Colin Pates added class to Brighton’s defence

1 Pates profile.jpgFORMER Chelsea captain Colin Pates added a touch of class when he joined Albion, initially on loan (1990-91) from Arsenal and then permanently (1993-95).

He was a key figure in the team which reached the 1991 Division Two play-off final against Notts County, playing in the same side as his former Chelsea teammate Clive Walker.

Young Irish centre back Paul McCarthy had been at the centre of Albion’s defence (alongside Gary Chivers) for the opening part of the season but when injury ruled him out, manager Barry Lloyd pulled off something of a coup to persuade his old Chelsea teammate, George Graham, then manager of Arsenal, to loan Pates to the Seagulls for three months.

In a special Argus supplement Go for it Seagulls! previewing the play-off final, Albion reporter John Vinicombe described it as a “masterstroke” and added: “It is doubtful if Albion would have made it without him.”

In the same publication, Lloyd’s faithful no. 2, Martin Hinshelwood said Pates had got better and better since joining. “He has steadied us a little bit. He talks to players, he is a great trainer and he has brought a lot to our back four.”

In an extended interview with the Argus in October 2001, Pates recalled: “It was a good time. The result in the play-off final didn’t go our way but it was a fantastic experience for the team to play at Wembley, the side was so close to the Premiership, or First Division as it was called then.

“I’d been lucky to have played there before but to others it was the pinnacle of their careers.”

Reflecting in a subsequent matchday programme article, Pates said: “We came with a fantastic late run in the league but it proved to be a game too far for us. We made a slow start to the game and that defeat still hurts, knowing what it meant to everyone connected with the club.

“I know we changed formation that day and maybe that contributed to our defeat but I didn’t look at it like that – it was just one of those games where it wasn’t meant to be.”

After the disappointment of the loss to Neil Warnock’s County, there was a suggestion Pates might make the move to Albion permanent, but he recalled: “I think Arsenal’s valuation was much higher than the club could afford, so I went back.

“I was a bit-part player but it was a good time to be at the club with the cup finals and being part of the squads.”

With Tony Adams and Steve Bould the first choice centre backs, and David O’Leary and Andy Linighan in reserve, first team games were few and far between, but he did play 13 times (plus two as sub) in 1991-92 then twice (plus five as sub) in 1992-93, before being released in the summer of 1993.

Lloyd’s time in the Albion manager’s chair was nearing its end but he picked up Pates on a free transfer and the defender played 61 games before a bad knee injury brought his professional career to an end in January 1995.

Towards the end of his time at the Albion, he’d moved out of the centre to play left back.

In that Argus interview in 2001, he explained how he had been grateful to accept the advice of Lloyd’s successor as manager, Liam Brady. “Liam told me that I should think of my health before my playing career and that I would be a fool to myself if I carried on playing.

“My knee had fallen apart and it was the right advice. If I’d ignored it I could well have ended up not being able to walk. Footballers need to be told when it is the end. I’ll always be grateful to Liam for that.”

Born in Carshalton on 10 August 1961, Pates made his way through the youth teams at Chelsea and made his debut at Stamford Bridge in an astonishing game which saw Chelsea beat Orient 7-3!

“I just remember Geoff Hurst, who was our manager at the time, coming up to me on the Friday and telling me that we had a few injuries so I was playing,” Pates told the official Chelsea website. “He literally just said: ‘Tomorrow you play,’ and that was it. Micky Droy was injured but he was brilliant with me, he gave me loads of advice and came to the game to support me.

“It certainly wasn’t a good advertisement for defenders but as long as you come away with the win the fans are happy. It’s one of those days where you’re so fired up it just goes so quickly. You come off the pitch at the end and have no recollection of what happened really. I was up against some good, experienced pros and it was quite daunting, but I really enjoyed it.”

It seems remarkable now but Chelsea only narrowly avoided relegation to the old Third Division in 1983, and, as a result, manager John Neal had quite a clear-out of players but Pates’ performances and attitude earned him the captain’s armband just before his 22nd birthday.

pates connor“I think he wanted someone who had come through the ranks and knew the club,” Pates said. “I was fortunate enough to be one of the few players – along with the likes of John Bumstead – who he kept on from before.”

Pates added: “I loved John Neal, he was a man of few words but when he said something you listened because it was going to be something poignant or important. He was a good man-manager and would always take care of you if you had problems and be there for a chat. You wanted to play for him.”

The club’s fortunes changed after they brought in the likes of Kerry Dixon, David Speedie and Pat Nevin and they soon returned to the elite as Second Division champions in 1984.

Two years later, Pates was holding another trophy aloft – the Full Members’ Cup – after a dramatic 5-4 win over Manchester City at Wembley which, extraordinarily, was played the day after they’d played a league game in which they’d won 1-0 at Southampton. Pates made history by becoming the first-ever Chelsea player to lift a trophy at the iconic stadium (when Ron Harris lifted the FA Cup in 1970 it was at Old Trafford, where the replay had taken place after a 2-2 draw at Wembley).

“It’s great to play at Wembley with thousands of fans screaming their heads off, and once you’re on the pitch you don’t care what cup it is, you just want to win it,” said Pates.

After 346 league and cup appearances for Chelsea, he was surprisingly sold to Charlton Athletic for £430,000. When the Albion visited Chelsea for a Division 2 league game on 29 October 1988, the matchday programme carried an article headlined ‘Colin’s farewell’, detailing the circumstances.

“The transfer of Colin Pates to Charlton Athletic not only surprised many Blues fans but Colin himself,” it began.

“It came right out of the blue,” said Pates. “Bobby Campbell told me that a First Division club wanted to sign me. At first, I was taken aback. I have been at Stamford Bridge since I was a schoolkid. Chelsea has become a way of life.”

However, he agreed to talk to Charlton boss Lennie Lawrence and was delighted to have made the move.

“After 11 years at Stamford Bridge, this is a new lease of life for me,” Pates told the programme.

In January 1990, aged 28, he joined Arsenal for £500,000, even though it was clear he would be a back-up. “I knew this was going to be the last opportunity to have a move like this in my career and although I knew I was only being signed as cover, I couldn’t turn it down.

“When I first met George (Graham) in his office at Highbury, he was honest and straight talking. He told me I’d have to work hard to get into the side.”

However, within a month he made his Gunners debut at left back in place of the injured Nigel Winterburn in a 1-0 defeat to Sheffield Wednesday.

Although he found it difficult to motivate himself for reserve team football, he pointed out: “I still enjoyed the training sessions with the first team and I did learn a lot about defending from George, even at that late stage in my career.”

Pates also famously scored a goal in a European Cup match at Highbury against a Benfica side managed by Sven-Goran Eriksson.

On his release from Brighton, Pates had a spell as player-manager of Crawley, played a handful of games for non-league Romford, and coached youngsters in various places including Mumbai in India and the Arsenal School of Excellence.

He subsequently became head of football at the independent Whitgift School in South Croydon, where he coached most sports and saw pupils Victor Moses and Callum Hudson-Odoi go on to have professional careers.

Pates also went back to Stamford Bridge on matchdays working in the hospitality lounges.

Further reading

http://www.theargus.co.uk/sport/6772423.Pates_is_on_a_mission_with_a_squad_of_1_400/

http://www.chelseafc.com/news/latest-news/2017/02/foot-in-both-camps–colin-pates.html

2 Pates in Chel prog

Controversial Gonzalo Jara Reyes won’t forget Brighton

Jara BHA blue and white

GONZALO JARA Reyes has never been far from the headlines for all the wrong reasons and his spell on loan to Brighton from West Bromwich Albion was no different.

The defender had two separate spells on loan with the Seagulls during the 2011-12 season but he hit the headlines for off-field matters.

He appeared before Brighton magistrates in January 2012 for driving his car in the city while already banned for drink driving.

He admitted driving an Audi Q7 sports car in Richmond Terrace, Brighton, while disqualified and driving without insurance and collected a £3,500 fine, having been banned for 17 months the previous July.

The Brighton bench handed him a further 12 month ban and ordered him to pay £100 costs.

Having joined Gus Poyet’s Brighton on loan in October 2011, he had only played four matches before missing that memorable December 2011 1-0 defeat against Burnley – when Ashley Barnes and Romain Vincelot were sent off in the first 12 minutes of the game.

It transpired he had been arrested by Sussex Police on the morning of the match, and was still in custody when the game kicked off.

It was an eventful few days for the Chile international because, two days after his arrest, West Brom recalled him early from the planned 13-game loan to the Seagulls as cover for the Baggies’ Christmas programme.

West Brom manager at the time, Roy Hodgson, was confident it wouldn’t affect his game, telling the Express & Star: “Most footballers have got something else going on in their lives that they have to deal with when they go onto the football field and they put it into another compartment.

“His is perhaps a bit more serious than others but he’ll have to learn to deal with it.”

On the final day of the transfer window in January 2012, Jara eventually returned to Brighton for the remainder of the season. But it wasn’t long before he was in trouble again.

On 17 March 2012, in a 3-1 defeat away to Blackpool, referee Simon Hooper showed Jara a red card in the 57th minute when he lunged in with a late challenge to take down Keith Southern. It wasn’t the first time he’d seen red at Bloomfield Road and it earned him a three-match ban. By the season’s end he’d played a total of just 14 games for Brighton.

Born in Hualpén on 29 August 1985, Jara grew up there, playing for Huachipato before winning three league titles in Chile with Colo-Colo.

He represented Chile in the 2005 World Youth Championship in the Netherlands and he came to the attention of West Brom’s head of EU recruitment Tony Spearing while captaining the Chile Under-23 team in Toulon in 2008.

He had actually already played for the full international side, on a 2006 European tour, and has since played more than a hundred games for his country.

Known for his versatility, he can play in either full back positions, central defence or as a holding midfielder.

