Background
Kennedy was born in Salford and began his career with Halifax Town making his debut in 1978-1979 as the Shaymen had a poor campaign finishing in 23rd position.
Kennedy was born in Salford and began his career with Halifax Town making his debut in 1978-1979 as the Shaymen had a poor campaign finishing in 23rd position.
He also gained two caps for Ireland during his career. Throughout his career he was renowned for his tough style of play which often left him with a poor disciplinary record. The 1979-1980 season saw Halifax make a marginal improvement finishing in 18th place.
Kennedy impressed enough with Halifax to earn a £50,000 move to Third Division Huddersfield Town.
His first season at Leeds Road was a frustrating one as Huddersfield missed out on promotion by three points. In the summer of 1982 he moved to Second Division Middlesbrough for a fee of £100,000.
He spent two seasons at Ayresome Park making 79 appearances before moving on again this time to south coast side. Pompey finished 4th in both 1984-1985 and 1985-1986 missing out on promotion by goal difference and then three points before finally going up in 1986-1987.
However with having financial problems he joined Bradford City in January 1988.
After two seasons at Bradford, Kennedy had short spells with Leicester City and Luton Town before joining his old manager Alan Ball at Stoke City for £250,000. He made 39 appearances for Stoke in 1990-1991 scoring three goals in a poor season which saw Stoke finish in their lowest ever league position of 14th in the third tier. Under the management of Lou Macari in 1991-1992 Kennedy played in 26 games and was released at the end of the season.
He then went on to play a season each at Chesterfield and Wigan Athletic.
Kennedy earned his two international caps in an international competition in May 1986. The competition held in Reykjavík, Iceland, with the and Czechoslovakia joining the hosts in a three team competition.
Although Kennedy played well in both games, even hitting the post against Iceland with a great volley, he was never selected by Jack Charlton again. The reason being that the Manager was asked by the Czechs what he was going to do about Kennedy elbowing one of their players in the mouth when he visited their dressing room after the game "with his teeth all knocked".
He never picked him again partly for this reason but also because in Tony Galvin and Kevin Sheedy he had two players that could do a better job.