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Ray Clemence

Raymond Neal Clemence, MBE (5 August 1948 – 15 November 2020)[4] was an England international football goalkeeper and part of the Liverpool team of the 1970s.[5] He is one of few players to have made over 1,000 career appearances,[6][7][8] and holds the record for the most clean sheets in the history of football (460).[9] Winning three European Cups, five League titles, two UEFA Cups, a UEFA Super Cup, an FA Cup and a League Cup with Liverpool, the last of his 665 appearances for the club was the victorious 1981 European Cup Final.[10] In 1981, after being phased out at Liverpool, Clemence joined Tottenham Hotspur, winning a UEFA Cup, an FA Cup, and a Charity Shield with them, before retiring from football in 1988.

Ray Clemence
MBE
Clemence with Tottenham Hotspur in 1981
Personal information
Full name Raymond Neal Clemence[1]
Date of birth (1948-08-05)5 August 1948[2]
Place of birth Skegness, England[2]
Date of death 15 November 2020(2020-11-15) (aged 72)
Place of death Corby, Northamptonshire, England[citation needed]
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)[3]
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
Notts County
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1965–1967 Scunthorpe United 48 (0)
1967–1981 Liverpool 470 (0)
1981–1988 Tottenham Hotspur 240 (0)
Total 758 (0)
International career
1967–1971 England U23 4 (0)
1972–1983 England 61 (0)
Managerial career
1992–1993 Tottenham Hotspur (joint with Doug Livermore)
1994–1996 Barnet
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

After brief spells as joint-manager at Tottenham (alongside Doug Livermore) and sole manager at Barnet in the first half of the 90s, he acted as head of the FA Development Team, overseeing the development made by players in the England youth teams from under-16 to 21 level, having previously been part of the England senior team's backroom staff.[2]

Club career

Scunthorpe United

Born in Skegness, Lincolnshire, Clemence played eight matches on trial for Notts County, but was ultimately not signed by the Meadow Lane club.[11] He was spotted by Scunthorpe United whilst playing in a county-cup final at their Old Showground ground for his local youth club Skegness Cosmos. After starring in the Cosmos' 4-3 victory,[12] Clemence was invited for formal trials with "The Iron", which he duly passed.[13] Clemence went on to sign professional terms for Scunthorpe on his 17th birthday, 5 August 1965, shortly before the start of Scunthorpe's 1965–66 Third Division campaign.[13]

Despite initially playing in the club's 'third team',[14] Clemence's big break arrived later in his debut season - making his professional debut in a 1-1 draw at home to Swansea Town on 2 April 1966. Prior to this debut, Clemence remembers a key behind-the-scenes intervention from two Scunthorpe coaches: "Jack Brownsword and Alan Bushby pulled me aside, gave me a pep talk and told me they thought I could play for England one day but 'you've got to work at it'".[14]

Clemence went on to make four appearances in total throughout his debut season,[15] including earning his first professional clean sheet in a 1-0 victory away at Southend United.[16] Having spent much of that season as understudy to the experienced former Wolverhampton Wanderers and Aston Villa custodian Geoff Sidebottom, Clemence later cited Sidebottom as a crucial early mentor: "I learned a lot from Geoff. He taught me how to look after myself because 'keepers were a lot less protected then."[17]

During his time at the club, Clemence lived with Mrs Ruby Duce of King Edward Street in Scunthorpe; in the very same digs which would then immediately be occupied by Ray's future England and Liverpool teammate Kevin Keegan following Clemence's departure to Liverpool.[18]

After being reintroduced to the side after they had lost their opening three games in all competitions,[15] Clemence became Scunthorpe's undisputed first-choice goalkeeper in their following 1966–67 Third Division campaign,[15] in which they finished a disappointing 18th.[19] After manager and ex-Busby Babe Freddie Goodwin departed mid-season for the New York Generals in the nascent North American Soccer League, Clemence spent the latter half of his season under the guidance of caretaker player-manager Keith Burkinshaw, who would later also sign the player for Tottenham Hotspur.

And despite Clemence himself worrying that a humiliating 7-1 defeat away to arch-rivals Grimsby Town could end his professional career,[20] Scunthorpe's faith in him never waivered and this defeat proved to be the second game in a run of 46 consecutive starts he made to see out all of Scunthorpe's remaining league and cup matches.[15]

This run took Clemence's figures to 50 appearances and 12 clean sheets in all competitions for Scunthorpe;[16] but unbeknownst to him, he had been scouted in 12 games by legendary Liverpool manager Bill Shankly and his coaching staff.[21] This came to fruition later that summer, when Clemence was forced to leave a beachside deckchair-stacking shift early, with the news that an urgent telegram awaited him at home.[16] This was because Liverpool's bid for the now 18-year-old shot-stopper had been accepted, and the Scunthorpe chairman personally drove Clemence to Anfield in his Rolls-Royce the next morning.

