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Carlton Palmer

English footballer (born 1965)


Summary

English footballer (born 1965)

FieldValue
nameCarlton Palmer
fullnameCarlton Lloyd Palmer
birth_date
birth_placeRowley Regis, England
height1.88 m
positionMidfielder
youthclubs1Chelsea
youthclubs2West Bromwich Albion
years11984–1989
clubs1West Bromwich Albion
caps1121
goals14
years21989–1994
clubs2Sheffield Wednesday
caps2205
goals214
years31994–1997
clubs3Leeds United
caps3103
goals35
years41997–1999
clubs4Southampton
caps445
goals43
years51999
clubs5Nottingham Forest
caps516
goals51
years61999–2001
clubs6Coventry City
caps630
goals61
years72000–2001
clubs7→ Watford (loan)
caps75
goals70
years82001
clubs8→ Sheffield Wednesday (loan)
caps822
goals80
years92001–2003
clubs9Stockport County
caps943
goals94
years102004
clubs10Dublin City
caps103
goals100
years112005
clubs11Mansfield Town
caps111
goals110
years122013
clubs12Staveley Miners Welfare
caps121
goals120
years132021
clubs13Grantham Town
caps130
goals130
totalcaps594
totalgoals32
nationalyears11989
nationalteam1England U21
nationalcaps14
nationalgoals11
nationalyears21989
nationalteam2England B
nationalcaps25
nationalgoals20
nationalyears31992–1993
nationalteam3England
nationalcaps318
nationalgoals31
manageryears12001–2003
managerclubs1Stockport County (player-manager)
manageryears22004–2005
managerclubs2Mansfield Town
manageryears32021
managerclubs3Grantham Town

Carlton Lloyd Palmer (born 5 December 1965) is an English football manager, former footballer and football television pundit whose last management role was as manager of Grantham Town.

As a player, he was a midfielder from 1984 to 2005, playing in the Premier League for Sheffield Wednesday, Leeds United, Southampton, Nottingham Forest and Coventry City. He also played for West Bromwich Albion, Watford and Dublin City. He was capped 18 times by England and was part of the squad at UEFA Euro 1992.

He went into management in 2001 when he was appointed player-manager of Stockport County, later holding the same position at Mansfield Town from 2004 to 2005. In 2021 he had a brief return to management with a spell at non-league Grantham Town.

Club career

Palmer started his career at West Bromwich Albion, joining as an apprentice in July 1983 before turning professional in December 1984. He made his league debut in September 1985, as a substitute against Newcastle United. He earned a move to Sheffield Wednesday in February 1989 for £750,000, where he made his name in the old First Division. He missed Wednesday's victory in the 1991 Football League Cup Final due to suspension.

He was bought by Leeds United under manager Howard Wilkinson for £2.6 million in June 1994.

In September 1997 he was signed by Southampton manager Dave Jones for a fee of £1.0 million. In the dressing room he was "abrasive, awkward and argumentative" but on the pitch he was "determined, hard-working and persistent" and his long legs made him "a most difficult player to compete against". Jones said of Palmer "He covers every blade of grass out there, but that's only because his first touch is so crap". In January 1999 he was transferred to Nottingham Forest for a fee of £1.1 million and was replaced in Southampton's midfield by Chris Marsden.

He scored once for Nottingham Forest, his strike coming in a 2–1 win over Grimsby Town. He later played for Coventry City, scoring his first and what turned out to be only goal for the club in a 4–1 win over Newcastle United. Coventry loaned him out to Watford for three months in 2000–01. He also had a loan spell at Sheffield Wednesday, before joining Stockport County in November 2001 as player-manager. Palmer also briefly played for Dublin City in Ireland, whom he joined in August 2004 and played three games before leaving the club.

International career

Graham Taylor gave Palmer all of his 18 caps for the England national team. Palmer scored his only goal for England against San Marino. He was a member of the England squad that went to the 1992 European Championships in Sweden. He was also capped 5 times for the England B team.

Managerial career

Palmer's management career began when he was appointed player-manager of Stockport County in November 2001. He was sacked by the club in September 2003, following a poor start to the season.