He was 24 when West Brom head coach Roberto Di Matteo signed him in August 2009 for £1.4m. Di Matteo told the club’s website: “Gonzalo is an exciting, quick, technical and aggressive player.

“He’s still young and has a strong desire to achieve. Gonzalo wants to go to that next level and prove himself in Europe.”

He was a regular in his first season at The Hawthorns before breaking a metatarsal. He played right back in the Baggies’ Premier League side but he got himself sent off in a game away to Blackpool when the side were already down to 10 men. After that, he was in and out of the team and new manager Roy Hodgson preferred Steven Reid, although Hodgson reckoned the move to Brighton was simply about giving him game time.

The future England manager said at the time: “I’m hoping he’ll get three good months down in Brighton which is better than three months here playing reserve team football because Jara is not a reserve team player.”

Di Matteo no doubt tipped off his old Chelsea pal Poyet about Jara’s capabilities, prompting his eventful time with the Seagulls.

He returned to West Brom at the end of the 2011-12 season, and the following season went out on loan again, this time to Nottingham Forest. On his release from West Brom in 2013, he joined Forest on a permanent deal but was one of seven players released a year later. It meant he went to the 2014 World Cup in Brazil without a club.

It has been while on international duty that Jara has made even more of a name for himself – and not in a good way!

After Jara had left Forest and moved to Germany he was caught up in a most unsavoury incident while playing for his country.

In a Copa America quarter-final in Santiago, which the hosts won 1-0 with a late goal, television images appeared to show Jara anally fingering Uruguay striker Edinson Cavani before then falling to the ground holding his face after the Uruguayan responded by flicking his hand onto the Chilean’s chin.

Cavani was shown a second yellow card for his role in the incident, but Jara escaped unpunished by the referee.

The South American confederation investigated the incident, and Jara was subsequently fined £4,775 and banned for three matches.

Jara’s club side, Mainz, were singularly unimpressed. Sporting director Christian Heidel told Bild: “We do not tolerate that. What makes me more angry than the prod, however, is what happens after. There is nothing I hate more than theatrics.”

Jara had previous against Uruguay too. During a running battle with the then-Liverpool striker Luis Suarez during a 2013 World Cup qualifier between Chile and Uruguay, Jara grabbed Suarez by the testicles, with Suarez responding with a punch in the face.

In January 2016, Jara left Mainz to return to Chile “for personal reasons” after his contract was terminated prematurely.

He now plays for the Santiago-based Club Universidad de Chile, one of the top sides in the country.

Pictures from The Argus show the Chilean in both Brighton strips and in West Brom’s colours.

Winger Neil Smillie was a Wembley winner eventually

NS v MU Wemb

AN UNSUNG hero of Brighton’s 1983 FA Cup Final side, winger Neil Smillie, had the distinction of being the first ever apprentice the legendary Malcolm Allison signed for Crystal Palace.

Big Mal had enjoyed league and FA Cup success at Manchester City as Joe Mercer’s sidekick but he swept into Palace in the early 70s as a boss in his own right, courting publicity with his flamboyant fedora hat and giant cigar.

Smillie admitted: “I was going to West Ham but Allison persuaded me to take a look at Palace.

“The place was so alive and vibrant under him that I went there instead.”

Born in Barnsley on 19 July 1958, Neil followed in the footsteps of his dad, Ron, a former professional who played for Barnsley and Lincoln.

After joining Palace in 1974, Smillie turned professional a year later and was on Palace’s books for seven years, although he had three loan spells away from Selhurst.

In 1977, he went briefly to Brentford, who he ultimately would have a long association with later in his career.

Smillie MemphisThe following two years, he went to play in America for Memphis Rogues (pictured left) where his teammates were players from the English game winding down their careers: the likes of former Albion players Tony Burns and Phil Beal, ex-Chelsea, Leicester and Palace striker Alan Birchenall and former Chelsea winger Charlie Cooke; the side being managed by former Chelsea defender Eddie McCreadie.

At the end of the 1981-82 season, Smillie was denied a pay rise by Palace so he decided to quit and wrote letters to clubs in the top two divisions in England asking for a job!

Brighton had managed to offload the troublesome Mickey Thomas to Stoke City so had a need for a left winger. They were the first to come up with an offer, and with full back Gary Williams surplus to requirements since the arrival of experienced defender Sammy Nelson, Brighton offered him in exchange for Smillie.

The bubble-haired winger gratefully accepted the switch to the Seagulls. While he made the starting line-up for the opening game of the new season, a heavy (5-0) defeat away at West Brom in the next game then saw him dropped and sidelined for months.

It was only once ultra-cautious manager Mike Bailey had left that Smillie got back in contention, and only then – in January 1983 – through someone else’s misfortune.

He said: “I was out in the cold and only got my break when Giles Stille was injured during the Cup game against Newcastle United.”

Smillie seized his opportunity and remained in the side for the rest of the season, culminating in the two Wembley FA Cup Final matches against Manchester United.

Back in the second tier following Brighton’s relegation, Smillie played 28 games plus once as a sub but following new manager Chris Cattlin’s signing of Northern Irish winger Steve Penney, there was competition in the wide areas.

Throughout the 1984-85 campaign, Smillie was more often than not a substitute rather than a starter. He did manage a seven-game run of appearances in the late autumn and began the final three games of the season, but the last game, a 1-0 home win over Sheffield United, proved to be his farewell.

Smillie revealed in a 2003 interview with Spencer Vignes that he’d discovered Manchester City had been keen to take him on loan but Cattlin hadn’t sanctioned it, even though he wasn’t selecting him.

“Chris had turned them down, saying I was a good player and he needed me. Yet he wasn’t even playing me! I just couldn’t believe he’d done it,” he said. Although he and his family were settled in Sussex, he realised he had to move.

Several eyebrows were raised when Cattlin managed to secure a £100,000 fee from Watford for Smillie’s services in the summer of 1985. The winger joined Graham Taylor’s beaten FA Cup finalists but he failed to establish himself in the side and made just 16 first team appearances in a season with the Hornets.

In the summer of 1986, he moved on to Reading for two years and, in 1988, after his disappointment with Brighton, Smillie was finally a winner at Wembley, scoring and setting up two goals as Reading beat Luton 4-1 in the Simod Cup Final.

The Hatters were led by former Albion captain Steve Foster and another of Smillie’s former teammates, Danny Wilson, was in their midfield. Mick Harford scored the opening goal for Luton, but Smillie’s pass allowed Michael Gilkes to bundle home an equaliser.

Smillie then won a spot kick converted by Stuart Beavon, and, in the second half, Mick Tait swept home another Smillie assist. Smillie then rounded off a great afternoon by scoring himself. It was hailed as one of the best days in Reading’s history, witnessed by over 45,000 loyal Royals fans.

Nevertheless, Smillie didn’t hang around and instead joined Brentford, where his former Palace teammate Phil Holder was assisting the manager at the time, Steve Perryman.NS Bees

Nick Bruzon interviewed Smillie in depth for a Where are they now? feature on the Brentford FC website in July 2010.

“Representing Brentford over three different decades, initially on loan in 1977 and then for five years from 1988 to 1993, Neil Smillie combined raw pace with ceaseless energy to make him one of the most popular players to patrol the New Road touchline,” said Bruzon. “Whilst with Brentford he experienced promotion, relegation and play off heartbreak, scoring 18 goals in 185 games.”

Smillie said: “I’ve got to say, the five years I spent at Brentford (and I was 30 when I signed) I thoroughly enjoyed.

“I’d reached a point in my career where I felt comfortable in terms of what I could give on the pitch. I’d always been a hard worker and I got the feeling that the supporters appreciated someone who worked hard.”

In the 1992-93 season, he played alongside Chris Hughton, who, like Smillie, was winding down his playing career.

“I loved taking people on and I loved getting crosses in for people to score so that just seemed to fit in nicely at the time with the team that we had,” he said. “I played my part as well as others who played theirs in getting the ball to me. We all did our bit and for me it was a great part of my career.”

On leaving Brentford, Smillie became a player-coach at Gillingham when his old Palace teammate Mike Flanagan was the manager. When Flanagan was sacked, Smillie took over the managerial reigns on a caretaker basis while the club tried to stabilise during financial troubles.

Smillie told Bruzon: “We were in a fairly precarious position and ended up in a decent position. So there was some enjoyment to it but the situation at a club without any money and struggling was difficult.”

Some names familiar to Brighton fans were at Gillingham at the time. Smillie played up front with Nicky Forster. Paul Watson was in defence and Richard Carpenter in midfield.

His three-month reign came to an end when Gillingham appointed Tony Pulis as the new manager and former Palace manager Alan Smith took Smillie to Wycombe Wanderers to look after their youth team.

When Smith left, Smillie was caretaker manager until former Albion full back John Gregory got the managerial post. Smillie then became Gregory’s successor in the hot seat for a year.

When the inevitable sack came, Smillie stepped outside of day to day running of football to become sports marketing manager for Nike in the UK. His role was to identify emerging talent for Nike to associate themselves with, and, as a result he stayed in touch with the game.

Among the players he signed to Nike were Theo Walcott, Darren Bent, Gabby Agbonlahor, James Milner, Tom Huddlestone, Danny Welbeck and Johnny Evans.

Pictures show (top) Smillie in action on the cover of the Albion programme; walking his dog; in Match magazine, on the cover of Shoot! being tackled by Liverpool’s Sammy Lee; a Simod Cup winner with Reading.

South Coast suited utility man Paul Wood at Brighton, Bournemouth and Pompey

paul wood (red)

THE quote at the top of an Albion matchday programme feature about Paul Wood sums up his Brighton career perfectly.

“I’ve played so many positions at the Albion. I’m not sure that I consider myself a centre-forward any more.

“Actually, playing on the right as I am now takes my career virtually full circle – I always used to be a winger before I joined Portsmouth.”

