Kit Napier top scorer for Brighton in five of six seasons

FORMER Newcastle United centre forward Kit Napier, who moved from the Magpies to Brighton in 1966, was playing up front alongside Alex Dawson when I first started watching the Albion (in 1969).

Kit Napier at full stretch to score against Bournemouth in front of a packed Goldstone Ground on Boxing Day 1971

Born in Dunblane on 26 September 1943, Kit’s promise as a schoolboy prompted his headmaster to put his name around as a future footballing talent and he left Scotland to join Blackpool (then playing in the top tier) as a junior before turning professional in 1960. But he only played twice for the Tangerines before moving on to Second Division Preston North End in 1963-64. Things didn’t work out there either, though, and he dropped down a further division to Workington, where it all started to click.

Workington were newly-promoted to the Third Division and Napier was on the scoresheet during what has been described as the club’s proudest night, a 5-1 win in a Football League Cup 3rd round replay against First Division Blackburn Rovers on 22 October 1964.

In a team managed by Ken Furphy, who later enjoyed success as manager of Watford, one of Napier’s teammates was Keith Burkinshaw, who several years later would become manager of Tottenham Hotspur.

The Workington archive also recalls the fifth round tie, on 25 November 1964, when Workington hosted Chelsea at Borough Park.  At the time, Chelsea were riding high in the top flight of English football and were unbeaten on their travels when they arrived in west Cumbria.  Reds were fourth in the old Third Division at the time.

“In front of a record League Cup attendance (17,996), Reds gave Tommy Docherty’s Chelsea the fright of their lives by holding them to a 2-2 draw having been 0-2 down early in the game,” the archive records.  “Dave Carr and Kit Napier scored for the Reds and we had a ‘goal’ disallowed late in the game for an offside offence.

“We eventually lost the replay, 0-2, but the crowd at Stamford Bridge was 10,000 fewer than the gathering at Borough Park.”

Napier scored 25 goals in 58 games for the Cumbrian side which attracted the attention of the Geordie giants at St James’ Park. He was still only 22 when they paid £18,000 for him.

KN NUFCHe made his Newcastle debut on 6 November 1965 in a 2-0 home win over Blackpool. But it probably didn’t help his cause that Newcastle lost six of his seven other games, and drew the other!

His last game was in the Tyne-Wear derby game on 3 January 1966 when Sunderland triumphed 2-0.

Toon1892.com, a veritable mine of Newcastle history, says of Napier: “He was seen as a forward who had great potential. Unfortunately, he struggled to come to terms with the First Division and despite having all the ‘tricks’ he could not put the ball into the net.

An autographed Evening Argus photograph of Kit Napier from the 1970-71 season

“Being given only eight games to prove himself, one wonders whether he was given a real chance or not, but the arrival of (Welsh international) Wyn Davies settled any argument and Kit was off to Brighton.”

That move came early in the 1966-67 season when Brighton – bottom of the league table at the time – paid £9,000 to bring him south. He made an instant impression, scoring twice on his debut in a 5-2 win over Peterborough.

It was the perfect start to what was to be the most successful period of his career.

Over Easter in 1971, Napier scored in all three of Albion’s matches – a 1-0 home win over Aston Villa on Good Friday, a 2-0 home win over Reading the following day, and a 3-2 away win at Bradford City on Easter Monday.

The matchday programme for the following home game declared: “This gift of marksmanship blends very nicely with his ball control and general skill in possession. Not to mention the times when he lets fly at goal from outside the penalty area.

“We’ve seen some thrilling thunderbolts from him, including several during 1967-68 season when he broke Albion’s post-war individual scoring record with 30 goals, 24 of them in the league.”

He was top goalscorer in five of his six seasons with the club and, by the time he left, he’d netted 99 goals in just short of 300 appearances, including 19 in the 1971-72 promotion-winning side. Against Shrewsbury at the Goldstone, on 30 October 1971, he netted his 100th career league goal (see below). At that time, his Albion tally was 75.

