Steve Perryman has been nominated by Tottenham Hotspur. Perryman was captain of Spurs when they won the FA Cup in 1981 and 1982. He is now director of football at Exeter City.
How does it feel to be nominated?
It is a very great honour. You have to say that Tottenham have been one of the leading clubs in FA Cup history in terms of successes. So to be part of that is really nice for me.
I believe I was only the third captain in modern history to pick up the FA Cup in consecutive years.
We were never challenging to win the league in my time at Spurs, so the Cup victories hold a special place in my memory.
You beat Manchester City in 1981. The replay was one of the greatest ever Cup Finals of all time wasn't it?
Yes, it had a bit of everything. We were winning, then losing, then eventually won it with such a fantastic goal by Ricky Villa. It was arguably one of the best winning strikes in a Wembley Final ever. It was also the competition's centenary Final.
And it was very important from Tottenham's point of view as the club had endured a few barren years. So for me as captain, I felt that the Cup Final win put our name back in the big time.
You beat QPR in the 1982 Final, also in a replay. They gave you a couple of tricky matches didn't they?
QPR were a good, up and coming team managed by Terry Venables. They gave us two tough games and there were some good players on show. But they weren't particularly good matches, I have to say.
They didn't quite match up to the Manchester City Final the year before. Two London teams didn't have the glamour of a north versus south Final.
So it didn't have the same feel about lifting the Cup for a second time, even though it is good to win any Final. After the joy, style and elation of 1981, the 1982 Final was not quite the same.
Apart from the FA Cup, you had other highlights in your career didn't you?
Two League Cup wins, two UEFA Cup wins, Football Writers' Player of the Year in 1982 and an MBE for services to football. Quite a lot there to go through but I had a 20 year career as a player. So you are entitled to do something in some of those years!
What about your role now at Exeter City where you work in an unpaid capacity?
I like a challenge. I first became involved at Exeter by helping out manager Noel Blake when the club were bottom of the Football League and we eventually managed to preserve our League status.
I returned a few years later after coaching in Japan when Exeter had been relegated to the Conference. This time I was director of football and the challenge was to revive a club deep in debt who had just been taken over by a supporters' trust.
I decided to move my family down to Devon so that I could have a closer involvement with the team, day-in day-out. It is nice to be here without being employed by the club. I like to think I am not taking someone else's job either.
Because if Exeter didn't have me, they wouldn't have anyone else in that role as they haven't got the finances. So it is good to be working with players and helping them improve, which is what I am all about.
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