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Not What You Meant?  There are 21 definitions for Psycho.

Stuart Pearce

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Stuart Pearce
Stuart Pearce
Personal information
Full name Stuart Pearce
Date of birth 24 April 1962 (1962-04-24) (age 45)
Place of birth    Hammersmith, London, England
Playing position Defender
Club information
Current club England U21 (Manager)
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1981-1983
1983-1985
1985-1997
1997-1999
1999-2001
2001-2002
Wealdstone
Coventry City
Nottingham Forest
Newcastle United
West Ham United
Manchester City
00? 0(?)
052 0(4)
401 (63)
037 0(0)
042 0(2)
038 0(3)   
National team
1987-1999 England 078 0(5)
Teams managed
1996-1997
2005-2007
2007-
Nottingham Forest (caretaker)
Manchester City
England U21

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Stuart Pearce MBE (born 24 April 1962 in Hammersmith, London) is an English football coach, currently the manager of the England Under 21s. Pearce is a former manager of Manchester City having been appointed as permanent manager after a period as caretaker following the retirement of Kevin Keegan. On 14 May 2007 he was sacked as manager of Manchester City because of a 'disappointing season'. As a player, Pearce had a long and distinguished career, becoming one of the most highly regarded defenders his country has ever produced, best remembered for his time at Nottingham Forest and his England international duties. He was still highly regarded as a first class defender when in his mid 30s.

Contents

Playing career

Early career

Born in West London. Stuart first attended Fryent Primary School in Kingsbury, NW London before attending Claremont High School in Kenton,Middx. He failed a trial at Queens Park Rangers and then rejected an offer from Hull City, instead settling happily into a career in the non-league game with his local side, Wealdstone, a top Middlesex club, while training and working as an electrician and plumber. For almost five years, he was the first choice full back of a highly successful team, then amongst the biggest names of non-league football. and in 1983 Wealdstone received an unexpected offer of £30,000 (then a huge sum for a semi-professional player) for Pearce from then top-flight club Coventry City. Manager Bobby Gould had been to watch Wealdstone, and was hugely impressed by Pearce's determination and combative attitude. Pearce agreed to the step up in clubs reluctantly - making his professional debut for Coventry immediately.

Nottingham Forest

Quickly establishing himself as an uncompromising left back who played hard but fair, he was then saved by Brian Clough for Nottingham Forest two years later, as the makeweight in a £300,000 deal which also saw Coventry's centre back Ian Butterworth move to Forest. Indeed, so unsure was Pearce of his footballing future that, after the transfer, he actually advertised his services as an electrician in Forest's match-day programme. However that determination and combative attitude made him an all time fans favourite and earned him the nickname Psycho. Pearce spent more than ten years at Forest, most of it as club captain, becoming by far and away the supporters' favourite player, and briefly also became player manager, a caretaker role he held while the club found a long-term boss. This short period in charge saw him win the manager of the month award, although ultimately resulted in Nottingham Forest's relegation. During his eventful playing career he won two League Cups and the Simod Cup, while also scoring from a free kick in the 1991 FA Cup final, when Forest were beaten by Tottenham Hotspur. Despite the relegation from the top flight, Pearce decided to stay, helping Forest to gain promotion the following season, including scoring a spectacular header to secure promotion. When Nottingham Forest again two seasons later suffered relegation from the FA Premier League, Pearce left for Newcastle United and reached another FA Cup final, though again he emerged on the defeated side. He went on to play for West Ham United, a year after falling out of favour with Newcastle manager Ruud Gullit.

Manchester City

Pearce then played one final season as captain of Manchester City, again quickly establishing himself as a fans favourite. His combative nature showed itself brilliantly in a game against Norwich City. City were down to 10 men after an ankle-high challenge by Danny Tiatto resulted in Norwich right winger Steen Nedergaard rolling around on the floor clutching his face. After this Pearce ran up to the player whilst he was on the groung and shouted in his face to get up. Pearce continued to put in hard but fair tackles against Needergaard until the player had to be substituted. City went on to win the game. His performance in the match summed up the total commitment and honour with which Pearce played the game. His final appearance came against Portsmouth, fans encouraged him to shoot from anywhere on the park so that he could score his 100th career goal. Pearce failed to score until the 89th minute when the referee awarded a penalty to City which was greeted with huge cheers by the home crowd even though they were already 4-0 up. Pearce as usual stepped up to take the penalty, and opposition keeper Dave Beasant, another veteran (aged 43), had a word in his ear. Pearce subsequently blasted the penalty over the bar and finished his career with one goal less than his golden target of 100 goals. After the game Pearce lifted the Division One championship trophy and announced his retirement from playing, three days before his 40th birthday.

