Showing posts with label Player - N. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Player - N. Show all posts

5 September 2014

Tony Nelson

Name: Anthony Nelson
Born: Bangor
Died: February 2009
Height:
Weight:
Position: 
Outside-Right

Representative Honours: Northern Ireland: 1 Amateur Cap (1966)

Club Career:

Teams
Seasons
Signed
Fee
League
FA Cup
Other
Bangor
-
-
Amateur
-
-
-
Glentoran
65/66
Jan-66
-
*15/6
-
-
Bangor
-
-
-
-
-
-
TOTALS
-
£-
-
-
-
* all games

Biography:
To follow.


Northern Ireland Amateur Cap Details:
15-01-1966 Wales... H D 0-0

Summary: 1/0. Won 0, Drew 1, Lost 0.

5 March 2014

Liam Nolan

Name: Liam Joseph Nolan
Born: 20 September 1994, Liverpool
Height: 5.09 ft / 1.75 m
Weight: 10.12 st / 69 kg
Position: Midfielder

Representative Honours: Northern Ireland: 1 Under-21 Cap, Youth.

Club Career:
Teams...... --Seasons-- Signed -Fee- -League- FA Cup FL Cup Other
Everton ...................... Youth
Crewe Alex. 13/14-14/15 ...... Youth 14(12)/0 ...... 2(0)/0 1(0)/0
Blackburn R. .......... Jul-15 Trial .0 (0)/0
Southport . 15/16-16/17 Aug-15 .Free (National League)
Accrington. 17/18- date May-17 .Free

Biography:
Liam Nolan was a member of Everton's Academy before being released at the age of 16. He followed the well-worn path to Crewe Alexandra, where he made his professional debut against Oldham in September 2013. After an impressive first season, during which he added a Northern Ireland Under-21 cap to those he had won as a youth at the 2013 Milk Cup, he was offered a contract extension. In his second season as a first team player at Gresty Road he was unable to consolidate his place and was released at the end of the 2014/15 season.

Wikipedia
Soccerbase
CreweAlex.net

Northern Ireland Under-21 Cap Details:
05-03-2014 Italy H L 0-2 ECQ sub

Summary: 0(1)/0. Won 0, Drew 0, Lost 1.

6 August 2011

Colin Nixon

Name: Colin Nixon
Born: 8 September 1978, Newtownards
Height: 5.11 ft
Weight: 11.00 st
Position: Right-Back

Representative Honours: Northern Ireland: 1 Under-21 Cap (1999), 5 Under-18 Schoolboy Caps (1996-1997), 14 Under-16 Schoolboy Caps (1993-1994); Irish League Representative.
Club Honours: (with Glentoran) Irish League Champion 1998/99, 2002/03, 2004/05, 2008/09; Irish Cup Winner ... 2012/13; Irish League Cup Winner; Co. Antrim Shield Winner.

Club Career:
Teams ... --Seasons-- Signed -Fee- League FA Cup FL Cup Europe Other
St Andrews Boys Club ....... Youth 
Glentoran 95/96-12/13   1993 Youth 
Bangor .. 13/14-15/16 May-13 .Free
Larne ... 15/16 ..... Jan-16

Biography:
Multi-honoured defender and captain of Glentoran, Colin Nixon won four Irish League titles and five Irish Cups during a near-two-decade career at the Oval. After close to 800 appearances he was released at the end of the 2012/13 season. His last game in a Glens shirt was in a 3-1 Irish Cup win over Cliftonville. He joined Bangor for the 2013/14 season.

Nixon then worked coached at Ards' Academy and with Harland & Wolff's Under-20 side. In 2016 he applied for the manager's job at Glentoran but was overlooked. In December he was appointed first-team manager at Ards.

More to follow.

Northern Ireland Under-21 Cap Details:
08-10-1999 Finalnd A L 1-2 ECQ sub

Summary: 0(1)/0. Won 0, Drew 0, Lost 1.

