‘Keeper Perry Digweed’s in and out 12 years with the Albion

THEY say goalkeepers are different and Perry Digweed certainly came into that category with his name alone!

Digweed switched from Craven Cottage to play for the Seagulls when signed for £150,000 by former Fulham favourite, Alan Mullery, in January 1981.

It seems remarkable to record that he was still at the club – indeed earning the player of the season accolade – a decade later.

In fact his Albion career stretched to 12 years, by which time you’d have imagined he would have racked up around 400 appearances.

That his total number of games played for the Albion amounted to 182 reflects periods when he was either out of favour courtesy of various managerial changes or sidelined through injury.

Born in Chelsea on 26 October 1959, the young Digweed started playing football at Park Walk Primary School and he was soon featuring in inter-school matches played at Battersea Park. It was only when he was 12 that he started playing in goal and before long he gained representative honours, playing for the West London Schools under-13 side.

He played at Highbury in one match but he started training with Fulham’s youngsters from the age of 13. Ken Craggs, Mullery’s no.2 at Brighton, was in charge of Fulham’s youth team at the time, but Digweed didn’t get an immediate offer of an apprenticeship after he left St Michael’s School; instead he became a trainee salesman at Covent Garden market (his dad ran a busy greengrocer’s close to Putney Bridge).

Craggs finally offered him the apprenticeship six months later, in September 1976, and only four months afterwards manager Bobby Campbell gave Digweed his first team debut in a 2-0 defeat at home to Bolton Wanderers. Fulham were in the old Second Division at the time and the form of Irish international Gerry Peyton restricted Digweed to only 15 league games.

A chance to step up a division came following one of Mullery’s public fits of pique with Brighton’s first choice Graham Moseley in the middle of the 1980-81 season. He put reserve goalkeeper John Phillips into the Albion line-up for the Boxing Day match at home to Crystal Palace and, although Moseley was restored to the line-up for three matches at the start of 1981, on Craggs’ recommendation, Mullery returned to his former club to sign Digweed. The young ‘keeper made his debut in a 2-0 defeat away to West Bromwich Albion on 17 January 1981.

DIG BWAfter only three games in the old First Division for Brighton, Digweed was called up to the England under 21 squad, although Leeds’ John Lukic and Blackpool’s Iain Hesford were chosen to play ahead of him.

A colourful insight into Digweed’s lifestyle came in Spencer Vignes’ excellent book A Few Good Men (Breedon Books Publishing, 2007) in the section about ‘rival’ Moseley.

“Very much the boy about town with his dandy dress sense and coiffured hair, Perry looked more like one of Adam’s Ants than a goalkeeper,” wrote Vignes, who discovered Digweed and Moseley got on well in spite of the rivalry.

“Perry was a single boy who still lived in London and would tell you all about his conquests the night before,” Moseley told Vignes. “He was a great lad and a lot of fun to be with.”

Dig colourIn one of many matchday programme profiles, Digweed talked about his love of looking round the Kings Road, Chelsea, clothes shops on his way back home from training. He also liked his golf and told the matchday programme in August 1991: “I try and play as much as I can and get quite a few invitations to pro-am events along with other footballers and celebrities.”

Remarkably at one point in his topsy turvy career with the Seagulls he was loaned to Chelsea and played three top tier games for them in the 1987-88 season, when John Hollins was their manager. He featured in a 3-3 draw away to Coventry City, a 0-0 home draw v Everton and a 4-4 draw at Oxford United.

“Playing wise it couldn’t have been better,” he told Dave Beckett in an interview. “I used to watch Chelsea always as a youngster, I was only born round the corner, so when circumstances meant I ended up in the first team I was overjoyed.”

He said Chelsea were keen to keep him until the end of the season but manager Barry Lloyd called him back to the Goldstone because he needed the goalkeeping cover.

Having watched the great Peter Bonetti keep goal for Chelsea for many years, Digweed was delighted to receive specialist coaching from the ex-England goalkeeper once a week at Brighton. When he’d been at Fulham, ex-QPR stopper Mike Kelly, who went on to work with England’s goalkeepers, had been his specialist coach.

Indeed he said it was through Kelly’s connections that he got a brief look-in with the England Youth set-up, although it was difficult to dislodge first choice Chris Woods, who went on to become a full England international.

Apart from Moseley, Digweed’s other competition for the number one spot during his time at the Goldstone came from the likes of Joe Corrigan, John Keeley and Mark Beeney.

He played under five different managers and, while other goalkeepers came and went, Digweed remained on the Albion’s books and played in some memorable games – as well as missing out on plenty of others. For instance, he had the green jersey in the famous 1983 FA Cup 5th round 2-1 victory at Anfield (although Moseley returned for the later rounds) but he was also between the sticks when Albion won 1-0 at Anfield the season before.

