Jim Stannard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Full name James David Stannard
Date of birth (1962-10-06) 6 October 1962 (age 63)
Place of birth Harold Hill, England
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Jim Stannard
Personal information
Full name James David Stannard
Date of birth (1962-10-06) 6 October 1962 (age 63)
Place of birth Harold Hill, England
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Position Goalkeeper
Team information
Current team
Welling United (goalkeeper coach)
Youth career
Ford United
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1980–1985 Fulham[1] 41 (0)
1984Southend United (loan)[1] 6 (0)
1985Charlton Athletic (loan)[1] 1 (0)
1985–1987 Southend United[2] 103 (0)
1987–1995 Fulham[1] 348 (1)
1995–1999 Gillingham[3] 106 (0)
2003 Brentford 0 (0)
Total 605 (1)
Managerial career
2005 Redbridge
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

James David Stannard (born 6 October 1962) is an English retired football goalkeeper. Whilst playing for Gillingham he set a record for the lowest number of goals conceded in a 46-match season in the Football League, when he let in just 20 goals in the 1995–96 season. Until 18 January 2013, he was first-team goalkeeping coach at Southampton. Stannard is currently the first team goalkeeper coach for Welling United.

Having previously played for non-league Ford United (now Redbridge), Stannard began his professional career with Fulham making his debut against Swindon Town in 1981 (keeping a clean sheet), but managed only 41 Football League appearances for the Craven Cottage club in his first five years, during which he was loaned out to Southend United and Charlton Athletic. In 1985 Southend signed him on a permanent basis and he made over 100 appearances before being sold back to Fulham in 1987.[1]

For the next eight years he was Fulham's first-choice keeper. He was affectionately known by Fulham supporters as "He's fat, he's round, he's worth a million pounds" or "He's fat, he's round, he can't get off the ground". But Stannard never played against many top English teams as his term was during a time when Fulham were in the lower divisions of the Football League. In 1995 manager Tony Pulis made him one of his first signings for Gillingham and, despite the fans' initial reservations about his age and burly build,[4] Stannard proved instrumental in the Kent club's promotion from Division Three as he let in just 20 goals all season, a then-record for a 46-match league season (since surpassed by Burnley in 2024-25), while keeping 29 clean sheets.[3] Stannard was named in the 1995–96 PFA Division Three Team of the Year.[5]

Stannard retired in 1999, but came out of retirement to sign for Division Two side Brentford on a non-contract basis in 2003,[6] backing up Alan Julian for two matches during the early months of the 2003–04 season.[7]

Coaching career

Honours

References

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