Paul Hammond was born July 26th, 1953 in Nottingham, England. On January 13th, 1971, Paul signed as an apprentice with English First Division club Crystal Palace. He remained on the Palace youth team until first team keeper, John Jackson was injured in 1972. While Paul, then became the starting keeper, his inexperience was a contributing factor to Palace’s slide to the second division, then third division. In the midst of Palace’s free fall through the English leagues, the team loaned him to the Rowdies for off-season training. The new owners hired Eddie Firmani, an assistant with Palace, as the team’s first head coach. Firmani brought over three Palace players, Stewart Jump, Mark Lindsay and Hammond for the 1975 season. He had to share the goalkeeper's postion with Mike Hewitt. Amazingly, the Rowdies won the league championship that season. However, he returned to Palace at the completion of the loan and was replaced by U.S. great Arnie Mausser for the 1976 season.
Although Mausser had been capped by the U.S. national team, and was selected as the top NASL goalkeeper for 1976, Firmani preferred Hammond and negotiated his purchase from Palace. At this time Palace was attempting to rebuild its team and used the funds from Paul's sale to purchase striker Jeff Bourne from Derby County. Paul played with the Rowdies through the 1977 season, but was traded to the Houston Hurricane after only eight games of the 1978 season.
He then spent the 1979 and 1980 seasons in Houston, being named to the NASL second team All Star list in 1979. While in Houston, he was introduced to professional indoor soccer when a new league, the Major Indoor Soccer League began operations in 1978-1979. He played for the Houston Summit Soccer which drew many of its players from the NASL Hurricane. Hammond was selected as the Goalkeeper of the Year as the Summit ran to the best record only to fall to the champion New York Arrows in the playoff semifinals.
At the end of the1980 season, the Hurricane folded and Hammond went to the Seattle Sounders in a dispersal sale. By this time he had blossomed into an excellent keeper. In 1982, the Sounders went to the championship game, only to fall to the New York Cosmos by a score of 1-0. That year he was ranked as the third best keeper in the league. At the end of the season, he entered contract negotiations with the Sounders.
However, other opportunities beckoned. He had gained his U.S. citizenship and the United States Soccer Federation had decided to enter the U.S. national team into the NASL. The team, fittingly known as Team America, drew on U.S. citizens playing in the NASL, MISL and the American Soccer League. However, many U.S. players were unwilling to leave their professional teams to play full time for the national team. To make up a full roster, USSF allowed a limited number of non-U.S. citizens, such as Alan Green to join Team America. Hammond elected to leave the Sounders after they failed to meet his demands and signed with Team America. When Team America finished the 1983 season with a 10-20 record, the worst in the NASL, USSF withdrew the team from the league. At that point Paul moved to the Toronto Blizzard for the last season of the NASL. In 1984, he achieved his greatest success in the NASL when he had the lowest goals against average in the league. That gained him another Second Team All Star team selection. He remained with the Blizzard for the 1985 season, which they played in the National Soccer League of Canada.
Today, Paul lives in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.
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