David Wetherall
- January 10, 2024
- English Footballer
Quick Facts
Full Name | David Wetherall |
Occupation | English footballer |
Date Of Birth | Mar 14, 1971(1971-03-14) |
Age | 53 |
Birthplace | Sheffield |
Country | United Kingdom |
Birth City | England |
Horoscope | Pisces |
David Wetherall Biography
Name | David Wetherall |
Birthday | Mar 14 |
Birth Year | 1971 |
Place Of Birth | Sheffield |
Home Town | England |
Birth Country | United Kingdom |
Birth Sign | Pisces |
David Wetherall is one of the most popular and richest English footballer who was born on March 14, 1971 in Sheffield, England, United Kingdom.
Wetherall was born in Sheffield. He was capped by England at schoolboy level, and in 1989, when he left school, he signed for Sheffield Wednesday under the management of Howard Wilkinson. Wetherall had attended Rotherham sixth form college where he achieved four A-levels at grade A, and chose to study for his BSc in chemistry at the University of Sheffield, so that he could live at home with his parents and combine his education with playing for Sheffield Wednesday’s reserve team. He graduated with a first-class honours degree in 1992, becoming the first Premier League player to achieve such a qualification. In 1990, he was part of a British squad which travelled to Italy for the world student five-a-side football championship, and represented Great Britain as they won the association football bronze medal at the 1991 World Student Games hosted in Sheffield.
Wilkinson, by then Leeds United manager, returned to his former club in July 1991 to sign two young centre-backs, Jon Newsome first and Wetherall a few days later, for a combined fee of £275,000. The 20-year-old Wetherall’s first season at Leeds was the final year of his degree course, so he played for the reserves while training part-time. He made a brief debut in the First Division, on 3 September 1991 at Elland Road as a late substitute against Arsenal; Leeds went on to win the 1991–92 league title. He remembers it as “With 20 minutes to go, we were 2–1 down and I was on the touchline ready to go on, then Lee Chapman scored and the gaffer (Howard Wilkinson) told me to sit down again. But he threw me on for the last two minutes. I always tell people that made the difference in winning the title!” As his teammates took the league trophy on a celebratory open top bus tour, Wetherall chose to revise for his examinations, a decision he came to regret, because “those experiences don’t come around that often”. Though the revision bore fruit: he graduated with first-class honours.
David Wetherall Net Worth
Net Worth | $5 Million |
Source Of Income | English footballer |
House | Living in own house. |
David Wetherall is one of the richest English footballer from United Kingdom. According to our analysis, Wikipedia, Forbes & Business Insider, David Wetherall 's net worth $5 Million. (Last Update: December 11, 2023)
David Wetherall (born 14 March 1971) is an English former footballer who played as a central defender, finishing his playing career with Bradford City at the end of the 2007–08 season. Born in Sheffield, he supported Sheffield Wednesday as a child, and started his playing career there. Before he made a league appearance for Sheffield Wednesday, he transferred to Leeds United and made more than 200 appearances. After this he joined Bradford City for a then club-record fee of £1.4 million and played every minute of every match in his first season for the club and scored the decisive goal which kept the club in the premier league on the final day of the season. Relegation from the Premier League soon followed though and the club went into administration in 2002 but when Stuart McCall departed for Sheffield United, Wetherall became the team captain. Wetherall missed several games through injury in the seasons that followed and Bradford City were further relegated to League One in 2004 and then to League Two in 2007. He played his final game in professional football on 3 May 2008 against Wycombe Wanderers.
Height, Weight & Body Measurements
Height | 1.9 m |
David Wetherall height 1.9 m Davidson weight Not Known & body measurements will update soon.
Who is David Wetherall Dating?
According to our records, David Wetherall is possibily single & has not been previously engaged. As of December 1, 2023, David Wetherall’s is not dating anyone.
Relationships Record : We have no records of past relationships for David Wetherall. You may help us to build the dating records for David Wetherall!
Wetherall was one of 19 senior first-team players to be laid off by chairman Richmond in May 2002, after the club were put into administration and the players unpaid since April. Those players went as far as taking strike action before a pre-season friendly at Hull City, even though Wetherall, as their Professional Footballers’ Association representative, had initially denied they would do so, before the club was saved and players reinstated. Wetherall played in the club’s opening game of the season as Bradford drew 0–0 with Wolverhampton Wanderers live on television, but was again ruled out through an injury, this time to his hip. A planned comeback was put off five weeks later, before he sought the advice of a specialist in Denmark. After sitting out another three months through injury, Wetherall made his return as a substitute against Gillingham in December 2002 but was again injured in a reserve team comeback three days later. He again returned in February 2003 against Coventry City and played 15 games during the final three months of the season.
Facts & Trivia
Davidson Ranked on the list of most popular English footballer. Also ranked in the elit list of famous people born in United Kingdom. David Wetherall celebrates birthday on March 14 of every year.
Despite the club’s relegation to League One and another spell in administration, Wetherall turned down a move away from Bradford City after snubbing Coventry City during the 2004 summer. In October 2004, Wetherall and fellow veteran player Dean Windass both signed year’s extensions to their contracts, with Wetherall’s keeping him at Bradford until the end of the 2007–08 season. He also put his injury problems to one side for the 2004–05 season and missed just one league game – a 1–1 draw with Walsall in February when he was ruled out because of suspension ending his run of 42 consecutive games. Bradford manager Colin Todd had identified Wetherall as a key player for the season, but despite scoring four goals and striker Windass’ 27 goals earning him the league’s top scorer’s crown, Bradford could only finish 11th.