England career

Debut

He made his debut for England against Brazil in 1987 (the 999th player to receive an England cap) and, from 1988 onwards, became the first choice left back for his country, in so doing wrestling the number 3 jersey away from Kenny Sansom prior to Sansom's thirtieth birthday. Injury robbed him of a place as Sansom's back-up in England's squad for the 1988 European Championships, but after the tournament, coach Bobby Robson decided to make Pearce his first choice left back. He ultimately became Forest's most capped outfield player and ended up with 78 international appearances to his name. At the 1990 World Cup, Pearce had a goal ruled out from a free kick during a group game against the Netherlands, but played well through the tournament, setting up a goal for David Platt in the quarter finals and operating as a more attacking left back than normal as England deployed a sweeper system. England progressed to the semi-finals, and Pearce was one of two unfortunate players (the other being Chris Waddle) to miss a penalty in the shoot-out which took place against West Germany after the match had ended in a 1-1 draw. Pearce left the field in tears. Pearce played in an unsuccessful Euro 92 campaign for England, when they failed to win any of their group games. He had a thunderous free kick strike the underside of the crossbar and bounce away from goal in a drawn game against France. Moments before taking the free kick, Pearce was headbutted by French defender Basile Boli, leaving a gash on his cheek. When England won the free kick Pearce immediately disregarded his injury and rushed to take it. The referee insisted on Pearce having the blood wiped from his face first, but Pearce soon returned and unleashed his thunderbolt, which failed to go in. England's failure to qualify for the 1994 FIFA World Cup in the U.S. included a personal nightmare for Pearce, when his underhit back pass allowed forward Davide Gualtieri to score for San Marino (who at the time had never won an international game) inside the first eight seconds of their qualifier. England still won the game 7-1, but qualification was highly unlikely anyway as England needed Poland to defeat Holland, the Dutch won the game 3-1 and England were knocked out.

Euro 96

When Terry Venables became England coach later in 1994, Pearce lost his place to Graeme Le Saux but then regained it after the Blackburn Rovers defender suffered a broken leg. Pearce stayed in the side into the Euro 96 competition, laying his ghosts to rest with a successful penalty in a quarter-final shoot-out against Spain, which England won. His forceful, emotional celebration before an ecstatic Wembley crowd became one of English football's most celebrated images. He repeated the feat in the semi-final shoot-out against Germany but once again the Germans emerged victorious. After the tournament, Pearce joined fellow England penalty missers Chris Waddle and Gareth Southgate (who missed in Euro 96) in a light-hearted commercial for Pizza Hut in which they poked fun at their own misfortunes. Pearce played only briefly under Glenn Hoddle and seemed to have completed his international career with 76 caps by the time he scaled down his career at Newcastle and then West Ham. However, the appointment of Keegan to the England job prompted a recall for a 36 year old Pearce for two qualifying games for Euro 2000. Pearce's broken leg later put paid to further international chances and he ended his international career with 78 caps, which for a time put him in the all-time top ten appearance makers for England.

