Steve Cherry

Steve Reginald Cherry (born 5 August 1960) is an English former footballer who played as a goalkeeper. He made over 690 league and cup appearances in a 20-year career in the Football League and Conference, playing in the top five divisions of the English game.

Steve Cherry
Personal information
Full name Steve Reginald Cherry[1]
Date of birth (1960-08-05) 5 August 1960[2]
Place of birth Nottingham, England[2]
Height 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)[3]
Position(s) Goalkeeper
Youth career
1976–1978 Derby County
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1978–1984 Derby County 77 (0)
1980–1981Port Vale (loan) 4 (0)
1984–1986 Walsall 71 (0)
1986–1989 Plymouth Argyle 73 (0)
1989Chesterfield (loan) 10 (0)
1988–1995 Notts County 266 (0)
1995–1996 Watford 4 (0)
1996Plymouth Argyle (loan) 16 (0)
1996–1997 Rotherham United 20 (0)
1997 Kettering Town
1997–1998 Rushden & Diamonds 18 (0)
1998 Rothwell Corinthians
1998 Gainsborough Trinity
1998 Stalybridge Celtic 10 (0)
1998 Mansfield Town 1 (0)
1999 Oldham Athletic 0 (0)
2003 Lincoln City 0 (0)
2003–2004 Kidsgrove Athletic
2004 Belper Town
Total 570 (0)
National team
1978 England Youth 3 (0)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Cherry was spotted playing for Calverton Youth Wing by Derby County and joined the club on a two-year apprenticeship in 1976, turning professional two-years later. He won three caps for the England Youth Team in 1978. He started his first competitive senior game in February 1980 and played eight games on loan at Port Vale during the 1980–81 season. He established himself in the first-team at Derby during the 1982–83 season and was voted the club's Player of the Year in May 1983. The club were relegated out of the Second Division at the end of the 1983–84 season and he was transferred to Walsall in August 1984. He was voted as Walsall's Player of the Season at the end of the 1984–85 campaign but lost his first-team place at the end of the following campaign and was sold on to Plymouth Argyle for a £19,000 fee in November 1986. After an initial poor start to his Plymouth career he improved and was named as the club's Player of the Year in 1988. He then asked for a transfer and joined Chesterfield on loan during the 1988–89 season, before being sold to Notts County for a £70,000 fee in February 1989.

Cherry was Neil Warnock's first signing as Notts County manager and the club found instant success under Warnock's stewardship, winning promotions from the Third Division to the First Division via the play-offs in 1990 and 1991. Though County were relegated back into the second tier, he was named as the club's Player of the Year in 1992. He played in two Anglo-Italian Cup finals, as County finished as runners-up in 1994 and champions in 1995. He moved on to Watford in July 1995, before rejoining Plymouth Argyle on loan in February 1996. He helped Plymouth to win the Third Division play-offs in 1996, his third such success with Neil Warnock and fifth appearance at Wembley. He then saw out his career with brief stays at Rotherham United, Kettering Town, Rushden & Diamonds, Rothwell Corinthians, Gainsborough Trinity, Stalybridge Celtic, Mansfield Town, Oldham Athletic, Lincoln City, Kidsgrove Athletic and Belper Town. He won the Staffordshire Senior Cup with Kidsgrove in 2004. He later coached at Notts County and Macclesfield Town.

Early life

Steve Reginald Cherry was born at Nottingham General Hospital on 5 August 1960 and grew up in Calverton, Nottinghamshire.[1] His parents were Harold and Lonorah Cherry, a colliery electrician and housewife respectively.[1] At the age of two he inadvertently saved the life of his family when his teething pains cries woke his mother during the middle of a late night house fire.[4] From an early age he became obsessed with football and goalkeeping.[5] As a teenager he attended a brief goalkeeping course at Nottingham Forest and had an unsuccessful trial with Notts County, though turned down the opportunity to play for Clifton All Whites after feeling dejected from his failed trial with Notts County.[6] In 1975, at the age of 15, he played in goal for local village teams Calverton Colliery and Calverton United, as well as for Calverton Youth Wing.[7]