Looking back on his time with the club, Clemence fondly recalled how Scunthorpe United was: "A club I'm proud to be associated with. While I was there it was like being part of a family.[14]

Liverpool

Clemence was signed by Liverpool manager Bill Shankly on 24 June 1967 from Scunthorpe United for a fee of £18,000.[22][23] He made his debut and kept his first clean sheet in a League Cup third round tie at Anfield on 25 September 1968,[24][25][26] Swansea Town were the visitors and were beaten 2–0.[27] He was nurtured through the reserve side over the next two years, with the occasional senior appearance, until 1970, at which point he became the club's first choice goalkeeper.

In 1971 Liverpool reached the FA Cup Final, where Clemence played well but Arsenal scored twice in extra time to overcome Liverpool's lead and win the game 2–1.[28] There would be joy for Clemence two seasons later in 1973 when Liverpool won both the League title and UEFA Cup, with Clemence saving a penalty in the final of the latter against Borussia Mönchengladbach. The penalty save meant that Liverpool took a 3–0 lead to Germany with them, rather than 3–1. Gladbach won 2–0 at home, had Jupp Heynckes scored the penalty, then with the same second-leg result the tie would have finished 3–3 on aggregate, and Borussia Mönchengladbach would have won on the away goals rule. The 1973–74 season saw Liverpool claim yet more silverware winning the FA Cup with a comprehensive 3–0 victory over Newcastle United.

Liverpool won another League and UEFA Cup double in 1976 and then made a bid for a unique treble a year later. They achieved the first leg when they won the League title, but lost the FA Cup final 2-1 to rivals Manchester United. A few days later, Liverpool won the European Cup for the first time in Rome, defeating Borussia Mönchengladbach 3–1. In the second half Clemence made a magnificent save against Uli Stielike when the score was 1–1.

Liverpool retained the European Cup in 1978 with a narrow 1–0 win over Club Brugge at Wembley, but conceded their League title to Nottingham Forest, to whom they also lost in the League Cup final. In 1979 and 1980, Clemence kept goal as Liverpool clinched the League title in each season. The 1978–79 League success saw Clemence set a record that was never beaten under the two points for a win system, conceding only 16 goals in the 42 league matches[29] (and just 4 at Anfield). This remarkable record remains for a 42-match season and endured until beaten in the 2004–05 season by Chelsea, who conceded 15 goals in the 38 League matches.

In 1981 Liverpool won the League Cup, and for the third time the European Cup, the latter with a 1–0 win over Real Madrid in a dour contest at the Parc des Princes on 27 May. It turned out to be Clemence's last game for the club.

The emergence of Bruce Grobbelaar put Clemence's place in the side under threat for the first time in eleven years (during which period he played in more than 650 matches and missed a mere six), and he decided to leave Liverpool to join Tottenham Hotspur for a fee of £300,000.

Tottenham Hotspur

Clemence left Liverpool to join Tottenham Hotspur in 1981 for a fee of £300,000.[30] The two clubs reached the 1982 League Cup final, which Liverpool won 3–1. Spurs did, however, win the 1982 FA Cup, defeating QPR 1–0 after a replay.

Clemence's first Tottenham appearance was in the 1981 FA Charity Shield against Aston Villa at Wembley on 22 August 1981, where Mark Falco and Peter Withe each scored twice in an entertaining 2–2 draw. His League debut came a week later with a winning start at Ayresome Park, where Spurs beat Middlesbrough 3–1. His first clean-sheet came three games later on 12 September at Molineux, when he kept Wolverhampton Wanderers off the scoresheet in the 1–0 victory.

Spurs won the UEFA Cup in 1984. Clemence missed the final against Anderlecht through injury, but was on the bench as substitute goalkeeper in a match famously won when Tony Parks saved twice during the penalty shootout. Clemence reached a fifth FA Cup final in 1987, where Spurs lost to Coventry City. He is in a select group of players who have appeared in five or more FA Cup finals. Clemence sustained an Achilles tendon injury in Tottenham's away match at Norwich in October 1987, which forced his retirement from playing in 1988. Shortly after retiring Clemence joined the Spurs coaching staff.