Manager Barry Lloyd bought Wood from Portsmouth for £40,000 in the summer of 1987 to play up front alongside Kevin Bremner, with Garry Nelson wide on the left.

Nelson, of course, thought otherwise – and 32 goals in a promotion season playing down the middle rather proved him right.

Thus Wood found himself deployed in that rather dubious-sounding role of ‘utility player’.

“A couple of goals would have done me great guns when I got a chance up front,” Wood admitted. “I don’t think I let anybody down when Nelson and Bremner were injured but I wasn’t putting them away.

“It didn’t really bother me too much. I was most happy just to be getting first team football, especially as I had spent the previous year at Portsmouth, while they got promoted to Division One, watching from the stands.”

A pelvis ligament problem had sidelined Wood at Fratton Park so the new lease of life as part of a promotion-winning squad was a welcome break.

After making his Albion debut in a 2-0 home win over Fulham on 29 August 1987, Wood admitted: “I found it very tiring after playing only one hour of reserve football in the last nine months. But I enjoyed the experience and I’m looking forward to creating and taking more chances.”

PW colBorn in Saltburn-by-the-Sea in the north east on 1 November 1964, at one point it was thought Wood’s football career was over almost before it had begun.

As a talented schoolboy footballer, he was spotted playing for Middlesbrough Boys as the side won the English Schools’ Trophy. His school headteacher had connections at Elland Road so he went for a trial but only 15 minutes into the game broke a leg.

It seems he had broken a knuckle at the back of his knee and the Leeds physio, Bob English, took a look at the injury and said: “Sorry son, you’ve broken your leg, ripped all the ligaments, and I think you’re finished.”

Thankfully for the budding young footballer, the dire diagnosis was wrong, but it put him off trying to make it at Leeds and instead he got picked up by Portsmouth whose scout in the north had seen him playing for Guisborough under-16s.

It was a long way from home, but he appreciated the club’s more caring nature and when a homesick Wood mentioned how he was feeling, manager Frank Burrows took £30 from his own pocket to send the youngster home for a break.

Wood’s Pompey debut eventually came, ironically at Middlesbrough, after Bobby Campbell had taken over in the manager’s chair.

Originally, he had only travelled with the squad so that he could visit friends and relatives but a couple of players fell ill and Wood got his big chance.

“Before I knew it, I was in the team,” he said. “I think that’s the best game I’ve ever played, although it flew past so fast.”

Another favourite moment came when he scored two in a 4-0 win over Shrewsbury. England World Cup winner Alan Ball had succeeded Campbell as manager and said after the 21-year-old’s performance ‘a star is born’. Wood told portsmouth.co.uk: “That will stay with me for the rest of my life. For somebody who has achieved what he has in football and the respect he commands to come out and give me that compliment was a great feeling.

“It was a game where everything seemed to go right. I scored a couple and was in confident form.”

A run in the team followed for Wood, who made 25 league appearances as Pompey fell just short of promotion.

The following season, he only played seven games at the start of the season before sustaining the pelvic injury he put down to playing three times on plastic pitches in the space of three weeks.

paul wood portrait

By the time Wood had made his recovery, Pompey were playing in the top flight and he had fallen down the pecking order. The move to Brighton came about after Wood scored a hat-trick for Portsmouth’s reserves.

He told portsmouth.co.uk: “I was disappointed to go because I never really wanted to leave but I had a mortgage to pay and no bonuses on appearance money was forthcoming.”

Ironically it was the long-term injury problems to crowd favourite Steve Penney that presented Wood with a lot of his games at Brighton and when Penney got back into the side in 1989, Wood put in a transfer request because he felt he was doing well enough to merit a place.

Penney was to move on before Wood but eventually, after two and a half seasons with the Seagulls in which he played 88 games + 17 as sub, and scored just eight goals, he was sold.

That canny transfer market operator Lloyd had acquired the services of one-time England international wideman Mark Barham, who had been written off elsewhere because of injury issues, so he dispensed with Wood’s services by selling him to promotion-chasing Sheffield United.

On 5 May 1990, Wood was on the scoresheet as Dave Bassett’s United beat Leicester City 5-2 to earn promotion to the top division. Playing alongside him were future Blades manager Chris Wilder, former Albion assistant manager Bob Booker and Mark Morris, who went on to play for Bournemouth and Brighton.

In 1991, Wood played 21 games for Bournemouth on loan from United, before making the move permanent, and in three years with the Cherries he scored 18 times in 78 appearances.

Then, in a deal that saw the Cherries acquire out-of-favour Portsmouth striker Warren Aspinall (known to BBC Radio Sussex listeners as a matchday summariser) Wood returned to Fratton Park.

He said: “It was fantastic for me to get the opportunity to return to the club.”

Pompey used him as more of a utility player than ever before, Jim Smith playing him in midfield and his successor Terry Fenwick even trying him at wing-back. Sadly, though, he suffered a bad knee injury that curtailed his professional career, causing him to retire in 1996.

He managed to play 20 games and score 15 goals for a Hong Kong side, Happy Valley, in 1997-98 and back in the UK linked up with National League South side Havant & Waterlooville.

He spent five years there, retiring at the end of the 2002-03 season after playing 137 games and scoring 48 goals.

Wood now runs his own Bournemouth-based decorating business.

Read more at: http://www.portsmouth.co.uk/sport/football/pompey/big-interview-paul-wood-1-7109817

£2m man Paul Kitson seldom off Brighton’s treatment table

main Kitson

OVER THE years there have been certain players, often strikers, who have fallen victim to the Brighton boo boys.

In recent times there was Chuba Akpom, a little further back Billy Paynter and former Newcastle United striker Leon Best, but, for the subject of this post, I’m going to recall another former Newcastle forward, Paul Kitson.

Kitson clocked up a total of just over 300 games across 16 years for nine different English clubs, and won seven caps for England under 21s, four of them in the same side as Dean Blackwell.

But, in an unhappy spell with the Seagulls in 2002-03, he managed only seven starts and three substitute appearances and scored just twice.

For whatever reason, he just never seemed to be fit and Brighton fans were short on patience. Even his surname is nearly an anagram of sicknote!

Back in August 2002, newly appointed manager Martin Hinshelwood was like the cat that got the cream. He told The Argus: “I’m very pleased. It’s my first signing and he is somebody we have been chasing for a couple of weeks.

“He’s had a lot of experience at Leicester, Derby, Newcastle and West Ham and he’s played with some quality strikers. That will help the younger players we have got in the squad.

“We have been patient, but it just shows we want to go for a bit of quality. He has played in the Premier League and hopefully he will be right for us.

“We are looking forward to playing him with Bobby Zamora. It will be a couple of weeks yet before he (Kitson) is fit, but it is a great signing for the club to get somebody of that calibre. It has taken a while, but he has agreed with us and I am really looking forward to working with him.”

Sadly, initially Zamora was injured and then Kitson suffered one injury after another and made just two substitute appearances between the middle of September and the start of April.

In one of its ‘rolling back the years’ features, The Argus recalled: “Albion fans who had been excited by his arrival had all but given up hope on Kitson.

“But manager Steve Coppell said all along the forward had something to offer and he came good in a Friday night game away to Reading.”

That was on 4 April 2003 and I remember it well having travelled to the game with Kev Bennett, who somehow managed to blag us into the hotel at the Madejski Stadium for pre-match drinks despite a ‘no away fans’ sign on the door!

Although the season would ultimately end in the disappointment of relegation, at the time Coppell’s side were battling to avoid the drop and they stepped up that battle at Reading.

Paul Brooker put them ahead on 16 minutes but most people felt it was just a matter of time before Reading hit back,” said the Argus.

Cometh the hour, cometh the man – well 77 minutes actually. Kitson had been a surprise inclusion on the substitutes’ bench, but, five minutes after replacing the ineffectual Graham Barrett to play alongside Zamora, he finally earned his money when he headed home a Richard Carpenter free-kick to make it 2-0.

Jamie Cureton did pull one back for Reading in the closing minutes but Albion held on to win 2-1 to keep their slim survival hopes alive a little longer.

David Alexander for The Guardian wrote: “Reading’s lone striker Nicky Forster missed three clear chances to level after Brooker’s goal and Glen Little, the Burnley winger making his debut after joining Reading on loan, was twice denied, a header cleared off the line and a fierce volley saved by Dave Beasant.”

Kitson’s goal was his first in 17 months and, almost embarrassed by that statistic, didn’t celebrate. His teammates came out in the media afterwards to defend him.

Beasant, who like Kitson had spent most of his career at the top level, told The Argus: “He came on and did well. He’s a big, strong lad and every time I had the ball he wanted it from me.

“He’s played in the Premier Division and he showed he’s quick in mind as well. He wants to do well now. I think a lot of people have taken Kits the wrong way at this club.

“People are saying he hasn’t justified himself here, but he’s had a problem. He’s been injured and you can’t do anything when you are injured.”

Screen Shot 2021-05-01 at 19.50.40Zamora added: “The lads see him in training, so we know what a quality player he is. Hopefully he will be injury free for the run-in.

“I was looking forward to playing with him when he signed. Nathan Jones has been playing with him in the Reserves recently and he’s had nothing but praise for him.”

Meanwhile boss Coppell acknowledged: “The supporters are like everybody here, we just want to see him play and play regularly.

“It’s like having a present you can’t open. Hopefully now we can take a few layers off and see what he’s made of.”

Born in County Durham, on 9 January 1971, Kitson was picked up by Leicester City as a youngster and came through their youth ranks before breaking through to the first team in 1989.

Dub + Kitson

A young Paul Kitson in action for Leicester up against Albion’s Keith Dublin

He scored 11 goals in 63 games for Leicester and was called up for international duty with England under 21s, at the time managed by Ray Harford.

He made his debut as a substitute in a 2-1 win over Senegal in the Toulon tournament in the summer of 1991 when Alan Shearer scored England’s two goals and David James was in goal.

