David Brightwell

David Brightwell
Personal information
Full name David John Brightwell
Date of birth 7 January 1971 (1971-01-07) (age 41)
Place of birth Lutterworth, England
Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Playing position Defender
Youth career
Manchester City
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1988–1995 Manchester City 44 (1)
1991 Chester City (loan) 6 (0)
1995 Lincoln City (loan) 5 (0)
1995 Stoke City (loan) 1 (0)
1995 Bradford City (loan) 1 (0)
1995–1997 Bradford City 24 (0)
1996–1997 Blackpool (loan) 2 (0)
1997–1998 Northampton Town 35 (1)
1998–2000 Carlisle United 78 (4)
2000–2001 Hull City 27 (2)
2001–2002 Darlington 36 (0)
Total 259 (8)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.
† Appearances (Goals).

David John Brightwell (born 7 January 1971) is an English former professional footballer who played in defence for ten clubs.

Contents

Biography

Brightwell was born in Lutterworth, England. He is the son of Olympic gold medalist Ann Packer and 400m runner Robbie Brightwell and brother of footballer Ian Brightwell.

Playing career

Brightwell played for ten professional clubs during his long career. He started at Manchester City, where he had been a trainee. He played 44 league games but also had loans spell at Chester City, Lincoln City, Stoke City and Bradford City.[1]

He joined Bradford permanently in December 1995 for £30,000 and took part in their 1995–96 promotion season. He spent a period on loan at Blackpool before he signed on a free transfer for Northampton Town. He made further free transfers to Carlisle United and Hull City before signing for his final club Darlington in February 2001. Whilst at Carlisle, he played a part in one of the most dramatic footballing moments of all time. With Carlisle needing to beat Plymouth Argyle on the last day of the season to avoid relegation from the Football League, Brightwell equalised from 25 yards when they fell behind and this paved the way for Jimmy Glass, their goalkeeper, to score the winner in injury time.[2]

Brightwell played a total of 258 league games during his career, scoring eight goals.

Honours

As a player

Manchester City

on leaving football became a fireman

References

External links