Irish League Representative Appearance Details:
01-11-2000 League of Ireland A W 2-0
13-02-2007 Football Conference H W 3-1

Summary: 2/0. Won 2, Drew 0, Lost 0.

13 December 2009

Rab Newberry

Name: Robert Newberry
Born: Belfast
Height: 5.10½ ft
Weight: 11.06 st
Position: Centre-Half

Representative Honours: Ireland: 2 Amateur Caps (1956); Irish League: 1 Cap (1956).
Club Honours:

Club Career:
Teams
Seasons
Signed
Fee
League
FA.Cup
Other
Distillery
-
-
Amateur
-
-
-
Ards
-
-
Amateur
-
-
-
TOTALS
-
£-
-
-
-

Biography:
Younger brother of Alex, formerly of Belfast Celtic, Rab Newberry was a back who reveled in a hard fought game.

More to follow.

Northern Ireland Amateur Cap Details:
21-01-1956 Wales... H W 2-1
25-02-1956 Scotland A W 3-1

Summary: 2/0. Won 2, Drew 0, Lost 0.

25 October 2009

Billy Neill

Name: William Neill
Born: 1929, Belfast
Died: 28 October 1997, Belfast
Height: 5.11 ft
Weight: 11.06 st
Position: Right-Back

Representative Honours: Ireland: Junior Caps; Irish League: 14 Caps (1952-1959); Irish FA: Representative (1953-1958).
Club Honours: (with Glentoran) Irish League Champion 1952/53; Irish Cup Runner-Up 1951/52, 1953/54, 1955/56; Gold Cup Winner 1951/52, 1960/61; City Cup Winner 1952/53, 1956/57; Ulster Cup Winner 1952/53; Co. Antrim Shield Winner 1951/52, 1956/57.
Awards: Ulster Footballer of the Year 1960.

Club Career:
Teams
Seasons
Signed
Fee
League
FA Cup
Europe
Other
Glentoran
50/51-62/63
-
-
*473/14
-
1/0
-
TOTALS
-
£-
473/14
-
1/0
-

Biography:
In the immediate post-war era Jimmy Geary brought a plethora of young talent to Glentoran via the Co-op Rec. (then the Glens’ Third team). Billy Bingham and Jimmy McIlroy went on to great things in the Football League and on the World Stage; Billy Neill however spent his entire playing career at the Oval, and stayed on as coach and manager. Shore Road born Neill had his footballing apprenticeship in the Boys’ Brigade, crediting the organisation with character building qualities. Indeed, he maintained a life-long affinity with the BB and its aims.

The role of Glentoran wing-half was always something of a charmed position. The presence Clancy McDermott, Danny Blanchflower and Frank Mulholland all had a hand in ensuring that Neill was not given a premature break in the first eleven. When his chance did come in the 1950/51 season he played little more than a supporting role as four trophies were won. Early in the following season he took the place of Middlesbrough bound Mulholland permanently at right-half, holding onto it for the next twelve years. Praised for his early “competent” displays, by the seasons end he had more than proved his merit and claimed both Gold Cup and Co. Antrim Shield winner’s medals. He managed his first goal to take a weakened Glens team to an Irish Cup semi-final second replay against Linfield. It took four games to settle that semi in Glentoran’s favour, and set up a Final match against unfancied Ards. The Peninsula team put in a superb performance to claim the Cup, in fact the 1-0 scoreline flattering Glentoran. Neill would play in a total of seven Irish Cup Final matches (encompassing three tournaments) in his long career, and never finish on a winning side.

In the 1952/53 campaign Neill really hit his stride in senior football. His goal in the opening match of the season, a 4-1 win over Coleraine, set Glentoran on the way to lifting the Ulster Cup. The City Cup soon followed in convincing fashion too and in May the Gibson Cup arrived at the Oval for the second time in three years. The season also brought Neill his first major representative honours. In September he played in the Irish league side defeated 5-1 by the Scottish League at Windsor Park – he was to remain a regular selection for much of the ‘fifties. Then, in May, he joined Glens teammate Sammy Hughes in the Irish FA party that toured Canada and the USA. The nearest he came to full international honours was as reserve for the 1952 Home Nations clash with England at Windsor Park.

