Thursday 4 September 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRO-ENGLISH " RODNEY SEYMOUR "ROD" WALLACE" IS AN ENGLISH PROFESSIONAL AND RESERVE TEAM COACH OF COMBINED COUNTIES FOOTBALL LEAGUE SIDE EPSON AND EWELL AND AS A PLAYER HE WAS A STRIKER FROM 1987 TO 2004 : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                              BLACK                 SOCIAL                 HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Rodney Seymour "RodWallace (born 2 October 1969) is an English professional footballer and reserve team coach of Combined Counties Football League side Epsom & Ewell. As a player he was a striker from 1987 to 2004.
Wallace was born in Lewisham but started his football career at Southampton in 1987 playing 128 league games scoring 45 goals. This form earned him a transfer to Leeds United where he won the First Division championship. After spending seven years at Leeds, Dick Advocaat signed him on a Bosman ruling transfer for Rangers where he scored 41 league goals and was part of the squad that won five out of six trophies in their first two seasons. After leaving Rangers in 2001 he signed for Bolton Wanderers on a free transfer for a season and then Gillingham before retiring from professional football.

Playing career

Southampton

He signed for the Saints as an apprentice in 1986 along with his twin brother Ray Wallace. Elder brother Danny Wallace had already become an established member of the Southampton first team.
On 22 October 1988, his two brothers Danny and Ray lined up alongside him in the Southampton team in a match at The Dellagainst Sheffield Wednesday; this was the first time three brothers had played in the same team in English professional top-flight football. In his best season at Southampton,1989-90, he scored 21 goals in all competitions. The previous season also saw his goal tally go well into double figures, as did the season after, as he formed an exciting young strikeforce with Alan Shearer and Matthew Le Tissier, which soon attracted interested from a number of bigger clubs.
The following year he played against BulgariaRepublic of Ireland and United States for the England U21 team.

Leeds United

Fellow top-flight team Leeds United signed him for £1.6 million in the summer of 1991, and he helped them win the old First Division championship and Charity Shield competition a year later. This would be the only major honour that Leeds would win during the seven years that Wallace spent with them (and indeed their most recent major honour to date), as they never finished higher than fifth in the league during the remainder of Wallace's time at the club, and the closest they came to winning any cup competitions was a 3–0 defeat by Aston Villa in the Football League Cup final in March 1996.
He became an integral part of the Leeds squad for the next seven years and was found often playing as an out-and-out striker or in a more wide position on the flanks.In September 1992, Wallace was called up to the senior England squad for a friendly against Spain, but had to pull out because of injury. He was never called up for international duty since.[citation needed]
He scored a hat-trick for Leeds on the last day of the 1992-93 season in a 3-3 draw at Coventry City.[2]
Wallace won the 1993–1994 Goal of the Season competition with a mazy dribble against Tottenham Hotspur in a Premier League game on 17 April 1994.[3] Wallace's contract with the Elland Road club was due to expire in the summer of 1998 and this resulted in a Bosman transfer move to Scotland to join Rangers.

Rangers

Whilst North of the Border the speedy Londoner acquired a flurry of medals to add to the silverware previously won during his time in England. In his first season he won the domestic treble, finishing as top scorer with 27 goals and scoring the winning goal in the 1999 Scottish cup final win over Celtic, the first cup final to be played at the newly renovated Hampden Park. The following season he was part of the squad that won the league and cup double. In total he made 122 appearances and scored 56 goals.[4]

Bolton Wanderers

In 2001 he headed back to English football on a free transfer to link up with newly promoted Bolton Wanderers of the FA Premier League. He scored on his debut for "The Trotters" away to Blackburn Rovers at Ewood Park[5] and managed to net further goals against Tottenham[6] and Blackburn again.[7] He also scored once in the League Cup against Nottingham Forest.[8] Wallace successfully helped Bolton stave off relegation back to the lower reaches of English football but was on the move again after being unhappy with the new one year contract which was offered to him.

Gillingham

In June 2002 he joined Gillingham on a two-year contract and managed to score 12 goals in his first full season at the Priestfield Stadium. His time with the Gills was blighted by a succession of injuries and at the end of the 2003–2004 season he announced his retirement from professional football. The summer of 2004 saw him return to Southampton in a one-off benefit game organised for elder brother Danny who has been diagnosed with the condition Multiple sclerosis.

Coaching career

In January 2008, he was appointed as assistant manager of King stonian's under 18 side, before joining Molesey for season 2010–11. Wallace joined Epsom & Ewell as a reserve team coach in October 2011.[9]

Career statistics

Club record
ClubSeasonLeagueCupLeague CupEuropeOtherTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Southampton1987–8815100000010161
1988–893812207200214915
1989–903818317200004821
1990–913714525200114819
Total12845103196004216156
Leeds1991–923411103200113914
1992–9332740212000408
1993–943717101000003917
1994–9532430200000374
1995–9624141401000332
1996–9722342330000298
1997–983110414200003913
Total212532141983025965
Rangers1998–9934195342835127
1999–00281651111024420
2000–01165101182268
Total78401146426712155
Bolton2001–02193103100234
Total193103100234
Gillingham2002–0322111020002511
2003–04141001000151
Total36121030004012
Career total473152461350193510604194

















































































































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