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The superb The Goldstone Wrap blog did an extended piece on him in which they said: “Kit Napier is rightly considered an Albion legend. He was a ball-playing attacker, skilful with both feet, and with tremendous talent for goalscoring. At the Goldstone, Napier’s class and quick-witted play endeared him to the crowds.”

Aside from the goals, three things about him stand out in my memory:

• Kit had an amazing talent for scoring direct from corners: quite some skill. The first came in a 2-0 home win over Bury on 27 December 1969.

• In a game against Preston, on 27 February 1971, when Napier was shaping to take a penalty in front of the South Stand, Alan Duffy, promptly stepped forward, pushed his teammate out of the way and took the penalty himself – and missed!

• The following season, in a home game against Wrexham, Napier had been having a bit of an off day and the crowd were getting on his back. Eventually manager Pat Saward subbed him off and, as he trudged towards the tunnel, rather than the polite applause that tends to accompany today’s substitutions there were lots of ironic cheers to greet his withdrawal. Napier responded by waving a two-fingered salute to all corners of the ground! I’m pretty sure nothing came of it although, of course, in this day and age he’d no doubt have been hauled before the powers that be.

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Kit Napier celebrates promotion with Willie Irvine, left, and manager Saward.

With Albion promoted, Saward knew he needed to strengthen the side and he clearly didn’t think Napier was up to playing at the higher level and put him on the transfer list.

Although he made a handful of starts in the 1972-73 Second Division campaign, by the end of August he’d been sold to Blackburn Rovers (who were in the Third Division at the time) for £15,000 as Albion sought to recoup some of the £29,000 record fee they spent bringing former England international Barry Bridges to the club from Millwall.

Napier had two seasons at Ewood Park and brought down the curtain on his English league career with a further 10 goals in 54 appearances. When he returned to the Goldstone with Rovers, he was made captain for the day. “I still get goosebumps and feel emotional at how the whole crowd gave me a standing ovation,” Kit remembered many years later.

He moved to South Africa to play for Durban United and, after packing up playing, had a very successful career as a Ford car salesman in the city (he was national sales manager of the year seven years in a row) alongside his former Albion teammate Brian Tawse. An Albion matchday programme reported how they both also turned out for a local Sunday league side in Durban.

Napier’s later years were blighted by emphysema and he died in Durban on 31 March 2019 at the age of 75.

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TV pundit Dean Saunders was a top goalscorer after release by Swansea

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YOUNGER readers will be familiar with Dean Saunders as a TV pundit but in the mid 1980s he was knocking in goals for the Albion.

Oxford United was his next club in a football career that ultimately saw him transferred for millions, play for a total of eleven clubs and manage five.

I have watched Brighton in pretty much all corners of the country and been through the inevitable highs and lows across the decades.

But a winning goal scored by Saunders in Sheffield is amongst my forgettable footballing moments – simply because I missed it!

On November 29 1986, the former Albion midfielder Billy McEwan was the manager of a Sheffield United side beaten 1-0 by the Seagulls.

Saunders netted what would turn out to be the decider but, as he was burying the ball in the back of United’s net, I had my back to the action buying a warming cup of Bovril for me and pal Colin Snowball. I had made a 436-mile round trip to Bramall Lane and I had missed the only bloody goal of the game!

After a slow start to his career in his native Wales, where he’d begun with Swansea City and been out on loan to Cardiff City, Saunders began to make a name for himself after Chris Cattlin had snapped him up for Brighton on a free transfer in the summer of 1985.

By the end of his first season he’d scored 19 goals in 48 league and cup games and was voted player of the season. His performances in the second tier for the Albion caught the eye of the Welsh national team manager, Mike England, and in March 1986 Saunders made his full international debut for Wales; the first of 75 caps.

