Brian Connor (footballer)

Brian Connor (born 23 April 1969) is a footballer who most recently played for Slough Town in the English Southern Football League Division One South & West. He played international football for Anguilla.

Brian Connor
Personal information
Date of birth (1969-04-23) 23 April 1969 (age 55)
Place of birth Taplow, England
Position(s) Defender
Youth career
Queens Park Rangers
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Slough Town
St. Albans City
Marlow
1996–2005 Maidenhead United 368 (5)
2005–2006 Hampton & Richmond Borough 20 (0)
2007–2008 Slough Town 16 (0)
International career
2008 Anguilla 2 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 22 December 2008

Club career edit

Connor joined Maidenhead United from local rivals Marlow in November 1996. He became a regular, dependable and popular member of Alan Devonshire's team, playing mainly as a sweeper, and such was his level of consistency that he played in all 61 competitive matches in the 1998/99 season.[1]

An Isthmian League Division One promotion winner in 1999/00, Connor also won a Full Members Cup winners medal and four County Cups during his spell at York Road, scoring a memorable match-winner in the Berks & Bucks Senior Cup final against Reading in 1998. Connor started 368 matches for the Magpies – sixth all-time – and, after leaving at the end of the 2004/05 season, was given the honour of a Testimonial that saw Alan Devonshire return to manage a Maidenhead United XI versus a Wycombe Wanderers XI. Connor would join his former Magpies boss, Devonshire, at Hampton & Richmond Borough in 2005. He re-signed for Slough Town, his hometown club, in 2007. He was inducted into the Maidenhead United Hall of Fame, alongside Devonshire, in January 2010.

International career edit

Connor debuted for Anguilla, aged 38, in a February 2008 World Cup qualification match against El Salvador. He also played in the return match, his only two caps by December 2008.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ "150 Countdown | Brian Connor". www.pitchero.com. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  2. ^ Record at FIFA Tournaments - FIFA

External links edit