Blackpool on 6 October 1923; there, his ideas began to come to the fore. He was lured to
Bloomfield Road with the promise of an extremely high salary and enough money to strengthen the squad. Buckley is credited with implementing a youth system and scouting scheme to 'the Seasiders'. Despite a total change of tactics, he did not have much more success with Blackpool than did his predecessor,
Bill Norman. During the
1924–25 season Buckley sold established players such as
Herbert Jones and
Harry Bedford, which proved unpopular amongst the fans. Buckley's stay at Wolves can be looked at in two ways. On the face of it, he appeared to achieve only modest success with the club; they won the
Division Two title in
1931–32 and finished runners-up in the
Division One in
1937–38 and in both the First Division and the
FA Cup the following season. An alternative view is that during his stay at
Molineux, Buckley once made the club a £100,000 profit within one year, purely on transfer deals; he toyed, provocatively, with the media, instigating the empty rumour that his players were using a monkey gland treatment (see
Serge Voronoff) to aid performance; he used psychologists to instill confidence in his players and was responsible for bringing through Stan Cullis and offering
Billy Wright a start in professional football. After he had left the club, however, the full value of his vision, not least the Wolves youth programme, came to fruition and did so much to shape the Wolves side of the 1950s, when they won three Division One championships, twice won the FA Cup, and were one of few genuine challengers to the
Busby Babes. Buckley left Wolves in 1944 and another non-committal couple of years followed at
Notts County (for a then-unheard-of £4,000 a year) and
Hull City before starting work at
Leeds United, where one of his first discoveries was
John Charles just after Christmas 1948. He was not afraid to try all manner of ideas to induce the
Elland Road club out of mediocrity: dancing songs broadcast through the public address system during training days, so-called 'shooting' boxes (a contraption designed to send the ball out at different speeds and angles to players), increasing admission costs,
banning players from smoking two days before a match and youth development programmes. John Charles did excel during the 1954–55 season, but the team failed to respond in kind.
Legacy Influence Buckley's influence on the rise of the Blackpool and Wolves sides of the 1950s, of the
Leeds United 'club culture' of the 1960s and 1970s should never be understated. His principles may not have been adopted directly by
Matt Busby,
Bill Shankly,
Brian Clough and
Alex Ferguson but they were innovative principles that are now quite commonplace. A stern disciplinarian throughout his career, Buckley earned devotion and affection, not least because he was also a 'tracksuit' manager. He brought in
Jack Charlton, who had this to say about him: "Unlike the pros, we got just two weeks' holidays in the summer, and while they were away our job was to remove the weeds from the pitch and replace them with grass seed. I remember being sat out there one day with Keith Ripley, another ground staff boy, when Major Buckley came over to us. We must have looked pretty forlorn, the two of us, and to gee us up he said he'd give us five shillings for every bucket we filled with weeds. Now that was an offer we couldn't refuse. By the time we were finished, we had filled six buckets, and, cheeky bugger that I was, I marched straight up to the Major's office. And when he asked what I wanted, I told him I was there to claim my thirty bob for the weeds. He nearly blew a bloody gasket! 'Get out of here!' he bellowed. 'You're already getting paid to do that work – don't ever let me see you up here again with your buckets.' "Yet beneath the gruff exterior, he was a kind man, as he demonstrated once when I met him. My shoes must have been a sight, for when he looked down at them, he asked me if they were the only pair I had. I nodded. The next morning, he summoned me to his office and handed me a pair of Irish
brogues, the strongest, most beautiful shoes I'd ever seen. And I had them for years." Buckley left Leeds in April 1953, moving to
Walsall, but left them in September 1955. He died in
Walsall in December 1964, aged 82. ==References==