‘Outstanding pro’ Wes Fogden was Cherries pick after Albion

WES FOGDEN is still playing the game he loves despite injuries blighting much of a career that might never have got off the ground.

Being told he might not play again when undergoing an operation to remove a benign tumour on his spine as an 18-year-old at Brighton made him even more determined to enjoy every moment of being able to step out onto a football pitch.

Although he eventually broke through to Albion’s first team, it was at AFC Bournemouth that he got regular league football as the Cherries began their rise through the football pyramid.

Brighton-born Fogden has stayed in Dorset and now plays part-time for Poole Town while working as head of football for Branksome-based Elite Skills Arena, a business owned by former Bournemouth chairman Eddie Mitchell.

“Bearing in mind the amount of time injured, I’ve missed out on about five seasons of football,” Fogden told The News, Portsmouth’s Neil Allen in an interview published on 1 December 2022.

“I’ve had pretty much every injury going. Cruciate ligament damage to both knees, hamstrings, ankles, I’ve broken my nose four or five times, I fractured my cheekbone when going up for a header in the FA Youth Cup against Andy Carroll.

“There was even the time when the ball smacked me in the private regions, requiring an operation and putting me out for four or five weeks. A real variety of injuries.

“But I wouldn’t have it any other way. As long as I’m fit, I want to be playing every game, especially after what happened at Brighton.”

Fogden was never short of admirers for the way he bounced back from the devastating blow of being told he might never be able to play football again.

Tommy Elphick, who also went through Brighton’s youth ranks before moving to Bournemouth, said: “One thing with Wes is that you know he is going to dig in for you. He is a very good player; a footballer who can play at right-back, right wing or in central midfield.”

The player himself told the Albion matchday programme: “When I was told that I might not play again was the worst moment of my life but to come through it is a great achievement.”

After surgery to remove the tumour from his spine was thankfully successful, Fogden had to spend three months in a body cast before slowly recovering throughout the 2006-07 season.

He was grateful to the support of physio Malcolm Stuart, fitness coach Matt (‘Stretch’) Miller and physio Kim Eaton in aiding his return to fitness.

Albion sent him out on loan to Dorchester Town to gain experience but when Dean Wilkins’ squad was hit by ‘flu, the midfielder, who had previously been part of Wilkins’ successful Albion youth team, was recalled.

He made his first team debut at right-back in a Johnstone’s Paint Trophy tie against Swansea City when he was up against future Albion player Andrea Orlandi.

Fogden kept the shirt for the following Saturday’s league game at Oldham but was unfortunate to be sacrificed early in a reshuffle Wilkins was forced to make after wantaway Dean Hammond had got himself sent off early in the game. Nathan Elder went on as a substitute and scored a last-ditch equaliser for the Seagulls.

After that, Fogden’s involvement was a watching brief from the subs bench although he did get on in the 64th minute of a game at Cheltenham, replacing Albion’s goalscorer Jake Robinson in a 2-1 defeat.

Fogden subsequently went back out on loan, this time to Bognor Regis Town, and when Micky Adams was brought back to the Albion over Wilkins’ head that summer, he preferred to select more experienced players.

Fogden returned to Dorchester on loan initially and made the move permanent in October 2008. “Dropping out of league football wasn’t a tough decision,” he told afcb.co.uk. “Dorchester Town offered me a good deal, they were the only professional club in the Conference South at the time and it was a good opportunity to play first team football week-in-week-out.”

A cost-cutting exercise early in 2009 saw Fogden let go and he joined Havant & Waterlooville, who were in the same division. He was voted the Supporters’ Player of the Season in 2009-10 and 2010-11.

Having contemplated a career outside of football, he enrolled to take a degree in sports coaching and PE at Chichester University but Bournemouth boss Lee Bradbury gave him a second chance to build a career in league football.

“It was a difficult decision to put my studies on hold when Bournemouth approached me,” he said. “I was a year and a half in and I wasn’t expecting that call.

“After speaking to my family and the university, I decided to give the professional game one last shot.”