In November 2004, events involving Mansfield Town manager Keith Curle resulted in Curle being suspended. With no manager, the Mansfield chairman rang up Carlton and asked him if he would join The Stags temporarily as manager of the club, which Carlton accepted, without being paid. Curle was later dismissed and Carlton Palmer signed a contract until 2006 as manager of Mansfield Town. In September 2005, after Mansfield Town were beaten 2–0 by Rochdale and close to the League Two relegation zone, Palmer resigned as manager saying "I have had a good career and I don't need to take the abuse from the crowd. Keith Haslam, the Mansfield chairman, is a good mate of mine and I want to keep it that way so I will be stepping down as manager".{{cite news |date=17 September 2005

On 14 September at the age of 55, Palmer named himself as a substitute in a game against Ashton United due to injuries.

On 9 November 2021, Palmer resigned as manager of Grantham Town. He had joined Grantham to work alongside chairman Darren Ashton, and left as Ashton had resigned from his role.

Personal life

Born in England, Palmer is of Jamaican descent. In 1997, Palmer was found guilty of sexual assault after groping a teenage girl. He was fined £600. Palmer later appealed the conviction which was rejected.

Palmer owned an online estate agency in Sheffield called The Home Game which ceased trading in August 2008. In June 2010 Palmer appeared in a one-off football special of Come Dine with Me where he came in first place and won £1,000 for charity. After working in Dubai for Repton School, he set up his own Football Academy in 2012 teaching football and P.E. In August 2014, Carlton became the Director of Sport at Wellington College, Shanghai.

In December 2016, Palmer required a life-saving five-hour operation for a heart condition. He made a full recovery.

In March 2023, Palmer was admitted to hospital after suffering a suspected "small heart attack" while he was running the Sheffield half-marathon.

Honours

Sheffield Wednesday

Leeds United

Individual

References

References

  1. {{Hugman. 15201
  2. "Carlton Palmer: Overview". Premier League.
  3. Matthews, Tony. (2005). "The Who's Who of West Bromwich Albion". Breedon Books.
  4. (21 April 2011). "Ferguson's Black Wednesday". espnfc.co.uk.
  5. (1 July 1994). "Football: Palmer signs for Leeds".
  6. (2003). "In That Number – A post-war chronicle of Southampton FC". Hagiology Publishing.
  7. Murphy, Alex. (4 July 2007). "40: Carlton Palmer". The Times.
  8. (14 August 1999). "Nottingham Forest 2 Grimsby 1". Sporting Life.
  9. (16 October 1999). "Coventry 4 Newcastle 1". Sporting Life.
  10. (15 December 2000). "Palmer is Watford bound". BBC Sport.
  11. (4 September 2001). "Palmer back at Hillsborough". BBC Sport.
  12. (26 August 2004). "Carlton Palmer signs with Vikings". RTÉ Sport.
  13. "Carlton Palmer - Soccer player profile & career statistics - Global Sports Archive".
  14. "England players: Carlton Palmer". englandfootballonline.
  15. (6 November 2001). "Palmer named Stockport boss". BBC Sport.
  16. (19 September 2003). "Stockport sack Palmer". BBC Sport.
  17. (9 March 2005). "Palmer earns permanent Stags role". BBC Sport.
  18. [https://www.granthamjournal.co.uk/sport/gingerbreads-announce-new-manager-at-the-helm-9194822/ Grantham Town announce Carlton Palmer as their new manager], ''Grantham Journal'', 9 April 2021
  19. (16 September 2021). "Sheffield Wednesday legend names himself on subs bench at 55-years-old…".
  20. (9 November 2021). "Carlton Palmer: Former England midfielder resigns as Grantham Town boss". BBC Sport.
  21. (2024-07-21). "Flying the flags: The influence of the Caribbean on England's Euros teams".
  22. "Palmer guilty of sex rap".
  23. "Come Dine with Me Footballers Special".
  24. "Carlton Palmer Football Academy {{!}} Dubai, UAE".
  25. (25 August 2014). "Wellington welcomed Mr Carlton Palmer as prospective Director of Sport - Wellington College International Shanghai 上海惠灵顿国际学校". Wellington-shanghai.cn.
  26. Madeley, Peter. (29 September 2017). "Ex-West Brom star Carlton Palmer recalls brush with death". Express & Star.
  27. (27 March 2023). "Carlton Palmer: Former England midfielder suffers suspected 'small heart attack'". [[BBC Sport]].
  28. (25 March 1996). "Milosevic gives; Villa a touch of magic".
  29. Lynch. "The Official P.F.A. Footballers Heroes".
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