As the 1950s continued Glentoran fell away from contention for the major honours. Irish Cup Finals were lost and Mercer Cup wins were celebrated in the absence of any more prestigious honours. It wasn’t until the 1956/76 season that any real success arrived back at the Oval, although for Neill it proved a difficult campaign as he suffered a fractured ankle in an early-season clash with Linfield. His spring return coincided with an upturn in the Glens’ fortunes, Neill bagging a rare two goals in a 7-2 League defeat of Ballymena on the way to third place respectability. The good form had arrived at just the right time, Glentoran claiming both the Co. Antrim Shield and City Cup via Final and Test Match defeats of Distillery. In a season of highs-and-lows Billy Neill and Sammy Hughes were awarded a joint benefit game against Everton.

The successes of May 1957 proved a false-dawn as Glentoran lost their manager that summer. The 1957/58 campaign brought only a mere sniff of a trophy, Glentoran losing the Ulster Cup Final replay 4-1 to Distillery, but it did see Neill awarded the inaugural Glentoran Player of the Year trophy. The following term Neill continued to impress in an average side, his ball control, tackling and intelligent accurate passing all praised. A rare moment of glory arrived with a Gold Cup semi-final win over Linfield, the first Glens win in a “Big-Two” clash for five years. In the final the Glentoran fans were again disappointed as the favourites lost out, against the run of play, 1-0 to Coleraine. In October 1958 Neill was again proved as among the most highly regarded players in the Irish League as he was named captain of an Irish FA XI for a match against South Africa, though the Africans ran out 5-2 winners. At the end of the season, with Glentoran empty-handed, a shake-up of the club’s coaching arrangements was announced, Neill given responsibility for the younger players.

The 1959/60 season looked to be heading for disaster early on for Glentoran. A run of eight games without a win put paid to any hopes in the Ulster Cup, Gold Cup and City Cup, in fact the only non-defeat was a 3-3 draw with Linfield at Windsor. Mid-season however the team clicked, embarking on their best League campaign in years. Eventually, with Neill putting in performances meriting Ulster Player of the Year status, the Glens finished runners-up, three points behind Glenavon in the race for the Gibson Cup.

Through the early-sixties Neill continued as an experienced head in an inexperienced team. Another trophy was finally claimed with a 4-2 Gold Cup Final win over Linfield in May 1961. Europe was tackled by the club for the first time in 1962 courtesy of entry into the Fairs Cup where Neill proving even experience was not enough to deal with the raw talent of Spanish giants Real Zaragoza – the 2-6 scoreline perhaps kind on the Glens. After 474 appearances – the seventh most of any Glens player – Neill hung-up his boots in 1963. He was appointed assistant-manager, and in three separate spells through the later ‘sixties would take charge of the team. In 1966 he finally got his hands on an Irish Cup winner’s medal, Glens’ ‘keeper Albert Finlay handing his to his boss. As manager of the Northern Ireland Amateur team he led them to the Amateur International Championship, England, Scotland and Wales all defeated, all away from home (due to the troubles).

Throughout his playing days and until his retirement in 1989, Billy Neill worked as a plater in the shipyard. Through the 1980s and 1990s he acted as a liaison with Northern Ireland managers Billy Bingham and Bryan Hamilton, assessing Irish League players’ international prospects. Neill was also an active fund-raiser for many local charities, particularly in conjunction with the Northern Ireland Showbusiness Club. In the 1996 Queen’s Birthday Honours list he was made an MBE, but due to ill-health was unable to travel to Buckingham Palace to accept his award. Sadly Billy Neill passed away in 1997; he is suitably remembered through the Billy Neill Centre of Excellence and Playing Fields, opened in Dundonald in 2001.