Playing career

Derby County

Cherry started his career with a five-day trial at Derby County, having been scouted by Ernie Roberts playing for Calverton Youth Wing in a 7–1 defeat to Ilkeston U16s.[8] Having impressed during the trial he was placed in the club's youth-team on wages of £12.50-a-week and in 1976 he signed a two-year apprenticeship contract.[9] He was on the bench for the first round of the UEFA Cup against Irish club Finn Harps in the 1976–77 season due to Colin Boulton being out on loan and Steve Bowtell being illegible.[10] In 1977, youth-team coach Dario Gradi told the Derby Evening Telegraph that Cherry was "a very relaxed goalkeeper with a lot of ability".[11] He was given his first professional contract in 1978, still with six months left to run of his apprenticeship contract.[12] He was called up to the England Youth Team later in the year and on 10 October was capped in a 1–0 victory over Russia in Las Palmas.[13] He played in the next game, a 3–0 win over Las Palmas, but was dropped in favour of John Lukic after a 2–1 defeat to Italy.[14]

Cherry started his first competitive game for Derby as John Middleton was ruled unfit due to a shoulder injury for a First Division fixture against Southampton at the Baseball Ground on 16 February 1980.[15] The match finished 2–2, with David Watson and Graham Baker scoring for the visitors.[16] He kept his first-team place for the following game at home to Tottenham Hotspur, which Derby won 2–1, however he was then sidelined after injuring his ankle slipping on the pavement outside his home whilst trying to prevent his kitten from running away.[17] He returned to the starting eleven in a 3–1 win against Manchester City on 24 April and was named as man of the match.[18] However Derby were relegated at the end of the 1979–80 season and the club signed two new goalkeepers: 34-year old Roger Jones and 24-year old Yakka Banovic.[18]

Cherry was not selected by Derby manager Colin Addison throughout the 1980–81 season and also picked up an ankle injury in October.[19] Upon his return to fitness he joined Port Vale on loan in November.[2] Manager John McGrath had sold regular custodian Trevor Dance, and was forced to enter the loan market after Mark Harrison was struck down with injury.[2] Cherry was in goal for four Fourth Division and four FA Cup games.[2] In his final game for the "Valiants" he conceded 'a comic goal' in a 3–0 defeat at non-League Enfield in a Third Round FA Cup Replay on 6 January 1981, a game that was televised.[2][20] Banovic was transfer-listed early in the 1981–82 season and Cherry was picked as stand in for an injured Jones against Bolton Wanderers on 23 September.[21] The team struggled and Addison was replaced as manager by Johnny Newman in January.[22] Derby finished the campaign 16th in the Second Division, with Cherry limited to four league and four cup appearances.

The 1982–83 season also started badly and Cherry replaced Banovic in goal in October.[23] Though Cherry was pleased with his own performance and that of the team as a whole, losses continued and Newman resigned the following month.[24] New manager Peter Taylor kept Cherry in goal, who would save a penalty from two-time Ballon d'Or winner Kevin Keegan in a 1–0 defeat to Newcastle United at St James' Park on 27 December.[25] On 8 January, he kept a clean sheet as Derby beat East Midlands derby rivals Nottingham Forest 2–0 in the FA Cup.[26] They went on to beat Chelsea in the following round and reached the fifth round of the competition, where they were knocked out by Manchester United.[27] Writing in his autobiography, Cherry cited the defeat to United as his career best performance as he made difficult saves to deny Frank Stapleton, Norman Whiteside and Steve Coppell, and was only beaten late on by Whiteside for the game's only goal.[28] His performance was described on Match of the Day as "a most accomplished exhibition in the art of goalkeeping" by Jimmy Hill, with Bob Wilson adding that he was "brilliant".[29] Derby avoided relegation after going on a 15-match unbeaten run towards the end of the 1982–83 season.[30] Cherry was voted the club's Player of the Year in May 1983.[31]

