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Andy Keogh
Personal information
Full name Andrew Declan Keogh
Date of birth 16 May 1986 (1986-05-16) (age 23)
Place of birth Dublin, Ireland
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
Playing position Striker / Winger
Club information
Current club Wolverhampton Wanderers
Number 10
Youth career
Cabinteely FC
St Josephs Boys AFC
Leeds United
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
2003–2005 Leeds United 0 (0)
2004 Scunthorpe United (loan) 12 (2)
2005 Bury (loan) 4 (2)
2005–2007 Scunthorpe United 86 (19)
2007– Wolverhampton Wanderers 114 (19)
National team
2006– Republic of Ireland B 2 (1)
2007– Republic of Ireland 11 (1)
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 16:48, 15 March 2010 (UTC).

† Appearances (Goals).

‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 17:08, 30 May 2009 (UTC)

Andrew Declan "Andy" Keogh (born 16 May 1986) is an Irish international football forward, who plays for English Premier League side Wolverhampton Wanderers.

Contents

Club career

Beginnings

Born in south Dublin, he attended St Brigid's NS Foxrock and CBC Monkstown. Keogh began his playing career at Cabinteely FC and St Josephs Boys AFC in South Dublin before moving to Leeds United at the age of sixteen. He never managed to make his mark at Leeds, making just one appearance as a late substitute against Portsmouth in the Carling Cup, and so was subsequently loaned out to then League Two side Scunthorpe United at the beginning of the 2004–05 season.

Here, he made his league debut on 7 August 2004 in a 3–1 win over Rochdale. He scored 2 goals in 12 appearances before an injury crisis at Elland Road caused him to be recalled to his parent club. He then spent the rest of 2004 playing reserve games for Leeds, until he was loaned to Bury in January 2005 as a replacement for Preston-bound David Nugent.

Scunthorpe United

While on loan at Bury, Scunthorpe United manager Brian Laws made an offer to Leeds (said to be around £50,000) to bring him to the club on a permanent basis. Leeds accepted the offer, and on 14 February, Keogh rejoined the club he had started the season with. He only scored only one further goal, but was part of the team which won promotion to League One as runners-up behind Yeovil Town.

He truly made his mark in the 2005–06 season, notably after Scunthorpe signed fellow 19-year-old striker Billy Sharp for £100,000 from Sheffield United. Keogh became part of the most potent strike-force in League One, scoring 38 goals between them, with Andy netting 15 of them. He also scored Scunthorpe's goal in the FA Cup 3rd Round visit to Manchester City, beating England International goalkeeper David James in the process.

On 12 January 2007, it was announced that he had rejected an improved contract offer from Scunthorpe United and would therefore be free to leave the club at the end of the 2006–07 season. As he was under the age of 24, Scunthorpe were able to command a fee for him, either as a direct offer or via a tribunal.

Wolves

Having had an earlier bid of £500,000 turned down, Keogh signed for Wolverhampton Wanderers on 23 January 2007. He signed a 3 and a half year contract with the transfer set to cost Wolves an initial £600,000 potentially rising to £850,000 with add-ons. [1]

Keogh earned plaudits for his displays for Wolves, with QPR manager John Gregory describing him as "one of the signings of the season."[2] He notched 5 goals for the club before the end of the season which helped them to reach the play-offs. At the start of the next season, he was recognised for his efforts for Wolves, being granted the famous number 9 shirt.[3] He went on to score 11 goals during a campaign which saw the club miss out on the play-offs on goal difference.

2008–09 saw Keogh's first team opportunities limited with Chris Iwelumo and Sylvan Ebanks-Blake topping the championship top scorers list in a campaign that saw Wolves promoted. However, injuries to Iwelumo, Ebanks-Blake and new signing Kevin Doyle at the start of Wolves' 2009–10 Premiership campaign gave Keogh his opportunity to return to the starting lineup. He became Wolves' first goalscorer of the season, scoring the winning goal as in a 1–0 win at Wigan Athletic, Wolves' first ever Premier League away win, and first top flight away win since 1984. He fell out of the team after injuries to others healed. In December 2009 he suffered a tendon and ligament injury to his ankle that needed surgery and is expected to be out for three months.[4]

He is contracted to the club until Summer 2012.[5]

International career

Keogh received his first call-up to the Republic of Ireland squad from Steve Staunton in March 2007, after Caleb Folan was forced to withdraw through injury. He went on to make his debut for the senior team on 23 May 2007 in a friendly against Ecuador in Giants Stadium, New York, and later featured in their Euro 2008 qualifying campaign.

He scored the equaliser in Giovanni Trapattoni's first match in charge, a 1–1 draw with Serbia in a friendly match at Croke Park, Dublin, a goal that won the FAI Goal of the Year Award.[6] Keogh had also scored the first goal of the Trapattoni era in a training camp game against a Portuguese football league team. With Robbie Keane and Wolves teammate Kevin Doyle the preferred partnership up front, he has found himself on the bench mostly making substitute appearances.

Honours

Scunthorpe United
Wolverhampton Wanderers

References

External links


Keogh, Andrew, born in Leeds, cricket anorak, barrister-at-law and author. Sometimes known as "Father Christmas" by his friends, this white bearded fellow is often seen shuffling about the Crown Courts of inner London.

His first book Twentytwelve is set in the near future (2012, in fact) describes a Britain suffering the terrible consequences of global aggression. Charlie Gilbert, his secret daughter, and the disagreeable family cat all have their place in this starnge and wonderfully dark world.

Also a fan of Leeds United FC

This insolent communication was entered by an impertinent fellow called chippers. AS the author, I would like to explain that what he was trying to say about twentytwelve is as follows:

Synopsis:

The year is 2012. The global conflict that first manifested itself in the attack on the twin towers and broadened and deepened with the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq has continued through the first decade of the new millennium and beyond, bringing with it ever increasing hatred and misery. A broken backed Britain battered by global economic collapse and seemingly endless terrorist outrages, has succumbed to fascism and barbarism. Charlie Gilbert, a south London schoolteacher, is not a particularly brave man yet he will need all his resources of bravery and ingenuity as events close in on him. Charlie has a secret. He has a young mixed race daughter, Natalie, hidden away in the country with his elderly mother. If caught by the authorities, Natalie and anyone helping her would meet a brutal end. Charlie decides that their only hope lies in escape to Ireland, which remains a democracy. He sets out to collect Natalie with only the haziest idea of how to effect their escape. Charlie, Natalie, his elderly mother and a disagreeable family cat called Catesby set out west, heading for Wales and thence to Ireland and safety. En route, they experience capture, incarceration in a slave labour camp, escape and recapture, collecting on the way Billy, an elderly Jamaican. Their story is both a fast moving adventure story and a warning as to the future of a troubled world.

and about me....

Andrew Keogh was born in Leeds and lives in south London with his wife and two children. He is a practising barrister specialising in criminal law. When not engaged in the law or writing or reading fiction, he enjoys cookery, a wide range of popular music, being a cricket anorak and following the misadventures of Leeds United Football Club. This is his first novel.



much better!







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