Andy Brownrigg

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Andrew Brownrigg
Personal information
Full name Andrew David Brownrigg [1]
Date of birth (1976-08-02) 2 August 1976 (age 49)
Place of birth Chapeltown, Sheffield, England
Position(s) Defender, Midfielder
Youth career
Hereford United
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1994–1995 Hereford United 8 (0)
1995–1997 Norwich City 0 (0)
1995–1996Kettering Town (loan) 14 (0)
1997–1998 Rotherham United 0 (0)
1997–1998Stalybridge Celtic (loan) 16 (0)
1998 Yeovil Town 0 (0)
1998 Stalybridge Celtic 10 (0)
1998–1999 Stocksbridge Park Steels 29 (4)
1999–2000 Kidderminster Harriers 20 (3)
2000 Greenock Morton 2 (0)
2000–2001 Hartlepool United 0 (0)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals

Andrew David Brownrigg (born 2 August 1976) is an English former professional footballer who played as a defender and midfielder. He made appearances in the English Football League with Hereford United and also played extensively in non-league football.

Contents

Career

Brownrigg began his career with Hereford United, making his debut during the 1994–95 season. In March 1995, after just eight league games, he was transferred to Norwich City for £100,000. He spent part of the following season on loan to Kettering Town and moved to Rotherham United in 1997. He was an unused substitute for Norwich in a Premier League match against Arsenal at Highbury on 1 April 1995.

After being named on the bench for Rotherham’s opening game of the 1997–98 season, his career was disrupted by a violent assault in which he suffered severe facial injuries. Following a spell out, he joined Stalybridge Celtic on loan and was released at the end of the season.

Brownrigg went on to play for a number of clubs including Yeovil Town, Stocksbridge Park Steels, and Kidderminster Harriers, with whom he won the Football Conference title in 1999. [2]

He later played in Scotland with Greenock Morton, [3] before returning to England to appear for clubs including Hartlepool United, Northwich Victoria, Hednesford Town, Gainsborough Trinity, Wakefield & Emley, Maltby Main, Scarborough, Hallam, Buxton, Sheffield, Staveley Miners Welfare, Ossett Albion, Worksop Town and AFC Emley.

Personal life

In June 2008, Brownrigg entered the Sporting Chance Clinic, a facility established by former England international Tony Adams for athletes facing addiction issues. [4] He has remained in recovery since that time.

Education and research

Brownrigg graduated with a First Class Honours Degree in Sport and Exercise Psychology from the University of Huddersfield in July 2009. He was subsequently awarded a PhD scholarship focusing on the transition of professional footballers out of the game.

In 2012, his research on career transition was published in the Qualitative Methods in Psychology: Sport and Performance Bulletin of the British Psychological Society, highlighting psychological adjustment issues faced by footballers leaving the professional game. [5]

In 2015, Brownrigg was awarded a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) by the University of Huddersfield for his thesis titled “‘I shouldn’t have problems because I’m a footballer’: exploring the lived experiences of career transition in UK male professional footballers”, which examined identity loss, psychological adjustment, and the challenges faced by players during and after their careers. [6]

In 2018, he co-authored an article in Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health titled "‘You shut up and go along with it’: an interpretative phenomenological study of former professional footballers’ experiences of addiction", which explored the lived experiences of ex-professional players dealing with issues related to alcohol and gambling addiction. [7]

References

  1. Hugman, Barry J. (1998). The PFA Premier & Football League Players' Records 1946–1998. Queen Anne Press. p. 81. ISBN   1-85291-585-4.
  2. "Molby gets feet wet at Harriers". Sports Argus. 26 June 1999. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  3. "Boswell takes Morton to court". BBC Sport. 22 November 2000. Retrieved 28 December 2008.
  4. "Sporting Chance Clinic". Sporting Chance Clinic. Archived from the original on 21 September 2009.
  5. "Research by Andy Brownrigg" (PDF). British Psychological Society. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 January 2015.
  6. Brownrigg, Andrew (2015). ‘I shouldn’t have problems because I’m a footballer’: exploring the lived experiences of career transition in UK male professional footballers (PhD thesis). University of Huddersfield.
  7. Brownrigg, Andrew; Burr, Vivien; Bridger, Alexander; Locke, Abigail (2018). "'You shut up and go along with it': an interpretative phenomenological study of former professional footballers' experiences of addiction". Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health. 10 (2): 238–255. doi:10.1080/2159676X.2017.1396557.