The former Leicester and Manchester United manager Frank O’Farrell has died at the age of 94. O’Farrell guided Leicester to the 1969 FA Cup final during his three-year spell in charge but the Irishman was best known as the man who succeeded Sir Matt Busby as United manager in 1971, although his Old Trafford reign would last only 18 months. O’Farrell was a wing-half who played for his native Cork, West Ham and Preston, winning nine Republic of Ireland caps between 1952 and 1959. He began his managerial career at Weymouth in 1961 and spent three years at Torquay before landing the Leicester job in 1968. Leicester were beaten 1-0 by Manchester City in the following year’s Cup final and relegated from the First Division three weeks later. Leicester returned to the top flight as Second Division champions in 1971 and O’Farrell was quickly appointed as Busby’s successor. After a promising start which saw United top the table for the first time in three years, O’Farrell fell out with George Best and the team ended the season eighth. O’Farrell was sacked in December 1972 with United third from bottom. He would later manager Cardiff, Iran and the United Arab Emirates club Al-Shaab, as well having two further spells in charge of Torquay.
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