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Nigel Jemson
English footballer (born 1969)
English footballer (born 1969)
| Field | Value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | Nigel Jemson | |||
| fullname | Nigel Bradley Jemson | |||
| birth_date | ||||
| birth_place | Hutton, Lancashire, England | |||
| height | 5 ft 11 in | |||
| position | Striker | |||
| years1 | 1986–1988 | clubs1 = Preston North End | caps1 = 32 | goals1 = 8 |
| years2 | 1988–1991 | clubs2 = Nottingham Forest | caps2 = 47 | goals2 = 13 |
| years3 | 1989 | clubs3 = → Bolton Wanderers (loan) | caps3 = 5 | goals3 = 0 |
| years4 | 1989 | clubs4 = → Preston North End (loan) | caps4 = 9 | goals4 = 2 |
| years5 | 1991–1994 | clubs5 = Sheffield Wednesday | caps5 = 51 | goals5 = 9 |
| years6 | 1993 | clubs6 = → Grimsby Town (loan) | caps6 = 6 | goals6 = 2 |
| years7 | 1994–1996 | clubs7 = Notts County | caps7 = 14 | goals7 = 1 |
| years8 | 1995 | clubs8 = → Watford (loan) | caps8 = 4 | goals8 = 0 |
| years9 | 1995 | clubs9 = → Coventry City (loan) | caps9 = 0 | goals9 = 0 |
| years10 | 1996 | clubs10 = → Rotherham United (loan) | caps10 = 16 | goals10 = 5 |
| years11 | 1996–1998 | clubs11 = Oxford United | caps11 = 68 | goals11 = 27 |
| years12 | 1998–1999 | clubs12 = Bury | caps12 = 29 | goals12 = 1 |
| years13 | 1999–2000 | clubs13 = Ayr United | caps13 = 12 | goals13 = 5 |
| years14 | 2000 | clubs14 = Oxford United | caps14 = 18 | goals14 = 0 |
| years15 | 2000–2003 | clubs15 = Shrewsbury Town | caps15 = 109 | goals15 = 36 |
| years16 | 2003–2004 | clubs16 = Ballymena United | caps16 = 22 | goals16 = 7 |
| years17 | 2004–2008 | clubs17 = Ilkeston Town | ||
| years18 | 2008–2009 | clubs18 = FC Halifax Town | ||
| years19 | 2009 | clubs19 = Arnold Town | caps19 = 6 | goals19 = 1 |
| years20 | 2009–2010 | clubs20 = Rainworth Miners Welfare | ||
| totalcaps | 420 | |||
| totalgoals | 109 | |||
| nationalyears1 | 1990 | |||
| nationalteam1 | England U21 | |||
| nationalcaps1 | 1 | |||
| nationalgoals1 | 0 | |||
| manageryears1 | 2005–2008 | |||
| managerclubs1 | Ilkeston Town (player-manager) | |||
| manageryears2 | 2009 | |||
| managerclubs2 | FC Halifax Town (caretaker manager) |
Nigel Bradley Jemson (born 10 August 1969) is an English footballer, who represented his country at under-21 level and was the player-manager of Ilkeston Town until May 2008. He finished his career at Rainworth Miners Welfare in the Northern Counties East League Premier Division.
Club career
Jemson played for a total of 12 English league clubs, most notably for Nottingham Forest and Sheffield Wednesday, one Scottish league club and one Northern Irish league club during his career, rarely lasting more than a season in each club. Arguably, the highlight of his career was the winning goal he scored in the 1990 League Cup Final for Nottingham Forest against Oldham Athletic, the only goal of the game.
Jemson made his league debut aged 16 in 1986 with Fourth Division Preston North End whom he had joined as a Y.T.S. lad. In March 1988 Jemson was signed by Brian Clough for Nottingham Forest for a fee of £150,000 but did not make his Forest league debut until season 1989-1990 after loan spells with Bolton Wanderers and old club Preston. In September 1991 Jemson was signed by Trevor Francis for Sheffield Wednesday for a fee of £800,000 and helped the club to a third-place finish. September 1994 saw a move back to Nottingham, this time joining Notts County for a fee of £300,000. During his time there, he had loan spells with Watford, Coventry City, and Rotherham United. In April 1996 he scored both Rotherham's goals in a 2–1 win over Shrewsbury Town, for whom he later played 109 games, in the Football League Trophy Final at Wembley Stadium. In 1996 Jemson was signed by Oxford United for a fee of £60,000 where he enjoyed two successful seasons. Moves to Bury, Ayr United, and a return to Oxford United followed before Jemson ended his English league career in 2003 after three successful seasons at Shrewsbury Town.
Jemson also gained national fame in January 2003, after scoring the Shrewsbury goals that knocked Everton out of the FA Cup third round. He put the Shrews into a first-half lead with a free kick and, after Niclas Alexandersson had equalised for Everton, glanced a last-minute header past Richard Wright, to give Shrewsbury a famous giant-killing victory. Having earlier scored once against Stafford Rangers{{cite web
In 2010, he replaced Eoin Jess in the Nottingham Forest's Masters team for the 2010 HKFC International Soccer Sevens tournament.
International career
Jemson was capped once for the England under-21s, in a 0–0 friendly against Wales under-21s in December 1990.
Personal life
In 2011, Jemson was reportedly training as a fireman in Bingham, Nottinghamshire. He also maintains his interest in football, working at Nottingham Forest as a match day host, and starting a blog about his former team in October 2011.
Jemson has also worked as a Business Development manager and Brand Ambassador for several businesses, currently with estate agents Pygott & Crone.
Honours
Nottingham Forest
- Football League Cup: 1989–90
Rotherham United
- Football League Trophy: 1995–96
References
References
- {{Hugman. 10123
- (2003). "Sky Sports Football Yearbook 2003–2004". Headline.
- "Players: J".
- (11 July 1996). "Football". Independent Print Limited.
- (13 January 1995). "Sporting Digest: Football". Independent Print Limited.
- Shaw, Phil. (24 March 1995). "Blackburn stage coup with Witschge loan". Independent Print Limited.
- (17 February 1996). "David Speedie sacked by Crawley". Independent Print Limited.
- Wood, Greg. (15 April 1996). "Familiar role for Jemson". Independent Print Limited.
- (4 January 2003). "Shrews shock Everton". BBC Sport.
- (22 April 2010). "Jemson drafted in". Thisisnottingham.co.uk.
- Barrie Courtney. "England – U-21 International Results 1986–1995 – Details". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
- (2 June 2011). "From football to fireman – ex Shrewsbury Town ace's new career". Shropshirestar.com.
- "About Nigel Jemson's Blog". Nigel Jemson's Blog.
- Wood, Greg. (14 April 1996). "Familiar role for Jemson".
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