Player Information
Full name: Frank James Lampard
Date of birth: June 21, 1978
Birthplace: Romford, England
Nationality: English
EU passport: Yes
Height: 177 cms
Weight: 78 kgs
Club: Chelsea
Position: Midfielder [C]
Squad Number: 8
Contract expires: June 2014
Previous clubs: West Ham > Swansea > West Ham > (£11m) Chelsea
International debut: October 1999, v Belgium
International Caps: 50
International Goals: 11
World Cups: Germany 2006
Date of birth: June 21, 1978
Birthplace: Romford, England
Nationality: English
EU passport: Yes
Height: 177 cms
Weight: 78 kgs
Club: Chelsea
Position: Midfielder [C]
Squad Number: 8
Contract expires: June 2014
Previous clubs: West Ham > Swansea > West Ham > (£11m) Chelsea
International debut: October 1999, v Belgium
International Caps: 50
International Goals: 11
World Cups: Germany 2006
Awards
English League Cup (2005, 2007)
English FA Premier League (2005, 2006)
English FA Community Shield (2005)
English FA Cup (2007)
English FA Premier League Footballer of the Year (2005)
Biography
1978
Born June 20 in Romford, Essex. Father, also Frank, was professional footballer with West Ham United.
1992
August: Joins West Ham, where uncle Harry Redknapp is assistant manager, as a trainee. Plays 187 games for the club, scoring 39 times. In 1994, Redknapp becomes manager and Lampard senior is appointed his assistant.
1995
October: On loan to Swansea for 11 games, scores one goal.
1999
October: First appearance for England at home to Belgium.
2001
June: Chelsea manager Claudio Ranieri buys the midfielder for 11 million pounds ($19.45 million).
2002
May: Following a mediocre season, Lampard fails to make England's World Cup squad.
2003
August: Lampard becomes an England regular, notching his first goal against Croatia.
2004
June: Scores three goals at Euro 2004.
July: Named Chelsea vice-captain when Jose Mourinho takes over at Stamford Bridge.
December: Voted England player of the year.
2005
February: Wins first major trophy when Chelsea hoist League Cup.
May: Helps the Blues to their first championship for 50 years with 12 league goals and 18 in total as club's top scorer.
June: Wins English football writers' player of the year award.
November: Runner-up for European Footballer of the Year.
December: Second in Fifa's World Player of the Year award.
2006
April: Helps Chelsea claim its second straight Premier League title.
June 10: Frank Lampard was named Budweiser Man of the Match for his excellent all-round game in England's 1-0 win over Paraguay in their opening match of the 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany.
August 20: Reiterated his desire to stay with the Chelsea for the rest of his playing career. "I see myself being here for a long time," he told BBC.
October 12: Included among the 30 nominees for the FIFA World Player of the Year Award.
October 17: Included among the 50 nominees for the European Footballer of the Year Award.
2007
February 25: Member of the Chelsea squad that won the English League Cup after defeating Arsenal 2-1 in the Millennium Stadium.
March 19: An angry fan raced on to the pitch and threw a punch at Lampard after Chelsea beat Tottenham 2-1 in an FA Cup quarter-final replay. Lampard, who was celebrating with team mates, ducked to miss the punch and the spectator was manhandled to the ground before being led away by security men.
May 1: Lost the Champions League semi-final with Chelsea against Liverpool on penalties 4-1 after drawing 1-1 on aggregate on a dramatic night at Anfield.
May 19: Won the English FA Cup with Chelsea over Man United following a 1-0 extra time victory at the New Wembley.
July 1: Rejected a new Chelsea deal which would have eclipsed the £121,000 a week given to Andriy Shevchenko and Michael Ballack.
August 5: Member of the Chelsea team that lost the English FA Community Shield against Man Utd 3-0 on penalties at Wembley.
August 9: Launched Frank TV, a new Mobile TV programme dedicated to him, available exclusively on OrangeƆs mobile phone TV service.
October 31: Took his tally of goals for Chelsea to 96 when he bagged a hat-trick in the holders? 4-3 victory over Leicester City in a thrilling League Cup fourth-round tie.
2008
February 16: Lampard became the eighth player to score 100 goals for Chelsea, when he scored twice against Huddersfield Town in the FA Cup.
February 24: Member of the Chelsea squad that lost the Carling Cup Final in extra time against Tottenham.
March 12: Scored 4 goals in Chelsea's 6-1 thrashing of Derby County.
April 30: Two days before the funeral of the mother he admits was his guiding light, Frank Lampard scored a vital penalty in extra-time to drive Chelsea towards victory over Liverpool FC in the UEFA Champions League semi-final. It was an act of courage that had team-mates queueing up afterwards to praise him.
May 21: Lost the UEFA Champions League final with Chelsea 6-5 on penalties against Man Utd at Moscow's Luzhniki Stadium. Lampard was rewarded for another trademark surge into the penalty area as two fortunate deflections allowed to tuck home the equaliser. Unlucky to hit the bar in extra-time.
August 13: Signed a five-year contract with Chelsea running until the end of the 2013/14 season, ending a summer of speculation about his future.
August 28: Became the first Chelsea player, and only the second English-based footballer after Beckham nine years ago, to take the UEFA Club Best Midfielder of the Year. He said: "It feels very good. When you see the players that you're up against, there are some world-class players there. I've been up for the award for three years now so it's nice to finally win it."
FIFA World Cup™ Germany 2006 player's profile
Voted England’s Player of the Year by supporters of the national team in 2004 and 2005, Frank Lampard has been an inspirational figure for both club and country in that time. He was England’s top scorer in the qualifiers for the FIFA World Cup™ and provided Chelsea’s main source of goals during their successive Premiership triumphs in 2004/05 and 2005/06.