The 1983–84 season opened with a 5–0 defeat by Chelsea at Stamford Bridge.[31] The team continued to lose games and concede goals, leaving Cherry to bemoan poor defending that frequently left him exposed.[32] Derby performed well in the FA Cup though and Cherry kept a clean sheet in a 0–0 draw away at Plymouth Argyle in the sixth round, denying Gordon Staniforth on multiple occasions. However he conceded directly from a corner kick in the replay and felt "lower than the village idiot".[33] Derby were relegated at the end of the campaign and Cherry rejected new manager Arthur Cox's offer of a new three-year contract starting at £275-a-week.[34] He also turned down an offer of £450-a-week from former Derby manager Tommy Docherty, who was now in charge at Wolverhampton Wanderers.[34]

Walsall

Derby teammate Steve Buckley recommended Cherry to his brother, Walsall manager Alan Buckley, who won Cherry's signature with the promise of a £17,500 signing-on fee.[34] Walsall paid Derby a £25,000 fee in August 1984.[35] He replaced Ron Green as the "Saddlers" number one and enjoyed a good start to the 1984–85 Third Division campaign.[36] Walsall played former club Derby four times during the season as they drew them in the first round of the Associate Members' Cup and Cherry was subjected to taunting from Derby fans throughout the games, which he admitted "was an occupational hazard, but it still gets to you".[37] He was an instant success with the Walsall fans however and was voted as the club's Player of the Season.[38]

Walsall beat Preston North End 7–3 and Port Vale 2–1 (after a replay) to reach the third round of the FA Cup tie against First Division club Manchester City on 4 January 1986.[39] City won the tie 3–1 after Peter Hart's back pass to Cherry was held up in the snow ten yards short of the goalkeeper, leaving Paul Simpson to convert a simple chance to take the lead.[40] Walsall went on to post a sixth-place finish at the end of the 1985–86 season, with former club Derby claiming the third and final automatic promotion place.[41] Buckley was sacked, much to Cherry's surprise, and new manager Tommy Coakley brought in goalkeeper Mark Prudhoe to be the club's new number one.[41] Demoted to the reserves, Cherry was permitted to look for a move away from Fellows Park.[42] Despite being injured with a sprained thumb he came on as a substitute in a youth-team game against Derby County, playing outfield, and scored a headed goal past Mark Grew.[42]

Plymouth Argyle

Cherry was sold to Plymouth Argyle for £19,000 fee in November 1986, having impressed on a week-long trial at the Second Division club, and took a signing-on fee of £18,000.[43] Manager Dave Smith brought him in as a replacement for popular 34-year old goalkeeper Geoff Crudgington, and gave Cherry his debut in a 1–0 defeat at Stoke City on 6 December.[44][45] It was the start of a poor run of form for the "Pilgrims" and Cherry became unpopular with supporters at Home Park.[46] He was booed before the FA Cup tie with Arsenal on 31 January and frequently abused during the match as Plymouth were beaten 6–1.[47] Argyle missed out on the play-offs by three points at the end of the 1986–87 season after losing the final game of the campaign 4–2 at Derby County.[48]

Cherry felt long travelling times from Devon to his Midlands home were not helping his form, so moved to Plymouth in summer 1987.[49] He enjoyed a good 1987–88 season and a much improved relationship with the fans, being rewarded with the club's Player of the Year award with 34% of the vote, more than double the percentage received by second-placed Mark Smith.[50] However he put in a transfer request as he and his wife missed their families in Nottingham.[51] Manager Ken Brown allowed him to live in Nottingham and train at the City Ground with Brian Clough's Nottingham Forest team whilst he looked for a new club and whilst Plymouth looked for a new goalkeeper.[52] The club finally found their replacement in signing Rhys Wilmot from Arsenal, which allowed Cherry to join Chesterfield in the Third Division for a three-month loan period from January.[52] He made his debut for Paul Hart's "Spireites" on 2 January, and recalled making one of his best ever saves in the 3–1 win at Sheffield United.[53] He played his final game for Chesterfield on 11 February, keeping a clean sheet in a 3–0 win over Notts County at Saltergate and impressing County manager Neil Warnock in the process.[54]

