David Watson (footballer, born 1946) explained

David Watson
Fullname:David Vernon Watson
Birth Date:5 October 1946
Birth Place:Stapleford, Nottinghamshire, England
Position:Central defender
Youthclubs1:Stapleford O.B
Years1:1966–1967
Clubs1:Notts County
Caps1:25
Goals1:1
Years2:1967–1970
Clubs2:Rotherham United
Caps2:121
Goals2:19
Years3:1970–1975
Clubs3:Sunderland
Caps3:177
Goals3:27
Years4:1975–1979
Clubs4:Manchester City
Caps4:146
Goals4:4
Years5:1979
Caps5:2
Goals5:0
Years6:1979–1982
Clubs6:Southampton
Caps6:73
Goals6:7
Years7:1982–1983
Caps7:59
Goals7:5
Years8:1983
Caps8:26
Goals8:3
Years9:1983–1984
Caps9:34
Goals9:1
Years10:1984
Years11:1984–1985
Caps11:25
Goals11:1
Years12:1985–1986
Clubs12:Kettering Town
Caps12:10
Goals12:3
Totalcaps:698
Totalgoals:71
Nationalyears1:1974–1982
Nationalteam1:England
Nationalcaps1:65
Nationalgoals1:4

David Vernon Watson (born 5 October 1946) is an English former professional footballer who played as a defender. During his club career, he played for Notts County, Rotherham United, Sunderland, Manchester City, Werder Bremen, Southampton, Stoke City, Vancouver Whitecaps and Derby County. Watson is regarded as one of Sunderland's greatest defenders of all time.[1] [2] [3]

He won 65 caps with the England national team and was captain on three occasions.[4]

Club career

Watson was born in Stapleford, Nottinghamshire, and started his career in 1966 as a striker with hometown club Notts County making 26 appearances in two seasons, before moving to Second Division Rotherham United in 1968.[5] Watson was signed by Tommy Docherty in a player exchange deal which involved Keith Pring going to Notts County and the Millers paying £1,000.[6] He was thrust into a relegation battle with Rotherham in 1967–68 which was unsuccessful and led to Docherty's departure.[7] [8] After four seasons at Millmoor where he made 141 appearances and scored 21 goals, he caught the attention of Sunderland manager Alan Brown who paid £100,000 for his services in December 1970.[6]

At Roker Park, Watson began at centre forward, which many believed hindered their chances of gaining promotion.[6] It was not until Bob Stokoe took over in November 1972 that Watson began to play at centre back. Sunderland reached the 1973 FA Cup final where they beat First Division Leeds United 1–0; he was able to keep Leeds's strike pairing of Allan Clarke and Mick Jones quiet and was praised by Stokoe.[9] Following Sunderland's cup success the expectation was now for the club to gain promotion but they missed out by two points in both 1973–74 and 1974–75.[6]

In the summer of 1975, Watson joined First Division Manchester City for a fee of £175,000 in a deal which saw Jeff Clarke move the other way. Watson spent four seasons at Maine Road which saw Man City miss out on the title in 1976–77 by one point. They did win the League Cup in 1976 beating Newcastle United 2–1.[6] He left Manchester City in the summer of 1979 for German Bundesliga side Werder Bremen. His time at Bremen was short as after making his debut in a 1–0 win over Bayer Uerdingen he was sent off in his second match against 1860 Munich for "pushing" Hermann Bitz and banned by the German FA for eight weeks.[6] He was fined by his club and refused to travel to an away match against FC Schalke 04 because of an injury before turning up to play for England.[6]

He returned to England by October with Southampton.[10] Watson played 31 games in 1979–80 and 44 games in 1980–81 as the Saints finished 8th and 6th respectively. However, he was dropped by Lawrie McMenemy during the next season and he joined Stoke City in January 1982. He played 24 times for Stoke in 1981–82 helping them to avoid relegation. He then played 40 times in 1982–83 as Stoke finished in a mid-table position of 13th. Watson spent the summer of 1983 with the Vancouver Whitecaps.[11] He spent as season on loan at Derby County where he made 34 appearances.[12] Watson ended his league career at his first club Notts County, but continued playing into his 40s at non-league club Kettering Town.

