Ferdinand's fine form continued into 1993–94, during which his 16 goals from 36 games helped QPR finish ninth. Despite mounting speculation of a move to either Manchester United or Arsenal, he signed a two-year contract with QPR that summer. In 1994–95, he scored 24 times in the Premier League and speculation grew that he would soon be on his way to a bigger club. In nearly a decade at Loftus Road, he played under four different managers – Jim Smith, Trevor Francis, Don Howe and Gerry Francis.

Newcastle United

Ferdinand was sold to Newcastle in 1995 for £6 million, with Hayes receiving £600,000 due to a sell-on clause agreed following his move to QPR. With the money received, Hayes built a function suite and named it "The Ferdinand Suite" in his honour. His arrival at the club came nearly three years after the Magpies had offered QPR £3.3million for him during their Division One promotion season — but the offer had been turned down.

The spell on Tyneside was arguably Ferdinand's most successful club tenure. He scored 29 goals in his first season with Newcastle, and significantly contributed to the side's getting within touching distance of the Premiership title in the 1995–96 season.

In both of his seasons on Tyneside, Ferdinand collected runners-up medals in the Premier League. Despite the Scot being regretful to lose such a talented striker, it quickly became apparent Ferdinand would be dispensed to free up funds for further signings.

Ferdinand scored 50 goals in only 84 games at Newcastle, forming a successful strike partnership with Alan Shearer. He was very highly thought of by the Newcastle United supporters during his spell with the club and is known affectionately as 'Sir Les' on Tyneside.

He improved his goal-scoring return over the next two seasons, contributing 10 goals in the 2000–01 season and a further 15 during the 2001–02 campaign. Ferdinand scored the 10,000th goal in Premiership history on 15 December 2001 in a 4–0 win against Fulham. He played in a second League Cup final for the club against Blackburn Rovers in 2002, but was thwarted by three saves by Rovers' goalkeeper Brad Friedel as Spurs lost 2–1.

Later career

After struggling to find a place in Spurs' first team season following Glenn Hoddle's purchase of Robbie Keane from Leeds, he moved to West Ham United on 21 January 2003 for an undisclosed fee. He scored his first goal for the club against former club Tottenham, but was unable to prevent the club's relegation from the Premier League and opted to remain in the top flight by signing for newly promoted Leicester City on a free transfer. While at Leicester Ferdinand scored 12 Premiership goals, despite being 37 years old. After the Foxes were relegated at the end of that season, he rejected a new contract and joined Bolton Wanderers.

Ferdinand memorably scored for Bolton Wanderers against rivals Manchester United in the last minute, despite playing from a centre back position, which looked to have given the Wanderers the win, but a goal from David Bellion even deeper in injury time gave United a point.

He found opportunities from the start limited, but proved useful for all his experience when coming off the substitutes' bench, and scored against former club Tottenham in the League Cup, with what proved to be a mere consolation goal in a 4–3 thriller which Bolton lost. He left them on 2 January 2005. Four days later, he signed with Reading. His contract at the club lasted until the end of the 2004–05 season. He scored one league goal in his time at Reading, in a 2–1 loss to Coventry.

Ferdinand committed to non-contract terms with Watford during the 2005–06, but did not play a competitive game for the club and left after their promotion to the Premier League via the Football League Championship playoffs. He retired from football a few months short of his 40th birthday.

International career

Ferdinand made his England debut in February 1993 against San Marino, scoring the final goal in a 6–0 victory at Wembley. He was part of the Euro 96 and 1998 FIFA World Cup squads, although he did not feature in any of the tournament matches. He was capped 17 times, scoring five goals. Ferdinand left the club on 19 June 2014. In October 2014, Ferdinand became head of football operations at Queens Park Rangers, before being appointed as director of football in February 2015.

On 16 June 2023, it was announced that Ferdinand had stepped down as director of football with the west London club, citing it was the right time to move on after eight years at the helm.

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"|National cup

!colspan="2"|League cup

!colspan="2"|Other

!colspan="2"|Total

|-

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

|-

|rowspan="9"|Queens Park Rangers

|1986–87

|First Division

|2||0||0||0||0||0||colspan="2"|—||2||0

|-

|1987–88

|First Division

|1||0||0||0||1||0||0||0||2||0

|-

|1989–90

|First Division

|9||2||0||0||0||0||colspan="2"|—||9||2

|-

|1990–91

|First Division

|18||8||1||0||2||0||0||0||21||8

|-

|1991–92

|First Division

|23||10||0||0||2||2||1||0||26||12

|-

|1992–93

|Premier League

|37||20||2||2||3||2||colspan="2"|—||42||24

|-

|1993–94

|Premier League

|36||16||1||0||3||2||colspan="2"|—||40||18

|-

|1994–95

|Premier League

|37||24||3||1||2||1||colspan="2"|—||42||26

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!163!!80!!7!!3!!13!!7!!1!!0!!184!!90

|-

|Brentford (loan)

|1987–88

|Third Division

|3||0||colspan="2"|—||colspan="2"|—||colspan="2"|—||3||0

|-

|Beşiktaş (loan)

|1988–89

|Süper Lig

|24||14||5||4||colspan="2"|—||1||0||30||18

|-

|rowspan="3"|Newcastle United

|1995–96

|Premier League

|37||25||2||1||5||3||colspan="2"|–||44||29

|-

|1996–97

|Premier League

|31||16||3||1||1||0||5||4||40||21

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!68!!41!!5!!2!!6!!3!!5!!4!!84!!50

|-

|rowspan="7"|Tottenham Hotspur

|1997–98

|Premier League

|21||5||2||0||1||0||colspan="2"|—||24||5

|-

|1998–99

|Premier League

|24||5||7||0||4||0||colspan="2"|—||35||5

|-

|1999–2000

|Premier League

|9||2||0||0||0||0||0||0||9||2

|-

|2000–01

|Premier League

|28||10||4||0||3||0||colspan="2"|—||35||10

|-

|2001–02

|Premier League

|25||9||3||1||5||5||colspan="2"|—||33||15

|-

|2002–03

|Premier League

|11||2||0||0||2||0||colspan="2"|—||13||2

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!118!!33!!16!!1!!15!!5!!0!!0!!149!!39

|-

|West Ham United

|2002–03

|Premier League

|14||2||0||0||colspan="2"|—||colspan="2"|—||14||2

|-

|Leicester City

|2003–04

|Premier League

|29||12||2||1||0||0||colspan="2"|—||31||13

|-

|Bolton Wanderers

|2004–05

|Premier League

|12||1||colspan="2"|—||2||1||colspan="2"|—||14||2

|-

|Reading

|2004–05

|Championship

|12||1||2||0||colspan="2"|—||colspan="2"|—||14||1

|-

|Watford

|2005–06

|Championship

|0||0||0||0||0||0||0||0||0||0

|-

!colspan="3"|Career total

!443!!184!!37!!11!!36!!16!!7!!4!!523!!215

|}

Honours

Beşiktaş

  • Turkish Cup: 1988–89

Tottenham Hotspur

  • Football League Cup: 1998–99; runner-up: 2001–02

Individual

  • PFA Players' Player of the Year: 1995–96
  • PFA Team of the Year: 1995–96 Premier League
  • North-East FWA Player of the Year: 1996
  • Scorer of the 10,000th Premier League goal – Premier League 10 Seasons Awards (1992–93 – 2001–02)
  • Leicester City Player of the Year: 2003–04
  • Newcastle United Hall of Fame Inductee

See also

  • List of English association football families

References