Don Kitchenbrand

South African soccer player (1933–2025) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Donald Basil Kitchenbrand (also Kichenbrand; 13 August 1933 – March 2025) was a South African football player who played in Britain for Rangers and Sunderland in the mid to late 1950s.

Full name Donald Basil Kitchenbrand[1]
Date of birth (1933-08-13)13 August 1933
Place of birth Germiston, South Africa
Date of death March 2025(2025-03-00) (aged 91)
Quick facts Personal information, Full name ...
Don Kitchenbrand
Personal information
Full name Donald Basil Kitchenbrand[1]
Date of birth (1933-08-13)13 August 1933
Place of birth Germiston, South Africa
Date of death March 2025(2025-03-00) (aged 91)
Position Forward
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1950 Boksburg
1951–1955 Delfos
1955–1958 Rangers 30 (26)
1958–1960 Sunderland 53 (28)
1960 Johannesburg Ramblers
1960 Vereeniging Athletic
1961–1962 Johannesburg Wanderers
1962–1963 Forfar Athletic 9 (6)
1963 Keith 5 (2)
Total 91+ (60+)
International career
1956 South Africa XI 1 (0)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals
Close

Career

Nicknamed The Rhino by the club's fans,[1] Kitchenbrand was one of very few players of the Catholic faith to play for Rangers between the 1920s and 1980s, between which times an unwritten rule was in effect; he was advised not to disclose his religion when signing.[2][3][4] In his first season in British football (1955–56), he scored 24 goals in 25 league appearances to help Rangers win the Scottish League title.[5] That goal tally included the only goal in a 1–0 win over Old Firm rivals Celtic on 2 January 1956,[6] and a five-goal haul in an 8–0 rout of Queen of the South at Ibrox on 7 March 1956.[3][7] Kitchenbrand did not feature much for Rangers after that first season,[5] having lost his place in the side to Max Murray,[8] and left for Sunderland in March 1958.[8]

Kitchenbrand played 54 competitive games for Sunderland, scoring 28 goals.[9] In November 1958 he scored a hat-trick in a 4–0 win over Rotherham, the first hat-trick a Sunderland player had achieved in two years.[10]

He returned to his homeland in 1960 to play for Johannesburg Wanderers[8] and a number of other teams,[11] before coming back to Scotland two years later for a brief spell at Forfar Athletic.[3][12]

Kitchenbrand played once for his country in March 1956, featuring in a South Africa representative side all consisting of British-based players and including Kitchenbrand's Rangers team-mate Johnny Hubbard. They played against a Scotland XI at Ibrox, losing 2–1.[3][13]

Personal life and death

As of 2019, Kitchenbrand and his wife were living in an elderly persons' complex in Benoni, Gauteng.[3] On 16 March 2025, it was announced that Kitchenbrand had died at the age of 91.[14]

Honours

References

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