Andros Townsend

Andros Darryl Townsend (born 16 July 1991) is an English professional footballer who plays as a winger for Premier League club Crystal Palace and the England national team.

Andros Townsend
Townsend playing for Crystal Palace in 2016
Personal information
Full name Andros Darryl Townsend[1]
Date of birth (1991-07-16) 16 July 1991[2]
Place of birth Leytonstone, England
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.81 m)[3]
Position(s) Winger[4]
Club information
Current team
Crystal Palace
Number 10
Youth career
2000–2009 Tottenham Hotspur
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2009–2016 Tottenham Hotspur 50 (3)
2009Yeovil Town (loan) 10 (1)
2009Leyton Orient (loan) 22 (2)
2010Milton Keynes Dons (loan) 9 (2)
2010Ipswich Town (loan) 13 (1)
2011Watford (loan) 3 (0)
2011Millwall (loan) 11 (2)
2012Leeds United (loan) 6 (1)
2012Birmingham City (loan) 15 (0)
2013Queens Park Rangers (loan) 12 (2)
2016 Newcastle United 13 (4)
2016– Crystal Palace 155 (13)
National team
2006–2007 England U16 3 (0)
2007–2008 England U17 6 (2)
2009–2010 England U19[5] 6 (0)
2012–2013 England U21[6] 3 (0)
2013– England 13 (3)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 22:41, 8 February 2021 (UTC)
‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 23:25, 13 July 2019 (UTC)

A graduate of the Tottenham Hotspur academy and featuring in various England youth teams, Townsend was initially loaned out to several League One and then Championship clubs alongside limited Tottenham appearances, before gaining his Premier League debut on 16 September 2012. After further limited appearances and then a half-season loan to Premier League club Queens Park Rangers, Townsend established himself as a Tottenham player for the 2013–14 and 2014–15 seasons. He subsequently fell out of favour at Tottenham, and following a short spell at Newcastle United in the 2015–16 season, he transferred to Crystal Palace in the summer of 2016.

In his senior international career, Townsend earned his first England cap on 11 October 2013, and has gone on to make thirteen appearances, scoring three goals.

Club career

Early career

Townsend joined the Tottenham Hotspur academy at the age of eight.[7] In March 2009, he went on loan to Yeovil Town,[8] making his football league debut against Milton Keynes Dons alongside fellow Spurs academy player Jonathan Obika.[9] He made ten appearances and scored one goal for Yeovil as they avoided relegation.[10]

Initial loans

Townsend entered the senior Tottenham team under manager Harry Redknapp. In August 2009, he went on a month's loan to League One club Leyton Orient, extended at the end of the month to the end of December, after which he returned to Tottenham.[11][12] In 26 appearances for Orient, Townsend scored twice, including a "great goal" in a 3–3 draw against Yeovil, passing three opposing players with a run that began in his own half, leading the opposition manager to lament that his players had not been more ruthless and taken him down with a professional foul.[13]

Having not yet made his Tottenham debut, on 14 January 2010, Townsend was again taken on loan by a League One club, Milton Keynes Dons, until the end of the season, although he was recalled after just two months due to injuries.[14] In nine matches for the Dons he had scored twice. The season ended without Townsend having made his debut for Tottenham.

On 12 August 2010, Townsend signed another season-long loan, moving up to the Championship level with Ipswich Town, but this was terminated on 20 December, as Redknapp believed he had not been playing regularly enough.[15][16] He had played 16 times, scoring once.

Tottenham debut and further loans

Townsend with Tottenham Hotspur in 2010
Townsend playing for Watford in 2011

On 9 January 2011, Townsend marked his senior Tottenham debut in a third round FA Cup tie at White Hart Lane against Charlton Athletic, scoring the first goal and being voted Man of the Match.[17] This proved to be his only appearance for Tottenham for the rest of the season, with two further loan spells occurring. He joined Championship club Watford on 20 January 2011 on loan until the end of the season, but this was terminated early, on 23 February, with Townsend having made three appearances.[18][19] On 7 March, Townsend again went on loan to a Championship club until the end of the season, this time Millwall.[20] By April he said he would be happy to stay at the club beyond his loan spell.[21] In 11 appearances he scored twice.

