Danny Higginbotham

Danny Higginbotham

Higginbotham with Gibraltar in 2014
Personal information
Full name Daniel John Higginbotham[1]
Date of birth (1978-12-29) 29 December 1978[1]
Place of birth Manchester, England
Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)[1]
Playing position Defender
Youth career
1994–1997 Manchester United
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1997–2000 Manchester United 4 (0)
1998–1999Royal Antwerp (loan) 29 (3)
2000–2003 Derby County 86 (3)
2003–2006 Southampton 94 (4)
2006–2007 Stoke City 45 (7)
2007–2008 Sunderland 22 (3)
2008–2013 Stoke City 64 (4)
2012Nottingham Forest (loan) 6 (1)
2012Ipswich Town (loan) 12 (0)
2013 Sheffield United 15 (0)
2013–2014 Chester 17 (1)
2014 Altrincham 2 (0)
Total 396 (26)
National team
2013–2014 Gibraltar 3 (0)

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

† Appearances (goals)

Daniel John "Danny" Higginbotham (born 29 December 1978) is a former professional footballer who played as a defender.

Born in Manchester, Higginbotham started his career at his local club Manchester United. He made seven appearances at Old Trafford as well as a loan spell with Belgian side Royal Antwerp before joining Derby County in order to play more matches. He spent three years at Derby but handed in a transfer request when the club was relegated from the Premier League. Southampton signed Higginbotham for a £1.5 million fee in February 2003, and he helped them reach the 2003 FA Cup Final. When Southampton were relegated in 2005, Higginbotham rejected a new contract and was placed on the transfer list.

He joined fellow Championship side Stoke City for a £225,000 fee in August 2006. He was made captain when Michael Duberry left in January 2007 and Stoke went on to narrowly miss out on a play-off place. With Stoke not being promoted Higginbotham again decided to hand in a transfer request to help force through a move to Sunderland. He spent one season at the Stadium of Light before returning to Stoke in 2008. He became a vital member of Tony Pulis' squad as Stoke established themselves in the Premier League. He scored the winning goal in the FA Cup quarter-final against West Ham United but missed out on both the semi-final and the final due to a knee injury. After his recovery he struggled to force his way back into the side and spent time out on loan to Nottingham Forest and Ipswich Town before joining Sheffield United on a free transfer in January 2013. After eight months at Bramall Lane, he left to join Conference Premier side Chester before ending his career with a short spell at Altrincham.

Higginbotham made his international debut for the Gibraltar national team in a friendly against Slovakia in November 2013 at the age of 34, qualifying through his maternal grandmother. In January 2014, Higginbotham retired from club football after a 14-year career, but made two more international appearances for Gibraltar until his international retirement in March.

Early life

Born in Manchester,[1] Higginbotham grew up in nearby Altrincham. Despite passing his eleven plus exam he was denied entry into Altrincham Grammar School for Boys.[2] His elder brother, Paul, played non-League football for Witton Albion.[3]

Club career

Manchester United

Higginbotham started his career at his local club Manchester United, but was not highly rated during the first year of his apprenticeship and his career was almost ended when he broke his femur in a B team match.[4] However, he recovered well from the injury and was given a two-year professional contract in 1998.[5] He made his Premier League debut on 10 May 1998, coming on for Michael Clegg 60 minutes into a 2–0 win over Barnsley at Oakwell.[6]

He was sent to Belgian Second Division side Royal Antwerp on a loan spell. He got off to a bad start at the club and asked to return to Old Trafford after being abused by Antwerp supporters outside the Bosuilstadion, and had to be talked into staying by manager Regi Van Acker.[7] Following this start the club then won 15 matches in a row and Higginbotham become popular with the fans.[8] However, the season ended with defeat in a play-off game, and after the final whistle there was an alleged attack on referee Amand Ancion by teammate Ronnie Wallwork. Higginbotham was subsequently banned from football for a year for his involvement. In September 1999, a Belgian court reduced Higginbotham's ban to four months.[9] Ancion maintained that Wallwork had grabbed him by the throat and that Higginbotham had headbutted him.[10] Higginbotham always maintained his innocence, stating that he had tried to intervene peacefully after Wallwork had confronted Ancion in an aggressive manner.[11] Alex Ferguson believed the player's innocence and handed both players four-year contracts as the club appealed their suspensions.[10]

