Johnny Quigley

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Johnny Quigley
Johnny Quigley.jpg
Personal information
Full name John Quigley
Date of birth (1935-06-28)28 June 1935
Place of birth Govan, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
Date of death Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Place of death Nottingham, England, UK
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1957–1965 Nottingham Forest 236 (51)
1965–1966 Huddersfield Town 67 (4)
1966–1968 Bristol City 66 (7)
1968–1970 Mansfield Town 105 (2)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

John "Johnny" Quigley (28 June 1935 – 30 November 2004), was a Scottish football midfielder. He began his career as a provisional signing with Glasgow Celtic, who farmed him out to Scottish Junior Football club St Anthony's. After Celtic terminated his contract he joined another non-league club Ashfield FC, but was almost immediately signed by Nottingham Forest in July 1957, scoring 58 goals in 270 appearances in the 7 seasons he was there.[1]

In 1958, he was the first Forest player to score a First Division post-war hat trick which was against Manchester City. His goal against Aston Villa at Hillsborough won the FA Cup semi final which insured Forest a place in the 1959 FA Cup Final which ended with a 2–1 win over Luton Town a game where he was also a key player.[2]

He left Nottingham Forest in February 1965 for Huddersfield Town where he scored 5 goals in 68 appearances, in October 1966 he joined Bristol City where he made 66 appearances and scored 7 goals. He moved to Mansfield Town in July 1968 for £3,000, there Quigley was to enjoy the club's arguably most famous moment when in 1969 they beat West Ham United, a team containing many of England's World Cup heroes, 3–0 in the FA Cup, and progressed to the quarter final stage where they eventually lost to Leicester City. He made 104 appearances and scored 2 goals, he also captained the team and went on to be assistant player-manager/trainer-coach at Field Mill. He left in 1970 and went on to coach at Doncaster Rovers and also coached in the Middle East in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia for five years. Overall in his professional career he made 508 appearances and scored 72 goals.[3]

Honours

FA Cup Winners 1959 (Nottingham Forest).
FA Charity Shield Runners Up 1960 (Nottingham Forest).
"Giant Killers" Cup Winners 1969 (Mansfield).[4]

References

Other Johnny Related Reference Reading

Bobby Moore: The Life and Times of a Sporting Hero by Jeff Powell

My Father And Other Working Class Football Heroes by Gary Imlach

External links