Early career Allardyce was hired as a player-coach by
Brian Talbot at
West Bromwich Albion in February 1989. He spent most of the rest of the
1988–89 season at
The Hawthorns managing and playing for the reserve team, before being promoted to first team coach in the summer, in a move that saw former first-team coach
Stuart Pearson demoted to reserve team coaching. Allardyce and Talbot were dismissed in January 1991 following a defeat to
Isthmian League side
Woking in the
FA Cup. He later worked as a part-time coach at
Bury, but manager
Mike Walsh could not afford to keep him on the staff for the
1989–90 season. Allardyce then took up the role of player-manager of
Limerick and guided the team to promotion into the
League of Ireland Premier Division after winning the
1991–92 League of Ireland First Division. Despite tremendous financial pressures, they achieved promotion, with Allardyce coaching and playing for the first team whilst the club board signed players as Allardyce had no knowledge of the Irish football scene. After his season in Ireland, Allardyce returned to England for the start of the
1992–93 season to coach at
Preston North End under
Les Chapman. Ten games into the season, however, Chapman was dismissed and Allardyce was appointed
caretaker manager. Allardyce worked as youth team coach for 18 months, but later said the extreme
long ball tactics Beck enforced upon the club were "indefensible".
Blackpool On 19 July 1994
Blackpool,
West Lancashire derby rivals to Preston North End, appointed Allardyce as their new manager following the departure of
Billy Ayre, agreeing a salary of £18,000 a year. He signed defender
Darren Bradshaw, midfielder
Micky Mellon and spent a club record £245,000 on
Andy Morrison, who Allardyce described as a "horrible in-your-face" centre-back and a "complete nutter". He also changed the club's backroom staff, hiring
Bobby Saxton as his assistant, promoting player
Phil Brown to a coaching role, and appointing
Mark Taylor as physio, who would follow Allardyce to Blackburn and Newcastle. Blackpool finished the
1994–95 season in 12th place after falling out of the promotion race with just one win in their final 11 games. Blackpool finished third, missing out on automatic promotion on the last day of the season, and were beaten in the play-off semi-finals by
Bradford City. They had won 2–0 away at
Valley Parade, only to lose 3–0 in the return leg at
Bloomfield Road. Chairman
Owen Oyston, while he was in a prison cell, dismissed Allardyce shortly after the play-off defeat. Allardyce then had a brief spell on the coaching staff under
Peter Reid at
Sunderland, working as director of the
academy.
Notts County In January 1997, Allardyce returned to football as manager of struggling Division Two club
Notts County. He arrived too late to save them from relegation in
1996–97, and in his autobiography, described how the players "would not respond" to his coaching methods as they went 18 games without a win and pressure mounted on Allardyce. However, he held on to his job and led the club to promotion as champions of Division Three at the end of the
1997–98 season, built upon a three-man defence and a mid-season run of ten consecutive wins. County broke several club and national records, winning the title by a 19-point margin and becoming the first post-war side to win promotion in March. Allardyce was eventually allowed to spend £50,000 on striker
Kevin Rapley, who helped the club to steer clear of relegation at the end of the
1998–99 campaign. In the summer, he signed midfielder
Craig Ramage and utility player
Clayton Blackmore.
Bolton Wanderers Promotion out of Division One Allardyce was appointed manager of Bolton Wanderers following
Colin Todd's departure, who had resigned in protest at the sale of
Per Frandsen as the club attempted to raise funds for the new
Reebok Stadium. He inherited a talented squad, which included
Eiður Guðjohnsen,
Jussi Jääskeläinen,
Mark Fish,
Claus Jensen,
Dean Holdsworth,
Bo Hansen,
Michael Johansen, and
Ricardo Gardner. He was forced to sell
Andy Todd, son of Colin Todd, after he broke assistant manager Phil Brown's jaw in a team-bonding session. He blamed referee
Barry Knight for the play-off defeat, accused him of being biased against Bolton. Allardyce was rewarded for turning the club around with a ten-year contract, though the terms of the contract only entitled him to a one-year's compensation pay if he was dismissed. In summer 2000, Guðjohnsen and Jensen were sold for £4 million each. Allardyce focused on spending money to improve the club's facilities and backroom staff, believing that money spent in these areas would allow Bolton to compete with clubs who had bigger budgets and paid bigger wages than Bolton could afford. On the playing front he spent £400,000 on striker
Michael Ricketts and £1.5 million to bring back Frandsen from Blackburn and also signed utility player
Ian Marshall and
Bradford City loanee
Isaiah Rankin. Teenager
Kevin Nolan was also promoted from the youth team, whilst 35-year-old defender
Colin Hendry arrived on loan. Bolton reached the
play-off final at the
Millennium Stadium in
2000–01, where they beat
Preston North End 3–0 to achieve promotion to the
Premier League after a three-year absence.
