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Lee Chapman

English footballer (born 1959)


English footballer (born 1959)

FieldValue
nameLee Chapman
fullnameLee Roy Chapman
birth_date
birth_placeLincoln, Lincolnshire, England
height6 ft 1 in
positionStriker
years11978–1982clubs1 = Stoke Citycaps1 = 99goals1 = 34
years21978clubs2 = → Plymouth Argyle (loan)caps2 = 4goals2 = 0
years31982–1983clubs3 = Arsenalcaps3 = 23goals3 = 4
years41983–1984clubs4 = Sunderlandcaps4 = 15goals4 = 3
years51984–1988clubs5 = Sheffield Wednesdaycaps5 = 149goals5 = 63
years61988clubs6 = Chamois Niortaiscaps6 = 10goals6 = 3
years71988–1990clubs7 = Nottingham Forestcaps7 = 48goals7 = 15
years81990–1993clubs8 = Leeds Unitedcaps8 = 137goals8 = 62
years91993clubs9 = Portsmouthcaps9 = 5goals9 = 2
years101993–1995clubs10 = West Ham Unitedcaps10 = 40goals10 = 7
years111995clubs11 = → Southend United (loan)caps11 = 1goals11 = 1
years121995–1996clubs12 = Ipswich Towncaps12 = 22goals12 = 1
years131996clubs13 = → Leeds United (loan)caps13 = 2goals13 = 0
years141996clubs14 = Swansea Citycaps14 = 7goals14 = 4
years151996clubs15 = Strømsgodset Toppfotballcaps15 = 5goals15 = 1
totalcaps575totalgoals = 202
nationalyears11981
nationalteam1England U21
nationalcaps11
nationalgoals10
nationalyears21991
nationalteam2England B
nationalcaps21
nationalgoals20

Lee Roy Chapman (born 5 December 1959) is an English former professional footballer who played as a striker from 1978 until 1996, in which he scored over 200 first team goals.

He is best known for spells with Stoke City, Leeds United, Sheffield Wednesday, Nottingham Forest and West Ham United. He also played for Plymouth Argyle, Arsenal, Sunderland, Portsmouth, Southend United, Ipswich Town and Swansea City. As well as this he played in both France and Norway for Chamois Niortais and Strømsgodset IF, and was capped by both the England U21 and England B teams. He also won the Football League Cup with Nottingham Forest and the league title with Leeds United. He scored a total of more than 250 goals in all competitions during a club career which lasted for nearly 20 years.

Club career

Chapman was born in Lincoln and began his career at Stoke City. He made his league debut whilst on loan at Plymouth Argyle in 1978–79. He made his debut for Stoke in a League Cup match against Swindon Town with Chapman scoring Stoke's goal in a 2–1 defeat. He soon became a vital player for Stoke top-scoring in both 1980–81 and 1981–82 which prompted Arsenal to pay Stoke £500,000 for his services.

However, the move was not a success – he made only 23 appearances for the club and scored four goals. Chapman moved to Sunderland in December 1983, but again failed to establish himself in the team, scoring just 3 goals in 15 appearances. Howard Wilkinson, then manager of Sheffield Wednesday, signed Chapman in August 1984, and at Wednesday he regained his goal scoring form; between 1984 and 1988 Chapman scored 63 goals in 149 appearances. However, Wilkinson moved on to manage Leeds United in 1988, and on his departure Chapman moved on briefly to French side Chamois Niortais.

In October 1988, Brian Clough signed Chapman for Nottingham Forest. Chapman was an integral part of the Forest team that won the League Cup and Full Members Cup in 1989, scoring two goals in the latter's final. Chapman had a positive season in the league as Forest finished third, though they never looked likely to catch the leading pair of Arsenal (champions on goals scored) and runners-up Liverpool. However, Forest's failure to clinch the title in 1988–89 was not ultimately the end of Chapman's quest to be part of a title winning side.

In his time at the City Ground, Chapman was one of the Forest players who had to cope with the horrors of the Hillsborough disaster during the opening minutes of their FA Cup semi-final against Liverpool. Chapman played in the rescheduled game at Old Trafford, which Liverpool won 3–1. In January 1990, Howard Wilkinson paid Nottingham Forest £400,000 to recruit Chapman to Leeds United. Chapman was part of the Leeds team that won the Second Division title and promotion to the First Division in 1990. Leeds finished 4th in 1991, and 21-goal Chapman was one of the highest scorers in the league. He scored a hat-trick in a remarkable league match at Elland Road against Liverpool on 13 April 1991, though Leeds lost the game 5–4. This was the first time in a decade that a Leeds player had scored a top flight hat-trick (Leeds had been out of the First Division from 1982 until 1990).

In the 1991–92 season, Chapman scored 16 goals as Leeds won the last league title before the creation of the FA Premier League. His 16 goals in the club's title winning season included two league hat-tricks; the first in a 6–1 away win against his old club Sheffield Wednesday on 12 January 1992, the second on 14 March 1992 in a 5–1 home win over Wimbledon. Chapman scored the club's first two goals in the new league at the start of the 1992–93 season, scoring twice in a 2–1 home win over Wimbledon. Despite being the top scorer for Leeds in the 1992–93 season with 14 goals, Chapman was allowed to move to Portsmouth at the age of 33 for £250,000 on 11 August 1993.