Kitson started the next game alongside Shearer and scored in a 6-0 win over Mexico. He also played in the final against France which England won 1-0, courtesy of a goal from Shearer.

Lawrie McMenemy then took over as manager for the 1991-92 season and Kitson played in four of their seven games, scoring twice.

In his last game, a 0-0 draw away to France in May 1992, he was replaced by future teammate Andy Cole.

By then, his club career had taken a major turn, promotion-chasing Derby, bankrolled by new chairman Lionel Pickering, having snapped him up for £1.3 million (with Phil Gee and Ian Ormondroyd going in the opposite direction as part of the deal).

County missed out on promotion to what would have been the first season of the Premier League when they lost in the play-offs….to Kitson’s old club, Leicester!

Under Arthur Cox at Derby, Kitson scored 49 goals in 132 appearances over two and a half years but not long into the season after they lost 2-1 in the play-off final – again to Leicester – he was heading back to his native north east.

It seems remarkable to think that Newcastle paid Derby an eyewatering £2,250,000 for Kitson in September 1994, especially as he was mainly a back-up to first choices Cole and Peter Beardsley.

Nevertheless, maybe the Magpies knew they would be selling Cole to Manchester United in January 1995. That departure gave Kitson the chance to start up front and he finished the season with eight goals in 26 games.

Goalscoring centre forwards are part of football folklore on Tyneside and the summer of 1995 saw the arrival of Les Ferdinand to fill that famous role.

With Faustino Asprilla also added to the mix as Newcastle challenged for top spot, only to finish five points behind Manchester United, Kitson’s chances were limited and he played only seven league games in the whole season.

It didn’t get much better in the summer of 1996 when Shearer arrived for a £15m fee. By February 1997, Kitson had played just three league games and, after playing only 36 games in three years, he was sold to struggling West Ham for £2.3m.

Manager Harry Redknapp also spent £3.3m on the bustling Welsh striker John Hartson and between them they scored the goals which kept the Hammers in the top division. Kitson scored on his debut in a 4-3 win over Spurs and finished with eight in 14 league games.

When he signed, Redknapp’s assistant, Frank Lampard senior, said: “The last man we signed from Newcastle was Bryan ‘Pop’ Robson in the 1970s and Paul has the same qualities. He is quick, sharp and has good physical attributes.”

In a game against Everton at Upton Park, Kitson scored twice for the Hammers but missed a penalty that would have given him a hat-trick and Everton nicked a point with a 90th minute equaliser from Duncan Ferguson.

Redknapp was fuming in his post-match interviews, telling Dave Hadfield of the Independent: “If we had scored it, the game’s over,” he said. “But we’ve given it to a boy who isn’t interested in taking penalties. What is it? A testimonial match? We’re in a relegation battle.”

Normal penalty taker Julian Dicks was injured and Hartson was West Ham’s designated penalty taker but a heart-rules-head decision gave the task to Kitson. “That was the killer for us. I can’t believe the unprofessionalism of it,” Redknapp railed.

Hadfield reported: “Kitson, up to that point, was having the sort of game in which anyone would have backed him to put away the spot-kick with ease. His failure to do so could prove monumentally costly at the end of the season, which is a harsh judgement on a player who had looked a world beater in that first half.”

But the great escape was achieved and is re-told in the media from time to time. For example, it was recalled by Sid Lowe in The Guardian in 2010, when he described the signing of Kitson and Hartson as “footballing Red Adairs”.

“On the final day of the season, they slaughtered Sheffield Wednesday 5-1 to complete an implausible survival,” said Lowe. “Kitson got a hat-trick; Hartson got two. It could hardly be any other way. They had scored 12 in the last 13 games. ‘Without them, we would certainly have gone down,’ insisted Redknapp.”

At the time, West Ham fans hailed Kitson and Hartson as the best striking partnership since Tony Cottee and Frank McAvennie. While he would ultimately spend five years on West Ham’s books, it was never as good for Kitson after those final months of the 1996-97 season.

He did, though, get the chance to show Newcastle what they were missing when he scored against them in a 2-0 win at Upton Park in March 1999. After a couple of glaring misses, he finally got on the scoresheet in the 83rd minute, as described by Gerry Cox in The Guardian: “The former Newcastle striker chased a long ball from Lampard, turned defenders Charvet and Andrew Griffin on the edge of the penalty area and slotted a low shot into the far corner of the goal.”

Kitson’s appearances became fewer than a handful, especially after Glenn Roeder became manager, although in November 2001 he produced a hat-trick in a 4-4 draw with Charlton that he has said was the highlight of his career.

The game was live on Sky and, after scoring the opening goal, Kitson twice equalised for the Hammers to claim the matchball…but they were the only goals he scored in the 2001-2002 season, and were his last in claret and blue.

West Ham sent him out on loan spells to both Charlton and Crystal Palace before finally releasing him on a Bosman free transfer to Brighton in the summer of 2002.

After his injury-plagued season with the Seagulls ended in relegation for the club, Kitson was released and moved to Rushden and Diamonds, who, at the time, had risen to the dizzy heights of English football’s third tier.

They were managed by the former Ipswich, Arsenal and England midfielder Brian Talbot.

On 30 September 2003, I recall my one and only visit to Nene Park to watch Brighton take on Rushden.

Goals from Guy Butters, Leon Knight and Zesh Rehman earned the Albion a 3-1 win. Kitson was on the Rushden subs bench and, although he did get on in the 62nd minute in place of David Bell, he wasn’t able to score against his old club.

At the time, he was on non-contract terms and playing for nothing but eventually he managed 28 appearances for them and helped himself to five goals.

The following year, Aldershot was to be his final club before retiring after just one game for them.

Reports say he returned to the north east after his playing days were over.

2 montage PK - Derby3 montage PK -Newcastle

4 montage PK - W Ham

European Cup Winners’ Cup winner Doug Rougvie left Chelsea to become Brighton captain

Rougvie portrait

THE SUMMER of 1987 saw Brighton & Hove Albion back in the old Third Division for the first time in 10 years.

It was the start of manager Barry Lloyd’s first full season in charge and he had gone back to his old club Chelsea to recruit his no.2, head coach Martin Hinshelwood, and a new captain for the Seagulls in rugged centre half Doug Rougvie, for a fee of £73,000.

Many years later, Gus Poyet brought in another Scottish captain in Gordon Greer. Rougvie certainly didn’t have Greer’s ability on the ball but he had been a European Cup Winners’ Cup winner with Aberdeen and he wasn’t afraid to put himself about.

Rougvie had a regular Captain’s Column in the 1987-88 season’s matchday programme, and for the opening game against York City, he wrote: “I’m delighted to be rewarded with the captaincy. It’s a great honour for me and my family.

“With five new players at the club, a new coach in Martin Hinshelwood and Barry Lloyd beginning his first full season in charge, I’m sure I won’t be the only person feeling a bit nervous in the dressing room.”

Born in Ballingry, Fife, on 24 May 1956, Rougvie signed schoolboy forms for Dunfermline Athletic at the age of 12 and his favourite player was another uncompromising centre half, Roy Barry, who after playing for Dunfermline headed south and played for Coventry City when they were regulars amongst the elite.

Rougvie joined Aberdeen in 1972 and had a loan spell at junior club Rosemount before getting a first team chance under future Scotland manager Ally McLeod in the 1975-76 season. He was largely overlooked by McLeod’s successor, Billy McNeill, but when Alex Ferguson arrived his fortunes changed.

It was a leg break for regular centre half Willie Garner that gave him his opportunity to step in and he eventually made 279 appearances for the Dons over eight years. Ferguson sparked a huge revival in Aberdeen’s fortunes and Rougvie was involved as they won two Scottish league titles, three Scottish Cups, and the European Super Cup. The highlight, though, was undoubtedly being part of the side that beat Real Madrid 2-1 in the final of the 1983 European Cup Winners’ Cup in Gothenburg.

That side was captained by Willie Miller and included Alex McLeish at centre back, Gordon Strachan in midfield and future Albion manager Mark McGhee up front.

On 13 December that year, Jock Stein selected him at left back for his one and only Scotland cap, featuring in a 2-0 defeat against Northern Ireland at Windsor Park, Belfast, in what was the last game of the old British Championship.

afcheritage.org recalls: “Big Doug had no international pedigree to speak of at youth or under-21 level, but was picked on the strength of his impressive club performances, particularly in big European competitions.” He was one of five Aberdeen players in that side, the others being goalkeeper Jim Leighton, McLeish, Strachan and Peter Weir, and McGhee came on in the second half as a substitute.

At the start of the 1984-85 season, to coincide with Chelsea’s promotion back to the top division, Rougvie headed to Stamford Bridge. The size of the fee involved varies depending on what source you read. It’s most commonly said to have been £150,000 although Rougvie told Brighton’s matchday programme it was £215,000.

Pates+Rougvie

In a highly entertaining interview Rougvie gave to The Scotsman in 2014 about the move south, he told reporter Alan Patullo: “He (Ferguson) called me a mercenary and told me to f**k off, so I f**ked off.”

Rougvie’s three seasons at Chelsea were far from plain-sailing and by popular opinion it would seem his capacity for tough tackling was counterbalanced by a lack of pace that was cruelly exposed.

In the highly irreverent footie banter magazine thedaisycutter.co.uk, writer Noel Draper took an amusing swipe at Rougvie on 9 February 2012.

“Footballers are fickle creatures,” he wrote. “Watch them in one team and they appear to be footballing gods, commanding the game, making outrageous passes and winning every tackle. Watch them play for someone else and they turn into a shadow of their former selves, hiding in full view, hitting passes into the crowd and missing tackles. Doug Rougvie was such a footballer.”

Draper continues: “One rather unkind journalist said, ‘If he were any more limited he could be quoted on the Stock Exchange’.”

