Welbeck – “something really exceptional you don’t find in many players”

DANNY WELBECK was still at school when he made his senior football debut in the League Cup.

A first-year scholar at Man Utd, and just 17 in September 2008, Welbeck made his bow against Middlesbrough in front of a 53,000 crowd at Old Trafford. United won 3-1 with goals from Ronaldo, Giggs and Nani. And they went all the way that season, beating Tottenham on penalties in the final at Wembley.

Although Welbeck had been subbed off 10 minutes into the second half, it was the first of many medals he collected and in five years at Arsenal, after his £16m 2014 transfer deadline day move from Old Trafford, he twice collected FA Cup winners’ medals (even though he missed the 2015 final through injury when Aston Villa were humbled 4-0).

When Welbeck scored the decisive quarter-final goal for Arsenal that knocked United out of the 2015 competition, manager Arsene Wenger praised the player and said: “We all want to do well when we play against our former club, to show that you are a great player, but it’s not easy to deal with the mental situation of it. 

“He focused just on his game, didn’t do anything special. He just played football like we wanted him to play. He has shown mental strength because it’s not always easy to deal with that. You have a little bit of a psychological consideration.”

Wenger continued: “Overall, I think he had a great game. He just wants to win. He’s a team player, that’s what I like about Danny. He’s intelligent and he always wants to do well for the team. 

“He’s a great talent and he has shown again that he can produce such a complete performance, defensively and offensively as he did today – he has a great future.”

Welbeck played in the 2017 final when the Gunners edged it 2-1 against favourites Chelsea, and it was a highlight of his injury-plagued five years at Arsenal.

“It was a great performance,” he said. “Every single one of us on the pitch performed really well that day. It was a deserved win.”

Welbeck scoring one of his three against Galatasary

Another highlight was scoring the first senior hat-trick of his career in a 4-1 Champions League home win over Galatasary in October 2014.

Injuries to each of his knees and a serious broken right ankle severely limited Welbeck’s availability during his time with the Gunners and he admitted in a matchday programme interview: “When I look back, the injuries I suffered really hindered my progress.

“That really disappoints me to this day because I know that if I had managed to stay fit I would have done a lot more at the club, scored more goals and made more appearances.”

Even so, he pointed out: “I look back on my time at Arsenal as a great experience; a great club. There were lots of positives, despite the negatives with the injuries.

“The fans always treated me well, showed me love, and I will always respect and remember that.”

Welbeck opened up about the impact of his many injuries in a July 2020 interview with Adam Bate of Sky Sports. “You go through a load of emotions,” he said. “There are times when you are there sat in your hospital bed and you are crying. You are just overthinking things.”

He continued: “Once you have had the surgery and your head is straight, you know what has happened, it is behind you and you have got to look forward. You try to build from where you are that day. Every single day there are steps to overcome. You just have to come through them and you find that you are getting better and better and feeling in a better state of mind.”

He also explained how the time wasn’t entirely wasted. “There are football games on TV, you can watch different players who are playing in your position, you can watch your own clips to see what you can improve on,” he explained.

“There are little apps that can help you, people who you can talk to. I think there are so many extra percentages you can gain and if you can get that extra one per cent it is always going to be a help.”

Welbeck buries one of his 32 goals for Arsenal

Wenger was certainly an admirer of what Welbeck was able to contribute. For example, speaking in February 2018 ahead of a shock 2-1 Europa League second leg home defeat against Graham Potter’s Ostersunds, Wenger said: “I want to keep him because I believe he has gone through a torrid time.

“He has come out well. I see signs in training now that are positive. If he can stay on the pitch and not be injured, I want him to stay here.”

And after the striker scored his fifth goal in five appearances to clinch a Europa League quarter final v CSKA Moscow, he said: “The qualities of Danny Welbeck… when your back’s against the wall, he looks like he has that extra special motivation in his body and in his head, that can give you something special.

“That’s something really exceptional and that you do not find in many players.”

Welbeck made 126 appearances for the Gunners (78 starts + 48 as sub) and scored 32 goals. As he had at United, he once again found himself at a club when there was an end of an era moment as Wenger left the Gunners after 22 years in 2018.

A badly-broken right ankle sustained in a Europa League match against Sporting Lisbon in November 2018 proved to be the end of his Arsenal career – he only made one Premier League start (out of seven appearances in total, plus seven off the bench) under Wenger’s successor Unai Emery.

Released at the end of that season, he joined Watford, who train next to Arsenal’s training ground in Hertfordshire, but injury struck early into his time with the Hornets, a hamstring problem putting him out for four months. After they’d got through four managers in the Covid-hit season, and been relegated from the Premier League, he left in October 2020 having scored three goals in 20 appearances (10 starts + 10 as a sub).