Higginbotham played six games for United during the 1999–2000 season, including appearances in the UEFA Champions League and at the Maracanã Stadium in the FIFA Club World Championship.[12] He made his full debut in a 3–0 defeat to Aston Villa at Villa Park on 13 October 1999, in what was described as a blow to the credibility of the League Cup as United had fielded a number of young players.[13] He suffered with concussion during the match after a clash of heads with Dion Dublin.[14] He failed to break into the first team on a regular basis as Denis Irwin, Phil Neville and Mikaël Silvestre were all preferred ahead of him at left-back.[15]

Derby County

Higginbotham's desire to play regular first-team football led to him joining Derby County for a £2 million fee – a large sum for a young player with just four top-flight appearances to his name.[16] His decision to leave Manchester United was praised by the player he failed to displace, Denis Irwin.[17] Higginbotham made his debut in a 2–2 draw with Southampton, and had a good start to his Derby career until he was substituted at half-time during his third appearance after struggling to contain Everton's Niclas Alexandersson.[18] Manager Jim Smith soon switched to a new system without any full-backs but Higginbotham adapted well to playing on the left-side of a three-man defence.[19] Derby avoid relegation out of the Premier League on the penultimate day of 2000–01 with a 1–0 victory over former his club Manchester United at Old Trafford.[20]

He began 2001–02 on the left-side of central defence despite Smith reverting to a 4–4–2 formation.[21] Smith was sacked after a poor start, but his replacement Colin Todd failed to improve the club's form, and Todd was sacked and replaced with John Gregory, with similarly poor results.[22] Higginbotham scored his first goal in English football on 16 March 2002, converting a penalty to secure a 3–1 victory over Bolton Wanderers after striker Fabrizio Ravanelli backed out of taking the penalty.[23] This would prove to be the last win of a relegation campaign, with the only remaining positive to the season for Higginbotham coming when he was voted as the fans' Player of the Year.[24]

On 17 August 2002, he collided badly with Grimsby Town forward Steve Livingstone and knocked Livingstone unconscious; this left Livingstone with a skull fracture injury that would see him out of action for two months.[25] It was expected that Higginbotham would eventually move unless Derby did well enough to gain promotion back to the Premier League, and so in January 2003, with Derby struggling in the First Division, he moved to Southampton on loan, joining permanently in February.[26]

Southampton

Following Derby's relegation from the Premier League, Higginbotham moved to Southampton in January 2003 on loan until the end of 2002–03. The move was made permanent in February 2003 for a £1.5 million fee.[27] He featured in Southampton's FA Cup run in 2002–03, playing once in the fifth round against Norwich City,[28] but was an unused substitute for the final against Arsenal.[29]

The 2003–04 season was difficult for the club, and Gordon Strachan resigned in March. Higginbotham felt that his replacement, Paul Sturrock, was unable to handle the pressure at St Mary's, but denied press rumours that Sturrock had lost the confidence of the players.[30] Steve Wigley took charge for 2004–05 and the club's decline continued.[31] Wigley demoted Higginbotham to the reserves after following a falling out between the pair, though he soon reversed the decision and returned him to the first team.[32] Harry Redknapp replaced Wigley as manager in December2004 but failed to arrest the decline, and Southampton were relegated in last place. Higginbotham had scored the equalising goal in the penultimate match of the season at Crystal Palace, but a final day defeat to Manchester United left Southampton two points from safety.[33]

George Burley took over from Redknapp in December 2005, though neither manager was unable to put together an effective promotion campaign and Southampton ended the season 12th in the Championship. Higginbotham rejected a new contract and as a result was placed on the transfer list in July 2006.[34] He told the local press that he felt disrespected the way Southampton chairman Rupert Lowe had handled his contract – he had taken a pay cut to move from Derby, a 40% pay cut following relegation, and then the new contract offer was lower still than his current contract.[35]

Stoke City

Higginbotham joined Southampton's Championship rivals Stoke City on 3 August 2006 for an initial £225,000 fee,[36] and quickly cemented a regular place in Tony Pulis's starting line-up. He began 2006–07 at left-back, but soon established himself at centre-back after initially filling in for Clint Hill following Hill's sending off at Wolverhampton Wanderers on 23 September 2006.[37] Pulis gave Stoke a reputation as a "Battersea Dogs Home" club, and Higginbotham proved to be a typical signing in this regard as he felt unwanted at Southampton and said that his career had been reinvigorated by the move to the Britannia Stadium.[38] Stoke went seven games without conceding a goal, and during this run Higginbotham scored the only goal of the game against local rivals West Bromwich Albion after deposing Carl Hoefkens as the club's penalty taker.[39] In February 2007, he was awarded the club captaincy following Michael Duberry's departure to Reading.[40] Over the course of the season he scored a career-high seven goals in his 46 appearances.[41] Though Stoke narrowly missed out on the play-offs, a successful personal campaign culminated in Higginbotham being voted the club's Player of the Year.[42]