International career

Clemence was a regular for England between 1972 and 1983 making his debut and keeping his first clean-sheet in the 1–0 World Cup qualifier win over Wales at Ninian Park on 15 November 1972. England failed to qualify for World Cups in 1974 and 1978. Clemence was part of the squad which qualified for Euro 1980 but the team failed to qualify from Group 2. In 1982, he was in the squad which qualified for the World Cup, but again England did not progress beyond the quarter-final stage.

Clemence captained England once—the first keeper to do so since Frank Swift. The game in question was a friendly with Brazil, although Clemence couldn't prevent the Brazilians from scoring as England lost 1–0.

Because of injury to his left knee Clemence was retired from international football with 61 England caps in a 12-year international career. The presence of another goalkeeper, Peter Shilton, meant that the England management struggled to decide which keeper was the best, and ended up alternating their selection. Shilton ended up as first choice keeper for the rest of the 1980s, playing in two more World Cups and attaining a record 125 caps.[31]

Coaching career

Management

Clemence retired in 1988 and joined the coaching staff at Spurs, working his way through to the first team, before leaving to become joint manager of Barnet (with fellow goalkeeper Gary Phillips) in January 1994. At the start of the 1994–95 season, he took sole charge leading Barnet to ninth and 13th in Division 3.

England coaching team

In August 1996[2] he was recruited by his former Spurs and England teammate Glenn Hoddle as goalkeeping coach for the England team, a position he continued to hold under Hoddle's successors Kevin Keegan and Sven-Göran Eriksson. He remained in that position under Steve McClaren until he was replaced by Italian Franco Tancredi as goalkeeping coach in December 2007, as Fabio Capello took charge of the national team. Clemence, however, remained part of the England backroom staff, and when Roy Hodgson took over as manager, he reinstated Clemence to the Goalkeeper coach role. On 11 June 2012, he snapped his Achilles tendon during England's warmups for their game against France during Euro 2012.

He was the head of the F.A.'s Head of Development Team, where his role was to oversee the England under 16s, 17s, 18s, 19s and 20 sides, working with England U21 coach Stuart Pearce in monitoring the players' progress to the U21 side.[citation needed] He also occasionally worked as a pundit on TV and radio, and commented on current goalkeeping stories in football.[32][33]

In 2013, Clemence retired; being "lavishly saluted", and being bought a gift from the England national team; despite his last appearance at an international level being 30 years earlier.[22]

Personal life and death

He cited Ian Callaghan as one of his favorite players and said Leeds United as his favorite team. He said Alan Bushby had the largest influence on his career. He said that Keith Weller was his most difficult opponent and said beating Newcastle in the 1974 F.A. Cup Final was his most memorable match, while winning his first game on the English national team was his biggest thrill. He said losing the 1972 title by one point was his biggest disappointment. He liked to golf and be with his family in his spare time and disliked being bothered by fans at restaurants most. He cited The Carpenters and Andy Williams as his favorite musicians. He said that he would have been an accountant if he hadn't gone into football.[34]

Clemence was appointed an MBE in the 1987 Birthday Honours for services to football.[35] His son, Stephen, was a midfield player who came through the ranks at Spurs and Birmingham City, before retiring injured from Leicester City in 2010. He was the Newcastle United first team coach under Steve Bruce. Clemence's daughter Sarah also has footballing connections, being the wife of former Crystal Palace and Nottingham Forest manager and Scotland striker Dougie Freedman.

In February 2005, Clemence announced that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer and that he would spend time away from the England squad whilst he received treatment. He was the second member of Eriksson's staff to be diagnosed with prostate cancer; Brian Kidd was diagnosed with the disease prior to Euro 2004.

Clemence is held in high regard by both Liverpool and Tottenham fans. He was voted in at No. 11 on the Liverpool Football Club web site poll 100 Players Who Shook The Kop; he was also the highest placed goalkeeper. He was also chosen as goalkeeper in the BBC's Merseyside team of the 20th century, and topped Total Football's poll of the best ever goalkeeper, beating players of the calibre of Peter Shilton, Lev Yashin, Gordon Banks and Pat Jennings.

