Andy Booth

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Andy Booth
Personal information
Full name Andrew Booth
Date of birth December 6, 1973 (age 33)
Place of birth    Huddersfield, England
Nickname Boothy, The Legend
Playing position Forward
Club information
Current club Huddersfield Town
Number 23
Youth clubs
Huddersfield Town
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1992-6
1996-2001
2001
2001-
Huddersfield Town
Sheffield Wednesday
Tottenham Hotspur (Loan)
Huddersfield Town
123(53)
133(28)
4(0)
207(63)   
National team2
 ? England U-21 3(0)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and
correct as of 05/03/2007.
2 National team caps and goals correct
as of 05/03/2007.
* Appearances (Goals)

Andrew "Andy" Booth (born 6 December 1973) is a professional footballer for Huddersfield Town in Coca-Cola League One.

Contents

[edit] The Early Years

"Boothy", as he quickly became known, was born in Huddersfield, England. He began his career playing for his home town club as a trainee, making his first team debut as a substitute at Fulham in March 1992, but had to wait until November that year to score his first goal (in a 2-2 draw at Blackpool) for the club. A few more goals followed in the 1992/3 season, but it was the season after, the last at Huddersfield Town's Leeds Road ground, that he really forced his way into the first team, scoring 10 goals in his 26 appearances.

The next season was probably the best of Booth's career. Partnered with maverick red-head Ronnie Jepson, Booth netted 29 goals, of which six came in two hat-tricks, and finished the season by scoring one more in the play-offs, guiding the Terriers to promotion into Division One. The next season, in which Huddersfield finished just outside the playoff spots in the division above proved to be the last Booth would play for Huddersfield after four seasons, during which he had scored 53 league goals for the club.

[edit] The Premiership

In the summer of 1996, Sheffield Wednesday bought Booth for a then club record transfer, £2.7 million , and his goal-scoring form continued into the Premiership, scoring 13 goals for the Owls in his first season making him the club's highest goal scorer for that season. Although Booth is not the tallest player, exactly six feet tall, he has always been known for his aerial ability and a good many of the goals he has scored have been with his head. Perhaps it was this, allied with the cartilage operation that kept him out for two months during the next season that proved pivotal in his career. He scored only seven goals - indeed, Booth was never to reach double figures in the Premiership again, although there were thrilling highlights, none better than the hat-trick he scored on his return to the team (following the operation) against Bolton.

Booth stayed with Wednesday until 2001, a period which included their relegation from the top flight. It was during his final season with the Owls that he made his final Premiership appearances, during a successful loan spell with Tottenham Hotspur and his Wednesday career came to an end shortly after his return to Hillsborough. Tottenham tried to sign him on a permanent deal but he opted to return home to his beloved Huddersfield Town

[edit] The Prodigal Son

In March 2001, Huddersfield Town were struggling towards the bottom of Division 1. On March 22nd, they paid Sheffield Wednesday £200,000 for the services of Booth, who returned with the intention of scoring the goals that would help him avoid his second successive relegation, and keep the club he had supported as a boy in the division he helped them reach. He failed.

In his first full season back with the club, he helped them into the play-offs. Despite another goal for Booth, Huddersfield lost to Brentford and were denied the opportunity to bounce straight back. Worse was to follow next season, when Booth's six goals did little to help his team avoid relegation, and they fell into the bottom division for the first time since 1980.

[edit] The Legend

Despite this setback, Booth stayed with Huddersfield and his experienced head was crucial in guiding a team of youngsters through a difficult season, culminating in a drop into the play-offs on the last day of the season. This time, though, Huddersfield were victorious, and their fans at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff could proclaim a new legend - Andy Booth.

Now plying their trade in Coca Cola League One, Huddersfield have been in the upper reaches of that league since their return. Booth has scored 23 goals in that period, including his 100th league goal for the club (after which a DVD was released showing all 100 goals) and a hat-trick, all headers, on 18th March 2006 against Rotherham United.

At the end of the 2005-06 season, following another play-off appearance (defeat against Barnsley over two legs), Booth had scored 122 goals for Huddersfield Town, leaving him 37 short of the club's record scorer, George Brown.

To commemorate Booth's service to the club, Town played a testimonial match against Spanish La Liga side Real Sociedad on July 25, 2006. The game finished 0-0 in front of over 7,000 people.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ On February 1 he signed a one year extension to his contract which will keep him till the summer of 2008."Booth pays tribute to Terriers fans", Teamtalk

[edit] External links


Huddersfield Town F.C. - Current Squad

2 Holdsworth | 3 Taylor | 4 Hudson | 5 Mirfin | 6 N. Clarke | 8 Worthington | 10 Taylor-Fletcher | 11 Schofield | 12 Ahmed | 13 Sinclair | 14 T. Clarke | 15 McAliskey | 16 McIntosh | 17 McCombe | 18 Beckett | 19 Collins | 21 Hardy | 22 Young | 23 Booth | 25 Berrett | 26 Eastwood | 27 Glennon | 30 Hand | 31 Skarz | 35 Smithies | Caretaker Manager: Murphy