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Richie Barker - CRAWLEY Manager



Edgefield

Edgefield
Jul 20, 2008
145
London
Not sure I'd agree that he was quality. Certainly gave 100 percent and I thought he was ok but he was definitely not popular with the majority of the 3k odd fans who went to Gillingham so I am curious as to why he has this legendary aura. Has the fact that he tried hard in an era when we were shit clouded people's memories.

What a surprise no target man is ever popular with brighton fans, they dont ever respect the guy up front who takes the knocks and specialises in the physical shift. He came into a team who were getting outmuscled every week and added some much needed strength, he didnt initially look able to score goals but by the time Micky Adams came he was a decent goalscorer and did ok for Rotherham at this level after he left us.
 




Silkster365

Oooo its a corner
Feb 21, 2009
666
Rustington
I will have a go.

He was one of the few good news stories from Gillingham - he always gave his all and in a game where goals count - he scored them for us.

He was always positive, and was approachable and friendly. On the day of the Referendum Vote - he was one player who appeared at least to be pleased to be able to help (as opposed so say Mark Walton to name but one).

After he left - and there is a debate about whether he was pushed or jumped - he stood on the terrace when we were away at Mansfield one evening.

Then he showed he could play by having a career at a higher level than the Albion for a lot of his time.

And he has great hair.

And it sometimes gets mentioned on here - but the goal he scored at London Road after a cross from Rod Thomas and a switch from Jeff Minton ("walkin' along - smokin' a bong") was a highlight of the period.

Dark days for the Club - but Richie at least tried to make it enjoyable.

I remember that goal at London Road - what a brilliant day out that was. All too rare back in those days!
 










Gwylan

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
31,715
Uffern
but he was definitely not popular with the majority of the 3k odd fans who went to Gillingham

Don't agree with this. He was a hugely popular player there (not difficult considering the amount of dross there was around) and his workrate was much appreciated. I remember him getting a big cheer when he came on as a sub at Withdean a couple of years later. So, no, this is not time clouding people's memories.

I think it's a bit of an exaggeration to say he has a "legendary aura" though. The Bear will be remembered as a whole-hearted player, who worked his socks off up front in a poor team. Nice guy, goodish player but no legend.
 


BUTTERBALL

East Stand Brighton Boyz
Jul 31, 2003
10,269
location location
Scored vital goals for us at the most difficult time in our history - Richie Barker is an Albion hero. Good luck to him at Crawley, hope he does well.
 


Icy Gull

Back on the rollercoaster
Jul 5, 2003
72,015
He was a hugely popular player there (not difficult considering the amount of dross there was around) QUOTE]

Hmmm, I can remember cringing at the ironic "Barker's scored a goal he's scored a goal etc" chant when he eventually found the net and was running around in joy. He had definitley being getting abuse right up until that time. He seemed to become hugely popular AFTER he left, but maybe that's just my bad memory :shrug:

Like DKM I'd be interested to know how long that first goal took to come, I feel sure it was ages??
 




Icy Gull

Back on the rollercoaster
Jul 5, 2003
72,015
He scored in his 16th game for us against Hull at Gillingham. He also scored a week later in the last match of the season away to Lincoln, ending with 2 goals in 17 games that season. Up to that point, he wasn't hugely popular and, like you, I can remember the sarcastic chant being sung at Priestfield when he finally hit the scorebag.

The next season, the second at Gillingham, he scored 12 goals and was really popular as he and Hart were actually extremely effective up front and we did quite well until Jeff Wood worked his magic.


Thanks for that CB, makes sense as to why he became popular I was only remembering half the story
 


Simster

"the man's an arse"
Jul 7, 2003
54,760
Surrey
I remember that goal at London Road - what a brilliant day out that was. All too rare back in those days!
Spot on. I too remember it well, an absolutely text book header on Boxing Day and it moved us up to 7th or something, which was unheard of at that time.
 








Curious Orange

Punxsatawney Phil
Jul 5, 2003
10,144
On NSC for over two decades...
Don't agree with this. He was a hugely popular player there (not difficult considering the amount of dross there was around) and his workrate was much appreciated. I remember him getting a big cheer when he came on as a sub at Withdean a couple of years later. So, no, this is not time clouding people's memories.

