Players - Phil Thompson

Born: 21 January 1954
Born in: Kensington, Liverpool
Other clubs: Sheffield United (loan 1984-85 + transfer 1985)
Signed from: Local
Joined Liverpool: April 1970 - Professional 22.01.1971
Debut: 03 Apr 1972
Final appearance: 20 Aug 1983
Debut goal: 04 Sep 1973
Last goal: 04 Sep 1979
Contract until: March 1985
Honours: League Championship 1972/73, 1975/76, 1976/77, 1978/79, 1979/80, 1981/82, 1982/83; FA Cup 1974; League Cup 1981, 1982; European Cup 1978, 1981; UEFA Cup 1973, 1976; European Super Cup 1977
League: Apps / Goals / Assists: 340 / 7 / 6
All Competitions: Apps / Goals / Assists: 477 / 13 / 12

Player Profile

Tommo is one of the greatest characters who has graced Liverpool's shirt and one of the most decorated players in English football history. He signed professional forms for his hometown club in January 1971 and made his debut at Old Trafford on Easter Monday 1972, coming on as a substitute for John Toshack after the big Welshman had put Liverpool into a commanding 2-0 lead. Thompson gained some useful experience during the 'double' League and UEFA Cup triumph year of 1972/73. He started out as a midfielder in the team and just qualified for his first championship medal by making 14 first division appearances, but by the opening day of the next season which was Bill Shankly's last as Liverpool manager, he had become an established part of Liverpool's centre of defence. Thompson's style was more continental than that of Larry Lloyd and most of his fellow British professionals. His distribution from defence was first class and he fitted well beside Emlyn Hughes. Thompson added to his already impressive medal collection when he was in the Liverpool side that conquered Newcastle 3-0 at Wembley in the 1974 FA Cup Final. Fired up by Malcolm MacDonald's boasts about how he would terrorise Liverpool's defence, Thompson showed astonishing maturity and composure at the tender age of 20 to effectively reduce the twin-threat that MacDonald and his strike-partner John Tudor posed.

The Reds finished as League runners-up to Derby County in 1974/75 as Bob Paisley came to terms with managing a top club side. It would be the last season without a trophy and winners' medal of one kind or another for the rest of Thompson's time or for that matter Paisley's time as Liverpool manager. In 1975/76 the club repeated its 1973 success at home and in Europe and this time Thompson could share in the 'double' triumph. He only missed one league match and scored the winning goal from close range in the UEFA Cup semi-final against Barcelona which took the club through to the final with Bruges, whom they narrowly beat 4-3 on aggregate to secure the giant trophy. To top off a remarkable year of personal success, Thompson was capped at full international level by England for the first time. He would eventually go on to win 42 caps at senior level and captain the team on six occasions. By now firmly established in the Liverpool team, Thompson won his third first division championship medal in 1977 but missed out on the club's great triumph in Rome due to a cartilage operation. A year later it was Smith who missed the European Cup final due to injury, but it was Alan Hansen who replaced him in the team for the showdown with Bruges at Wembley. Thompson's place was never in doubt during the second part of that season and after an uncharacteristic error by Hansen near the end of the game when his woeful back-pass had goalkeeper Ray Clemence in all sorts of trouble, it was Thompson who redeemed the situation and protected Liverpool's narrow lead by clearing the ball off the line.

Successive championships followed in 1979 and 1980 with Thompson only missing three League games in the first of those seasons and being an ever-present in the second. In April 1979 the Kirkby lad (raised there after being born in Kensington) was given the ultimate honour of captaining the team. Thompson's biggest moment in his Liverpool career came two years later when it was he who walked up the steps first in Paris to collect the club's third European Cup in 1981 after the 1-0 victory over Real Madrid. However, later that year he lost the captaincy to Souness. Thompson won his sixth and seventh championship medals in 1982 and 1983, as well as winning another League Cup winners' medal in 1982 although he missed the 1983 final because of injury. Thompson was by now approaching his thirtieth birthday and the younger Mark Lawrenson had become Hansen's partner at the heart of Liverpool's defence. Thompson eventually brought the curtain down on a wonderful playing career at Anfield by agreeing to join Sheffield United in March 1985, after being on loan at Bramall Lane for four months.