Clemence died on 15 November 2020, after 15 years with prostate cancer. He was 72.[36][37]

Honours

Liverpool

Tottenham Hotspur

See also

References

  1. ^ "Ray Clemence". Barry Hugman's Footballers. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d "Ray Clemence". The FA. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  3. ^ "Ray Clemence". worldfootball.net. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  4. ^ Mason, Peter (16 November 2020). "Ray Clemence obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  5. ^ "Ray Clemence". Liverpool FC. Retrieved 5 September 2015.
  6. ^ Louise Taylor (23 March 2017). "Gianluigi Buffon's 1,000th career game is testament to a beacon of stability". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  7. ^ James Horncastle (23 March 2017). "Gianluigi Buffon is far from finished after 1,000 games between the posts". ESPN FC. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  8. ^ Glenn Moore (27 May 2011). "Zanetti, Inter's captain and gentleman, joins the 1,000 matches club". The Independent. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  9. ^ Wirunhchatapant, Naratorn. "World Football Historic Center: World Record and Statistics". Xtrahistory.blogspot.com. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  10. ^ "Liverpool FC deeply saddened by Ray Clemence passing". Liverpool FC. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  11. ^ Shoot Magazine, 27 August issue, 1977. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  12. ^ "18 Holes with Ray Clemence in Dubai | Vidcast #4". YouTube. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  13. ^ a b Soccer Monthly, August 1979, Interview with John Keith (Daily Express). Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  14. ^ a b c Scunthorpe United Football ClubScunthorpe United vs Morecambe and Bolton Wanderers official match programme. 21st-24 November 2020. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  15. ^ a b c d Staff, John. (17 October 2012). From Nuts to Iron - The Official History of Scunthorpe United 1899-2012. Yore Publications p236
  16. ^ a b c Bell, Max (31 August 2020). Scunthorpe United: 20 Legends. Vertical Editions. p88. ISBN 978-1-9088471-9-5
  17. ^ LFC Official Matchday Magazine interview. 30 October 2001. Liverpool vs Borussia Dortmund. Retrieved on 3 December 2020.
  18. ^ Keegan, Kevin. (1977). Kevin Keegan by Kevin Keegan. Arthur Baker Ltd, p54.
  19. ^ "1966-67 Season Final Football Tables". Englishfootballleaguetables.co.uk. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  20. ^ "▶️ Ray Clemence: '7-1 Defeat To Grimsby Town Almost Changed My Career'". Grimsby-townfc.co.uk. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  21. ^ "Ray Clemence - Liverpool's finest keeper - LFChistory - Stats galore for Liverpool FC!". Lfchistory.net. Retrieved 14 November 2021.
  22. ^ a b c d Winter, Henry (1 November 2013). "Stalwart Clemence quits after 47 years". The Daily Telegraph. pp. S8. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  23. ^ Hassall, Paul (12 February 2010). . Liverpool F.C. Archived from the original on 4 November 2013. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  24. ^ "English League Cup". Soccerbase. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  25. ^ Rowland, Chris. "TTT Top 20 Players – Ray Clemence". The Tomkins Times. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  26. ^ Prentice, David (5 February 2009). "Liverpool FC legend Ray Clemence clean sheets record still a benchmark". The Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 5 November 2013.
  27. ^ Abbink, Dinant. "Round 3". RSSSF. Retrieved 6 November 2013.
  28. ^ McIlvanney, Hugh (9 May 1971). "Have a double on George". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
  29. ^ "Goals: Fewest goals conceded in a season (in 42 games or more)". fl125.co.uk. Retrieved 4 January 2017.
  30. ^ Ponting, Ivan (1993). Tottenham Hotspur Player by Player. p. 152. ISBN 0851127177.
  31. ^ "WHEN PETER SHILTON SET ENGLAND RECORD AGAINST DENMARK". TheFA.com. The FA.
  32. ^ "Pellegrini coy on Hart involvement". The Express. 1 November 2013. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  33. ^ Sale, Charles (3 August 2013). "Al Jazeera recruit 25 pundits for new season". gulfnews.com. Retrieved 4 November 2013.
  34. ^ Shoot Magazine, Focus on Ray Clemence, publisher: Shoot Magazine, published: 1970's
  35. ^ "No. 50948". The London Gazette (Supplement). 12 June 1987. p. 11.
  36. ^ "Statement on behalf of the Clemence family". Liverpool F.C. 15 November 2020.
  37. ^ "Ray Clemence: Former England goalkeeper dies aged 72". BBC Sport. 15 November 2020. Retrieved 16 November 2020.