European football and further loans

For the first half of Tottenham's 2011–12 season, Townsend was a regular in their Europa League campaign, making six appearances in the competition, scoring his second goal for the club in their final match in the competition against Shamrock Rovers on 15 December 2011, curling in a shot from outside the box.[22] On 23 December, he signed a contract extension, making him a Tottenham player until the end of the 2016 season.[23]

With only one other appearance for Tottenham, in the League Cup, on 1 January 2012, Townsend joined Championship club Leeds United on loan until the end of the season, but with his agent claiming he was unhappy at the club, he switched the loan to their Championship rivals Birmingham City in February.[24][25][26] At Leeds, he made seven appearances, including a Man of the Match performance on his debut, and scored one goal.[27][28] At Birmingham, he made 16 league appearances, including in their second leg tie in the unsuccessful Championship promotion playoff against Blackpool.

Premier League debut

Townsend remained with Tottenham for the first half of their 2012–13 season, with the club now under a new manager, André Villas-Boas, who replaced Redknapp in the summer. He made his Premier League debut with a late substitution appearance on 16 September. Although appearing a further four times in the Premier League, these were all still late substitute appearances. Outside the league he made a further five appearances, once in the League Cup and FA Cup respectively, and three times in the Europa League. He scored his third Tottenham goal in the League Cup, a fine individual effort in a 3–0 victory against Carlisle United in the third round.[29]

Loan to Queens Park Rangers

On 31 January 2013, Townsend followed Redknapp to Premier League club Queens Park Rangers on a loan deal until the end of the season.[30] He made twelve appearances for the club, including a Man of the Match performance on his debut, scoring two goals in March, a dipping volley from outside the penalty area in a 3–1 win at home to Sunderland, and an equalising deflection in a 3–2 away loss to Aston Villa.[31][32][33] QPR were ultimately relegated, and Townsend returned to his parent club.

Established in the first team

Now back at Tottenham, Townsend started the second Premier League match of their 2013–14 season, and went on to make a total of 33 appearances, including 25 in the league. He scored twice, in a 5–0 away victory over Dinamo Tbilisi in the Europa League (his first match of the season), and his first in the Premier League in a 2–0 victory away to Aston Villa on 20 October 2013.[34][35] In the middle of the season, Townsend came under the management of his third Tottenham boss, after Villas-Boas was replaced by Tim Sherwood.

With Sherwood's contract terminated at the end of the season, Townsend started the club's 2014–15 season under new manager Mauricio Pochettino. He made a total of 35 appearances, scoring 5 goals, but was reduced to just 17 appearances in the league, having been unable to hold down a starting place until the second half of the season.[36] He started as Tottenham lost 2–0 to Chelsea in the 2015 League Cup Final at Wembley Stadium on 1 March.[37]

Out of favour

On 4 November 2015, having not started a league match of the 2015–16 season, Townsend was dropped from the squad following a touchline argument with the club's fitness coach.[38] With Townsend having apologised, Pochettino allowed him to return to the squad by 17 November, and stated the matter was over and he was available for selection again.[39] He never made a first team appearance for Tottenham following the incident, being an unused substitute three times, the last time on 10 December.[40]

Newcastle United

Townsend playing for Newcastle United in 2016

On 26 January 2016, having still not started a league match, Tottenham agreed a transfer fee with Newcastle United for Townsend, reportedly £12 million.[41] Before the fee had been announced, Townsend had already tweeted a goodbye message, and stated "As soon as I knew of Newcastle's interest they were the only club I wanted to join...Two of the best positions you can play in football are centre-forward and left wing at Newcastle. I've got the chance. I could never turn that down. I can't wait to play my first game at St James' Park".[42] The transfer was confirmed the following day, a five-and-a-half-year contract but with the club declining to disclose the fee. On signing, his new manager, Newcastle head coach Steve McClaren, said of Townsend that he is a "winger with an old-fashioned style. He can play on the right or the left, is two-footed, quick, very direct and loves taking on defenders and crossing the ball."[43] According to Sky Sports, the transfer had been under negotiation for a week and Newcastle had initially wanted Townsend on loan, and then had a transfer offer of £10.5m rejected.[40]

