Clive Mendonca Explained

Clive Mendonca
Full Name:Clive Paul Mendonca
Birth Date:9 September 1968
Birth Place:Islington, London, England
Position:Forward
Years1:1986–1988
Years2:1988
Years3:1988–1991
Years4:1991–1992
Years5:1992
Years6:1992–1997
Years7:1997–2002
Clubs1:Sheffield United
Clubs2:Doncaster Rovers (loan)
Clubs3:Rotherham United
Clubs4:Sheffield United
Clubs5:Grimsby Town (loan)
Clubs6:Grimsby Town
Clubs7:Charlton Athletic
Caps1:13
Caps2:2
Caps3:84
Caps4:10
Caps5:10
Caps6:156
Caps7:96
Totalcaps:359
Goals1:4
Goals2:0
Goals3:27
Goals4:1
Goals5:3
Goals6:57
Goals7:45
Totalgoals:132

Clive Paul Mendonca (born 9 September 1968) is an English former professional footballer, who played as a forward between 1986 and 2002, notably for Grimsby Town and Charlton Athletic. Mendonca also played for Sheffield United, Doncaster Rovers and Rotherham United.

Career

Mendonca started his career with Sheffield United, before spells with Doncaster Rovers, Rotherham United and Sheffield United again. Mendonca then moved to Grimsby Town in 1992, initially on loan. Mendonca scored 60 goals in 166 appearances for Grimsby, and is considered to be their best striker in recent history.[1] Mendonca moved to Charlton Athletic in the summer of 1997 and scored twenty eight times for the Addicks in the 1997–98 season, including a hat-trick against his home town team Sunderland who he'd supported as a boy, in the Division One play-off final at Wembley. His hat-trick in 1998 was the last one to be scored at the original Wembley Stadium for an English league team. Mendonca also scored a penalty in the subsequent penalty shoot-out after a 4–4 draw, which Charlton won 7–6.

Mendonca scored another hat-trick in Charlton's first home game in the Premier League, a 5–0 win against Southampton.[2] However, he started to suffer a series of injury problems, with his final appearance for Charlton coming in the first half of the 1999–2000 season against Queens Park Rangers. Although a possible return to Grimsby was mooted,[3] Mendonca retired from football in February 2002.[4]

On 9 August 2003, a testimonial match was played against NEC Nijmegen which ended 1–1.

Personal life

He is the nephew of former West Indian wicket-keeper Ivor Mendonca. Born in Islington, London, he moved to Sunderland at the age of two.[5] [6] In 2004, he won both the BBC's "Grimsby's cult heroes"[7] and "Charlton's cult heroes"[8] polls with 52% and 43% respectively.

In January 2012 Mendonca auctioned his prized possessions from his football career to help his wife set up her own business.[9]

Mendonca works at the Nissan plant in Sunderland.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cod Almighty – Clive Mendonca T-shirts: our tribute to the dude . 13 November 2007 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20071031030355/http://www.codalmighty.com/site/ca.php?page=t-shirts%2Fclive . 31 October 2007 .
  2. News: Brown . Geoff . Mendonca's Valley high . 22 August 1998 . 15 July 2009 . The Independent . London.
  3. News: Grimsby delay Mendonca bid . BBC . 13 November 2007 . 22 November 2001 .
  4. News: Mendonca ends career . BBC . 13 November 2007 . 1 February 2002 .
  5. Web site: BBC Radio 4 Extra - Yes Yes Yes, Series 2, Twelve Yards from the Premiership.
  6. Web site: Clive Mendonca Interview.
  7. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/football_focus/3581200.stm BBC Sport
  8. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/football_focus/4081997.stm BBC Sport
  9. Web site: Relief follows Royal Marine operation . South London Press Today . 21 August 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140330221032/http://www.southlondon-today.co.uk/sport.cfm?id=2285&headline=Exclusive:%20Clive%20Mendonca%20auctions%20Charlton%20medals . 30 March 2014 . dead .
  10. News: Edwards . Luke . Clive Mendonca: 'I still get tingles down my spine when I remember Charlton beating Sunderland' . 24 March 2020 . The Telegraph . 23 May 2019.