From a Hartlepool ppaper:
'Lennie Lawrence, who turns 77 in December, is one of a select few
managers to have been in the dugout for more than 1,000 games during his long
and distinguished career.
He became a legend at Charlton, spending almost a decade at
the helm and leading the Addicks back to the First Division after a 29 year
absence, helped Middlesbrough win promotion to the inaugural Premier League,
was in the dugout when Grimsby beat Liverpool in the League Cup and steered
Cardiff to promotion to Division One.
Following a brief spell as caretaker manager at Crystal
Palace in 2012, he worked in a variety of consultancy roles before returning to
the dugout with Pools in January following the sacking of John Askey.
Of his eight games in charge across two interim spells,
Lawrence has led Pools to a creditable three wins and three draws.
And up until Saturday, when Pools produced their best
performance of the season to secure a dominant victory over Aldershot Town, the
expectation was that Lawrence would likely return to his advisory role, with
the club tipped to make the most of almost two weeks without a game to secure
Sarll's successor.
All of a sudden, it's starting to look possible, even probable,
that the veteran, who also holds a position on the board, might have a hand in
appointing himself as the new manager.
Right now, few would begrudge him a belated return to
permanent management. After all, he has a remarkable record, an almost endless
list of contacts, an encyclopedic knowledge of the beautiful game and has
managed to transform Pools from a side who rarely even looked like winning into
a team who are all of a sudden being talked up as play-off contenders again.
Lawrence, who is one of the country's most experienced
manager's and who clearly commands the respect of both the players and fans,
might just be their man, for now at least.'
Legend is often a overworked word but not for Lennie, a true legend who got the club through some of it's worst times..
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