
BOBBY ZAMORA was arguably at the top of his game when he played for Fulham, even though some supporters begged to differ.
Although he had played Premier League football for Spurs and West Ham, the form he showed in Roy Hodgson’s side finally propelled him into the England reckoning.
And he might even have gone on to greater heights after the rich goalscoring vein he hit in the 2009-10 season: Hodgson wanted to sign him for Liverpool, but he preferred to stay in the south.

Zamora had been surprised to discover West Ham had sold him to Fulham without any consultation at the start of the 2008-09 season, but he knuckled down to play a supporting role as Fulham finished seventh in the Premier League.
Certain sections of the Fulham faithful were expecting more than the four goals he scored, even though the player was fulfilling the manager’s brief, and let their feelings be known.
The player eventually had enough of the barracking and, after he had scored the only goal of the game to beat Sunderland in December 2009, he confronted them and invited them to “shut your fucking mouths”.
Hodgson defended him saying: “He has been a key player for us. Just a very good player.”

In no mood to apologise for his outburst, Zamora told Amy Lawrence of The Guardian he found some of the stick unacceptable.
“I just can’t get my head round some people,” he said. “If you are a supporter, support your team. You expect it at away grounds, fair enough, but from your own supporters it is a bit strange.
“It wouldn’t make me want to leave but it’s not nice. I wish at times football could be a happier environment.

While Brighton fans had witnessed Zamora leading from the front and scoring goals for fun, at Fulham he was asked to play a different role, and it disappointed him that people were only judging him on goals alone.
“If you ask Joe Bloggs down the street how many assists I have had this season they wouldn’t be able to tell you. Or how many team-mates I have set up for a shot at goal. Or pass completion. They just know goals, full stop,” he said.
“I was asked to play more as a defensive centre forward,” he said in an interview with the Fulham website. “It’s a job I did and I enjoyed putting AJ (Andrew Johnson) through.
“The team appreciated it; the fans possibly not. We didn’t finish seventh because I didn’t do a job. Ultimately it helped the team. Roy had faith in me and I’d like to think I repaid him.”
Zamora added: “The gaffer has been behind me from day one. There was a lot of pressure on me to score goals. Because I wasn’t, the press and the fans didn’t think I should be playing. But the gaffer and the players appreciated what I was doing for the team. That’s all that matters.”
‘Gentleman Jim’ on friendsoffulham.com recalled: “He had it in for some fans who kept booing him or saying he was not the best player and not supporting him.
“He was quite harshly criticised at the time by the fan base because he wasn’t scoring, but his general play and hold up play was very good for most of his time here.
“Whilst he could’ve managed the situation differently to endear himself more to the fans, he was combative and ended up doing very well for us.”
On the same forum, Graham Leggat said: “His best was as good as Mitro (Aleksandar Mitrovic) at his best for us and Saha (before we sold him to Man Utd). I would say even higher. He was absolutely unplayable, even if he didn’t bang in as many as the other two. A true Fulham great.”
Zamora might have escaped the Fulham boo boys if he’d accepted an approach from Hull City but he chose to stay, much to Hodgson’s delight, and went on to produce his best form.
He scored 19 goals in the season when Fulham finished 12th in the Premier League and made it through to the final of the Europa League (the first season of the revamped competition previously known as the UEFA Cup).
Zamora had been a fitness doubt before the game against Athletico Madrid in the People’s Park Stadium in Hamburg and he had to give way to Clint Dempsey 10 minutes into the second half.
The game went into extra time with the score 1-1 after 90 minutes and agonisingly Fulham succumbed to an extra time winner scored by ex-Man Utd striker Diego Forlan. Sergio Aguero, later of Man City fame, beat defender Aaron Hughes and crossed for Forlan to flick the ball home four minutes from the end.
The achilles injury Zamora had picked up prevented him from joining Fabio Capello’s England squad for the 2010 World Cup and he underwent surgery instead of heading out to South Africa.
As described in a previous blog post, Capello nevertheless kept Zamora in mind and the striker did eventually get his chance with the national side.
It was that same summer that Hodgson left Fulham to take over at Anfield and as the August transfer deadline loomed the manager hoped to persuade Zamora to join him at Liverpool.
But the player’s wife had just had twin daughters and he didn’t want to uproot the family. He was also getting on well with Hodgson’s successor Mark Hughes.
“I enjoyed my time with Mark, he came at the start of the season, I had a good pre-season with him,” he told the Say It and Spray It podcast. “Roy came in for me at Liverpool and Harry Redknapp came in for me at Spurs, but Mark said he wanted me to stay, and I’d just had my twins in August.
In the event, Zamora signed a new four-year contract – and the very next day suffered a broken leg in a tackle by Wolves’ Karl Henry.
He was sidelined for five months but managed to return before the end of the season, scored seven goals in 16 appearances and finally got to play for England that summer.
When Hughes decided to leave Fulham after just one season in charge, Zamora expressed his shock in newspaper interviews. “There was no hint of it,” he told the Mirror. “It was going well. Everyone had bought into his ideas and were just starting to play the way he wanted.
“He has decided not to stay and we go on and try and find another manager and hope we do well.
“But Mark has got his reasons. I don’t blame him at all. It’s one of those things. Managers and players come and go.”