Notts County

Cherry was signed by Notts County in February 1989 for a £70,000 fee.[35] He was Neil Warnock's first signing as the club's manager.[55] He started on wages of £425-a-week and took home a signing-on fee of £6,666.[56] He immediately replaced Mick Leonard in goal as Warnock built his own team.[57] County narrowly missed out on the Third Division play-offs at the end of the 1988–89 season after losing just four of their remaining 18 games.[57] He kept a clean sheet on the opening day of the 1989–90 campaign, a 1–0 win at Leyton Orient, and though they were beaten by Blackpool in August, the "Magpies" lost just three of their remaining 22 games in 1989.[58] The team were unbeaten in their final 15 games of the season and qualified for the play-offs in third-place.[59] County secured promotion by winning the play-off final with a 2–0 victory over Tranmere Rovers in Notts County's first ever trip to Wembley.[59]

County adapted well to the Second Division, winning their first four games of the 1990–91 season and going on a run of nine games unbeaten in December.[60] On 16 February, he was described by reporter Sue Mott as being "all reflex and brilliance" as he kept a clean sheet in a 1–0 victory over top-flight Manchester City at Meadow Lane in the fifth round of the FA Cup.[61][62] County lost 2–1 to Tottenham Hotspur in the following round, with Paul Gascoigne's winning goal described as "planted with such precision that even Cherry could do nothing about it" by BBC commentator John Motson.[63] In the league, County won their final seven games of the season to qualify for the play-offs in fourth-place. Cherry was criticised for conceding a scrappy goal in the first leg of the play-off semi-final draw with Middlesbrough, though he would keep his 18th clean sheet of the season as County won the second leg 1–0 to secure a place in the play-off final against Brighton & Hove Albion.[63] In the final a brace from Tommy Johnson and a goal from Dave Regis won the game for County, despite a late consolation goal from Dean Wilkins, winning a promotion for the club and a £12,000 win bonus for each of the players.[64]

The 1991–92 season saw Cherry play top-flight football for the first time in 11 years, and he opened by the campaign by being named as man of the match in a 2–0 defeat to Manchester United at Old Trafford.[65] County picked up 15 points from their opening 11 games and Cherry signed a new four-year contract with the club; chairman Derek Pavis said that Cherry and midfielder Don O'Riordan's signings had "completed the jigsaw" for the club.[66] On 22 October, County beat Sheffield United on a penalty shoot-out in the Full Members' Cup, with Cherry saving four of United's five penalties.[67] Four days later he was named as man of the match in a 2–0 defeat to Arsenal at Highbury, having had to make four diving saves from Ian Wright whilst wearing a pair of gloves borrowed from opposition goalkeeper David Seaman following a mix-up before the game.[68] Another man of the match performance came in the Nottingham derby game on 11 January, in a 1–1 draw at Nottingham Forest.[69] On 25 February, he was credited with saving the life of Wimbledon striker John Fashanu after preventing an unconscious Fashanu from choking on his tongue following a collision with Craig Short.[70] On 10 March, he gave away a penalty, which he subsequently saved to earn another man of the match award, though the 0–0 home draw with Aston Villa left County in the relegation zone.[71] They ended the season with a 2–1 win over Luton Town that saw both clubs relegated, though they would technically remain in the First Division as the Second Division was now renamed due to the creation of the Premier League.[72] A relegation clause in Cherry's contract saw his salary reduced by 20%, though he was named as the club's Player of the Year – his fourth such award at four different clubs.[72]