DS v PoshSaunders scored in a memorable FA Cup tie on a snow-covered pitch at Peterborough

Albion, though, could manage only a mid-table finish; Cattlin was sacked and there were rumblings of financial issues beginning to reverberate around the corridors of the Goldstone. Alan Mullery returned as manager but had limited funds to invest in the team. After his unseemly swift departure, former Worthing boss Barry Lloyd took over and fans were completely mystified as to how Lloyd could leave out Saunders in favour of Richard Tiltman, who Lloyd had plucked from local football. Since then, it has emerged that his omission was more to do with money than football ability.

An even more astonishing thing that happened to Saunders during his time with the Albion centred on a team photograph.

In the traditional pre-season team line-up, Saunders, sitting in the front row, had very evidently forgotten to wear a jockstrap under his shorts and, when the camera clicked, his manhood was captured for posterity – and a large number of female fans saw to it that sales of the photograph reached much higher levels than in other seasons. Ironically, the team’s shirt sponsor at the time was Nobo!

There was great consternation when Albion collected only £60,000 for Saunders when he was sold to Oxford, especially when his next transfer saw him move for £1million to Derby County. That deal saw the then Oxford manager Mark Lawrenson quit in protest.

At Derby, Saunders got off to a great start with 14 goals which helped County to a fourth-placed First Division finish in the 1988-89 season. He scored 24 for them in 1990-91, but the side was relegated and Saunders was quickly snapped up by Liverpool for a cool £2.9million as a strike partner for his fellow Welsh international Ian Rush. His signing by Graeme Souness was the start of a long-standing relationship as Souness also signed him for Galatasaray and Benfica and then had him as part of his management team at Blackburn Rovers and Newcastle United.

When things didn’t work out for Souness at Liverpool, Saunders was on the move again and Aston Villa splashed out what was a record fee at the time of £2.5million to take him to Villa Park.

Initially he formed a formidable strike partnership with the late Dalian Atkinson, and then paired up with Dwight Yorke. Saunders’ brace in the 1994 League Cup final helped beat Manchester United 3-1.

Another change of manager saw Saunders move on when Brian Little succeeded Ron Atkinson and he linked up once more with Souness in Turkey, for a £2.35million fee.

After only a year, he was back in the UK with Nottingham Forest, but the season ended in relegation and Saunders’ next port of call was South Yorkshire, where he spent two years with Sheffield United and three years with Bradford City.

His 19-year playing career finally came to an end in 2001 and then worked as a coach for old boss Souness for five years.

After losing his coaching job at Newcastle, he was assistant manager of Wales under John Toshack for three years (2007-10).

He became a manager in his own right, taking the helm at Wrexham when they were in the Conference. He stepped up to league management with Doncaster Rovers in 2011 but they lost their Championship status and in January 2013 he took over as manager of Wolverhampton Wanderers, only to see them drop out of the same tier after a last game heavy defeat to Brighton at the Amex, which also led to his departure.

Saunders was to pop up in Sussex again, though, when he took temporary charge of League One Crawley Town, from December 2014 through to the end of the season.

Next stop was Chesterfield but once again his tenure was shortlived as he was relieved of his duties after only five months in the hot seat.

  • Pictures of Dean Saunders in action from the 1985-86 season matchday programme.

Tidy full back Stewart Henderson polished Saints diamonds

1 SH monoALBION’S right back when I first started watching them in the late 1960s was someone who would go on to make much more of a mark as a coach.

Gareth Bale, Theo Walcott and Adam Lallana were among the players developed by Stewart Henderson. Wayne Bridge and Chris Baird, too.

That was all to come for Stewart when I first saw him wearing the number 2 shirt in Freddie Goodwin’s Division 3 side.

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Henderson, who shares the same June birthday as me, albeit he was born 11 years earlier, was only 5’6″ tall but he had noticeably muscular thighs. Hailing from Bridge of Allan in Scotland, his stature didn’t stop him earning Scottish schoolboy international honours and he was on the winning side in three matches.

The Scots beat Northern Ireland 5-1 at Windsor Park, Belfast – when future Albion teammate John Napier was playing for the home side – Wales at Ninian Park, Cardiff, and England at Ibrox Park where a 30,000 crowd watched.

