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Andy Sinton

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Full name
  
Andrew Sinton

Name
  
Andy Sinton

Role
  
Footballer

Years
  
Team

Height
  
1.73 m

1982–1985
  
Cambridge United


Andy Sinton Andy SINTON League appearances Tottenham Hotspur FC


Date of birth
  
(1966-03-19) 19 March 1966 (age 49)

Playing position
  
Left Midfielder (retired)

Profiles


Place of birth
  
Cramlington, England

Andy sinton


Andrew "Andy" Sinton (born 19 March 1966 in Cramlington, Northumberland) is an English former professional footballer. During his playing career, he notably played for Queens Park Rangers, Sheffield Wednesday and Tottenham Hotspur, and also earned 12 caps playing as an international footballer for England. He is currently club ambassador at his former team Queens Park Rangers.

Contents

Andy Sinton BBC Sport Football In pictures Andy Sinton39s career

Exclusive andy sinton appointed qpr ambassador


Club career

Andy Sinton Andy Sinton on QPR Spurs England and his career in the

Sinton was a schoolboy footballer, playing for the England Under 15 team. He signed for Cambridge United on leaving school, and made his debut aged 16 years 228 days on 2 November 1982. He is the youngest player to play a league game for Cambridge, and is one of only two product of the club's youth team to become a full England international: John Ruddy of Norwich City followed Sinton to this accolade in 2012. Sinton was the outstanding player in a poor Cambridge side, which suffered successive relegations in 1983–84 and 1984–85.

Andy Sinton Wolverhampton Wanderers Andy Sinton says the future is

He was signed by Brentford F.C. in 1985 for just £25,000. He was signed for QPR by Trevor Francis in 1989 for £350,000 and went on to play 160 league games, scoring 22 goals including the first goal in the notable 4–1 QPR victory at Old Trafford in 1992. Sinton played for QPR in the first year of the Premiership, where he scored a hat-trick in a 4–2 win against Everton on 28 December 1992, before moving to Sheffield Wednesday for a then club record £2.75million in August 1993.

Andy Sinton httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

He spent two and a half years at Hillsborough but returned to London early in 1996 to link up with former Rangers boss Gerry Francis at Tottenham Hotspur. He came on as an 89th-minute substitute, for David Ginola, in the 1999 Football League Cup Final that Spurs won 1–0 over Leicester City.

Andy Sinton Andy Sinton

He made his last Premiership appearance for Tottenham Hotspur in 1999, before spending three years with Wolverhampton Wanderers and then signing for Nigel Clough's Burton Albion in August 2002.

International career

Andy Sinton BBC Sport Football Andy Sinton aims for first

On the international front, Sinton made his England debut in a 1–1 draw in Poland in November 1991, and went on to acquire 12 caps – including two in Sweden during a disappointing European Championships campaign. He played David Platt through on goal for England's penalty claim that was turned down in their 2–0 defeat against the Netherlands in Rotterdam in October 1993, towards the end of Graham Taylor's reign. His last appearance for his country came the following month, in the 7–1 rout of San Marino in Bologna.

Management career

Sinton was appointed manager of Isthmian League Division One outfit Fleet Town in summer 2005, having spent the previous season as the club's Football Development Officer. On 26 May 2010 it was announced that, from a large field of applicants, Sinton had been appointed manager of AFC Telford United in Conference North. In his first season in charge, he led them to a second-place finish in the league and clinched promotion to the Conference via the playoffs. In his second season at the club, he kept them out of the Conference National's relegation zone all season and secured safety with two games still remaining. On 31 January 2013, it was announced that Sinton had left A.F.C. Telford United by mutual consent after a 16-match winless run, the worst in the club's history.

Honours

  • Brentford Supporters' Player of the Year (2): 1986–87, 1987–88
  • References

    Andy Sinton Wikipedia