Cherry was unhappy with his wage reduction and became unsettled early in the 1992–93 season, whilst key first-team players such as Tommy Johnson, Paul Rideout and Dave Regis were sold off to fund a £3.4 million redevelopment of Meadow Lane.[73] Cherry was dropped in favour of Bob Catlin for the season opener at Birmingham City, though was returned to the starting line-up the following week.[74] He kept his place despite the team winning only four of their next 19 games and despite him fracturing a finger in November and playing on with the aid of pain-killing injections.[74] He was named as man of the match during a 0–0 draw at Portsmouth on 19 December, but the team still found wins hard to come by and Warnock was sacked the following month.[75] Warnock's successor, Mick Walker, steered the club to a 17th-place finish as they stabilised in the second tier.[76] However Cherry's weight became an issue as he reached 14 stone, with reporter Ron Hallam describing him as "goalkeeper, wit, raconteur and failed anorexic".[77]

County suffered a poor start to the 1993–94 campaign, losing 11–2 on aggregate to Newcastle United in the second round of the League Cup, with Andy Cole scoring a hat-trick in both legs.[78] County faired much better in the Anglo-Italian Cup, reaching the Wembley final against Brescia after beating Southend United on penalties in the semi-final.[79] Brescia won the final 1–0 after Gabriele Ambrosetti chipped Cherry to claim the game's only goal.[80] The league campaign ended with a 2–0 loss at Oxford United that saw County narrowly miss out on the play-offs with a seventh-place finish.[81]

Walker was sacked in September 1994 and new manager Russell Slade dropped Cherry for Paul Reece in December, saying "he was out of form and when you're bottom of the league you can't complain if the manager makes changes".[81] Howard Kendall replaced Slade as manager the following month and signed Australian goalkeeper Jason Kearton on loan from Everton to be the club's new number one.[82] Cherry put in extra work in training to lose 11 pounds in weight and was rewarded with a place in the Anglo-Italian Cup final game with Ascoli at Wembley on 19 March.[83] Goals from Tony Agana and Devon White were enough to secure a 2–1 victory, though Cherry was substituted on 75 minutes.[84] However County won just one of their remaining ten league games and were relegated in last place at the end of the 1994–95 season, whilst Cherry was released.[85]

Later career

Cherry signed for Glenn Roeder's Watford in July 1995 on a £30,000 a-year salary, with a £15,000 signing-on fee.[86] He had received offers from Norwegian club Tromsø and a club in Hong Kong but decided to remain in England.[86] He featured in just four First Division matches in the 1995–96 season as Kevin Miller was Watford's regular custodian.[35] Cherry left Vicarage Road to return to former club Plymouth Argyle on a three-month loan starting in February, in a move that reunited him with former boss Neil Warnock.[87] He played 19 games for the club and kept a clean sheet for Plymouth in the Third Division play-off final at Wembley, as his team won promotion with a 1–0 victory over Darlington.[88]

Cherry then moved on to Rotherham United, after being offered a two-year contract on £400-a-week (with a £20,000 signing-on fee) at the Don Valley Stadium by management duo Archie Gemmill and John McGovern.[89] However Danny Bergara replaced Gemmill and McGovern as manager before the start of the season, and signed goalkeeper Kevin Pilkington on loan from Manchester United.[89] Cherry started the 1996–97 season in goal as the team picked up just two points from their opening eight league games, with Pilkington taking his first-team place in October.[89] Cherry played 23 league and cup games for the "Millers", before leaving the club by mutual consent in January.[90] He went on to play on a part-time basis for Kettering Town after being contacted by manager Steve Berry.[90] He turned down an offer from Bolton Wanderers manager Colin Todd to be the club's third-choice goalkeeper and instead joined Kettering's Conference rivals Rushden & Diamonds in March 1997 on wages of £400-a-week, with a £20,000 signing-on fee.[90] He played ten games for the Diamonds at the end of the 1996–97 season as the ambitious newly-formed club began to build a strong squad under the ownership of Max Griggs.[91]