External links

  • FIFA competition record (archived)  
  • Ray Clemence at National-Football-Teams.com  
  • Official past players at Liverpoolfc.tv
  • England coaches at thefa.com
  • Ray Clemence at goalkeepersaredifferent.com
  • Ray Clemence at IMDb  

clemence, raymond, neal, clemence, august, 1948, november, 2020, england, international, football, goalkeeper, part, liverpool, team, 1970s, players, have, made, over, career, appearances, holds, record, most, clean, sheets, history, football, winning, three, . Raymond Neal Clemence MBE 5 August 1948 15 November 2020 4 was an England international football goalkeeper and part of the Liverpool team of the 1970s 5 He is one of few players to have made over 1 000 career appearances 6 7 8 and holds the record for the most clean sheets in the history of football 460 9 Winning three European Cups five League titles two UEFA Cups a UEFA Super Cup an FA Cup and a League Cup with Liverpool the last of his 665 appearances for the club was the victorious 1981 European Cup Final 10 In 1981 after being phased out at Liverpool Clemence joined Tottenham Hotspur winning a UEFA Cup an FA Cup and a Charity Shield with them before retiring from football in 1988 Ray Clemence MBEClemence with Tottenham Hotspur in 1981Personal informationFull nameRaymond Neal Clemence 1 Date of birth 1948 08 05 5 August 1948 2 Place of birthSkegness England 2 Date of death15 November 2020 2020 11 15 aged 72 Place of deathCorby Northamptonshire England citation needed Height6 ft 0 in 1 83 m 3 Position s GoalkeeperYouth careerNotts CountySenior career YearsTeamApps Gls 1965 1967Scunthorpe United48 0 1967 1981Liverpool470 0 1981 1988Tottenham Hotspur240 0 Total758 0 International career1967 1971England U234 0 1972 1983England61 0 Managerial career1992 1993Tottenham Hotspur joint with Doug Livermore 1994 1996Barnet Club domestic league appearances and goalsAfter brief spells as joint manager at Tottenham alongside Doug Livermore and sole manager at Barnet in the first half of the 90s he acted as head of the FA Development Team overseeing the development made by players in the England youth teams from under 16 to 21 level having previously been part of the England senior team s backroom staff 2 Contents 1 Club career 1 1 Scunthorpe United 1 2 Liverpool 1 3 Tottenham Hotspur 2 International career 3 Coaching career 3 1 Management 3 2 England coaching team 4 Personal life and death 5 Honours 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksClub career EditScunthorpe United Edit Born in Skegness Lincolnshire Clemence played eight matches on trial for Notts County but was ultimately not signed by the Meadow Lane club 11 He was spotted by Scunthorpe United whilst playing in a county cup final at their Old Showground ground for his local youth club Skegness Cosmos After starring in the Cosmos 4 3 victory 12 Clemence was invited for formal trials with The Iron which he duly passed 13 Clemence went on to sign professional terms for Scunthorpe on his 17th birthday 5 August 1965 shortly before the start of Scunthorpe s 1965 66 Third Division campaign 13 Despite initially playing in the club s third team 14 Clemence s big break arrived later in his debut season making his professional debut in a 1 1 draw at home to Swansea Town on 2 April 1966 Prior to this debut Clemence remembers a key behind the scenes intervention from two Scunthorpe coaches Jack Brownsword and Alan Bushby pulled me aside gave me a pep talk and told me they thought I could play for England one day but you ve got to work at it 14 Clemence went on to make four appearances in total throughout his debut season 15 including earning his first professional clean sheet in a 1 0 victory away at Southend United 16 Having spent much of that season as understudy to the experienced former Wolverhampton Wanderers and Aston Villa custodian Geoff Sidebottom Clemence later cited Sidebottom as a crucial early mentor I learned a lot from Geoff He taught me how to look after myself because keepers were a lot less protected then 17 During his time at the club Clemence lived with Mrs Ruby Duce of King Edward Street in Scunthorpe in the very same digs which would then immediately be occupied by Ray s future England and Liverpool teammate Kevin Keegan following Clemence s departure to Liverpool 18 After being reintroduced to the side after they had lost their opening three games in all competitions 15 Clemence became Scunthorpe s undisputed first choice goalkeeper in their following 1966 67 Third Division campaign 15 in which they finished a disappointing 18th 19 After manager and ex Busby Babe Freddie Goodwin departed mid season for the New York Generals in the nascent North American Soccer League Clemence spent the latter half of his season under the guidance of caretaker player manager Keith Burkinshaw who would later also sign the player for