Dave Watson
Dave Watson (born October 5 1946) was a towering centre half. He started his career in the late 1960s, first with Notts County then with Rotherham United, but it was at Sunderland A.F.C. that he became famous.
Converted from centre forward to centre back by Bob Stokoe, he was part of Sunderland's 1973 FA Cup winning team and became established as an England international shortly after this, eventually winning 65 caps, sometimes as captain. He is the most capped England footballer never to play in the World Cup.
He later played for Manchester City, Werder Bremen, Southampton, Stoke City, Derby County then finally back to Notts County.
He is now a businessman.
Dave Watson (born November 20 1961) a hard working central defender who started his career at Liverpool F.C. as a reserve team player before joining the Norwich City first team for £50,000 in 1980. Watson's career began to take off and he was capped for England before moving onto play for Everton F.C. for £1.23milion in 1986. Watson became a defensive stalwart for the Toffees throughout the 1980s and 1990s, captaining them to F.A Cup success in 1995 and being a member of their 1987 league championship winning side. Dave had made 369 league appearances for Everton scoring 23 goals and was honoured with a testimonial match against Rangers F.C. later that year, which Everton won 3–2. He was appointed interim manager in March 1997 following the resignation of Joe Royle, but reverted to his playing duties for the 1997–98 when Howard Kendall was appointed manager for the third and final time. Watson's first-team opportunities gradually faded, but he made one appearance for Everton during the 2000–01 before finally announcing his retirement as a player at the age of 39 and moving into management with Tranmere Rovers. His key objective at Tranmere was to regain their Division One status which had just been lost, but he failed to achieve that goal and was sacked after just one season at the helm.
Categories: 1946 births | English footballers