Steve Claridge

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Steve Claridge
Personal information
Full name Stephen Edward Claridge
Date of birth (1966-04-10) 10 April 1966 (age 55)
Place of birth Portsmouth, England
Position(s) Striker
Club information
Current team
Salisbury (manager)
Youth career
Portsmouth
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1983–1984 Fareham Town 13 (2)
1984–1985 Bournemouth 7 (1)
1985–1988 Weymouth 110 (28)
1988 Crystal Palace 0 (0)
1988–1990 Aldershot 62 (19)
1990–1992 Cambridge United 79 (28)
1992 Luton Town 16 (2)
1992–1994 Cambridge United 53 (18)
1994–1996 Birmingham City 88 (35)
1996–1998 Leicester City 63 (17)
1998Portsmouth (loan) 10 (2)
1998 Wolverhampton Wanderers 5 (0)
1998–2001 Portsmouth 104 (34)
2001Millwall (loan) 6 (3)
2001–2003 Millwall 85 (26)
2003–2004 Weymouth 47 (24)
2004 Brighton & Hove Albion 5 (0)
2004–2005 Brentford 4 (0)
2005Wycombe Wanderers (loan) 4 (0)
2005 Wycombe Wanderers 15 (4)
2005 Millwall 0 (0)
2005 Gillingham 1 (0)
2005–2006 Bradford City 26 (5)
2006Walsall (loan) 7 (1)
2006–2007 Bournemouth 1 (0)
2007 Worthing 1 (0)
2007 Harrow Borough 4 (2)
2009 Weymouth 1 (1)
2011–2012 Gosport Borough 11 (4)
2017 Salisbury 1 (0)
Total 829 (256)
Teams managed
2000–2001 Portsmouth
2003–2004 Weymouth
2005 Millwall
2015– Salisbury[1]
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Stephen Edward Claridge (born 10 April 1966) is an English football pundit, coach and former player. He was a pundit for BBC Sport football shows including Football Focus and The Football League Show, until 2015 when he became both manager and a director at newly formed Salisbury.[2]

Claridge's career was known for its longevity and diversity. Born in Portsmouth, he has spent a number of periods with teams from Hampshire and Dorset, having begun his career with non-league Fareham Town in 1983. After failing to gain a permanent contract at local league club A.F.C. Bournemouth, Claridge spent three years at Weymouth, in his longest single spell with any club. From 1988 till 1996 Claridge played for a number of Football League teams, before moving to Leicester City with whom he played in the Premier League and won the 1997 Football League Cup. In 1998, he moved to Portsmouth, where he was also player manager from 2000 to 2001. After a spell with Millwall, he dropped down to the Southern Premier League to work as player-manager for Weymouth. After this ended in 2004, Claridge played for ten different clubs in a variety of leagues, never spending more than a season with one team. He has played at all levels of English football and has also appeared in 1000 professional or semi-professional football matches.

After formally retiring from football in 2007, Claridge moved into media work for the BBC. His experience of the Football League has been used to position him as an expert at that level, though he works across a variety of different football programmes on the BBC. After retirement he occasionally played semi-professional football for clubs in south England, most recently in 2017 for Salisbury.

Early years[]

Claridge was born in Portsmouth and grew up in Titchfield, a village near Fareham, and attended Brookfield Community School in Sarisbury Green. He was an adopted child.[3]

Claridge initially played for Fareham Town in the Southern League. He got into Football League side Bournemouth, though Claridge again stepped down the leagues after just seven games for Bournemouth to sign for Weymouth.[citation needed]

In October 1988 Claridge moved to Crystal Palace for a brief period before opting to join Division Four team Aldershot for season 88–89. He spent two years with the club before signing with Cambridge United for £75,000. He moved with Cambridge up into the Second Division (which later became the First Division) and stayed with the club for most of the next four years. His tempestuous relationship with manager John Beck, which was exacerbated by Claridge's gambling problems,[4] eventually led to his being sold to Luton Town for only £120,000 in March 1992. With Luton in financial difficulties however he was sold back to Cambridge, for £190,000, just five months later (Beck having left the club by this time).

