Iwelumo's father is Nigerian and his mother is Scottish. He won his first cap as a full Scottish international coming on as a substitute against Norway in a 2010 FIFA World Cupqualifier in 2008, notable for his missing an open goal from only yards out as the match finished 0–0 an event which Iwelumo has said "tortured" him. He had his first international start in a friendly against Argentina in November the same year.
Iwelumo had only made nineteen appearances for St Mirren, scoring twice against Berwick in the Scottish League Cup[4] and Dundee in the Scottish Cup,[5] before his performances were being noticed and in early 1998, Aarhus Fremad of Denmark signed him up. Aarhus released him two years later in February 2000 and he had trials at Preston North End and Celtic – the team he supports – before signing a four-year deal with Stoke City.[6]
Stoke City
After two years in Denmark, Iwelumo returned to the UK to join third tier Stoke City. He played as a substitute as Stoke won the 2000 Football League Trophy Final.[7] Later that year he was sent out on loan to York City where he made eleven appearances before returning to Stoke. He remained there before being loaned out again to Cheltenham Town in February 2001. He played four times for Cheltenham Town, scoring once against Mansfield[8] before being recalled back from his loan by Stoke City where he managed to build on his appearances without actually gaining a regular place in the first team, his most notable contribution possibly being the equaliser in the Potteries derby on 21 October 2001. He signed a two-year contract extension with Stoke in March 2002.[9]
Barnsley revealed an interest in signing Iwelumo in January 2004.[10] He was subject of a loan move once more when he moved to Brighton & Hove Albion in March 2004.[11] He helped the "Seagulls" to the 2004 Second Division play-off final in Cardiff, winning the penalty that gave Albion promotion.[12] When he returned to Stoke at the end of the season he was released, after four years at the club.
Alemannia Aachen
2. Fußball-Bundesliga side Alemannia Aachen signed Iwelumo on a free transfer in July 2004, after rejecting the offer of a two-year contract from Brighton.[13] However his stay at Aachen was short-lived, and he was released after just six months and nine substitute appearances.
Colchester United
Iwelumo had his most successful period of his career at Colchester United, he signed for Colchester United in July 2005.[14] On 28 November 2006, the many highlights included, the four goals he scored as Colchester beat Hull City 5–1 in a Championship league match.[15] Iwelumo formed a formidable partnership with Jamie Cureton that season, with the U's eventually finishing 10th in The Championship. Whilst at Colchester, he helped them achieve promotion to the Championship in 2006 and finish in a club record 10th position the following season. Iwelumo rejected a new contract offer from Colchester on 21 May 2007,[16]
Charlton Athletic
On the same day signed for Charlton Athletic on a free transfer.[17] In the 2007–08 season he featured in every league game and was the Addicks' top goalscorer; he was also named the Championship's player of the month for November 2007 after scoring last minute winning goals in two consecutive games.[18]
Wolverhampton Wanderers
It was confirmed that Iwelumo could leave Charlton as part of cost-cutting measures and he eventually signed for fellow Championship side Wolverhampton Wanderers in July 2008 on a two-year deal.[19] Iwelumo scored a hat-trick for Wolves against Preston North End in a 3–1 win, taking his goal tally to eight for the season, where he was also sent off for an apparent head-butt on defender Sean St Ledger.[20] Wolves made an appeal against this, which was turned down, despite St Ledger stating that the clash of heads was accidental and Iwelumo served a three-match ban.[21]
His early season form in front of goal earned him November's Championship Player of the Month Award.[22] However, after this run of form he entered a goalless drought of 16 games before netting against his former club Charlton.
His season was ended prematurely after a high tackle from Lee Carsley in the game against promotion rivals Birmingham City left him with medial ligament damage.[23] In his absence the team secured promotion to the Premier League as champions.[24]
He regained fitness over the summer break but suffered more injury woe as he broke his metatarsal in Wolves' opening pre-season game against Australian club Perth Glory.[25] He eventually returned to first team contention and made his Premier League debut in a 1–1 draw against Aston Villa in October 2009, though again suffered an injury setback which put him on the sidelines for a further month.[26]
When fit, his Premier League appearance were limited to fleeting substitute roles and he instead moved on a month's loan to Championship side Bristol City in February 2010 to gain more playing time.[27] He scored the first of two goals for Bristol City in a 2–1 win over West Bromwich Albion on 21 February 2010.[28] He returned to Wolves to battle for his place, making a handful of further substitute appearances as the club confirmed their Premier League survival, but failing to score, meaning he had scored just once for Wolves in 18 months.
He signed for Championship side Burnley on 1 June 2010 on a two-year deal for an undisclosed fee.[29] Iwelumo scored his first goal for Burnley on his debut on 7 August 2010, scoring the winner against Nottingham Forest in a 1–0 victory for Burnley. On 11 September 2010 Iwelumo scored a stunning hattrick against Preston North End in a 4–3 win for Burnley at home, with two fine headers and a volley. After a disappointing second half to the season, Iwelumo was subject to transfer speculation, with a failed move to Preston North End.
Watford
Iwelumo signed for Championship rivals Watford on a two-year contract for an undisclosed fee on 19 July 2011.[30] Iwelumo made his debut for Watford against former club Burnley on the opening day of the season. The game finished 2–2.[31] Iwelumo scored his first goal for Watford against Hull City in October and had to wait another five months before scoring again in which he bagged a brace against Leeds United on 31 March 2012.[32]
Iwelumo joined Notts County on loan on 23 November.[33] He returned to Watford after failing to score for the "Magpies" in five matches.[34] On 31 January 2013, Iwelumo joined Oldham Athletic on loan until the end of the 2012–13 season.[35]
He was called up to the full Scotland squad for a 2010 FIFA World Cup qualification match against Norway at Hampden Park on 11 October 2008.[42] He came on as a 57th-minute substitute in that game to make his debut, but his performance was overshadowed by an open goal miss from three yards, in a match that finished 0–0.[43][44] For days after, Iwelumo constantly watched video replays of the incident but was determined not to be remembered for the miss, stated "I'm a proud Scot, I love my country and it's my dream to do well for them."[45] He was recalled for his first international start in a friendly against Argentina on 19 November 2008.[46]
Coaching and media career
In October 2014, one day after he announced his retirement from playing, Iwelumo began working in the media department at his former club Stoke City.[47] In July 2015, Iwelumo was appointed head coach of the under-18 team at former club Wolverhampton Wanderers.[48] However, he quit the position less than a week later.[49] In November 2016 he re-joined former club Chester as assistant manager to Jon McCarthy but continued to work as a pundit for Channel 5's Football League Show. In June 2017, citing concerns from fans about his absence on matchdays, he moved into the role of first-team striker coach.[50][51]
Iwelumo graduated from Staffordshire University in 2016 with a first-class bachelor's degree in Professional Sports Writing and Broadcasting.[52]
Iwelumo can often be heard as a co-commentator on talkSPORT.
Career statistics
Club
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition