Wayne Biggins

Wayne Biggins (born 20 November 1961) is an English former professional footballer born in Sheffield who made more than 450 appearances in the Football League and also played in the Scottish Football League.[2] He was a striker and was nicknamed "Bertie" throughout his career.[1][3]

Wayne Biggins
Personal information
Full nameWayne Biggins[1]
Date of birth (1961-11-20) 20 November 1961 (age 62)[1]
Place of birthSheffield, England
Height5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)[1]
Position(s)Striker[1]
Youth career
Lincoln City
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1980–1981Lincoln City8(1)
1981–1982Matlock Town
1982–1983King's Lynn
1983–1984Matlock Town
1984–1985Burnley78(29)
1985–1988Norwich City79(16)
1988–1989Manchester City32(9)
1989–1992Stoke City122(46)
1992–1993Barnsley47(16)
1993–1994Celtic9(0)
1994–1995Stoke City27(6)
1995Luton Town (loan)7(1)
1995Oxford United10(1)
1995–1997Wigan Athletic51(5)
1997–1998Leek Town
1998–2003Stocksbridge Park Steels
2004–2005Buxton
Total470(130)
Managerial career
2002–2003Stocksbridge Park Steels
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Playing career edit

Biggins was a latecomer to league football, for although he began his career with Lincoln City he played just eight games for them before he was released. He then played non-league football for Matlock Town and King's Lynn while working as a hod carrier.[3] Biggins found a way back into league football with Burnley, who signed Biggins from Matlock for a nominal fee in February 1984. He scored four goals in his first four appearances for the Lancashire club, including a hat-trick against his former side Lincoln. He was an ever-present for Burnley during the 1984–85 season but despite scoring 21 goals in all competitions he could not prevent the team being relegated to the Fourth Division for the first time in the club's history.[4] Biggins scored four goals in twelve matches at the start of the following campaign and his form attracted the attention of Norwich City, whose manager Ken Brown signed him in October 1985 for a transfer fee of £35,000.[5]

Norwich were re-building their squad after relegation from the first division and were looking to bounce back to the top flight at the first attempt. They succeeded, and Biggins ended the season with a second division championship medal.[3] He stayed at Carrow Road until the summer of 1988 when Manchester City's new manager Mel Machin – who had until that summer been Brown's assistant at Norwich – took him to Maine Road.[3] He scored 9 goals in 32 games for Manchester City before moving to Stoke City in August 1989 for a fee of £250,000. He was a number of expensive signings made by manager Mick Mills in the summer of 1989 as Stoke looked to gain promotion.[1] However results were very poor and cost Mills his job and the new manager Alan Ball failed to stop Stoke's slide and they ended up being relegated to the Third Division, Biggins top-scored in 1989–90 with 11 goals.[1] In 1990–91 Biggins was again leading goalscorer with 12 before enjoying his most prolific season in his career in 1991–92.[1] He scored 28 goals as Stoke lost in the play-offs to Stockport County, although they did beat County in the 1992 Football League Trophy Final.[1]

Not long into the 1992–93 season, Biggins left to join Barnsley where he spent a year before joining up with Lou Macari at Celtic. Biggins endured a poor three-month spell at Celtic Park and returned to Stoke for £125,000 on transfer deadline day in March 1994,[6] before playing out his league career with Luton Town, Oxford United and Wigan Athletic.[7] He won a Third Division championship medal with Wigan in 1997.[8] He went back into non-league football with Leek Town.

Management and coaching edit

After leaving Leek Town, Biggins moved to Stocksbridge Park Steels, where he became assistant manager and then manager until November 2003. He later played for and coached Buxton.[3]

Personal life edit

He is the father of footballer Harrison Biggins.[9] Wayne, his wife, and Harrison all had COVID-19 during the COVID-19 pandemic.[9]

Career statistics edit

Source:[10]

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Lincoln City1980–81Fourth Division8100000081
Burnley1983–84Third Division20800004[a]32411
1984–85Third Division461831403[a]25621
1985–86Fourth Division123002100144
Total78293161759436
Norwich City1985–86Second Division28710004[b]1337
1986–87First Division31430313[c]2407
1987–88First Division20500311[c]0246
Total79164062839721
Manchester City1988–89Second Division3292041003810
Stoke City1989–90Second Division351010002[c]13811
1990–91Third Division381230401[a]04612
1991–92Third Division412220427[d]45428
1992–93Second Division82002200104
Total122466010410514855
Barnsley1992–93First Division34144000003814
1993–94First Division132000000132
Total47164000005116
Celtic1993–94Scottish Premier Division90100000100
Stoke City1993–94First Division104000000104
1994–95First Division17200204[e]2234
Total276002042338
Luton Town (loan)1994–95First Division7121000092
Oxford United1995–96Second Division10100411[a]0152
Wigan Athletic1995–96Third Division182000000182
1996–97Third Division33310201[a]0373
Total515102010555
Career total4701302323493115558156
  1. ^ a b c d e Appearances in Football League Trophy
  2. ^ Appearances in Football League Super Cup
  3. ^ a b c Appearances in Full Members' Cup
  4. ^ Five appearances and four goals in Football League Trophy and two appearances in Third Division play-offs
  5. ^ Appearances in Anglo-Italian Cup

Honours edit

Individual

Norwich

  • 2nd Division Championship 1985-86

Wigan

  • 3rd Division Championship 1996-97

Stoke

  • Football League Trophy Winner 1992

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Matthews, Tony (1994). The Encyclopaedia of Stoke City. Lion Press. ISBN 0-9524151-0-0.
  2. ^ "Wayne Biggins". UK A–Z Transfers. Neil Brown. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Wayne Biggins". Flown From The Nest. Steve Whitlam. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  4. ^ Simpson, Ray (1996). The Clarets Collection 1946–1996. Burnley F.C. p. 17. ISBN 0-9521799-0-3.
  5. ^ "Biggins joins Norwich for £35,000". The Times. London. 12 October 1985.
  6. ^ Haylett, Trevor (25 March 1994). "Football: Peacock goes but Francis stays: Mixed day at Queen's Park Rangers while Limpar joins Everton and Beagrie hops to City". The Independent.
  7. ^ "Wayne Biggins". Soccerbase. Centurycomm. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  8. ^ "Latics A–Z : Neil Bailey to Tony Black". Ye Olde Tree And Crown. Bernard Ramsdale. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  9. ^ a b Smith, Peter (29 May 2020). "Stoke City hero Wayne Biggins reveals family trauma". stokesentinel.
  10. ^ Wayne Biggins at the English National Football Archive (subscription required)
  11. ^ Lynch. The Official P.F.A. Footballers Heroes. p. 148.
  12. ^ Lynch. The Official P.F.A. Footballers Heroes. p. 149.

External links edit