When Welbeck linked up with Brighton that autumn, few supporters would have imagined five years later he would still be making a huge contribution to the club.

There were a few murmurings at the beginning of the 2025-26 season but a brace in Albion’s comeback 3-1 win at Chelsea in September once again saw him grabbing headlines for all the right reasons. Two more followed at home to Newcastle and he once again scored against his first club at Old Trafford on 25 October. And long may it continue!

Speaking to The Athletic in February 2025, Welbeck said of his longevity: “I can probably thank my mum and dad for the genes. I work hard to keep myself in good condition and I am feeling fit and strong.”

Reporter Andy Naylor said: “He does not have a strict diet regime but watches what he eats, snacking on fruits or an occasional bar of chocolate between a normal three meals a day. His idea of a takeaway is a mixed grill with rice and salad.

“Another secret of Welbeck’s long-running success is a desire and determination to be the best he can be for as long as he can. He focuses on his football, turning down invites to take part in podcasts and punditry, preserving his energy for the training pitch and matchdays.”

After four seasons at Brighton in each of which he scored six or seven goals, in 2024-25 his 11 goals made him joint top scorer with Karou Mitoma from 26 starts + 10 as sub.

With five on the board before Halloween in 2025-26, the signs are looking positive for his best-ever haul.

Welbeck himself declared: “As long as I feel good, that’s how long I will go on for. If I feel good, feel like I can impact games, then I will just keep on going.”

Dean Saunders raised cash for Brighton and Liverpool

IT’S NOT often Brighton and Liverpool have had something in common but, when it came to striker Dean Saunders, they both sold him to raise money. And they weren’t alone.

In the Albion’s case, it happened in 1987 when manager Barry Lloyd was forced to cash in on the free transfer signing to raise £60,000 to go towards players’ wages.

For their part, five years later, Liverpool let the Welsh international depart Anfield for £2.3m because boss Graeme Souness wanted the money to buy a central defender.

When Saunders was remarkably transferred for £1m from the Maxwell-owned Oxford United to the Maxwell-owned Derby County, it prompted former Brighton and Liverpool defender Mark Lawrenson to quit as boss at the Manor Ground after he’d been promised there would be no transfers likely to weaken his squad.

Saunders’ long and much-travelled career began in Swansea, the place where he was born on 21 June 1964, the son of former Swansea and Liverpool wing-half Roy Saunders.

He attended GwrossydJunior School and was soon appearing in the school football team on Saturday mornings and playing minor football in the afternoons. He went on to Penlan Comprehensive in Swansea and his career began to blossom, playing in the school team at all levels under sports master Lee Jones, a former British gymanstics champion. Saunders played for the Swansea Schools representative sides at under 11, 13 and 15 levels.

“I can remember enjoying watching the Swansea players train when I was a lad,” he told Tony Norman in an Albion matchday programme article. “I was lucky because my dad was the assistant manager, so I could go to pre-season training and things like that.

“I used to kick a ball around on the sidelines and dream of playing for Swansea.” That dream turned to reality after he joined the Swans in 1980 as an apprentice (when John Toshack was the manager), turned professional in 1982, and made his debut in the 1983-84 season. He scored 12 times in 49 appearances but in his final year had a goalless four-game loan at Cardiff City.

Manager John Bond released him on a free transfer after a turbulent season in which the Swans only narrowly avoided relegation to the basement division and Chris Cattlin, who’d been impressed when he saw Saunders playing for Swansea Reserves at the Goldstone Ground, snapped him up for Brighton.

“I was amazed when the Welsh club let him go for financial reasons,” Cattlin wrote in his matchday programme notes for the opening game of the season. “He is young, quick and, if he works hard, he has a great chance.”

By the end of that season, Saunders had scored 19 goals in 48 league and cup games and was voted player of the season. His performances in the second tier for the Albion caught the eye of the Welsh national team manager, Mike England, and on 26 March 1986 Saunders made his full international debut for Wales as a substitute in a 1-0 win away to the Republic of Ireland. It was the first of 75 caps.

Saunders scored his first international goals when he netted twice in a 3-0 friendly win over Canada in Vancouver on 19 May 1986, after which England said: “He goes past defenders with his tremendous pace and his finishing against Canada was a revelation.

“The experience he gained at Brighton has done him the world of good. To finish top scorer in his first full season of Second Division football tells its own story.”

Saunders, who shared a house with Albion’s young Republic of Ireland international Kieran O’Regan, said being happy at home had helped him to settle down quickly.

“I liked Brighton from the day I arrived,” he said in a matchday programme article. “It reminds me of my home town of Swansea and I like living by the sea.”