Sunderland

On 28 August 2007, it was announced that a bid from Sunderland had been accepted by Stoke, after Higginbotham had handed a transfer request to the club.[43] Higginbotham wrote in his autobiography that Pulis would only authorise the deal if he handed in a transfer request.[44] Higginbotham signed a four-year deal with Sunderland the following day, moving for a £2.5 million fee, possibly rising to £3 million dependent on appearances.[45] He said that the chance to play Premier League football under Roy Keane was too good to refuse.[46] On 10 November 2007, Higginbotham scored the opening goal for Sunderland which was believed to come off his ear in a 1–1 draw with their Tyne-Wear rivals Newcastle United at the Stadium of Light.[47] He was only a bit-part player by the start of 2008–09, and Keane allowed him to return to Stoke for the same fee that he had paid to Stoke.[48]

Return to Stoke City

Higginbotham playing for Stoke City in 2010

Higginbotham re-joined Stoke, now in the Premier League, in September 2008 for a £2.5 million fee.[49] On 19 October 2008, Higginbotham scored the first goal of his second spell, with a penalty in a 2–1 win over Tottenham Hotspur.[50] He was the first choice at left-back for manager Tony Pulis, playing in 28 league matches as the team successfully fought for survival. However, he missed the final five matches of the season due to a slipped disc.[51] He later underwent surgery.[52]

With the summer signing of Danny Collins, Higginbotham was dropped to the bench before regaining his place in the team, mainly being utilised in his more natural position in the centre of defence, and scored the first goal in a 3–0 win over Blackburn Rovers on 8 February 2010.[53][54] He was praised by first-team coach Mark O'Connor for reclaiming his place in the side.[55]

He started the first match of 2010–11 away at Wolverhampton Wanderers, but was dropped for the next match in favour of Collins.[56] Higginbotham signed a contract extension in October 2010 for a further 12 months, keeping him at Stoke until the summer of 2013.[57] He made his 200th top-flight appearance against Manchester United on 24 October 2010.[58] He struggled with injury for the rest of the first half of the season, and was in and out of the first team.[59]

"We wanted to cement Danny's future with the club because he is such a good professional and it is important we look after certain players at the football club who started all this off. I've got a lot of time for Danny because he is one who falls into that category. He may not be in the side on a regular basis at the moment, but he still has a crucial role to play, as do a number of other players in a similar situation. The fabric of a football club is made up of the whole cloth, not bits and pieces, so we are delighted Danny will remain a part of that."
Stoke manager Tony Pulis on Danny Higginbotham's new contract.[60]

After signing his contract extension, Higginbotham stated that he wanted to end his career at Stoke.[61] He scored a rare league goal in January 2011 against Bolton Wanderers.[62] He scored the first FA Cup goal of his career in a quarter-final win against West Ham United in March 2011.[63] It proved to be the winning goal, thus earning Stoke their first semi-final appearance in 39 years.[64] He scored an identical goal against Newcastle United the following week.[65] However, in the next league match against Chelsea, Higginbotham sustained a cruciate knee ligament injury that ruled him out for six months.[66][67] Pulis spoke of his disappointment at losing Higginbotham but also stressed he would play a key role in the final few matches of the season due to his influence in the dressing room.[68][69] Higginbotham later admitted that missing the FA Cup final made him "jealous" of his teammates.[70]

Higginbotham targeted to return from his knee injury by October 2011.[71] He marked his return from his knee injury by scoring the only goal in a 1–0 reserve team win over Sheffield United on 11 October 2011.[72] However, after failing to force his way back into the first team, Higginbotham joined Championship team Nottingham Forest on loan until the end of the season on 31 January 2012.[73][74] Upon signing for Forest, Higginbotham admitted that he was unsure of his future at Stoke.[75] He was backed by Thomas Sørensen to make a return to Stoke's first team.[76] On 10 March 2012, Higginbotham scored his first goal for a year when he scored the second for Forest in a 3–1 home win over Millwall.[77] His loan spell with Forest was ended early in April 2012 due to injury.[78]

Higginbotham joined Championship club Ipswich Town on a one-month loan on 21 September 2012,[79] which was later extended until January 2013.[80] He was expected to extend his loan until the end of the season but Higginbotham rejected the deal saying he wanted to be based closer to his home,[81] and left Portman Road having played 12 matches.[82] After his move to Sheffield United, Higginbotham has stated that his six-year spell at Stoke was 'the best years of his career'.[83]