That recognition followed his success playing for his school team, St Modans High School in Stirling, and Stirlingshire Schoolboys. It eventually took him to England at the age of 17 in 1964 to join Chelsea.

Tommy Docherty was their manager at that time and he obviously wasn’t convinced Henderson was good enough for the First Division, so he dropped down to the Third with Brighton where, for a couple of seasons, he had the unenviable task of trying to oust captain and Northern Irish international Jimmy Magill from the right back slot.

 

Stew Hendo blue

He made his debut on 3 May 1966 away to Exeter a month before his 19th birthday and didn’t make his home debut until 1 October that year, stepping up when Magill was injured and helping Albion to a 5-2 win over Peterborough.

It wasn’t until March 1968, though, that he eventually cemented his place in the side. But when he did, he became a near-permanent fixture for the next four years. He only scored once in 199 appearances, that coming in a 6-0 drubbing of Oldham Athletic on 24 August 1968.

Stew Hendo PoYIn the 1969-70 campaign, he missed only one game and the supporters chose him as player of the season. He played 36 league games in Pat Saward’s first season in charge and in the 1971-72 promotion campaign was a regular in the line-up right through until the famous televised Aston Villa home game in March 1972 when Saward made two shock changes and left out both Henderson and captain John Napier for the top of the table clash.

It was the beginning of the end for Henderson and he cuts a rather-forlorn looking figure in a picture of the newly-promoted team captured in the Goldstone dressing room after gaining the necessary point against Rochdale, standing fully-clothed alongside his team mates in their kit, taking a sip of champagne.

Saward made him available for transfer at the end of the season and although he stayed with the club, he played only two more league games, and a league cup game, in the following season before being transferred to Reading in June 1973.

Henderson had chalked up 198 league games and 14 cup games during his time with Brighton but the move to Berkshire was by no means a petering out of his career.

I am grateful to the website of the Reading FC Former Players Association (readingformerplayers.co.uk) to discover how, although manager Charlie Hurley signed Stewart initially as a full-back, in 1975 he pushed him into a midfield role with immediate success: Stewart scored twice in the first 17 minutes at Bradford City.

He went on to be an influential member of Reading’s 1976 Fourth Division promotion winning side. In May 1977, he was made club coach and worked closely with manager Maurice Evans helping the club win the 1978/79 Fourth Division Championship.

Amazingly Stewart was recalled to the playing squad at the beginning of the 1979/80 season, at the age of 32, and continued playing intermittently until May 1983 when he played the last of his 186 games for the Royals and became Reading’s first Centre of Excellence director.

Coaching became his new direction and he was at manager Ian Branfoot’s side when Reading beat Luton at Wembley to win the Simod Cup in 1988 (a game incidentally in which former Albion winger Neil Smillie was one of the goalscorers for the Royals and Steve Foster and Danny Wilson were playing for Luton).

Henderson left Elm Park in 1989 to take up the role of youth development officer at Southampton, where his work began helping to produce some of the finest footballing talent in the country.

He was to spend over 20 years at Southampton in various roles working with the youth and academy teams, the reserve side and even had a short spell as first team manager.

It’s worth quoting an article from the Mirror in October 2012, when Matt Law reckoned Southampton owed a £55million debt of gratitude to Malcolm Elias, Steve Wigley, Huw Jennings and Stewart ­Henderson who spotted and coached the incredible Southampton Fame Academy, which through transfer fees effectively saved the club from extinction.

Gareth Bale, Theo Walcott, Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, Wayne Bridge, Kenwyne Jones, Adam Lallana, James ­Ward-Prowse and Luke Shaw were all named as coming under the influence of the quartet who, after being released by Southampton moved on together to Fulham.

Henderson was a guest at an Albion raceday in 2006 and met up with former teammate Ian Goodwin

Clough chose Billy McEwan to add steel to Albion’s midfield

McEwan H and SBILLY McEWAN was part of a £15,000 double signing made by Brian Clough in his brief reign as manager of the Albion in the 1973-74 season.