Tottenham Hotspur And despite Clemence himself worrying that a humiliating 7 1 defeat away to arch rivals Grimsby Town could end his professional career 20 Scunthorpe s faith in him never waivered and this defeat proved to be the second game in a run of 46 consecutive starts he made to see out all of Scunthorpe s remaining league and cup matches 15 This run took Clemence s figures to 50 appearances and 12 clean sheets in all competitions for Scunthorpe 16 but unbeknownst to him he had been scouted in 12 games by legendary Liverpool manager Bill Shankly and his coaching staff 21 This came to fruition later that summer when Clemence was forced to leave a beachside deckchair stacking shift early with the news that an urgent telegram awaited him at home 16 This was because Liverpool s bid for the now 18 year old shot stopper had been accepted and the Scunthorpe chairman personally drove Clemence to Anfield in his Rolls Royce the next morning Looking back on his time with the club Clemence fondly recalled how Scunthorpe United was A club I m proud to be associated with While I was there it was like being part of a family 14 Liverpool Edit Clemence was signed by Liverpool manager Bill Shankly on 24 June 1967 from Scunthorpe United for a fee of 18 000 22 23 He made his debut and kept his first clean sheet in a League Cup third round tie at Anfield on 25 September 1968 24 25 26 Swansea Town were the visitors and were beaten 2 0 27 He was nurtured through the reserve side over the next two years with the occasional senior appearance until 1970 at which point he became the club s first choice goalkeeper In 1971 Liverpool reached the FA Cup Final where Clemence played well but Arsenal scored twice in extra time to overcome Liverpool s lead and win the game 2 1 28 There would be joy for Clemence two seasons later in 1973 when Liverpool won both the League title and UEFA Cup with Clemence saving a penalty in the final of the latter against Borussia Monchengladbach The penalty save meant that Liverpool took a 3 0 lead to Germany with them rather than 3 1 Gladbach won 2 0 at home had Jupp Heynckes scored the penalty then with the same second leg result the tie would have finished 3 3 on aggregate and Borussia Monchengladbach would have won on the away goals rule The 1973 74 season saw Liverpool claim yet more silverware winning the FA Cup with a comprehensive 3 0 victory over Newcastle United Liverpool won another League and UEFA Cup double in 1976 and then made a bid for a unique treble a year later They achieved the first leg when they won the League title but lost the FA Cup final 2 1 to rivals Manchester United A few days later Liverpool won the European Cup for the first time in Rome defeating Borussia Monchengladbach 3 1 In the second half Clemence made a magnificent save against Uli Stielike when the score was 1 1 Liverpool retained the European Cup in 1978 with a narrow 1 0 win over Club Brugge at Wembley but conceded their League title to Nottingham Forest to whom they also lost in the League Cup final In 1979 and 1980 Clemence kept goal as Liverpool clinched the League title in each season The 1978 79 League success saw Clemence set a record that was never beaten under the two points for a win system conceding only 16 goals in the 42 league matches 29 and just 4 at Anfield This remarkable record remains for a 42 match season and endured until beaten in the 2004 05 season by Chelsea who conceded 15 goals in the 38 League matches In 1981 Liverpool won the League Cup and for the third time the European Cup the latter with a 1 0 win over Real Madrid in a dour contest at the Parc des Princes on 27 May It turned out to be Clemence s last game for the club The emergence of Bruce Grobbelaar put Clemence s place in the side under threat for the first time in eleven years during which period he played in more than 650 matches and missed a mere six and he decided to leave Liverpool to join Tottenham Hotspur for a fee of 300 000 Tottenham Hotspur Edit Clemence left Liverpool to join Tottenham Hotspur in 1981 for a fee of 300 000 30 The two clubs reached the 1982 League Cup final which Liverpool won 3 1 Spurs did however win the 1982 FA Cup defeating QPR 1 0 after a replay Clemence s first Tottenham appearance was in the 1981 FA Charity Shield against Aston Villa at Wembley on 22 August 1981 where Mark Falco and Peter Withe each scored twice in an entertaining 2 2 draw His League debut came a week later with a winning start at Ayresome Park where Spurs beat Middlesbrough 3 1 His first clean sheet came three games later on 12 September at Molineux when he kept Wolverhampton Wanderers off the scoresheet in the 1 0 victory Spurs won the UEFA Cup in 1984 Clemence missed the final against Anderlecht through injury but was on the bench as substitute goalkeeper in a match famously won when Tony Parks saved twice during the penalty