Thompson returned to Liverpool as reserve coach in 1986 replacing Chris Lawler. Robbie Fowler remembers he was a strict taskmaster. "Phil Thompson was a coach who would push youngsters to see how tough they were and a lot of the young lads coming through despised him for it. I'm amazed he never got properly sparked out there." Thompson had been raised on Ronnie Moran: "Ronnie was my mentor and he was very, very hard at times, but it was the Liverpool way," Thompson said. Thompson stayed on as coach until Souness sacked him infamously in 1993. Tommo returned again to Liverpool as assistant manager in 1998. "We were all training for these Masters games they have on SKY television. It was not far from the ground. One morning I get a phone call just out of the blue from Peter Robinson. He said: 'I'd like you to come to a meeting.' 'When?' He said: 'Right now. Do you know where the Chairman lives?' When I got up to the chairman's house they were all sitting there. They said: 'Well, we would like you to be assistant manager.' I felt absolutely thrilled. Imagine, assistant manager of Liverpool? It was just a dream come true." Houllier wanted more discipline from his camp than any Liverpool player had been used to and Thompson made sure everybody was doing their best. Thompson had filled every role at the club except as manager but was left to lead Liverpool when Houllier was recuperating from his heart operation, guiding the club to a respectable second in the league in the 2001/02 season. Thompson left after the Frenchman's reign finished six years later.

"I regard Phil as one of the best possible examples of a true professional. His greatest asset as a player is his ability to read the game, he showed that gift even as a teenager. He is not the biggest man physically for his role in defence but his football brain is outstanding." – Bob Paisley.

Appearances per season

Season League FA LC Europe Other Total
1971-1972 1 0 0 0 0 1
1972-1973 14 2 1 3 0 20
1973-1974 35 9 4 3 0 51
1974-1975 32 2 1 1 1 37
1975-1976 41 2 3 11 0 57
1976-1977 26 4 2 3 1 36
1977-1978 27 1 7 7 1 43
1978-1979 39 6 1 3 0 49
1979-1980 42 8 7 2 1 60
1980-1981 25 1 6 7 1 40
1981-1982 34 1 7 5 1 48
1982-1983 24 0 4 5 1 34
1983-1984 0 0 0 0 1 1
1984-1985 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totals 340 36 43 50 8 477