A lover of all sports, Saunders revealed how he liked to play cricket in the summer, when he turned out for Haywards Heath, and he played snooker with O’Regan and Steve Penney.

That summer, Saunders told Shoot! magazine: “I had both cartilages out of my left knee at 18 and had both Swansea and Cardiff turn me down. I’ve had my share of the downs. From the moment I joined Brighton, my career has turned for the better.”

The young striker continued: “Swansea just gave me away – despite the fact that I was top scorer in a team coming apart. Cardiff City gave me a few games but always seemed to have reasons for not playing me consistently when I was on loan there.

“So, I had every incentive to make the break from Welsh football and I joined Brighton. Brighton can go places.

“I was disappointed that we didn’t make the First Division first time around. But all the lads are convinced that we will get there next season. I’ve been given a three-year contract so there are tremendous incentives to do better.”

It didn’t work out that way, though. After only a mid-table finish, Cattlin was sacked and there were rumblings of financial issues beginning to reverberate around the corridors of the Goldstone. Alan Mullery returned as manager but had limited funds to invest in the team, and, with echoes of the Pat Saward era back in the early ‘70s, the club turned to fans for financial help to bring in players.

After Mullery’s unseemly swift departure halfway through the season, former Worthing boss Lloyd took over and fans were completely mystified as to how he could leave out Saunders in favour of Richard Tiltman, who Lloyd had plucked from local football. Since then, it has been suggested his omission was more to do with money than football ability.

There was great consternation that Albion collected only £60,000 when Lloyd sold Saunders to Oxford in early March 1987, especially as the Seagulls were fast hurtling back to a level of football they’d manage to avoid for ten years.

That was no longer a concern for Saunders who recovered the goalscoring touch he’d shown during his first season at the Goldstone Ground, scoring 33 goals in 73 games for Oxford before being sold to Derby for £1m against Lawrenson’s wishes 19 months after arriving at the Manor Ground.

Meanwhile, the goals kept flowing for Saunders as he netted 57 in 131 games for Derby. The side finished fifth in the old First Division by the end of Saunders’ first season with the Rams, and he’d contributed 14 goals. The Derby Telegraph noted: “From the moment ‘Deano’ arrived, the players were inspired and the crowd enthused. The signing also suited the post-war tradition of 5ft 8in goalscoring heroes at the Baseball Ground – Raich Carter, Bill Curry, Kevin Hector and Bobby Davison.

“Derby fans were too wise to comment on height. What mattered was Saunders’ speed, eel-like turn and persistence. He scored six in his first five games, starting with two against Wimbledon when he captured supporters’ hearts with the immediacy of a Kevin Hector. A close-in header and long-range right-footer were beautiful appetisers.”

Despite Saunders scoring 24 goals for Derby in 1990-91, the side was relegated and Saunders and teammate Mark Wright were snapped up by Liverpool. Reds paid £2.9m to take Saunders to Anfield, boss Souness believing he’d be an ideal strike partner for their established Welsh international striker, Ian Rush.

Saunders made his Liverpool debut on 17 August 1991 in a 2-1 win over Oldham Athletic (Mark Walters and defender Wright also played their first league games for Liverpool); Ray Houghton and John Barnes scored Liverpool’s goals.

Saunders scored his first goal for the Reds 10 days’ later in a 1-0 win over QPR at Anfield but a Liverpool history website reckons he struggled to adapt to Liverpool’s passing game. “He was used to Derby’s counter-attacking style, scoring many of his goals by using his exceptional pace,” it said. “Saunders wasn’t very prolific in the league with about one goal every four games but flourished in the UEFA Cup with nine goals in five matches that included a quadruple against Kuusysi Lahti.”

Saunders scored twice in Liverpool’s successful FA Cup campaign, which culminated in them lifting the trophy at Wembley after beating Sunderland.

Although he scored twice in seven games at the start of his second season at Anfield, a cashflow issue meant Souness was forced to sell him to raise funds to dip into the transfer market.

Saunders explained: “Graeme called me in one day and told me he needed a centre-half [Torben Piechnik], and that he could raise the money by selling me to Aston Villa.

“I couldn’t believe he was prepared to let me go, but he said he didn’t think my partnership with Ian Rush had worked out, and Rushy wouldn’t be the one going anywhere. That was it.” 

Saunders had scored 25 goals in 61 appearances for Liverpool, the last coming in a 2-1 home win over Chelsea (Jamie Redknapp scoring the other Liverpool goal) on 5 September 1992.

The Welshman had the last laugh, though, because only nine days after his departure from Liverpool he scored twice in Villa’s 4-2 victory over the Reds.

