Kevin Keegan
Leadership credibility is hard to manufacture inside an organisation that has lost belief in its own direction. People follow leaders who have stood in front of a hostile crowd, taken responsibility when results went wrong, and still set the tone the next morning. The gap between management theory and that lived test is what serious leadership audiences want closed.
Kevin Keegan is a two-time European Footballer of the Year, former England captain and manager, and a speaker who draws leadership, pressure, and team-building lessons from four decades at the top of the game.
Full Profile
Why organisations work with Kevin Keegan
- He is one of only four players to win European Footballer of the Year twice, alongside Di Stefano, Beckenbauer, and Cruyff, which gives any leadership message he delivers immediate authority with a senior audience.
- He has carried the captaincy of a national team and the weight of managing it, so his account of pressure is operational rather than theoretical.
- As a manager he is the first person in the Premier League era to win the Football League title with two different clubs, Newcastle United and Manchester City, evidence of repeatable team-building rather than a single peak.
- His after-dinner style is warm, self-aware, and quotable, which makes him a reliable fit for awards nights, gala dinners, and senior client hospitality where the brief is engagement rather than instruction.
Biography highlights
- Two-time Ballon d’Or winner (European Footballer of the Year), 1978 and 1979, at SV Hamburg
- 63 England caps, 21 international goals, captained England 31 times including UEFA Euro 1980
- Won three First Division titles, two UEFA Cups, an FA Cup, and the European Cup with Liverpool under Shankly and Paisley
- Awarded the OBE in 1982; PFA Players’ Player of the Year, 1982; FWA Footballer of the Year, 1976
- Managed Newcastle United, Fulham, England, and Manchester City; only manager in the Premier League era to win the Football League title with two different clubs
- Inducted into the inaugural English Football Hall of Fame in 2002; author of the Sunday Times bestselling autobiography “My Life in Football” (Pan Macmillan, 2018)
Biography
Hamburg signed Keegan from Liverpool in 1977, and within two seasons he had been named European Footballer of the Year twice. Before him, only Di Stefano, Beckenbauer, and Cruyff had managed that. The move was the first by a leading British player to a major continental club at his peak, and it reset what an English footballer’s career could look like.
Liverpool was where the platform was built. Six seasons under Bill Shankly and Bob Paisley produced three league titles, two UEFA Cups, an FA Cup, and a European Cup. England rewarded the form with the captaincy. He led the side 31 times, including at Euro 1980, and finished with 63 caps and 21 goals.
Management followed playing. Keegan returned to Newcastle United as manager in 1992, took the club out of the second tier, and pushed it to two Premier League runner-up finishes. He went on to manage Fulham, England, and Manchester City, and remains the only manager in the Premier League era to have won the Football League title with two different clubs.
On stage he works the same material his career produced: the tactics rooms at Liverpool and Hamburg, the dressing rooms he ran as a manager, and the moments the public watched live, from the 1996 title race with Manchester United to managing England at Wembley. The 2018 autobiography “My Life in Football”, co-written with Daniel Taylor, set the version of those stories he now tells from the floor.
Key speaking topics
- Leadership under public pressure
- Team building and squad management
- Motivation and high performance
- Lessons from elite sport for business
- Handling setbacks and reinvention
- After-dinner storytelling
Ideal for
- Sales kick-offs, awards dinners, and gala evenings where senior clients are the audience
- Leadership and management offsites looking for a credible outsider voice on team performance
- Hospitality and entertainment programmes around major sporting fixtures
Audience outcomes
- A first-hand account of how elite teams are built, recover from losing form, and hold their nerve in title races
- Concrete stories about taking the captaincy and the manager’s seat for England, and what that exposure teaches about leadership in public
- A view of the manager-player relationship that translates to senior leaders managing senior talent
- An evening of warm, self-deprecating storytelling that reliably lands with mixed corporate audiences