Born in 1947 at Hazlewood Castle in the English county of Yorkshire, Harbin grew up in Swillington Common before emigrating with his parents to Australia at the age of ten, settling in Queensland. As a child, he played rugby league and was a boxer.[1][2] After leaving school he completed a teaching degree.[3]
After a brief spell as chief executive officer[7] at Dewsbury Rams, Harbin joined Oldham as head coach in January 2002.[8]
Association football
Late in 2002 Harbin joined Oldham Athletic as fitness conditioner and sports psychologist, alongside then-assistant, managerIain Dowie.[9] Dowie was later promoted to manager and moved to Crystal Palace, with Harbin following.
Dowie moved to Charlton Athletic in 2006, and again, appointed Harbin to his coaching staff. After Dowie's sacking in November 2006, Harbin briefly stayed under new manager Les Reed, but departed by the end of 2006. In February 2007, he linked up with Dowie for the fourth time at Coventry City. Striker Leon Best said that after Harbin's fitness sessions he felt he was "definitely the fittest I have ever been".[10] A year later he was placed in a joint-caretaker's role alongside first-team coach Frankie Bunn after the sacking of Dowie. Harbin again followed Iain Dowie to Queens Park Rangers and remained following Dowie's departure in October 2008. Harbin stayed at Loftus Road under new manager Paulo Sousa until Sousa left the club in the summer of 2009. Harbin followed Sousa to Swansea City in July 2009.[11]
Australian rugby league
After seven years in English Football and only three months at Swansea, Harbin decided to return to Australia to take up a senior coaching role at Yeppoon Rugby League club in the Queensland Rugby League Central Division.[12][13][14] He was appointed as head coach of the Central Queensland Capras in September 2011.[15] Harbin later became the manager of the Dreamtime Lodge motel in Rockhampton.[14]
^Jackson, Peter (1 January 2006). "Putting the person before the performance"(PDF). The Bulletin of the Association for Coaching (7). Association for Coaching: 8–10. Archived from the original(PDF) on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 8 July 2010.