“Obviously I had a big incentive to do well today and I’m thrilled to have scored,” said Saunders. “Both my goals went through the goalkeeper’s legs.”

Signed by Ron Atkinson, Saunders spent three seasons at Villa, initially developing a formidable strike partnership with Dalian Atkinson, and then pairing up with Dwight Yorke. Saunders’ brace in the 1994 League Cup final helped beat Manchester United 3-1.

Villa history site lerwill-life.org.uk remembers him as “a spring-heeled attacker and very popular with the supporters” and adds: “Not big in size, he was very speedy and scored some spectacular goals including a 35-yard spectacular against Ipswich.”

His time at Villa Park came to an end when Brian Little took over as manager, and Saunders was reunited with his old Liverpool boss Souness in Turkey. A £2.35million fee took him to Galatasaray for the 1995-96 season and he netted 15 goals in 27 Turkish League matches.

Next stop for Saunders was back in the UK at Nottingham Forest, but the 1996-97 was an unhappy one as the manager who signed him, Frank Clark, was sacked in December after a bad run of defeats and Forest’s slide towards relegation continued under Stuart Pearce and Dave Bassett.

By the time Forest had bounced straight back up, Saunders had left the club, moving in December 1997 to second-tier Sheffield United for a year under Nigel Spackman and caretaker managers Russell Slade and Steve Thompson. United made the play-offs but lost out to Sunderland in the semi-finals. In December 1998, Saunders moved abroad again to link up with Souness a third time, at Benfica in Portugal.

The following summer, he returned to England and joined Bradford City, where his former Brighton teammate Chris Hutchings was assistant manager, then briefly manager. Saunders was a regular in his first season at Valley Parade, when the Bantams managed to narrowly avoid relegation from the Premier League, but he played only a handful of games in 2000-01, when they were relegated. Saunders retired as a player shortly before his 37th birthday and became a coach at Bradford before linking up with Souness again, this time as a coach.

He joined him at Blackburn Rovers and then Newcastle United, but when Newcastle sacked Souness early in 2006, Saunders lost his job as well.

In the following year he began taking the Certificate in Football Management course run by the University of Warwick; and this led to him being granted his UEFA Pro Licence coaching badge, a qualification that allowed him to be appointed as assistant to John Toshack with the Welsh national team. 

In October 2008, Saunders replaced Brian Little as manager of Wrexham, newly relegated to the Conference. He eventually managed to steer the north Wales outfit into the play-offs in the 2010-11 season, but they were knocked out by Luton Town and, in September 2011, Saunders was appointed manager of then Championship club Doncaster Rovers.

Unfortunately, he couldn’t save Rovers from relegation and they went back down to League One with only 36 points from their 46 League fixtures.

Having guided Rovers to second place in League One, Saunders was appointed manager of Wolverhampton Wanderers in January 2013, but he couldn’t prevent them being relegated from the Championship and he was sacked three days after relegation was confirmed courtesy of a 2-0 defeat at the hands of Gus Poyet’s Albion.

Saunders told the media after the game: “We have to get some players in who think like I’m thinking, who want to win, fresh minds, no damage done to them, no confidence issues, no ‘been here too long’ issues, no ‘I don’t know if the manager likes me’ issues. Once I get my own team on the pitch, imagine what the supporters will be like.”

Saunders, with only five wins from his 20 games in charge, didn’t get that chance and rather ruefully said of his opponents that day: “A few years ago they were bankrupt and without a stadium, but they’ve shown what is possible and, with the momentum, they have could well get into the Premier League.”

Just after Christmas 2014, Saunders was named as the interim manager of Crawley Town after the previous incumbent John Gregory stood down for health reasons.

Saunders then became manager of League One side Chesterfield on 13 May 2015 but his stay there lasted only five months.

In June 2016, Saunders was part of the BBC pundit team for their coverage of the Welsh national team’s games at Euro 2016 and made the headlines during the tournament when it was revealed that he had incurred parking charges of over £1,000 from Birmingham Airport’s short stay car park as he wasn’t expecting Wales to progress as far as they did. The charge was eventually waived by the airport who asked him to make a donation to charity instead.

His subsequent involvement in football has been as a pundit on BT Sport’s Saturday afternoon Score programme as well as on the radio with talkSPORT. He hit the headlines in 2019 when he was jailed for failing to comply with a roadside breath test but the initial punishment was quashed and changed to a suspended sentence. Via the League Managers’ Association, Saunders issued a statement in which he said: “I made a terrible error of judgment for which I have been rightly punished, and I wholeheartedly regret that it happened.”

Pictures from the Albion matchday programme and various online sources.