Kenneth Graham Sansom (born 26 September 1958) is a former professional footballer who played as a left-back. An England international, he played for clubs such as Crystal Palace, Arsenal, Newcastle United, Coventry City, Queens Park Rangers, Everton and Watford.

He is the second most capped England national team full-back, having appeared 86 times for his country between 1979 and 1988.

Club career

Kenneth Graham Sansom was born in Camberwell, London on 26 September 1958; the second youngest of five children. His father, George, was an itinerant who left the family home shortly after the birth of his youngest child. His mother, Rose, was a cleaner, and moved the family to Tulse Hill in 1960. He considered himself a goalkeeper in his early years, but while playing for a youth team called Spring Park Wolves he replaced an injured teammate at left-back, and remained a full-back for the rest of his career. He attended Beaufoy Secondary school, and was capped by England schoolboys.

Crystal Palace

Sansom was scouted by Arsenal, Queens Park Rangers and Tottenham Hotspur, but went on to join the youth team at Crystal Palace. He made his League debut against Tranmere Rovers on 7 May 1975.

In 1977, he captained the Palace junior team to FA Youth Cup success while also skippering the England youth team at the same level, collecting Palace's "Player of the Year" award in his first season.

Quick, calm, strong in the tackle and an excellent crosser of the ball, Sansom missed just one league game in a consecutive run of 156 games, starting in 1976, when Palace were in the Third Division. In the 1978–79 season Crystal Palace won the Second Division championship with Sansom integral to the young team. They were quickly labelled as the "Team of The '80s". and briefly topped the First Division at the start of the 1979–80 season although they ultimately finished in thirteenth position.

Sansom made his Arsenal debut against West Bromwich Albion on 16 August 1980 and was an ever-present for the whole of that season and also the next, and a near-constant figure at left-back for the North London club. He was bestowed with the honour of Arsenal Player of the Season in 1981. Although a third-place finish did ensure European football was back on the agenda, no real title challenge was forthcoming. The next two seasons saw a top-five finish in 1982, and a disappointing tenth in 1983 when matters were not improved by semi-final defeats to Manchester United in both domestic cups. Terry Neill was dismissed in December 1983 and Don Howe took over. Arsenal finished sixth and seventh under Howe. During this period Sansom was remarkably consistent and ever present. After six seasons for Arsenal Sansom missed just seven games in all competitions. Meanwhile, silverware eluded both Sansom and Arsenal. In May 1986, Millwall manager George Graham, a former Arsenal double-winner, was appointed as Howe's long-term replacement, and it was the beginning of a new era of success at Highbury. Arsenal's form immediately improved and the club were top of the League at Christmas 1986.

Sansom finally won domestic silverware in 1987, captaining Arsenal to a League Cup final victory over Liverpool at Wembley; Arsenal came from a goal down to win 2–1, with Sansom starting the move which had led to Arsenal's late winner, scored by Charlie Nicholas. After making 64 league appearances for QPR, he moved on to Coventry City for £100,000 in March 1991 and made 51 league appearances for 'The Sky Blues'. Sansom then had short spells at Everton (seven league appearances and one goal against Tottenham Hotspur), who he joined on a free transfer in February 1993, and First Division Brentford (eight appearances), who he joined on a free transfer a month later, March 1993, but he could not prevent 'The Bees' from being relegated. After playing non-league football with Chertsey Town, Sansom returned to league football again by joining Glenn Roeder and First Division Watford, as player and first team coach. Sansom made one league appearance for Watford, before he retired from top class football, though he did play on for non-league clubs such as Croydon F.C. and Slough Town. Since retiring from the game, he has often appeared on Sky Sports as a football analyst.

International career

On 23 May 1979, Sansom made his debut for the full England team, in a goalless draw against Wales. The following year he starred for England in Euro 1980 in Italy, though England did not progress beyond the group stage. Sansom was a regular starter playing in the 1982 World Cup in Spain, in which England exited in the second group phase. He was still the first-choice left-back for the 1986 World Cup in Mexico, playing in all of the matches up to and including the quarter-final defeat against Argentina, in which he was one of the England players left trailing behind by Diego Maradona as the Argentinian burst from inside his own half to score a solo goal and his second of the match.

