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By JAMES SHARPE Published: 13: 00 AEDT, 21 March 2026 | Updated: 13: 00 AEDT, 21 March 2026 3 View comments This week, more than most, Kevin Phillips is unable to escape it. Whether heâs at a restaurant, down the pub near his partnerâs house in Durham, or on the golf course, itâs all anyone wants to talk about. Itâs derby day in the North East. âYou canât get away from it, â he tells Daily Mail Sport. âItâs in your face 24/7. I can walk down the street and someone will shout âPhillips, youâre a legend! â and 10 seconds later Iâll get: âPhillips, you little Mackem t**t! "â You get used to such welcomes when youâve been at the heart of some of the most iconic moments in the history of the rivalry between Sunderland and Newcastle. When you scored that winner for the Black Cats in the pouring rain at St Jamesâ Park more than a quarter of a century ago, that tends to follow you around these parts. âItâs not until you live in the area, or play in the derby, that you appreciate the hatred between the fans, â he adds. âI hear it all the time but when derby day comes around, they almost turn into different people. You know what it means to the area and the bragging rights to come out on top. â Phillips was offered the chance to go to St Jamesâ Park on Sunday, as Sunderland make their first Premier League visit to their arch rivals in a decade, but opted against it. Heâll watch the game instead from the clubhouse at his local golf course. âI just thought Iâd be able to watch it in comfort, without any grief, â he says with a laugh. âCome Monday morning, if Sunderland donât get a result, Iâll be keeping my head down. â Former Sunderland striker Kevin Phillips was at the heart of some of the most iconic moments in the history of the Tyne-Wear derby Now 52, Phillips is planning to watch Sunday's derby from his golf club, not St James' Park. 'I just thought Iâd be able to watch it without any grief, ' he laughs None of this is new for former striker Phillips, now 52, who knew as soon as he stepped foot in Sunderland â a place he once thought looked like Coronation Street â how much it meant to the people of both cities. âWe had a culture back then where we would socialise quite a lot as a team, â he says. âI remember one Sunday afternoon we were in Gibside in Newcastle. About six lads came walking in to the pub and within, I would say, two minutes they were chasing us out. We had to leg it. Luckily one of the lads had his car there. We got to it just before they grabbed hold of us. âIâve been chased out of a Chinese restaurant before! These two lads made it very clear that if I didnât leave now, I wouldnât be leaving at all. I didnât even get to the table. I literally just walked in the door, turned around, and walked straight back out again. â Phillips regales all his tales with a smile. Heâs keen to point out, too, that itâs not always like this. There were many times, too, when the Sunderland squad would have their nights out in Newcastle and enjoy the cityâs hospitality. Even now, 27 years on, he relives that famous goal with a clarity that makes you feel like heâs right back there again. He remembers every detail. He remembers the deafening whistles around St Jamesâ Park before the game, the loudest heâd ever heard. He remembers how the ball fell to Gavin Mc Cann on the right, how the ball stopped dead in a puddle as Phillips attempted his first shot, how Tommy Wright raced out to save it, how Niall Quinn called for Phillips to cross the rebound to him and how, instead, he hit âthe sweetest chip Iâd probably ever hit in my careerâ and how he watched it looped over Wright and Warren Barton and the âunrealâ emotions that filled him. He remembers the âdeadly silenceâ. He certainly remembers the rain. âWe found out afterwards that their bench at 2-1 was trying to get the game called off, â he says. He remembers the build-up, too. The 200 fans that lined the streets outside Sunderland's hotel to wish them well. The police escort that made him feel like he was playing for England. The bombshell team news. Â âWe got wind on the bus that Alan Shearer and Duncan Ferguson were potentially going to be on the bench and Ruud Gullit was going to lose his job if we won. The atmosphere on the bus changed. Peter Reid was never a big team-talker but he came into the dressing room and pinned the team sheet on the board and went: âI donât need to say anything, lads, just look at that! " Phillips and Alex Rae celebrate their famous win at St James' Park in 1999, thanks to Phillips' winner. He describes the emotion as 'unreal' Sunderland fans pause by a mural of Phillips at the Stadium of Light earlier this season âWe got to the ground, glass bottles were lobbed at the bus. Kevin Ball looked out the window and saw this old lady, so Kev waved at her just to be polite. She turned around and stuck two fingers up at him! â It wasnât just hard man Ball who had his frosty encounters with his elders. The day after Phillips scored the âgoal in the rainâ, as itâs now known, he thought it would be a good idea to go shopping in Newcastle city centre. He was hungry so stopped off at Greggs. âI was in the queue, minding my own business, when I get a tap on the shoulder, â says Phillips âI thought, âOh, here we go! â. I turned around and it was a little old lady. She just looked at me, shaking her head, and said: "What the f*** are you doing in here? " I was like âIâm sorry, what do you mean? â and she replied: âAfter what you did last night, you shouldnât be here. "' Like the current crop, that Sunderland side in 1999-00 had just been promoted too. Phillips ended the season on 30 Premier League goals, including another two in the reverse fixture against Newcastle as Sunderland came from 2-0 down to earn a 2-2 draw, which earned him the Golden Boot and the European Golden Shoe, becoming the first and only Englishman to win it before Harry Kane joined him two years ago. âLet's not forget as well, Harryâs in the Bundesliga, so it doesnât count, â grins Phillips. Phillips only found out about his European crown when the club phoned him on holiday. He didnât even attend the ceremony because Sunderland had a match that night. For a player who started his career at right back and was long told he was too small to make it at the top level, he admits he didnât do too bad. He proved some people wrong along the way, few more so than former England forward-turned-pundit Rodney Marsh who predicted Phillips, while prolific in the lower leagues, would struggle to get past five or six goals in the top flight. âPeople that know me will tell you it takes a lot for me to get wound up or annoyed, â says Phillips. âFor some reason, what Rodney Marsh said really spurred me on. âI also remember Shearer coming out, I think he'd done it a few seasons before, saying he didn't think anybody would get 30 goals in the Premier League again. â Phillips can see that football is changing. You donât see the old âbig man, little manâ combinations like his famous partnership with Quinn. The art of the striker is not quite what it once was either. Phillips ended the 1999-2000 season with the Premier League Golden Boot - a feat that no Englishman matched until Harry Kane 16 years later âIt almost feels like people are more interested in what they can do aside from scoring goals: their link play, their distance covered, their sprints, â says Phillips. 'Can you play up top on your own? Can you play out wide if needed? Can you drop into the pocket? Itâs crazy, really. A striker? How many goals can you score? â Phillips has dipped his toe into management, winning the Northern Premier League title with South Shields â an achievement he puts up there with his winning goal in the derby â before stints at Hartlepool and AFC Fylde. After leaving Fylde last year, he says heâs in no rush to return to the dugout but wouldnât reject any calls from interested chairmen. Heâs impressed by the job Regis Le Bris has done with his old club and how heâs moulded a new group of players so quickly. One of those players has the chance on Sunday to write their name, like Phillips nearly three decades ago, into Sunderland folklore. âYou don't really become part of the furniture until you score a winning goal in a derby, â he says. âYou take your standing to a different level. I was only at Aston Villa for a year and I didnât play too many games. But what I did do that season was score the winning goal against Birmingham City at St Andrews. Whenever I bump into Villa fans, thatâs all they ever remind me about. âThis Sunday is a chance for someone to become a legend. â
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