Coaching career

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Stuart Pearce

Pearce's last club was Manchester City, where he spent one season as a player-coach. Pearce scored on his league debut for the team, a 3-0 victory over Watford. He was a rock in the City defence for the 2001-2002 season helping the team earn promotion back into the Premiership for the 2002-2003 season. In his last game as a professional footballer Pearce missed a penalty, even though goalkeeper Dave Beasant had promised not to attempt a save. Had he scored, Pearce would have achieved 100 career goals. He remained at Manchester City as a coach, and was appointed caretaker manager of the club on March 10 2005 following the departure of Keegan. He expressed his wish on appointment to get the job permanently, though accepted that this would depend on the results he achieved during his temporary period in charge. His first game, against Tottenham Hotspur nine days later, ended with a 2-1 defeat but on May 12, after 15 points from his first 8 games, he was appointed on a permanent basis. A 1-1 draw against Middlesbrough just three days later brought City's season to the end with an eight-game unbeaten run and the club finishing in 8th, four places higher than when Keegan had left two months earlier. In this game Pearce placed goalkeeper David James in the position of striker for the last few minutes. His first full season in charge was mixed; fourth place after finishing the first five games unbeaten started a reasonable opening three months, plus some good publicity thanks to Pearce's eccentricities on the touchline, was tempered by a poor ending to the campaign as City lost nine of their last ten games of the season to finish 15th. His record in Cup competitions was also inconsistent with successive FA Cup quarter-finals in 2006 and 2007 being offset by 2nd round exits in the Carling Cup to Doncaster Rovers in 2005 and Chesterfield in 2006. Pearce is unusually fair and honest for a Premiership Manager, refusing to criticise referees for mistakes they may have made. [1] Pearce was appointed England under-21 manager on 1 February 2007.[2] His team made the semi-final of the under-21 European Championships in June 2007. Pearce was sacked as Manchester City manager on 14 May 2007. [3] Reasons for his sacking are largely due to poor performances by the team during the 2006-07 season, including only scoring 10 home goals, a record low in top flight English football history.[4] After Wigan Athletic dismissed manager Chris Hutchings on 5 November 2007, Pearce was sounded out as a possible successor behind favorite Graeme Souness to take over at the JJB. However, several days later, Pearce ruled himself out of the running for Wigan to concentrate on England under-21 and the vacancy was filled by Steve Bruce.

Personal life

Pearce is a known devotee of punk rock, and, indeed is visible as one of the members of a frenetic audience featured on the cover of a live album by one of his favourite bands, The Lurkers. Additionally, he has met The Stranglers nearly 30 times, and has had a record label named after him by the band, (Psycho Records). He also enjoys reading, going to the theatre and owns racehorses with his wife, Liz. Throughout his career, he was given the affectionate nickname of 'Psycho' for his unforgiving style of play. This was initially a tag afforded to him only by Forest fans, though later it was adopted by England supporters too. A compilation of computer games was released as Psycho's Soccer Collection in 1992. He escaped virtually unscatched from a road accident in 1998, in which his Rover 200 was in collision with a lorry. Although Pearce, with 78 caps, stands currently as the 12th most capped player for England, he did not even emerge as the most capped left back - his predecessor Kenny Sansom achieved that with 86 caps, which places him seventh in the all-time list. However, in a 2000 poll to find England's greatest XI, the public voted overwhelmingly for Stuart Pearce to take the left back spot. Sansom and Ashley Cole, the other candidates in the poll, trailed well behind. His autobiography, Psycho, was released in 2001 and became a Sunday Times best seller. In 2006, Pearce's seven year old daughter Chelsea insisted that he took her toy horse Beany on to the touchline with him when Manchester City were in action. Pearce resignedly did so, stating it was impossible to tell a small girl why he shouldn't, but after City won the match, superstition took over and Beany ended up alongside him in the technical area for several games to come until City were defeated. Beany's name was then chanted by City fans for many games during their successful run in December.

Managerial stats

Team Nat From To Record
G W L D Win %
Nottingham Forest Flag of England December 20 1996 May 8 1997 23 7 7 9 30.43
Manchester City Flag of England March 11 2005 May 14 2007 97 34 43 20 35.05
England Under-21[5] Flag of England February 1 2007 Present 11 5 1 5 45.45

Notes

  1. ^ Manchester Evening News Pearce backs ref over penalty claim. Accessed 21 December 2006.
  2. ^ "Pearce named as England U21 boss", BBC Sport, 2007-02-01. Retrieved on 2007-05-14. 
  3. ^ Manchester City FC official website accessed 14th May 2007
  4. ^ Man City sacking: Football365.com website. Accessed May 14 2007.
  5. ^ Statistics for Pearce's record in the U21 job from here and here.

External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Peter Taylor
England national under-21 football team manager
2007–
Incumbent
Persondata
NAME Pearce, Stuart
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Psycho (nickname)
SHORT DESCRIPTION Football player and manager
DATE OF BIRTH April 24, 1962
PLACE OF BIRTH Hammersmith, London, England
DATE OF DEATH
PLACE OF DEATH

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Stuart Pearce from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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