PAUL BROOKER, a winger at one time mentioned in the same breath as Ryan Giggs, played more games for Brighton – 147 – than any of his other clubs but only managed a Premier League cameo with Leicester City.
Brooker certainly had the capacity to excite fans but there could be frustration in equal measure and, although he won back-to-back promotions with the Albion, his career didn’t come close to the achievements of the great Manchester United winger.
The national football fanzine, When Saturday Comes, ran a superb piece about Brooker in April 2002, in which Adam Powley talked about his “conspicuous talent” and maintained: “Brooker was indeed very good, blessed with real pace and an ability to keep control while running at full pelt.”
Born in Hammersmith on 25 November 1976, Brooker was with Chelsea as a schoolboy but it was Fulham who picked him up and gave him his professional opening.
Ian Branfoot handed him his first team debut – in a 0-0 draw away to Bury on 14 October 1995 – and he was part of Micky Adams’ promotion-winning Fulham side of 1997.
Amazingly, he made just 18 starts for Fulham, but came off the bench 54 times. Across those 72 appearances, he scored six goals. He was eventually frozen out in the Kevin Keegan era, playing his last first team game in September 1998, and then spent time on loan at Stevenage, where he played eight games.
In February 2000, he joined his former Fulham boss, Adams, on loan at Brighton and, after a 15-game spell, he joined Albion permanently for a £25,000 fee.
Brooker scored after only three minutes in a 2-0 win away to Plymouth Argyle on 14 April 2001 (celebrating above) which secured promotion for the Seagulls, and he was a regular on the wing that season, making a total of 41 appearances. He remained a key member of Albion’s third tier promotion-winning squad in 2001-02, Argus reporter Andy Naylor summing up his contribution thus: “Most wingers have an inconsistent streak and ‘Bozzy’ is no exception, but he is a matchwinner on his day.
“Quick and an elusive runner with the ball, he hit scoring form as well towards the end of the campaign with three goals in eight games. The First Division should suit his style.”
Brooker also featured in Steve Coppell’s 2002-03 side – I remember seeing him score in a 2-1 away win at the Madjeski Stadium – but as Brighton exited the second tier at the wrong end in 2003, so Brooker ended his association with the club.
Coppell had hoped he would stay, telling The Argus: “We obviously want to keep him at the club. I think he is a terrific asset. He has still got a lot to add to his game and improve but he makes us that little bit different.
“He is hard to tie down. Teams cannot afford to leave him and yet they don’t really want to assign somebody to him.”
For his part, Brooker told Howard Griggs of The Argus in an April 2011 interview: “I absolutely loved my time at Brighton; it was the best three years of my career.
“By nature I am a Chelsea fan but I always look out for Brighton and so do a lot of my family and friends.”
A free transfer move to Leicester City, once again working under Adams, finally gave Brooker a Premier League platform to display his talent but his chances were limited and he ended up starting just two League Cup games as well as getting on as a substitute in three League games and a FA Cup match.
With his top tier opportunities limited, he elected to play under Coppell again and joined Championship side Reading on loan. He made 11 appearances in 2004 before joining the Royals permanently in July 2004.
After just one season at Reading, when he played 34 games, Martin Allen signed him on a free transfer for Brentford.
He had two seasons with the Bees but his time at Griffin Park came to an end shortly after the start of the 2007-08 season.
“When Terry Butcher came in, I think he’d made his mind up about me before he’d even seen me play,” Brooker told fulhamfc.com. “We just didn’t see eye to eye about things, and that was the end of it for me there.”
A Brentford blog, the entertaining BFC Talk, spoke about Brooker in a July 2015 piece. “Paul Brooker was another who flattered to deceive and throughout his career never did justice to his vast ability,” it said.
“He scored a goal of sheer brilliance after running the length of the pitch at Swindon, but on other days he appeared to be lethargic, disinterested and peripheral to the action.
“He did not take criticism well, either from fans, or indeed, his manager, Terry Butcher, and reacted badly before having his contract cancelled.” Although Brooker started taking his coaching badges, he admitted to the Fulham website: “I’ve not really kicked a football since I left Brentford; I lost a lot of my passion and love for the game.
“I’ve set up a carpet cleaning business with a friend just for something to do and that’s going quite well. I’m enjoying doing something different from football.”
Brooker played non-league for Chertsey Town in 2008-09 although he did have a short spell back training at the Albion, during Adams’ brief return as manager.
He also turned out for Havant & Waterlooville and Dorking Wanderers. After his playing days ended, he took up after school sports coaching in the Kingston, Twickenham and Hounslow areas.
Pictures from the matchday programme; Simon Dack in the Argus, and the Reading website.