Eddie Forrest

Edward 'Eddie' Forrest (born 17 December 1978 in Edinburgh) is a Scottish footballer who is currently without a club.

Eddie Forrest
Personal information
Full name Edward Forrest
Date of birth (1978-12-17) 17 December 1978
Place of birth Edinburgh, Scotland
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1996–1999 Stirling Albion 28 (0)
1999–2001 Airdrieonians 48 (2)
2001–2002 Motherwell 13 (0)
2002–2003 Berwick Rangers 11 (0)
2003 Arbroath 10 (1)
2003–2004 Partick Thistle 5 (0)
2004–2006 Forfar Athletic 62 (4)
2006–2008 Ayr United 71 (8)
2008–2010 East Stirlingshire 50 (1)
2010–2011 Airdrie United 9 (1)
Total 304 (17)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Career

Forrest began his career with Stirling Albion, spending three years with The Binos before moving to Airdrieonians in 1999. In June 2000, Forrest was one of just three players to survive the club's financial troubles, with the majority of players released from their contracts.[1] Subsequently, made redundant the following year, Forrest joined Scottish Premier League side Motherwell, only to suffer the same fate in April 2002.[2] Forrest joined Berwick Rangers and had spells with Arbroath, a brief return to the SPL with Partick Thistle, Forfar Athletic and Ayr United before joining East Stirlingshire. He retired from the game after two years with The Shire, but came out of retirement on November 2010 to return to Airdrie, to play for Airdrieonians' successors Airdrie United.[3]

Hoax victim

In July 2003, Paul Browne returned to Arbroath, after Forrest left on the promise of full-time football at Raith Rovers. Arbroath manager John Brownlie signed Browne as a replacement for Forrest, then discovered that Forrest had been duped. A telephone call that Forrest had believed to be from Danny Smith, the Raith chairman, had been a hoax. The caller had been Browne, Forrest's prospective replacement, although Browne argued it was "a friend". Forrest was reinstated at Arbroath and Browne summarily sacked, fleeing Scotland, although Forrest subsequently join Partick Thistle, which led Brownlie to re-sign Browne to fill the defensive gap. Brownlie had to check with captain Andy Dow that the players would accept Browne after the hoax.[4][5][6]

Honours

Airdrieonians
gollark: I think stuff is implicitly int in C if you don't specify?
gollark: Actually, only the last 90 lines are the incomprehensible image generation code.
gollark: Is this... generating the positions of a square "ring" around a point?
gollark: I mean, what?
gollark: ```haskellringAt :: Position -> Int -> [Position]ringAt (x, y) l = sides ++ top ++ bottom where top = [(n + x, l + y) | n <- [-l .. l]] bottom = [(n + x, -l + y) | n <- [-l .. l]] sides = concat [[(l + x, n + y), (-l + x, n + y)] | n <- [1 - l .. l - 1]]```

References

  1. "Sacked Airdrie players to appeal". BBC Sport. 16 June 2000. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  2. "Motherwell axe 19 players". BBC Sport. 29 April 2002. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  3. "Diamonds sign Eddie Forrest". STV Sport. 29 September 2010. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 17 February 2011.
  4. "Browne flees home after hoax". BBC Sport. 6 July 2003. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  5. "Arbroath to forgive hoaxer". BBC Sport. 14 August 2003. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  6. McColl, Graham (23 August 2003). "Strange case of the hoaxer and the Arbroath defender". London: The Times. Retrieved 8 May 2009.
  7. "Airdrie lift Challenge Cup". BBC Sport. 19 November 2000. Retrieved 14 April 2020.}}
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