Ian Clarkson

English footballer (born 1970) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ian Stewart Clarkson (born 4 December 1970) is an English former professional footballer who made nearly 400 appearances in the Football League playing as a defender for Birmingham City, Stoke City, Northampton Town and Kidderminster Harriers.[2]

Full name Ian Stewart Clarkson[1]
Date of birth (1970-12-04) 4 December 1970 (age 55)
Place of birth Solihull, England
Position Defender
Quick facts Personal information, Full name ...
Ian Clarkson
Personal information
Full name Ian Stewart Clarkson[1]
Date of birth (1970-12-04) 4 December 1970 (age 55)
Place of birth Solihull, England
Position Defender
Youth career
1987–1988 Birmingham City
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1988–1993 Birmingham City 136 (0)
1993–1996 Stoke City 75 (0)
1996–1999 Northampton Town 94 (1)
1999–2002 Kidderminster Harriers 105 (0)
2002 Nuneaton Borough 12 (0)
2002 Stafford Rangers
2003 Leamington
2003 Forest Green Rovers
2012– Alvechurch
Total 422 (1)
Managerial career
2002 Kidderminster Harriers
(player/assistant caretaker manager)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals
Close

Playing career

Ian Clarkson was born in Solihull, West Midlands. He began his football career as a YTS trainee with Birmingham City,[1] the club he had supported since childhood,[3] in 1987. He made his first team debut as a 17-year-old in the League Cup against Aston Villa in September 1988, and his Football League debut a few days later.[4] He signed his first professional contract in December 1988.[1] In 1991, he played in Birmingham's winning side in the Associate Members' Cup final at Wembley. The following season, he captained the side to promotion from the Third Division while still only 21, an achievement which he considers to be the highlight of his career.[3]

Former Birmingham manager Lou Macari brought Clarkson to First Division side Stoke City in September 1993 for a fee of £40,000. He spent three seasons at Stoke, and played in the First Division play-offs, in which Stoke lost to Martin O'Neill's Leicester City side in the 1996 semi-final. When his contract expired he rejected Stoke's offer of renewal terms, and left for Third Division side Northampton Town.[5]

At Northampton, he linked up with former Birmingham City teammates John Gayle, Dean Peer and manager Ian Atkins, soon to be joined by John Frain. In his first season, he helped them to promotion via the play-offs, and the next year played in the Second Division play-off final, but lost 1–0 to Grimsby Town. In August 1998, he suffered a badly broken tibia in a match against Lincoln City. Though he made a couple of appearances for Northampton at the start of the 1999–2000 season, it appeared that he was no longer fit enough to compete at that level, and that his league career was over at the age of 28.

Clarkson went to train at Kidderminster Harriers, which was then a Conference club, and regained sufficient fitness to be able to play regularly at that level. Kidderminster made him club captain, and of his first 30 games for the club they lost only one; at the end of the season the club were promoted to the Football League as Conference champions.[5] They repaid the insurance payout that Clarkson had received on his retirement due to injury, so that he was able to play for them in the Football League.[6] When Jan Molby resigned as manager of Kidderminster in March 2002, Clarkson acted as assistant to caretaker manager Ian Britton.[7] The club released him at the end of that season for financial reasons.[8] He joined Nuneaton Borough of the Conference, and was released in December again on financial grounds.[9] He then registered for short periods with Stafford Rangers,[10] Leamington[11] and, from March 2003, Forest Green Rovers,[12] finally retiring at the end of the season.

In 2012, he returned to football to sign for Alvechurch in September 2012 at the age of 41.[13]

Life after football

Clarkson qualified as a coach and coach educator, and worked for Birmingham City's Football in the Community programme. During the later years of his playing career he was keen to get involved in media work; from 2002 he was employed as a football reporter and journalist by the Birmingham Post and Sunday Mercury newspapers and by the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA)'s website.[3] In 2006, he was appointed to manage a scheme designed to involve young people in sport and physical activity, as part of a wider programme of regeneration of the deprived areas of North Solihull.[14] Clarkson now works as a PE Teacher at Repton Prep School in Derbyshire, where he has been based since 2010.

Personal life

Clarkson's nephew is the Sheffield United midfielder Callum O'Hare.[15]

Career statistics

More information Club, Season ...
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[16]
Club Season League FA Cup League Cup Other[a] Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Birmingham City 1988–89 Second Division 90002000110
1989–90 Third Division 200301020260
1990–91 Third Division 370100080460
1991–92 Third Division 420107020520
1992–93 First Division 280102050360
1993–94 First Division 0000001010
Total 1360601202001740
Stoke City 1993–94 First Division 140102020190
1994–95 First Division 180201040250
1995–96 First Division 430203040520
Total 7505060100960
Northampton Town 1996–97 Third Division 450104060560
1997–98 Second Division 421502041532
1998–99 Second Division 5000200070
1999–2000 Third Division 2000100030
Total 94160901011192
Kidderminster Harriers 1999–2000 Conference National 280000000280
2000–01 Third Division 380302010440
2001–02 Third Division 390100020420
Total 10504020301140
Nuneaton Borough 2002–03 Conference National 120000000120
Career total 42212102904315152
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Honours

References

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