Chuba Akpom’s watching brief in Albion’s promotion

AFTER Chuba Akpom finally made his mark on England’s Championship, he earned a €14m move to Ajax where he initially struggled to make an impact.

But three goals in two wins after new manager John van’t Schip sent him on as a substitute made life look a lot better.

The forward got 28 goals in helping Middlesbrough to the Championship play-offs in 2022-23 but the move to Ajax began badly and he had few chances as the side struggled under former coach Maurice Steijn.

“It was a terrible first two months here if I am being honest,” Akpom told AFC Ajax. “The new manager has made me feel more at home than I have ever felt since arriving. We are footballers, we are human beings first.

“He spoke to me as a human being, not as a footballer. Ever since the new manager arrived, I feel much lighter, back to myself.”

The early season form sounded a lot like the unhappy spell when he was on loan to Brighton from Arsenal in 2017.

Akpom spent 16 years at Arsenal and one of his major inspirations was Tottenham Hotspur’s Chris Hughton, who took him on loan at Brighton. Hughton had been to the same inner city school, St Bonaventure’s in Newham, as the young striker from Canning Town and in an Andy Naylor exclusive for the Argus, Akpom revealed: “When I was in school there used to be pictures of the gaffer there.

“The kids used him like an inspiration and motivation. I did as well. Seeing someone come from the same area and the same school as me to become such a big and successful person.”

But the alma mater link did little to help the Arsenal loanee – in spite of high hopes when he signed in early 2017, Hughton gave him only one start and the rest of his involvement was as a substitute.

“He is a young talent who gained valuable experience with Hull in the Championship last season, will give us really good pace in the forward areas and complement the other strikers at the club,” said Hughton.

“We fought off competition from other clubs to sign Chuba and we would like to thank Arsenal for the opportunity of working with him for the rest of the season.”

Akpom was in effect a replacement for Dutch flop Elvis Manu, who left the building on loan to Huddersfield after a disappointing five months on the south coast.

It was to his disadvantage, though, that he joined the club at a time when Glenn Murray, Tomer Hemed and Sam Baldock were the preferred forward options, and, from the outset,he was aware of the challenge they posed.

“All three are experienced players; they know the Championship and they’ve shown what they can do with the goals they’ve scored, so it’s going to be good to learn from them,” he told the matchday programme.

“I’m going to be an addition to what we’ve already got here. We’ve all got something different to offer and I like to play at a fast intensity, try to get at defenders and get some shots off – basically be as much of a threat as I can. I’m also a team player, which is important.”

As it turned out, the young loanee’s only start was against Blackburn Rovers, on April Fool’s Day, and he was hooked on 58 minutes, with Hemed going on his place. Murray won it for the Seagulls with the only goal of the game nine minutes later netting past Jason Steele in the Rovers goal.

Akpom made nine appearances off the bench but he didn’t manage to get on the scoresheet. He made his debut as a 63rd minute sub for Hemed in the 3-1 defeat at Huddersfield on 2 February and replaced Jamie Murphy in the next match, when fellow substitute Hemed netted a last-gasp equaliser in a 3-3 draw at Brentford.  

“I know the Championship is a tough, tough league to play in,” he told the programme. “It’s really competitive and unpredictable, so you’ve got to get your head down and take each game as it comes.

“The team’s been flying high at the top of the league this season so you can see they’ve got the winning mentality in this league, and they’re playing the right kind of football, so I just want to be a positive addition to the team and help boost the bid for promotion.”

Akpom’s arrival at the Amex promised so much more, because he had already scored four goals at the stadium in previous matches: he scored a hat-trick for Arsenal’s under-21 side there and scored for England under 21 in a win over Switzerland in October 2015.

“I like playing here,” he told the programme. “The stadium’s nice, the pitch is great as well, so you can’t complain.

“It’s always good to score goals, no matter who it’s against, but hopefully I can now score a few goals here for Brighton.”

Even though his involvement in Albion’s promotion was peripheral, the club’s automatic elevation to the Premier League as runners up behind Newcastle meant he’d gone one better than the previous season when he’d been part of Hull City’s promotion via the play-offs.

That had been his fourth loan experience having previously gone on temporary moves to Brentford, Coventry City and Nottingham Forest.

Born in Canning Town on 9 October 1995, Akpom was playing football on local streets from the age of five but soon moved on to the Wanstead Flats, where he played for Rippleway United. An Arsenal scout spotted him at the tender age of six.

“I had a few training sessions for Arsenal and then signed for the club. I’ve been there ever since,” he told the programme. His best friend, who was developing alongside him, was Alex Iwobi, who also made it through to the Arsenal first team before moving on to Everton.

Akpom made his senior debut for the Gunners as a late substitute in a 3-1 win away to Sunderland in September 2013 (the match when Mezut Ozil made his debut).

The young striker went on to make a further nine first team appearances (mostly in the FA Cup and League Cup) but couldn’t claim a regular starting place under Arsene Wenger.

Akpom returned to Arsenal as Albion prepared for life in the Premier League and the following January made another loan move, linking up with Belgian First Division side Sint-Truiden on transfer deadline day in January 2018. He scored six goals in 16 games.

His association with Arsenal finally came to an end that summer when he signed a three-year contract with Greek Super League club PAOK Salonika.

Akpom told the BBC he consulted former Arsenal teammate Lucas Perez before moving to the club, based in Greece’s second largest city of Thessaloniki, and by the season’s end he had helped them win their first league title in 34 years.

“Perez said that I wouldn’t want to leave PAOK if I signed,” he said. “Thessaloniki is a beautiful city by the sea, the people are friendly, the climate is nice and, when I’m not training, I’m sometimes able to go to nearby beaches.