“Funnily enough, I’ve never lost against Liverpool in the four first-team and two reserve matches I’ve played against them,” he told Beckett.

Digweed memorably saved a Chris Kiwomya penalty as Brighton beat Ipswich to reach the play-offs in 1991 but one of his personal highlights was a mid-season game Albion played against the Nigeria national side in Lagos during Mike Bailey‘s reign.

“It was unbelievable,” he said. “The people were poverty-stricken yet all the money they had went on these huge football stadiums. There were trumpets and music going all the way through….it’ll take soomething to beat playing in front of nearly 100,000 fanatical Nigerians.”

Any Albion fans at the Brighton v West Brom game at the Goldstone on 21 September 1988 will wince with the recollection of Digweed being injured in the most intimate of places.

Forward John Paskin lunged in attempting to score and his studs tore Digweed’s urethra. Not surprisingly the ‘keeper was forced off the pitch but I recall he went off under his own steam rather than on a stretcher which, when the extent of the injury was revealed later, seemed remarkable!

Digweed lost four-and-a-half pints of blood through the wound, was in hospital for three weeks initially and required four operations to repair the damage.

“I realise now I was lucky that they weren’t just internal injuries otherwise it would have been even more serious and who knows what could have happened,” Digweed told Beckett in the matchday programme.

“I had a catheter bag and everything for a while and I couldn’t even lay down because it was so uncomfortable. I had to sleep in an armchair for three weeks.”

A subsequent article by Vignes in a later matchday programme revealed how the club tried to get him back playing sooner than the medical people advised.

“The doctors had said not to play for the rest of the season,” he told Vignes. “When I got out (of hospital) Brighton tried to rush me back into training and I said ‘Er, I don’t think so’. Sometimes some things are more important than football.”

In fact it would be 18 months before he played his next first team game, largely because Keeley seized the opportunity to establish himself as a more than useful no.1. Digweed didn’t reappear between the Albion sticks until March 1990, stepping back onto the Goldstone pitch for a midweek match against Plymouth Argyle which the Seagulls won 2-1.

In August 1990, through impeccable sources, I was able to break the story exclusively that Albion were transferring Keeley to Oldham Athletic for £238,000. Barry Lloyd briefly flirted with erratic American Tony Meola in goal before restoring Digweed to the first team.

He ended up playing 52 games over the course of a season extended by involvement in the play-off final against Notts County – his highest season’s tally in all his years with the Albion. And he was voted player of the season.

In an Argus supplement previewing the Wembley final, Digweed was interviewed by Mike Donovan and couldn’t hide his delight that instead of watching from the sidelines, as he did in 1983, he’d be out on the pitch.

“It’s the biggest match of my career,” he declared.

The only other season Digweed came close to what you might refer to as first choice was in Chris Cattlin’s 1985-86 squad when he played in 41 games, including a memorable FA Cup third round 2-0 win away to Newcastle when, according to the definitive Albion history book Seagulls! The Story of Brighton & Hove Albion FC (by Tim Carder and Roger Harris): “Perry Digweed was magnificent between the posts.”

By 1992-93, Beeney had established himself as first choice and after Digweed had stepped in when Beeney served a one-game suspension, manager Lloyd declared: “We believe we have on our books the best two ‘keepers in Division Two.”

Older readers will recall how later that season Beeney pulled off the biggest save in Albion’s history: the proceeds of his sale to Leeds United being used to pay off the Inland Revenue who were threatening to close the club down.

With Beeney transferred, Digweed came back in for the final three games of the season, the 3-2 home win over Chester turning out to be his last game for the club.

When finally released by the Albion in June 1993, he joined Wimbledon initially without getting a game but then had two years at Watford where he featured in 29 league games. Among his teammates there was former Albion defender Keith Dublin.

Since leaving the football scene, Digweed has had interests in property and run executive chauffeur-driven cars for racehorse owner Sheikh Mohammed, and other wealthy Arab families.

He also had an acting role (playing  a character called Marsden) alongside Vinnie Jones and the stand-up comic Omid Djalili in the 2001 film Mean Machine – a fact that earns him a mention on the goalkeepersaredifferent.com website!

On the same site, bearing in mind I like a parallel line, I was interested to note the aforementioned Meola had also appeared on the silver screen since giving up playing, with a cameo role as a card player in the 2001 Jason Priestly film Zigs.

  • Pictures from my scrapbook show Digweed’s look of despair as Notts County score in the 1991 play-off final at Wembley; his portrait in the 1983 FA Cup Final programme, and another portrait from the matchday programme.

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