With the three-year deal done, Fogden said: “I’m really pleased to get back here at this level.

“It is a big jump for me. I was only young when I made my few appearances for Brighton and the pace was a lot quicker so hopefully I can just adapt as soon as I can.”

Bradbury told BBC Radio Solent: “Wes is a young prospect, who has a good grounding from his time at Brighton. He can play on either wing and can also play up front or in behind the strikers.

“He’s well thought of in the non-league circuit, and I saw it as a good opportunity to get him down here and integrate him into our squad.”

After three substitute appearances, Fogden produced an eye-catching performance on his full debut in a 1-1 draw at Colchester United in October 2011, Bournemouth’s Daily Echo observing that he “showed some neat touches in a lively display” playing just behind the striker in an attacking midfield role.

“I thought Wes Fogden was probably the best player on the park for us,” said Bradbury. “He was different class. He had great energy levels and worked really hard. He set the standard for the rest of the team.

“He has played off the striker quite a lot. He can play on either wing or up front in a partnership.

“He has got a lot of uses. He showed on Tuesday night what great quality he has, what a great professional he is and the fitness he has as well.”

The following March, after Fogden struck a 20-yard winning goal in a 1-0 victory over Brentford, Bradbury was once again full of praise for his signing. “I’m delighted for him. It was a terrific strike,” he said. “His energy levels are fantastic and he works so hard for the team. He’s very durable and a pleasure to work with.”

Fogden was part of a group of players who shared a close bond through meeting up at the Cotea coffee shop in Westbourne. The group included Ryan Fraser, Marc Pugh, Benji Buchel and Shaun MacDonald.

MacDonald, who joined Cherries two months before Fogden, told the Glasgow Times: “Just before I left, we all started going to Cotea in Westbourne. The food was always perfect, the coffee really nice and the people who own it are lovely.”

Fogden remained part of the set-up during Paul Groves’ brief reign after taking over from Bradbury, and then the return from Burnley of Eddie Howe and Jason Tindall. “Eddie and Jason gave the whole club a lift, the fans, the staff and the players, and we went on a roll that didn’t stop,” said Fogden.

Howe’s appreciation of Fogden was demonstrated in an interview with the Daily Echo, when he said: “Wes is a hard worker and a real team player but has got ability as well. He is a very good footballer, he has quality on the ball and you can`t underestimate that.”

Describing him as a valued member of the squad, the manager added: “Wes has certainly got the fire inside him to want to improve and to keep his place and I have been very impressed with him.”

Having made 59 appearances for the Cherries, including 32 League One starts, Fogden didn’t make any appearances in the Championship during the first half of the 2013-14 season and moved on to Portsmouth in January 2014.

Ahead of the move, Howe told BBC Radio Solent: “He’s been a really good servant to the club in his time here, he’s been an outstanding professional and someone who we have really enjoyed working with.

“But it’s been difficult to give him, although he has been injured this season, as much game time as he wants.”

Looking back on it a couple of years later, Fogden said: “I still had 18 months on my contract but decided that moving to Pompey was right for me.

“It was sad to leave, but it was time for a new chapter in my career. After the injuries I had when I was young it made me realise that, ultimately, I just love playing; if you’re not in that starting eleven on a matchday it’s very difficult.”

Born in Brighton on 12 April 1988, Fogden started playing football from an early age. “I was four or five years old, playing with boys a couple of years above me in my older brother’s team, which was run by my dad,” he said. “I signed for Brighton at 11 years old and played right the way through my school years.”

That senior school was Patcham High and in 2001 Fogden was in a Sussex under-14s squad alongside the likes of Richard Martin, Joel Lynch, Tommy Elphick, Tommy Fraser, Scott Chamberlain and Joe Gatting who all went on to play for the Albion.

He was part of the hugely successful Albion youth team of 2006 who, against all the odds, beat the youth sides of Premier League clubs Chelsea and Blackburn Rovers in the FA Youth Cup before losing on penalties to Newcastle United (managed by Peter Beardsley) in the quarter finals.

