Paul Gascoigne

Player

Birthday May 27, 1967

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Gateshead, England

Age 56 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 1.77 m

#1683 Most Popular

1946

His father, John (1946–2018), was a hod carrier, and his mother, Carol, worked in a factory.

He was named Paul John Gascoigne in tribute to Paul McCartney and John Lennon of the Beatles.

He is of Irish descent through his grandparents.

He attended Breckenbeds Junior High School, then the Heathfield Senior High School, both in the Low Fell area of Gateshead.

He was noticed by football scouts while playing for Gateshead Boys, though failed to impress in a trial at Ipswich Town.

1967

Paul John Gascoigne (, born 27 May 1967), nicknamed Gazza, is an English former professional footballer who played as an attacking midfielder.

Regarded as one of the best playmakers of his generation and one of the best English footballers of all time, Gascoigne is described by the National Football Museum as "widely recognised as the most naturally talented English footballer of his generation".

Gascoigne was born in Gateshead, County Durham, on 27 May 1967.

1980

Further trials at Middlesbrough and Southampton also proved unsuccessful, before the team he supported, Newcastle United, signed him as a schoolboy in 1980.

Former Ipswich and Newcastle scout Charlie Woods has claimed Ipswich were keen on signing Gascoigne, but once Newcastle got wind they quickly signed up the youngster.

Gascoigne frequently got into trouble with his friend, Jimmy "Five Bellies" Gardner.

The pair were even taken to court and fined over a hit and run incident.

Newcastle chairman Stan Seymour Jr. described Gascoigne as "George Best without brains".

While Gascoigne was successful on the football field, his childhood was marked by instability and tragedy.

Initially, his family lived in a single upstairs room in a council house with a shared bathroom, and moved several times during his early life.

When he was ten, Gascoigne witnessed the death of Steven Spraggon, the younger brother of a friend, who was killed in a traffic collision.

Around this time, his father began to experience seizures.

Gascoigne began developing obsessions and twitches, and was taken into therapy, but soon quit the therapy sessions after his father expressed doubts over the treatment methods.

Gascoigne developed an addiction to gaming machines, frequently spending all his money on them, and also began shoplifting to fund his addiction.

He experienced further tragedy when a friend, whom he had encouraged to join Newcastle United from Middlesbrough, died whilst he was working for Gascoigne's uncle on a building site.

Brian Tinnion met Gascoigne for the first time at the age of 14 when Tinnion signed for Dunston Juniors, another side Gascoigne played for.

Tinnion explained that though Gascoigne eventually became the stand out, by the age of 15, most felt that Ian Bogie would be the top player out of this particular Newcastle youth set up.

Gascoigne decided to provide financially for his family – his parents and two sisters – as he saw professional football as a way of earning more money than the rest of the family were capable of.

He enjoyed football, and later wrote that "I didn't have twitches or worry about death when I was playing football".

1984

Born and raised in Gateshead, Gascoigne signed schoolboy terms with Newcastle United, before turning professional with the club in 1984.

Three years later, he was sold to Tottenham Hotspur for £2.2 million.

1988

Gascoigne represented the England national team from 1988 to 1998, in which he was capped 57 times and scored ten goals.

1990

Gascoigne was immensely popular during his playing career, with television broadcaster Terry Wogan calling him "probably the most popular man in Britain today" in September 1990, and public interest in and adoration for him came to be known as "Gazzamania".

He was part of the England team that reached fourth place in the 1990 FIFA World Cup, where he famously cried after receiving a yellow card in the semi-final with West Germany, which meant he would have been suspended for the final had England won the game.

1991

He won the FA Cup with Spurs in 1991, before being sold to Italian club Lazio for £5.5 million.

1995

In 1995, he was transferred to Rangers for £4.3 million and helped the club to two league titles, a Scottish Cup and a Scottish League Cup.

1998

He returned to England in a £3.4 million move to Middlesbrough in 1998.

He made his debut in the Premier League in the 1998–99 season, having already featured in the 1998 Football League Cup final.

He has been involved in a number of high-profile goal celebrations at both club and international level, including the "dentist's chair" celebration from Euro 96, and mimicking playing the flute with Rangers in 1998, a reference to the Protestant Orange Order.

In the later part of his career, and especially following retirement, Gascoigne's life became dominated by severe mental and emotional problems, particularly alcoholism.

He has been jailed or sectioned on numerous occasions and his struggles receive regular coverage in the British press.

He has frequently attempted to live without alcohol, though rehabilitation programmes have provided only temporary relief.

2000

He switched to Everton in 2000, and later had spells with Burnley, Gansu Tianma and Boston United.

2005

His personal issues ended his coaching career, and he has not worked in football since being dismissed as the manager of Kettering Town in 2005.

2013

He also helped the team to the semi-finals of Euro 96, which included scoring a goal against Scotland, described in 2013 as "one of the most iconic goals in the game's recent history".