Pacy Tariq Lamptey smiled on through, despite injury woes

SPEEDY Tariq Lamptey missed too many games through injury in five and a half years at Brighton.

Like many quick players, Lamptey would excite fans when he sped past opponents with ease to create chances for others or score himself. Sadly, that electric pace came at a price.

Shortly after the pint-sized, fleet-footed full-back first broke through at Chelsea under Frank Lampard, he joined Brighton for £3m on January transfer deadline day in 2020.

Brighton were able to offer him more first team chances but lengthy spells on the treatment table meant he only made 122 appearances for the club and 49 of those were as a sub.

The 2024-25 season was another when his involvement was limited to only 14 starts plus six as a sub, although he scored two Premier League goals, netting the opener in a 2-2 draw at Leicester and burying an impressive late equaliser to salvage a point in another 2-2 draw, at Aston Villa. He also scored in the 3-2 League Cup defeat at home to Liverpool.

Throughout the season, there was speculation linking him to moves elsewhere so it came as something of a surprise in the summer of 2025 when it was announced that he had signed a new one-year deal.

However, it transpired that was just a device to secure a fee because he moved on anyway, joining Fiorentina in Italy on August transfer deadline day. Officially the sum involved was undisclosed although media reports put it at £6m.

There was no acrimony surrounding his departure; indeed, head coach Fabian Hurzeler said: “He’s been a valued player throughout his time, but more than that he is a brilliant professional and person.

“This is a good opportunity for him to play both Serie A and European football. On behalf of everyone at the club I’d like to wish him all the very best for the future.”

Sadly, after only a handful of weeks into life at his new club, Lamptey was struck by another devastating injury blow in the 22nd minute of Fiorentina’s 2-1 Serie A defeat at home to Como on 21 September.

He tore the anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee and faced a long period of recovery after successful reconstruction surgery.

Lamptey had been at Chelsea for 12 years and had just broken into their first team when he joined the Seagulls in the Covid-hit season. It meant he didn’t make his first start for the Seagulls until June 2020, in a behind-closed-doors 0-0 draw at Leicester.

By the autumn, Lamptey’s form for Brighton was catching the eye of various suitors and earned him a call-up to the England under 21 squad.

He was an unused sub for young England’s 6-0 win over Kosovo on 4 September that year but four days later started in their 2-1 win over Austria; Aaron Ramsdale, Mark Guehi and Jude Bellingham were in the same line-up.

Injury ruled him out of two matches the following month but he returned to the starting XI for England’s 3-1 win over Andorra at Molineux. He was again an unused sub four days later when England beat Albania 5-0 at the same stadium.

Wayne Rooney was reported as saying Lamptey was a player Man United should sign while Bayern Munich, Seville and Atletico Madrid were also said to be watching him.

Amidst it all, head coach Graham Potter said: “We have been delighted with Tariq. It is great to see a young player like him come in and grasp the opportunity. He fits in really well with our club and our team.”

Sadly, Lamptey then suffered a hamstring injury at Fulham in December 2020. It sidelined him until October the following year.

Unsurprisingly, on his return, he said: “I’m grateful to be back on the pitch, playing football and playing well. I’d like to be involved in every game, but it’s up to what the gaffer decides, so I just have to keep training well. Whenever the team call upon me, I’m ready to help.”

Grounded, polite and popular with teammates, Lamptey said in a matchday programme interview: “I love football and have a smile on my face because I enjoy playing. Of course, there are things that you sacrifice for it, but you know why you’re doing it.

“When you’re on the pitch and you have great moments, you remember the times there was sacrifice and you enjoy the moment – that’s what you play for.

“You’re going to go through battles and tough times in football, but that’s all part of it. You know what you’re getting yourself into, so you just have to make sure you believe in yourself, keep working hard and things will turn out right.”

