Ian Hutchinson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ian Hutchinson
Personal information
Full name Ian Hutchinson
Date of birth August 4, 1948(1948-08-04)
Place of birth    Derby, England
Date of death    September 19, 2002 (aged 54)
Playing position Striker
Club information
Current club N/A
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
 ?-?
?-?
1968-76
Burton Albion
Cambridge United
Chelsea
 ? (?)
? (?)
119 (44)   

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of July 11, 2006.
2 National team caps and goals correct
as of June 22, 2006.
* Appearances (Goals)

Ian Hutchinson (4 August 194819 September 2002) was an English footballer who spent most of his injury-plagued career with Chelsea.

Hutchinson was born in Derby and started his career with non-league Burton Albion before signing for Cambridge United. In July 1968 he joined Chelsea for the modest sum of £5000. Chelsea coach Ron Suart had journeyed to Cambridge to watch a goalkeeper, but instead recommended Hutchinson to manager Dave Sexton.

Hutchinson was a tall, brave and selfless striker with an impressive heading ability and an uncanny knack for taking long throw-ins. On his debut against Ipswich Town, he sent in a series of long throws which reached the opposite side of the penalty area, confusing both the opposing defenders and the crowd and one of which an Ipswich defender inadvertently put into his own net. At Chelsea he proved to be the perfect foil for the more technically gifted Peter Osgood after a sparkling debut partnership in which both players scored in a 3-1 win against Sheffield Wednesday. During the 1969-70 season they scored 53 goals between them. That season turned out to be Hutchinson's most successful, as he scored an impressive 16 goals in 26 league appearances.

Hutchinson is most notable for his part in Chelsea winning the FA Cup that same season. In the notoriously physical final against Leeds United, he was often in the thick of the action. In the first match at Wembley his headed flick-on teed up Peter Houseman for Chelsea's first equaliser and he was later floored by a poor challenge from Leeds' Norman Hunter. Leeds took the lead with six minutes to go, but two minutes later Hutchinson, still limping from Hunter's challenge, headed in John Hollins' cross to take the game to a replay. Two weeks later at Old Trafford, with the game tied at 1-1 going into extra time, Hutchinson launched one of his trademark long throw-ins into the Leeds penalty area and it was headed in by David Webb to win the cup for Chelsea.

Despite more impressive performances in the following years at Chelsea, the remainder of his career was blighted by injuries, including two broken legs, a broken arm, a broken toe and persistent knee trouble, which kept him out of the side's successful Cup Winners' Cup run the following year and limited him to just 4 appearances in the 1972-73 season. He retired in July 1976 aged 27, having been unable to conquer his injury woes. He made 144 appearances for Chelsea and scored 58 goals.

He died in September 2002 after a long illness.

Languages