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Robert Fleck

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Scottish footballer (born 1965)
For the rugby player, seeRobbie Fleck.

Robert Fleck
Personal information
Full nameRobert William Fleck[1]
Date of birth (1965-08-11)11 August 1965 (age 59)
Place of birthGlasgow, Scotland
Position(s)Striker
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1983–1987Rangers85(29)
1983–1984Partick Thistle (loan)2(1)
1987–1992Norwich City143(39)
1992–1995Chelsea40(3)
1993–1994Bolton Wanderers (loan)7(1)
1995Bristol City (loan)10(1)
1995–1998Norwich City104(16)
1998–1999Reading9(1)
2000–2001Gorleston
Total400(91)
International career
1990–1992Scotland4(0)
1990SFA (SFL centenary)1(0)
Managerial career
2000–2001Gorleston (Player-manager)
2002–2006Diss Town
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Robert William Fleck (born 11 August 1965) is a Scottish former professionalfootball player and manager. Fleck played as astriker from 1983 until 2001, notably in theScottish Premier League forRangers, in England forChelsea in theFA Premier League, and forNorwich City in theFootball League.

Fleck also played forBolton Wanderers,Bristol City andReading. Fleck gained four caps forScotland and featured in the 1990 World Cup. Fleck went into management in 2000 with Dr. Kenny Muir with a spell as player-managers ofnon-League clubGorleston, and later having a four-year spell in charge ofDiss Town. Fleck was made a member of Norwich City's Hall of Fame. Since retiring as a player, he has worked in football management, but is now a teaching assistant in Norwich.

Playing career

[edit]

Born inGlasgow, Fleck started his senior career withRangers under managerJock Wallace, although it was only after the arrival ofGraeme Souness as player-manager in 1986 that Fleck began to make a real impact, scoring 22 goals in 48 appearances in the 1986–87 season.[2] Fleck's goal tally that season included four hat-tricks; in league games againstClydebank (twice) andFalkirk, and in a UEFA Cup tie againstIlves Tampere.[citation needed]

In December 1987 Fleck was transferred for £580,000 toNorwich City in the EnglishFootball League First Division.[3] He scored 66 goals in 181 appearances in his first spell with the club, earning a call-up to theScotland squad, winning four caps, including two at the1990 World Cup. 'Flecky' attained hero status among Norwich supporters and was votedNorwich City player of the year in 1992 which was the final season of his first spell atCarrow Road. He helped them finish fourth in the league in 1989, when they also reached theFA Cup semi-final, though Norwich were unable to compete in thefollowing season's UEFA Cup due to the ongoing ban on English clubs in European competitions that followed theHeysel disaster of 1985.

Fleck helped the Canaries reach another FA Cup semi-final in 1992, where they lost to Second Division underdogsSunderland, Fleck returned from injury to play in this game but he was clearly[according to whom?] unfit.

He controversially moved on toChelsea for a (then) club record fee of £2.1 million just before thefirst season of the newPremier League got underway, Norwich turned down the bid, but he forced it through by threatening to go on strike and refusing to play for the club again.[citation needed] At the time the deal was a record sale for Norwich. The move proved unsuccessful; Fleck scored just four goals in 48 appearances and wasloaned out toBolton Wanderers andBristol City. He missed out on a place in Chelsea's squad for the1994 FA Cup Final, which they lost 4–0 toManchester United.

Despite his dismal goalscoring record at Chelsea, he is remembered fondly by the club's fans, who sang a song in his honour –We all live in a Robert Fleck world – based on the lyrics ofYellow Submarine byThe Beatles.[4]

Fleck re-joined Norwich (who had just been relegated from the Premier League) for £650,000 in September 1995 after a loan spell. He initially made an impact and formed a solid strike partnership with Ashley Ward, but after Ward was sold due to Norwich's financial problems, Fleck's performances were inconsistent and the team were unable to gain promotion in any of his three seasons back at the club. He moved toReading towards the end of the 1997–98 season, spending one season at theBerkshire club, and in nine league games he scored once against Luton Town (in the first game at theMadejski Stadium),[5] before injury ended his playing career.

Managerial career

[edit]

After a spell as player-manager withGorleston,[6] where he won the Norfolk Senior Cup in 2001, he joinedDiss Town who play in the Ridgeons League, as manager in the summer of 2002. He won the Norfolk Senior Cup again in 2003 and 2005. A poor run of form during 2006 saw him sacked on 18 October 2006. Fleck returned to employment with Norwich City in May 2007, when he joined the club's scouting network.

Teaching career

[edit]

Fleck is now a teaching assistant at the Parkside School, "a Norwich school for children with complex needs",[7] a career move that developed from running coaching sessions for children at the school.[7]

Legacy

[edit]

Fleck is fourth in the list of Norwich City's all-time goalscorers,[7] behindJohnny Gavin,Terry Allcock andIwan Roberts. In 2002, Norwich fans voted him into the club'sHall of Fame.

Personal life

[edit]

Fleck is married to a "Norfolk girl" and has an adult daughter who is a beautician.[7] While playing, Fleck funded trips for 18 months for a child with a terminal condition.[7]

Fleck's nephew,John plays forChesterfield FC.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Robert Fleck".Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved13 May 2017.
  2. ^"Rangers Player Graeme Grant Details". Fitbastats.com.
  3. ^"Flown From the Nest – Robert Fleck". Ex-canaries.co.uk.
  4. ^"Listen to Robert Fleck football song. Chelsea MP3 FIFA 13 CFC chant". Fanchants.com.
  5. ^"Was our win over Palace the best ever game at the Madejski?". ReadingFC.co.uk. 22 August 1998. Retrieved17 February 2010.
  6. ^Past players Gorleston FC
  7. ^abcdeMantell, Rowan (13 March 2016)."From Norwich City football hero to teaching assistant here's Robert Fleck's inspirational story".edp24.co.uk.

External links

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Awards
2002
2003
2006
2009
2012
Scotland
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