A more detailed look at the player's appearances

Apps Mins Opponent
27 2212 Arsenal
21 1800 Coventry City
21 1732 Ipswich Town
21 1890 Manchester City
21 1610 Manchester United
20 1604 Tottenham Hotspur
19 1710 Nottingham Forest
17 1440 Everton
17 1530 Norwich City
17 1350 West Ham United
16 1260 Leeds United
16 1350 Wolves
15 1350 Leicester City
15 1250 Stoke City
14 1260 Birmingham City
14 1260 Middlesbrough
13 1080 Derby County
13 1170 West Bromwich Albion
11 990 Aston Villa
11 900 Southampton
10 810 Newcastle United
9 720 Burnley
9 810 Queens Park Rangers
8 720 Bristol City
7 630 Chelsea
7 547 Crystal Palace
6 496 Brighton & Hove Albion
6 180 Dynamo Dresden
6 540 Sheffield United
5 360 Carlisle United
5 450 Sunderland
4 128 Benfica
4 360 Bolton Wanderers
4 180 Borussia Moenchengladbach
4 360 Oulu Palloseura
3 270 Club Brugge
3 109 CSKA Sofia
3 270 Exeter City
3 270 Luton Town
3 270 Swansea City
2 180 Aberdeen
2 31 AEK Athens
2 180 AZ Alkmaar
2 180 Barcelona
2 95 Barnsley
2 180 Bradford City
2 180 Dinamo Tbilisi
2 180 Doncaster Rovers
2 180 Dundalk
2 90 Dynamo Berlin
2 0 Eintracht Frankfurt
2 180 Hamburg SV
2 180 HJK Helsinki
2 180 Hull City
2 103 Jeunesse d'Esch
2 0 Lech Poznan
2 180 Notts County
2 180 Real Sociedad
2 90 Red Star Belgrade
2 180 Slask Wroclaw
2 180 Southend United
2 180 Trabzonspor
2 180 Tranmere Rovers
2 155 Watford
2 53 Widzew Lodz
1 90 Anderlecht
1 90 Bayern Munich
1 90 Brentford
1 90 Bury
1 90 Chesterfield
1 0 Crusaders
1 0 Dinamo Bucharest
1 90 Flamengo
1 90 Grimsby Town
1 90 Hibernian
1 90 Oldham Athletic
1 90 Real Madrid
1 90 Rotherham United
1 90 Saint-Étienne
1 0 Servette
1 0 Stockport County
1 90 Strømsgodset
1 90 Swindon Town
1 90 Wrexham
1 90 York City
Total Started/substitutions
470 Started
10 Substituted
7 Substitute
41 On bench
Total Venue
226 Home
228 Away
23 Neutral
Total Competition
340 League
43 League Cup
36 FA Cup
32 European Cup
14 UEFA Cup
7 Charity Shield
3 European Super Cup
1 World Club Championship
1 European Cup Winners Cup
Total W D L Win% Manager
403 233 106 64 57.8% Bob Paisley
73 38 23 12 52.0% Bill Shankly
1 0 0 1 0.0% Joe Fagan

Goals per season

Season League FA LC Europe Other Total
1973-1974 2 0 0 0 0 2
1974-1975 0 0 0 2 0 2
1975-1976 0 0 0 2 0 2
1976-1977 2 0 0 0 0 2
1977-1978 3 0 0 1 0 4
1979-1980 0 0 1 0 0 1
Totals 7 0 1 5 0 13

A more detailed look at the player's goals

Total Opponent
2 Birmingham City
2 Strømsgodset
1 Barcelona
1 Derby County
1 Hamburg SV
1 Newcastle United
1 Norwich City
1 Real Sociedad
1 Stoke City
1 Sunderland
1 Tranmere Rovers
Total Started/substitutions
13 Started
Total Competition
7 League
2 European Cup Winners Cup
2 UEFA Cup
1 European Super Cup
1 League Cup
Total Goal minute period
1 1-15 minutes
2 16-30 minutes
1 31-45 minutes
3 46-60 minutes
4 61-75 minutes
2 76-90 minutes
Total Goal origin
13 Open play

Assists per season

Season League FA LC Europe Other Total
1973-1974 0 0 1 0 0 1
1974-1975 1 0 0 0 0 1
1975-1976 1 0 0 0 0 1
1976-1977 1 0 0 0 0 1
1977-1978 0 1 0 0 0 1
1978-1979 1 0 0 0 0 1
1979-1980 1 0 0 0 0 1
1980-1981 0 0 1 0 0 1
1981-1982 0 0 1 0 0 1
1982-1983 1 0 0 1 1 3
Totals 6 1 3 1 1 12

A more detailed look at the player's assists

Total Opponent
2 Arsenal
1 Brighton & Hove Albion
1 Chelsea
1 Coventry City
1 Middlesbrough
1 Sheffield United
1 Sunderland
1 Swindon Town
1 Tottenham Hotspur
1 West Ham United
1 Widzew Lodz
Total Competition
6 League
3 League Cup
1 Charity Shield
1 European Cup
1 FA Cup
Total For player
3 Kenny Dalglish
2 Ray Kennedy
1 David Hodgson
1 Graeme Souness
1 Ian Rush
1 Jimmy Case
1 Kevin Keegan
1 Kevin Sheedy
1 Steve Heighway