Richard Cadette Explained

Richard Cadette
Fullname:Richard Raymond Cadette
Birth Date:21 March 1965
Birth Place:Hammersmith, England
Height:1.7m
Position:Forward
Youthyears1:–1984
Youthclubs1:Wembley
Years1:1984–1985
Clubs1:Orient
Caps1:21
Goals1:4
Years2:1985–1987
Clubs2:Southend United
Caps2:90
Goals2:49
Years3:1987–1988
Clubs3:Sheffield United
Caps3:28
Goals3:7
Years4:1988–1992
Clubs4:Brentford
Caps4:87
Goals4:20
Years5:1989–1990
Clubs5:Bournemouth (loan)
Caps5:8
Goals5:1
Years6:1992–1994
Clubs6:Falkirk
Caps6:92
Goals6:31
Years7:1994
Clubs7:Millwall (loan)
Caps7:0
Goals7:0
Years8:1994–1997
Clubs8:Millwall
Caps8:24
Goals8:5
Years9:1997
Clubs9:Shelbourne
Caps9:1
Goals9:0
Years10:1997
Clubs10:Clydebank
Caps10:4
Goals10:1
Years11:1997–1998
Clubs11:Gloucester City
Caps11:2
Goals11:0
Totalcaps:355
Totalgoals:119
Manageryears1:2002–2006
Managerclubs1:Tooting & Mitcham United

Richard Raymond Cadette (born 21 March 1965) is an English former professional footballer who played as a forward, most notably for Falkirk, Brentford and Southend United. After his retirement he moved into management with Tooting & Mitcham United.

Playing career

Early years

Born in Hammersmith, Cadette began his career in non-League football with Isthmian League First Division club Wembley, before securing a move to the Football League with Third Division club Orient in August 1984. He made 27 appearances and scored six goals in a disastrous 1984–85 season for the Os,[1] which saw the club relegated to the Fourth Division. He departed Brisbane Road after the season.

Southend United

Cadette signed for Fourth Division club Southend United in a £4,000 deal in August 1985.[2] [3] He had an emphatic start to his career at Roots Hall, scoring four goals in a 5–1 rout of former club Orient on his full league debut for the club. He scored 56 goals in 104 appearances over the course of two seasons and celebrated promotion to the Third Division with a third-place finish at the end of the 1986–87 season. Cadette twice named in the PFA Fourth Division Team of the Year while with the Shrimpers and was also voted the club's 1985–86 Player of the Year.[4] [5] He left the club after the season.

Sheffield United

Cadette moved up to Second Division to sign for Sheffield United in July 1987, in a move which was settled by tribunal for £90,000.[6] He failed to replicate his previous goalscoring form, netting just seven times in 33 appearances, before departing at the end of the 1987–88 season.

Brentford

Cadette moved back to London to sign for Third Division club Brentford in July 1988 for an £80,000 fee.[7] Brought in by manager Steve Perryman to form a strike partnership with Gary Blissett, Cadette hit the ground running, top scoring with 17 goals in the 1988–89 season,[8] before having his season cut short by injury in March 1989. He featured in Brentford's run to the quarter-finals of the FA Cup, which ended in a 4–0 defeat to giants Liverpool, with Cadette hitting the post with a chance which could have put the Bees 1–0 up.[9]

The arrival of Dean Holdsworth up front for the 1989–90 season and the change to route one tactics pushed Cadette out of contention. Out of favour at, Cadette joined Second Division strugglers Bournemouth on loan until the end of the 1989–90 season in March 1990. He scored one goal in 8 appearances. Cadette rejected a move to a Dutch Eerste Divisie club during the 1990 off-season and stayed at Griffin Park on a weekly contract. He scored seven goals from 39 appearances in the 1990–91 season,[10] which was ended after he underwent knee surgery in April 1991.

Cadette was offered a new contract in the 1991 off-season, but again turned it down to remain on a weekly arrangement. He began the 1991–92 season up front alongside Holdsworth, but fell behind Blissett in the pecking order in October 1991 and departed Griffin Park in January 1992. Cadette made 123 appearances and scored 31 goals in years with Brentford. Looking back in 2005, Cadette revealed that despite his differences with manager Phil Holder (who had been promoted from Steve Perryman's assistant in 1990), he appreciated the support he received from the fans.

Falkirk

Cadette joined Scottish League Premier Division club Falkirk for a £50,000 fee in January 1992,[11] linking up with former Brentford teammates Tony Parks and Eddie May. He had a successful two and a half years with the club, winning the 1993–94 Scottish Challenge Cup (scoring in the final after being famously attacked by manager Jim Jefferies at half time) and the First Division title,[12] which secured an immediate return to the top-flight.[13] He departed Brockville Park in October 1994, after a spell which Jim Jefferies described as "phenomenal".[14]

Millwall

Cadette returned to England to sign for First Division club Millwall on loan in October 1994.[15] He signed a permanent £130,000 deal the following month.[16] In what turned out to be a disastrous move,[17] Cadette made just 27 appearances and scored 6 goals in almost three years at The New Den.