The piece maintains: “The Chelsea fans loved him instantly, not for his skills, but for his passion and commitment. He also seemed to love scoring own goals and pulling defeat from the jaws of victory. A reckless challenge here, a sending off there, it seemed that nothing would stop Doug ‘Rambo’ Rougvie.”

He was sent off whilst playing against Wimbledon after 10 minutes for head butting John Fashanu and “scored an own goal at Wembley that resulted in an easy 5-1 victory becoming a heart stopping 5-4 win against Manchester City”.

On another occasion, he was in a Chelsea side on the wrong end of a 6-0 thumping from QPR in the days of their artificial pitch at Loftus Road. The future Albion striker John Byrne was playing up front for QPR alongside Gary Bannister, who scored a hat-trick, and in an interview with bbc.co.uk, Byrne recalled: “We tore them to shreds. Doug Rougvie, who was playing at centre-back for Chelsea, was a fearsome player and he was absolutely furious. By the end, Doug was looking for blood.

“We had the Milk Cup final coming up a couple of weeks later. Banno and me didn’t want to get injured so having destroyed Chelsea, we spent the last part of the match avoiding Doug, who was an angry man.

“We stayed away from him. Banno went to play on one wing and I went and played on the other!”

In Brighton’s Division 3 side in the 1987-88 season, Rougvie was virtually ever-present until March, as the Seagulls hovered close to the promotion places as well as having enjoyed the distraction of playing Arsenal at home in the fourth round of the FA Cup.

Rougvie wrote in his programme notes: “The most important thing for us is to win promotion although the FA Cup is a great diversion for the lads and we’ll be doing our utmost to spring a surprise.”

The average Brighton home crowd that season was around 8,000 but for the Arsenal game 26,467 packed into the Goldstone. A terrific volleyed goal from Garry Nelson gave the Albion hope, but Arsenal won through 2-1.

With parallels of 1972, when Pat Saward dropped captain John Napier for the final run-in towards promotion from the same division, after a 1-0 defeat away at Rotherham, Lloyd dropped Rougvie in favour of another former Chelsea defender, Robert Isaac, and the captain’s armband switched to Steve Gatting.

Rougvie returned for what would be his last game in the stripes – a 2-0 home win over Gillingham – but Isaac regained the no.5 shirt for the remaining seven games of the season, including the promotion-clinching 2-1 win against Bristol Rovers in front of 19,800 at the Goldstone.

So, after playing a total of 46 league and cup games, Rougvie’s Albion career was over and at the end of the season he departed for Shrewsbury Town, where he made 21 appearances.

He then went back to West London to play 18 games for Fulham before returning to his first club, Dunfermline, to help their 1989-90 promotion push.

He subsequently became player-manager at Montrose before ending his playing days at Highland League team Huntly. In the late 90s, Rougvie was still pulling on his boots, turning out for Aberdeen amateur league side Kincorth AFC.

That 2014 interview in The Scotsman revealed that Rougvie was back in Aberdeen working for the engineering firm Costain, having gone back to college in his mid-forties to complete studies he had begun before his football career and gain an HNC in electrical engineering.

His only football involvement at that time was watching Aberdeen and he said: “If I was still in football I would be divorced right now. Whether you are part-time or full-time, if you aren’t watching football, you are talking about it, on the phone to players, taking training. It is non-stop. I admire the boys who are in the game but still able to have that happy home life too.”

Pictures from the Albion programme and the Argus plus a Shoot! magazine Q&A when Rougvie was at Chelsea.
Further reading

http://www.scotsman.com/sport/football/doug-rougvie-pulls-no-punches-on-sir-alex-ferguson-1-3331981

http://www.afcheritage.org/history/darkbluedons/index.cfm?player_id=212

Goalkeeping guru Eric Steele: a promotion talisman at Brighton

1 ES action v Mansfield

GOALKEEPER Eric Steele was involved in an incredible six promotions as a player before becoming one of the country’s top goalkeeping coaches.

Two of those promotions came in his three years with Brighton & Hove Albion and another during a five-year spell at Watford.

His penchant for coaching began during his time at Brighton who he joined in February 1977 for £20,000 from Peterborough United.

As a replacement for the injured Peter Grummitt, Steele made his debut in a 3-1 defeat away to Crystal Palace but the season was to end in triumph. With Peter Ward making the headlines at one end, Steele kept the ‘keeper’s jersey to the end of the season as Albion won promotion to the old Second Division in runners up spot behind Mansfield Town.

As Albion chased a second successive promotion in 1977-78, Steele’s terrific form meant new signing Graham Moseley had to wait five months to make his debut. Steele played 38 matches but Moseley took over for the final four games of the season, as Albion just missed out.

The following season, manager Alan Mullery opted for Moseley as his first choice but the accident-prone former Derby ‘keeper twice caused himself damage – once with a hedge trimmer and then by falling through a plate glass window – which opened the door for Steele, who, by the season’s end, played 27 times compared to Moseley’s 20.

Steele 4 AlbionSteele was between the posts as the Seagulls won 3-1 at St James’ Park to win promotion to the elite for the first time in their history, a particularly sweet moment considering Newcastle had discarded him early on in his career.

“It was important to go back as part of something, to show that I should have been given a chance,” he said in a 2019 Albion matchday programme article. And rather than join the infamous promotion party train ride back to Brighton, after the match Steele stayed over in Newcastle.

“I wanted to be with my family,” he said. “They’d supported me all the way from when I was a kid. To actually do it at my hometown club as well was a bit special. It was a great day for me, a really great day.”

In Spencer Vignes’ excellent book A Few Good Men, it’s interesting to hear Moseley’s view about his rival for the shirt. “He was very dedicated, much more so than I ever was. He would train every day after everybody else had finished.”

Nevertheless, at the higher level, it was not long before Mullery decided to dispense with Steele’s services, and it came within a matter of days of an amazing incident at Old Trafford when Steele exchanged punches with his own defender, Gary Williams, in a 2-0 defeat.

Steele and Williams together in the 1979-80 Albion squad photo

Argus reporter John Vinicombe produced a book (Super Seagulls) to document the history of Albion’s memorable first season in the first tier and covered in detail Steele’s somewhat acrimonious departure.

“Mullery knew from the beginning that one day he would have to choose between the lightning-on-the-line reflexes of Steele and the aerial domination of his great rival, Moseley,” said Vinicombe.

Mullery told the reporter: “Eric is an exceptionally good goalkeeper on the line, there’s no doubting that. But I feel he is not as commanding in the air as Graham, especially on crosses.”

Steele’s departure was felt quite keenly by the fans who, as much as his contribution on the pitch, had applauded his coaching in local schools and support for Sussex charities, in particular Chailey Heritage.

Regardless of that, in October 1979, Mullery turned a sizeable profit on his original investment and sold Steele to Second Division Watford for £100,000.

The articulate Steele shared his thoughts with the readers of Shoot! magazine.

“I didn’t want to leave Brighton,” he said. “That’s the first and most important point. It wasn’t my decision, it was Alan Mullery’s. I think he was wrong and I’ll be proved right in time. Once he’d made up his mind, I had to resolve myself to leaving.

“But it hurt. It took me a long time to get to the First Division and I think that in the ten games I played, I proved I was good enough to keep my place at that level. But once I knew I was on the move, I wanted to get away as quickly as I could.

“I went on the list on a Thursday and Watford came straight in for me the next day. I’d signed for them within a week. I was very happy to join such a progressive club. I would never have come here if I didn’t believe we would be a First Division side in a couple of years.”

Steele maintained he was taking one step back to take two forward and must have remembered those thoughts when Watford won promotion to the top division for the first time in their history in 1981-82.

However, vying for the no.1 jersey with Steve Sherwood, he made just 65 appearances in five years and said it was when watching from the stands as Watford played in the 1984 FA Cup Final that he realised he needed to move on.

Born on 15 May 1954, Steele’s path to professional football was the one taken by many talented Geordies – via Wallsend Boys Club to Newcastle United.

He never made it to the first team at St James’ Park but put that right when he joined Peterborough, setting a record of 124 consecutive appearances, including being part of the side that won the Fourth Division championship in 1974.

After those spells with Brighton and Watford, he linked up with former Newcastle United boss Arthur Cox at Derby County, and was part of their promotions from the third tier through to the first.

When he retired in 1988, it was to run a pub, but he also set up Eric Steele Coaching Services and began an illustrious career in which he has been instrumental in the development of some of the country’s top goalkeepers, working with ‘keepers at Manchester City, Aston Villa, Leeds United, Derby County, and Barnsley, as well as overseas in Australia, Switzerland, Norway, Germany and the United States.

When another former Watford ‘keeper, Tony Coton, was forced to retire as Manchester United’s goalkeeping coach because of injury, he recommended Steele as his successor.

Coton told the Republik of Mancunia website: “Eric Steele was my goalkeeping coach when I was a player at Manchester City, and it soon became evident after just a couple of training sessions that Eric was a unique and talented coach.

“Eric was different due to his innovative teaching style. Every session was challenging and interesting, and his breadth and depth of knowledge was second to none. Because of this I decided to call Eric ‘The Guru’, a name that he is now known by throughout the Premier League.”

As well as former Brighton ‘keeper Wayne Henderson at Villa, Steele also coached Kaspar Schmeichel at Manchester City. And at Man Utd, he famously played a part in Ben Foster successfully saving a penalty in the 2009 League Cup Final penalty shoot-out after the game ended 0-0.

Foster explained: “We went into the shootout as well prepared as possible. We have had things to look at over the last couple of days and before the shootout you can see me looking at an iPad with Eric Steele.

“It had actual video on it and showed where players put things. It is a new innovation for us. Eric brought it when he came to the club. I have never seen anything like it. It is a fantastic tool for us.”

Steele was part of Sir Alex Ferguson’s team at United between 2008 and 2013 and helped to recruit long-standing no. 1 David de Gea.

