Kevin Ellison (footballer)

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Kevin Ellison (footballer)

Kevin Ellison (born 23 February 1979) is an English former professional footballer who plays as a forward for Northern Premier League Division One West club Vauxhall Motors.[3]

Quick Facts Personal information, Full name ...
Kevin Ellison
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Ellison in 2010
Personal information
Full name Kevin Ellison[1]
Date of birth (1979-02-23) 23 February 1979 (age 46)[2]
Place of birth Liverpool, England
Height 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)[2]
Position(s) Winger, Striker
Team information
Current team
Vauxhall Motors
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1996–1997 Southport 4 (0)
1997–1998 Chorley 4 (0)
1998–1999 Conwy United 37 (7)
1999–2001 Altrincham 51 (23)
2001 Leicester City 1 (0)
2001–2004 Stockport County 48 (2)
2004Lincoln City (loan) 13 (0)
2004–2005 Chester City 24 (9)
2005–2006 Hull City 39 (2)
2006–2007 Tranmere Rovers 34 (4)
2007–2009 Chester City 75 (19)
2009–2011 Rotherham United 62 (11)
2011Bradford City (loan) 7 (1)
2011–2020 Morecambe 352 (81)
2020–2022 Newport County 33 (3)
2022 Warrington Rylands 2 (0)
2022–2023 City of Liverpool 27 (5)
2023–2024 Runcorn Town 9 (1)
2024– Vauxhall Motors 33 (12)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 10:51, 12 February 2025 (UTC)
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He has represented fourteen clubs during his career, making in excess of 550 appearances in the Football League; including 350 games for Morecambe. Ellison also played once in the Premier League for Leicester City. He also played in the Football League for Stockport County, Lincoln City, Chester City, Hull City, Rotherham United, Bradford City and Newport County. He has featured semi-professionally for Southport, Chorley, Conwy United, Altrincham and Warrington Rylands.

During the 2019–20 season, Ellison briefly acted as a coach for Morecambe.

Career

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Perspective

Early career

Born in Liverpool, Ellison started his career in non-league football, playing for Southport, Chorley, Conwy United and Altrincham. In February 2001 he joined Leicester City for a £50,000 fee.[4] At Leicester he made his only appearance as a late substitute against Manchester United at Old Trafford.[5] He later joined Stockport County. In 2004, he was loaned out to Lincoln City.[6] In August 2004 he was transferred to Chester City.[7]

Ellison signed for Hull City in January 2005 for a £100,000 fee.[8] Despite a solid work rate he often struggled for form and was regularly in the shadow of Stuart Elliott, the Tigers' most outstanding left winger of recent times. Ellison did score an individual goal away at Southampton in a 1–1 draw and was part of the 2004–05 team that gained promotion from the third tier to the Championship. In June 2006, Hull accepted £100,000 for the player from Scunthorpe United,[9] though Ellison refused the move.[10] Instead he joined Tranmere Rovers for an undisclosed fee.[11] In June 2007 he moved on to Chester City for £150,000, signing a three-year contract.[12]

His first league game back at Chester was a goalless draw with Chesterfield on 11 August 2007. In January 2008 Wrexham put in a five-figure offer for the player,[13] though he did not make the move. Stockport County also attempted to win his signature,[14] but were also unsuccessful.

In the 2008–09 Football League Two campaign, Ellison scored a hat-trick for Chester in a 3–1 victory over Grimsby Town on 13 September 2008. He scored 12 other league goals during the season, which still ended with the club being relegated from The Football League.[citation needed] On 11 August 2009, he scored the winning goal as Rotherham upset Championship side Derby County 2–1 in the first round of the Football League Cup.

In February 2011, Ellison was loaned to Rotherham's fellow League Two side Bradford City, with Omar Daley moving in the opposite direction.[15] He scored the only goal of a 1–0 win against Wycombe Wanderers in his Bradford debut.

Morecambe

Ellison was released by Rotherham at the end of the 2010–11 season. On 31 May 2011, Ellison signed for Jim Bentley's Morecambe on a one-year contract.

On 1 January 2012, Ellison signed an extension to his Morecambe contract, which would keep him at the Globe Arena for a further 18 months.[citation needed]

In June 2018 Ellison publicly talked about his struggles with depression, giving advice to fellow professionals.[16] In November 2018, a club-released YouTube video featuring Ellison challenging his online gaming speed stat gained notoriety when it was featured on the sports website Deadspin.[17]

He signed a new one-year contract with Morecambe in June 2019.[18] Following Jim Bentley's departure as manager on 28 October 2019, Ellison assumed the role of caretaker player-manager, alongside Barry Roche.[19] Ellison's only match in charge was the 1–0 home win against Leyton Orient in League Two on 2 November 2019.[20] Derek Adams was appointed Morecambe team manager on 7 November 2019.[21] In June 2020, Ellison was released by Morecambe after 352 league appearances during nine years with the club and having scored 88 goals.[22]