International career

Less than a year after the FA Cup victory and despite playing in the Second Division, he was given his debut for England in a friendly game against Portugal in Lisbon.[13] Watson – quite advanced in years for a debutant at 27 – was one of six first-timers on show (among the others were Trevor Brooking) in what would prove to be 1966 World Cup-winning manager Alf Ramsey's last game in charge.[14] Later in 1974, Watson won his second cap in a 2–0 defeat by Scotland at Hampden Park, Glasgow, coming on as a substitute for Norman Hunter. His first competitive game at international level was his seventh appearance in all as England defeated Czechoslovakia 3–0 at Wembley in a qualifier for the 1976 European Championships. Despite this scoreline, England would not ultimately qualify for the finals while the Czechoslovak team would go on to win it.[15] [16] Watson did not miss another England game until 1980.[6]

During the same year, Watson's establishment as England's first choice central defender was galvanised by a 4–3 victory over Denmark in Copenhagen which set the seal on a qualification for UEFA Euro 1980 – England's first major tournament qualification for a decade.[17] [18] Watson continued his England career, earning his 50th cap against Argentina in a warm-up game prior to the European Championships in Italy.[19] Watson duly played in all three of England's group games – against Belgium, Italy and Spain – but a draw, defeat and victory respectively was not enough for England to progress.[20] His final appearance for England came against Iceland in June 1982 having gained 65 caps.[6] He was excluded from the squad for the 1982 FIFA World Cup, with manager Ron Greenwood selecting only three central defenders, Phil Thompson, Terry Butcher and Steve Foster. He did however, appear in the video for "This Time We'll Get It Right", England's 1982 World Cup song.[21] Watson remains the most-capped England player never to play in a World Cup finals match.[22]

Personal life

Born in Stapleford, just west of Nottingham, he played youth football for Stapleford Old Boys and left school to work as a farm labourer and then as an electrician. His elder brother, Peter, was also a professional footballer.[23]

In February 2020, it was reported that Watson, aged 73, was suffering from a neurodegenerative disease with his wife, Penny, suspecting that "head injuries and repeated heading of the ball" were the cause.[24]

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Notts County1966–67Fourth Division4000000040
1967–68Fourth Division211001000220
Total251001000261
Rotherham United1967–68Second Division180400000220
1968–69Third Division448400000488
1969–70Third Division412305000492
1970–71Third Division1892320002212
Total12119133700014122
Sunderland1970–71Second Division174000000174
1971–72Second Division42134110414715
1972–73Second Division373941000474
1973–74Second Division413204040513
1974–75Second Division404201030464
Total177271757011121233
Manchester City1975–76First Division311107130422
1976–77First Division412401020482
1977–78First Division410206020512
1978–79First Division331204081472
Total1464901811511886
Werder Bremen1979–80Bundesliga2000000020
Southampton1979–80First Division304100000314
1980–81First Division382402000442
1981–82First Division5100102081
Total737503020837
Stoke City1981–82First Division243000000243
1982–83First Division352302100403
Total595302100646
Vancouver Whitecaps1983NASL263263
Derby County1983–84Second Division341502000411
Notts County1984–85Second Division251101000271
Career total6886853841228281080

International

Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
England197470
197570
1977110
197890
1979104
1980100
198150
198220
Total614

Honours

Sunderland

1972–73[25]

Manchester City

1975–76

England

1973–74 (shared),[26] 1974–75,[27] 1977–78,[28] 1978–79,[29] 1981–82[30]