Together with gritty defender Paul Fuschillo, McEwan arrived on the south coast from Blackpool in February 1974.

Born in Cleland, a village near Motherwell and Wishaw in Lanarkshire, on 20 June 1951, McEwan had begun his career at Pumpherston Juniors in his home country and played 60 times for Hibernian (see Shoot! picture below) before moving to Blackpool to join his younger brother Stan. But he only managed four games for the Tangerines before Clough came calling.Foot ret + McEwan

McEwan hibAlbion were flirting dangerously close to the relegation places as Clough struggled to find the right formula with players nowhere near the quality he had been used to working with at Derby.

McEwan recalled in his programme notes when managing Sheffield United against Albion in 1986: “Brian Clough bought me because he said he wanted some Scottish steel in the side.”

He featured in only 27 games for the Albion, getting on the scoresheet on three occasions, all at the Goldstone, but he was also made captain as Clough chopped and changed the line-up.

In the way players were traded like horses in those days, just nine months after his arrival he was moved on to Chesterfield (together with Ronnie Welch) in exchange for the right back Ken Tiler. Tiler himself would subsequently leave Albion for a £15,000 fee in 1979 – to join Rotherham.

From Chesterfield, a £15,000 fee took McEwan to Mansfield Town in January 1977, and he helped them to win the Division Three title that season.

Next up was Peterborough United, where one of his teammates for half a season was Lammie Robertson (pictured together below) before he moved to Rotherham for £30,000 in July 1979. A serious spinal injury forced him to miss the whole of the 1980-81 season but he finishing his playing career having scored 10 goals in 95 games for the Millers between 1979 and 1983.

rob billyHe moved onto the coaching staff at Millmoor and subsequently managed the side between 1988 and 1991. In his first season in charge (1988-89) he guided them to the old 4th division championship with a side featuring Tony Grealish in midfield.

In fact the 141 games they played under his stewardship proved to be his longest managerial reign, and McEwan was well known in football circles in Yorkshire and the East Midlands.

Remarkably he was a coach at Derby County under five different managers. Inevitably he was caretaker manager there too – on two separate occasions, seven years apart.bill derby

The first was on the final day of the 1994-95 season for an away game at Watford, following Roy McFarland’s departure the previous weekend.  He also had a spell in charge in the 2001- 02 Premier League season, for a home game against Ipswich Town and a trip to Charlton Athletic, after Colin Todd’s departure and before John Gregory was appointed.

“Derby are a great club, playing in a  great stadium with a wonderful fan base,” McEwan told Stuart Clarkson of themillers.co.uk. “Since John Gregory arrived I have been promoted to assist him in rebuilding and guiding the team back to the Premier League. Football is my life and I still appreciate getting paid for doing something that I love.”

His most successful time as a manager (in terms of wins ratio) was in charge of Conference side York City but his last league spell as a boss, with Mansfield Town in 2008, was somewhat ignominious and lasted only five months.

In March 2010, McEwan was appointed technical director of the Antigua and Barbuda Football Association and he was later manager of Antigua Barracuda FC, a position he held until March 2011.

It was reported McEwan was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 2014 and he died aged 70 on 17 February 2022.

Seagulls.co.uk revealed in April 2015 that Albion ‘keeper David Stockdale began his career under McEwan at York – only to be released!

It didn’t damage his career though and Stockdale later had eight games on loan to the Millers from parent club Fulham.

• Pictures from my scrapbook, Albion matchday programmes and online sources.

100 goals in Scotland and England for Neil Martin

2 MartinSCOTTISH international Neil Martin remains a legend at one of his homeland clubs but his brief time at Brighton was more like a bad dream after a goalscoring start.

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The striker’s youthful picture can still be found on the legends section of Queen of the South FC’s website where it notes he was among the first players to score 100 league goals in both Scotland and England.

It was while playing for the Wearsiders that he gained three Scotland international caps, all in 1965.