shootout Clemence reached a fifth FA Cup final in 1987 where Spurs lost to Coventry City He is in a select group of players who have appeared in five or more FA Cup finals Clemence sustained an Achilles tendon injury in Tottenham s away match at Norwich in October 1987 which forced his retirement from playing in 1988 Shortly after retiring Clemence joined the Spurs coaching staff International career EditClemence was a regular for England between 1972 and 1983 making his debut and keeping his first clean sheet in the 1 0 World Cup qualifier win over Wales at Ninian Park on 15 November 1972 England failed to qualify for World Cups in 1974 and 1978 Clemence was part of the squad which qualified for Euro 1980 but the team failed to qualify from Group 2 In 1982 he was in the squad which qualified for the World Cup but again England did not progress beyond the quarter final stage Clemence captained England once the first keeper to do so since Frank Swift The game in question was a friendly with Brazil although Clemence couldn t prevent the Brazilians from scoring as England lost 1 0 Because of injury to his left knee Clemence was retired from international football with 61 England caps in a 12 year international career The presence of another goalkeeper Peter Shilton meant that the England management struggled to decide which keeper was the best and ended up alternating their selection Shilton ended up as first choice keeper for the rest of the 1980s playing in two more World Cups and attaining a record 125 caps 31 Coaching career EditManagement Edit Clemence retired in 1988 and joined the coaching staff at Spurs working his way through to the first team before leaving to become joint manager of Barnet with fellow goalkeeper Gary Phillips in January 1994 At the start of the 1994 95 season he took sole charge leading Barnet to ninth and 13th in Division 3 England coaching team Edit In August 1996 2 he was recruited by his former Spurs and England teammate Glenn Hoddle as goalkeeping coach for the England team a position he continued to hold under Hoddle s successors Kevin Keegan and Sven Goran Eriksson He remained in that position under Steve McClaren until he was replaced by Italian Franco Tancredi as goalkeeping coach in December 2007 as Fabio Capello took charge of the national team Clemence however remained part of the England backroom staff and when Roy Hodgson took over as manager he reinstated Clemence to the Goalkeeper coach role On 11 June 2012 he snapped his Achilles tendon during England s warmups for their game against France during Euro 2012 He was the head of the F A s Head of Development Team where his role was to oversee the England under 16s 17s 18s 19s and 20 sides working with England U21 coach Stuart Pearce in monitoring the players progress to the U21 side citation needed He also occasionally worked as a pundit on TV and radio and commented on current goalkeeping stories in football 32 33 In 2013 Clemence retired being lavishly saluted and being bought a gift from the England national team despite his last appearance at an international level being 30 years earlier 22 Personal life and death EditHe cited Ian Callaghan as one of his favorite players and said Leeds United as his favorite team He said Alan Bushby had the largest influence on his career He said that Keith Weller was his most difficult opponent and said beating Newcastle in the 1974 F A Cup Final was his most memorable match while winning his first game on the English national team was his biggest thrill He said losing the 1972 title by one point was his biggest disappointment He liked to golf and be with his family in his spare time and disliked being bothered by fans at restaurants most He cited The Carpenters and Andy Williams as his favorite musicians He said that he would have been an accountant if he hadn t gone into football 34 Clemence was appointed an MBE in the 1987 Birthday Honours for services to football 35 His son Stephen was a midfield player who came through the ranks at Spurs and Birmingham City before retiring injured from Leicester City in 2010 He was the Newcastle United first team coach under Steve Bruce Clemence s daughter Sarah also has footballing connections being the wife of former Crystal Palace and Nottingham Forest manager and Scotland striker Dougie Freedman In February 2005 Clemence announced that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer and that he would spend time away from the England squad whilst he received treatment He was the second member of Eriksson s staff to be diagnosed with prostate cancer Brian Kidd was diagnosed with the disease prior to Euro 2004 Clemence is held in high regard by both Liverpool and Tottenham fans He was voted in at No 11 on the Liverpool Football Club web site poll 100 Players Who Shook The Kop he was also the highest placed goalkeeper He was also