Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Mark Fish

South African footballer


South African footballer

FieldValue
nameMark Fish
imageMark Fish.jpg
captionFish playing for Charlton Athletic in 2004
fullnameMark Anthony Fish
birth_date
birth_placeCape Town, South Africa
height
positionDefender
youthclubs1Arcadia Shepherds
years11991–1993
years21993–1996
years31996–1997
years41997–2000
years52000–2005
years62005
years72007
clubs1Jomo Cosmos
clubs2Orlando Pirates
clubs3Lazio
clubs4Bolton Wanderers
clubs5Charlton Athletic
clubs6→ Ipswich Town (loan)
clubs7Jomo Cosmos
caps155
caps2110
caps315
caps4103
caps5102
caps61
caps70
totalcaps386
goals13
goals211
goals31
goals43
goals53
goals60
goals70
totalgoals21
nationalyears11993–2004
nationalteam1South Africa
nationalcaps162
nationalgoals12
Note

the South African footballer

Mark Anthony Fish (born 14 March 1974) is a South African former professional footballer who played as a defender.

Club career

Born in Cape Town, Fish started his career in his native South Africa under the guidance of renowned coach Steve Coetsee, playing for Arcadia Shepherds, an amateur team based at the Caledonian Stadium in Pretoria. He was spotted by then Jomo Cosmos coach Roy Matthews and turned professional as a striker. It was at Cosmos that he was converted into a left-back and went on to become one of the most promising defenders in South Africa at the time.

In 1994, Fish was signed by Orlando Pirates after Cosmos were relegated. At Pirates he arguably played the best football of his career under the tutelage of Mike Makaab. He also won the league championship at Pirates, as well as the BP Top 8 cup in 1994, the 1995 1995 African Champions League and the 1995 Bob Save Super Bowl (then the premier cup in South Africa). He captained The Buccaneers when they beat JS Kabylie in the 1996 CAF Super Cup.

Soon foreign scouts came knocking and he was signed by Lazio of Italy, after he turned down an opportunity to play for his boyhood club, Manchester United. However, he did move to England after just one season at Lazio to become the highest paid player at Bolton Wanderers. Fish was a mainstay in Bolton's back four for much of their first season back in the Premiership, he received praise from both teammates and those whom he played against, most notably Manchester United forward Andy Cole. Despite Fish's efforts Bolton were relegated on the last day of the season despite having accumulated 40 points, normally enough to stave off the drop. Once playing back in the lower leagues Fish applied himself well, quickly gaining a cult status amongst the Bolton faithful, backed up by his nickname "Feesh", and a particularly eyecatching headgear in the shape of a giant Blue fish being made available in club stores. However, new suitors soon came calling, and only after the appointment of Sam Allardyce did Fish's star begin to fall in Lancashire. Fish soon followed his Danish teammate Claus Jensen and at Alan Curbishley's second time of asking moved to Charlton Athletic in a £700,000 move in November 2000. "The Big Fish" as he was affectionately known throughout his playing career went on to make 102 Premiership appearances for the Addicks, scoring three times.

In 2005, he began to fall out of favour at Charlton. He went on to have a short loan spell at Ipswich Town in the 2005–06 season but a severe cruciate ligament injury led to Fish announcing his retirement.

Fish returned to football when he signed a six-month contract with his first club Jomo Cosmos in early 2007 but did not play an official game due to his low level of fitness.

International career

Internationally, Fish is best remembered as being a crucial part of South Africa's victorious national soccer squad when they won the 1996 African Cup of Nations. He scored one of the goals in the quarter final against Algeria. He was named to the Team of the Tournament in both the 1996 and 1998 African Cup of Nations. In total he won 62 caps for the South African national team, scoring twice.

He made his international debut in a friendly game against Mexico on 6 October 1993 and received his last cap in a World Cup qualifier against Ghana on 20 June 2004.

Personal life

In August 2008, Fish's wife and his son were at their Pretoria home with friends when five armed men robbed their house.

Career statistics

International

National teamYearAppsGoalsTotal622
South Africa199310
199460
199540
1996102
1997100
1998140
199980
200070
200420

:Scores and results list South Africa's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Fish goal.

No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetitionRef.
1FNB Stadium, Johannesburg, South Africa1–02–11996 African Cup of Nations
2FNB Stadium, Johannesburg, South Africa2–03–01998 FIFA World Cup qualification

Honours

Orlando Pirates

  • National Soccer League: 1994
  • Bob Save Super Bowl: 1996
  • BP Top Eight Cup: 1996
  • African Cup of Champions Clubs: 1995
  • CAF Super Cup: 1996

South Africa

  • African Cup of Nations: 1996; runner-up: 1998; third place: 2000

References

References

  1. {{Hugman. 6416
  2. {{NFT player. 6129
  3. [http://www.kickoff.com/news/37231/orlando-pirates-1995-caf-champions-league Orlando Pirates 1995 CAF Champions League]
  4. "Soccer star robbed, son threatened".
  5. "South Africa v Algeria, 27 January 1996". AFS Enterprises.
  6. "South Africa v Malawi, 15 June 1996". AFS Enterprises.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Mark Fish — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report