Bryan Small Explained

Bryan Small
Fullname:Bryan Small
Birth Date:15 November 1971
Birth Place:Birmingham, England
Youthclubs1:Aston Villa
Position:Defender
Years1:1990–1996
Clubs1:Aston Villa
Caps1:35
Goals1:0
Years2:1994
Clubs2:Birmingham City (loan)
Caps2:3
Goals2:0
Years3:1996–1998
Caps3:17
Goals3:0
Years4:1997
Clubs4:Luton Town (loan)
Caps4:16
Goals4:0
Years5:1997–1998
Clubs5:Bradford City (loan)
Caps5:5
Goals5:0
Years6:1998
Clubs6:Bury (loan)
Caps6:8
Goals6:0
Years7:1998
Clubs7:Bury (loan)
Caps7:10
Goals7:1
Years8:1998–2001
Clubs8:Stoke City
Caps8:45
Goals8:0
Years9:2001
Clubs9:Walsall
Caps9:0
Goals9:0
Years10:2001
Clubs10:Forest Green Rovers (loan)
Caps10:5
Goals10:0
Years11:2001–2002
Clubs11:Kettering Town
Caps11:7
Goals11:0
Years12:2002–2003
Caps12:20
Goals12:0
Totalcaps:171
Totalgoals:1
Nationalyears1:1993
Nationalteam1:England U21
Nationalcaps1:12
Nationalgoals1:0

Bryan Small (born 15 November 1971) is an English former professional footballer who played as a defender.[1]

He started out as a trainee at his hometown club Aston Villa and played for a total of 11 clubs in a series of free transfers and loan deals. Small played for Birmingham City, Bolton Wanderers, Luton Town, Bradford City, Bury, Stoke City and Walsall. At international level he was capped 12 times for the England under-21 team.[2]

Playing career

Small was born in Birmingham and began his career as a trainee at Aston Villa making his debut away at Everton in 1991–92. He played in 13 matches that season and made 15 appearances in 1992–93.

In 1993–94 Small played 12 times for Villa including two against Deportivo de La Coruña in the UEFA Cup. In the 1994–95 season he played five matches for Villa and had a loan spell at second city rivals Birmingham City where he played three times.

He left Villa in March 1996 for Bolton Wanderers where he made 16 appearances helping the club win the First Division in 1996–97. Small was unable to force his way into the team in the Premier League and spent time out on loan at Luton Town, Bradford City and Bury. At Bury he scored his only goal of his career against Sunderland.

In the summer 1998 Small moved to Stoke City where he made 43 appearances in 1998–99 as Stoke failed to claim a play-off place.[1] In 1999–2000 he nine appearances before being released in the summer of 2000.[1] Following his release from Stoke Small had unsuccessful trials at Carlisle United and Brentford.[1]

Another free transfer followed to Walsall but he failed to make the first team. After a loan spell at Forest Green Rovers he moved to Kettering Town before he finished his career at Hednesford Town.

Later career

Small began his coaching career with Stourport Swifts and in July 2008 turned out for old club Bolton in the Masters Tournament.[3]

Personal life

Small's nephew, Thierry Small, became Everton's youngest first-team debutant when he made a brief appearance in the FA Cup as a 16-year-old in early 2021,[4] and turned professional later that year with Southampton.[5]

Career statistics

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Aston Villa1991–92First Division80300020130
1992–93Premier League140001000150
1993–94Premier League90001020120
1994–95Premier League5000000050
Total360302040450
Birmingham City (loan)1994–95Second Division3000000030
Bolton Wanderers1995–96Premier League1000000010
1996–97First Division110301000150
Total120301000160
Luton Town (loan)1997–98Second Division150000000150
Bradford City (loan)1997–98First Division5000000050
Bury1997–98First Division181000000181
Stoke City1998–99Second Division370202020430
1999–2000Second Division8000100090
Total450203020520
Walsall2000–01Second Division0000002020
Forest Green Rovers (loan)2001–02Football Conference5000000050
Kettering Town2002–03Football Conference7000000070
Career total14618060801681

Honours

Bolton Wanderers

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lowe, Simon. Stoke City The Modern Era – A Complete Record. 2000. Desert Island Books. 1-874287-39-2.
  2. Web site: Bryan Small . The Football Association . 20 January 2011.
  3. Web site: Masters 2008. https://archive.today/20130128214400/http://www.mastersfootball.com/Events/Archive/MastersCup/MastersCup2008/NorthWestMasters.asp. dead. 28 January 2013. Masters Football. 15 May 2013.
  4. Web site: Record-breaker Small explains 'sacrifice' after debut . Paul . McNamara . Everton F.C. . 25 January 2021 . 11 November 2022.
  5. News: Southampton FC sign young Everton left-back Thierry Small . Alfie . House . Daily Echo . Southampton . 24 August 2021 . 11 November 2022.