Manchester
United's Tony Whelan: The man helping nurture the club's future stars
You almost certainly won't have heard of 69-year-old Mancunian
Tony Whelan, but many of the Premier League stars he has helped develop need no
introduction.
As Manchester United's academy programme advisor, Whelan has
nurtured the early careers of Marcus Rashford, Jesse Lingard, Danny Wellbeck
and Paul Pogba as well as hundreds of other young prospects, since first
arriving at Carrington in 2005.
Yet it's Whelan who describes 24-year-old Rashford - 45 years
his junior - as a "hero of mine".
Speaking to BBC Sport for Black History Month, Whelan explains:
"Marcus, with his family background, where he lived and the different
challenges he's faced in his life, who would have thought that he was going to
be a humanitarian par excellence."
This week an FA
report said the number of black, Asian and minority
ethnic managers and 'non senior' coaches had gone down since last season - with
all 20 Premier League clubs and 32 of 72 English Football League clubs signed
up to its diversity code, failing to hit six of the eight targets.
Those statistics, criticised by QPR director of football Les
Ferdinand and Crystal Palace boss Patrick Vieira, are despite the fact that 43%
of Premier League players and 34% of EFL players are black, a far cry from
Whelan's days as a player.
"I only played with or against about seven black players
during my time in the UK, between 1968 when I was an apprentice professional at
Manchester United and when I left to go to America in 1977," says Whelan.
"Only seven. You wouldn't see that now.
"In fact I've got photographs of myself in squads,
Manchester United squads and at Manchester City, and I'm the only black face."
'I had champions, I was
never on my own'
Whelan made his Manchester United debut aged 17 against the
Bermuda national team on a pre-season tour in 1970.
He "treasures" memories of seeing legends like George
Best, Denis Law and Bobby Charlton in training at The Cliff - United's former
training ground - and the "gravitas and dignity" of manager Sir Matt
Busby who "was so highly respected he was like the Pope".
Whelan later spent two season at Manchester City and played
alongside Colin Bell, Franny Lee and Mike Summerbee.
Speaking about the general environment for black players in
British football in the 1970s, Whelan says he became "immunised" to
racist slurs.
"It was an every day occurrence, getting called names - I
don't need to mention the standard names I used to get called," he said.
"I had champions. I was never on my own. I had team-mates
and people who stood up for me: school teachers, friends, strangers. So I was
never on my own, but I often think to myself how did I get through all that?
But I loved football too much."
After his time in England, Whelan's career took him to the US
and the now defunct North American Soccer League where he rubbed shoulders with
some of football's biggest icons.
"I played three years for the Fort Lauderdale Strikers. I
played with Gordon Banks. I played with Gerd Muller…. It's hard to believe
thinking back," Whelan said.
"I also played against some wonderful players. I played
against Pele, I played against Franz Beckenbauer, people like Carlos Alberto,
Johan Cruyff. It was just like, 'What am I doing? I'm just a lad from
Wythenshawe playing against all these superstars!'"