Newport County

On 4 September 2020, Ellison joined fellow League Two side Newport County on a one-year deal.[23] For the 2020–21 season, Newport County appointed Ellison as their 'mental health ambassador'.[24] He made his debut for Newport on 6 October 2020 in the starting line up for the 5–0 EFL Trophy defeat against Norwich City Under 21s.[25][26] His first goal for Newport was the 96th minute winner in a 1–0 League Two win against Port Vale on 21 November 2020.[27][26]

When he came on as a substitute in the second leg of Newport's play-off semi-final against Forest Green Rovers on 23 May 2021, he became the oldest outfield player in play-off history.[28] He scored a goal in the 70th minute, thus also becoming the oldest goal scorer in the play-offs.[28] Ellison played for Newport in the League Two play-off final at Wembley Stadium on 31 May 2021 which Newport lost to his former club, Morecambe, 1–0 after extra time.[29]

On 26 July 2021, Ellison signed a new one-year deal to stay at Newport through the 2021–22 season.[30] As part of the deal, he would also take up a coaching role with the club's development squad.[30] He was released by Newport at the end of the 2021–22 season, stating his decision to continue playing.[31]

Non-League

In August 2022, Ellison signed for Northern Premier League Premier Division club Warrington Rylands.[32] On 23 September 2022, Ellison joined City of Liverpool. On his debut, he contributed two assists and a goal.[33]

In September 2023 Ellison signed for North West Counties League Division One North club Runcorn Town and scored on his debut - a 2–2 draw against Garstang.

Career statistics

  • Correct after match played 12 February 2025.
More information Club, Season ...
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[34][35]
Club Season League FA Cup League Cup Other Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Southport 1996–97[36] Football Conference 40000040
Chorley 1997–98[37] NPL Premier Division 40000040
Conwy United 1997–98[38] League of Wales 9292
1998–99[39] League of Wales 285285
Total 377377
Altrincham 1999–00[40] Football Conference 371431914916
2000–01[41] NPL Premier Division 179102[a]1208
Total 542310215724
Leicester City 2000–01[42] Premier League 1000000010
2001–02[43] Premier League 00000000
Total 1000000010
Stockport County 2001–02[43] First Division 110100000120
2002–03[44] Second Division 23100001[b]0241
2003–04[45] Second Division 14100101[b]0161
Total 482101020522
Lincoln City (loan) 2003–04[45] Third Division 1300000130
Chester City 2004–05[46] League Two 24931102[b]13011
Hull City 2004–05[46] League One 16100161
2005–06[47] Championship 231101000251
Total 392101000412
Tranmere Rovers 2006–07[48] League One 34410102[b]0384
Chester City 2007–08[49] League Two 361110101[b]03911
2008–09[50] League Two 39810101[b]1429
Total 75192020218120
Rotherham United 2009–10[51] League Two 39821214[c]14711
2010–11[52] League Two 23310102[b]1274
Total 62113131627415
Bradford City (loan) 2010–11[52] League Two 710071
Morecambe 2011–12[53] League Two 341510211[b]13817
2012–13[54] League Two 401131201[b]14613
2013–14[55] League Two 421010101[b]04510
2014–15[56] League Two 43111010004511
2015–16[57] League Two 44920103[b]0509
2016–17[58] League Two 45810212[d]0509
2017–18[59] League Two 40911102[d]04410
2018–19[60] League Two 43720103[d]0497
2019–20[61] League Two 21100102[d]1242
Total 3528112212215339188
Newport County 2020–21[26] League Two 23230004[e]1303
2021–22[62] League Two 10110202[d]0151
Total 333402061454
Warrington Rylands 2022–23[63] NPL Premier Division 20100030
City of Liverpool 2022–23[64] NPL Division One West 2751[f]0285
Runcorn Town 2023–24[65] NWCFL Division One North 915[g]1142
Vauxhall Motors 2023–24[35] NPL Division One West 62000062
2024–25[66] NPL Division One West 2710202[h]23012
Total 331220223714
Career total 8581803452335413970199
Close
  1. Appearance(s) in NPL League Challenge Cup
  2. Appearance(s) in Football League Trophy
  3. One appearance in Football League Trophy, three appearances and one goal in League Two play-offs
  4. Appearance(s) in EFL Trophy
  5. Two appearances in EFL Trophy, two appearances and one goal in League Two play-offs
  6. Appearance(s) in Liverpool Senior Cup
  7. Two appearances in FA Vase, two appearances and one goal in NWCFL Challenge Cup, one appearance in Liverpool Senior Cup
  8. One appearance in FA Trophy, one appearance and two goals in Cheshire Senior Cup

References

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