IMG_5147Martin scored 28 goals in 119 games for Nottingham Forest having moved down from Scotland in the 1960s and begun his English league career with Sunderland.

Martin partnered the legendary Denis Law up front in World Cup qualifiers against Poland and Finland and his third and final cap was earned in a 1-0 win over Italy playing alongside Tottenham’s Alan Gilzean.

IMG_5146One of his most prolific spells was at Coventry City (above) where, in three years, between 1968 and 1971, he scored 40 goals in 106 appearances.

He was slightly less prolific for Forest (although he was on the scoresheet in Clough’s first game in charge) before Peter Taylor brought him to the Albion on 26 June 1975.

Four new players were presented to the assembled press that pre-season and standing alongside Martin was one Peter Ward.

Martin scored on his league debut for Brighton as Rotherham United were dispatched 3-0 but he didn’t stay in the side long because Taylor brought in loan signing Barry Butlin, also from Forest, for five games to play up front alongside Fred Binney and Gerry Fell.

Martin did get a run back in the side during the autumn, when he added to his goals tally. But Taylor obviously felt the attack needed something extra and the £30,000 arrival of Northern Ireland international Sammy Morgan from Aston Villa spelt the beginning of the end of Martin’s short spell at the club.

He scored eight league goals and one in the FA Cup in 18 starts (plus four substitute appearances) but it all ended somewhat acrimoniously.

The Argus reported on February 13 1976 that the 32-year-old former Scotland international had been transfer listed and banned from the Goldstone.

Words had evidently been exchanged after Martin had been subbed off in a reserves game and, try though he did, reporter John Vinicombe couldn’t find out exactly what had gone on.

Taylor was renowned for his tough stance with players. He suspended six players in the September that season and he had fallings out with Ian Mellor, Joe Kinnear and reserve ‘keeper Derek Forster.

Martin didn’t play for the club again, instead being moved on to Crystal Palace where he scored just the once in nine appearances.

At the end of the season, he joined what was a familiar exodus for ageing English league players at the time and played alongside England’s World Cup winning captain Bobby Moore, and ex-Arsenal full back Bob McNab, for San Antonio Thunder in America.

It wasn’t unfamiliar territory for Martin because, in the summer of 1967, he was part of the Sunderland contingent who played in the NASL as Vancouver Royal Canadians. The 16-man squad also included the above-mentioned Forster.

After Martin’s 1976 stint at San Antonio, he didn’t play in England again. His final playing days were in the Republic of Ireland, interestingly being given a lifeline by another former international striker who’d played for Brighton – Barry Bridges.

The former Chelsea, Birmingham, QPR and Millwall striker had a couple of seasons managing Dublin side St Patrick’s Athletic, where Martin joined him.

The Scot had a brief managerial foray with Walsall, mainly in tandem with Alan Buckley, but it didn’t end well and he left the club in 1982.

Born in Tranent, just east of Edinburgh, on 20 October 1940, Martin’s break into the professional game came at Alloa Athletic. His 25 league and cup goals in the 1960-61 season brought about a move to Queen of the South where he continued to score plenty of goals – 33 in 61 appearances.

A £7,500 transfer fee took him to Hibernian in 1963. He’d supported them as a boy and after Jock Stein took over as manager in 1964, Martin netted 29 league and cup goals in the 1964-65 season. He said later that Stein was the biggest influence on his career.

It was top-tier Sunderland who paid £45,000 to take Martin south of the border. His goalscoring in his first taste of English football wasn’t quite as prolific as it had been in Scotland, mainly due to the Wearsiders not being able to decide on the best strike partner for the Scot.

Eventually, in 1968, he moved on to Coventry City, newly-promoted to the old First Division. He spent three years at Highfield Road, developing good partnerships with Ernie Hunt and John O’Rourke, with the emerging talents of Willie Carr and Dennis Mortimer providing good service from midfield.

His switch to Nottingham Forest towards the end of the 1970-71 season helped them survive the drop, but they went down the following season and that was the last Martin saw of top-flight football.

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