Born in Hillingdon to Ghanaian parents on 30 September 2000, he played locally for Larkspur Rovers before joining the Chelsea academy aged just seven. Lamptey’s progress through the age groups reached a peak when he was part of the Chelsea youth team that won the FA Youth Cup in 2018 (beating Arsenal 7-1 over two legs), alongside the likes of Guehi, Reece James, Conor Gallagher, Billy Gilmour and Callum Hudson-Odoi.

That development at Chelsea also led to him earning selection for England age group sides. He made a total of 18 appearances for the under 18, 19 and 20 sides.

Lampard and Lamptey

His progression to the Chelsea first team saw Frank Lampard give him his Chelsea debut as sub for Fikayo Tomori in a Premier League game away to Arsenal, when he helped Chelsea turn round a goal deficit to win 2-1 on 29 December 2019.

He made two more sub appearances in FA Cup wins the following month: a home debut when he went on in the 76th minute of the 2-0 win over Nottingham Forest and he played most of the second half of the 2-1 win at Hull City. But at the end of that month, he joined Brighton.

If it seemed like a surprise move at the time, Albion’s then technical director, Dan Ashworth, pointed out: “We’ve been tracking Tariq for a while and I knew him from my England days, coming through the youth systems, where they spoke very, very highly of him.

“It’s an opportunity for us to bring in a young, exciting and talented player. He has terrific pace and is technically good. He can play as a full-back, a wing-back and has also played some of his time as an advanced midfield player. He brings some real energy and hunger to the squad and I hope he’ll be here for a number of years.”

For his part, Lamptey told the matchday programme: “It was a really tough decision to leave. I’d been with the club since the age of seven and had seen it all the way through to the under 23s and this season with the first team.

“It was a proud moment for me to make my debut but I felt like it was the right time to start a new chapter and come to this brilliant club.”

After welcoming Lamptey back after his first long injury absence, Potter said: “He’s just an amazing person, an amazing young lad. If you speak to anybody here (at Brighton), they just say the same, which is everyone loves him.

“When you have that feeling for someone, of course you want everything to go well for him and he’s had a really tough time. He’s a human being, so you’re going to be frustrated and you’re going to be disappointed and you’re going to be sad and you’re going to be angry — all of those things.

“But how he’s conducted himself, how he’s acted, how he’s got on with his work is just inspirational to everybody. His resilience, his mental strength, his capacity to deal with adversity is incredible, and I think that’s credit to him and his family.

“He’s been fantastic around the place and I think he will use it as a way to strengthen and a way to grow and a way to improve — that’s how Tariq is.”

In a subsequent interview, Potter added: “Tariq needs to be threatening the opposition defenders as much as he can. Some games you can do that from right-back, some games from left-back, sometimes from right wing-back, and sometimes you can be a little bit higher.

“The fact that he’s so open-minded and so ready to help the team makes it easy for me. It’s just finding the right solution for him.”

Albion’s European season of 2023-24 once again saw injury deprive Lamptey of greater involvement (14 starts and 10 as a sub) although coach Roberto De Zerbi was grateful to exploit his versatility when called upon, using him as right-back, left-back and winger.

Lamptey played a key part in the 2-2 comeback draw away to Marseille in the October Europa League group match when filling in for injured Pervis Estupinan at left-back. He capped an influential second-half performance by winning the late penalty from which Joao Pedro equalised.

De Zerbi told The Athletic: “He is a unique player. His attitude and behaviour are incredible. It is to Tariq’s credit that we achieved first place in the Europa League. The penalty in Marseille was for his attitude and passion to create the penalty, to find the one-on-one.

“I would like to improve him in pass control and I would like him cleaner in technique. His characteristic is speed, his energy. When Tariq starts (to run) and is attacking, you have to follow him or you will be left 40 metres behind.”

The admiration was certainly mutual, with Lamptey telling 3 Sports: “He’s an amazing coach; tactically, he makes you look at football from a different point of view.

“You try to add as much to your game as possible, and the way he saw the game was different. We played some fantastic football, so I really enjoyed my time with him. I just try to use the experiences he gave me to add to my game and make me a better player.”

