Dave Leworthy Explained

David Leworthy
Birth Date:1962 10, df=y
Birth Place:Portsmouth, England
Height:5 ft 9 in[1]
Position:Forward
Years1:1981–1982
Clubs1:Portsmouth
Caps1:1
Goals1:0
Years2:1982–1984
Clubs2:Fareham Town
Caps2:84
Goals2:44
Years3:1984–1985
Clubs3:Tottenham Hotspur
Caps3:11
Goals3:5
Years4:1985–1989
Clubs4:Oxford United
Caps4:31
Goals4:9
Years5:1987–1988
Clubs5:Shrewsbury Town (loan)
Caps5:6
Goals5:3
Years6:1989–1992
Clubs6:Reading
Caps6:27
Goals6:8
Years7:1991
Clubs7:Colchester United (loan)
Caps7:9
Goals7:4
Years8:1991–1993
Clubs8:Farnborough Town
Caps8:71
Goals8:64
Years9:1993–1997
Clubs9:Dover Athletic
Caps9:152
Goals9:86
Years10:1997
Clubs10:Rushden & Diamonds
Caps10:18
Goals10:8
Years11:1997–2000
Clubs11:Kingstonian
Caps11:132
Goals11:66
Years12:2000–2003
Clubs12:Havant & Waterlooville
Caps12:49
Goals12:26
Years13:2006
Clubs13:Kingstonian
Manageryears1:1995
Managerclubs1:Dover Athletic (joint caretaker)
Manageryears2:2004
Managerclubs2:Havant & Waterlooville
Manageryears3:2007–2008
Managerclubs3:Banstead Athletic
Manageryears4:2008–2009
Managerclubs4:Croydon (joint)
Club-Update:22:30, 14 March 2012 (UTC)

David Leworthy (born 22 October 1962) is an English retired footballer who played as a centre forward.

Career

Leworthy started his career with his hometown club Portsmouth. After spending 9 years with Pompey, from the age of 10, he moved to Non-League Fareham Town where his prolific goalscoring record there earned him a dream move to Tottenham Hotspur. Leworthy made his Spurs debut in the North London derby, against arch rivals Arsenal, that ended in a 2–0 defeat at White Hart Lane in front of a crowd of 40,399 on 17 April 1985. He played alongside the likes of Glenn Hoddle, Ossie Ardillies, Graham Roberts and Steve Perryman and went on to make a further ten appearances in total, scoring 4 goals.

In December 1985, Leworthy moved to fellow First Division side Oxford Utd for a transfer fee of £200,000. He spent 4 years at the club and made 37 appearances, scoring 8 goals - most notably against Manchester United. Following a loan spell at Shrewsbury Town, he then moved to Reading in 1989 where he would spend 3 years. He was loaned to Colchester Utd towards the end of the 1990/1991 season, scoring 4 goals in 9 appearances and helping the U's to a 2nd-place finish in the Vauxhall Conference as runners-up to Barnet.

Leworthy returned to the Vauxhall Conference the following season with Farnborough Town, following a permanent switch from Reading ahead of the 1991/1992 season. Leworthy had a couple of very successful seasons at Cherrywood Road and finished the 1992/1993 season as the Vauxhall Conference top goalscorer with 32 League goals (39 in all competitions) despite the club being relegated. He remained in the division following Farnborough's relegation and was sold to newly promoted Dover Athletic in a move that saw the non-league transfer record broken when the Kent club paid £50,000 for his services. Leworthy continued his prolific goalscoring exploits at Crabble and scored 86 times in a total of 158 appearances. He netted all four goals in Dover's 4–3 win over Woking in February 1996, and netted a hat-trick in the very same fixture the following season, just seven months later, which ended in 5–1 victory for Dover in September 1996.[2]

In January 1997 Leworthy moved to fellow Football Conference side Rushden & Diamonds for a fee of £15,000, and his goals in the final 4 months of the season, including a debut goal against his former club Farnborough Town, helped ease the club away from the relegation zone and into a midtable finish.[3] However, his stay at Rushden didn't last long, and at the end of the season he moved to South-West London club Kingstonian for a club record fee of £18,000.[4] [5] Leworthy was part of the Kingstonian side that celebrated two consecutive FA Trophy wins at Wembley Stadium in 1999 and 2000.

Leworthy's career began to draw to a close with a period at Conference South club Havant & Waterlooville that included a spell as manager.[6]

Leworthy came out of retirement in 2006 for a brief second spell at Kingstonian. He was named manager of Banstead Athletic of the Combined Counties League Premier Division in December 2007. He left Banstead in October 2008[7] and became joint manager of Croydon alongside Peter Thomas in November. Peter Thomas left the club in January the following year.[8]

Leworthy is now long retired from the game but still supports his hometown club Portsmouth.

Honours

Colchester United[9]

Kingstonian[10] [11]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rothmans Football Yearbook 1987–88 . Peter . Dunk . Queen Anne Press . London . 1987 . 278 . 978-0-356-14354-5.
  2. News: Lew Better Believe It! . Paul . Vass . . 72 . 1996-09-05 . 2024-06-24 . Newspapers.com.
  3. Web site: David Leworthy Profile on the Rushden & Diamonds Official Website . 4 April 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100601093851/http://www.thediamondsfc.com/page/A-ZofDiamonds/0,,10784~1253301,00.html . 1 June 2010 . dead .
  4. Web site: Official Dover Athletic Football Club – News . 4 April 2010 . 27 July 2011 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110727122132/http://dover-athletic.co.uk/index.php?p=news&id=894&link= . dead .
  5. https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football-nonleague-notebook--chapple-faces-up-to-challenge-1246729.html?cmp=ilc-n Football: Non-League notebook
  6. http://www.havantandwaterlooville.net/stats/player.asp?p=2 David Leworthy
  7. Web site: Leworthy quits as Banstead Athletic boss | This is Surrey . https://archive.today/20120914083118/http://www.thisissurreytoday.co.uk/sport/Leworthy-quits-Banstead-Athletic-boss/article-425619-detail/article.html . 14 September 2012 . dead.
  8. http://www.wandsworthguardian.co.uk/sport/4576613.Gill_defends_Robbins_sacking/ Gill defends Robbins sacking
  9. Web site: Conference Honours . Coludaybyday.co.uk.
  10. Web site: FA Trophy Honours . Coludaybyday.co.uk.
  11. Web site: Other Award – Non League Honours . Coludaybyday.co.uk.