Despite his debut for Newcastle being in a disappointing team performance in an away defeat, at the next match, his home debut, he was given a standing ovation after a Man of the Match performance which saw Newcastle climb out of the relegation places.[44][45] His first goal for the club came in his third match, a shot from just outside the area, but it was just a 90th minute consolation goal in a 5–1 away defeat to Chelsea.[46]

Crystal Palace

Townsend playing for Crystal Palace in 2016

On 1 July 2016, Townsend joined Premier League club Crystal Palace on a five-year contract from Newcastle following their relegation to the Championship.[47] Palace triggered his £13 million release clause just six months after he joined from Tottenham.[48] He was originally assigned the number 17 shirt for his first season with Palace. However, after Yannick Bolasie left for Everton, Townsend was reassigned the vacant number 10 shirt previously worn by Bolasie.[49] On 19 August 2019, Townsend was nominated for 2019 FIFA's Puskas Award for his volley against Manchester City.[50]

Role within the loan system

Having had nine loan spells, Townsend's career path to regular first team football for Tottenham is often discussed in the context of a wider debate in English football about the best way to develop young talent, contrasting the loan route with Premier League players being developed in Under-21 leagues, or being brought to the Premier League level via transfers from lower league clubs. According to his father, the loan spells were the making of his son's career, while Tottenham's former Director of Football Damien Comolli, who was dismissed in October 2008, believes Townsend succeeded in spite of the way Tottenham handled him.[51][52]

International career

Youth levels

Townsend represented England at under-16, under-17 and under-19 level. He played three times for the under-16s between 2006 and 2007, making his debut in a 1–1 draw away with Wales on 20 October 2006 and his last appearance in a 2–0 away loss to Germany in April 2007.[53] He scored twice on his under-17 debut, in a 6–1 win over Northern Ireland in August 2007,[54] and went on to make six appearances, the last in a 0–0 draw with Portugal on 5 February 2008.[53]

Townsend received his first call up to the England under-21 team in October 2012 for the Euro 2013 play-off matches against Serbia.[55] He made his debut in the first leg as a 65th-minute substitute for Liverpool's Raheem Sterling.[56]

In May 2013, Townsend was charged by The Football Association over alleged breaches of its rules on betting. He subsequently voluntarily withdrew from England's squad for the upcoming European Under-21 Championship finals.[57] He later admitted to charges under the FA's rules for breaching football betting regulations. After a personal hearing, he was fined £18,000 and suspended for four months backdated to 23 May 2013, with three months suspended until 1 July 2016.[57]

Senior team

Townsend's first call-up to the senior England squad came in September 2013, for the World Cup qualifiers against Moldova and Ukraine.[58] He made his senior debut in the starting eleven against Montenegro in the World Cup qualifier on 11 October, aged 22 years 87 days. He was involved in England's first goal in a 4–1 win, scored the third with a "low swerving finish" from outside the penalty area after 78 minutes, two minutes before being substituted, and was named man of the match.[59] He earned a second cap in the World Cup qualifier against Poland, a playing almost all of the 2–0 home win, on 15 October 2013.[60] Two further appearances came in the November friendlies, a 57th minute sub appearance in the 2–0 home defeat to Chile, and a full match in the 1–0 loss to Germany.[61][62] His fifth cap came as a very late substitute in a March 2014 friendly, a 1–0 home win over Denmark.[63]