Having collecting those two England under 21 caps after the move to Brighton, and with several contenders ahead of him in the pecking order for the full international side, Lamptey opted to play for his parents’ country at full international level.

It was perhaps not a surprise because through his own charitable foundation he supports youth in Ghana, donating football kit and other sports equipment to the country’s schools and other organisations.

It was the warmth of the people he met while in the country doing his charity work that helped him to decide to play for Ghana, although he said his upbringing in a Ghanaian household was also a factor.

He finally decided to play for the Black Stars after visiting the Cape Coast Stadium to watch Ghana beat Madagascar 3-0. He made his debut for Ghana in September 2022, going on as a sub in a friendly 3-0 defeat against Brazil, and went on to play twice for the country at the Qatar World Cup.

Andy Crosby enjoyed the taste of success with Brighton

ROCK-solid centre-half Andy Crosby won a Division 3 Championship medal with the Albion in 2001 before experiencing two frustrating near-miss seasons as captain of Oxford United.

Brighton’s achievement provided him with his first-ever promotion, but it didn’t turn out to be his last: he climbed out of the same division with Scunthorpe United and then, against all the odds, reached the Championship with the Iron – twice.

Micky Adams, who was a player at Leeds when Crosby was in their youth ranks, had been unsuccessful in trying to sign the defender when he was in charge of Brentford.

But as Adams set about building his first squad at the Albion, he managed to secure Crosby’s services for a £10,000 fee in the summer of 1999.

“I didn’t need any convincing at all to sign,” said Crosby. “It was good timing for me and it worked out fantastically well,” he told Richard Walker. “Sometimes it’s hard to see where you’re going when you’re just keeping your head down and working hard at a struggling club so the Albion did wonders for my career.”

In a matchday programme interview with Spencer Vignes, he added: “I couldn’t wait to sign. Even at that level, I still thought of them as a big club.

“My only reservations were that I’d never lived down south and that we’d just bought a house. We also had a one-year-old daughter. But in the end the pros outweighed the cons.”

The family moved into a house at Stone Cross, near Eastbourne, and Crosby made his debut (albeit with a broken toe!) in the 6-0 Withdean win over Mansfield (as featured in my recent blog post about Darren Freeman).

He developed an effective central defensive partnership with Danny Cullip, and he said: “Although we were very different characters away from the 90 minutes, something really clicked between us and everyone knows how vital it is to have a good centre-half pairing, just as much as a good front two working for each other.

“Our paths have crossed since, and the talk’s always of great memories from Brighton days.”

Hired as a stopper rather than a scorer, Crosby helpfully weighed in with five goals as Albion found their feet back in Sussex.

Then in the following season, Crosby was at the heart of the defence when Albion won the league. “That win down at Plymouth and the home game against Chesterfield where we sealed the Championship will stay with me forever,” he said. “It was just an amazing ride.”

Crosby continued: “We had this great spirit, a team desperate to do really well.

Pouncing to score and celebrate against future employer Hull City

“I’ve got nothing but good memories of the place. It was the first time I’d ever been involved in a promotion campaign as a player. For the first time in my life, I was seeing on a day-to-day basis what it takes to be successful.

“We played some great football and the fans were fantastic. I’ve said it before but if you can’t play for them you can’t play for anyone.”

He added: “Withdean was a funny place but somehow we were able to use it to our advantage. Other clubs didn’t like playing there.”

Getting to grips with Paul Watson

Once elevated to the higher level, Crosby lost his starting place to Simon Morgan and Adams’ successor Peter Taylor continued with Cullip and Morgan as his preferred centre-back pairing.

By then 28, Crosby didn’t fancy a watching brief and in December 2001 he moved on a free transfer to Oxford, the first United signing made by Ian Atkins. He said: “I didn’t want to go, and Peter said he wanted me to stay, but I wanted to play. Going to Oxford meant first team football.”

Although Crosby’s first half season with Oxford saw them struggle near the foot of the division, the 2002-03 campaign ended with them only a point off the play-off places and the central defender scored winning goals in four of the 53 matches he played.

