english football player

Marc Bridge-Wilkinson ( have a bun in the oven 16 March 1979 ) is an english football coach and former musician. A left-sided midfielder and besides a winger, he was known for his goal-scoring ability. He started his career at Derby County in 1998, but rather made his name at Port Vale following his transfer to Vale Park in 2000. He made 140 appearances in four years, scoring 36 goals in all competitions, and lifting the Football League Trophy in 2001. He spent the 2004–05 season with Stockport County, before signing with Bradford City in 2005. He spent two years at Bradford, making 95 a total of appearances. He signed with Carlisle United in 2007, and went on to pick up a Football League Trophy runner-up decoration with the club in 2010. After four years with Carlisle, he joined Darlington in 2011, breaking his political campaign of ten back-to-back seasons in the third tier of English football. With Darlington he lifted the FA Trophy in 2011, before his sign was terminated in January 2012. He was re-signed to Darlington on a non-contract basis until the golf club folded in the summer of 2012. He went on to coach at Huddersfield Town and Liverpool.

Playing career [edit ]

Derby County [edit ]

Born in Coventry, Bridge-Wilkinson was a product of the Derby County youth academy and made his debut for Derby in a 2–1 victory against Liverpool at Anfield on 7 November 1998. [ 3 ] This Premier League clash would be his only appearance for the clubhouse. He joined Carlisle United of the Third Division, where he played seven games in a six-week loan enchantment at the end of the 1998–99 season. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] He returned to Derby and was released by the club at the end of the stick to temper, after which he was given a trial at Port Vale. [ 5 ]

Port Vale [edit ]

Bridge-Wilkinson joined Port Vale on a free transfer following his test and made his debut in a 4–1 defeat at Oldham Athletic on 12 August 2000. The follow week he scored doubly in his first Vale begin when they defeated Oxford United 3–0. [ 6 ] He scored fourteen goals in 52 games throughout his foremost season at Vale, which included one in the final of the Football League Trophy concluding – which Vale won 2–1 over Brentford. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] He besides scored the winner in the Potteries bowler hat in the Northern Section semi-finals with a hundred-and-fifth moment golden-goal punishment. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] He spent much of the next season out with a hamstring injury, and did not feature between August and late-January. [ 11 ] His fall to the side coincided with Vale ‘s climb up the table, and he consequently signed a new biennial contract with the club. [ 12 ] Recovering from a knee injury, [ 13 ] his nine goals in 2002–03 were enough to make him the club ‘s top-scorer, as the Second Division club posted a mid-table finish. He struck seven times in 37 games during the 2003–04 campaign, as the club finished outside of the play-offs on finish remainder. At the end of the season coach Martin Foyle offered him a raw contract at reduce pay due to the club ‘s desperate fiscal position, [ 14 ] [ 15 ] an extend which Bridge-Wilkinson rejected in order to sign for League One rivals Stockport County on a biennial contract in June 2004. [ 16 ]

Stockport County [edit ]

Bridge-Wilkinson made fair 22 starts with Stockport, and in February 2005 joined Bradford City, besides of League One, on a month ‘s loanword conduct to cover for injuries. [ 17 ] The loan soon become a permanent wave transfer .

Bradford City [edit ]

Bridge-Wilkinson made his City debut on 25 February 2005 in a 1–1 draw with Walsall [ 18 ] and after four games he signed a biennial conduct on transfer deadline day to stay at Valley Parade permanently. [ 19 ] He celebrated his new narrow with his first Bradford goal in a 1–1 draw with Doncaster Rovers belated the same day. [ 19 ] He scored another two goals in a 4–1 victory over Brentford, [ 20 ] finishing the season with three goals from his 12 games.

At the begin of the keep up season he missed more than two months after sustaining a knee injury in train. [ 21 ] [ 22 ] [ 23 ] [ 24 ] He finished the season with six goals in forty games. On 16 September 2006, he scored against his former club Port Vale, [ 25 ] but it was just one of four goals for Bridge-Wilkinson that season, as Bradford were relegated into League Two. [ 26 ] He was one of many players released by Bradford in May 2007. [ 27 ]

Carlisle United [edit ]

In June 2007, Bridge-Wilkinson rejoined Carlisle United. [ 4 ] He played 52 games in his foremost full temper at the golf club, including both legs of the League One play-off semi-final with Leeds United. He scored Carlisle ‘s irregular at Elland Road to give his side a 2–1 first branch victory. [ 28 ] however, in the irregular leg he could not help his side avoid a 2–0 frustration. [ 29 ] A regular in 2008–09, he picked up a toe injury in January, which ended his contribution to the campaign. [ 30 ] The trouble was a floating bone in his big toe. [ 31 ] He made 26 appearances in 2009–10, as Carlisle posted a mid-table polish. He besides made an appearance at Wembley Stadium in the Football League Trophy Final, which ended in a 4–1 get the better of to Southampton. [ 32 ]

Darlington [edit ]

Searching for first team football, [ 33 ] in October 2010 he joined Conference National outfit Darlington on loan for one calendar month. [ 34 ] After the midfielder shanghai coach Mark Cooper, [ 35 ] this one calendar month then got extended until January. [ 36 ] [ 37 ] On 18 January 2011, he signed for Darlington on a permanent basis after he was released from Carlisle United two days earlier. [ 38 ] He scored the first hat-trick of his career in a 6–1 victory against Eastbourne Borough on 12 February. [ 39 ] [ 40 ] All Bridge-Wilkinson ‘s goals, which included two penalties, came in the first half and within the space of 14 minutes. [ 41 ] At the conclusion of the campaign he picked up the irregular significant respect of his career, as Darlington lifted the 2011 FA Trophy with a 1–0 victory over Mansfield Town at Wembley. [ 42 ] Darlington suffered fiscal difficulties during Bridge-Wilkinson ‘s fourth dimension at the club and his compress was terminated on 16 January 2012, along with the rest of the play squad and caretaker director Craig Liddle ; he stated that “ to say I feel nauseated is an understatement ”. [ 43 ] however a surprise decisiveness meant that the golf club would continue to complete their persist fixtures, and Bridge-Wilkinson returned to Darlington on a non-contract footing. [ 44 ] Darlington were relegated at the end of the 2011–12 season, having been deducted ten points for entering administration and as the cabaret reformed to Darlington 1883 in the Northern Football League, Bridge-Wilkinson left the baseball club and had a trial at League Two outfit Accrington Stanley. [ 45 ]

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dash of play [edit ]

Bridge-Wilkinson was a good technical midfielder who had an eye for goal. [ 46 ] [ 47 ] He had good composure, movement and possession skills. [ 48 ]

“ He ‘s constantly got a luck of creating you something. He ‘ll give balls away sometimes, but you have to put up with that because he ‘s a apt player. ”Darlington manager Mark Cooper speaking on Bridge-Wilkinson in March 2011.[49]

Coaching career [edit ]

Bridge-Wilkinson spent three years as a bus at the Academy at Huddersfield Town, before he was appointed under-14 bus at Liverpool ‘s Academy in 2015. [ 50 ] He was promoted to under-16 coach in July 2018 and then to under-18 coach in May 2020. [ 51 ]

Statistics [edit ]

Honours [edit ]

Port Vale
Carlisle United
Darlington

References [edit ]