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14-631: Boxall is a surname. Notable people with the name include: Danny Boxall (born 1977), English footballer Margaret Boxall , English badminton player Michael Boxall (born 1988), New Zealand footballer Richard Boxall (born 1961), English professional golfer Steve Boxall (born 1987), British speedway rider Thomas Boxall , English cricketer Tony Boxall (1929–2010), British photographer William Boxall (1800–1879), British painter See also [ edit ] Boxall baronets [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with

28-599: A free transfer . He made 46 appearances and scored one goal during the Bees' Third Division-title winning 1998–99 season. A second anterior cruciate ligament injury suffered in February 2000 kept Boxall out of match play until March 2002 and he made a number of late- 2001–02 season appearances. He was released after Brentford's Second Division play-off final defeat and played the 2002–03 and 2003–04 seasons with Third Division club Bristol Rovers . After putting off

42-548: A 0–0 draw away to West London rivals Queens Park Rangers in the penultimate match of the season dropped the club out of the final automatic promotion place. Cause for concern was a goal drought suffered by Ben Burgess, who had failed to score since 26 February and the midfield was weakened by the £150,000 sale of Gavin Mahon to Watford , in a bid to reduce the wage bill. Brentford would play 2nd-place Reading at Griffin Park on

56-719: A decision to retire, Boxall played his subsequent career in the League of Ireland and English non-League football , before retiring due to injury in 2008. Owing to an Irish grandmother from Wexford , Boxall qualified to represent the Republic of Ireland at international level and he won eight U21 caps in 1998 and 1999. Boxall was born at Mayday Hospital and attended Holy Trinity Church of England Junior School and Stanley Park High School in Wallington . He has four older brothers and an older sister. Boxall has worked as

70-410: A male model and has run cleaning, construction and physiotherapy businesses. As of 2020, he was director of cleaning and property business Adept London. Boxall was hired as a body double for Kuno Becker 's legs in close-up dribbling sequences in the 2005 film Goal! . Brentford 2001%E2%80%9302 Brentford F.C. season During the 2001–02 English football season, Brentford competed in

84-639: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Danny Boxall Daniel James Boxall (born 24 August 1977) is an English former professional footballer who played as a right back for Brentford , Bristol Rovers , Oldham Athletic and Crystal Palace . After two seasons in Ireland with Dublin City , he returned to England in 2006 to play non-League football and retired in 2008. A right back , Boxall began his senior career at First Division club Crystal Palace and made 8 appearances during

98-545: The 1995–96 and 1996–97 seasons. He made two appearances during Palace's single-season stay in the Premier League and spent most of 1997–98 on loan at Second Division club Oldham Athletic . Having been hampered by an anterior cruciate ligament injury suffered during his time at Selhurst Park , Boxall was released by Crystal Palace in June 1998 and joined newly-relegated Third Division club Brentford on

112-563: The Football League Second Division . The Bees were denied promotion after defeat to Stoke City in the 2002 Second Division playoff Final . After a promising, but ultimately disappointing 2000–01 season, Steve Coppell replaced Ray Lewington as manager of Second Division Brentford on 8 May 2001. In the knowledge he would be provided with little money to buy players, Coppell was also tasked with raising £500,000 in transfer fees. The previous season's squad

126-409: The surname Boxall . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Boxall&oldid=1190234659 " Category : Surnames Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description

140-545: The final day of the season, needing a win to secure automatic promotion, while the Royals only needed a draw. Brentford took the lead through Martin Rowlands , but were pegged back 13 minutes from time by Jamie Cureton and the match finished as a 1–1 draw, which consigned the Bees to the playoffs . Brentford faced 6th-placed Huddersfield Town in the playoff semi-finals, a rematch of the 1995 semi-final encounter between

154-447: The season, which was the fourth instance of three Brentford players reaching double-figures before Christmas Day. A 4–0 victory over Brighton & Hove Albion in front of the Sky cameras at Griffin Park on 24 January 2002 turned Brentford's flagging season around, with twin forwards Owusu and Burgess finding the net with regularity. The Bees lost just two of the next 16 matches, but

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168-582: The table for the first time after a 4–0 win over Tranmere Rovers on 8 September 2001. After a first league defeat of the season at the hands of Swindon Town on 25 September, the Bees went on a seven-match club record-equalling winning run and seized top spot in the Second Division. Captain Paul Evans led by example, scoring 9 goals in 13 matches in all competitions before suffering a hamstring injury in mid-October. His temporary replacement

182-470: Was Arsenal 's teenage midfielder Steve Sidwell , another loan signing which would prove to be a master-stroke and which would later be extended until the end of the season. Between 10 November 2001 and 24 January 2002, Brentford won just twice in a spell of 13 league matches, suffering eight defeats, while briefly returning to the top of the table in late December. By 21 December, Lloyd Owusu , Paul Evans and Ben Burgess had each reached 10 or more goals for

196-425: Was kept together, with two fringe players released and two arrivals – youngster Stephen Hunt and defender Jason Price on a short-term contract. After a 1–1 opening day draw with Wigan Athletic , teenage Blackburn Rovers forward Ben Burgess was brought in on a one-month loan , which was subsequently extended until the end of the season. Brentford had its best start to a season since 1934–35 and topped

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