English Career (1991 - 2000)
He started his career at
Norwich City, initially as a centre-half before being converted into a striker by manager
Dave Stringer. He quickly found success in his new position as Norwich spent most of the first season (1992-1993) of the new
Premiership as league leaders, before eventually slipping back to third place.
He became the most expensive player in English football in July 1994, when he was transferred from Norwich City to
Blackburn Rovers for £5 million.
In his first season at Ewood Park he developed a strong partnership (known as 'The SAS Partnership') with
Alan Shearer and scored fifteen Premiership goals to secure the club's first league title since 1914.
A succession of injuries, combined with a loss of form, saw him make just thirteen Premiership appearances during
1995-96 and fail to score a goal. He regained his form over the next three seasons and even won an England cap in November 1997, although he was left out of the
World Cup squad after a fall-out with national coach
Glenn Hoddle.
Blackburn Rovers were relegated from the Premiership at the end of
1998-99, just four years after being crowned champions, and Sutton was sold to
Chelsea for £10 million. His time at
Stamford Bridge proved an unhappy one, as he struggled both to live up to the price tag and to adapt to Chelsea's style of play, scoring just one league goal in 28 appearances, in the 5-0 destruction of Manchester United. He failed to even make the bench for the club's
FA Cup final win against
Aston Villa and was sold to
Scottish Premier League side
Celtic for £6 million in the summer of 2000.