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Steve Thompson (footballer, born 1964)

English footballer and coach


Summary

English footballer and coach

FieldValue
nameSteve Thompson
fullnameSteven James Thompson
birth_date
birth_placeOldham, England
height
currentclubOldham Athletic (head of recruitment)
positionMidfielder
years11982–1991
years21991
years31991–1995
years41995–1997
years51997–2000
years62000–2001
years72001–2002
clubs1Bolton Wanderers
clubs2Luton Town
clubs3Leicester City
clubs4Burnley
clubs5Rotherham United
clubs6Halifax Town
clubs7Leigh RMI
caps1333
caps25
caps3127
caps449
caps5103
caps636
caps78
goals150
goals20
goals318
goals41
goals514
goals62
goals70
totalcaps661
totalgoals85
manageryears12008–2009
manageryears22012
manageryears32013
manageryears42023
managerclubs1Blackpool (co-caretaker)
managerclubs2Blackpool (caretaker)
managerclubs3Blackpool (caretaker)
managerclubs4Oldham Athletic (caretaker)

Steven James Thompson (born 2 November 1964) is an English retired professional footballer who played as a midfielder. He is the Head of Recruitment for National League side Oldham Athletic.

Playing career

Thompson started his playing career as an apprentice at Bolton Wanderers before signing his first contract in 1982, and was at the club until 1991 playing in a total of 410 games, and scoring 57 goals in all competitions. He played on the winning side at Wembley in 1989 in the Football League Trophy final. On 13 August 1991, he signed for Luton Town for £180,000. His stay with the Hatters was short-lived; he made just five league appearances before moving to Leicester City two months later, on 22 October, where he played in 121 league games scoring six goals. He won the Player of the Season award twice while with the Foxes and later described his time with the club as probably the best three years as a footballer.

On 24 February 1995, Thompson moved to Burnley for a £200,000 transfer fee. He made 49 league appearances, scoring one goal, before leaving at the end of the 1996–97 season. On 1 August 1997, he signed for Rotherham United, where he made 106 league appearances and scored fourteen goals. In the 2000–01 season, he joined Halifax Town, where he spent one season, playing 36 games and scoring two goals. He then spent a season with Leigh RMI before retiring from football.

Coaching career

Blackpool

Thompson started coaching with the Centre of Excellence at Blackpool before becoming Head of the Youth Department in 2005. Following the appointment of Simon Grayson as Blackpool's manager Thompson was promoted to first team coach in 2006, and he coached the team in the 2006–07 season as the Seasiders were promoted to the Championship, making their first return to the second tier of English football for 29 years. In March 2008 he signed a new two-year extension to his contract at Bloomfield Road. In December 2008 following the departure of the Seasiders manager Simon Grayson to Leeds United, Thompson became the assistant manager on a caretaker basis, with Tony Parkes as the caretaker manager. After Parkes' first game in charge, a 1–1 Boxing Day draw against Sheffield Wednesday at Hillsborough, Parkes revealed that the Blackpool board was willing to give him the job full-time, with Thompson as his assistant, if the team continue to perform as they did under Grayson. Speaking of his role as assistant manager at what he considers to be his hometown club, Thompson said, "I am enjoying the responsibility and myself and Tony have been bouncing ideas off each other. Tony will probably make the major decisions but I am enjoying it because it is the club that I love. I am a local lad and I am just as excited doing what I'm doing now as Simon Grayson probably is at Leeds." When Ian Holloway became Blackpool manager in summer 2009, Thompson stayed on as his assistant.

Three and a half years later, when Holloway left to become manager of Crystal Palace, Thompson was appointed caretaker manager before the match at Derby County on 3 November. It was Holloway who had picked the team, however. After the match, which Blackpool lost 4–1, Thompson stated his interest in applying for the job on a full-time basis. Blackpool won their next fixture, with Thompson still in charge, 2–0 at Sheffield Wednesday.

He resumed his caretaker role two months later when Michael Appleton left to become manager of Blackburn Rovers. He picked the team to face Charlton Athletic on 12 January, but they lost 2–1.

Huddersfield Town

On 6 June 2014, Thompson was hired as Mark Robins' new assistant manager at Huddersfield Town. He retained the position under new Huddersfield Manager Chris Powell.

Leeds United

On 18 December 2014, Thompson was hired as Neil Redfearn's new assistant at Leeds United. On 2 April 2015, Thompson was suspended by then Leeds director of football, Nicola Salerno for an 'internal matter'. Head Coach Neil Redfearn was kept in the dark as to why Thompson had been suspended.

On 24 June 2015, on the day Salerno left the club, Salerno gave an interview to Sky Sports, saying about Thompson: "I had a bad relationship with Steve but I didn't speak to Massimo about him."

Preston North End

On 1 July 2015, Thompson was appointed first-team coach of newly promoted Football League Championship side Preston North End, reuniting him with manager Simon Grayson 2013–2017. and Alex Neil 2017–2022

Oldham Athletic

On 9 November 2022, it was announced that Thompson had been appointed as Head of Recruitment at his hometown club Oldham Athletic. On 17 September 2023, he was appointed interim manager following the sacking of David Unsworth. He held this caretaker position until 12 October with a managerial appointment imminent.

Personal life

Thompson's son, Curtis, signed as a first-year professional with Blackpool for the 2012–13 season.

Managerial statistics

TeamNatFromToRecordGWDLWin %Total
Blackpool (caretaker)England3 November 20127 November 2012
Blackpool (caretaker)England11 January 201318 February 2013
Oldham Athletic (caretaker)England17 September 202312 October 2023633050.00

Honours

Bolton Wanderers

Individual

References

References

  1. {{Hugman. 19564
  2. (1987). "Rothmans Football Yearbook 1987–88". Queen Anne Press.
  3. Powell, David. (29 May 1989). "Happy days return to Burnden Park". NewsBank.
  4. (10 August 2007). "Thompson looking forward to Leicester game". [[Blackpool F.C..
  5. (4 March 2008). "Parkes extends Blackpool contract". [[bbc.co.uk]].
  6. (7 March 2008). "Larry delighted by Parkes and Thompson stay". [[Blackpool F.C..
  7. (26 December 2008). "Sheff Wed 1–1 Blackpool". [[bbc.co.uk]].
  8. Canavan, Steve. (28 December 2008). "Parkes: Give me the Pool job". [[Blackpool Gazette]].
  9. [https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/av/football/20195332 "Blackpool: Steve Thompson wants to replace Ian Holloway"] – BBC Sport, 3 November 2012
  10. (6 November 2012). "Sheffield Wednesday 0–2 Blackpool". British Broadcast Corporation.
  11. (12 January 2013). "Charlton 2–1 Blackpool". British Broadcast Corporation.
  12. (2 April 2015). "Leeds United suspend assistant manager Steve Thompson". The Guardian.
  13. (24 June 2015). "AGREEMENT REACHED WITH SALERNO". Leeds United.
  14. (24 June 2015). "Leeds United under Massimo Cellino - Nicola Salerno lifts the lid". Sky Sports.
  15. (1 July 2015). "Steve Thompson Joins Preston North End Coaching Staff". PNEFC.
  16. (17 September 2023). "David Unsworth".
  17. (12 October 2023). "Steve Thompson & Neil Redfearn".
  18. Powell, David. (29 May 1989). "Happy days return to Burnden Park". NewsBank.
  19. Lynch. "The Official P.F.A. Footballers Heroes".
Wikipedia Source

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