Irish League Representative Appearance Details:

18 October 2009

Oliver Norwood


Name: Oliver James Norwood
Born: 12 April 1991, Burnley (England)
Height: 5.11 ft
Weight: 12.00 st
Position: Midfielder

Representative Honours: Northern Ireland: Full (2010-date), 1 B Cap (2009), Under-21 (2009-date), Youth; England: Youth.
Club Honours: (with Brighton) EFL Championship Runner-up 2016/17 (promoted); (with Fulham) EFL Championship Play-Off Winner (promoted) 2017/18.
 


Club Career:
Teams.........--Seasons-- Signed -Fee- -League- FA Cup FL Cup Other
Manchester U. ............. 2007 Youth .0(0)/ 0
Carlisle U... 10/11 ..... Sep-10 .Loan .4(2)/ 0 ............. 1(0)/0
Scunthorpe U. 11/12 ..... Aug-11 .Loan 14(1)/ 1 0(1)/0 1(0)/0 1(0)/0
Coventry City 11/12 ..... Jan-12 .Loan 17(1)/ 2
Huddersfield. 12/13-13/14 Jun-12 ..... 75(5)/ 8 4(2)/1 4(0)/0
Reading ..... 14/15-15/16 Aug-14 £1.2m 75(6)/ 4 8(1)/1 2(0)/0
Brighton & HA 16/17- date Aug-16 Undis 16(17)/0 1(0)/0 3(0)/0 
Fulham ...... 17/18 ..... Jul-17 .Loan 22(14)/5 1(0)/0 1(0)/0 0(3)/0
Sheffield U.. 18/19 ..... Aug-18 .Loan


Biography:
A product of the same Manchester United youth set-up that has produced the likes of the Evans brothers and Craig Cathcart in recent seasons, Ollie Norwood signed his first professional contract in July 2009.

Already capped at Youth level by England, Norwood switched allegiances to Northern Ireland. He initially played for Northern Ireland in friendlies and minor tournaments, including an Elite success in the 2009 Milk Cup, while awaiting clearance. He made his competitive début in a 1-1 UEFA Under-21 Championship qualifier against Germany in November 2009, scoring the equaliser with a stoppage time free kick. In May 2010 he starred for Northern Ireland in the Elite Round of the UEFA Under-19 Championship, scoring twice (including another free-kick) in a 2-2 draw with Russia and a penalty to give the Irish a 1-0 lead against Italy prior to an eventual 3-2 defeat.

Norwood received his first senior call-up for the August 2010 friendly against Montenegro. He made his debut as a 64th minute substitute for Sammy Clingan, though by then Northern Ireland were already trailing 2-0 which turned out to be the final score.

Yet to make his United début, Norwood had a loan spell at Carlisle cut short by injury early in the 2010/11 season. In August 2011 he joined Scunthorpe on loan through to the following January. It was during his time at the Iron that Norwood scored his first senior goal, a trademark "belter" in a 2-2 draw with Huddersfield. Another loan spell that season with Coventry saw him play alongside Sammy Clingan but suffer relegation from the Championship.

In the summer of 2012 Norwood announced that he would be seeking a move away from Manchester United, despite the offer of a new contract, as he sought regular firstteam football. He drew interest from several clubs before eventually signing for Huddersfield.

In 2014 he moved to Reading in a reported £1.2 million deal.

More to follow.

ManU Profile

Northern Ireland Cap Details:
11-08-2010 Montenegro.... A L 0-1 FR. sub
09-02-2011 Scotland...... N L 0-3 CNC sub
24-05-2011 Rep. Ireland.. A L 0-5 CNC sub
27-05-2011 Wales......... N L 0-2 CNC
still active

Northern Ireland B Cap Details:
06-05-2009 Scotland...... A L 0-3 FR sub

Summary: 0(1)/0. Won 0, Drew 0, Lost 1.

