- Craig Forrest
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Craig Forrest Personal information Full name Craig Lorne Forrest Date of birth 20 September 1967 Place of birth Coquitlam, Canada Height 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) Playing position Goalkeeper Senior career* Years Team Apps† (Gls)† 1985–1997 Ipswich Town 263 (0) 1987–1988 → Colchester United (loan) 11 (0) 1996–1997 → Chelsea (loan) 3 (0) 1997–2002 West Ham United 30 (0) – Total 307 (0 ) National team 1988–2002 Canada 56 (0) * Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).Craig Lorne Forrest (born 20 September 1967 in Coquitlam, British Columbia) is a Canadian soccer commentator and a former goalkeeper.
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Club career
Born and raised in British Columbia, Forrest joined English league side Ipswich Town in 1984 and remained with the club until 1997, making 263 league appearances. Forrest saw his first first-team action with 11 appearances on loan to Colchester United in the 1987–88 season. From 1988–89 through to 1996–97, Forrest was in the Ipswich Town goal, including during the 1991–92 season when the club won promotion to the newly-established Premier League by winning the old Football League Second Division. Forrest was ever-present that season. He was also one of only 13 foreign players to play on the opening weekend of the FA Premier League along with John Jensen, Jan Stejskal, Anders Limpar, Peter Schmeichel, Andrei Kanchelskis, Robert Warzycha, Eric Cantona, Ronnie Rosenthal, Michel Vonk, Gunnar Halle, Roland Nilsson and Hans Segers. He was the unfortunate goalkeeper on the receiving end of the heaviest Premiership defeat in history when Ipswich lost 9–0 to Manchester United at Old Trafford in March 1995.
On a more positive note, his goalkeeping helped Ipswich beat United (then in the early years of their current dominance of English football) on two occasions in the first three seasons of the Premier League - a 2-1 win at Portman Road in February 1993 and a 3-2 victory there in September 1994 - as well as holding them to draws at Old Trafford in August 1992 and November 1993 - on the latter occasion he ensured that Ipswich were one of just three sides who visited United in the league without conceding a goal that season. He was voted Goalkeeper of the Month in the Premier League for October 1994, and around this time an offer of around £2million from an unnamed club for Forrest's services was rejected by Ipswich. He remained loyal to the club despite their relegation at the end of that season, and stayed there for another two seasons.[1]
Forrest went on loan to Chelsea from Ipswich in 1997, playing in the same team with the likes of Gianluca Vialli and Gianfranco Zola under the guidance of manager Ruud Gullit. A permanent move to Chelsea was turned down by the Ipswich Board of Directors. The goalkeeper ended up moving to West Ham United in the summer of 1997 for £500,000.[2] Forrest played a number of first-team games in the FA Premier League in the late 1990s and early 2000s with the east Londoners, remaining at Boleyn Ground until his retirement from football in 2002. He suffered at the hands of Manchester United again in a 7–1 defeat at Old Trafford although he was not deemed by some to be at fault for any of the goals.
International career
Forrest played at the 1987 FIFA U-20 World Cup[3] and made his debut for the Canada senior team in a May 1988 friendly match against Chile. He earned 56 caps (excluding the May 1990 North American Championship match against the USA), the most of any goalkeeper in the national team's history tied with Pat Onstad and earned the most clean sheets in the country's history before retiring from international football in 2002. The highlight of his international career was undoubtedly helping Canada win the 2000 CONCACAF Gold Cup, in which Forrest was named tournament MVP and Most Valuable Goalkeeper for allowing a mere three goals and stopping two penalties in his side's five games. Also during his international career Canada had secured a 1–1 draw against Brazil only a month prior to the World Cup in U.S.A. in 1994. Forrest had further success against Brazil in 2001, recording a clean sheet in a 0–0 draw in the 2001 Confederations Cup in Japan.
Retirement
Forrest was forced to retire from professional soccer due to complications from acquiring and recovering from testicular cancer. He began working as a sports analyst with Rogers Sportsnet upon his retirement from playing.
Forrest is considered by some to be one of the best players ever for Canada and continues to play a major role in promoting the game in the country, appearing frequently as a broadcaster for the men's national team and Toronto FC on Rogers Sportsnet and CBC.
Forrest is now the Canadian FIFA Ambassador for SOS Children's Villages, joining over 80 international stars who are official ambassadors. This list includes the likes of Andriy Shevchenko, Wayne Rooney, Ruud van Nistelrooy, Lucas Radebe, Carlos Dunga, Fabio Cannavaro, Roger Milla, George Weah, Andrzej Niedzielan, Samuel Eto'o and Hugo Sánchez.
Honours
Individual
- CONCACAF Gold Cup Most Valuable Player: 2000
- CONCACAF Gold Cup Most Valuable Goalkeeper: 2000
- CONCACAF Gold Cup Team of the Tournament: 2000
- Canadian International Player of the Year: 1994
- Ipswich Town Players' Player of the Season: 1994-1995
- Ipswich Town Fans' Player of the Season: 1994-1995
Club
- Football League Second Division: 1991-1992
Country
References
- ^ [1]
- ^ "Craig Forrest"
- ^ Record at FIFA Tournaments - FIFA
External links
- Forrest's West Ham page with career Premier and Football League statistics at Sporting Heroes.net
- Craig Forrest Elected to Canadian Soccer Hall of Fame
- Player profile - Canada Soccer
- Career stats - National Football Teams
1993: Bunbury | 1994: Forrest | 1995: Bunbury | 1996: Peschisolido | 1998: Radzinski | 2005: De Rosario | 2006: De Rosario | 2007: De Rosario | 2008: De Guzman | 2009: Jackson | 2010: HutchinsonCanada squads Categories:- 1967 births
- Living people
- People from Coquitlam
- Canadian people of British descent
- Association football goalkeepers
- Soccer people from British Columbia
- Canadian soccer players
- Canadian men's international soccer players
- Canadian expatriate soccer players
- CONCACAF Gold Cup-winning players
- 1996 CONCACAF Gold Cup players
- 2000 CONCACAF Gold Cup players
- 2001 FIFA Confederations Cup players
- Canadian expatriate sportspeople in the United Kingdom
- Ipswich Town F.C. players
- Colchester United F.C. players
- Chelsea F.C. players
- West Ham United F.C. players
- Premier League players
- The Football League players
- Expatriate footballers in England
- Canadian Soccer Hall of Fame inductees
- Canadian television sportscasters
- Association football commentators
- Testicular cancer survivors
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