Cherry featured eight times at the start of the 1997–98 season before being dropped by manager Brian Talbot.[92] Talbot released him from his contract at Nene Park in September 1997 and set him up for a part-time arrangement at Rothwell Corinthians in the United Counties League Division One.[93] He swiftly joined Northern Premier League Premier Division side Gainsborough Trinity on wages of £165-a-week, with the promise of a £500 signing-on fee from manager Steve Richards.[93] He returned to the Conference with Stalybridge Celtic in January 1998, making ten appearances in a brief stay at Bower Fold.[94] He played the opening game of the Third Division 1998–99 season for Mansfield Town on 9 August 1998, a 3–0 defeat at Brentford, as regular custodian Ian Bowling was unavailable and Steve Parkin needed a goalkeeper for the one match.[94] He later provided cover for Oldham Athletic, with Oldham manager Andy Ritchie providing a £200 fee to be in the match-day squad against Wycombe Wanderers.[94]

Cherry spent three months coaching at Notts County under Sam Allardyce in 1999.[94] He joined Lincoln City as the club's goalkeeping coach in 2001.[95] He spent the 2003–04 season playing for Kidsgrove Athletic in the Northern Premier League Division One and helped the club to win their first Staffordshire Senior Cup with victory over Stafford Rangers in the final.[96] He later played for Belper Town.[96] In 2006 he returned to Notts County as a part-time goalkeeping coach, leaving when Ian McParland replaced Steve Thompson as manager the following year.[96] He was appointed as goalkeeping coach at Macclesfield Town in July 2008, but left the job in May 2010 after an illness required that he undergo heart surgery.[35]

Personal and later life

He married Julie, a factory worker, on 22 December 1979.[15] They divorced in 2012 and he later married Fiona.[97] He began working at Imperial Tobacco in Nottingham in 1999.[98] He published his autobiography, Cherry Picking, in 2019.[99]

Statistics

Source:[100][101][102][91]

Club Season Division League FA Cup Other Total
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Derby County 1979–80 First Division 40000040
1980–81 Second Division 00000000
1981–82 Second Division 40400080
1982–83 Second Division 3103020360
1983–84 Second Division 3805020450
Total 7708040890
Port Vale (loan) 1980–81 Fourth Division 40400080
Walsall 1984–85 Third Division 41030100540
1985–86 Third Division 3004060400
Total 71070160940
Plymouth Argyle 1986–87 Second Division 2101000220
1987–88 Second Division 3703010410
1988–89 Second Division 1501040200
Total 7305050830
Chesterfield (loan) 1988–89 Third Division 1000030130
Notts County 1988–89 Third Division 1800000180
1989–90 Third Division 46010120590
1990–91 Second Division 4604090590
1991–92 First Division 4203050500
1992–93 First Division 4401040490
1993–94 First Division 45030120600
1994–95 First Division 2502060330
Total 26601404803280
Watford 1995–96 First Division 40000040
Plymouth Argyle (loan) 1995–96 Third Division 1600030190
Rotherham United 1996–97 Second Division 2000030230
Rushden & Diamonds 1996–97 Conference 1000000100
1997–98 Conference 80000080
Total 1800000180
Stalybridge Celtic 1997–98 Conference 1000000100
Mansfield Town 1998–99 Third Division 10000010
Career total 57003808206900