In January 1994 Claridge moved to Birmingham City for £350,000. In 1994–95, he became the first player since Trevor Francis to score 20 goals in a season for Birmingham, a performance that earned him the club's Player of the Year award.[5] Claridge was transferred to Leicester City for £1.2 million in March 1996. It was at Leicester that Claridge reached the Premiership, scoring winning goals in both the 1996 play-off final that gave Leicester promotion and the 1997 League Cup final replay. In 1997 his autobiography Tales From The Boot Camps, co-written with Ian Ridley, was first published.

Moves into management[]

In 1998 Claridge joined hometown club Portsmouth on loan and, following a brief period at Wolverhampton Wanderers, signed for Portsmouth on a permanent basis. From 2000 this was as a player-manager, though Claridge's reign lasted for just twenty-five games before he was demoted. After a period on loan with Millwall, he moved to the London club on a free transfer in 2001. He spent two seasons with Millwall before returning to Weymouth as the club's new player-manager. Weymouth just missed out on promotion to the Football Conference. Following Ian Ridley's resignation as chairman, Claridge also left to return to playing league football.

Later playing career[]

In his later playing career, chronologically, Claridge played for Brighton and Hove Albion, Brentford, Wycombe Wanderers, Gillingham, Bradford City and Walsall. In the summer of 2005 he was appointed as manager of Millwall, but following board-room changes he was relieved of his duties after just 36 days, before his team had played any competitive matches. His replacement was Colin Lee. The decision to dismiss Claridge was taken by new chairman Theo Paphitis,[6] who stated to the BBC that "we had a strong chance of being relegated under Steve". Millwall were indeed relegated from the Championship that season.

At the start of the 2006–07 season Claridge didn't have a club.[7] It was reported that Claridge had offered to play without payment in order to achieve the landmark of 1,000 games. Eventually in December 2006 he re-signed on a month-long contract with Bournemouth[8] and his 1,000th first-team match was a 4–0 defeat to Port Vale on 9 December, at age 40.[9]

On 16 January 2007, he signed a contract with Isthmian League Premier Division side Worthing to play in one game only, against AFC Wimbledon. The match ended in a 1–1 draw.[10]

On 30 January 2007, Claridge joined Harrow Borough and scored on his debut in a 4–4 draw against Margate.[11]

In September 2009, Claridge came out of retirement to play unpaid for his former club, the Conference South side Weymouth, who were in severe financial difficulties.[12][13]

Claridge then came out of retirement once more in October 2011 when he signed for Gosport Borough of the Southern League Division One South & West as a player-coach.[14] On 22 October 2011, Claridge scored on his début for Gosport during their FA Trophy game against Southern League side Sholing;[15] his first league goal came a week later on 29 October 2011 in a 2–1 defeat of Mangotsfield United at Privett Park [16]

On 7 May 2012, Gosport were promoted to the Southern League Premier Division courtesy of Claridge's brace of goals in the play-off final against Poole Town. Having been losing 1–0, Claridge scored a last-gasp equaliser in the first minute of injury time to send the tie to extra-time; Claridge scored Gosport's third goal in the 98th minute as they ran out eventual 3–1 winners, and returned to the Premier Division after a 22-year absence.[17]

Shortly after the playoff final, Claridge said he was contemplating retirement,[18] however he later admitted he was considering playing for a further season following Gosport's promotion.[19]

On 1 July 2017, the 51-year-old Claridge played for Salisbury in a friendly against Portsmouth due to a lack of players. Salisbury lost the match 3–0.[20] On 15 August, he played in a Southern League Division One South & West match against Paulton Rovers, playing himself as a 78th-minute substitute in a 2–2 draw;[21] he also started Salisbury's next match, a 3–2 FA Cup victory over Fareham Town, substituting himself off after 71 minutes [22] after sustaining an injury. In an interview with BBC Sport in 2018, Claridge revealed that he had retired from playing as a result of this injury.[23]

