Everything about Micky Quinn totally explained
» For other people with a similar name, see Michael Quinn (disambiguation).Liverpool
| countryofbirth =
England
| position =
Striker (retired)
| youthyears = 1978-1979
| youthclubs =
Derby County
| years = 1979-1981
1982-1983
1983-1985
1985-1988
1989-1992
1992-1994
1994
1994
1995-1996
| clubs =
Wigan AthleticStockport CountyOldham AthleticPortsmouthNewcastle UnitedCoventry City→
Plymouth Argyle (loan)
→
Watford (loan)
PAOK Thessaloniki FC Total
| caps(goals) =
Michael "Micky" Quinn, (born
May 2 1962 in the
Cantril Farm estate in
Liverpool), is a retired
English footballer. He played as a centre-forward for the vast majority of his career. However, despite being a consistent goalscorer, he was more notorious for his large build.
Following his retirement from football in 1996, Quinn has become a professional racehorse trainer and now has stables at
Newmarket in
Suffolk. He also covers
horse racing and
football for the radio station
TalkSPORT.
Quinn was the first born child of Michael and Patricia Quinn. In total they'd three more children: Mark,
Sean and Patricia junior. They all lived in a house on the Cantril Farm overspill estate just outside Liverpool. Michael senior worked in the local docks and later found employment as a taxi driver.
Quinn began his career as an apprentice with
Derby County, but didn't make any first team appearances and turned professional on joining
Wigan Athletic in September 1979. Shortly afterwards he came to the attention of
Social Security after being reported for claiming unemployment benefit while being employed full-time by Wigan Athletic. He explains his actions by saying that he was earning a mere £35-a-week wages at the time and his father was "hardly earning a king's ransom" from his job as a taxi driver. He had decided to continue signing on and claiming unemployment benefit to help his family, but quickly withdrew his claim.
His first child, a boy called Michael, was born four months later. He moved to
Stockport County in June 1982 and then to
Oldham Athletic in January 1984.
Quinn joined
Portsmouth in March 1986 and finished the season as their leading goalscorer during their
Second Division promotion campaign.
Quinn was sold to
Newcastle United for £650,000 in July 1989, just after their relegation to the Second Division. He scored four goals on his debut against
Leeds United and finished as the division's top goalscorer in
1989-90 with 34 league goals. Newcastle were beaten to the automatic promotion places by Leeds and
Sheffield United, and their promotion hopes were ended when they lost to
Sunderland in the playoffs.
During his first six months at
Highfield Road, Quinn scored 17 Premiership goals - 10 of them in his first 6 games. His performances were not enough to bring
Coventry City beyond 15th place in the final table, but they improved to 11th place the following season with Quinn still scoring regularly. Quinn featured regularly for Coventry during the 1993-94 season, still scoring goals on a regular basis, but in September 1994 Coventry signed
Dion Dublin and Quinn lost his place in the team. He had unproductive loan spells with
Plymouth Argyle (in November 1994) and
Watford (in March 1995) before leaving on a free transfer at the end of the season.
Quinn appeared on BBC TV's
Football Focus as part of their 'Cult Heroes' series in 2005, inspired by his relatively prolific two seasons as Highfield Road. Whilst at Coventry, he was nicknamed 'Sumo' and was famously quoted as being the Premiership's 'fastest player over a yard'. Quinn was also seriously considered for inclusion into the England football squad during 1993.
On leaving Coventry, Quinn had a brief spell playing in
Greece with
PAOK Thessaloniki FC. Around this time, his youngest brother Sean (a former apprentice footballer with Liverpool and later Portsmouth) died suddenly at the age of 26. Shortly afterwards, his mother Patricia died of cancer aged 52.
Quinn applied for the manager's job at
Burnley in 1996, but it went to
Adrian Heath instead, and he decided to retire from football and concentrate on his career as a racehorse trainer.
In August 2001, he was suspended from racehorse training for two-and-a-half years after the
RSPCA found that three horses in his care were being neglected. His ban from the sport was later reduced to one year on appeal.
In 2003 he released his autobiography
Who Ate All The Pies?.
In 2005 he signed a contract with the newspaper
Cambridge Evening News, where he'd his own column entitled
Who Ate All The Pies?. Here he comments on various aspects of football, sport and the world.
He appeared on the 2006 series of
Celebrity Fit Club, weighing more than 18 stone and finished the programme as Mr Fit Club, having lost 24% of his initial body weight and now feeling refreshed. This later led
Harvey Walden, the US Marine instructor, on the series comparing him to
The Incredible Hulk.
He has most recently been seen on
May 14 2006 playing for Italy in the Celebrity World Cup
Soccer Six tournament in
Birmingham,
UK.
Quinn was the co-host of Drive Time on Talksport with Adrian Durham until recently when he was replaced by Ian Wright.
While at Portsmouth the fans' chant for him was, "He's fat, he's round, he's worth a million pound - Micky Quinn!"
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