Deane On First PL Goal, Foxes Promotion & England
Famous for scoring the first-ever goal in the newly formed Premier League, Brian Deane played a key role in Leicester City’s promotion back to the top-flight in 2003.
brian-deane
brian-deane
by John Hutchinson
Published
31 May, 2025
Deane On First PL Goal, Foxes Promotion & England
Famous for scoring the first-ever goal in the newly formed Premier League, Brian Deane played a key role in Leicester City’s promotion back to the top-flight in 2003.
John Hutchinson
Deane On First PL Goal, Foxes Promotion & England
Famous for scoring the first-ever goal in the newly formed Premier League, Brian Deane played a key role in Leicester City’s promotion back to the top-flight in 2003.
John Hutchinson
Deane On First PL Goal, Foxes Promotion & England
Famous for scoring the first-ever goal in the newly formed Premier League, Brian Deane played a key role in Leicester City’s promotion back to the top-flight in 2003.
John Hutchinson
Deane On First PL Goal, Foxes Promotion & England
Famous for scoring the first-ever goal in the newly formed Premier League, Brian Deane played a key role in Leicester City’s promotion back to the top-flight in 2003.
John Hutchinson
Speaking to Club Historian John Hutchinson, Deane recalled his memories on Filbert Way including scoring the first two competitive goals our new home in 2002 and playing a big part in the Club’s promotion back to the Premier League at the first attempt in 2003.
Starting his professional career at Doncaster Rovers in 1985, he also played for Doncaster Rovers, Sheffield United, Leeds United, Benfica, Middlesbrough and England, before joining Leicester City in November 2001.
“All I ever wanted to do was play football,” Leeds-born Brian began. “I played for Leeds Boys but then I broke my leg when I was 16. I was in plaster for about six months. When I recovered, I wrote to clubs for trials. Doncaster’s chief scout, David Blakey, who had been at Leeds when I was there as a kid and when I’d had been on trial there, invited me down to Doncaster. Steve Beaglehole was my youth team coach there. They gave me a professional contract when I was 17.”
Brian made his debut for Doncaster Rovers in the 1985/86 season and went on to play 66 times for them in the Third Division before relegation in 1988. “The club offered me terms when they were relegated,” Brian continued. “But I didn’t think they were good enough, so I exercised my right to leave. Luckily for me, Sheffield United came in.”
Tony Agana and Deane celebrate the Blades' promotion in the dressing room after the Division Two match against Leicester City in May 1990.
Tony Agana and Deane celebrate the Blades' promotion in the dressing room after the Division Two match against Leicester City in May 1990.
The Blades had just been relegated from the Second Division and, in his first two seasons at Bramall Lane, Brian was a key figure in the side which won back-to-back promotions to reach the old First Division.
“Dave Bassett brought me in,” he added. “He was the right kind of manager for me at the time. He’s a very good man manager. I was a young kid and needed guidance and he made me feel very at home and welcome. I’d had a lot of rejection as a kid and, for the first time, I had somebody telling me he had a long-term strategy for me.”
An early highlight in Brian’s first season at Sheffield United was a game against Chester City.
“Playing Chester at home, I got a hat-trick in the first half,” he explained. “Tony Agana then got a hat-trick in the second half, but I ended up with the match ball. Everyone signed the ball. I was only a 20-year-old kid at the time and Tony gave the ball to me. It was fantastic. I must have been like a kid at Christmas! Tony was great for me.
“He was a very quick, left-footed forward. We had a really good symmetry between us. I was right footed but not as quick as him. We just seemed to hit it off. The style of football was perfect for us because it meant we were getting a lot of balls over the top and we were running at people. It worked perfectly for me at that stage.”
In action for the Whites, up against Manchester United's Gary Pallister at Old Trafford.
In action for the Whites, up against Manchester United's Gary Pallister at Old Trafford.
Brian’s successful first season with Sheff Utd was followed up by a second successive promotion, which saw the Blades return to the top-flight for the first time in 14 years.
Thinking back, Brian recalled: “Progression was rapid for me. I’d scored 30 goals in my first season at Sheffield United and I scored another 24 and was heavily influential when we were promoted again. Our final game was at Filbert Street. We won 5-2. I scored the first goal.
“Everything that was happening that day was just surreal. It was fantastic. Some of our fans say that it was the best day of their lives. There were people coming to the game at Filbert Street in fancy dress. They couldn’t believe what was happening!”
In his next two seasons at Bramall Lane, the Blades finished 13th and ninth in the old First Division, with Brian scoring a total of 33 goals. Then, on 15 August, 1992, Brian made football history when he netted the first-ever goal in the newly-formed Premier League against Manchester United.
“It was the beginning of a new era,” Brian remembered. “I scored two that day. I like to score as quickly as possible so we can hit the ground running, so when I got the chance after four minutes and it went in, it took the pressure off. I was made up about that.
“The significance of scoring the first-ever goal in the Premier League came after I finished playing, when everyone kept saying: ‘Oh, Brian, you scored the first goal in the Premier League!’ I even get asked about it today. It’s great for me personally that I will be remembered for that for as long as the Premier League lasts.
One of his three England caps came against Spain in 1992.
One of his three England caps came against Spain in 1992.