Later career

On 1 January 2013, Higginbotham signed for Sheffield United on a six-month contract,[84][85] and made his debut for the club against their South Yorkshire rivals Doncaster Rovers the same day.[86] Former Stoke teammate and current Sheffield United teammate Dave Kitson played a part in Higginbotham's move to Bramall Lane, Higginbotham stated on his move to the club: "I was getting ready to go back to Ipswich on Sunday but after speaking to Dave I was optimistic something would be sorted here and thankfully it was ... I was very surprised and very happy when I got a phone call on Sunday to say that something could be happening here [Sheffield United] ... Dropping into League One isn't a worry for me because this is a club on the up and I didn't want to be stuck at Stoke just picking my money up because that isn't me"[87][88] On 18 June 2013, having made sufficient first-team appearances for Sheffield United, Higginbotham activated a clause in his contract to extend it for the following season.[89]

On 29 August 2013, Higginbotham joined Conference Premier club Chester on a one-year deal after falling out of the Sheffield United first team.[90] After making 17 appearances for Chester, Higginbotham left the club in order to forge a media career.[91] After leaving Chester, Higginbotham signed for Altrincham of the Conference North, as he wished to continue playing on a part-time basis with fewer travel commitments.[92] Higginbotham had previously stated it was an ambition of his to play for Altrincham, as he had supported them as a boy.[93] He announced his retirement from football on 8 January 2014.[94][95]

International career

Born and raised in England, Higginbotham was eligible to play for the Gibraltar national team through his maternal grandmother.[96] The former Gibraltar manager, Allen Bula, is his uncle.[97][98] Higginbotham made his international debut in Gibraltar's first ever match as a UEFA member, a 0–0 draw in a friendly against Slovakia, on 19 November 2013.[99] He was praised for his performance and was named man of the match.[100] He announced his retirement from international football in March 2014,[101] having earned three caps for Gibraltar.[102]

Journalism career

In February 2013 Higginbotham began to write his own column in The Sentinel, a local newspaper in the North Staffordshire and South Cheshire area.[103][104] Higginbotham also has a regular sports column in The Independent. He released his autobiography in April 2015, entitled: Rise of the Underdog.[105]

Personal life

His first child, Jak, was born in 2001.[106] His second child, Jessica, was born on 12 October 2003.[107] His first marriage ended in 2008.[108]

In 2010 he married Nicole, an American woman, who gave birth to his third child, Joshua, in 2011.[109]

Career statistics

Club

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League National Cup League Cup Europe Other Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Manchester United 1997–98[110] Premier League 100000000010
1998–99[111] Premier League 000000000000
1999–2000[112] Premier League 3000101[lower-alpha 1]01[lower-alpha 2]060
Total 400010101070
Royal Antwerp (loan) 1998–99[113] Belgian Second Division 293003[lower-alpha 3]1324
Derby County 2000–01[114] Premier League 2603040330
2001–02[115] Premier League 3711020401
2002–03[116] First Division 2320021253
Total 8634081984
Southampton 2002–03[116] Premier League 9010100
2003–04[117] Premier League 27010201[lower-alpha 4]0310
2004–05[118] Premier League 2114010261
2005–06[119] Championship 3731010393
Total 9447040101064
Stoke City 2006–07[120] Championship 4472000467
2007–08[121] Championship 101020
Total 4572010487
Sunderland 2007–08[121] Premier League 21300213
2008–09[122] Premier League 100010
Total 2230000223
Stoke City 2008–09[122] Premier League 2810020301
2009–10[123] Premier League 2413021292
2010–11[124] Premier League 1023131164
2011–12[125] Premier League 2000003[lower-alpha 5]050
2012–13[82] Premier League 000000
Total 64461723000807
Nottingham Forest (loan) 2011–12[125] Championship 6161
Ipswich Town (loan) 2012–13[82] Championship 120120
Sheffield United 2012–13[82] League One 150201[lower-alpha 6]0180
Chester 2013–14[126] Conference Premier 171101[lower-alpha 7]0191
Altrincham 2013–14[126] Conference North 2020
Career total 39626221213506145031
  1. Appearance in UEFA Champions League
  2. Appearance in FIFA Club World Championship
  3. Appearances in Belgian Second Division play-offs
  4. Appearance in UEFA Cup
  5. Appearances in UEFA Europa League
  6. Appearance in League One play-offs
  7. Appearance in FA Trophy

International

Appearances and goals by national team and year
National teamYearAppsGoals
Gibraltar[102] 201310
201420
Total30

Honours

Individual

References

General

Specific

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  107. Higginbotham 2015, p. 135
  108. Higginbotham 2015, p. 205
  109. Higginbotham 2015, p. 232
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