Seven months later, Zamora left Fulham himself to rejoin Hughes, who had taken over at QPR.
Zamora didn’t see eye to eye with Hughes’ successor at Craven Cottage, Martin Jol, who he said had not got the best out of him, although he had scored seven goals in 29 appearances at the time of his departure.
Jol tried to deny there had been a rift with the player saying any talk of a disagreement between them had been inflated by the press.
“If you look at the media, they started this Bobby thing in August,” said Jol. “They said we had a bust up at the start of the season, but you always have a little bit of a disagreement.
“I don’t think there is any problem,” said Jol. “I said to him a few weeks ago ‘Do you love this club?’ and he said ‘Yes, I love this club, I love this team’.”
Nevertheless, Zamora joined QPR on deadline day in January 2012 for £4.5m and was given a two-and-a-half-year contract.
“We needed a player of his ilk at the football club and I couldn’t be more delighted, he’s a great foil for any team,” said Hughes, who’d only replaced Neil Warnock a few weeks earlier. “Bobby is a guy that makes things happen on the pitch, be it scoring goals or creating chances for others.
“He’s got great power and pace and his technical ability is top class. He’s got an excellent left foot.”
For his part, Zamora, by then 31, said: “I got on really well with the manager at Fulham. We all grew to like Mark. I think that will be the case here. He’s looking to take the club forward.
“This was the right time for me to have a fresh challenge. I had some great experiences at Fulham. Going to a European final is special. But this is a new challenge and I’m thoroughly looking forward to it.”
If Zamora hadn’t always seen eye to eye with Fulham’s followers, it didn’t get much better at Loftus Road – although he ended up the hero when he once again scored the winner in a Championship Play-Off Final.

