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Steve Stone (footballer)

English footballer (born 1971)


Summary

English footballer (born 1971)

FieldValue
nameSteve Stone
imageFile:Steve Stone 22122025 (1).jpg
image_size200px
captionStone in 2025
fullnameSteven Brian Stone
birth_date
birth_placeGateshead, England
height1.73 m
positionRight midfielder
currentclubNottingham Forest (first team coach)
youthyears1–1989
youthclubs1Nottingham Forest
years11989–1999
clubs1Nottingham Forest
caps1193
goals123
years21999–2002
clubs2Aston Villa
caps290
goals24
years32002
clubs3→ Portsmouth (loan)
caps35
goals31
years42002–2005
clubs4Portsmouth
caps468
goals48
years52005–2006
clubs5Leeds United
caps512
goals51
totalcaps368
totalgoals37
nationalyears11995–1996
nationalteam1England
nationalcaps19
nationalgoals12

Steven Brian Stone (born 20 August 1971) is an English professional football coach and former player. He is currently first team coach at Premier League club Nottingham Forest.

As a player, he was a right midfielder who notably played in the Premier League for Nottingham Forest, Aston Villa and Portsmouth. Whilst with Forest he won the First Division title and played in the UEFA Cup. He also played in the 2000 FA Cup final for Villa. He finished his career with a brief spell in the Football League with Leeds United. He was capped nine times by England, scoring twice. He was part of England's Euro 96 team and made three appearances during the tournament.

Following retirement, Stone moved into coaching and worked for Newcastle United from July 2010 to June 2015 in a variety of different roles for both the first and reserve team. He was head coach of Burnley's under-23 team between 2018 and 2022.

Club career

Stone was born in Gateshead. He began his career at Nottingham Forest.

The 27-year-old moved to Aston Villa for £5.5 million in March 1999. He was transferred to Portsmouth for the 2002–03 season. In June 2005, he signed a two-year deal with Leeds United.

Stone's career at Leeds was short-lived. He was injured in training as soon as he joined the club, and it took him most of his first season to recover from the tendinitis in his Achilles tendon due to contracting MRSA after the operation and then requiring a further two operations for the MRSA. Stone played a few matches at the end of the 2005–06 campaign, and continued to play at the start of the 2006–07 campaign, scoring once against West Brom. Injuries, however, struck again, and Stone retired early on 15 December 2006.

International career

Stone was capped nine times at senior level for England. He made his debut in October 1995, coming on as a substitute in a 0–0 draw against Norway. Four days later, again coming off the bench, Stone scored his first international goal in a 3–1 win over Switzerland at Wembley Stadium. He also scored in his next game, which was his first start, as England drew 1–1 with Portugal.

Stone was capped three more times in the build-up to UEFA Euro 1996, where he was selected by manager Terry Venables as part of the 22-man England squad. He made three appearances during the competition, all off the bench. Stone's introduction during extra-time of the quarter-final versus Spain was his last appearance for England.

Coaching career

On 27 July 2010, he was appointed reserve team assistant manager to Peter Beardsley at Newcastle United after a successful time working at their academy. Stone was promoted to first team coach on 14 December 2010, by new manager Alan Pardew.

Stone remained as first team coach after Pardew resigned to join Crystal Palace, with John Carver put in charge of Newcastle until the end of the season. On 9 June 2015, both he and Carver had their contracts terminated by Newcastle ahead of the announcement of Steve McClaren as new head coach.

On 12 November 2018, he replaced Michael Duff as the new U23 manager of Burnley.

Stone was dismissed on 15 April 2022, alongside first team manager Sean Dyche and fellow coach and former Forest teammate Ian Woan. Stone followed Dyche to Everton in January 2023 where he worked until his dismissal in January 2025. Stone followed Dyche once again to Nottingham Forest in October 2025.

Personal life

Stone featured in the music video to the football song Three Lions, where he dances with the trophy mimicking Nobby Stiles at the 1966 FIFA World Cup final.

Career statistics

Club

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupEuropeOtherTotalDivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsTotal19323110152822022927Total904102811401227Total73931408010Total121001020151Career total368372432832224044645
Nottingham Forest1991–92First Division1000000010
1992–93Premier League1210010131
1993–94First Division455205020545
1994–95Premier League4152040475
1995–96Premier League347602082509
1996–97Premier League50000050
1997–98First Division2920000292
1998–99Premier League2631032305
Aston Villa1998–99Premier League100100
1999–2000Premier League2416161363
2000–01Premier League342311040423
2001–02Premier League221101080321
2002–03Premier League00002020
Portsmouth2002–03First Division18411195
2003–04Premier League3221030362
2004–05Premier League2331010253
Leeds United2005–06Championship2000002040
2006–07Championship10110111

International

:Scores and results list England's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Stone goal.

No.DateVenueCapOpponentScoreResultCompetitionRef.
115 November 1995Wembley Stadium, London, England23–13–1Friendly
212 December 1995Wembley Stadium, London, England31–01–1Friendly

Honours

Nottingham Forest

Aston Villa

  • UEFA Intertoto Cup: 2001

Portsmouth

Individual

References

References

  1. {{Hugman. 18919
  2. "Steve Stone". AFS Enterprises.
  3. Staff. (2002-12-20). "Stone drops in at Pompey". The Guardian.
  4. (2005-06-29). "Leeds deal set in Stone".
  5. (30 September 2006). "West Brom 4–2 Leeds". BBC Sport.
  6. (15 December 2006). "Stone takes retirement decision". BBC Sport.
  7. "Steve STONE - International football career for England. - England".
  8. "England v Switzerland, 15 November 1995 - 11v11.com".
  9. "England v Portugal, 12 December 1995 - 11v11.com".
  10. UEFA.com. "Spain 0-0 England {{!}} Line-ups".
  11. (27 July 2010). "Beardsley Appointed Reserve Team Coach". [[Newcastle United F.C.]].
  12. (27 July 2010). "Steve Stone handed Newcastle first-team coach role". BBC Sport.
  13. (26 January 2015). "Newcastle United: John Carver to stay in charge until end of season". BBC Sport.
  14. Edwards, Luke. (9 June 2015). "John Carver sacked by Newcastle United". telegraph.co.uk.
  15. (12 November 2018). "Ex-England Man Steve Stone Is New Under-23s' Boss". Burnley FC.
  16. "Burnley sack manager Dyche with eight games left". BBC Sport.
  17. (27 May 2020). "Before Three Lions: How Baddiel and Skinner's Fantasy Football defined football in the 1990s {{!}} FourFourTwo".
  18. (14 November 2011). "Old music: Baddiel & Skinner & Lightning Seeds – Three Lions {{!}} Lightning Seeds". The Guardian.
  19. {{ENFA
  20. "England v Switzerland, 15 November 1995 - 11v11.com".
  21. "England v Portugal, 12 December 1995 - 11v11.com".
  22. (9 September 2019). "NAMES OF THE NINETIES: STEVE STONE".
  23. "FC Basel v Aston Villa, 07 August 2001". AFS Enterprises.
  24. (2003). "Sky Sports Football Yearbook 2003–2004". Headline Publishing Group.
  25. (1996). "The 1996–97 Official PFA Footballers Factfile". Queen Anne Press.
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