West Ham United Paul Emerson Carlyle Ince was born in
Ilford, Greater London. He is a product of the
West Ham youth team and made his debut in English football on 30 November 1986 against
Newcastle United in the
First Division. He became a regular player in
1987–88, proving himself to have all-round qualities of pace, stamina, uncompromising tackling and good passing ability. He also packed a powerful shot, and was awarded with England under-21 honours to go with the youth
caps he acquired as an apprentice. He firmly established himself as the successor in West Ham's midfield for the veteran
Billy Bonds, who retired at the end of the 1987–88 season. Unfortunately for Ince, West Ham were not enjoying one of their best spells when he broke into the team. Despite having won the FA Cup in 1980 and finished third in the league in 1986, they had failed to sustain their challenge for major honours and finished 15th in 1987 and 16th in 1988, and worse was to follow. In August 1988, an eventful
season for Ince began. In a struggling West Ham side, he shot to national recognition with two stunning goals in a shock 4–1 win over defending league champions
Liverpool in the
League Cup, and continued to score goals as the Hammers reached the semi-finals while having real trouble finding any form in the League. West Ham lost to
Luton Town in the semi-finals and, despite frequent displays of individual brilliance from Ince, were relegated at the end of the season, which cost manager
John Lyall his job after 15 years at the helm.
Manchester United Ince played just once in the
Second Division the following season before completing a highly controversial transfer to
Manchester United for
£1 million. Ince had been photographed in a Manchester United kit long before the transfer was complete, which appeared in the
Daily Express. Ince received abuse from West Ham United fans for many years afterwards. The initial move was postponed after he failed a medical, but was quickly completed on 14 September 1989 after he later received the all-clear. In an article in
Four Four Two magazine, Ince said: ''"I spoke to
Alex Ferguson and the deal was close to being done. I then went on holiday, and my agent at the time,
Ambrose Mendy, said it wasn't worth me coming back to do a picture in a United shirt when the deal was completed, so I should do one before I left, and it would be released when the deal was announced. Lawrence Luster of the
Daily Star took the picture and put in the library. Soon after, their sister paper, the
Daily Express, were looking for a picture of me playing for West Ham, and found the one of me in the United shirt in the pile. They published it and all hell broke loose. "I came back from holiday to discover West Ham fans were going mad. It wasn't really my fault. I was only a kid, I did what my agent told me to do, then took all the crap for it."'' Ince eventually made his Manchester United debut in a 5–1 win over
Millwall, although his next game for United came in a 5–1
Manchester derby defeat by
Manchester City. Ince became a strong presence in the United midfield alongside
Bryan Robson and
Neil Webb, although the first season of this midfield partnership saw Robson and in particular Webb miss many games due to injury. United won the
FA Cup in his first season, defeating
Crystal Palace 1–0 in a replay at
Wembley after initially drawing 3–3. In both of these games, Ince was selected at right-back in favour of
Viv Anderson, with his favoured central midfield position being occupied by
Mike Phelan. Ince was man of the match for the replay. Over the next four seasons, Robson's United career gradually wound down until he finally left to manage
Middlesbrough in 1994. During this time, Ince found himself playing alongside several other different central midfielders, including Mike Phelan, Neil Webb and
Darren Ferguson. One of his best games came in February 1994, when he scored in a 2–2 away draw with former club West Ham in the
Premier League. Ince won his second winners' medal when Manchester United defeated
Barcelona in the final of the
European Cup Winners Cup in
Rotterdam in 1991, and received his third another year later when United beat
Nottingham Forest in the 1992
League Cup final. Manchester United continued to dominate the domestic game in 1993–94, enjoying an almost unbroken lead of the Premier League throughout the season, and Ince was the midfield general in the side which won the "double" of league and FA Cup in 1994. A year later Manchester United went to West Ham on the last day of the season, needing a win to retain their Premier League crown. They could only draw the game and
Blackburn Rovers took the title. Ince's next game saw them lose the FA Cup final to
Everton, leaving United without a major trophy for the first time in six seasons. In June 1995, Ferguson sold Ince to
Inter Milan for £7.5 million – at the time one of the biggest fees involving an English club- and a three-year deal of a reputedly £2 million annual salary. Ferguson had long sustained a tempestuous relationship with Ince, labelling him a "bottler" and a "big-time Charlie" (a statement Ferguson said later he regretted). Ince's nickname,
The Guvnor, also rankled with Ferguson, who once berated him by saying, "There's only one guvnor around here, Incey, and it ain't you". Many fans saw this as the prime reason for Ince being sold, rather than on footballing or economic grounds. While at United, Ince won two
Premier League title medals as well as two
FA Cup winner's medals and one winner's medal each in the
European Cup Winners' Cup and
Football League Cup. He had also collected runners-up medals in the League Cup twice and the FA Cup once.
