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Any news on Terry Dixon?

Dharmabum

Well-Known Member
Aug 16, 2003
8,274
12,242
Dixon has, at 18, already lost 2 years of his development due to injuries and still no fit to start his come-back. Those 2 years, at this age, are very vital for a player to make the grade, and virutally impossible (not saying impossible) to catch up with on.
 

PT

North Stand behind Pat's goal.
Admin
May 21, 2004
25,468
2,408
This would be one of his "highs" I imagine....




Best Wishes Tel.

:clap:
 

mawspurs

Staff
Jun 29, 2003
35,111
17,813
I'm very disappointed to hear we have let him go, purely because he had so much potential. It is probably the right decision if the club feel he will never recover enough to reach the required standard.

With regard to his comments about hoping the club would treat him better, this is something I've heard a fair few times over the years from players who Spurs have let go. It seems we don't treat players we let go very well, especially players who have not go on to be big name players for the club. Which is not nice to hear. It's all very well having a Spurs hall of fame but we should not forget other players who have grafted on the clubs behalf.
 

AngerManagement

Well-Known Member
May 15, 2004
12,518
2,739
Not the first 'exciting youngster' we have had never come through (injuries or just not making the grade) and no doubt will not be the last.

Shame for the kid of course, but from our point of view there is no guarentee he would have ever made the grade anyway.
 

Flatters

Racist Troll
May 4, 2005
27,001
50
Extremely sad that. I will admit to having never seen him play but by all accounts he was a star in the making....a far better prospect than Pekhart. To have your career smighted at such a young age is so harsh. Good luck to him with whatever he does next.

You've never seen him play, but you still think he was a star in the making and a better prospect than Pekhart?
 

themanwhofellasleep

z-list internet celebrity
Dec 14, 2006
690
0
The Club made a big deal about how they were going to help Gazza after his recent problems. I'd prefer that money or counselling go to people like Terry Dixon or other young pros we've had to let go of, rather than giving it to someone like Gazza.
 

Kendall

Well-Known Member
Feb 8, 2007
38,502
11,933
The Club made a big deal about how they were going to help Gazza after his recent problems. I'd prefer that money or counselling go to people like Terry Dixon or other young pros we've had to let go of, rather than giving it to someone like Gazza.

I agree. Clubs often disrupt the education of young players in order for them to succeed in our colours. We should be giving money back to give them a fresh start should they not make it..

This is sad news for the kid, but at least it will stop people suggesting he should start ahead of Darren Bent in as cup match, having never seen him.
 

BoringOldFan

It's better to burn out than to fade away...
Sep 20, 2005
9,955
2,498
I saw Dixon play for the reserves against Birmingham back in September. Might have been his last game - I think he went off injured. Even though a teenager, he was strong, had good control, and I think he would have done well for us if this hadn't happened.

Always hard to tell but he was highly-thought of around the club apparently.
 

donny1013

Well-Known Member
Nov 4, 2005
5,646
946
to have been called up to the full ireland squad at 17 having never played a first team game or even many reserve games shows he must have had talent. shame for the kid, looks like the same build to Rooney
 

ever

Frog-Mod
Staff
Dec 20, 2004
23,615
1,462
to have been called up to the full ireland squad at 17 having never played a first team game or even many reserve games shows he must have had talent. shame for the kid, looks like the same build to Rooney
not really, steve staunton was in charge, the guys a fucking retard,
 

Rocksuperstar

Isn't this fun? Isn't fun the best thing to have?
Jun 6, 2005
53,384
67,050
I feel sorry for the kid - all of the news i used to read on here from the reserves followers was that he had promise.

Best wishes to him, must be heartbreaking.
 

BoringOldFan

It's better to burn out than to fade away...
Sep 20, 2005
9,955
2,498
In today's Irish Examiner:

Last year, Terry Dixon was our award-winner in football.

Having already made waves as a goal-scorer for the Irish U17s, he then became, at age 16, the second-youngest player ever to be called into the senior squad when Steve Staunton brought him to Portugal for Ireland’s warm weather training camp ahead of a friendly against Chile. At that point, Dixon was only a youth player at Spurs but was already as highly thought of at White Hart Lane as he was at international level, where Ireland’s under-age manager Sean McCaffrey is, to this day, happy to describe him as the most talented player he has ever worked with at that age.

The consensus back then — among his coaches, his fellow players and the senior Irish internationals who were knocked out by impression the big, red-headed lad made on them in Portugal — was that Dixon would go on to become not just a successful professional footballer but, potentially, a great one.