Sansom missed only a handful of England matches between 1980 and 1988; his record of 37 consecutive appearances between May 1984 and April 1987, has only been bettered by Billy Wright and Ron Flowers. He was occasionally rested in friendly matches so that coaches Ron Greenwood and then Bobby Robson could check on potential replacements Derek Statham, Alan Kennedy, Nick Pickering and Stuart Pearce in the event of losing Sansom either through serious injury or chronic loss of form. However, Sansom remained the regular left-back during England's UEFA Euro 1988 qualifying campaign. In 2015 he said he had contemplated suicide after becoming homeless due to his problems.

Sansom was a tour guide on the "Legend's Tour" of Arsenal's Emirates Stadium.

He was a co-presenter of LBC Radio's Saturday afternoon football programme. Sansom was voted into Palace's Centenary XI.

On 7 February 2014, Sansom appeared at court in Bromley, charged with assault following an alleged incident at his former partner's property. He was cleared of all charges.

In May 2020 he was reportedly in hospital with an undisclosed illness. It was revealed six months later that he was diagnosed with Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome, a type of dementia.

Sansom's father George and uncle Terry were investigated but not charged as suspects in the Great Train Robbery. Sansom stated that he thought that they were innocent, but that his uncle Freddie, a well-known armed robber, was likely a member of the gang that committed the crime.

Career statistics

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

|+ Appearances and goals by club, season and competition

|-

!rowspan="2"|Club

!rowspan="2"|Season

!colspan="3"|League

!colspan="2"|FA Cup

!colspan="2"|Other

!colspan="2"|Total

|-

!Division!!Apps!!Goals!!Apps!!Goals!!Apps!!Goals!!Apps!!Goals

|-

|rowspan="7"|Crystal Palace||1974–75 Crystal Palace F.C. season|1974–75||Third Division||1||0||0||0||0||0||1||0

|-

|1975–76 Crystal Palace F.C. season|1975–76||Third Division||6||0||0||0||0||0||6||0

|-

|1976–77 Crystal Palace F.C. season|1976–77||Third Division||46||0||6||0||3||0||55||0

|-

|1977–78 Crystal Palace F.C. season|1977–78||Second Division||41||2||1||0||4||0||46||2

|-

|1978–79 Crystal Palace F.C. season|1978–79||Second Division||42||0||4||1||4||0||50||1

|-

|1979–80 Crystal Palace F.C. season|1979–80||First Division||36||1||0||0||3||0||39||1

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!172!!3!!11!!1!!14!!0!!197!!4

|-

|rowspan="9"|Arsenal||1980–81||First Division||42||3||1||0||4||0||47||3

|-

|1981–82||First Division||42||0||1||0||9||0||52||0

|-

|1982–83||First Division||40||0||8||0||10||0||58||0

|-

|1983–84||First Division||40||1||1||0||4||0||45||1

|-

|1984–85||First Division||39||1||2||0||3||0||44||1

|-

|1985–86||First Division||42||0||5||0||7||0||54||0

|-

|1986–87||First Division||35||0||4||0||9||0||48||0

|-

|1987–88||First Division||34||1||4||0||8||0||46||1

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!314!!6!!26!!0!!54!!0!!394!!6

|-

|Newcastle United||1988–89||First Division||20||0||4||0||0||0||24||0

|-

|rowspan="3"|Queens Park Rangers||1989–90 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season|1989–90||First Division||36||0||9||2||3||0||48||2

|-

|1990–91 Queens Park Rangers F.C. season|1990–91||First Division||28||0||1||0||5||0||34||0

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!64!!0!!10!!2!!8!!0!!82!!2

|-

|rowspan="4"|Coventry City||1990–91||First Division||9||0||0||0||0||0||9||0

|-

|1991–92||First Division||21||0||2||0||0||0||23||0

|-

|1992–93||Premier League||21||0||0||0||2||0||23||0

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!51!!0!!2!!0!!2!!0!!55!!0

|-

|Everton||1992–93||Premier League||7||1||0||0||0||0||7||1

|-

|Brentford||1992–93||First Division||8||0||0||0||0||0||8||0

|-

|Watford||1994–95||First Division||1||0||0||0||0||0||1||0

|-

!colspan="3"|Career total

!637!!10!!53!!3!!78!!0!!768!!13

|}

Honours

Crystal Palace

  • FA Youth Cup: 1977
  • Football League Second Division: 1978–79

Arsenal

Individual

  • Crystal Palace Player of the Year: 1977, 1979