The Doog: The Incredible Story of Derek Dougan - Football s Most Controversial Figure

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The Doog: The Incredible Story of Derek Dougan - Football s Most Controversial Figure

The Doog: The Incredible Story of Derek Dougan - Football s Most Controversial Figure

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So Dougan's chairmanship came to a premature and disappointing end. Smoke without fire? Perhaps, but he remained, above all as a player, one of the most magnetic figures of his day. Dougan made his Northern Ireland debut against Czechoslovakia during the 1958 World Cup in Sweden and his final international appearance was in 1973.

Derek Dougan Psychedelic footballer – the secret life of Derek Dougan

Francis Lee tries to get between Karl-Heinz Schnellinger and Berti Vogts during England’s 3-2 quarter-final defeat to West Germany. Photograph: Trinity Mirror/Mirrorpix/Alamy Dougan succeeded Terry Neill – his future Northern Ireland manager – as chairman of the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA) in 1970. [91] He advocated the belief that players should control their own destiny and used his position as Chairman of the PFA to further players' rights. [92] He oversaw the inaugural PFA awards in 1973–74, which included the PFA Players' Player of the Year, PFA Young Player of the Year, PFA Team of the Year, and PFA Merit Award. [93] He pushed for freedom of contract for players, and in 1978 accepted a compromise deal that allowed players to switch clubs at the end of their contracts, providing that the player's new club and old club could agree on a transfer fee, with a tribunal agreeing on a fee in cases where clubs could not agree. [94] Pryke, Chris (8 April 2000). "Smile of an innocent man; Soccer idol Dougan is cleared of assault. – Free Online Library". Birmingham Post . Retrieved 27 July 2016. Forster, Richard (11 May 2021). "The day Irish footballers from north and south united to take on Brazil". The Guardian . Retrieved 15 July 2021.O'Forp, Lila (31 March 2011). "Psychedelic footballer – the secret life of Derek Dougan". The Guardian . Retrieved 27 July 2016. Yet he remained an enigma. How could so seemingly rational, objective and eloquent a footballer occasionally commit such fearful fouls? And once, late in 1969, in a Wolves versus Everton match, he got himself suspended for eight games for swearing at a linesman.

Derek Dougan to enter Wolves hall of fame - BBC News

In just over eight seasons at the Molineux, Dougan made 320 first team appearances for Wolves netting over 120 goals. He scored 19 goals in 51 appearances in the 1972–73 campaign, helping the club to a fifth-place league finish and to the semi-finals of the FA Cup and League Cup. [54] They went on to beat Arsenal 3–1 at Highbury in the FA Cup third-place play-off match, which was the penultimate match of an unsuccessful five-year experiment. [55] He scored 15 goals in 50 appearances in the 1973–74 season, and helped Wolves to finally win a trophy. They beat Halifax Town, Tranmere Rovers (after a replay), He was regarded as an outspoken figure, never more so than during his period as PFA chairman, a position he held for most of the 70s. He played a crucial role in the fight for freedom of movement for out-of-contract players.He was appointed player-manager at Southern League Premier Division side Kettering Town in 1975, a position he retained for two years. Whilst at the club he negotiated the first shirt sponsorship deal in English football. He chaired the Professional Footballers' Association (PFA) from 1970 to 1978, and helped to further players' rights and set up the first PFA player awards in 1974. Also throughout the 1970s he became a football pundit and writer, and became particularly well known for his part in ITV's coverage of the 1970 and 1974 FIFA World Cup. After fronting a consortium that took Wolverhampton Wanderers out of liquidation, he served the club as chairman from August 1982 to January 1985. He stood as an independent politician in the Belfast East constituency in 1997, and later became involved in the UK Independence Party.

Derek Dougan - Football s The Doog: The Incredible Story of Derek Dougan - Football s

Over half a century later, it’s almost impossible to imagine what it was like to see colour TV for the first time. “When I first caught sight of myself,” recalled Jimmy Hill, “I was quite alarmed. The colours in those days were very garish. I looked like I had terribly high blood pressure. But the ‘wow’ factor of colour was amazing. We wanted our coverage in 1970 to have a carnival feel to it.” I became a big fan of The Doogs thereafter and i am still collecting memorabilia to this day ,a love afair that has lasted over fifty years. Rejuvenated, he regained his place in the Northern Ireland side. Then Wolves bought him for double what Leicester had paid at the tail end of 1966-67. He stayed a Wolves player until 1976.Everyone at Molineux will be saddened by this news," said Wolves' chief executive Jez Moxey. "Derek was a very talented and colourful footballer who was much loved by the supporters during the years that he wore the Wolves shirt." New DVD charts career of Wolves legend Derek Dougan". Birmingham Mail. 5 December 2007 . Retrieved 28 July 2016. I had eight years under him as chairman and he led the PFA, along with my predecessor Cliff Lloyd, all through negotiations in establishing a constitution and a collective bargaining agreement, which have stood the test of time."

Derek Dougan - Wikipedia

Dougan fails to show for motoring charges. – Free Online Library". Birmingham Post. 11 April 2000 . Retrieved 27 July 2016. Dougan is cleared of burglary charge. – Free Online Library". Birmingham Post. 7 April 2000 . Retrieved 27 July 2016. For many years, players were treated like cattle. But he was very, very outspoken in saying that players had an important role to play and they deserved to be free and masters of their own fate." His time there overlapped with former PFA deputy chief executive Brendon Batson, who recalled: "Derek was a great champion of players' rights and conditions and he was integral part of current terms players enjoy now.In late 1968 Dougan even cut his own single, produced and recorded by Fritz Erste, a German recording engineer who had moved to the West Midlands. In his own studio, Erste recorded A Goal for Dougy, a version of Kaleidoscope's single A Dream for Julie. The words were changed to reflect Dougan's day job – instead of "Strawberry monkeys are smiling for Julie", he sang, in a surprisingly keen tenor, "Peter Knowles dribbles and crosses for Dougy" – and Erste had high hopes of securing a release for the record. It was not to be. "Fritz wanted the record to come out for Christmas," his widow April recalls. "Then we got a call from Derek saying Wolves had a new manager, called Bill McGarry, who'd take a very dim view of his star centre-forward singing on a hippy record. So we never took it to a record company. Fritz was broken-hearted. He was sure it was a No 1." At times, he was a very controversial character, never frightened of taking on authority, which got him into trouble in his playing career and, needless to say, off the field as well," said the current PFA chief executive, Gordon Taylor. Tossell, David (2012), In Sunshine Or In Shadow: A Journey Through the Life of Derek Dougan, Pitch, ISBN 978-1-908051-39-4



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