Wednesday, 27 August 2014

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRO-ENGLISH " THOMAS ANDREW "TOM" HUDDLESTONE " IS A PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALLER WHO PLAYS FOR HULL CITY AND THE ENGLAND NATIONAL TEAM : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK GENIUS "

                        BLACK               SOCIAL             HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Thomas Andrew "TomHuddlestone (born 28 December 1986) is an English professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Hull City and the England national team.
Having progressed through the youth ranks at Nottingham Forest and Derby County, Huddlestone began his professional career in 2003 with the latter club. He quickly broke into the first team, and made 95 league appearances before switching to Tottenham Hotspur in 2005. Having spent some of the 2005–06 season on loan to Wolverhampton Wanderers, where he made 14 league appearances, he began to break into the Tottenham team during the 2006–07 season, and became a regular player for the club. However, he struggled with injury problems during the 2011–12 season, and fell out of favour. He joined current club Hull City in August 2013, having made 143 league appearances for Tottenham.
Huddlestone represented England at under-16under-17under-19 and under-20 levels before making hisunder-21 debut in 2005. He was a regular for the under-21 side between 2005 and 2009, and made 32 appearances. He made his full England debut in 2009, and has since gone on to make three further appearances.

Club career

Derby County

Born in Nottingham,[1] Huddlestone was taken on by Nottingham Forest at an early age but was released at 12 as he was claimed to be "not strong enough". After Forest he joined Derby and after progressing well, made his debut for Derby County's reserve side at the age of just 15, when he appeared as an 80th minute sub at right wingback in a match against Coventry City.[2]
He was given his full debut by George Burley at the age of 16 on the opening day of the 2003–04 season in a 3–0 home defeat to Stoke City, where he was voted Man of the Match. Though Derby struggled in Huddlestone's first full season, Huddlestone was one of Derby's few bright points, with Burley saying "He's a terrific talent. As a young player, he (is) the best passer of a ball I (have) ever seen, and I've worked with some good young players."[3] He eventually went on to appear in 43 of Derby's 46 league games that season. He enjoyed an equally successful 2004–05 as Derby reached the Football League Division One playoffs, where they lost toPreston North End in the semifinals. However, half way through the season Huddlestone signed for Tottenham Hotspur in January 2005 for a fee reported to be worth up to £2.5 million, though he remained at Derby for the rest of the campaign.[4] He left Pride Park with 95 appearances to his credit.

Tottenham Hotspur

Huddlestone spent a few months of the 2005–06 season on loan to Wolverhampton Wanderers, scoring his first league goal, at Derby,[5] before returning to make his debut for Tottenham as a substitute in the 1–0 defeat away at Fulham on 31 January 2006.[6]
His first start for Tottenham came on 14 September 2006, away to Slavia Prague in the UEFA Cup, a game which Tottenham won 1–0. His first goal for Spurs came in the League Cup 4th Round match against Port Vale on 8 November 2006. Huddlestone scored 2 goals in this match, his second goal proving decisive in extra time, taking Tottenham through to the quarter finals of the competition. Huddlestone got his first league goal for Spurs on 17 December 2006 against Manchester City with an excellent half-volley on 24 minutes, hit first-time after assisting with team mate Calum Davenport's first goal with a free-kick.[7] Huddlestone established himself as one of the most promising young English central midfielders in the premiership towards the end of the 2006–07 season and head coach Martin Jol compared Tom Huddlestone with German legend Franz Beckenbauer due to his playmaking abilities, ferocious shot power and versatility.[8] He has also been deployed at centre back on numerous occasions for both Tottenham and the England under-21s.
On 25 December 2006, he signed a new four and a half-year contract – keeping him at the club until 2011.[9] Tom signed a new and improved five-year contract on 30 June 2008 committing his future to Tottenham Hotspur until 2013.[10] He came on as a substitute as Spurs beat Chelsea in the 2008 Football League Cup Final. During the 2009–10 season, he became a regular under Harry Redknapp. In March, he extended his contract until 2015.[11] Huddlestone was plagued with injury during the 2011–12 season and managed only four appearances for the club. On 18 July 2012, Huddlestone made his first appearance for the club in over 10 months, coming on as a second half substitute in Tottenham's 2–0 pre season friendly win over Stevenage. He returned for the 2012/13 season and made his first appearance as a substitute for Jermaine Defoe against Norwich City on 1 September 2012. He was shown a red card for serious foul play, the match ended in a disappointing 1–1 draw. The red card was later rescinded.[12]