Later career

Chapman made a Premier League comeback just four months after moving to Portsmouth when West Ham United signed him for £250,000 in September 1993. Making his West Ham debut along with other new signings Mike Marsh and David Burrows, Chapman scored in a 2–0 away win against Blackburn Rovers on 18 September 1993. He played 51 games in all competitions scoring 11 goals. He played one game on loan for Southend United in January 1995, scoring the consolation goal in the Shrimpers' 4–1 defeat at Grimsby Town.

During early 1996 he was loaned back to Leeds United where he played only two games. In his first, against one of his former sides, West Ham United, he was sent-off for elbowing defender Marc Rieper. He finished his UK career with Swansea. During the summer of 1996 he had a brief spell in Norway with Strømsgodset scoring one goal.

International career

Chapman was capped by both the England U21 and England B teams.

Personal life

He is the son of former Lincoln City, Port Vale and Chester striker Roy Chapman. Chapman is married to the actress Leslie Ash, with whom he owns two restaurants: So:uk in London and Teatro Leeds (in which one of his former clubs, Leeds United, is a shareholder). He previously owned another Teatro restaurant in London's Soho.

Main article: News of the World phone hacking affair

In 2011 Chapman and his wife, Leslie Ash, indicated that they were preparing to sue the News of the World for breach of privacy over suspicions that their voicemails, and those of their children, were illegally accessed by private investigator Glenn Mulcaire. After writing to the police over their suspicions, the police informed them that there were four pieces of paper referring to Ash in Mulcaire's notebooks, and five items relating to Chapman. There were further items relating to their children.

Career statistics

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotalDivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsTotal993431530010738Total234102022286Total1496318101762018679Total481553126637127Total13762114141010417280Total4076252005111Total221001020251Career Total56720046215627238692256
Stoke City[1978–79](1978-79-stoke-city-f-c-season)Second Division0000000000
[1979–80](1979-80-stoke-city-f-c-season)First Division173001100184
[1980–81](1980-81-stoke-city-f-c-season)First Division41152121004517
[1981–82](1981-82-stoke-city-f-c-season)First Division41161021004417
Plymouth Argyle (loan)[1978–79](1978-79-in-english-football)Third Division4000000040
Arsenal[1982–83](1982-83-in-english-football)First Division193102022245
[1983–84](1983-84-in-english-football)First Division4100000041
Sunderland[1983–84](1983-84-in-english-football)First Division153210000174
Sheffield Wednesday[1984–85](1984-85-in-english-football)First Division40152372004920
[1985–86](1985-86-in-english-football)First Division31107233004115
[1986–87](1986-87-in-english-football)First Division41195320004822
[1987–88](1987-88-in-english-football)First Division37194251204822
Chamois Niortais[1988–89](1988-89-french-division-2)French Division 2103000000103
Nottingham Forest[1988–89](1988-89-in-english-football)First Division3085375434619
[1989–90](1989-90-in-english-football)First Division187005120258
Leeds United[1989–90](1989-90-in-english-football)Second Division21120000002112
[1990–91](1990-91-in-english-football)First Division38216364435431
[1991–92](1991-92-in-english-football)First Division38161054004320
[1992–93](1992-93-in-english-football)Premier League40134132615317
Portsmouth[1993–94](1993-94-in-english-football)First Division5200001062
West Ham United[1993–94](1993-94-in-english-football)Premier League3076232003911
[1994–95](1994-95-in-english-football)Premier League100002000120
Southend United (loan)[1994–95](1994-95-in-english-football)First Division1000000011
Ipswich Town[1994–95](1994-95-in-english-football)Premier League161000000161
[1995–96](1995-96-in-english-football)First Division6000102090
Leeds United (loan)[1995–96](1995-96-in-english-football)Premier League2000000020
Swansea City[1995–96](1995-96-in-english-football)Second Division7400000074
Strømsgodset[1996](1996-norwegian-premier-league)Tippeligaen5100000051

:A. The "Other" column constitutes appearances and goals in the Anglo-Italian Cup, FA Community Shield, Football League Trophy, Full Members Cup, UEFA Cup, UEFA Champions League.

Honours

;Nottingham Forest

;Leeds United

References

References

  1. (1987). "Rothmans Football Yearbook 1987–88". Queen Anne Press.
  2. Matthews, Tony. (1994). "The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City". Lion Press.
  3. "Lee Chapman".
  4. "Forest stars recall their Hillsborough horror".
  5. "Hat-Trick Heroes".
  6. "Sorry, the page was not found".
  7. Smyth, Rob. (17 July 2008). "On Second Thoughts: Leeds United's 1991–92 title".
  8. link. (16 January 2012 , Statbunker.com. Retrieved 15 November 2011)
  9. (7 August 1993). "Football: Portsmouth recruit Chapman to replace Whittingham".
  10. "Blackburn Rovers v West Ham United, 18 September 1993".
  11. He remained in the Premier League when he moved on to [[Ipswich Town F.C.
  12. Culley, Jon. (15 January 1996). "That was the weeks that was.".
  13. Ellis, James. "Lee Chapman".
  14. "A game of two-halves".
  15. Sabbagh, Dan. (27 January 2011). "New claims suggest that phone hacking is still going on".
  16. {{ENFA
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