Premier League survival Building for the
2001–02 Premier League campaign, Allardyce signed
France international defender
Bruno Ngotty from
Marseille in a loan deal which was eventually made into a permanent one after Ngotty established himself as a key first team player. He also brought in
Henrik Pedersen from
Silkeborg IF for £650,000, though otherwise remained loyal to the players that had won promotion the previous campaign. They recorded a 5–0 win at
Leicester City on the opening day, then beat
Middlesbrough and
Liverpool to secure nine points from their first three games. After six games without a win, Bolton then recorded a shock 2–1 victory over
Manchester United on 20 October. However their form dropped, and so in the January transfer window Allardyce brought in Danish midfielder
Stig Tøfting, German striker
Fredi Bobic (on loan), and
World Cup-winning attacker
Youri Djorkaeff. Djorkaeff scored both goals in a 2–1 win over
Charlton Athletic on 23 March and Bobic scored a hat-trick in a 4–1 win over Ipswich Town on 6 April; the victory over Ipswich proved to be essential as Bolton ended the season in 16th place on 40 points, ahead of Ipswich who were relegated with 36 points. Allardyce managed to sign another big name on a free transfer for the
2002–03 season, bringing in 28-year-old
Nigeria captain
Jay-Jay Okocha, who four years previously had been purchased by
Paris Saint-Germain for £14 million. He also brought in Spanish central defender
Iván Campo on loan from
Real Madrid. He sold 2001–02 top-scorer
Michael Ricketts to Middlesbrough for £3.5 million, bringing in
Pierre-Yves André on loan as his replacement. Bolton struggled all season but managed to avoid relegation with a final-day win over Middlesbrough. Looking to avoid another relegation battle, Allardyce made some signings in preparation for the
2003–04 season, the most significant of which were Brazilian defender
Emerson Thome,
Greece international
Stelios Giannakopoulos, and target-man striker
Kevin Davies. Allardyce's side finished eighth in the league and reached the League Cup final, in what was his first major domestic final appearance as a player or manager. Bolton lost
2–1 to
Middlesbrough in the final, though Allardyce blamed referee
Mike Riley for not giving a late penalty for an alleged handball by
Ugo Ehiogu.
Venture in Europe Now an established Premier League club, Bolton signed veteran internationals
Gary Speed and
Fernando Hierro, aged 35 and 36 respectively. Speed and Hierro went into midfield, while
Tunisia international
Radhi Jaïdi was played at centre-back after arriving on a free transfer from
Espérance; he was played alongside another new arrival,
Israel defender
Tal Ben Haim, who was recommended by Allardyce's son Craig. He also brought in
Senegal striker
El Hadji Diouf on a season-long loan from Liverpool, whom he would eventually sign permanently for £3 million. Bolton went on to finish in sixth place in
2004–05 to win qualification to the
UEFA Cup for the first time in the
club's history. Bolton reached the Round of 32 in the UEFA Cup in
2005–06, beating
Lokomotiv Plovdiv (
Bulgaria) in the First Round and successfully negotiating through the Group stage after beating
Zenit Saint Petersburg (Russia), and drawing with
Sevilla (Spain),
Beşiktaş (
Turkey) and
Vitória Guimarães (Portugal), before losing to Marseille (France) in the knock-out stages. Allardyce's success with Bolton resulted in
the FA putting him on a short-list of four people to succeed
Sven-Göran Eriksson as
England manager after the
2006 FIFA World Cup, alongside
Alan Curbishley,
Steve McClaren and
Martin O'Neill. He was interviewed for the position and was told by FA Chief Executive
Brian Barwick that the final choice would be between him and McClaren however the FA eventually decided to give the job to McClaren. Allardyce was also again offered the Newcastle job and was this time to keen to take it, but Newcastle chairman Freddie Shepard broke off contract negotiations after electing to appoint caretaker-manager
Glenn Roeder on a full-time basis. Allardyce's team seemed unaffected by speculation on his future or by their European exploits and ended the season in eighth position. Keen to strengthen Bolton for a European push in the
2006–07 season, Allardyce signed France international striker
Nicolas Anelka from
Fenerbahçe for a
club record £8 million. He also signed
Ivory Coast defender
Abdoulaye Méïté from Marseille, and in an unusual sequence of events made a £400,000 profit on
Dietmar Hamann, who changed his mind about joining Bolton and signed with
Manchester City a day after signing a pre-contract agreement with Bolton; Manchester City agreed to pay Bolton £400,000 in compensation. Bolton had another good season: their 16 points from their first eight games was the last time for 14 years that two teams from outside the so-called 'big six' averaged at least two points per match in their first eight games (the other team being Portsmouth). However, Allardyce's relationship with chairman
Phil Gartside became increasingly strained as Gartside refused to sanction greater transfer spending to finance a push for
UEFA Champions League qualification. On 29 April 2007, Allardyce resigned with the club in fifth place with two games of the season left to play, and the following day, his assistant
Sammy Lee was announced as his replacement.