When Ferguson stood down at Old Trafford, Steele returned to Derby – where he’d previously worked as a coach for four years – under Steve McLaren and then went on to coach young goalkeepers for the English FA. He’s also an ambassador for Evolution Goalkeeper Coaching.

2 Steele claims v Palace
3 Steele Pat Partridge Pipes
4 steele farewell
5 Steele + De Gea
Steele has coached young England goalkeepers

Scrapbook photos from the Albion matchday programme, the Argus, and the republikofmancunia.com.

  • Top one shows Steele in action in one of his early Albion matches, a top-of-the-table clash against Mansfield Town in front of a packed Goldstone. I am one of those supporters crammed into that south west corner terrace!
  • Peter O’Sullivan (left) looks on as Steele claims a cross in a home game against Crystal Palace.
  • Steele and ref Pat Partridge see the funny side of it as spongeman Glen Wilson fixes a facial injury to Steve Piper.
  • A thumbs up to the crowd as Steele says his farewell at the Goldstone.
  • Steele working at Man Utd with David de Gea.

Booed on his Burnley debut, Gifton Noel-Williams was the centre forward Brighton craved

GNW DackFOR ALMOST the whole of Championship seasons 2004-05 and 2005-06, Albion manager Mark McGhee spoke about how the side desperately needed an old-fashioned hold-up centre forward.

In the first season, he converted defender Adam Virgo to the role with some degree of success, but after Virgo’s summer 2005 departure to Celtic, the problem returned, in spite of the occasional promise of the inexperienced Colin Kazim-Richards.

It wasn’t until March 2006 that McGhee finally landed his man in the shape of 6’ 3” Gifton Noel-Williams, on loan to the end of the season from Burnley.

The omens were good when he made his debut against Luton on 25 March because he had scored on his debut for both Burnley and previous club Stoke City. Sure enough, he did it again, netting with a brave diving header from an Adam Hinshelwood cross after 18 minutes.

It demonstrated only too emphatically what Albion had been missing for so long.

Unfortunately a glaring miss by midfielder Dean Hammond saw the chance to go 2-0 up squandered and Luton went straight back down the other end and equalised when ‘keeper Wayne Henderson could only parry Warren Feeney’s shot and the rebound went into the open net off on-loan defender Paul McShane running back.

Luton were destined to join Albion and Leeds as the fall-guys from the division but they hung on that afternoon on a quagmire of a pitch to earn a point.

GNW BHAGary Hart came close to nicking it for the Albion with a volley that struck a post but the points were shared, which was no good for either side.

McGhee was philosophical after the game, recognising it would “take something astonishing” for Albion to stay up with only six games remaining. It would. They didn’t.

Nevertheless, before the inevitable happened, Noel-Williams scored again  – on Easter Saturday 2006.

Brittle old Ipswich, with Joe Royle in charge, stood in the way of Albion notching some desperately needed points, but somehow I just fancied their chances that day and I made a late decision only on the morning of the match to travel up to Ipswich with my son Rhys.

Wearing the all-burgundy away strip, Albion had a new-found confidence in their play thanks to the arrival of Noel-Williams, who, after scoring against Luton, had got an assist by laying on a goal for Paul Reid in a 2-0 win at Millwall two weeks before.

McGhee made an interesting choice in playing Hart at right back rather than Reid, who slotted in ahead instead. The decision was justified when Hart’s strong challenge on Alan Lee midway inside the Albion half enabled Hammond to release Kazim-Richards down the right.

He crossed into the left back area, where the lurking Noel-Williams seemed to have acres of space to turn on the cross and drive the ball home from ten yards. Photographer Simon Dack captured the goal celebration for the front page of the Sports Argus (below).

GNW IpsIf that delight was not enough, teenage defender Joel Lynch made sure our trip was a memorable one by scoring his first-ever goal for the club.

Albion, never wanting to make life too easy for themselves or their fans, allowed Ipswich to pull a goal back when Lee flicked on from former Seagull Darren Currie’s cross for substitute Nicky Forster – a future £75,000 signing for Albion – to score. But thankfully it was too late for Ipswich to salvage anything from the game.

It was all to turn pear-shaped on the Easter Monday at home to Sheffield Wednesday, but for a couple of days at least the Great Escape still seemed a possibility.

Nevertheless, Noel-Williams seemed to enjoy his brief time with the Seagulls, telling Andy Naylor in The Argus: “I like the way the team plays football. They play my type of football.

“It is not only in the air for me to flick it on, they get the ball on the deck and want to knock it about a bit as well. That suits me, that’s what I like.

“The manager hasn’t asked me to be tearing around the pitch, he’s asked me just to use my movement and get into the channels when I have to. I appreciate that, so I’m enjoying my football, and, when I’m enjoying my football, I think I’m not a bad player.”

The downside of not having played regularly at Burnley was a lack of match fitness, and he admitted: “I play all right for maybe the first hour and then that’s it, my legs are gone.”

Certainly a fascinating character, Noel-Williams was still only 26 when he pitched up at the Albion, and was already a father of six children.

But how did he end up at Brighton?

An article on the excellent Burnley supporters website,claretsmad.co.uk, gives a great insight into the background. Published in June 2013, Tony Scholes wrote: “There was heavy criticism of his signing and he was booed by his own fans during his league debut for us at Crewe on the opening day of the 2005-06 season.

“He was one of Steve Cotterill’s five summer signings during that 2005 summer, and the plan was to partner him up front with his old Stoke City team mate Ade Akinbiyi, a partnership people were quick to say hadn’t worked when they had played together for Stoke.”

Scholes continued: “He must have wondered what he’d come to when he was roundly booed in that first match of the season at Crewe. He scored our equaliser, then hit the woodwork in the last minute which would have earned us a point.”

A week later, he missed a penalty against Coventry, and, even though he scored in a home draw against Derby, the poor start to the season saw Cotterill tinker with the line-up, and he lost his place.

He was then a peripheral figure and, just before the end of the loan window in March, Cotterill, who had once been on loan to Brighton himself, loaned him to struggling Albion.

Burnley fans thought they had seen the last of him but, despite being placed on the transfer list, and missing the club’s pre-season trip to Italy, he was still a Burnley player when the season began.

Then, remarkably, he went from zero to hero during the space of a few days in September. When he came on as a substitute against Colchester, yet again he was met by a chorus of boos from the Burnley faithful.

Scholes said: “The booing that greeted him was shameful. How he could go on and play in those circumstances is hard to believe, but he did and by the end of the game he’d turned those boos to cheers. We lost, but he’d played well.

“Three days later we went 2-0 down against Barnsley and he was brought on to replace the injured Alan Mahon. This was without doubt Gifton’s night. He never turned in a better performance for Burnley, and after Jon Harley pulled one back to give us hope, he scored a hat trick as we ran out 4-2 winners.”

Taken off the transfer list, over the next couple of months he became one of the most influential players in the side as Burnley climbed to third in the table.

Sadly, it didn’t last. The team and player’s form dipped from November.

“As the results went against us, the rumblings of discontent about him were being heard in the stands again,” said Scholes.

Meanwhile, Akinbiyi returned to the club which further reduced the chances of his former strike partner getting games. As the January transfer window came to a close, Noel-Williams was sold to Real Murcia in Spain for £50,000.

“Burnley fans will remember him as a player who struggled with pace and movement, a player who didn’t score enough goals, and a player they just loved to criticise,” said Scholes.

How different it all was from the early promise he had shown when blooded in the Watford first team at the tender age of 16.

Born in Islington on 21 January 1980 to Jamaican parents, the young Noel-Williams played for district and county representative sides and Carl Dixon, a coach at his local Sunday side Apex Arvensdale, recommended him to Watford.

When he played in a national cup final fo Islington and Camden at Highbury, he scored a hat-trick in front of the Sky Sports TV cameras and Arsenal, Spurs and Chelsea all took an interest in him but he stuck with Watfod, and it paid off when, in 1996, Kenny Jackett gave him his first team debut at just 16.

A serious knee injury sustained in a tackle by Sunderland’s Paul Butler in 1999 put him out of the game for the best part of 18 months and he subsequently developed rheumatoid arthritis in both knees.

In an interview with itv.com on 4 April 2016, the striker revealed how he might never have had a career at all if it hadn’t been for former Watford chairman Elton John.

GNW WatHe was told he would have to give up the game, but Watford’s pop icon chairman was living in America at the time and saw an article about a drug that could save his career. He contacted Graham Taylor and they paid for him to get the necessary treatment.

The injury and illness came just as Noel-Williams had received a call-up to the England Under-21 squad. At 18, he had been playing in junior England teams alongside Michael Owen and Michael Bridges.

Noel-Williams told interviewer Will Unwin: “Even though I had rheumatoid arthritis I was still able to play at Championship level and abroad.”

After seven years and 33 goals in 169 appearances for Watford, Noel-Williams signed for Stoke City; Tony Pulis taking him on a Bosman free transfer in 2003.

Across two seasons, he scored 23 goals in 88 games for The Potters banishing all thoughts that he wasn’t fit to play.

Then, in 2005, he joined Burnley because he was encouraged to by his former Stoke teammate, Akinbiyi (another striker who had impressed on loan from Norwich to Brighton earlier in his career, when he scored four times in seven games).

As an aside, Akinbiyi had distinctly mixed fortunes throughout his career and after he completed a £600,000 move to Burnley was sent off on his debut within two minutes for head butting Sunderland’s George McCartney!

But back to Noel-Williams, who told itv.com: “I did not want to go to Burnley, to be honest. What happened was that Tony Pulis left Stoke at the end of the season, he went to Plymouth – so as he was leaving and a new manager coming in, I didn’t want to stay at Stoke.

“Ade Akinbiyi was at Burnley at the time and he was with me at Stoke so he kept phoning me, saying ‘come to Burnley, they want us to play up front together’, so that’s why I went to Burnley, but then six months later Ade left to go to Sheffield United, so my time at Burnley crashed a little bit and that’s why I didn’t stay there for so long.”

