Steve Nicol
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Steve Nicol | ||
Personal information | ||
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Full name | Stephen Nicol | |
Date of birth | 11 December 1961 | |
Place of birth | Irvine, Scotland | |
Playing position | Defender | |
Club information | ||
Current club | New England Revolution (Coach) | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1979–1981 1981–1995 1995 1995–98 1998 1998–99 1999 1999 2000–01 |
Ayr United Liverpool Notts County Sheffield Wednesday West Brom Doncaster Rovers Boston Bulldogs New England Revolution Boston Bulldogs |
343 (36) 32 (2) 49 (0) 9 (0) 30 (0) ?? (??) 0 (0) ?? (??) |
70 (0)
National team | ||
1981–84 1984–92 |
Scotland Under-21 Scotland |
27 (0) |
14
Teams managed | ||
1995 1999 2000–01 2002– |
Notts County New England Revolution (interim) Boston Bulldogs New England Revolution |
|
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Stephen 'Steve' Nicol (born 11 December 1961 in Irvine, Scotland) is a Scottish former professional footballer, a utility player who played in the all-conquering Liverpool team of the 1980s, and is currently coach of New England Revolution in MLS.
Contents |
[edit] Playing career
Nicol started his career with Ayr United in 1979 and spent just over two seasons with the Scottish side, racking up 70 league appearances, before Liverpool manager Bob Paisley decided to pay, what turned out to be, a bargain price of £300,000 to bring Nicol to Anfield on the 26 October 1981.
Two years in the reserves followed as Nicol gained experience. He made his Reds debut on the 31 August 1982 in a 0–0 league draw with Birmingham City at St Andrews becoming a regular in 1983 under new boss Joe Fagan, he also scored his first goal for the club on 22 October 1983, in a 1–0 league victory over Queens Park Rangers at Loftus Road. He went on to win a League championship medal by the end of his first full season having not appeared enough times the previous season to qualify for a medal, however, he was not picked for the League Cup final victory over fierce Merseyside derby rivals Everton, the first ever all Merseyside final. He was selected for the European Cup final in Rome, Nicol played well and earned a winner's medal after a penalty shoot-out in which he missed his own spot-kick. Fortunately for Nicol A.S. Roma, playing in their home stadium, subsequently failed to score two of their penalty kicks and Liverpool won.
Nicol became a first-team regular for many subsequent seasons, winning the League championship and FA Cup "double" in 1986 under the guidance of Kenny Dalglish, pipping Everton to the title by just two points and then beating them 3–1 in the first ever all Merseyside FA Cup final. He was also settling into an international career with Scotland which would ultimately yield 27 caps and a place in the 1986 FIFA World Cup in Mexico. Jock Stein gave Steve his international debut on the 12 September 1984 in a friendly with Yugoslavia, The Scots turned on the style for the 18, 512 Hampden Park crowd thumping the Eastern Europeans 6–1, helping Nicol to settle in somewhat were club mates Graeme Souness, who also captained the side, and Kenny Dalglish, both scoring.
A versatile player, he played most often at right back following the departure of Phil Neal in 1986, though he also featured at left back, in the centre of defence and as a midfield player, he even played up front on a couple of occasions. He earned the nickname 'Chopsy' because of how he pronounced the word 'chips'.
In 1988, Nicol was pretty much ever-present and actually began the season in goalscoring form, despite playing in a position not naturally conducive to attacking. This included a memorable hat-trick at Newcastle United and a phenomenal long-range header at Arsenal. Nicol's defensive qualities were also much admired as Liverpool coasted to the League title but missed out on another "double" when Wimbledon surprisingly beat them 1–0 in the FA Cup final at Wembley. Nicol was the last Liverpool player to have a chance to equalise and force extra-time, his diving header in injury time flying narrowly over the crossbar.
A year later, Nicol accompanied his team-mates to many of the funerals and memorial services of the 96 fans who died at the Hillsborough disaster and played his part as Liverpool won the FA Cup against Everton, winning 3–2 after extra time, but lost the League title in a decider against Arsenal with virtually the last kick of the season. The campaign ended on a personal high for Nicol as he was named Footballer Of The Year by football writers. Like many others in the Liverpool squad, Hillsborough was the second tragedy Nicol had witnessed, four years earlier just before the 1985 European Cup final at the Heysel Stadium, Brussels football hooligans had charged a section of, mainly, Juventus supporters causing a retaining wall to collapse killing 39 people,
When Liverpool beat Crystal Palace 9–0 the following season to accumulate the club's biggest-ever League victory, Nicol was the only player to score twice, getting the first and last goals of the game in the seventh and 90th minutes. Liverpool regained the League title that season – their last to date - and, two years later, Nicol was in the team which, under Graeme Souness, won the FA Cup again in 1992 this time beating Sunderland 2–0.