Newcastle United Allardyce was offered the Manchester City job, but the offer was withdrawn after
Thaksin Shinawatra's purchase offer of the club was accepted. On 15 May 2007, Newcastle United announced that Allardyce had signed a three-year contract to succeed Glenn Roeder as manager. Coincidentally Newcastle then also had a change of owners, as
Mike Ashley completed his takeover of the club. The sales of
Scott Parker and
Kieron Dyer raised £13 million, allowing Allardyce to sign
Australia international striker
Mark Viduka (free transfer), utility man
Alan Smith (£6 million), midfielder
Geremi Njitap, controversial midfielder
Joey Barton (£5.5 million), left-back
José Enrique (£6.3 million), right-back
Habib Beye (£2 million), and defender
Abdoulaye Faye. Newcastle enjoyed a good start to the season, beating Allardyce's former club Bolton 3–1 on the opening day in a run of five wins and two draws from the opening nine league games. However they then had a series of disappointing results in the run-up to Christmas, and after gaining only one point from a possible six from bottom-of-the-table Wigan and Derby Allardyce parted company with Newcastle United on 9 January 2008. He had gone into the meeting with chairman
Chris Mort expecting to be told Newcastle had signed a new player only to learn he was being replaced by
Kevin Keegan in his second stint as Newcastle manager.
Blackburn Rovers On 17 December 2008, Allardyce was appointed as manager of
Blackburn Rovers on a three-year contract, succeeding
Paul Ince, who left the club in 19th place with just three wins from 17 games. Allardyce's first game in charge was a 3–0 victory over
Stoke City at
Ewood Park three days later. This was the first game of a nine-game unbeaten run. He strengthened the team by spending £2 million on Sunderland winger
El Hadji Diouf and brought in defender
Gaël Givet on loan from Marseille. Blackburn were forced to sell talismanic
Paraguay striker
Roque Santa Cruz to Manchester City and defender
Stephen Warnock to Aston Villa for a combined £21.5 million to balance the books. Allardyce was permitted to bring in defensive midfielder
Steven Nzonzi from
Amiens for £500,000,
Croatia international forward
Nikola Kalinić from
Hajduk Split for £6 million, and
Pascal Chimbonda from Tottenham Hotspur for £2.5 million. In the
2009–10 season, Blackburn reached the League Cup semi-final against Aston Villa, but lost over two legs. Blackburn remained mid-table for the duration of the season, and finished tenth with a final day victory away at Aston Villa. The club was put up for sale in the summer of 2010, and Allardyce was offered the job of managing
Shabab Al-Ahli Dubai but could not secure permission to leave Blackburn without paying compensation to the club and so remained in charge at
Ewood Park. Allardyce was later dismissed by new owners the
Venky family on 13 December 2010, with Rovers placed 13th in the league. He was replaced by one of his coaches,
Steve Kean, whose agent
Jerome Anderson was a highly influential figure with the Venky family.
West Ham United Allardyce was appointed as manager of then-recently relegated
West Ham United on 1 June 2011, signing a two-year contract. He vowed to play "attractive football" in getting West Ham back to the
Premier League, according to the "traditions of the club", and rejected the claims that he played dull,
long-ball football at previous clubs. He signed
Abdoulaye Faye,
Kevin Nolan,
Joey O'Brien and
Matt Taylor. Faye, Nolan and O'Brien had all played under Allardyce at his former club Bolton Wanderers while Taylor was a Bolton player who had joined after Allardyce left the club. He made striker
John Carew West Ham's fifth signing of the season, on a free transfer, followed by defender
George McCartney from Sunderland on a season-long loan, strikers
Sam Baldock from
Milton Keynes Dons and midfielder
Papa Bouba Diop on a free transfer. He concluded his
summer transfer window signings on
deadline day by bringing in midfielders
David Bentley from Tottenham Hotspur and
Henri Lansbury from Arsenal, both on season-long loans, as well as utility man
Guy Demel from
Hamburg for an undisclosed fee.
