Andy Clarke (footballer) explained

Andy Clarke
Fullname:Andrew Weston Clarke[1]
Birth Date:22 July 1967
Birth Place:Islington, England
Position:Forward
Youthclubs1:Islington St Mary's
Years1:1989–1991
Clubs1:Barnet
Caps1:63
Goals1:30
Years2:1991–1999
Clubs2:Wimbledon
Caps2:170
Goals2:17
Years3:1998
Clubs3:Port Vale (loan)
Caps3:6
Goals3:0
Years4:1999
Clubs4:Northampton Town (loan)
Caps4:4
Goals4:0
Years5:1999–2005
Clubs5:Peterborough United
Caps5:230
Goals5:57
Totalcaps:473
Totalgoals:104
Nationalteam1:England Non-League XI

Andrew Weston Clarke (born 22 July 1967) is an English former footballer. A striker, he scored 74 goals in 410 league games in a 14-year career in the English Football League.

After helping Barnet to the Conference title in 1990–91, he was signed to Wimbledon, a Football League side, at the relatively late age of 23. He played for the "Dons" in the Premier League before being loaned out to Port Vale in 1998 and Northampton Town in 1999. He joined Peterborough United in June 1999. He scored the only goal of the Third Division play-off final in 2000. He retired in May 2005.

Career

Barnet

Clarke originally started playing Sunday League football in the Greek Community League, before moving on to Islington St Mary's in the Spartan League.[2] He was signed to Barnet by manager Barry Fry. He scored on his debut for the "Bees" in a 5–1 defeat at Sutton United on 6 May 1989. He made a huge impression at Underhill over the next eighteen months and was named as the club's Player of the Year for 1990.[3] He also represented the England Non-League XI before signing for Ray Harford's Wimbledon in February 1991 for £250,000 – a record fee for a non-League player. At the end of the season, Barry Fry led the "Bees" to promotion to the Football League as champions of the Conference.

Wimbledon

Clarke was immediately thrown into the first team at Plough Lane, playing 12 league games and scoring three goals as the "Dons" finished seventh in the First Division. New boss Joe Kinnear then led the club to a 13th-place finish in 1991–92. The club then became founder members of the Premier League, posting a 12th-place finish in 1992–93; Clarke scored five goals in 33 appearances. Despite being forced to play their home games at Crystal Palace's Selhurst Park, they rose to sixth in 1993–94, finishing higher than all London clubs except Arsenal. Wimbledon then finished ninth in 1994–95, and Clarke won the BBC Goal of the Month award for February with his goal against Liverpool at Anfield in the FA Cup fifth round. He scored four goals in 1995–96, helping the "Wombles" into 14th place. Clarke hit the net just once in 1996–97 as the "Crazy Gang" hit eighth in the league and reached the semi-finals of both domestic cup competitions. He played 20 games in 1997–98, again scoring just one goal, as Wimbledon dropped to 15th. He played 212 league and cup games for the club, scoring 23 goals. Clarke started the 1998–99 campaign on loan at First Division side Port Vale but made just six goalless appearances for John Rudge's "Valiants". He spent four weeks on loan at Second Division side Northampton Town in January 1999 but made just four goalless appearances for the struggling Sixfields side.

Peterborough United

He was given a free transfer in June 1999 and joined Third Division club Peterborough United. He rediscovered his scoring form at London Road under Barry Fry, his former manager at Barnet, bagging 18 goals in 43 appearances in 1999–2000. The "Posh" finished fifth, and Clarke scored at Underhill in a 5–1 win over Barnet in the play-off semi-finals. He went on to score in the play-off final at Wembley, the only goal of the game, to take Peterborough into the Second Division; he said that "It's the best moment of my life."[4] Clarke hit 11 goals in 48 games in 2000–01, helping Peterborough to acclimatise well to the third tier. In December 2001, he failed a random drug test – the results being released in February the following year.[5] Accepting his explanation that it was a 'one-off' he was given a four-week ban.[6] He quickly signed a new contract with the club in April 2002,[7] and returned to the first-team. He hit eight goals on the field in 37 games in 2001–02. Scoring 19 goals in 48 games, he described the 2002–03 season as his "best ever".[8] He scored 12 goals in 50 games in 2003–04, helping Peterborough to avoid relegation by three places and two points. In May 2004, the 36-year-old put pen to paper on a new one-year contract.[9] He remained popular throughout his time at Peterborough,[10] even though he only scored three goals in 37 appearances in the 2004–05 relegation campaign, before being released in May 2005.[11] In all he scored 73 goals in 266 appearances in all competitions for Peterborough.

Post-retirement

After retiring, he worked on a market stall in the centre of Barnet.[12]

Career statistics

Source:[13]

ClubSeasonDivisionLeagueFA CupOtherTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Barnet1988–89Conference10000010
1989–90Conference3617521000
1990–91Conference2612911100
Total6330143217934
Wimbledon1990–91First Division1230000123
1991–92First Division3431021394
1992–93Premier League3353030395
1993–94Premier League2321061303
1994–95Premier League2513130312
1995–96Premier League1824121244
1996–917Premier League1111060181
1997–98Premier League1404031211
1998–99Premier League00000000
Total1701717225421223
Port Vale (loan)1998–99First Division60000060
Northampton Town (loan)1998–99Second Division40000040
Peterborough United1999–2000Third Division371521424318
2000–01Second Division42941214811
2001–02Second Division2856231378
2002–03Second Division451611224819
2003–04Second Division45922315012
2004–05League One3333020383
Total2305718716726471
Career total47310449124312565128

Honours

Individual

Barnet

1990–91

Peterborough United

Notes and References

  1. Book: Barry J. . Hugman . The PFA Footballers' Who's Who 2003/2004 . 2003 . Queen Anne Press . 1-85291-651-6 .
  2. Web site: Club Information . stmarysfc.co.uk . 14 May 2020.
  3. News: Barnet Football Club Supporters Association. 27 August 2017. onlybarnet.com.
  4. Web site: Posh pull it off at Wembley. 28 June 2000. BBC Sport. 14 May 2009.
  5. Web site: Clarke fails random check. 13 February 2002. BBC Sport. 14 May 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20090619204008/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/p/peterborough_united/1818808.stm. 19 June 2009 . live.
  6. Web site: Clarke banned until April. 6 March 2002. BBC Sport. 14 May 2009.
  7. Web site: Clarke agrees Posh deal. 3 April 2002. BBC Sport. 14 May 2009.
  8. Web site: Clarke: My best season. 6 May 2003. BBC Sport. 14 May 2009.
  9. Web site: Clarke signs new Posh deal. 5 May 2004. BBC Sport. 14 May 2009.
  10. Web site: Fry unhappy with Clarke. 31 August 2004. BBC Sport. 14 May 2009.
  11. Web site: Quartet free to leave Posh – Fry . 24 May 2005. BBC Sport. 14 May 2009.
  12. Web site: Port Vale – C. where-are-they-now.co.uk. 1 November 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20120405081326/http://www.where-are-they-now.co.uk/port-vale/c.php. 5 April 2012. dead.
  13. Web site: Downhill Second Half - A Barnet FC Archive Andy CLARKE Barnet FC career stats including appearances, goals, cards, matches played. . downhillsecondhalf.co.uk . 7 January 2022.