Mark Hateley

Player

Birthday November 7, 1961

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Derby, Derbyshire, England

Age 62 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 6ft 3in

#31199 Most Popular

1961

Mark Wayne Hateley (born 7 November 1961) is an English former professional footballer who played as a striker.

He started his career with Coventry City in the First Division of English football.

Hateley was born in Derby on 7 November 1961.

His father, Tony, was also a professional footballer who played as a striker for such clubs as Notts County, Aston Villa, Coventry City and Chelsea.

Hateley trained with Nottingham Forest whilst still at school; however, he was rejected by then-manager Brian Clough, who did not believe he was sufficiently talented.

1983

A spell followed at English Second Division club Portsmouth, where he ended the 1983–84 season as the club's top goalscorer.

Upon leaving school, he joined Coventry City and started his career in professional football, playing over 90 games in the First Division before moving to Portsmouth in the Second Division in the summer of 1983.

He scored 22 league goals for them in the 1983–84 season.

1984

He then moved to Italian club A.C. Milan, where he suffered several injuries (requiring four operations); however, he did score the winning goal against city rivals Inter Milan in 1984.

From 1984 to 1992, Hateley made 32 appearances for the England national team, scoring nine goals.

On 28 June 1984, he was transferred to A.C. Milan for £1 million.

He scored a decisive and historic match-winning goal in a 2–1 win against Inter in the Milan Derby on 28 October 1984, beating out former Milan defender Fulvio Collovati with a header; this was the first time Milan had beaten Inter in the Derby in six years.

On 2 June 1984, Hateley was capped for England at senior level for the first time in a 2–0 friendly defeat to the USSR.

In his next game, eight days later, he scored in a 2–0 victory over Brazil, to date England's only away victory against Brazil.

1986

He was a member of the squads for the 1986 FIFA World Cup and UEFA Euro 1988.

1987

In 1987, Hateley signed for French club Monaco, winning Ligue 1 in his first season at the Monegasque club.

Arsène Wenger then brought him to AS Monaco, his first signing for the club, in 1987 and he was part of the team which won the French Division 1 title in 1987–88.

Ayrton Senna lived in the apartment below him, and Boris Becker lived next door, during part of his time in Monaco.

Senna played five-a-side football with Hateley.

1989

Rangers were league champions in every season that Hateley played for them (scoring 85 Scottish Premier Division goals in the process), as they went on a run of nine successive titles, which lasted from 1989 until 1997.

1990

In 1990, he signed for Scottish Premier Division club Rangers.

After three years at Monaco, a 28-year-old Hateley returned to Britain in a £1 million move to Rangers on 19 July 1990, taking an 80% reduction compared to his pay at Milan.

Manager Graeme Souness had attempted to bring him to Ibrox three years earlier from Milan.

1991

He scored 112 goals for the Gers in all competitions, including two that clinched the championship on the final day in 1991 and one in each of the narrow Scottish Cup final victories in 1992 and 1993.

1992

As for Hateley's renowned strike partnership at Rangers with Ally McCoist, Hateley said: "Alistair was the perfect partner for me. As a finisher, he was an unbelievable goal scorer. He linked with me. All the goal scorer does is he looks at the leader of the line and makes sure he's offset, fifteen yards away. It was a great partnership" In 1992–93, Rangers scored 97 goals.

McCoist won the European Golden Boot, with 49 of them, and Hateley scored 29.

1993

In his five-year spell in Glasgow, he was a part of a title-winning squad in every season, and he attained personal success in the 1993–94 season, as he was voted both the SFWA Footballer of the Year and the SPFA Players' Player of the Year, as well as the league's top goalscorer with 22 goals.

Hateley became a key part of the Rangers side, and was voted player of the year by the Scottish Football Writers in 1993–94.

He finished in third place for the SFWA award in 1993.

1995

After making 218 appearances for Rangers, he moved to Queens Park Rangers in November 1995, for a fee of £1.5 million.

He had just recovered from having concurrent operations on his knee and ankle.

Hateley said in 2021: "My dad always said to never make a decision when injured, or in ill-health, because invariably it will be the wrong decision, an emotional decision. I knew after literally ten days that it was the wrong move."

1997

He briefly rejoined the club in 1997, as there were no available forwards for the Old Firm match, but was sent off on his second debut.

In early 1997, with Rangers trying to win their ninth title in a row and with a long injury list, manager Walter Smith desperately needed a striker, and re-signed Hateley for £300,000 to play in the vital game against Rangers' biggest rivals Celtic.

Rangers won the game 1–0, but Hateley was sent off for headbutting Stewart Kerr.

He played four times in his second spell at Rangers, scoring once, and transferred to Hull City in July 1997, where he fulfilled the role of player-manager.

Hateley managed Hull from the summer of 1997 until November 1999.

1999

In 1999, Hateley was named as part of Rangers' greatest-ever team, and in 2003 he was inducted to Rangers' Hall of Fame.

Hateley ended his playing career with Ross County in September 1999, playing two games for them.

"It was a great time. I really did enjoy myself up there. It was a logistic nightmare for me, because I was staying down in Derby and going through a divorce. I was having to fly from East Midlands into Glasgow and then I had twenty minutes to make a connection to get up there, and I could never make it."