Dave Wiggett

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dave_Wiggett an entity of type: Thing

David Wiggett (25 May 1957 – 23 March 1978) was an English footballer who played for Lincoln City and Hartlepool United before losing his life in a car crash. Wiggett, a left-back, began his career at Graham Taylor's Lincoln City, making his first-team debut in 1974. He made only a handful of appearances for the Imps, and joined Hartlepool in October 1976, where he made his debut in a Division Four match against Colchester United. During his 18-month spell at Hartlepool, Wiggett played 60 matches for the club, and scored one goal. On 23 March 1978 Wiggett was killed in a car crash. He was a passenger in a car driven by his Hartlepool teammate Bob Newton.[1][2] rdf:langString
rdf:langString Dave Wiggett
rdf:langString Dave Wiggett
rdf:langString David Jonathan Wiggett
rdf:langString Dave Wiggett
rdf:langString England
xsd:date 1978-03-23
rdf:langString Chapeltown, England
xsd:date 1957-05-25
xsd:integer 21399641
xsd:integer 991603864
xsd:date 1957-05-25
xsd:date 1978-03-23
rdf:langString David Jonathan Wiggett
xsd:integer 0 1
xsd:integer 1974 1976
xsd:integer 6 54
rdf:langString David Wiggett (25 May 1957 – 23 March 1978) was an English footballer who played for Lincoln City and Hartlepool United before losing his life in a car crash. Wiggett, a left-back, began his career at Graham Taylor's Lincoln City, making his first-team debut in 1974. He made only a handful of appearances for the Imps, and joined Hartlepool in October 1976, where he made his debut in a Division Four match against Colchester United. During his 18-month spell at Hartlepool, Wiggett played 60 matches for the club, and scored one goal. On 23 March 1978 Wiggett was killed in a car crash. He was a passenger in a car driven by his Hartlepool teammate Bob Newton.[1][2] Two days after the crash, a minute of silence was observed before Hartlepool's away match against arch-rivals Darlington. Allegedly, sections of the Darlington crowd chanted throughout the minute of silence, and what followed was a very bad-tempered match Hartlepool eventually won 2–1. Following the match, Hartlepool manager Billy Horner, himself a former Darlington player, called the offending Darlo fans "a disgrace to their club, their town, and the human race".
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3208

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