It was only after he had signed on as a professional at 18 in 2006, that he found out about his spine tumour.

“Initially I was told I would never play football again,” he recalled. “A diagnosis like that definitely changes the way you think about things; you take each day as it comes and enjoy it for what it is.”

Fogden’s time at Portsmouth was disrupted by a serious knee injury and he was only able to make 29 appearances in 19 months at Fratton Park. He later suffered a similar injury while playing for Dorking Wanderers and, in a March 2022 interview with Surrey Live, said: “With both of my ACL injuries I gained a lot of experience in the exercises I’d need to do,” he said.

“With the first ACL I had, I had a great physio at Portsmouth, Sean Duggan, who gave me a step-by-step plan. It was an unbelievable plan and I’ve used a lot of that into what I’ve done this season.

“Every minute of every game is a bonus now. I’m one of those that likes to play every minute anyway because of the injuries I’ve had. You cherish the moments you are out there.”

Fogden’s last professional league action came at League Two Yeovil Town where he was the 12th of 19 new signings made by Paul Sturrock ahead of the 2015-16 season.

He scored two goals in 17 appearances (plus one as sub) but was released in the summer of 2016 by Sturrock’s successor Darren Way.

He returned to Havant & Waterlooville in the Isthmian Premier League, helping them to promotion to the National League South and over four seasons made 154 appearances, scoring 23 goals.

For the 2020-21 season, Fogden switched to National League South outfit Dorking Wanderers, where he was once again dogged by injuries, including a nasty head injury that required hospital treatment.

He dropped back down to football’s sixth tier with Poole Town for the 2022-23 season because of the travel requirements playing and training for Dorking entailed.

There had been times when it clashed with his day job demands and taking on more at Elite Skills Arena had also influenced the decision. ESA owner Mitchell was chairman at Dorchester way back when the player went there on loan from Brighton.

“I’ve been working for Eddie Mitchell for a while now and have known him going back 15 years. He’s been really good to me,” he said.

As regards continuing to play, Fogden told The News: “All the time I can move about the pitch and be involved, playing as well as I can, then I’ll stay in the game. I’m still playing central midfield, right in the action, attacking and defending. I’m still going.

“When you’re a footballer, injuries are going to happen, the way I play is always twisting and turning, being involved, action packed. Freak injuries occur for me because of that – I can’t change my playing style.

“Considering I’m a bit shorter than a lot of players and at elbow height, it doesn’t help with my facial area. The same for dead legs, my thighs are knee-height compared to most players, it’s just one of those things.

“As I’ve got older, I’ve learnt to get away from some of the injuries which maybe I could have avoided previously. I’m still all-action, but sometimes it’s a case of pulling out of tackles I know I haven’t got any chance of winning.

“Are my injuries connected with the back? I don’t think anyone can really know, there might be a bit of a lack of mobility in that area, which could cause hamstring injuries and give less knee support, and perhaps a pelvic imbalance. I don’t know, I’m not really sure.

“It has been 16 years since that back operation and I’m still playing. Without football I wouldn’t be anywhere near the person I am. It’s strange thinking back to how it could have been, had it not been for a fantastic surgeon.”

Krul luck as Ryan kept Dutch penalty ‘master’ at bay

AN international goalkeeper whose prowess at saving penalties took his country through to the World Cup semi-finals barely got a look-in between the sticks for Brighton.

Experienced Dutchman Tim Krul, who played 184 games for Newcastle United over 12 years, kept goal for the Seagulls on only five occasions during the 2017-18 season.

The form of Mat Ryan, himself an Australian international, meant Krul’s involvement was restricted to cup matches and a watching brief from the substitute’s bench.

Krul initially signed on a season-long loan deal on deadline day in August 2017 but the move was made permanent the day after he made his Albion first team debut in a 1-0 League Cup defeat at Bournemouth.

Manager Chris Hughton said: “I know Tim from my time at Newcastle and he is an excellent professional that has a vast amount of experience at both club and international level.

“He’s played an extensive amount of games in the Premier League, as well as playing in the Europa League and his experience will also help benefit the other keepers in the squad.”

