Early career Le Tissier was born in
Guernsey, a British
crown dependency, and played youth football on the island with
Vale Recreation between the ages of seven and sixteen. At fifteen, he had a trial at English club
Oxford United, but nothing came of it.
Southampton Signing for
Southampton on
Youth Training Scheme forms in 1985 and then signing professional forms in October 1986, Le Tissier made his club debut in a 4–3 defeat at
Norwich City in the
First Division, and by the end of that season had scored six goals in 24 league games, including a hat-trick against
Leicester City in the league. He scored his first two competitive goals in a
League Cup third-round replay at home to
Manchester United on 4 November 1986, a game which Southampton won 4–1 and was
Ron Atkinson's last in charge of the visitors, his sacking coming within 48 hours of the result. Le Tissier made 19 first team league appearances in the
1987–88 season, failing to score, but in the
1988–89 season, rediscovered his scoring touch and reclaimed his first team place, scoring nine times in 28 league games. Le Tissier was voted
PFA Young Player of the Year for the
1989–90 season, in which he was one of the
league's top goalscorers with 20 goals as Southampton finished seventh in the First Division, the club's highest finish for five years. Le Tissier's highest-scoring league season was in the
1993–94 season, in which he scored 25 league goals. The following season, he won the
Match of the Day Goal of the Season award for his drifting 40-yard chip against
Blackburn Rovers, scoring against his long-term friend, and former Southampton
keeper,
Tim Flowers. On 2 April 2000, Le Tissier scored a last-minute
penalty for Southampton in a 2–1 defeat to
Sunderland. This brought his tally of
Premier League goals to 100, making him only the sixth player and first midfielder to reach this milestone. Le Tissier scored the last goal in the final competitive match played at
The Dell on 19 May 2001, against
Arsenal. This turned out to be his last goal for Southampton. He played several games for the club during the
2001–02 season, the first season at the new
St Mary's Stadium, in an eventual 11th-place finish. His final competitive appearance for the
Saints came against
West Ham United on 30 January 2002. He announced on 29 March 2002 that he would retire from playing at the season's end after limping off with a recurrence of a calf strain during a
reserve team game against
Charlton Athletic. Le Tissier's final match, a
testimonial against an England XI in May 2002, ended in a 9–9 draw, with Le Tissier playing 45 minutes for each side, while his ten-year-old son Mitchell came on as a substitute in the second half, scoring four times. Throughout his career, Le Tissier had a fearsome reputation for scoring from the spot, converting 47 of the 48
penalties that he took for Southampton. His sole failure to convert came on 24 March 1993 in a match against
Nottingham Forest, his spot kick being saved by Forest keeper
Mark Crossley, the feat being so unique that Crossley describes it as the save of which he is most proud. Le Tissier played in the top division of English football for 16 consecutive seasons, being a regular player for the majority of them, but never won a major trophy or played in a European competition, with Southampton's highest finish during his career being the seventh place final position in 1990.
Eastleigh After leaving Southampton, Le Tissier had a two-season-long spell with non-league side
Eastleigh, where he played alongside his former Southampton teammate
David Hughes. He made his debut in a 3–0 victory over
Newport (IOW) in the
Hampshire Senior Cup in October 2002. He played his last match for the club early in August 2003, starring in the
Hampshire Chronicle Cup Final second-leg victory against
Winchester City.
Guernsey On 7 April 2013, ten years after retiring from football, Le Tissier announced he had come out of retirement and signed with his hometown club
Guernsey. A number of fixture postponements meant that they had to play 17 league fixtures in a month, and Le Tissier announced that he would be able to play in four or five games, also saying he was unable to play Saturday games due to his job as a television pundit on
Soccer Saturday. He made his only appearance for the club on 24 April, as a substitute for Ollie McKenzie, in a 4–2 defeat in their
Combined Counties League Premier Division clash with
Colliers Wood United. ==International career==