Noel-Williams said he didn’t really see eye-to-eye with Cotterill, which hastened his departure to Spain.

The Spanish lifestyle suited him but his game time was restricted mainly to substitute appearances and when Real Murcia were promoted he was told he would not be guaranteed a place.

So he switched to Elche, where he said he enjoyed his football but they didn’t pay him for a year because of financial issues. He ended up having to take action via FIFA to get the money he was owed, and left after just one season.

His old Watford mentor, Jackett, gave him a short-term contract with Millwall, but he played just the one game whilst Tresor Kandol and Neil Harris were unavailable. On 5th November 2008, he signed for Yeovil Town on a month’s loan.

He played eight times for Yeovil, the last coming on the Saturday before Christmas. But 2009 saw him once again without a club and on 8th January it was confirmed that he was signing a two-year deal with American USL club Austin Aztex, a club managed by former Burnley boss Adrian Heath.

He was released at the end of the 2009 season and signed for American fourth-tier side DFW Tornados (based in Dallas).

After he packed up playing in 2010, he became a coach at the Brentwood Christian School in Austin, Texas.

He returned to the UK and linked up with his former Watford teammate Allan Smart at Daventry Town and subsequently had various coaching and managing roles with non-league sides – Northwood, Burnham and Codicote. In November 2017, he was sacked after Hertfordshire-based Codicote, who play in the 10th tier of English football, lost 12 of their first 14 league matches.

1 GN-W Argus2 GN-W Argus main3 G N-W PA (watford)

Pictures published by The Argus show THAT diving header to score on his Albion debut, and a study in determination to get to the ball. Also a Press Association image of a youthful Gifton in Watford colours.

 

Brighton move turned sour for Tottenham legend Phil Beal

1 Beal portrait

PHIL BEAL was a Tottenham Hotspur legend so it seemed like quite a coup when in 1975 Third Division Brighton signed a player who had played at the top level for over a decade.

However, in a fairly recent interview, Beal said signing for Brighton was “the worst thing I’ve ever done”. At the time he certainly had a different outlook. Shoot incorporating Goal began an article about him: “A gladiatorial display by Phil Beal for his new club Brighton against Rotherham was loudly acclaimed by the supporters who revelled in the strength and guile the ex-Spurs player had brought to their side.

“The immensely experienced Beal had wielded a pattern of play that sent the supporters home humming happily, relishing the 3-0 win and calculating the prospects of the new season.”

Beal told the magazine: “It’s a great feeling to have a crowd behind you like that. Their reaction impressed me just like everything else did when I visited the club for the first time to meet manager Peter Taylor.

“I knew nothing at all about the club and, to be honest, I thought it might be a tin-shed type of place. What an eye opener it turned out to be.

“I had imagined the Third Division to be a big step down, not just in terms of football but in terms of everything else too. But I found they had new offices, new dressing rooms and medical rooms and when they travel they go first class, stay in first class hotels and even use the same coach company as Spurs.

“The set-up is easily as good as many First Division clubs. The pitch, for instance, is a nice size and allows you to make room to play. Some pitches are tight and cramped but not at the Goldstone Ground.

“When I saw how great things were off the field I felt they must want the same quality on it and that persuaded me. Like Tottenham, Brighton aim to play football….which is what I am all for. I don’t want to know about kick and rush…the big boot up the field, a challenge and then back it comes….that’s not for me.”

But let’s go back to where it all began. Born in Godstone, Surrey, on 8 January 1945, Beal joined Spurs at 15 after impressing Bill Nicholson’s assistant manager, Harry Evans, while playing for Surrey Schoolboys v Kent at The Valley (Charlton) in 1960.

The website spursforlife.com detailed his rise to the first team, saying he was “the first of the modern youth team to climb through the ranks of the trainees, juniors and reserves to claim a first team place.”

In those days apprentice footballers were responsible for cleaning the senior players’ boots as well as the balls, dressing rooms and gym. Beal said it was a great time to be involved at Spurs because they clinched that historic first double in 1961 and, as a 16-year-old, he felt part of it.

In a tottenhamhotspur.com feature, Beal paid tribute to the great Dave Mackay’s influence on his fledgling career.

“The first team players involved the apprentices, and when they won the Cup to clinch the Double we were invited to all the functions afterwards,” he said. “I had my picture taken with Jimmy Greaves. Also, because I lived so far away, John White used to let me stay at his place in Southgate after we’d played youth or reserve matches.

“The player who has always stood out in my mind, however, on how to be a professional footballer and make it to the top, was Dave Mackay.

“When we used to train in the afternoons, Dave would always come and train with the youngsters. He’d train with the first team in the morning, have lunch and then come back.

“We’d have 5-a-sides and Dave was very competitive. He didn’t stand any messing around – you had to win. He’d encourage, but if you did something wrong he’d have a go.

“His dedication really opened my eyes to what it would take to make it and, looking at the Double team, I knew how hard it was going to be.”

Phil made a winning First Division debut at Aston Villa on 16 September 1963 when he deputised for the legendary Danny Blanchflower, who by then was 37. But it took a further two years before he earned the chance to establish himself at right back after Maurice Norman was seriously injured at the start of the 1965-66 season.

My main memories of him at Spurs were as a sweeper alongside Welsh international Mike England but he played in eight different positions for them during the earlier part of his career.

A broken arm sustained against Manchester City prevented him being part of the 1967 FA Cup winning team against Chelsea, ironically opening the door for future Brighton teammate Joe Kinnear to establish himself at right back.

It was on his return to the side that he stepped into that role alongside England, and where he enjoyed a lot of success.

Beal played in the League Cup winning teams of 1971 and 1973, the UEFA Cup winning team of 1972 and was on the losing side in the final of the same competition in 1974. He was awarded a testimonial against Bayern Munich in December 1973.

Recalling that 1972 European win in a recent interview with tottenhamhotspur.com, Beal said: “We beat some good teams along the way and nothing was better than beating AC Milan in the semi-final. I remember walking out at the San Siro in front of 70,000 hostile people and an iron bar landed right by my foot.

“They had a midfielder called Bonetti who spat in my face. I hated that, so I chinned him. He laid down and Mike England said: ‘You’d better get down Bealy’. So I went down and held my ankle.

“The ref came over and booked us, but he put Steve Perryman’s number 10 down instead. I got booked later and didn’t get sent off! Because they got beat they were rocking our coach on the way out.”

The website said Beal was known “for his calm, safety-first approach in a Spurs defence that provided the platform for the flair players to perform in the opposition’s half”.

Spurs’ captain through much of that time, and future Brighton manager, Alan Mullery, spoke highly of Beal in his autobiography. “Phil Beal was very underrated. He had the tough task of taking over from Mackay when he went to Derby and I never thought Phil got the credit he deserved,” he said.

When Bill Nicholson resigned in 1974, it was to hasten his own departure from the club a year later. Together with Martin Peters he sought to persuade Nicholson to change his mind, but without success. “I liked him as a man. He respected us and used to listen to people,” said Beal.

New manager Terry Neill brought in Don McAllister to play at the heart of the back four and, at the end of the 1974-75 season, Beal was given a free transfer as part of a clear out of some of the experienced players. He had clocked up 479 appearances for Spurs plus four as a sub.

While the move to Brighton had initially all seemed positive, perhaps his view in hindsight relates to the fact Peter Taylor wasn’t afraid to shuffle the pack and bring in new people, and adding Dennis Burnett after the opening five games stymied Beal’s chances of lining up alongside Andy Rollings.

Ken Tiler was ensconced as the first choice right back, although fellow ex-Spur Kinnear, who’d signed for Brighton as well, took over the spot when injury kept Tiler sidelined in the final third of the season. Beal began in Albion’s midfield, but Ernie Machin, Peter O’Sullivan and Ian Mellor were preferred as the season progressed; Machin eventually being replaced by new signing Brian Horton in March.

Beal actionThese were the days, of course, of only one sub and, by the season’s end, Beal had played just nine games plus one as sub, and was a non-playing sub on another occasion.

Off the pitch, Beal had clearly taken heed of the way the old pros looked after the youngsters at Spurs and applied similar principles when he joined Brighton. He arrived on the south coast a fortnight after Peter Ward signed as a 20-year-old and Ward briefly shared a club house in Rottingdean with Beal and Neil Martin, and one or other of the senior pros would give Wardy a lift into training.

With Brighton narrowly missing out on promotion, the competition for places intensified for Beal and Kinnear when Taylor signed experienced defenders Graham Cross and Chris Cattlin before quitting to rejoin Clough at Forest.

However, when it was announced Taylor’s replacement was former Spur Mullery, they might have been forgiven for thinking their fortunes with Brighton were going to change. How wrong they would be.

Mullery was in a quandary. He had only just finished playing and he inherited a squad of 36 professionals, two of whom were his former teammates, and many who were much the same age as him. Any display of favouritism would not have gone down well amongst the group, and he consulted Nicholson for some advice. Nicholson told him that regardless of who they were, if Mullery didn’t think they were up to the job he would have to respond accordingly.

Kinnear never did play a game under Mullery having been told he wasn’t fit enough while Beal managed just two games at right back.

One of them came in the memorable 2-1 League Cup second round defeat of Bobby Robson’s First Division Ipswich Town, but Beal was stretchered off with an ankle injury – and never played for the Albion again.

Argus reporter John Vinicombe was full of praise for Beal who had been nursing an ankle injury ahead of the game.

“Beal would have been well within his rights in declaring himself unfit,” wrote Vinicombe. “Such selfless courage brought cruel reward when he went down and he was on his way to hospital when Cross muscled through for the winner.” An x-ray later revealed Beal had suffered deep bruising of his right ankle.