Northern Ireland Under-21 Cap Details:
12-08-2009 Portugal...... A L 1-2 FR. sub
13-11-2009 Germany....... H D 1-1 ECQ 1 goal
17-11-2009 Czech Republic H L 1-2 ECQ 1 goal
02-03-2010 San Marino.... A W 3-0 ECQ 2 goals
03-09-2010 San Marino.... H W 4-0 ECQ
07-09-2010 Germany....... A L 0-3 ECQ
31-05-2011 Faroe Islands. A D 0-0 ECQ
10-08-2011 Faroe Islands. H W 4-0 ECQ
still active

Pictures kindly supplied by Roy Cathcart.

24 December 2007

Jim Nolan-Whelan

Name: James Valentine Joseph Nolan *
Born: 22 October 1880, Dublin
Died: April 1950, Dublin
Position: Goalkeeper
(* Between his second and third caps his name was changed by deed-pole to Nolan-Whelan)

Representative Honours: Ireland: 5 Full Caps (1901-1902).
Club Honours: (with Freebooters) Irish Cup Runner-Up 1900/01.

Club Career:
Teams
Seasons
Signed
Fee
League
FA.Cup
Others
Dublin.Freebooters
97/98-03/04
-
Amateur
-
-
-
Oxford University
02/03
-1902
Amateur
-
-
-
Corinthians
-
-
Amateur
-
-
-
TOTALS
-
£-
-
-
-

Biography:
One of the youngest goalkeepers ever to take the field for Ireland, Jim Nolan-Whelan was just 20 years and 138 days old when he made his international debut. In all Nolan-Whelan was capped on five occasions, tasting victory just once. His final cap was won against Scotland, in a benefit match held to raise funds for the Ibrox Disaster Fund. This hastily arranged match followed the collapse of a stand at Rangers’ stadium during an international match between Scotland and England that claimed the lives of 25 fans.

Nolan-Whelan played for the amateur gentlemen’s Dublin Freebooters club, and was between the posts on the historic day on which they played in the Irish Cup Final where they lost 1-0 to Cliftonville in 1901. He was the regular goalkeeper for the Freebooters and was the most-capped of their four players who represented Ireland.

While attending Christ Church College at Oxford University in 1902/03 Nolan-Whelan played in the 30th Varsity match against Cambridge, a match that finished with a 1-0 win. Although Oxford University had an amazing FA Cup record of one win, another three final appearances and two further appearances in the semi-finals, by the time of Nolan-Whelan’s attendance they no longer competed with the professional clubs in English football’s primary competition.

A Dubliner by birth, Nolan-Whelan returned from Oxford a qualified Barrister in Law and spent the rest of his life in his home city.

Ireland Cap Details:

09-03-1901 England. A L 0-3 BC
23-03-1901 Wales... H L 0-1 BC
22-02-1902 Wales... A W 3-0 BC
01-03-1902 Scotland H L 1-3 BC
09-08-1902 Scotland H L 0-3 FR


Summary: 5/0. Won 1, Drew 0, Lost 4.


Photo and details by George Glass.

23 December 2007

Rab Nixon

Name: Robert J. Nixon
Born:
Died:
Height:

Weight:
Position: Inside-Right

Representative Honours: Ireland: 1 Full Cap (1914); Irish League: 3 Caps / 2 Goals (1914).
Club Honours: (with Linfield) Irish League Champion; Irish Cup Winner 1912/13, 1914/15, 1915/16, Runner-Up 1913/14, 1917/18; Co. Antrim Shield Winner; Belfast & District "War-Time" League Champion.

Club Career:
Teams
Seasons
Signed
Fee
League
FA Cup
Other
Linfield
-
-
-
-
-
-
TOTALS
-
£-
-
-
-

Biography:

Rab Nixon was granted his only cap due to the unavailability of Billy Gillespie for the key 1914 Home Nations tie with Scotland. Even then cicumstance favoured Nixon as the first choice replacement, Bradford Park Avenue’s Jack McCandless, failed to secure a release from his club and so in came Nixon at inside-right, with Linfield teammate Sam Young moving to centre-forward. It proved a happy switch, with Young scoring the equaliser that saw Ireland claim their first ever Home Nations title outright. Nixon might well have added further international caps to his collection had it not been for the outbreak of World War One.