Nicky Maynard,
Ricardo Vaz Tê and
Ravel Morrison followed in the
2011 winter transfer window. Over the course of the
2011–12 season a total of 25 players left the club while 19 were signed. In March 2012, despite standing in third place in the
Championship, Allardyce's style of football was again questioned.
Fans called for more
passing of the ball and football played on the pitch and not in the air. On 19 May 2012, West Ham were promoted back to the Premier League after only one season in the Championship after beating Blackpool 2–1 in the
play-off final. Allardyce described this promotion as his best-ever achievement. A busy transfer window for the
summer of 2012 saw Allardyce bring in eleven players, including his former Bolton goalkeeper Jussi Jääskeläinen, midfielder
Mohamed Diamé,
Mali international striker
Modibo Maïga,
Wales international centre-back
James Collins, defensive midfielder
Alou Diarra, winger
Matt Jarvis, England striker
Andy Carroll (on loan from Liverpool) and Israel international midfielder
Yossi Benayoun. West Ham finished the
2012–13 season in tenth place, and Allardyce renewed his contract at West Ham by signing a new two-year deal. Allardyce's main signing of summer 2013 was Andy Carroll, for a £15 million fee from Liverpool, whilst he also spent an undisclosed fee on winger
Stewart Downing, again from Liverpool, to provide crosses for Carroll to convert into goals. He also signed goalkeeper
Adrián on a free transfer from
Real Betis. However, Allardyce's plans were disrupted when Carroll picked up a long-term injury, which left Allardyce regretting the transfer, especially as he had chosen Carroll instead of signing
Swansea City's
Wilfried Bony, who went on to score 16 league goals in the
2013–14 campaign. Allardyce was awarded the
Premier League Manager of the Month for February 2014 following a run of four wins and one draw in their five Premier League games. In April 2014, during an away game against West Bromwich Albion, a section of West Ham fans expressed their distaste at the style of football played under Allardyce by displaying a banner which read "Fat Sam Out, killing WHU". The following month some supporters hung a banner bearing the legend "Fat Sam Out" outside the mansion owned by club chairman,
David Sullivan, in
Theydon Bois, Essex. Despite protests, on 20 May 2014, the club announced that Allardyce would be staying as manager and would be supported by new attacking coach
Teddy Sheringham for the
2014–15 season to "ensure the team provides more entertainment" and to "improve the club's goal tally". In summer 2014, Allardyce signed midfielder
Cheikhou Kouyaté, left-back
Aaron Cresswell, attacker
Enner Valencia, right-back (on loan from Arsenal)
Carl Jenkinson, striker
Diafra Sakho, defensive midfielder
Alex Song (on loan from
Barcelona), midfielder
Morgan Amalfitano, and forward
Mauro Zárate. In October 2014, pundits like BBC's
Robbie Savage were commenting about the team's "more attractive and attacking playing style" or "the statistics [that] show the progress that West Ham have made in the last few months." Allardyce was awarded the Premier League Manager of the Month for October 2014 after three wins for West Ham out of four games played that month. Allardyce left West Ham on 24 May 2015, the final day of the season, after his contract was not renewed. Allardyce stated that "I didn't want to stay. I suppose you could say it was mutual if they didn't want me to stay either". His West Ham side had finished 12th in the 2014–15 season, one place higher than in the 2013–14 season.
Sunderland in 2016 On 9 October 2015, Allardyce was named the new
Sunderland manager, replacing
Dick Advocaat. When Allardyce was appointed, Sunderland sat 19th in the Premier League table with three points from their first eight games of the season. However, after a run of 5 defeats in a row in December, Sunderland headed into the second half of the season in the relegation zone with only 12 points from 19 games. In the January transfer window he signed centre-backs
Lamine Koné and
Jan Kirchhoff and attacking midfielder
Wahbi Khazri. On 6 February 2016, Sunderland scored two late goals to draw 2–2 with Liverpool at Anfield, having trailed 2–0 with ten minutes remaining. Later that week winger
Adam Johnson was dismissed by the club after pleading guilty to one count of sexual activity with a child and one charge of grooming. Sunderland remained in the relegation zone for much of the remainder of the
2015–16 season, before they boosted their survival chances by beating
Norwich City 3–0 at
Carrow Road on 16 April, closing the gap on 17th-place Norwich to just one point. Allardyce successfully led Sunderland to safety from relegation after beating
Everton 3–0 on 11 May, a result which also ensured the relegation of rivals (and one of his former clubs) Newcastle United. Allardyce earned praise for his management of Sunderland from some
pundits, particularly for his organized approach and emphasis on a strong
defence.