Having experienced some in and out spells during his time on Tyneside, Krul understood the situation when interviewed by The Argus in November 2017.

“I’m working hard every day to push Mat Ryan. He’s done great so far and we’re picking up points, that’s what it’s all about.

“If the gaffer needs us or Mat got injured, I need to be ready and literally it can happen any second.”

Krul admitted: “It’s a different position for myself, because I’m used to playing week in, week out.”

The move to Albion had been the chance to reignite his career after a long spell on the sidelines having suffered a cruciate knee ligament injury on international duty in 2015.

Krul is powerless to stop Romelu Lukaku’s winning goal for Manchester United in Brighton’s FA Cup fifth round tie at Old Trafford

Before he made the move, he consulted Steve Harper, who’d been on loan at Brighton during the Gus Poyet era. Harper told the matchday programme: “I told him it woud be a great move for him and it will also be a great signing for the club. He was outstanding in the season Newcastle finished fifth in the Premier League and he’s an international ‘keeper for the Netherlands who has played at the World Cup.”

After he’d played in Albion’s FA Cup fifth round defeat to Manchester United at Old Trafford, Krul told The Argus: “Obviously when I came, I was hoping to get a bit more (game time) maybe, but at the time I walked through the door Maty’s performances went up a level, so that is testament to him.

“The level we are training at with Ben Roberts every day is really high. He has been showing that in the games. I’ve been around long enough to see when a goalkeeper is playing well you take that. I’m 29, I’m back fit, I’m feeling better than I’ve ever done so I’m ready to play. I just have to be patient again.

“I had to be patient at the start of my career and you have to do that again now. But my chance will come. There’s a lot of years left.”

Krul finally got regular playing time again when he moved to Norwich City

Unfortunately, that didn’t happen with the Albion but Krul certainly resurrected his career with Norwich City and, after signing an initial two-and-a-half-year deal in the summer of 2018, earned a further three-and-a-half-year contract in December 2020.

He then contracted Covid-19, announcing it on Twitter, where he has a huge following of more than 349,000. “I feel under the weather and fatigued,” he wrote. “It’s an important reminder to stay safe, this virus is not a hoax.”

Thankfully, by the end of January, he had recovered and returned to the side to clock up 100 appearances for the Canaries.

Born in The Hague, Holland, on 3 April 1988, from a young age Krul played for his hometown club RAS and was with ADO Den Haag between the ages of 12 and 17. Graeme Souness was still boss when Krul joined Newcastle in the summer of 2005. Shay Given and Steve Harper were the established ‘keepers in those days.

Shortly after making his debut in a UEFA Cup match in November 2006, he suffered injuries which ruled him out of action for six months. After returning to playing in the spring of 2007, he earned a new four-year deal with Newcastle.

An eventful loan spell in Scotland followed as Krul sought to gain league experience at Falkirk. He conceded 11 goals in two games early on (four to Celtic, seven to Rangers), he was sent off in a game on 2 January 2008, and then dislocated a shoulder in a cup match against Aberdeen, bringing the loan to a premature end.

When Given left St James’ Park for Manchester City, Krul was no.2 behind Harper in Newcastle’s 2009-10 season in the Championship. He deputised if Harper was injured and was given starts in cup matches. By the season’s end, when the Toon had won promotion back to the Premier League, Krul was awarded a new four-year deal and made his debut at that level when replacing the injured Harper in a 1-0 win away at Everton in September 2010.

He ended that campaign having played 25 first team matches, and the following season, established himself as the no.1, with Rob Elliot as his deputy. Out-in-the-cold Harper was allowed to spend a month on loan with the Albion.

Under Alan Pardew, Krul was the preferred first choice ‘keeper, and he signed a five-year contract with the Magpies in 2012. Several different injuries in 2012-13 restricted him to 30 appearances.