Also honoured at inter-league level on three occasions, Nixon marked his first appearance for the Irish League with a goal in a 2-1 defeat by the Football League at West Brom in October 1914. Later that month he scored another for the Irish League to secure a draw with the Southern League in Swansea. Nixon’s final inter-league appearance, in the Irish side’s final match at that level until after the War, was a 2-1 defeat by the Scottish League at Grosvenor Park.

On the domestic front Nixon claimed a host of medals. He claimed Irish League and War-Time League titles, Co. Antrim Shield winner’s medals, but had the greatest success in the Irish Cup. He played in six final matches, finishing on the losing side just once against Glentoran in 1913 (he missed the second replay defeat by Belfast Celtic in 1918). He scored two goals, one in each of the matches it took to see off the Glens in 1915, and claimed three winner’s medals.

Ireland Cap Details:
14-03-1914 Scotland H D 1-1 BC

Summary: 1/0. Won 0, Drew 1, Lost 0.

Harry Nicholl

Name: Henry* Nicholl
Born: 30 October 1875, Enniskillen
Died: 21 August 1911, Belfast
Height:
Weight:
Position: Left-Half

Representative Honours: Ireland: 3 Full Caps (1902-1905); Irish League: 6 Caps (1899-1904).
Club Honours: (with Belfast Celtic) Irish League Champion 1899/1900, Runner-Up 1904/05; Irish Cup Runner-Up 1905/06; City Cup Winner 1905/06, Runner-Up 1901/02, 1902/03; Belfast Charity Cup Winner 1903/04; Co. Antrim Shield Runner-Up 1903/04.

Club Career:
Teams
Seasons
Signed
Fee
League
FA.Cup
Others
Belfast Celtic
-
-
-
-
Liverpool
97/98
Aug-1897
-
0/ 0
-
-
Belfast Celtic
98/99-01/02
-1898
-
-
-
-
Third Lanark
02/03
-
-
1/ 0
-
-
Belfast Celtic
03/04-09/10
Jun-1903
-
-
-
-
TOTALS
-
£-
-
-
-

Biography:
Great changes were being made at Belfast’s Celtic Football Club at the turn of the twentieth century. Having only been admitted to the Irish League in 1896, Celtic took their first title in 1899/1900. In 1901 the club became a limited company, taking the Belfast prefix to differentiate themselves from their Glasgow cousins. That same year ground would be broken for the club’s new home, Celtic Park or “Paradise” to the regular attendees.

All through these exciting years the club fielded a half-back of great ability, Harry Nicholl. Nicholl was with Celtic from the time they joined the Irish League through to their first appearance in an Irish Cup Final – a 2-0 defeat by Shelbourne in 1906. He was honoured by the Irish League, playing in a famous 3-1 defeat of the Scottish League in 1899, and by Ireland. His three caps, spanning three years, were all won at left-half, though through his career he featured almost as regularly on the right-hand side of the half-back line.

Versatility was an important quality for Nicholl as competition for firstteam football at Belfast Celtic, even in those early days, was stiff and he wasn't always guaranteed a place. He was in the team for many of Celtic's most important matches as they consistently challenged for the major honours and, a brief spells "across the water" with Liverpool and Third Lanark aside, remained a squad member until 1909/10. In all his time at Paradise Nicholl scored just twice, both against Cliftonville in the City Cup in January and December 1904.

Nicholl died from typhoid fever in Purdysburn Hospital, Belfast in August 1911, aged just 35. On his death, the Dundee Courier reported: "As a half-back he had no superior in Irish football when at his best."

Kjell Hanssen

Ireland Cap Details:
22-02-1902 Wales... A W 3-0 BC
22-03-1902 England. H L 0-1 BC
25-02-1905 England. A D 1-1 BC

Summary: 3/0. Won 1, Drew 1, Lost 1.


Additional details by George Glass and Cris Freddi. Photo supplied by Roy Cathcart.

* Possibly Harold.

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