It got better for him on a personal level the next season when his fellow pros named him in the 2003-04 PFA team of the year, but United missed out on the play-offs by three points.

Another string to Crosby’s bow at Oxford was being an accomplished penalty taker. He never missed a spot kick in normal play and, in 2003-04, one of the five he buried was at Scunthorpe’s Glanford Park.

In the summer of 2004, he declined a new contract believed to have been on worse terms than the previous one and chose to move back to the north to join Scunny.

Nonetheless, the Oxford Mail said of him: “The 31-year-old centre back has been a model of consistency in his time at the Kassam Stadium.

“Ideally suited to the Third Division with his uncompromising, no-nonsense style, the hard-tackling defender, who is also good in the air, was also greatly respected by his teammates for his cool professionalism.”

He may have started out in the basement division with Scunthorpe, but what followed was the stuff of dreams. Crosby himself later admitted: “When I joined, if someone had told me I’d be playing for Scunthorpe in the Championship, I would have called them a doctor.

“But it reaffirms your belief in football a little bit, especially when you’re involved first-hand, to see a club of Scunthorpe’s size still being able to pull off what was nothing short of a minor miracle.”

In an interview with the Scunny website, Crosby pointed out: “I was 31 when I arrived at Scunthorpe and I had to use my knowledge and experience in whatever capacity I could, and set standards on and off the pitch. It was something I enjoyed doing and I think it’s something that’s either in you or it’s not.

“My whole time at Scunthorpe was great and I never thought when I signed that we’d get to the Championship twice. It was fantastic and the highlight of my career without a shadow of a doubt.

“I was captain of a promotion-winning team from League One to the Championship, playing at some massive stadiums.”

Although knee injury issues limited him to nine appearances in the 2008-09 season, he was restored to the side for the play-offs and led Scunny to a 3-2 League One play-off final win over Millwall at Wembley in May 2009 (Matt Sparrow scored twice for Scunny).

“It was a great way to end playing,” he admitted. “I have some fantastic memories and look back at my time at the club with nothing but fondness.”

By then he had already been working as assistant manager to Nigel Adkins, the former Iron physio and after playing a total of 715 games for six league clubs he was also Adkins’ assistant manager at Southampton, Reading, Sheffield United, Hull City and Tranmere Rovers.

Crosby, who took over from Adkins as manager of League Two Tranmere in February 2025, said “I’ve got a fantastic relationship with Nigel. He’s been fantastic for me, changed me as a person and polished off a few of the rough edges. I’ve got nothing but great words to say about him.”

Into the manager’s chair

In an interview with tribalfootball.com, he said: “My coaching journey has been full of learning experiences, and I’m a much better coach now than when I started. I was fortunate to work with some fantastic players.

“My best experience was at Southampton, where we achieved back-to-back promotions from League One to the Premier League, working with incredible players like Lallana, Lambert, and Schneiderlin. Even the difficult moments teach you a lot, though. Results didn’t always go our way, but even then, those experiences helped me grow as a coach.”

Crosby also saw the development of the likes of Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, James Ward-Prowse and Luke Shaw during nearly two and a half years at Southampton. While at Bramall Lane, he also worked with future England internationals Aaron Ramsdale and Dominic Calvert-Lewin.

Even at Hull, he had the fortune to work with Fikayo Tomori, on loan from Chelsea, and Jarrod Bowen.

Born in Rotherham on 3 March 1973, miner’s son Crosby was raised in the village of Maltby. He supported the Millers as a youngster but was rejected by them as a player when he was 11. At 14, though, he was taken on at Leeds.

When he didn’t progress beyond the youth team at Elland Road, former Leeds captain and manager Billy Bremner took him on at Doncaster Rovers and gave him his league debut aged 18.

He played 60 times for Donny over a couple of seasons (and spent a month on loan at Conference side Halifax) before moving to the north east and spending five years at Darlington, notching up a total of 211 appearances.

