Nicky Forster

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Nicky Forster
Personal information
Full name Nicholas Michael Forster [1]
Date of birth (1973-09-08) 8 September 1973 (age 50) [1]
Place of birth Caterham, [1] England
Height 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) [2]
Position(s) Striker
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1991 Horley Town
1992–1994 Gillingham 67 (24)
1992Margate (loan) 1 (1)
1992Hythe Town (loan)
1994–1997 Brentford 109 (39)
1997–1999 Birmingham City 68 (11)
1999–2005 Reading 187 (60)
2005–2006 Ipswich Town 24 (8)
2006–2007 Hull City 35 (5)
2007–2010 Brighton & Hove Albion 98 (40)
2010Charlton Athletic (loan) 8 (2)
2010–2011 Brentford 18 (1)
2011 Lingfield 4 (6)
2012–2013 Dover Athletic 6 (0)
Total625(197)
International career
1995 England U21 4 (1)
Managerial career
2011 Brentford
2011–2013 Dover Athletic
2015–2016 Staines Town
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Nicholas Michael Forster (born 8 September 1973) is an English former professional footballer who was most recently the manager of Staines Town. Forster has also been player-manager at Brentford and manager of Dover Athletic.

Contents

Career

Early years

Forster, who was born in Caterham, Surrey, was spotted playing for non-league Horley Town and invited for trials by Gillingham in December 1991. After impressing with the youth and reserve teams he signed a professional contract in May 1992, making his debut the following September. [3] He starred for the club during the otherwise disappointing 1993–94 season, scoring 18 goals, but at the end of the season he turned down a new contract and instead joined Brentford for £320,000, a move which provoked bad feeling from Gillingham fans which persisted for many years. [4]

Brentford and Birmingham City

While at Brentford, Forster formed prolific partnerships with Carl Asaba and Robert Taylor, both of whom would later join his former club Gillingham. He made 109 league appearances for Brentford and scored 39 goals during his time at Griffin Park. [5] He was later capped by England at under-21 level soon afterwards. [5] In January 1997, Forster moved to Birmingham City for a fee of £700,000. [5] He made 67 league appearances and scored eleven league goals for the club. [6]

Reading

Two years later he was on the move again, this time to Reading, where he spent six years at the club at a cost of £650,000 between 1999 and 2005. Forster receives part of the credit for salvaging Reading's 1999–2000 season, during which the club rose from Division Two's relegation zone at Christmas to a finish in the top ten under caretaker manager Alan Pardew. [7] However, an injured Forster was unable to contribute to the club's good fortune the following season. [7] However, he did return in time for the 2000–01 Division Two play-off semi final against Wigan Athletic. In the second leg with Wigan leading 1–0 on aggregate, Forster came on as a late substitute. He set up Martin Butler for the equaliser before winning a penalty; after Jamie Cureton's effort was saved, Forster scored from the rebound. Reading were to lose the final 3–2 after extra time to Walsall. He then scored 18 goals the following season as Reading were promoted to Division One.

Forster regards Reading's 2002–03 campaign as his best period of form during his career, [8] when he notched 17 goals, including hattricks against Ipswich Town and Preston North End as Reading finished in fourth place. He scored the opening goal in the play-off semi final against Wolverhampton Wanderers, but went off injured and Reading lost 3–1 on aggregate.

Forster considers the club as "home". [8]

Ipswich Town

Despite being a popular player at Reading, he was allowed to join Ipswich Town on a free transfer in 2005. Unable to replicate for Ipswich the form he showed with Reading due to several injury setbacks over the 2005–06 season, Forster signed a two-year contract with Hull City on 31 August 2006 for a £250,000 transfer fee. [9] He had been a teammate of Hull City's manager, Phil Parkinson, while at Reading.

Hull City

During his time at Hull City, Forster made 37 appearances and scored six goals for the club; these totals include one goal in two FA Cup appearances. His form helped propel him to second place in the club's Player of the Year awards for the 2006–07 season. [5]

Brighton & Hove Albion

In January 2007, Brighton & Hove Albion made an unsuccessful £100,000 bid for Forster. [10] However, at the end of the 2006–07 season, Forster stated his wish to move back to the south of England for family reasons, [11] and eventually signed a three-year contract with Brighton in late June 2007 for a £75,000 fee. [12] He attributed his decision to drop down to Football League One from the Championship to the ambition shown by Brighton manager Dean Wilkins and chairman Dick Knight. [13]

Forster was appointed club captain after the departure of Dean Hammond during January 2008, and confirmed in the role by new manager Micky Adams for the 2008–09 season. [14] [15] He won the League One Player of The Month award for September 2009 after scoring five goals in four League games. [16] Having lost his first-team place after a contract dispute with manager Gus Poyet, Forster left Brighton for Charlton Athletic on 25 March 2010 on loan until the end of the season. [17] [18] At the conclusion of the season, Forster's contract at Brighton expired and he left the club.