Replicating the feat he achieved at West Ham, in May 2014 he went on as a substitute in the Championship play-off showdown at Wembley and his 91st-minute goal was enough to beat Derby County (who’d beaten Oscar Garcia’s Brighton in the semi-finals) to restore the Rs to the Premiership.
They’d only narrowly avoided relegation, by a point, at the end of the 2011-12 season and after Hughes had been sacked in November 2012, new boss Harry Redknapp couldn’t save them from the drop in 2013. Rangers went down in last place and Zamora made only 17 starts plus seven off the bench, scoring five goals.
Nevertheless, he was hailed as an example to others for putting himself through the pain barrier for the Hoops’ cause.
A troublesome hip injury hindered his involvement and some questioned why the former manager had paid big money for ‘veterans and cast-offs’. Paul Doyle in The Guardian reported that fans didn’t like an interview Zamora gave in which he said that he did not regularly watch football on television, which some took to mean he did not care about sport and was only interested in the money.
“Fans wondered aloud whether he was even bothered about getting fit enough to play again,” wrote Doyle. But he went on: “All that has changed. Now he is considered the embodiment of the warrior spirit that QPR need if they are to pull off the great escape from relegation. Zamora did not score against Sunderland but he led the line strongly, combined well with his new strike partner Loïc Rémy and, most of all, lifted his team-mates by battling manfully through pain.”
Redknapp reckoned that Zamora was only 60 per cent fit, and the persistent hip trouble was further aggravated by ankle ligament damage.
“That’s the sort of character we need,” said Redknapp. “He’s waiting for a hip operation and he has torn ankle ligaments but he’s played through that.
“At half-time we have to keep him on the move because if he sits down he’ll seize up. So, he puts a water bottle on his hip and stands at the wall doing stretches. He can’t get in his car after the game. But he’s a proper bloke. He’s not an idiot, he’s a sensible guy. He’s good for the team. He talks to people and is a big influence in the dressing room.”
QPR chairman, Tony Fernandes, also chipped in to acclaim Zamora, tweeting: “There are many young professionals who could learn a thing from Bobby Zamora. He’s an ultimate club man.”
Sadly, Rangers couldn’t avoid the drop but they bounced straight back via the aforementioned play-offs after finishing fourth in the Championship, 13 points behind second-placed Burnley, and 17 points adrift of champions Leicester City.
QPR had five fewer points than third-placed Derby and in the final at Wembley Redknapp admitted they were hanging on for their lives against the Rams having had Gary O’Neil sent off on the hour mark.
The lottery of extra time and penalties was looming when substitute Zamora struck in the dying embers of the match. “It was a fantastic goal to win the game and I couldn’t be more pleased,” Redknapp told The Standard.
“I would be a liar if I said I thought I would see us scoring. They had 11 men, were probing us and we were hanging on.
“That was a one off where you stand on the touchline, hanging on for grim death and get a goal like that.”
Once again Rangers found the Premier League too hot to handle and Zamora’s ongoing hip problem limited his involvement to 19 starts and 14 appearances off the bench. He scored just three goals as QPR went down in last place.
Redknapp, who was replaced by former Albion full-back Chris Ramsey in February 2015, described how managing Zamora’s game time had been similar to the way he had to manage Ledley King at Tottenham.
“Ledley didn’t train at all to be fair,” said Redknapp. “To think he didn’t train one day and then play 90 minutes was unbelievable.
“It does take Bobby a few days to recover after a game, so it’s always on how he feels. He’s as good as anybody at doing what he does, holding the ball up and bringing people into play.”
Redknapp continued: “Bobby has been very important for us. After about 60 to 65 minutes he has to come off, but when he’s on the pitch he has been outstanding.
“We were bringing him off the bench to start with, but we’ve reversed it and started him recently. He’s been captain and great in the dressing room, I couldn’t be more pleased with Bobby.
“He’s got his hip but he manages it and when he plays he’s been great and his attitude has been first class.”

Released in the summer of 2015, Zamora’s long-held desire to end his career back at Brighton was fulfilled when Chris Hughton invited him to join the bid for promotion from the Championship.

Hughton had previously worked with Zamora at Spurs and said: “He is a great professional. I know he will bring plenty of experience to the team, having played Premier League, European and international football.

“He will also bring a lot in terms of character to the club and to the dressing room – but most importantly, having played more than 30 times for QPR last season, he brings top quality to our offensive options.”
There was frustration all round that in spite of a handful of vital goals he registered in that 2015-16 season, the injury issues prevented him from being able to help the Albion to promotion from the Championship.
In retirement, Zamora has tried his hand at various ventures and indulges one of his great loves away from football, carp fishing, in the Grand Fishing Adventure series with Ali Hamidi on ITV 4.

Unsurprisingly, he’s also often seen as a pundit commenting on televised games involving his former clubs and is a popular guest on all sorts of podcasts, looking back at his playing days.
For example, he told the Albion podcast in November 2023: “When I came to retirement it was painful, I couldn’t carry on playing with the aches and the pains day-to-day. It was a nice relief, not having to take painkillers, anti-inflammatories that aren’t good for your stomach and liver.
“Christmas and New Year, being able to go skiing for the first time, it’s really nice. I am seven years into retirement now, but after three or four years you start to miss it; the boys and the banter in the dressing room.”
Zamora has also been involved in property development and is one of a multitude of top former players who are ambassadors with Football Escapes, football-based holiday experiences at exclusive hotels and resorts around the world.
Zamora also works in an ambassadorial role for the Albion, such as being an interviewee at the 2023 event when the club showcased the value its success has brought to the city of Brighton and Hove.
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