He was captain of the losing side in the 1996 Third Division play-off final at Wembley when Jim Platt’s Darlo lost by a single goal to Neil Warnock’s Plymouth Argyle.

Off-field financial issues marred his time at Chester City in the 1998-99 season, so his move to Brighton was a welcome change.

Reflecting on that time with the Seagulls, he said: “In any walk of life, if you get a really good group together, recruit well and get good characters in who complement each other well, then you should succeed. A lot of that was down to Micky.

“It was the fittest I’ve ever been – that was down to him – but that work and organisation brought its reward which is something I’ve taken with me into my own coaching career.”

Before his current (August 2025) position at Prenton Park, he also coached the Northern Ireland under 21 international side and spent three years coaching and managing at Port Vale.

The only way was up after Tomori’s awkward Albion debut

FIKAYO TOMORI couldn’t have had a worse debut for Brighton.

The teenage defender on loan from Chelsea was booked on 37 minutes and scored an own goal in the 62nd as Brighton were humiliated 3-1 in the FA Cup by non-league opponents, National League Lincoln City.

Tomori, playing at right back, sliced Nathan Arnold’s cross past a startled Casper Ankergren who’d only just come on as a sub for the injured Niki Mäenpää.

In fact, Tomori wasn’t on the winning side in any of the three matches he started for the Seagulls.

However, he saw plenty of action when making seven appearances off the bench. For example, he played an hour in Albion’s 3-1 home win over Birmingham City when sickness forced off Lewis Dunk on the half-hour mark and slotted in alongside Uwe Huenemeier, who himself was deputising for injured Shane Duffy.

“We knew Lewis wasn’t quite right before the game and everyone had told me to be ready,” he said later. The matchday programme observed: “Tomori looked as if he’d been playing all season alongside Uwe, such was their understanding.”

The two were also paired together in the second half of the 2-1 win away to QPR when Tomori replaced Dunk at half-time. And Tomori lined up alongside Dunk in the centre of defence for the last game of the season at Villa Park when Jack Grealish’s last-minute equaliser denied Albion the Championship title.

Nevertheless, the talented youngster, who went on to be capped by England, was recognised as having played his part in the Albion winning promotion that 2016-17 season.

“I would have liked to play more football but this team’s pushing for promotion and I knew before I came here that getting in the side was going to be difficult,” he said in a matchday programme interview.

“I’ve had to be make sure I’ve been ready when called upon and take any opportunities that have come my way. It’s a challenge I’ve embraced. The manager has been really good to me and I’ve taken a lot of confidence from the fact that when we have had injuries in defence, I’m pretty much the first player to come on.

“I’ve really enjoyed it here. Being involved with a club that’s going for promotion has been a different sort of challenge to what I’ve been used to.”

Reflecting on that period a few years later, Tomori said: “It was a big part of my development, playing every day with professionals who have been playing the game for 10, 15 years.

“That focus, will to win and need to be at the top of your game every game was something I had to learn, and it was really important for my development.”

He added: “They were trying to get their first promotion to the Premier League. The team was really together and focused, and when the games came, they were really on it.

“It was my first taste of senior football and being in a senior changing room and being part of a matchday and stuff like that. It was a great learning experience and obviously we got promoted which was great.”

Born in Calgary, Canada, on 19 December 1997 to wealthy Nigerian parents, Yinka and Mo, who originate from Osun in the south west region of Nigeria, Tomori was less than a year old when the family moved to England.

The family home was in Woolwich and he enjoyed a kickabout with his friends from the age of five or six before starting organised football with Riverview United. The youngster admitted he modelled his game on Thierry Henry.

“I wore my socks above my knees like him, I wore gloves like him even if it wasn’t cold, and I celebrated like him,” he said. “I loved everything about him. Back then it was all about having fun and never did I think that one day I would end up playing for Chelsea.”

Tomori was taken on by the Chelsea academy as a seven-year-old but it wasn’t all about football and, after passing his 11+ exams, he attained 10 GCSEs (six As, three Bs and a C) at Gravesend Grammar School, where he was a pupil between 2009 and 2014.