Hull City


Huddlestone playing for Hull Cityin 2013
On 14 August 2013, Huddlestone moved to Hull City for an undisclosed fee believed to be about £5.25 million.[13] He made his debut on the first day of the 2013–14 season when he came off the bench in a 2–0 loss away at Chelsea.[14] On 28 December, he scored his first goal for Hull in a 6–0 home win against Fulham, his first goal since April 2011.[15] On 28 January 2014, Huddlestone acted as emergency goalkeeper after Hull City's goalkeeper Allan McGregor was sent off for squaring with Crystal Palace's player Stuart O'Keefe. With Hull already making three substitutions, Hull City's manager Steve Bruce ordered Huddlestone to take over the goalkeeping role.[16]
On 13 April 2014, he scored Hull's third goal in their 5–3 FA Cup semi-final defeat of Sheffield United at Wembley Stadium.[17] On 17 May 2014 he started in the 2014 FA Cup Final against Arsenal.[18]

International career

Youth

Having been capped at the U-17 and U-19 levels, Huddlestone was a regular in the England under-21s. He played twice in the 2007 UEFA Under-21 Championship before a red card for dissent ruled him out of the semi-final and final.[19] In October 2008, he scored the opening goal from a free kick in the second leg of the 2009 European Championship qualifying play-offs against Wales. Although the game ended in a draw which ensured qualification for England, it was marred by his sending-off in the second half for a reckless challenge on Darcy Blake.[20]He missed the tournament through injury.

Senior team

He was called up into the England squad for the first time by coach Fabio Capello to face United States and Trinidad and Tobago in friendlies.[21] On 14 November 2009, he received his first cap for the senior side in the 1–0 loss in a friendly match against Brazil, after coming on as a substitute in the 81st minute.[22] His next appearances came in a2010 World Cup warm up match against Mexico, where he came on in as a substitute in the 61st minute.[23] His latest appearance for England also came in a 2010 World Cup warm up game against Japan where he started for the first time in 2–1 victory.[24]
In May 2010, Fabio Capello announced that Huddlestone would be in his preliminary World Cup squad of 30 players.[25] However, was not selected for the final 23-man squad.[26]On 11 November 2012, new England manager Roy Hodgson gave Huddlestone his first call up to the squad for two years for a friendly match against Sweden on 14 November.[27]

Attributes

He is known for his passing ability, which has led to comparisons with former Tottenham player Glenn Hoddle.[28] He also has a powerful shot that has enabled him to score long-range goals from midfield, notably when he scored twice from outside the penalty area against Fulham on 26 December 2007,[29] a top-corner goal against Bolton Wanderers in May 2010 and a spectacular left-footed effort against Arsenal in a 3–3 draw in April 2011.

Hair

Shortly after scoring a goal for Tottenham against Arsenal in April 2011, Huddlestone accepted a challenge not to cut his hair until he scored again, to raise money for charity.[30]It took him two-and-a-half years, and 55 games, before he finally scored his next goal (in a Premier League match for Hull against Fulham on 28 December 2013), and he raised more than £57,000 for Cancer Research as a result.[31] [32]

Career statistics

Club

As of 24 August 2014.
ClubSeasonDivisionLeagueFA CupLeague CupEuropeOther[A]TotalDiscipline
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsBookedRed card
Derby County2003–04[33]First Division430101045080
2004–05[34]Championship45020102050060
Total880302020950140
Wolverhampton Wanderers (loan)2005–06[35]Championship131000013120
Tottenham Hotspur2005–06[35]Premier League4000004000
2006–07[36]21130526035320
2007–08[37]28320419043461
2008–09[38]22010206231230
2009–10[39]3326042434100
2010–11[40]14200007021240
2011–12[41]200000204000
2012–13[42]20020204028031
Total144814017534220915282
Hull City2013–14[43]Premier League363410040481
2014–15[44]200000204010
Total38341002044491
Career total283122111953622036120533
A. ^ The "Other" column constitutes appearances (including substitutions) and goals in the Football League play-offs.

International

As of 7 January 2014.
England National Team
YearAppsGoalsBookedRed cardRef
20091000[39]
20102000[39]
201100[40][41]
20121000[42]
201300[42][43]
Total4000

Honours

Tottenham Hotspur

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