“I’m living in an apartment about 10 minutes from the ground and I drive along the coast to training.”

In May 2019, Akpom was the delighted but emotional scorer of the winning goal for PAOK in the Greek Cup as they beat AEK Athens.

After scoring 18 goals in two years for the Greek side, Akpom returned to the UK to sign for Neil Warnock at Middlesbrough, the effervescent Warnock declaring: “I’m delighted to finally have got him. He’s been my number one choice. I’ve wanted him for a long time.”

The deal gave Arsenal an unexpected £1m windfall because they had inserted a clause into the contract when the striker was sold to PAOK Salonika stipulating they would be entitled to 40 per cent of any fee if he was sold back to an English club.

Such an arrangement was frowned on by the football authorities and earned a fine and censure from FIFA, but Arsenal challenged that decision and got it overturned on an appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

Although Akpom scored on his Boro debut to secure a 1-1 draw at QPR and followed it up with a goal in his second game, a 2-1 home win over Barnsley, he went on to score just five in 40 appearances and in August 2021 returned to PAOK on loan.

The manager castigated the club’s recruitment team for having signed the player on the strength of watching videos, saying: “We really have to go into everything a bit more when we’re looking to sign players. I don’t think we’ll be signing another player on the recruitment (team’s) say after just watching a video, we need to watch players live.”

Warnock was typically forthright when asked why it didn’t work out for Akpom on Teesside, telling BBC Tees: “I think it’s a mixture of things. I think at the end of the day he didn’t show enough during the games to warrant him getting a place and you have to play games to get yourself fit.

“I never really thought he deserved a run of games because whenever I used him he didn’t perform and it’s one of those things.

“When I spoke to him we all agreed it’s best to go and I think he’s quite happy to go back there.”

Akpom had been expected to leave Boro in the summer of 2022 after returning from his loan in Greece, as Warnock’s successor Chris Wilder looked for other forward options.

But he impressed the boss in pre-season and started in their first game against West Brom, and again when coming off the bench in a defeat at QPR.

“It’s no secret that people would probably have thought I’d be gone by now, and maybe me too,” Akpom told BBC Tees. “It has been a rocky few months for me, which is no secret.

“I don’t know what the future holds. I just have the mentality of staying professional and enjoying it. Who knows what tomorrow brings?”

After Akpom scored both Boro goals in a 2-2 home draw with Sheffield United, Wilder said he was keen for Akpom to remain part of his squad.

“He’ll rightly get the plaudits. For him to come back into the group and show a great attitude… He’s just done an interview and said it’s one day at a time but for me it isn’t that unless he wants it to be, and I don’t think he does,” Wilder said.

“It’s his job to convince me that he wants to stay at this brilliant football club and he’s done enough. He has to keep going of course but we’ve all seen enough that he sees his medium to long-term future here. We’re delighted to have him here.”

In a quite extraordinary turnround in fortune for the player, he scored 28 goals in 38 games for Boro in the 2022-23 season, ending a 33-year wait for a striker who could score more than 20 goals in a season.

gazettelive.co.uk said of him: “He has gone from also-ran to one of the most feared strikers in the league.”

Comparing his goalscoring prowess to the likes of former Boro heroes like Brian Clough, John Hickton and John O’Rourke, the newspaper said: “Akpom has shown what any decent player can achieve if they stay fully focused.

“He already looked a different player before the arrival of Michael Carrick but has since climbed another few rungs up the ladder.”

Reporter Eric Paylor wrote: “The marvellous thing about Akpom’s goal sprint is that we didn’t see it coming. Two years ago he looked a very ordinary striker indeed.

“He managed to sneak into the side this season only as an afterthought, because Chris Wilder was short of strikers. So it’s to his eternal credit that Akpom has grabbed the nettle and shown what a massive threat he is in the box.”

When Carrick succeeded Wilder, he selected Akpom in a no.10 role rather than as an out and out centre forward, and it paid off.

Carrick told gazettelive.co.uk: “You go on your eye, your instincts, how well he takes the ball, how fluid he is moving with the ball in a bit of space. Technically coming through the ranks at Arsenal he’s had that foundation. I just wanted to free him up a little bit and play to his strengths. Thankfully he’s been able to do that. I think it suits him.

“It’s difficult for me to speak about the turnaround because I don’t know how he was playing before that before I came through the door.

“Certainly, from my first training session and the games leading up to me taking over, I saw encouraging signs from him. I said it from the start, we have tried to play to the strengths of our players and put them in positions that benefit them and the team. Chuba is definitely one of them. He’s found his role and he’s suited it; he’s doing great.”

Akpom himself said: “I wish I’d been playing in a deeper role throughout the whole of my career! I’m enjoying it.

“Playing in a nine previously helps me with my movement up top and with my back to goal, but I feel like coming to feet is when you can see the real me – getting on the half turn, playing one-twos, connecting the play and dribbling – this is what my game is all about.”

Over in Holland, Akpom struggled to get a starting place as Ajax found themselves at the wrong end of the Eredivisie.

After the departure of Steijn as Ajax coach, Akpom made a brief appearance as a sub when the Amsterdam side lost 2-0 to Albion in the first leg of their Europa League tie in October 2023 under caretaker boss Hedwiges Maduro.

But in Schip’s first Eredivisie game against Volendam, Akpom was sent on and scored in a 2-0 win.

He went one better against Heerenveen, joining the action off the bench again and this time scoring twice in a 4-1 win for Ajax.

In January 2025, Akpom secured a loan move to French side Lille, who secured a place in the last 16 of the Champions League after thumping Feyenoord 6-1.

100 goals in Scotland and England for Neil Martin

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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