Teddy Sheringham's career
Many people associate Teddy Sheringham’s name with his successful substitute appearances for Manchester United. In fact, his career was not limited to that.
Edward (nicknamed Teddy) Sheringham was born in London, where he started playing soccer. His favorite club was Tottenham Hotspur, as his family lived near White Hart Lane, but Sheringham was unable to get into the Spurs’ academy.
Before the start of the 1982-1983 season, he signed a contract with Millwall, a club in the third division of English football. Sheringham made his debut a year later, playing 10 matches for Millwall and scoring two goals.
In the second half of the 1984-1985 season, Sheringham was loaned to Aldershot, which played in the fourth division, but Teddy did not really play there. Millwall, meanwhile, had been promoted to the second division, but were in no hurry to bring Sheringham back, so this time the striker had to go to the Swedish league.
Sheringham was helped by chance: due to injuries in the second half of the 1985-1986 season, Millwall had a shortage of forwards, and he was brought back to the team. It cannot be said that Teddy started playing well right away (18 games, 4 goals), but he was no longer sent on loan.
Gradually, Sheringham began to play an increasingly important role in the team’s attack, and in the 1987-1988 season, when Millwall won the Second Division, Teddy scored 24 times. Millwall played two seasons in the First Division (as the Premier League was then called), and Sheringham continued to score at the highest level.
And in the 1990-1991 season (the club had already been relegated from the top flight by then), Teddy Sheringham https://znaki.fm/persons/teddy-sheringham/ scored 38 goals, 33 of them in the league. Millwall came very close to reaching the top flight via the second division playoffs.
However, Sheringham ended up there anyway, as he transferred to Nottingham Forest. Not long ago, this club was making waves in Europe, winning the Champions Cup twice in a row. Of course, Nottingham had already passed its peak, but the team was still coached by the legendary Brian Clough, and it was a completely different level of football.
In 59 official matches that season, Teddy Sheringham scored 22 goals. He helped the team reach the League Cup final, which was lost to Manchester United.
In the summer of 1992, Teddy Sheringham’s childhood dream finally came true when he was invited to join Tottenham. In his first season, the striker won the scoring race in the newly created Premier League.
In the 1994–1995 season, Sheringham played alongside German Jürgen Klinsmann. The duo proved to be lethal, scoring 52 goals between them, but Tottenham once again failed to win any trophies and finished only seventh in the league.
Sheringham continued to do his job well, scoring goals, but his club remained a mid-table team.
After his Manchester adventure, 35-year-old Teddy Sheringham returned to Tottenham, where he played two seasons at a decent level (80 games, 26 goals).
However, Manchester United became the main team in Sheringham’s career. It was here that he won all his trophies (with the exception of the Full Members’ Cup) and gained worldwide fame.
Yes, Teddy Sheringham sat behind Andy Cole and later Dwight Yorke, but he was an excellent substitute who often decided the outcome of matches. First and foremost, of course, is the 1999 Champions League final, when Sheringham came on as a substitute in extra time to equalize, and then Ole Gunnar Solskjaer (another of Alex Ferguson’s super substitutes) scored the second goal, turning defeat into victory.
Sheringham bid farewell to Manchester United in style. In his final season (2000-2001), he became a regular starter and the team’s top scorer (21 goals, 15 of them in the league). At the end of the season, Sheringham was named England’s best footballer, and Manchester United won another championship title.