Francis Tierney

Francis Tierney
Personal information
Full name Francis Tierney
Date of birth (1975-09-10) 10 September 1975 (age 48)
Place of birth Liverpool, England
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)[1]
Position(s) Midfield
Youth career
0000–1993 Crewe Alexandra
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1993–1998 Crewe Alexandra 87 (10)
1998–2000 Notts County 32 (4)
2000–2001 Exeter 7 (1)
2001–2005 Doncaster Rovers 58 (10)
2005–2006 Northwich 3 (0)
Total 187 (25)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Francis Tierney (born 10 September 1975) is an English retired professional footballer who played most notably for Crewe Alexandra and Doncaster Rovers. Tierney came through the famous Crewe Alexandra academy system where he was extremely highly rated by Dario Gradi, and the coaching staff. He played as a winger or striker, and was known for his dribbling skills and technique. Tierney played almost 100 times for Crewe in the bottom two divisions, scoring 11 times. He was an important part of the team that won promotion from League 2 to League 1 in 1994–95, and also played 22 times in the Crewe side that won promotion via the Play-Offs from League 1 to The Championship in 1996–97.[citation needed]

Tierney attracted a lot of attention from scouts top flight English clubs, and a £750,000 fee was agreed in June 1995 for Tierney to move to Liverpool. The deal fell through at the last minute when Tierney failed a medical. The setback seemed to knock Tierney's confidence, and the next season Tierney suffered a serious cruciate ligament injury, that kept him out of the Crewe team for almost a year. He never looked likely to regain his former form at Gresty Road, and he was only seen at his best intermittently after that.[citation needed]

Tierney then signed played for Doncaster Rovers as a midfielder where he is affectionately known among fans as 'Sir' Francis Tierney for scoring the golden goal in the 2003 conference play-off final against Dagenham & Redbridge at Stoke's Britannia Stadium.[2]

In his 2005 autobiography, former Liverpool legend Robbie Fowler described Tierney as a "brilliant player...better than most of the other lads in the schoolboys team including myself".[citation needed]

Honours[edit]

As a player[edit]

Crewe Alexandra

Doncaster Rovers

References[edit]

  1. ^ Rollin, Jack, ed. (1995). Rothmans Football Yearbook: 1995–96. London: Headline. p. 518. ISBN 0-7472-7823-7. OCLC 60284604.
  2. ^ "Francis Tierney | Doncaster Rovers". www.doncasterroversfc.co.uk. Retrieved 8 February 2024.

External links[edit]