England On 22 July 2016, Allardyce signed a two-year contract to become manager of the
England national team. He won his first and only game in charge on 4 September, as an
Adam Lallana goal deep into injury-time was enough to beat
Slovakia on the opening day of
qualification for the
2018 FIFA World Cup. Following
allegations of malpractice, Allardyce left the role by mutual consent on 27 September, having managed the team for just 67 days and one match. He strengthened in the January transfer window by spending around £30 million on
Jeffrey Schlupp,
Patrick van Aanholt, and
Luka Milivojević. The "Eagles" confirmed their safety from relegation in the penultimate game of the
2016–17 season with a 4–0 victory over
Hull City at
Selhurst Park. Allardyce unexpectedly announced his departure from Crystal Palace on 23 May 2017, saying he had no intention of seeking another job, in what was interpreted as a retirement announcement. However, on 19 July 2017, Allardyce clarified that he would be open to an international management position, but not another club job.
Everton Despite announcing his retirement from club management, on 30 November 2017, Allardyce was appointed manager of
Everton on an 18-month contract. Everton were lying in thirteenth place in the
Premier League table upon his arrival, following a poor start to the
2017–18 season under previous manager
Ronald Koeman. His first game in charge came two days later, when his side defeated
Huddersfield Town in a 2–0 victory. He guided the "Toffees" to a seven-game unbeaten run at the start of his tenure, a spell which included five clean sheets. Having steadied the defence, he stated that his next task was to bring in a consistent goalscorer. Everton ended the season in eighth-position, but fans were dissatisfied with the style of play. Whilst under Allardyce's management, Everton were ranked 20th for total shots, 19th for total shots on target, 16th for passing accuracy and 17th for shots faced in the Premier League. Allardyce left the club on 16 May 2018.
West Bromwich Albion On 16 December 2020, Allardyce was appointed manager of
West Bromwich Albion on an 18-month contract after
Slaven Bilić was dismissed with the club 19th in the Premier League table. His time as manager began with West Brom losing 3–0 at home to
local rivals Aston Villa on 20 December with defender
Jake Livermore being sent-off in the first half for a bad foul on
Jack Grealish. BBC correspondent Simon Stone reported after the match that "Allardyce has his work cut out... the size of this task [avoiding relegation] cannot be overstated". It took until his sixth game in charge for the Baggies to record a victory, when they won 3–2 away at
Black Country derby rivals Wolverhampton Wanderers. In the same month, he testified that it would "kill" him if he was relegated with West Brom and that he was aware of the health risks of returning to the managerial position. In January 2021, Allardyce said that three transfers had fallen through for West Brom as, following
Brexit, the players would not have obtained a work permit. In the same month, it was reported that Allardyce could not get the hoped for reinforcements. He had wanted to sign another two players before the transfer window closed. Despite picking up some notable results, such as a memorable 5–2 away victory against eventual
2020–21 UEFA Champions League winners Chelsea, he was unable to keep West Brom in the Premier League, as they were relegated to the Championship on 9 May following a 3–1 away defeat against Arsenal. This marked Allardyce's first relegation from the Premier League in his career. On 19 May, following a 3–1 defeat to West Ham, Allardyce confirmed he would step down as manager at the end of the
2020–21 season, despite the club stating their desire for him to continue as manager next season.
Leeds United On 3 May 2023, Allardyce was appointed as manager of Premier League club
Leeds United following the dismissal of
Javi Gracia, with four matches left to play of the
2022–23 season. At the time of his appointment, Leeds were in 17th place, outside of the relegation zone on
goal difference. In his first game in charge on 6 May, Leeds lost 2–1 away to
Manchester City. Leeds drew their next game, against Newcastle United but lost the last two games of the season, 3–1 away to West Ham and 4–1 at home to Tottenham Hotspur. Leeds finished in 19th place in the Premier League and were relegated to the Championship. On 2 June 2023, following the club's relegation, it was announced by the club that Allardyce had left by mutual agreement. As such, Allardyce became the manager with the shortest tenure for a Premier League manager with just 30 days at Leeds, surpassing
Les Reed at
Charlton Athletic who previously held the record with a 40-day tenure. ==Managerial style==