Lampard, who came second behind Ronaldinho in the 2005 voting for FIFA World Player of the Year, has worked hard to achieve his current status in the game. Steven Gerrard, his partner in England’s midfield, considers him “probably the most improved player in the world” over the last two years, describing his progress in that time as “unbelievable”.
A schoolboy cross-country runner, Lampard his shown plenty of resilience in his rise up the football ladder. It is now ten seasons since Lampard made his debut for West Ham United, the club where he grew up under the watchful gaze of his father and uncle, Frank Lampard Sr and Harry Redknapp, who were assistant manager and manager respectively.
There were ups and downs at Upton Park for the young Lampard, as he recalled when he collected his award for the English Football Writers’ Player of the Year in May 2005. “I remember running on the touchline and being told, ‘Go and sit down with your uncle and dad because you’re not good enough to get on the pitch’,” he said.
Lampard gradually began to fulfil his promise as a goalscoring midfielder, registering seven-goal hauls in each of his last two seasons with West Ham, before he joined Chelsea in an £11million transfer in 2001. By this time he was an England international, having made his debut came against Belgium in 1999, but it was not until the 2003/04 season that he finally won a regular starting place in the national side.
Since coming off the bench to claim his first goal for England in the 3-1 friendly win against Croatia in August 2003, however, Lampard has become a near-permanent presence on Sven-Goran Eriksson’s team sheet. He ended 2003/04 with ten league goals for Chelsea and then struck three times as England reached the last eight at UEFA EURO 2004, his first senior international tournament.
If those figures were impressive then in the intervening two years, Lampard has got even better. Blessed with supreme fitness, a keen eye for goal and, in his own words, “a natural determination to compete”, he has become one of the best attacking midfielders in world football.
He is vice-captain at Chelsea and together with John Terry and Joe Cole brings some English ‘spirit’ to Jose Mourinho’s multi-national collective. Of course, he brings much more than that: Lampard played 164 consecutive league games over the course of the last five seasons and was a key contributor as Chelsea captured successive league titles in 2004/05 and 2005/06, scoring 29 Premiership goals in that period.
For England, Lampard was on target in five of their ten Germany 2006 qualifiers and set the seal on a successful campaign with the winning goals in the final two fixtures against Austria and Poland. He struck from the spot against the Austrians, having taken over the penalty-taking duties from David Beckham, while against Poland it was an exquisite volleyed effort that won the match – a goal struck with the confidence becoming a player at the very top of his game.
© 2001-2006 FIFA, All Rights Reserved
UEFA Champions League 2005-06 player's profile
A dynamic player who possesses a fine range of passing and devastating shooting, Frank Lampard has developed into one of the finest exponents of the midfield player's art.
Club
A graduate of the academy at West Ham United FC, Lampard made his Premiership debut in 1996. He spent a spell on loan at Swansea City FC but was back at Upton Park as West Ham won the UEFA Intertoto Cup in 1999. He joined Chelsea FC for €16m in the summer of 2001 and missed just one Premiership game in his first two seasons at Stamford Bridge. He was Chelsea's best player as they reached the UEFA Champions League semi-final in 2003/04, and played a starring role again the following year, scoring 19 goals as Chelsea won the Premiership title and the English League Cup. That display saw him named as Football Writers' Player of the Year, and he scored 16 goals as the London club retained the Premiership crown in 2005/06.
National team
Lampard made his international debut in October 1999, but missed out on selection for UEFA EURO 2000™ and the 2002 FIFA World Cup. He bounced back to feature at UEFA EURO 2004™, scoring three times before England were knocked out in the quarter-finals by Portugal, but his form was less impressive as England bowed out at the same stage, against the same opponents, at the 2006 World Cup.
Did you know?
Lampard's father Frank twice won the FA Cup with West Ham while his uncle, Harry Redknapp, is the manager of Portsmouth FC.
©uefa.com 1998-2006. All rights reserved.
UEFA EURO 2004™ player's profile
A midfield player who possesses a fine passing range, Frank Lampard is also a tireless worker and regular goalscorer.
National team
Kevin Keegan was in charge when Lampard made his international debut on 10 October 1999, although he was not selected for England's ill-fated UEFA EURO 2000™ campaign, instead captaining the Under-21s. Was selected for Sven-Göran Eriksson's first match but again missed out when the 2002 FIFA World Cup squad was announced. However, Lampard bounced back to play in UEFA EURO 2004™ qualifying.
Club
Like team-mate Joe Cole, he is a graduate of the academy at West Ham United FC. Lampard made his Premiership debut against Sheffield Wednesday FC in 1996 and by 1997/98 - after a spell on loan at Swansea City FC - was a regular. Ever present in 1998/99, he then played 64 matches over the next two seasons to take his tally at Upton Park to 148, scoring 23 goals.
2001: Joined Chelsea FC for €16m and missed just one game in a debut season which saw him net five goals in 37 Premiership matches and feature in the UEFA Cup.
2002/03: For the second time in his career, Lampard did not miss a game, scoring six times as Chelsea finished fourth to reach the UEFA Champions League qualifying round, where they eliminated MŠK Žilina in August 2003.
2003/4: A memorable season for Lampard whose midfield displays earned him second place in the PFA Player of the Year awards. Despite a flood of big name buys, he was consistently Chelsea's best player as they reached the Champions League semi-final and finished second in the Premiership.
Did you know?
Lampard's father, also Frank, twice won the FA Cup with West Ham and his uncle, Harry Redknapp, is the manager of Portsmouth FC.
©uefa.com 1998-2006. All rights reserved.
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