Nicol stayed at Liverpool until 20 January 1995 when he took on the a player-coach role at Notts County, he stayed in the role for just 10 months playing 22 times, although he did receive his first taste of management at Meadow Lane when he took charge of the club with two other players for the final month’s of the Magpies disastrous 1995–96 campaign. Unfortunately his efforts were not enough to save Notts County from relegation to Division Two.
Following the end of the season, Nicol next moved to Sheffield Wednesday in the November of '95, where he made his debut against former derby rivals Everton at Goodison Park on the 25 November a game which ended in a 2–2 draw. However, probably Steve's best memory of his time at Hillsborough happened on the 7 December 1996 when his Wednesday side travelled to his old stomping ground of Anfield, the Sheffield side completely nullified the Liverpool attack, which contained the likes of Robbie Fowler, Steve McManaman and John Barnes, and came away with a surprise 1–0 victory with Nicol playing a major part in the Wednesday defence.
Steve is 17th in the all time list of appearances for Liverpool, with a total of 468 games for the Reds.
[edit] End of playing career and managerial career
Nicol went on to make 49 league appearances before spending a spell on loan at West Bromwich Albion during the 1997–98 season where he played nine games. He then had a short spell with Doncaster Rovers before heading to the U.S. to take a player-coach position with Boston Bulldogs of the A-League in 1999. In September of that year, he took over as interim player-coach with the New England Revolution of Major League Soccer for the final two games of the season, winning both. He returned to Boston Bulldogs as player-coach for the 2000 and 2001 seasons before re-joining the Revs in 2002 as an assistant coach.
He took over as head coach of New England Revolution on an interim basis initially, then permanently after 21 games, leading the team to the MLS Cup that season, and was named MLS Coach of the Year in his first year. The team has advanced to the MLS Eastern Conference Finals in each of his years as coach, and returned to the MLS Cup in 2005, 2006, and 2007. Nicol's Revolution has the unique distinction of having not scored a goal in regulation time in the first three of their four final appearances (losing all four). One of the coaches who works under him is ex-Plymouth Argyle Ipswich Town, Arsenal and England centre forward Paul Mariner.
Nicol lives in Hopkinton, Massachusetts, with his wife Eleanor, their son (Michael, who plays American football) and daughter (Katie). He was once considered to be a possible successor to Bruce Arena as full-time coach of the United States Men's National Team.
Nicol still holds a place in the hearts of Liverpool supporters everywhere, this was shown in the 2006 poll 100 Players Who Shook The Kop which was compiled by the official Liverpool Football Club web site. 110,000 supporters worldwide took part in the poll in which they had to supply their favourite 10 Reds of all time. Nicol came in at a more than respectable 39th position.
[edit] Career details and honours
- 70 league appearances, 7 league goals
- 468 appearances, 46 goals
- Division 1 (Level 1): 1984, 1986, 1988, 1990
- European Cup: 1984
- FA Cup: 1986, 1989, 1992
- Screen Sport Super Cup: 1986
- Charity Shield: 1986 (shared), 1989
- FWA Footballer of the Year 1989
Runner-up
- Charity Shield: 1984, 1985
- Intercontinental Cup: 1984
- European Super Cup: 1984, 1985
- Division 1 (Level 1): 1985, 1987, 1989, 1991
- European Cup: 1985
- League Cup 1987
- FA Cup: 1988
- 32 league appearances
* Sheffield Wednesday F.C 1995-1998
- 49 league appearances
- 9 appearances (on loan from Sheffield Wednesday)
* New England Revolution 1999 & 2002-Present
- US Open Cup 2007
- MLS Coach of the Year Award 2002
- MLS Cup Runner-up: 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007
[edit] External links
- Oficial Liverpool FC profile
- New England Revolution profile
- LFCHistory.net profile
- Steve Nicol career stats at Soccerbase
- Liverpool seasonal record (part 1) 1981/82-1985/86 at sporting-heroes.net
- Liverpool seasonal record (part 2) 1986/87-1989/90 at sporting-heroes.net
- Liverpool seasonal record (part 3) 1990/91-1994/95 at sporting-heroes.net
- Sheffield Wednesday seasonal record 1995/96-1997/98 at sporting-heroes.net
- Scottish caps 1984-91 at sporting-heroes.net
- Profile of Nicol from Soccer New England
Awards | ||
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Preceded by John Barnes |
Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year 1989 |
Succeeded by John Barnes |
Sporting positions | ||
Preceded by Walter Zenga |
New England Revolution Head Coach (Interim) 1999 |
Succeeded by Fernando Clavijo |
Preceded by Fernando Clavijo |
New England Revolution Head Coach 2002-Present |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
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