Individual

1973–74 Second Division,[31] 1974–75 Second Division, 1978–79 First Division,[32] 1979–80 First Division[33]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Sunderland's Greatest XI news from The Northern Echo . 2023-03-20 . www.thenorthernecho.co.uk.
  2. Web site: SUBHAM . 2022-02-01 . Greatest Sunderland Players Ever Top 10 Legends . 2023-03-20 . 1SPORTS1 . en-US.
  3. Web site: 2020-01-16 . Your 2020 inductees . 2023-03-20 . Sunderland Association Football Club . en.
  4. Book: Matthews, Tony . The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City . Lion Press . 1994 . 0-9524151-0-0.
  5. Web site: Godbehere . Finlay . 18 November 2022 . Five former Millers who went to the World Cup . 28 February 2024 . Rotherham United FC.
  6. Web site: Dave Watson . football-england.com . 5 April 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121010094611/http://www.football-england.com/dave_watson.html . 10 October 2012.
  7. Web site: 31 December 2020 . Tommy Docherty: The irrepressible Scot who always had a one-liner at the ready . 28 February 2024 . Bracknell News.
  8. Web site: Club History . 28 February 2024 . Rotherham United FC.
  9. Web site: 2 January 2001 . The day cup fever gripped Bickley! . 28 February 2024 . News Shopper.
  10. Book: Chalk, Gary . All the Saints: A Complete Players' Who's Who of Southampton FC . Holley . Duncan . Bull . David . Hagiology Publishing . 2013 . 978-0-9926864-0-6 . 495–496 . en.
  11. Web site: Smith . Peter . 24 November 2021 . Photo of blood-soaked Stoke City hero helps secure landmark ruling in dementia campaign . 28 February 2024 . Stoke on Trent Live.
  12. Web site: Manager . Warren . Parke . Callum . 19 February 2022 . Ex-Derby County star Dave Watson barely remembers his playing days as he battles dementia . 28 February 2024 . Derbyshire Live.
  13. Web site: Bagchi . Rob . 11 October 2012 . The forgotten story of … England under Joe Mercer . 28 February 2024 . The Guardian.
  14. Web site: 14 February 2020 . Former England captain Dave Watson has neurodegenerative disease . 28 February 2024 . The Guardian.
  15. Web site: History of the Championship . 28 February 2024 . BBC Sport.
  16. Web site: Scragg . Steven . 15 May 2019 . Czechoslovakia, the birth of the panenka and unlikely glory at Euro 76 . 28 February 2024 . These Football Times.
  17. Web site: 12 January 2014 . Keegan double downs Denmark in seven-goal thriller . 28 February 2024 . The FA.
  18. Web site: Gott . Tom . 4 July 2021 . England vs Denmark: Complete head-to-head record . 28 February 2024 . 90min.
  19. Web site: England vs Argentina . 28 February 2024 . eu-football.info.
  20. Web site: Evans . Tony . 4 April 2020 . How England blew their chances in Italy as Euro 80 turned ugly on and off the pitch . 28 February 2024 . The Independent.
  21. Web site: 4 June 2006 . Frozen in time . 28 February 2024 . The Guardian.
  22. Web site: Dave Watson . 28 February 2024 . Manchester City FC.
  23. Web site: Ahmed . Nadya . 30 August 2013 . Death of former Forest centre-half Peter Watson . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20130831123432/http://www.nottinghampost.com/Death-Forest-centre-half-Peter-Watson/story-19728334-detail/story.html . 31 August 2013 . 28 February 2024 . Nottingham Post.
  24. News: Dave Watson: Ex-England skipper may have same disease as Jeff Astle had . 14 February 2020 . BBC Sport . 14 February 2020.
  25. Web site: Gillian . Tony . 11 May 2023 . Sunderland AFC responds after social media criticism following remarks from wife of 1973 hero Dave Watson . 28 February 2024 . Sunderland Echo.
  26. Web site: British Home Championship 1974 . 28 February 2024 . www.footballdatabase.eu.
  27. Web site: British Home Championship 1975 . 28 February 2024 . www.footballdatabase.eu.
  28. Web site: British Home Championship 1978 . 28 February 2024 . www.footballdatabase.eu.
  29. Web site: British Home Championship 1979 . 28 February 2024 . www.footballdatabase.eu.
  30. Web site: British Home Championship 1982 . 28 February 2024 . www.footballdatabase.eu.
  31. Lynch, Tony (1995). The Official P.F.A. Footballers Heroes. London: Random House. p. 140.
  32. Lynch. The Official P.F.A. Footballers Heroes. p. 142.
  33. Lynch. The Official P.F.A. Footballers Heroes. p. 143.