Terry Dixon seemed to have the world at his feet. But then came a succession of horrendous injury setbacks which turned his life upside down, replacing the buzz of training and matches with the torture of surgery and rehabilitation. And, then, just two days ago, the following bleak announcement suddenly appeared on the official Spurs website: “Following meetings with Terry Dixon, his family and his representatives at which his long term recovery and future well-being after an unfortunate sequence of severe injuries were discussed, the player has now left the club. The Academy striker, who featured on a number of occasions for our reserve side, suffered a dislocated kneecap, which ruled him out for the entire 2006-07 season before he was able to return to action at the beginning of this campaign. The 18-year-old, however, suffered the same injury again in mid-September during an Academy League fixture and underwent further surgery and extensive rehabilitation. We wish Terry every success for the future.”

It’s understood that the specialists who have tried to rebuild the player’s shattered knee are of the opinion that it will never stand up to the rigours of intensive training, never mind the pressure of top-flight football itself. The clear implication then is that, at the age of just 18, Terry’s career as a professional footballer is effectively over. People close to the Londoner suggest that he hasn’t fully absorbed the news and still believes he can continue to play at a high level in the game. But while one would love to think that he could prove the experts wrong, the concern must be that, in pushing himself and his fragile knee to the limit, he would only succeed in doing himself further physical damage in the long run.

Terry Dixon’s story (so far) is a sobering reminder that the line between glory and disaster can be distressingly fine in sport, something worth bearing in mind the next time you reach for the adjectives “pampered” and “overpaid” to describe your least favourite football star. Even for the game’s established names, as Arsenal’s unfortunate Eduardo has recently discovered, the dream can become a nightmare in an instant.

But how much harder must it be for a youngster when fate intervenes to such devastating effect? And you can’t help but wonder: is it better, in the sporting sense, to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all? Probably, you suspect, the latter. At least those of us who were always basically useless at football only ever entertained dreams of wearing the green shirt when we were of such a tender age that a rival career as an astronaut still seemed like a reasonable fall-back.

But, lest we forget, there are much worse things which can befall the dreamer. Just the other night, I pulled down a book of columns by the great journalist Frank Keating and, for the first time, my eyes fell upon a verse which was sent to him by a woman in Northamptonshire, after her young football-mad son had lost his life in a road accident. Here is what the grieving mother wrote: “Now it will never be, perhaps because of Wembley/An image in the mind of a boy having a reality more tangible than life itself/Was it because of this?/Did the road turn green and the noise of the cars become the cheers of the crowd?/I hope he was scoring the goal at the moment of impact.”

I need hardly add anything more except to say that while, for Terry Dixon, it might feel like the world has ended just now, it hasn’t. Whatever he does with his life in the future, whether it’s inside or outside football, I wish him well and hope he can find it in himself to live it to the fullest.
 

chrissivad

Staff
May 20, 2005
51,646
58,072
just posted over on COYS

what i heard on thursday was that the club offered him a coaching role (he has been working on his badges) but he is still totally convinced that he can still continue with his playing career. this is something the doctors don't agree with and insist he could risk not being able to walk when he is older. his family have been put in the horrible situation of being caught between the facts and their son's belief and will power. they've taken the view that if terry believe's he can make it back then they have to fully support him over what's gonna be a nigh impossible journey with the only consolation being that plenty of people have been told they'll never play again or do this or that again and overcome all odds..

the club were left with no option but to release him so that he can pursue his chosen direction. he has still been told that there will be a door left open for him and it's nothing like the cold situation i'd imagined it to be. good luck to him but i don't hold the same belief as he does.

the club were left with no option bu

hope he can get fit and play again, the specialists have been wrong before.
 

yanno

Well-Known Member
Aug 1, 2003
5,857
2,877
hope he can get fit and play again, the specialists have been wrong before.

Yup, doctors have been wrong before, and will be again.

However, a twice dislocated knee is about as fundamentally damaging an injury as I can imagine for a sportsman. It's a great shame, for Spurs and particularly for young Terry Dixon.
 

Rocksuperstar

Isn't this fun? Isn't fun the best thing to have?
Jun 6, 2005
53,384
67,050
We can rebuild him. We have the technology. We can make him better than he was before. Better, stronger, faster.

But we don't want to spend a lot of money

31auRMHmgnL._AA280_.jpg


DA DA DADAAAA, DA DADA DA DA DADADAAAAA!!!!
 

tooey

60% banana
Apr 22, 2005
5,234
7,969
Ive always said that whilst the football machine is making millions and millions and spending needless money on things like hologramic fucking advert boards there is very little in place for youngsters whom have been told there going to make it "big" only to be struck down with an injury or their progress has been hindered. I really hope that the club have put something in place for the youngsters who dont make the grade. I for one would certinally put all my eggs into one basket if id been called up to play for my nation at the age of 16. Just hope theres something career wise (be it football or other pastures) that the club will/ have sorted out for the lad.
 
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