I think it's a bit of an exaggeration to say he has a "legendary aura" though. The Bear will be remembered as a whole-hearted player, who worked his socks off up front in a poor team. Nice guy, goodish player but no legend.

I seem to recall from my few visits to Gillingham that someone had actually created a banner for the Bear, I seem to remember he had quite a nice partnership with Harty, so was disappointed when he left.
 




dejavuatbtn

Well-known member
Aug 4, 2010
7,496
Henfield
What a surprise no target man is ever popular with brighton fans, they dont ever respect the guy up front who takes the knocks and specialises in the physical shift. He came into a team who were getting outmuscled every week and added some much needed strength, he didnt initially look able to score goals but by the time Micky Adams came he was a decent goalscorer and did ok for Rotherham at this level after he left us.

This, particularly when we were looking for a bit more effort from a generally weak team. By the time he had some decent people around him, he was scoring goals and I was pretty pissed off when he left - but you had to appreciate his reaons for leaving.
Anyway, if he had stayed we may never have seen Bobby Z.
 


Bozza

You can change this
Helpful Moderator
Jul 4, 2003
56,535
Back in Sussex
I will have a go.

He was one of the few good news stories from Gillingham - he always gave his all and in a game where goals count - he scored them for us.

He was always positive, and was approachable and friendly. On the day of the Referendum Vote - he was one player who appeared at least to be pleased to be able to help (as opposed so say Mark Walton to name but one).

After he left - and there is a debate about whether he was pushed or jumped - he stood on the terrace when we were away at Mansfield one evening.

Then he showed he could play by having a career at a higher level than the Albion for a lot of his time.

And he has great hair.

And it sometimes gets mentioned on here - but the goal he scored at London Road after a cross from Rod Thomas and a switch from Jeff Minton ("walkin' along - smokin' a bong") was a highlight of the period.

Dark days for the Club - but Richie at least tried to make it enjoyable.

A great summary that I heartily agree with. He wasn't around long enough to warrant the 'legend' tag that gets thrown about too readily these days, but he was a shining light in otherwise dreary times on the pitch. Beyond that he seemed to really get the Albion and what it was all about - once again something rarely seen around that time.
 


ROSM

Well-known member
Dec 26, 2005
6,576
Just far enough away from LDC
He left Brighton as his father who lived in Sheffield was very ill and he wanted to be close to him. His girlfriend (who I think he later married) came from Brighton.

Speaking to Mickey Adams in the pre season that Barker left, he was disappointed to lose him and led to us trying out Aidan Newhouse, Scott Ramsey, Pinamonte etc to fill the gap before Zamora came in. Barker then went on to score goals for Macclesfield (was leading score in Div 2 before injury ended his season early) and Rotherham. In some ways a reliable journeyman striker but clearly an honest pro who, as others have said, 'got' the Albion at that time.
 


Pinkie Brown

Wir Sind das Volk
Sep 5, 2007
3,623
Neues Zeitalter DDR 🇩🇪
Barker formed a half decent partnership with Gary Hart when we were at Gillingham. Always gave 100% even if he was never a prolific scorer. He was a breath of fresh air compared to some of the wasters that claimed to be strikers around that time - Michael Mahoney-Johnson, Damien Hilton, Lawrence Davies, Jaime Moralee. Barker was Premier League quality compared to that quartet of crap.
 






Storer 68

New member
Apr 19, 2011
2,827
He got so much shit from our fans at Gillingham, scored a goal after weeks or was it months of trying and then left to be close to his ill father. Nice guy but a journeyman who seems to have gained totally unjustified legend status. Can someone explain why?

Absolute rubbish. I don't recall him getting ANY grief from us at Pissfield. In fact he was one of the most positive players that we had during that time. I might almost tkae the view that "The Bear" was our best player at that time. At leaat he gave a damn, unlike many otehr who quite obviously didn't give a shit

This is how I remember The Bear. Top bloke in my book.
chester98_09.jpg


Now, the samne CANNOT be said for Jeff Minton (also in the pic) who was total crap at the time
 
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