Another six-week injury lay-off over Christmas 2014 interrupted a period when there was yet another managerial change on Tyneside and the 2015-16 season under Steve McLaren was only a couple of months old before Krul was ruled out for the remainder of the season when he ruptured an anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee playing in the Netherlands’ 2-1 European Qualifiers win in Kazakhstan.

McLaren was sacked in March 2016 and his replacement Rafa Benitez couldn’t prevent them from being relegated. Krul signed a one-year contract extension in the summer of 2016 but, with Elliot and Karl Darlow ahead of him, he was sent on loan to Ajax as Newcastle successfully bounced back to the elite, pipping Albion to the Championship title.

Meanwhile, things didn’t work out as planned for Krul. He only got a handful of games for the Ajax reserve side and he spent the second half of the season at AZ Alkmaar instead.

Krul has played for his country at every age level and made his full international debut in a friendly against Brazil in 2011. Maarten Stekelenburg and Jasper Cillessen have normally been ahead of him but he has won 11 caps, including three in 2020 after a five-year absence from the side. However, it was what happened at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil that most fans will remember.

Head coach Louis van Gaal took off Cillessen in the final seconds of extra time with the Dutch still drawing 0-0 with Costa Rica and sent Krul on because of his reputation for saving penalties. Sure enough, he made two saves in the subsequent shoot-out and Holland went through to the semi-finals (where they went out 4-2 on penalties to Argentina).

The story behind the decision emerged in an article by Michael Bailey for The Athletic on 5 March 2020. The Dutch goalkeeping coach at the tournament, Frans Hoek, explained how Krul had responded best of the three ‘keepers to special training he put them through.

“When we came together with the national team, the three goalkeepers were more or less at the same level in stopping penalties. And that level was low,” Hoek told The Athletic. “We decided to do things in a different way and when you do that you have to believe in it, practice it and then show it. Basically, Tim responded best to that.

“He had some advantages. He’s very big, he has an enormous reach. He is impressive when you’re standing the other side of him and maybe because he’s from Den Haag area, he can be a little bit provocative. Michel Vorm is too nice a guy, so is Cillessen. But Tim can get away with it. It’s just something he has.”

A look back through the archives reveals Krul was displaying his prowess saving penalties as far back as his youth playing days. In an FA Youth Cup match for Newcastle against Brighton, he made saves from Tommy Fraser and Scott Chamberlain as Toon edged it 3-2 on penalties.

Albion goalkeeper coach Roberts was full of praise when asked about the big Dutch ‘keeper. “He has an aura about him and the self-belief to think he will save everything,” said Roberts. “I’m delighted for him as lots wrote him off when he had his bad knee injury. He’s since shown how much his hard work and dedication has paid off.”

After putting pen to paper on his new Norwich contract, Krul told the club website: “Proud is the big word. I’m excited to commit my future to Norwich and have had an amazing two and a half years already at this club, so I’m excited to add another three and a half years to that.

“The plan the club has got for the next few years is exciting and there’s some young, exciting talent coming through the ranks as well. From top to bottom, it’s a club I want to be at; one that’s run really well from Michael and Delia to the kitman. It’s an exciting time for the club, for sure.

“As a player, you want to be loved and I’ve got a great relationship with the fans. The club giving me this three-and-a-half-year contract shows the belief they’ve still got in me.”

Manager Daniel Farke added: “It’s fantastic news for us to have a player of Tim’s quality and personality. He’s by far the best goalkeeper in this league and was impressive in the Premier League.

“He’s still in a really good age for a goalkeeper and can play many more years. It’s good news he was willing to sign a long-term contract because there is lots of interest in a player of his quality and experience.”

Krul was a key part of Norwich’s Championship-winning sides of 2018-19 (when he was ever-present) and 2020-21. But in August 2023 he returned to the Premier League when he was signed by newly-promoted Luton Town.

Town boss Rob Edwards said: “Tim’s a leader and a top goalkeeper who is still very and ambitious and very hungry. He wants to play.

“It’s great to have someone of his level in the group with that ambition and to be that driven, and it’s going to add great competition to the goalkeeper department, which is what we’ve wanted.”

Pictures from online sources and matchday programmes.