Terry Fenwick

Terence William ' Terry ' Fenwick ( born November 17, 1959 in Seaham, County Durham ) is a former English footballer. He graduated between 1984 and 1988 a total of 20 caps for the England football team. After finishing his career as a footballer Fenwick became a coach.

Career as a football player

The extremely responsive central defender started his professional career in 1977 at the second division club Crystal Palace, with the Fenwick in his second season promotion to the First Division succeeded.

After a first season in the English Premier League, he joined in December 1980 for a transfer fee of 110,000 pounds again in Second Division to the Queens Park Rangers. The Rangers then Fenwick rose to as second division champions in 1983. In the following season, the club was promoted as immediately prove a surprising fifth degree course and Fenwick was appointed by Bobby Robson in the England national team, where he made his debut in the 0-1 defeat against Wales in Wrexham on May 2, 1984.

Fenwick continued to play for England on a South American tour, which had convened the Association, as the team had not qualified for the European Championship 1984 in France. As after the qualifiers for the World Cup started in Mexico in 1986, Fenwick was replaced by the returning Terry Butcher and only came back in the summer of 1985 against Finland for use. After many changes to the defensive positions, Robson decided then set next to the Butcher for the nomination Fenwicks for the World Cup, but this was heavily criticized in the British public, as the position next to Butcher was seen as a weak point of the team. During the tournament, Fenwick received a total of three yellow cards, setting a negative record for an English player in a World Cup on. In one of the most spectacular scenes during the century by Diego Maradona World Cup goal, he was one of the played by the Argentine opponents.

After the World Cup Fenwick then moved to the end of 1987 to the Tottenham Hotspurs. Although he was always there to 1989 regulars, he was inducted into the national team, even after Butcher suffered a broken leg, only sporadically. With the arrival of Des Walker in the English choice of generation change was fully implemented and Fenwick's national career ended.

In 1990, Fenwick was loaned to second division Leicester City and returned to a game time back to the Spurs. Since he had already passed its zenith power, he came in the next two years there is no longer significantly to the use and entered the relegation zone in the Premier League, Swindon Town, with. The 1993/94 season as Swindon could bring in only five wins in 42 games, was then Fenwick's last season as an active soccer player.

Coaching career

Fenwick took over in 1995, the second division club FC Portsmouth for the first time the trainer function. After three years, where he was able to keep the class just under twice, he moved briefly to the coaching staff of Crystal Palace and assisted Terry Venables there. His last major engagement in English professional football was in 2003, the short-term head coach of Northampton Town, before he moved to Trinidad and Tobago, where he began to work successfully in San Juan Jabloteh and also won the first championship of the club.

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