chosen as goalkeeper in the BBC s Merseyside team of the 20th century and topped Total Football s poll of the best ever goalkeeper beating players of the calibre of Peter Shilton Lev Yashin Gordon Banks and Pat Jennings Clemence died on 15 November 2020 after 15 years with prostate cancer He was 72 36 37 Honours EditLiverpool Football League First Division 1972 73 1975 76 1976 77 1978 79 1979 80 FA Cup 1973 74 League Cup 1980 81 FA Charity Shield 1974 1976 1977 shared 1979 1980 European Cup 1976 77 1977 78 1980 81 UEFA Cup 1972 73 1975 76 European Super Cup 1977 22 Tottenham Hotspur FA Cup 1981 82 FA Charity Shield 1981 shared UEFA Cup 1983 84 22 See also EditList of men s footballers with the most official appearancesReferences Edit Ray Clemence Barry Hugman s Footballers Retrieved 14 March 2020 a b c d Ray Clemence The FA Retrieved 4 November 2013 Ray Clemence worldfootball net Retrieved 4 November 2013 Mason Peter 16 November 2020 Ray Clemence obituary The Guardian Retrieved 16 November 2020 Ray Clemence Liverpool FC Retrieved 5 September 2015 Louise Taylor 23 March 2017 Gianluigi Buffon s 1 000th career game is testament to a beacon of stability The Guardian Retrieved 24 March 2017 James Horncastle 23 March 2017 Gianluigi Buffon is far from finished after 1 000 games between the posts ESPN FC Retrieved 24 March 2017 Glenn Moore 27 May 2011 Zanetti Inter s captain and gentleman joins the 1 000 matches club The Independent Retrieved 24 March 2017 Wirunhchatapant Naratorn World Football Historic Center World Record and Statistics Xtrahistory blogspot com Retrieved 14 November 2021 Liverpool FC deeply saddened by Ray Clemence passing Liverpool FC Retrieved 15 November 2020 Shoot Magazine 27 August issue 1977 Retrieved 3 December 2020 18 Holes with Ray Clemence in Dubai Vidcast 4 YouTube Retrieved 14 November 2021 a b Soccer Monthly August 1979 Interview with John Keith Daily Express Retrieved 3 December 2020 a b c Scunthorpe United Football ClubScunthorpe United vs Morecambe and Bolton Wanderers official match programme 21st 24 November 2020 Retrieved 3 December 2020 a b c d Staff John 17 October 2012 From Nuts to Iron The Official History of Scunthorpe United 1899 2012 Yore Publications p236 a b c Bell Max 31 August 2020 Scunthorpe United 20 Legends Vertical Editions p88 ISBN 978 1 9088471 9 5 LFC Official Matchday Magazine interview 30 October 2001 Liverpool vs Borussia Dortmund Retrieved on 3 December 2020 Keegan Kevin 1977 Kevin Keegan by Kevin Keegan Arthur Baker Ltd p54 1966 67 Season Final Football Tables Englishfootballleaguetables co uk Retrieved 14 November 2021 Ray Clemence 7 1 Defeat To Grimsby Town Almost Changed My Career Grimsby townfc co uk Retrieved 14 November 2021 Ray Clemence Liverpool s finest keeper LFChistory Stats galore for Liverpool FC Lfchistory net Retrieved 14 November 2021 a b c d Winter Henry 1 November 2013 Stalwart Clemence quits after 47 years The Daily Telegraph pp S8 Retrieved 4 November 2013 Hassall Paul 12 February 2010 Ray Clemence on Shankly Liverpool F C Archived from the original on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 4 November 2013 English League Cup Soccerbase Retrieved 6 November 2013 Rowland Chris TTT Top 20 Players Ray Clemence The Tomkins Times Retrieved 5 November 2013 Prentice David 5 February 2009 Liverpool FC legend Ray Clemence clean sheets record still a benchmark The Liverpool Echo Retrieved 5 November 2013 Abbink Dinant Round 3 RSSSF Retrieved 6 November 2013 McIlvanney Hugh 9 May 1971 Have a double on George The Guardian Retrieved 21 November 2020 Goals Fewest goals conceded in a season in 42 games or more fl125 co uk Retrieved 4 January 2017 Ponting Ivan 1993 Tottenham Hotspur Player by Player p 152 ISBN 0851127177 WHEN PETER SHILTON SET ENGLAND RECORD AGAINST DENMARK TheFA com The FA Pellegrini coy on Hart involvement The Express 1 November 2013 Retrieved 4 November 2013 Sale Charles 3 August 2013 Al Jazeera recruit 25 pundits for new season gulfnews com Retrieved 4 November 2013 Shoot Magazine Focus on Ray Clemence publisher Shoot Magazine published 1970 s No 50948 The London Gazette Supplement 12 June 1987 p 11 Statement on behalf of the Clemence family Liverpool F C 15 November 2020 Ray Clemence Former England goalkeeper dies aged 72 BBC Sport 15 November 2020 Retrieved 16 November 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ray Clemence Ray Clemence FIFA competition record archived Ray Clemence at National Football Teams com Official past players at Liverpoolfc tv England coaches at thefa com Profile at Liverweb org uk Ray Clemence at goalkeepersaredifferent com Ray Clemence at IMDb List of great players at truegreats com Player profile at LFChistory net Ray Clemence Goalkeeping Greats Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ray Clemence amp oldid 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