Louis Carey Explained

Louis Carey
Fullname:Louis Anthony Carey[1]
Birth Date:22 January 1977
Birth Place:Bristol, England
Height:[2]
Currentclub:Forest Green Rovers (assistant)
Youthyears1:?–1995
Youthclubs1:Bristol City
Position:Central defender
Years1:1995–2004
Clubs1:Bristol City
Caps1:312
Goals1:5
Years2:2004–2005
Clubs2:Coventry City
Caps2:23
Goals2:0
Years3:2005–2014
Clubs3:Bristol City
Caps3:247
Goals3:7
Years4:2015
Clubs4:Shepton Mallet
Caps4:9
Goals4:1
Totalcaps:591
Totalgoals:13
Nationalyears1:1998
Nationalteam1:Scotland U21
Nationalcaps1:1
Nationalgoals1:0
Manageryears1:2023–
Managerclubs1:Forest Green Rovers (assistant)

Louis Anthony Carey (born 22 January 1977) is a professional football coach and former player who is the assistant manager of EFL League Two club Forest Green Rovers.

He played as a central defender, mostly for Bristol City. Carey, who was born in Bristol, was eligible to play for Scotland at international level through his grandparents, and played once for the Scotland U21 team.[3]

Career

Carey is a Bristol City supporter and came up through the ranks at Bristol City made his City debut in October 1995,[3] and was a regular in the first team both as a right back and centre back for 9 seasons, and was part of the side which won promotion to the Championship in 1997/1998. He signed a four-year deal in July 2000.[3] He was part of the side that won the 2003 Football League Trophy Final.[4]

Carey spent 6 months at Coventry City under Peter Reid and was in and out of the first team, playing 27 games in all competitions, before then Bristol City manager Brian Tinnion signed him back after his contract was cancelled.[3]

On 4 August 2012, Carey was given a testimonial against local rivals Bristol Rovers, which City won 3–0.[3] Carey made his 500th appearance in all competitions for Bristol City on 15 March 2008.[3]

In July 2013, Carey was three games shy of equalling John Atyeo's appearance record for the club,[5] which he equalled in December 2013.[6] On 29 December 2013, Carey made his 646th appearance for Bristol City to become the club's new record holder.[7]

He left the club at the end of the 2013–14 season.[8]

On 16 January 2015, Carey signed for Western Premier League side Shepton Mallet on a one-year deal.

Having been employed as the under-16s coach at Southampton,[9] in July 2023, he departed Southampton to join Forest Green Rovers as assistant head coach.[10]

Career statistics

Sources:[11] [12]

ClubSeasonDivisionLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Bristol City1995–96Division Two160000000160
Bristol City1996–97Division Two430103000470
Bristol City1997–98Division Two37020202[13] 0430
Bristol City1998–99Division One410103000450
Bristol City1999–2000Division Two220002050290
Bristol City2000–01Division Two463602000543
Bristol City2001–02Division Two370102000400
Bristol City2002–03Division Two261100051322
Bristol City2003–04Division Two441202010491
Total3125140160131!3556
Coventry City2004–05Championship230103000270
Total230103000!270
Bristol City2004–05League One140000000140
Bristol City2005–06League One383101010413
Bristol City2006–07League One382301050472
Bristol City2007–08Championship33000103[14] 1371
Bristol City2008–09Championship280202100321
Bristol City2009–10Championship372202000412
Bristol City2010–11Championship210000000210
Bristol City2011–12Championship200100000210
Bristol City2012–13Championship160100000170
Bristol City2013–14League One2010001040
Total247711071101!2759
Shepton Mallet2014–15Western League Premier Division9100000091
Career total5911326026123266616

Honours

Bristol City

2002–03[15]

Individual

2003–04 Second Division[16]

References

● Playfair football annuals

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Professional retain list & free transfers: 2012/13 . The Football League . 77 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140802074454/http://www.football-league.co.uk/staticFiles/4e/bd/0%2C%2C10794~179534%2C00.pdf . 2 August 2014 . dead.
  2. Book: Barry J. . Hugman . The PFA Footballers' Who's Who 2003/2004 . 2003 . Queen Anne Press . 1-85291-651-6 . 78 .
  3. Web site: Bristol City official profile.
  4. News: Bristol City sink Carlisle. BBC. 6 April 2003 . 25 April 2020.
  5. Web site: Louis Carey: Bristol City defender unfazed by John Atyeo's record. 2 July 2013. 23 December 2013. BBC Sport.
  6. Web site: Louis Carey: Bristol City record brings mixed emotions. 23 December 2013. 23 December 2013. BBC Sport.
  7. Web site: Bristol City 4–1 Stevenage. 29 December 2013. 29 December 2013. BBC Sport.
  8. Web site: Louis Carey: Bristol City record holder one of four to leave. 7 May 2014. 7 May 2014. BBC Sport.
  9. Web site: Video: Louis Carey Exclusive Interview. 19 August 2017. 20 August 2017. Bristol City FC.
  10. Web site: 18 July 2023 . David Horseman named FGR head coach . 18 July 2023 . Forest Green Rovers FC.
  11. Web site: Louis Carey | Football Stats | No Club | Season 2013/2014 | 1995-2014 | Soccer Base. www.soccerbase.com.
  12. Web site: 1ST TEAM match reports. www.pitchero.com.
  13. Appearance(s) in Football League Trophy
  14. Appearance(s) in EFL Championship play-offs
  15. News: Bristol City 2–0 Carlisle . BBC Sport . 6 April 2003 . 17 March 2024.
  16. News: Henry retains PFA crown . BBC Sport . 25 April 2002 . 15 January 2023.