Media[]

During Claridge's time at Weymouth, he and Ian Ridley, who was club chairman at the time, were two of the subjects of a BBC documentary called Football Stories; he left Weymouth to begin to work in the media, initially for BBC Radio 5 Live. He works for the BBC mainly on The Football League Show, and stated his opposition to the use of goal-line technology. He also has contributed scouting reports to The Guardian.[24]

Driving conviction[]

In June 2008, Claridge was convicted of dangerous driving and sentenced to six months' imprisonment, suspended for two years, after speeding at 100 mph (160 km/h) in "treacherous" conditions. He already had nine points on his driving licence.[25]

Honours[]

Birmingham City

Leicester City

  • League Cup: 1997
  • First Division play-offs: 1996

Millwall

  • Football League Second Division: 2000-01

Managerial stats[]

Team From To Record
G W D L Win%
Portsmouth 12 October 2000 25 February 2001 23 5 10 8 021.74
Weymouth 1 July 2003 20 October 2004 55 26 17 12 047.27
Millwall 21 June 2005 27 July 2005 0 0 0 0 !
Salisbury[26] April 2015 Present 204 133 24 47 065.20

References[]

  1. ^ "Steve Claridge and group of supporters buy the assets of Salisbury City FC". Salisbury Journal.
  2. ^ Salisbury FC www.salisburyfc.co.uk Archived 27 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ "Ask Steve Claridge". BBC Sport. 21 October 2009. Retrieved 21 October 2009.
  4. ^ Cambridge United – Former Player News. Cambridge-united.co.uk. Retrieved on 29 October 2011.
  5. ^ Ridley, Ian (11 February 1996). "Still crazy after all these years". The Independent. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  6. ^ Claridge sacked Evening Standard; 27 July 2005; at findarticles.com; accessed December 2006
  7. ^ Thursday's football gossip BBC Sport, 8 December 2006
  8. ^ Claridge ties up Cherries switch BBC Sport, 8 December 2006
  9. ^ Bournemouth 0–4 Port Vale BBC Sport, 9 December 2006
  10. ^ Football: It's hello and goodbye for Rebel Claridge theargus, 17 January 2007
  11. ^ Match report: Harrow 4–4 Margate Harrow Borough F.C. Official Website, 3 February 2007
  12. ^ Summers, Adam (3 September 2009). "Claridge is back". Dorset Echo. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  13. ^ "Claridge to revive playing career". BBC Sport. 3 September 2009. Retrieved 3 September 2009.
  14. ^ "BBC football pundit Steve Claridge signs for Gosport Borough". BBC Sport. 21 October 2011. Retrieved 21 October 2011.
  15. ^ "Gosport Borough Football Club - Official Site". web.archive.org. 15 April 2012.
  16. ^ "Gosport Borough Football Club - Official Site". web.archive.org. 15 April 2012.
  17. ^ "Gosport Borough Football Club - Official Site". web.archive.org. 29 January 2013.
  18. ^ "Great way to go as Claridge fires Boro to play-off joy - Portsmouth News".
  19. ^ "Claridge to retire... definitely, maybe" – via www.bbc.co.uk.
  20. ^ "Salisbury boss Claridge plays aged 51" – via www.bbc.co.uk.
  21. ^ Belk, Thom (15 August 2017). "MATCH REPORT: Salisbury 2 Paulton Rovers 2 - Salisbury FC - Official Website". www.salisburyfc.co.uk. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  22. ^ "Match Details - Salisbury 3-2 Fareham Town - FAC - 19th August 2017 | Aylesbury United FC". www.aylesburyunitedfc.co.uk.
  23. ^ "How Salisbury FC are offering a city relief from poisoning crisis" – via www.bbc.co.uk.
  24. ^ Scouting report – Ryan Shawcross, Stoke City (4 March 2008).
  25. ^ Driving ban for 100mph footballer BBC News, 10 June 2008
  26. ^ Fixtures / Results - Salisbury FC Salisbury FC, Retrieved 24 April 2018

External links[]

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