Inter Milan In the 1995–96 season, Inter failed to challenge for a 14th
scudetto, finishing seventh in Serie A. Ince, though, had a successful first season, playing in all but four of Inter's league matches and performing well after a slow start which had started speculation that he could be on his way back to the Premier League as early as the November transfer window - with
Arsenal and
Newcastle United both reported to be interested. However, he would remain in Milan for two seasons. The next year, Ince had another successful season with the nerazzurri, scoring 6 times in 24 matches in the championship – in which Inter finished third – and also playing his part in Inter's run through to the
UEFA Cup Final. Ince scored in the third round second-leg match away to
Boavista as Inter swept all before them before meeting
Schalke 04 in
the final. Ince was suspended for the away first-leg as Inter lost 1–0 In his first season at
Anfield, he equalised in a 1–1
Merseyside Derby draw at home to
Everton on 23 February 1998, and on 6 May he scored twice in a 4–0 win over newly crowned league champions Arsenal to secure third place. He equalised in a 2–2 comeback draw against United, who nonetheless
won the treble. According to
Graeme Le Saux's autobiography, Ince's homophobic taunting and Le Saux's reaction during a 1997 match between Liverpool and Chelsea resulted in a long-running coolness between the two players. Ince won no honours in his two seasons with Liverpool, and remarked on his teammates "I just felt they were good players, but just wanted to go out all the time, and I just thought that wasn't the way. I thought they needed that professionalism on the pitch"; He fell out with Liverpool manager
Gérard Houllier in the summer of 1999, when he attempted to sign
Marc-Vivien Foé without consulting him. Ince received 11, 9 and 10 yellow cards in his three respective seasons. The following 10 March, he scored in a 3–0 victory against
Everton at the
Riverside Stadium to put Boro into the semifinals of the FA Cup, but he missed the defeat to Arsenal in that round due to suspension. In July 2002, Ince left Boro after turning down a two-year contract extension, citing the long commute from his home in the northwest. He played 106 games for Boro, scoring nine goals.
Wolverhampton Wanderers In August 2002, Ince signed a one-year contract with
Football League First Division side
Wolverhampton Wanderers, who had just signed his former Manchester United teammate
Denis Irwin. In his first season outside top-flight football, he helped the team to promotion via a 3–0 win over
Sheffield United in the
play-off final, assisting the second goal by
Nathan Blake. Ince and Irwin signed new one-year contracts to remain with Wolves for the
2003–04 FA Premier League season. The team finished bottom and he was sent off in the last game of the season, a 2–0 loss to Tottenham at
Molineux. With over 100 appearances to his name, Ince signed a new contract in June 2005. Through thigh problems, he missed four months between August and December. In April 2006, Ince announced that he wanted to continue playing for Wolves for a further season after speaking with his friend
Teddy Sheringham. However, following Ince's failure to get the manager's job at Wolves in July 2006 on Hoddle's resignation, the newly appointed manager,
Mick McCarthy, decided not to offer Ince a new contract. Throughout his time with the club, Ince declared his intention to return, at some point in the future, as manager of Wolves. ==International career==