Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Jeff Whitefoot (footballer)

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Place of birth
  
Cheadle, England

1950–1957
  
Manchester United

Position
  
Wing half

Years
  
Team

Height
  
1.70 m

1949–1950
  
Manchester United

Role
  
Footballer

Playing position
  
Wing half

Name
  
Jeff Whitefoot


Jeff Whitefoot (footballer) Signed picture of Jeff Whitefoot the Manchester United footballer

Date of birth
  
(1933-12-31) 31 December 1933 (age 82)

Jeffrey "Jeff" Whitefoot (born 31 December 1933 in Cheadle, Cheshire) is an English former footballer who played as a wing half in the Football League for Manchester United, Grimsby Town and Nottingham Forest. He was capped by England at under-23 level in 1954.

Whitefoot started his career as a trainee with Manchester United in 1949. When he made his debut against Portsmouth in April 1950 he was at the time the youngest player to start in a League match for United at 16 years and 105 days. In eight seasons at United, he made 95 appearances in all competitions and was a member of the 1952 and 1956 title-winning sides, although he never scored a goal for them. He left the club for Grimsby Town in 1957, but returned to the First Division to sign for Nottingham Forest a year later, and helped them win the FA Cup in 1959. He stayed at the City Ground until his retirement as a player at the end of the 1966-67 season, when Forest finished second behind Manchester United in the league - at the time, this was the closest Forest had come to winning the league title.

After Billy Gray's death on 11 April 2011, Whitefoot is now the only surviving member of the 1959 FA Cup winning team.

The death of Bill Foulkes on 25 November 2013 also means that Whitefoot is the last player still living to have collected a league title winner's medal with Manchester United in the 1955-56 season, having played 15 times in the league that season. However, seven of the United players who qualified for a championship medal that season lost their lives as a result of the Munich air disaster on 6 February 1958, including Eddie Colman, the player who ousted Whitefoot as the club's regular right-half during that season.

References

Jeff Whitefoot (footballer) Wikipedia