Frank Lampard Sr. Football player

Frank Richard George Lampard is a former English football player. Lampard was born to Frank Richard Lampard (1920–1953) and Hilda D. Stiles (born 1928). He has a sister Gwendoline, who is a year younger than himself. He was only five years old when his father died in 1953, aged 33. He debuted for West Ham United in November 1967, and quickly established himself in his preferred left-back position. He won four England Under-23 caps, and debuted for the national team against Yugoslavia in October 1972, the first of two full caps he would win. At club level, he won two FA Cups with West Ham, in 1975 and 1980, and the old second division title in 1981. By the time he left the club on a free transfer at the end of the 1984–85 season, Lampard had played 660 games, scored 22 goals and become one of the most celebrated players ever to pull on the claret and blue jersey. He moved on to Southend United for the 1985–1986 season, then managed by another ex-West Ham star Bobby Moore, and made 38 appearances for the Essex club before deciding to retire. From 1994 to 2001 he returned to West Ham to serve as assistant manager under Harry Redknapp, his brother-in-law. On 24 November 2008, Lampard was appointed as a football consultant to the then new Watford manager Brendan Rodgers and then followed Rodgers to Reading to take up a similar role at the Madejski Stadium.

Personal facts

Frank Lampard Sr.
Birth dateSeptember 20, 1948
Birth place
England national football team , London , East Ham , Essex
Height (meters)1.8288

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Football player

position
Defender (association football)
teams
England national football team
Southend United F.C.
West Ham United F.C.
England national under-21 football team

Frank Lampard Sr. on Wikipedia