On the day Paul Canoville celebrates his 64th birthday, we revisit an interview from 2022 with the first black player to represent Chelsea at senior level. In it, the former winger shares his experience of overcoming racism and expresses his pride at the part he played in changing things for the better…
Canoville’s contribution to the club and role in breaking down the race barrier at Chelsea and in football more widely was recognised in June 2021, when the Centenary Hall in the Shed End stand of Stamford Bridge was renamed as the Paul Canoville Suite.
On 12 April 1982, at the age of 21, he made history when he came off the bench to replace Clive Walker for his Chelsea debut in a 1-0 win away at Crystal Palace, becoming the first black person ever to play in a men's first-team match for the club.
However, what should have been the proudest moment of the young winger’s life, as he fulfilled his dream of becoming a professional footballer, was marred when he suffered racist abuse from a sizeable proportion of those at the game to support Chelsea, and that prejudice was something he would be forced to endure in games that followed.
Canoville did so with dignity and strength by refusing to let the undoubted pain show, while focusing on proving that ignorant section wrong with his performances on the pitch, despite often having to face adversity on his own.
‘Being told if you scored a goal it didn’t count because you’re black - no young player, or no young kid, should have to go through that,’ says Canoville in the interview, part one of which can be watched above.
‘Every time, I thought I had to play twice as better than my team-mates, just to get their approval. It would have been quite easy to walk away and say I’m not playing for this, but then you’re allowing those same ignorant people to beat you.’
He went on to provide plenty of memorable moments in a Chelsea shirt, perhaps none more so than when he famously came on at half-time with the Blues trailing Sheffield Wednesday 3-0 in a cup tie to inspire a dramatic comeback. However, his biggest contribution at Stamford Bridge was to pave the way for the many great black players who have starred for Chelsea in the years since.
‘When I came back and saw the likes of Frank Sinclair, Eddie Newton and other black players, and when I first met them I was so nervous to shake their hand and they came to me to say “thank you for making this happen, I know what you went through, if it weren’t for you I probably wouldn’t be here”.
‘It makes me proud to know that I’ve made it easier for them. I did make a difference.’
The change in attitudes he helped set in motion is also evidenced by the way he won over many of those people who initially subjected him to racist abuse and by the fantastic welcome he is now given by all supporters every time he returns to the Bridge today.
His impact was summed up perfectly by the words of one fan Canoville, who has worked with Chelsea on anti-discrimination and education projects, met at a game in 2004.
‘I saw at least six black players and a guy knocked me, sitting there, and he said “Canners, that’s because of you, you made this happen”.'
Happy Birthday, Canners!