Shelbourne

After a trial with Clydebank, Cadette signed for League of Ireland club Shelbourne on a short-term contract in August 1997, as cover for the injured Stephen Geoghegan and Pat Morley.[18]

Clydebank

Cadette rejoined Scottish League Second Division club Clydebank in late August 1997, scoring one goal in seven appearances before departing the following month.

Gloucester City

Cadette dropped into non-League football to join Southern League Premier Division club Gloucester City in October 1997,[19] for whom he made just three appearances.[20]

Coaching career

After retiring as a player, Cadette became involved with the youth setup at former club Millwall.[21] He later managed Isthmian League First Division club Tooting & Mitcham between November 2002 and May 2006.[22] [23] He was sacked at the end of the 2005–06 season, after defeat to Tonbridge Angels in the playoff semi-finals.[24]

Career statistics

Club! rowspan="2"
SeasonLeagueNational CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Orient1984–85Third Division21411402[25] 0285
Sheffield United1987–88Second Division28720102[26] 0337
Brentford1988–89Third Division32128142524917
1989–90Third Division161002031212
1990–91Third Division286104061397
1991–92Third Division11134145
Total87209113614412331
Bournemouth (loan)1989–90Second Division8181
Millwall1994–95[27] First Division1641021195
1995–96[28] Second Division10000010
1996–97[29] Second Division7100000071
Total245102100276
Clydebank1997–98Scottish Second Division412[30] 061
Gloucester City1997–98Southern League Premier Division201030
Career total1503313218620420145
  1. Web site: 1984–85 . 19 April 2024 . Leyton Orient F.C. Programmes.
  2. Web site: Player Profile . 1 April 2015 . SUFCdb.
  3. Web site: Miles . Peter . Blues History: The Eighties . 1 April 2015 . southendunited.co.uk.
  4. Book: Lynch, Tony . The Official P.F.A. Footballers Heroes . Random House . 1995 . 978-0-09-179135-3 . London . 146.
  5. Book: Miles, Peter . 101 Interesting Facts on Southend United: Learn About the Boys From Roots Hall . 12 June 2015 . Andrews UK Limited . 978-0-9932417-6-5 . en.
  6. Web site: Hall of Fame . 9 May 2018 . Shrimpers Trust.
  7. Book: Haynes, Graham . Timeless Bees: Brentford F.C. Who's Who 1920–2006 . Coumbe . Frank . Yore Publications . 2006 . 978-0955294914 . Harefield . 32.
  8. Book: 100 Years Of Brentford . Brentford FC . 1989 . 0951526200 . White . Eric . 400.
  9. Book: Lane, David . Cult Bees & Legends: Volume Two . Legends Publishing . 2005 . 0954368282 . Hampton Hill . 70–75.
  10. Book: Croxford, Mark . The Big Brentford Book Of The Nineties . Lane . David . Waterman . Greville . Legends Publishing . 2013 . 9781906796723 . Sunbury, Middlesex . 476–477.
  11. Book: Croxford, Mark . The Big Brentford Book of the Eighties . Lane . David . Waterman . Greville . Legends Publishing . 2011 . 978-1906796716 . Sunbury, Middlesex . 371.
  12. Web site: McKinney . David . 13 December 1993 . Football: Falkirk find their fire . 19 February 2020 . The Independent . en.
  13. Web site: Jefferies pulls a Hampden flanker . 1 April 2015 . scotsman.com.
  14. Web site: Ewing Grahame . 18 December 2008 . I grabbed a player by the throat, says Kilmarnock manager Jim Jefferies . 1 April 2015 . Telegraph.co.uk.
  15. News: Sporting Digest: Football . The Independent . dead . 1 April 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402191528/http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/sporting-digest-football-1442928.html . 2 April 2015.
  16. Web site: Millwall Players A to D . 1 April 2015 . millwall-history.org.uk.
  17. Web site: Falkirk to do it again – Cadette . 1 April 2015 . Herald Scotland.
  18. Web site: Shelbourne sign Cadette as cover . 1 April 2015 . Irish Times.
  19. Web site: Profile . 24 March 2011 . Tiger Roar – Gloucester City Results & Statistics.
  20. Web site: 1997/98 Season . 13 August 2024 . Tiger Roar – Gloucester City Results & Statistics.
  21. Web site: Past Managers . 1 April 2015 . tmu-fc.co.uk.
  22. Web site: The Terrors: Cadette force for the future? . 1 April 2015 . News Shopper.
  23. Web site: Tooting & Mitcham United . 24 March 2011 . BBC.
  24. Web site: Hastings' dream move . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402094454/http://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/archive/1996/9/24/844344.html/ . 2 April 2015 . 1 April 2015 . Lancashire Telegraph.
  25. Appearances in Football League Trophy
  26. Appearances in Full Members Cup
  27. Web site: Millwall Stats 1994–95 . 30 May 2017 . www.millwall-history.org.uk.
  28. Web site: Millwall Stats 1995–96 . 30 May 2017 . www.millwall-history.org.uk.
  29. Web site: Millwall Stats 1996–97 . 30 May 2017 . www.millwall-history.org.uk.
  30. Appearances in Scottish Challenge Cup

Honours

Southend United

Brentford

Falkirk

Individual