Neil Shipperley
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| Neil Shipperley | ||
| Personal information | ||
|---|---|---|
| Full name | Neil Jason Shipperley | |
| Date of birth | 30 October 1974 | |
| Place of birth | Chatham, England | |
| Height | 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) | |
| Playing position | Centre forward | |
| Youth career | ||
| Chelsea | ||
| Senior career1 | ||
| Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
| 1992–1995 1994 1995–1996 1996–1998 1998–1999 1999–2001 2001–2003 2003–2005 2005–2007 2007 |
Chelsea Watford (loan) Southampton Crystal Palace Nottingham Forest Barnsley Wimbledon Crystal Palace Sheffield United Brentford |
37 (7) 6 (1) 67 (12) 61 (20) 20 (1) 78 (27) 87 (32) 41 (8) 39 (11) 11 (0) |
| National team2 | ||
| 1993–1995 | England U21 | 7 (3) |
| Teams managed | ||
| 2009– | Bedfont | |
|
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
||
Neil Jason Shipperley (born 30 October 1974 in Chatham, Kent) is a retired English professional footballer, who played as a centre forward. He is currently manager of Bedfont of the Combined Counties League
A large, powerful, courageous and brave forward who was surprisingly mobile for a big man and was particular good with his back to goal, Shipperley lived in Hillingdon, Middlesex and attended Bishopshalt School. He is the son of Dave Shipperley, who played for many years at centre back for Charlton Athletic and Gillingham.
[edit] Career
Shipperley began his career as a trainee at Chelsea on leaving school in 1991 and was an occasional member of the first team. He was loaned out to Watford during the autumn of 1994, and soon after returning to Stamford Bridge, he was transferred to Southampton, in January 1995.
He was signed for the Saints by Alan Ball for a record fee of £1.5 million.[1]He seemed to be fairly settled in the first team but, following Ball's departure, new manager Graeme Souness recruited Norwegian Egil Østenstad and, after two years at The Dell, Shipperley left the Premiership club for Division One promotion chasers Crystal Palace in October 1996, for a fee of £1 million. During his time with the Saints he won his first England under-21 cap, earning seven in all.
He helped Palace win promotion to the Premiership at the end of the 1996-97 season, but was unable to save them from going straight back after just one season. Next stop was at newly promoted Nottingham Forest, who also went down within a year of promotion.
The following season, 1999-00, Shipperley was playing for Barnsley, scoring 31 goals from 88 appearances in two seasons before moving to Wimbledon and forming a strong partnership with David Connolly during 2002-03, which produced nearly 50 second level goals. When Wimbledon went into receivership, Shipperley 'moved' back to Palace (Wimbledon had been squatting at Selhurst Park Crystal Palace's ground), and during the 2003-04 season he captained them to promotion to the top level, scoring in the play-off semifinal home win over Sunderland, and the winning goal in the final win over West Ham United.
However, Shipperley rarely featured in the subsequent campaign, with England international Andy Johnson preferred. After Palace were relegated, Shipperley moved to Sheffield United on a free transfer in July 2005, scoring 11 goals in 39 appearances in his debut season, helping them to promotion to the Premiership. Injuries made it difficult for an individual impact in the top flight season, and he was one of several United players transfer-listed in December 2006.
On 15 January 2007,[2] his contract with Sheffield United was terminated by mutual consent. He then signed a four-month contract with Brentford, eight days later.[3]Despite a promising start, Shipperley failed to score in his eleven appearances for Brentford, and on 25 April 2007 announced his retirement from professional football.
On 20 May 2009, it was announced that Shipperley had become manager of Bedfont in the Combined Counties League.[4]
[edit] References
- ^ Duncan Holley & Gary Chalk (2003). In That Number - A post-war chronicle of Southampton FC. Hagiology. p. 578. ISBN 0-9534474-3-X.
- ^ Neil Shipps out
- ^ Fitz lands his man
- ^ Shipperley named as new manager