By the time Mullery steered the side to promotion at the season’s end, Beal had left the club. In early February 1977, together with Burnett, he reached a financial settlement with the club and played non league with Ilford for the remainder of the season before heading to the United States to play for Los Angeles Aztecs alongside George Best, Ron Davies, Terry Mancini and Charlie Cooke.

The following season he played for Memphis Rogues, coached by former Chelsea full back Eddie McCreadie, where, amongst his teammates, was Neil Smillie, later to join Albion from Crystal Palace, and the former Everton and Luton Town striker, Jimmy Husband. The goalkeeper was Tony Burns, who’d played for Brighton in the mid 1960s, and the team also included Arsenal cup winner Eddie Kelly and the colourful Alan Birchenall.

Back in England for the 1979-80 season, Beal turned out four times for lowly Crewe Alexandra, but when the legendary Bobby Moore took over as manager of non-league Oxford City in December 1979, Beal was one of a flurry of new signings the former England captain made, and he appeared 12 times before finally hanging up his boots.

Beal dropped out of football once his playing days were over and moved with his family to Cornwall. But he returned to Spurs as a corporate hospitality host on matchdays, working alongside Pat Jennings.

“I enjoy my work at Spurs because I’m Tottenham through and through and enjoy going back,” he said. “I’ve no regrets. I played over 400 games for Tottenham and enjoyed every minute of it. If I had my time again I would do exactly the same.”

Further reading:

http://spursforlife.com/phil-beal/

http://www.tottenhamhotspur.com/history/past-players/phil-beal/

Brighton and Huddersfield full back Chris Hutchings went on managerial merry go round

Hutch prog cover 1987

CHRIS Hutchings is better known to today’s football followers as a manager or, on no less than four occasions, assistant manager to Paul Jewell.

Back in the 80s, though, he played full back for Brighton for four years before moving on to Huddersfield Town for a three-year spell.

Born in Winchester on 5 July 1957, Hutchings was on Southampton’s books as a youngster but they didn’t keep him on and he became a bricklayer while playing part-time football with Harrow Borough. Chelsea manager Geoff Hurst saw him play well in a friendly match against Tottenham Hotspur and a £10,000 fee took him to Chelsea in 1980.

He played 101 games for them over three years, and told Richard Newman’s Football the Albion and Me podcast how Chelsea legend Alan Hudson took him under his wing and showed him the ropes of the professional game. In an interview in an Albion matchday programme, Hutchings recalled his Chelsea debut as a favourite football moment.

“We were away to Cardiff and I travelled with the team as sub,” he said. “One of the lads got injured in the first half and I was straight into the action. It was a great day for me. Everything seemed to go right. I was playing in midfield. We won 1-0. I scored the winner and I even had another ‘goal’ disallowed. I’ll never forget that match.”

It was in November 1983 that he signed for Brighton for £50,000 and he has a place in the Albion history book Seagulls, The Story of Brighton & Hove Albion FC (by Tim Carder and Roger Harris) for an incident when playing for Chelsea in their first ever league visit to The Goldstone earlier that season.

There had been trouble in Brighton the night before the game when rival fans clashed and 8,000 Chelsea fans swelled the crowd to 20,874, infiltrating all parts of the ground (the picture shows how tightly packed fans were in the North Stand).

albion v chelsea

“At the final whistle the hooligans invaded the pitch from all unfenced areas to launch a vicious assault on the hopelessly outnumbered police,” the history book recalls.

It was only the arrival of a police horse that finally managed to quell the disorder by which time seven policeman were injured and the North end goal broken.

The Sports Minister of the time ordered an inquiry and both clubs were cleared of blame. But Hutchings was charged with threatening and abusive behaviour for swearing at police trying to clear the pitch.

Two months later, after Chris Cattlin had taken over from Jimmy Melia, Hutchings was one of three new players he brought in (Steve Penney and Danny Wilson were the others).

He had yet to appear before Hove magistrates. And he was in further trouble on the pitch when he was one of five Albion players sent off before the New Year.

Eventually the court fined him £250 although Hutchings’ version of events was that all he did was to applaud the Chelsea fans and when a policeman told him to get off the pitch he told him to f**k off!

Like his manager, Hutchings was able to play right or left back. Generally he featured on the left side, although in the 1985-86 season Graham Pearce had a long run as no.3 and Hutchings wore no.2.

In a Tony Norman interview for the programme in 1985, it was revealed Hutchings was quite the handyman about his house in Rottingdean. He was into painting and decorating, and wasn’t averse to a spot of simple car maintenance either.

When Cattlin – and Pearce – left the Albion in the summer of 1986, Hutchings returned to the left back spot under Alan Mullery and carried on there when Barry Lloyd took over.

In January 1987, just days after Lloyd had taken over from Mullery, Albion were in the lower half of the third tier and the crowds had slumped to below 10,000.

Hutchings told interviewer Tony Norman: “Nothing would make me happier than to see the side playing to its full potential and big crowds returning to the Goldstone.

“When the stadium is packed, it’s a great place to play football.”

However, as part of the wholesale changes brought about by Albion’s relegation, Lloyd signed Keith Dublin from Chelsea as his first choice left back, and Hutchings was put on the transfer list.

He wasn’t done with the Albion quite yet, though, and played the first four months of that Third Division season in midfield before eventually moving on to Huddersfield, who were managed at the time by the former Newcastle, Arsenal and England centre forward, Malcolm Macdonald.

Hutchings played more games for Albion – 174 – than any of the other clubs he represented. One of his teammates at Huddersfield was a familiar face from his Goldstone career: Kieran O’Regan, who was a Town regular for six seasons. O’Regan stayed with Hutchings when he initially moved to Yorkshire and the pair still stay in touch and play golf together.

After making 110 appearances for Huddersfield, Hutchings joined Walsall for a season, in 1990-91, when another former teammate, Tony Grealish, was a coach. Hutchings played 40 games for the Saddlers but travelling to and from his home in Holmfirth meant it wasn’t an ideal arrangement.

Next stop, between 1991 and 1994, he played 78 times for Rotherham United under manager Phil Henson and John Breckin, who, as he wound down his playing days, encouraged him to take on coaching duties. He started coaching the Millers youth team but when Archie Gemmill and John McGovern took over as joint managers, he was a victim of the wage bill being cut.

He then had a spell out of the game, becoming a second hand car salesman temporarily, before he took his first step into management at Bradford City, becoming assistant to Chris Kamara, the Sky TV pundit who was manager of the Yorkshire club at the time.

When Kamara was replaced by Jewell, Hutchings stayed on as part of a duo who would subsequently crop up at a variety of clubs in the coming years.

Arguably the pair’s greatest success was getting Bradford promoted to the Premier League. During the 2000-01 season, when Jewell moved to Sheffield Wednesday, Hutchings briefly took charge and must have enjoyed securing a 2-0 win over Chelsea (although the result was too much for the Stamford Bridge hierarchy, who promptly sacked their manager, Gianluca Vialli).

However, the joy was shortlived because it was the only win in 12 Premier League games and Hutchings was sacked after being in charge for just 137 days.

As several media outlets pointed out earlier this season, it might have been a brief tenure but it wasn’t as short as Frank de Boer’s at Palace!

Next stop for Jewell and Hutchings was Premier League Wigan Athletic between 2001 and 2007. As happened at Bradford, when Jewell resigned in May 2007, Wigan chairman Dave Whelan handed over the managerial reins to Hutchings.

“He’s one of the best and most knowledgeable coaches in the Premiership,” said Whelan.

But after six successive defeats, and Wigan floundering in the bottom three, he was sacked in November 2007 – a 2-0 loss to Chelsea being the final straw for Whelan.

His route back into football, in January 2008, was briefly to assist caretaker manager Chris Brass at Bury on a voluntary basis, but, by April, he was linking up with Jewell once again, this time at Derby County.

The pair were with the Championship club less than a year, however, and when Jewell went in December 2008, Hutchings had just one game as caretaker before Nigel Clough took over the helm, and Hutchings left the club.

He wasn’t out of work for long, though, because one of his old clubs, Walsall, took him on as no.1 in his own right in January 2009. With Martin O’Connor as his assistant, the pair had two years with the League One club.

The chop came in January 2011 with The Saddlers bottom of League One, eight points adrift from safety.

Chairman Jeff Bonser told the Walsall website: “Their preparation and professionalism has been second to none but we are in a results business.

“Chris and Martin have both worked extremely hard during their time at the club.

“They have both been professional throughout and conducted themselves with great dignity in what have been difficult times.”

A fortnight later, Hutchings was back in work, linking up once more with Jewell, this time at Ipswich Town, who had parted company with Roy Keane.

The pair managed to steer Town clear of relegation but the 2011-12 season was one of struggle and they finished in a disappointing 15th place.

Jewell was unable to bring in the players he wanted during the summer and instead signed eight on loan. It was not a recipe for success and, by October 2012, Ipswich were bottom of the Championship.

Jewell departed and Hutchings remained in caretaker charge until Ipswich appointed Mick McCarthy and Terry Connor.

In July 2013, with Hutchings not having found a route back into league football, he took on the role of no.2 at Shropshire non league outfit Market Drayton Town.

When Shrewsbury Town replaced Graham Turner with caretaker manager Mike Jackson in February 2014, Hutchings was recruited as a coach to assist with training.

However, a month later his old Brighton teammate Danny Wilson, who had taken over as manager at League One Barnsley, took Hutchings to Oakwell as his assistant manager.

Wilson told the club website: “Chris has been a friend and confidant over many years since playing together. Chris has done very well with clubs at all levels that he has worked at.

“His experience will be invaluable as we go into the final ten games of the season and I am delighted that he has come to help us out.”

On Valentine’s Day the following year, the pair were chopped. The club were 17th in League One having won only 10 of their 29 games at that point.

Hutchings was a popular subject for the Brighton matchday programme producers, often appearing on covers and featuring in the player profile feature. The pictures are a selection of these. Plus a couple of headlines from his managerial career.