Honours

Individual
Notts County
Plymouth Argyle
Kidsgrove Athletic

References

Citations
  1. Cherry 2018, p. 2
  2. Kent, Jeff (1996). Port Vale Personalities. Witan Books. p. 60. ISBN 0-9529152-0-0.
  3. Rollin, Jack (1980). Rothmans football yearbook. London: Queen Anne Press. p. 158. ISBN 0362020175. Retrieved 14 April 2020.
  4. Cherry 2018, p. 1
  5. Cherry 2018, p. 4
  6. Cherry 2018, p. 9
  7. Cherry 2018, p. 10
  8. Cherry 2018, p. 11
  9. Cherry 2018, p. 13
  10. Cherry 2018, p. 17
  11. Cherry 2018, p. 19
  12. Cherry 2018, p. 24
  13. Cherry 2018, p. 28
  14. Cherry 2018, p. 30
  15. Cherry 2018, p. 36
  16. Cherry 2018, p. 37
  17. Cherry 2018, p. 39
  18. Cherry 2018, p. 42
  19. Cherry 2018, p. 45
  20. Fielding, Rob (4 June 2019). "Port Vale Fail 1: Steve Cherry". onevalefan.co.uk. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  21. Cherry 2018, p. 46
  22. Cherry 2018, p. 47
  23. Cherry 2018, p. 49
  24. Cherry 2018, p. 51
  25. Cherry 2018, p. 54
  26. Cherry 2018, p. 56
  27. "England FA Challenge Cup 1982–1983". The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 22 June 2016.
  28. Cherry 2018, p. 65
  29. Cherry 2018, p. 66
  30. Rippon, Anton (28 January 2014). "Peter Taylor's miracle turned to ashes for penniless Rams 30 years ago". Derby Telegraph. Archived from the original on 5 June 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2016.
  31. Cherry 2018, p. 69
  32. Cherry 2018, p. 74
  33. Cherry 2018, p. 75
  34. Cherry 2018, p. 76
  35. "Profile" (PDF). watfordfcarchive.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 November 2014. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  36. Cherry 2018, p. 79
  37. Cherry 2018, p. 81
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  39. Cherry 2018, p. 84
  40. Cherry 2018, p. 85
  41. Cherry 2018, p. 86
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  43. Cherry 2018, p. 88
  44. Cherry 2018, p. 106
  45. "GoS-DB Players". www.greensonscreen.co.uk. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  46. Cherry 2018, p. 107
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  55. "The Story Of Steve Cherry - Magpie Circle". the Nottingham Sport. 17 December 2020. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  56. Cherry 2018, p. 124
  57. Cherry 2018, p. 125
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  60. Cherry 2018, p. 129
  61. "Former Magpies keeper relives finest hour against City in the FA Cup". Nottingham Post. 27 January 2011. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
  62. Cherry 2018, p. 130
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  65. Cherry 2018, p. 134
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  67. Cherry 2018, p. 139
  68. Cherry 2018, p. 140
  69. Cherry 2018, p. 144
  70. Jacob, Gary (24 January 2019). "Bonding with Neil Warnock and sleeping in baths: Steve Cherry's life as a journeyman goalkeeper". The Times. Retrieved 31 December 2020.
  71. Cherry 2018, p. 146
  72. Cherry 2018, p. 148
  73. Cherry 2018, p. 149
  74. Cherry 2018, p. 150
  75. Cherry 2018, p. 151
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  77. Cherry 2018, p. 153
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  80. Cherry 2018, p. 159
  81. Cherry 2018, p. 160
  82. Cherry 2018, p. 161
  83. Cherry 2018, p. 162
  84. Cherry 2018, p. 163
  85. Cherry 2018, p. 165
  86. Cherry 2018, p. 166
  87. Cherry 2018, p. 167
  88. "Pilgrims progress" Archived 1 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine. The Independent. London. 26 May 1996. Retrieved 9 March 2010.
  89. Cherry 2018, p. 172
  90. Cherry 2018, p. 173
  91. "Steve Cherry". rdfc1992. 13 March 2017. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  92. "Steve Cherry". thediamondsfc.com. Retrieved 14 April 2012.
  93. Cherry 2018, p. 176
  94. Cherry 2018, p. 180
  95. Alan Marriott says Scott Loach's dedication is behind the keeper's rise to the top, thisislincolnshire.co.uk
  96. Cherry 2018, p. 182
  97. Cherry 2018, p. 184
  98. "Steve Cherry | Interview". Watford Legends. 26 August 1995. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  99. "Former Derby County, Notts County, Chesterfield and Mansfield Town keeper Steve Cherry's frank autobiography lifts the lid on local clubs and a fine career". Eastwood Advertiser. 14 March 2019. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  100. Steve Cherry at the English National Football Archive (subscription required)
  101. Steve Cherry at Soccerbase
  102. "Stalybridge Celtic - Official Site - Player Profile Steve Cherry". www.stalybridgeceltic.co.uk. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
  103. Cherry 2018, p. 164
Sources
  • Cherry, Steve; Nicholas, Jonathan (2018). Cherry Picking. The Book Guild Ltd. ISBN 978-1912575-831.
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