“That season, I scored a hat-trick at Burnley in midweek in the FA Cup. The next game, I scored another hat-trick against Ipswich in the Premier League, so I was after three hat-tricks in three games in the next game, an FA Cup match against Hartlepool. You’d have thought that was going to be the easiest game but it wasn’t. We won but I didn’t score.”
At the end of the season, in June 1993, Brian moved to Leeds United.
“It was probably the right time for me to leave, “Brian explained. “I knew there was interest from other clubs. I turned down a move to Crystal Palace to replace Ian Wright, who’d gone to Arsenal. I held talks with Sheffield Wednesday as well. I’m a Leeds boy and going there seemed like going home.
“The reported £2.9M fee was a record for Leeds. It’s been calculated that the fee would be the equivalent of £50M today. I was a local boy and there was a lot of pressure in that first year. I took a while to settle, but I spent four years there and scored a lot of goals in the Premier League.”
In July 1997, Sheffield United, keen to regain their Premier League status, reportedly paid £1.5M for Brian to return to Bramall Lane, but six months later, Benfica’s manager Graeme Souness signed him for a fee of around £1M.
The striker went on to score 19 goals for the Foxes.
The striker went on to score 19 goals for the Foxes.
“It was an interesting time,” Brian reflected. “I didn’t have any kind of support network. English football in those days wasn’t held in as high esteem as Italian or Spanish football. As an English forward, I had to gain the respect of the fans and, fortunately for me, I had some very good team-mates.
“Some of them played for national teams all over the world and I fitted in quite well in the end. When I went there, we were seventh in the league and, by the end of the season, we finished second to Porto and qualified for the Champions League, which I played in out there.”
Brian left Benfica in October 1998. “I wasn’t planning on coming back,” Brian explained. “I wanted to see if I could go to Spain or Italy, but Middlesbrough came in for me. It looked a very interesting project with Bryan Robson. They’d got promoted to the Premier League and were making some good strides.”
Three years later, in November 2001, his old Sheffield United manager Dave Bassett took him to Leicester City at a time when the Foxes were engaged an ultimately unsuccessful fight against relegation from the Premier League.
“Their position didn’t really bother me,” Brian said. “The way I viewed it, if we went down, the project would still be to get straight back up.”
Opening the scoring at City's new stadium.
Opening the scoring at City's new stadium.
City’s first game back in the second tier was also the first game at our new stadium – now called King Power Stadium – and Brian made history by scoring the first two competitive goals at the Club’s new home in a 2-0 victory over Watford.
“It was brilliant to do that,” he said. “There was so much upheaval at the Club. There were some financial issues and the Club went into administration (from October 2002 until February 2003). I had come to Leicester on a good contract and then people were saying that the Club might go into liquidation. It was a very worrying time. I’d made a commitment to Leicester. I’d brought a place down here. These things were at the back of my mind but I tried to block them out as a player.”
Despite the months in administration, Leicester were promoted back to the Premier League at the end of the season: “We had the ability to beat any team, but we could only do this if we worked as a team. The Club had managed to keep together a very good squad and, as a result, we clubbed together as a group and said: ‘Listen, this is on us’. We felt we were the ones responsible for going up.
“We had so many characters in the changing room like Matty Elliott, Gerry Taggart, Jordan Stewart, Ian Walker, Frank Sinclair, Muzzy Izzet, Andy Impey, James Scowcroft and Paul Dickov. Then others came in, like Nicky Summerbee and Billy McKinlay. We had a Premier League presence about us. It was a great year for us.”
Brian and his strike partner Paul Dickov scored 30 goals between them in that promotion season.
“Paul’s career went up again when he came to Leicester,” Brian recalled. “We had a really good relationship. He worked so hard. We fed off each other and got our fair share of goals. I enjoyed playing with him.”
Netting at Goodison Park in April 2002.
Netting at Goodison Park in April 2002.
An important young player that season was Jordan Stewart, who regards Brian as his mentor.
“I liked to see young players like Jordan and Matt [Piper] doing well,” Brian continued. “I always tried to give them tips. Jordan and I moved into the same apartment complex and he was like a little brother. It was good to see him develop and do well.”
Brian left City for West Ham United in October 2003.
“It was the first time I’d left a Premier League club to go to the Championship,” Brian explained. “Their manager, Alan Pardew, wanted someone with experience. They had some very good players like Jermaine Defoe, who I knew. It seemed like a natural move. I didn’t want to leave Leicester, but I’d been told I wasn’t going to play here. I was disappointed about that, as I felt I’d had a big impact in getting the Club promoted.”
During the next two-and-a-half years, Brian had a further spell at Leeds United, and short times at Sunderland and Perth Glory in the Australian A-League, before returning briefly, for a third time, to Sheffield United, where Neil Warnock wanted to use his experience in the dressing room.
Brian concluded by talking about his England career, when he won three England caps as a Sheffield United player in 1991 and 1992: “At the time, England had some fantastic strikers, like Alan Shearer, Teddy Sheringham, Les Ferdinand, Ian Wright, and David Hirst. Gary Lineker was still there. I wish in some respect I'd have had more belief in myself.
“If I'd have had the mental awareness and toughness to actually believe that this was where I belonged, I would have fared better. I only got three caps. I was actually in a lot of the squads, and on standby for a period of about two years. But I'm very proud that I was able to wear the England shirt.”

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