Brentford (second spell)

On 16 June 2010, Forster re-signed for Brentford on a two-year deal. [19] He scored his first goal in his second spell at the club in a 1–1 draw with Exeter City on 14 January 2011. Forster was appointed as temporary manager following the departure of Andy Scott on 3 February 2011, [20] with Mark Warburton as his assistant. [21] On 1 March, it was confirmed Forster would remain first team manager on a permanent basis until the end of the current season. On 19 May 2011, Forster announced his retirement from football to concentrate on management. Earlier that week, it was announced that he had failed to land the Brentford manager's job.

Lingfield

In 2011, Forster signed for Lingfield of the Sussex County League. [22] He scored twice on his debut in an FA Cup match against Hailsham Town. [23] His first league goals came in his next game for the club in a 3–0 win against AFC Uckfield.

Dover Athletic

On 27 September 2011, he was appointed player-manager of Dover Athletic after the departure of Martin Hayes. [24] He appeared on the substitutes' bench in the first league match of the season, a 2–2 home draw with Farnborough on 18 August 2012. [25] Forster made his Dover debut as a 46th-minute substitute for Calum Willock in a 1–0 home loss to Chelmsford City on 4 September. [26]

In January 2013, with Dover still third in the table despite five losses in a row, Forster was placed on gardening leave; the club appointed Chris Kinnear the following day. [27]

Staines Town

Forster was appointed as the replacement for Marcus Gayle as manager of Staines Town on 8 January 2015, with the task of keeping them in the Conference South. However, Staines Town were relegated to the Isthmian League Premier Division at the end of the 2014–15 season.

Personal life

As of 2020, Forster ran The Spot Wellness Centre in Godstone. [28] [29] His stepson, Jake Forster-Caskey, is also a footballer. [30]

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeague FA Cup League Cup OtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Gillingham 1992–93 [31] Third Division 266323000328
1993–94 [31] Third Division41183020004618
Total67246250007826
Margate (loan) 1992–93 [32] Southern League Southern Div.1111
Brentford 1994–95 [31] Second Division 462420405 [lower-alpha 1] 25726
1995–96 [31] Second Division38530422 [lower-alpha 2] 1478
1996–97 [31] Second Division251031311 [lower-alpha 2] 13213
Total10939811138413647
Birmingham City 1996–97 [31] First Division 7373
1997–98 [33] First Division283300000313
1998–99 [34] First Division335104100386
Total68114041007612
Reading 1999–2000 [35] Second Division361020303 [lower-alpha 2] 04410
2000–01 [36] Second Division9100003 [lower-alpha 3] 1122
2001–02 [37] Second Division421810202 [lower-alpha 2] 04818
2002–03 [38] First Division401620101 [lower-alpha 4] 14818
2003–04 [39] First Division30700443411
2004–05 [40] Championship 3073210349
Total18759821149221567
Ipswich Town 2005–06 [41] Championship2070000207
2006–07 [42] Championship411051
Total2480010258
Hull City 2006–07 [42] Championship35521376
Brighton & Hove Albion 2007–08 [43] League One 411542102 [lower-alpha 2] 24819
2008–09 [44] League One301221115 [lower-alpha 2] 23816
2009–10 [45] League One27135310003316
Total9840116317411951
Charlton Athletic (loan) 2009–10 [45] League One822 [lower-alpha 5] 0102
Brentford 2010–11 [46] League One18120204 [lower-alpha 2] 0261
Career total61519041123793010723221
  1. Three appearances and one goal in Football League Trophy, two appearances and one goal in Second Division play-offs
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Appearance(s) in Football League Trophy
  3. Appearances in Second Division play-offs
  4. Appearance in First Division play-offs
  5. Appearances in League One play-offs

Managerial statistics

As of 19 May 2011
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecordRef
PWDLWin %
Brentford (caretaker)3 February 201119 May 201121957042.9 [47] [48]
Total21957042.9

Honours

As a player

Brentford

Reading

Individual

As a manager

Brentford

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References

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