Edries Burton

Edries Burton
Personal information
Date of birth (1968-12-13) 13 December 1968
Place of birth Cape Town, South Africa
Playing position Central defender
Youth career
Moonlighters AFC
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1989–1991 Santos Cape Town 112 (3)
1991–1994 Cape Town Spurs 74 (2)
1994–1997 AmaZulu 92 (6)
1997–2007 Santos Cape Town 277 (7)
Total 555 (18)
National team
1996–2002 South Africa 2 (0)

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Edries Burton (born 13 December 1968)[1] is a retired South African football (soccer) defender who played professionally for Santos Cape Town, Cape Town Spurs and AmaZulu.

Early life

He matriculated at Belgravia High School in 1987, Lyle Lakay also matriculated at the same school. He also studied at UNISA[2]

Club career

Burton joined Santos from amateur club Moonlighters AFC in 1989 and featured regularly when Santos won the Federation Professional League in 1990. He later joined Cape Town Spurs and later won a league and cup double that won the 1995 National Soccer League and the BobSave titles in 1995. When he was at Cape Town Spurs in 1992, he also worked as a financial manager at Josman and Seidel until late into his Amazulu spell in 1996.[3] In his second spell with Santos,he led Santos to the BobSave Knockout Cup (2000/01), PSL league title (2001/02), BP Top Eight Cup (2002) and Absa Knockout Cup (2002/03). When Burton retired in 2007, Santos boss Goolam Allie disclosed that no other Santos player will wear jersey number 23 which was worn by Burton.[4]

After retirement

Shortly after retiring he became the Chief Operations Manager at Santos. In 2012 he took up a Financial and Accounting course at Wits Business School[5] Burton quit as the COO of Santos on 6 August 2014.[6] On 7 August 2014 he became the CEO of National First Division side, Cape Town All Stars.[7]

After resigning from Cape Town All Stars FC, Edries was appointed as Chief Executive Officer at National First Division side, Vasco da Gama (South Africa) in 2015. Vasco da Gama (South Africa) was later renamed in 2016 to Stellenbosch F.C.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.