A second England goal came in the Euro 2016 qualification campaign in a 5–0 win over San Marino on 9 October 2014, as he came on for the final third of the match.[64] His next appearance marked his third England goal; on 31 March 2015 he scored the equaliser in the 79th minute against Italy, having come on as a 70th minute sub in a friendly match which ended 1–1.[65] The 20-yard strike was described as a "sweet right-foot drive into the bottom corner"; Townsend took to Twitter immediately after the match to respond to Paul Merson after he had said Townsend's club form did not justify him being anywhere near the England team.[36] His eighth and ninth caps came in June 2015, first as a 66th minute sub in the 0–0 away draw to Ireland in a friendly on 7 June 2015, before playing for the first two-thirds of a 3–2 away win over Slovenia on 14 June 2015 in the Euro 2016 qualifiers.[66][67] His tenth cap was in another Euro 2016 qualifier, this time as a 73rd minute sub in the 3–0 away win over Lithuania on 12 October.[68]

Personal life

Townsend was born in Leytonstone, Greater London. He is of paternal Jamaican and maternal Greek Cypriot descent.[69] He was brought up in Chingford, and is a lifelong Tottenham fan. He attended Rush Croft Sports College.[10] When Townsend was 10, his half-brother Kurtis died in a car accident, aged 18.[70]

Townsend was filmed singing the song Stand By Me by Ben E. King with the rest of the Tottenham youth players in the dressing room, which became a popular internet video.[71]

Townsend said in a December 2019 interview that he had been a problem gambler, compulsively betting online on football. He lost £46,000 on a single bet in 2012 on the night before a play-off game for Birmingham. After being caught for breaking the FA's anti-betting rules, he went to counselling.[72]

Career statistics

Club

As of match played 8 February 2020
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League FA Cup League Cup Other Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Tottenham Hotspur 2008–09[73] Premier League 0000000000
2009–10[74] Premier League 000000
2010–11[75] Premier League 001111
2011–12[76] Premier League 00106[lower-alpha 1]171
2012–13[77] Premier League 5010113[lower-alpha 1]0101
2013–14[78] Premier League 25100107[lower-alpha 1]1332
2014–15[79] Premier League 17231619[lower-alpha 1]2356
2015–16[80] Premier League 3000103[lower-alpha 1]070
Total 503521022849311
Yeovil Town (loan) 2008–09[73] League One 101101
Leyton Orient (loan) 2009–10[74] League One 22200202[lower-alpha 2]0262
Milton Keynes Dons (loan) 2009–10[74] League One 9292
Ipswich Town (loan) 2010–11[75] Championship 13130161
Watford (loan) 2010–11[75] Championship 3030
Millwall (loan) 2010–11[75] Championship 112112
Leeds United (loan) 2011–12[76] Championship 611071
Birmingham City (loan) 2011–12[76] Championship 1501[lower-alpha 3]0160
Queens Park Rangers (loan) 2012–13[77] Premier League 122122
Newcastle United 2015–16[80] Premier League 134134
Crystal Palace 2016–17[81] Premier League 3633010403
2017–18[82] Premier League 3621020392
2018–19[83] Premier League 3864132459
2019–20[84] Premier League 2410010251
2020–21[85] Premier League 2111010231
Total 15513918217216
Career total 3193115323431438842
  1. Appearances in UEFA Europa League
  2. Appearances in Football League Trophy
  3. Appearance in Championship play-offs

International

As of match played 15 November 2016[86]
Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
England 201341
201421
201541
201630
Total133
As of match played 15 November 2016. England score listed first, score column indicates score after each Townsend goal.[86]
List of international goals scored by Andros Townsend
No. Date Venue Cap Opponent Score Result Competition Ref.
1 11 October 2013Wembley Stadium, London, England1 Montenegro3–14–12014 FIFA World Cup qualification[59]
2 9 October 2014Wembley Stadium, London, England6 San Marino4–05–0UEFA Euro 2016 qualification[64]
3 31 March 2015Juventus Stadium, Turin, Italy7 Italy1–11–1Friendly[65]

Honours

Tottenham Hotspur

England U19

Individual

References

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