Assistant head James Fotheringham told The Sun Tomori was the first Gravesend pupil to “really make it” as a footballer, pointing out: “We’ve had a number of boys promised the world by different football clubs and then they get dropped and end up nowhere.

“I asked Chelsea, ‘What makes Fikayo different?’ The guy said, ‘Because he’s got all the attributes of a footballer’s skills but he’s incredibly bright and he just reads the game. He’s got a couple of yards on people because he’s so bright’.”

At Chelsea, Tomori bonded with Tammy Abraham from an early age. They became good friends and made their way through the ranks and were part of the team that recorded back-to-back wins in the UEFA Youth League and the FA Youth Cup in 2015 and 2016.

The 2015-16 season saw Tomori named the Chelsea Academy Player of the Year and he rounded it off by making his first team debut as a substitute against Leicester City on the final day. He described it as “the proudest moment of his career” and explained: “To be out there playing with the likes of Eden Hazard and Willian was a fantastic feeling for me and my family.”

As Albion adjusted to the demands of the Premier League, Tomori remained in the Championship having gone on loan to a Hull City side battling to avoid the drop – a very different experience to his time with the Seagulls.

“My first full season on loan was at Hull and it was my first time away from home too,” he said. “We were hovering over the relegation zone for the whole season, so that was a different kind of challenge mentally.

“You weren’t sure if you were going to be in the team the next week if we had lost the game, because the club needed the points to stay up.

“Those loans really gave me a good outlook on football. Coming from Chelsea, you’re winning a lot of games and trophies, and are protected in a way. Those loans were what moulded me as a person and as a man and made me grow up a lot quicker.”

Tomori’s rapid progress earned him England international recognition and, in 2017, he was in the England under 20 team who won the World Cup in South Korea and in 2018 was with the under 21s when they won the Toulon tournament.

As a forerunner to his breakthrough at Chelsea, Tomori spent the 2018-19 season on loan at Derby County, where Frank Lampard had taken over as manager.

Fikayo played a total of 55 league and cup matches as County made it all the way to the play-off final where their tilt for promotion to the Premier League was finally quashed when Aston Villa beat them 2-1 at Wembley.

Nevertheless, the young defender was named as Derby’s Player of the Year, and perhaps it was no surprise that when Lampard’s next move was to become manager of Chelsea, he was quick to put Tomori into the first team at Stamford Bridge.

The majority of his 27 matches for Chelsea came in that 2019-20 season, and, although defending might have been his priority, he popped up with a couple of goals. A long-range screamer he scored against Wolves was voted Chelsea Goal of the Year.

The same season, Tomori stepped up to the full England side and made his debut as an 84th-minute substitute for Trent Alexander-Arnold in the 4-0 away win against Kosovo in a Euro 2020 qualifier in November 2019. In doing so, he became the 50th Chelsea player to be capped by England.

However, it was another two years before Gareth Southgate selected him again, by which time he had moved to AC Milan.

After falling out of contention at Chelsea, he joined the Italian side on loan initially in January 2021 but then made the move permanent in June 2021, signing a four-year deal.

In a lengthy interview with Sky Sports, he spoke about how his career had turned round after the disappointment of losing his place at Chelsea.

“It was a difficult time – every footballer wants to play, and every footballer wants to show themselves on the pitch,” he said.

“When you are not able to do that, it is difficult – and being able to overcome and forget about that is part of the reason why it is now going so well.

“I didn’t really dwell on it and just moved on and put it as part of football, part of life.

“I had a really good support system with my family and my friends – and now I’ve overcome that I want to take it further and keep progressing.”

On 9 October 2021, Tomori was a 60th minute substitute for John Stones in England’s 5-0 thrashing of Andorra, when his good friend Abraham was among the scorers.

The pair were up against each other 22 days later when Tomori’s Milan beat Abraham’s AS Roma 2-1 in a Serie A clash. Zlatan Ibrahimovic scored his 400th league goal (and 150th in Italian football).