Brian Turner (footballer, born 1949) explained

Brian Turner
Fullname:Brian Alfred Turner
Position:Midfielder/Striker
Birth Date:31 July 1949
Birth Place:East Ham, England
Years1:1966
Years2:1967
Years3:1968–1969
Years4:1969–1970
Years5:1970–1972
Years6:1972–1980
Years7:1981
Years8:1981
Years9:1982
Years10:1983
Years11:1984–1985
Years12:1986–1988
Clubs1:Ponsonby
Clubs2:Eden
Clubs3:Chelsea
Clubs4:Portsmouth
Clubs5:Brentford
Clubs6:Mount Wellington
Clubs7:Blacktown City
Clubs8:Wollongong Wolves
Clubs9:Gisborne City
Clubs10:Papatoetoe
Clubs11:Mount Wellington
Clubs12:Bay Olympic
Caps1:2
Goals1:3
Caps2:15
Goals2:10
Caps3:0
Goals3:0
Caps4:4
Goals4:0
Caps5:92
Goals5:7
Caps6:155
Goals6:62
Caps7:11
Goals7:2
Caps8:7
Goals8:0
Caps9:19
Goals9:1
Caps10:21
Goals10:4
Caps11:40
Goals11:?
Totalcaps:366
Totalgoals:89
Nationalyears1:1967–1982
Nationalteam1:New Zealand
Nationalcaps1:59
Nationalgoals1:21

Brian Alfred Turner (born 31 July 1949 in England) is a New Zealand football former player, who was a prominent squad member during the country's first successful campaign to qualify for the FIFA World Cup, in 1982. He was assistant coach[1] for the New Zealand national team that played in the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

Clubs coached

Turner has served on the coaching staffs of Wellington Phoenix FC, Auckland Manukau United, Onehunga Sports, and Fencibles AFC 2013.

Club career

Turner was born in England and moved to New Zealand at an early age. He began his senior playing career in New Zealand with Ponsonby and Eden before returning to England in 1968 where he joined Chelsea FC for a season, but failed to make a 1st team appearance. He then moved to Portsmouth FC for a short stint and ultimately to Brentford FC where he spent seasons. Turner returned to New Zealand in 1972 where he spent 8 seasons with Mt Wellington. In 1981 Turner moved to Australia, playing first with Blacktown City then Wollongong Wolves[2] before once again returning to his adopted country to play for Gisborne City, Papatoetoe and Mt Wellington again.[3]

International career

He made his A-International debut in a 3–5 loss against trans-Tasman rival Australia on 5 November 1967 in the 1967 South Vietnam Independence Cup[4] and went on to earn 59 A-international caps in which he scored a credible 21 goals.[5] [6] His international career spanned a then national record 102 appearances in the All White strip including unofficial matches.[7]

Turner was an integral member of the New Zealand side that qualified for the 1982 FIFA World Cup in Spain, playing in all but 3 qualifying matches. However, his only appearance at the finals was as a late substitute in the 0–4 loss to Brazil. It was to be his last game for his adopted country, Turner announcing his international retirement after their elimination following group stage losses against Scotland, USSR and Brazil.[7]

Turner continued to play domestically in New Zealand through his thirties before continuing his football involvement in coaching roles. Brian's achievements earned him three Player of the Year titles, and in 1995 he was inducted into the New Zealand Soccer Hall of Fame[8]

Administration career

In 2013, Turner founded the independent group Friends of Football[9]

Honours

Individual

Club

Mt Wellington

1972, 1974, 1979, 1980

1973, 1980Brentford

Notes and References

  1. http://www.nzfootball.co.nz/all-whites-world-cup-squad-announced/ World Cup squad announced
  2. Web site: Australian Player Database. OzFootball. 2008-09-03.
  3. Web site: New Zealand Players' Careers. RSSSF. 16 February 2009.
  4. News: Bombs and boots - when New Zealand played football in a war zone. Stephen. Craig. 2020-06-12. RNZ.
  5. Web site: A-International Appearances - Overall. https://web.archive.org/web/20081007054503/http://www.ultimatenzsoccer.com/NZRepSoccer/id1708.htm. 2008-10-07. The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website. 2008-07-25.
  6. Web site: A-International Scorers - Overall. https://web.archive.org/web/20120213133557/http://www.ultimatenzsoccer.com/NZRepSoccer/id1842.htm. 2012-02-13. The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website. 2008-07-25.
  7. Web site: NZ 1982 World Cup . New Zealand Football . 2008-08-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080723152233/http://www.nzsoccer.com/page/1982_world_cup_team.html . 23 July 2008 . dead.
  8. Web site: Honours List. The Ultimate New Zealand Soccer Website. 2008-07-25.
  9. http://www.friendsoffootballnz.com/people/ Friends of Football Committee
  10. Web site: Medal of Excellence. Friends of Football Website. 14 November 2015. 23 November 2015. 1 July 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170701161643/http://www.friendsoffootballnz.com/all-white-greats-receive-medals/. dead.
  11. Book: 100 Years of Brentford. Brentford FC. 1989. 0951526200. White. Eric. 391.