- Ed de Goey
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Ed de Goey Personal information Full name Eduard Franciscus de Goeij Date of birth 20 December 1966 Place of birth Gouda, Netherlands Height 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) Playing position Goalkeeper Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1985–1990 Sparta Rotterdam 145 (0) 1990–1997 Feyenoord 235 (0) 1997–2003 Chelsea 123 (0) 2003–2006 Stoke City 56 (0) Total 559 (0) National team 1992–2002 Netherlands 31 (0) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Eduard "Ed" Franciscus de Goeij, usually referred to as Ed de Goey (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈɛd də ˈɣui]) in the English media (born 20 December 1966) is a Dutch former football goalkeeper. He was most recently a coach at Queens Park Rangers. In a 20-year career, he played for Sparta Rotterdam, Feyenoord, Chelsea and Stoke City.
Contents
Club career
He signed for Feyenoord in 1990 and stayed there for seven years. During his time in Rotterdam, De Goey missed a total of just eight games and won one Eredivisie title (in 1993) and four KNVB Cups in 1991, 1992, 1994 and 1995. He was awarded the Dutch Golden Shoe in 1994.[1]
De Goey joined Chelsea in June 1997 from Feyenoord for £2,250,000, which at the time made him the most expensive goalkeeper in the Premier League. He was first choice goalkeeper for most of his time in West London, and was a member of the sides that won the League Cup, the Cup Winners' Cup (both in 1998) and the FA Cup in 2000. In 1999-00 he set club records for most appearances (59) and clean sheets (27) during a season, both since surpassed by Frank Lampard and Petr Čech respectively. De Goey later lost his place in the side to Italian Carlo Cudicini and made just 25 appearances in his final three seasons. He joined Stoke City on a free transfer in 2003 having played 179 games for Chelsea, keeping 71 clean sheets.
He stayed with Stoke until May 2006, making 56 appearances in total.
De Goey played in every game for his country at USA '94 as the Netherlands reached the quarter-finals, losing to eventual winners Brazil.
On 6 July 2007, De Goey joined Queens Park Rangers as a first team coach, but chairman Gianni Paladini terminated his contract on 6 December 2007.
Honours
Club playing honours
- Feyenoord Rotterdam
- Eredivisie: 1992-93
- KNVB Cup: 1991, 1992, 1994, 1995
- Johan Cruijff-schaal: 1991
- FA Cup: 2000
- FA Community Shield: 2000, runner-up 1997
- League Cup: 1998
- UEFA Cup Winner's Cup: 1998
- UEFA Super Cup: 1998
International playing honours
- World Cup: 4th Place 1998
Individual playing honours
- Dutch Footballer of the Year: 1993
- Golden Shoe: 1994
External links
- Ed de Goey profile and stats at Wereld van Oranje (Dutch)
References
Netherlands squad – 1994 FIFA World Cup 1 de Goey • 2 F. de Boer • 3 Rijkaard • 4 Koeman • 5 Witschge • 6 Wouters • 7 Overmars • 8 Jonk • 9 R. de Boer • 10 Bergkamp • 11 Roy • 12 Bosman • 13 van der Sar • 14 van Gobbel • 15 Blind • 16 Numan • 17 Taument • 18 Valckx • 19 van Vossen • 20 Winter • 21 de Wolf • 22 Snelders • Coach: AdvocaatNetherlands squad – UEFA Euro 1996 Netherlands squad – 1998 FIFA World Cup Fourth Place 1 van der Sar • 2 Reiziger • 3 Stam • 4 F. de Boer • 5 Numan • 6 Jonk • 7 R. de Boer • 8 Bergkamp • 9 Kluivert • 10 Seedorf • 11 Cocu • 12 Zenden • 13 Ooijer • 14 Overmars • 15 Bogarde • 16 Davids • 17 van Hooijdonk • 18 de Goey • 19 van Bronckhorst • 20 Winter • 21 Hasselbaink • 22 Hesp • Coach: HiddinkNetherlands squad – UEFA Euro 2000 semi-finalists 1 van der Sar • 2 Reiziger • 3 Stam • 4 F. de Boer • 5 Zenden • 6 Seedorf • 7 Cocu • 8 Davids • 9 Kluivert • 10 Bergkamp • 11 Overmars • 12 van Bronckhorst • 13 Konterman • 14 van Vossen • 15 Bosvelt • 16 R. de Boer • 17 van Hooijdonk • 18 de Goey • 19 Numan • 20 Winter • 21 Makaay • 22 Westerveld • Coach: RijkaardDutch Football Goalkeeper of the Year 1987: van Breukelen | 1988: van Breukelen | 1989: Hesp | 1990: Menzo | 1991: van Breukelen | 1992: van Breukelen | 1993: de Goey | 1994: van der Sar | 1995: van der Sar | 1996: van der Sar | 1997: van der Sar | 1998–1999: Dudek | 1999–2000: Dudek | 2000–2001: Waterreus | 2001–2002: Zoetebier | 2002–2003: Gentenaar | 2003–2004: BabosDutch Golden Shoe Winner 1982: Haar | 1983: Schrijvers | 1984: Cruijff | 1985: Rijkaard | 1986: Gullit | 1987: Rijkaard | 1988: Vanenburg | 1989: Vanenburg | 1990: Sturing | 1991: Meijer | 1992: Metgod | 1993: Overmars | 1994: de Goey | 1995: Blind | 1996: Blind | 1997: Stam | 1998: van der Sar | 1999: Mols | 2000: Dudek | 2001: Vogel | 2002: Chivu | 2003: Kuyt | 2004: Maxwell | 2005: van Bommel | 2006: Kuyt | 2007: Afonso Alves | 2008: Heitinga | 2009: El Hamdaoui | 2010: SuárezCategories:- 1966 births
- Living people
- Expatriate footballers in England
- Dutch expatriate footballers
- Dutch footballers
- Netherlands international footballers
- Eredivisie players
- Sparta Rotterdam players
- Feyenoord players
- Chelsea F.C. players
- Stoke City F.C. players
- Premier League players
- Association football goalkeepers
- 1994 FIFA World Cup players
- UEFA Euro 1996 players
- 1998 FIFA World Cup players
- UEFA Euro 2000 players
- Queens Park Rangers F.C. non-playing staff
- People from Gouda
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