Doug Loft

English footballer (born 1986) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Douglas James Loft (born 25 December 1986) is an English former professional footballer who played as a midfielder. He made 430 league and cup appearances in an 18-year career, scoring 32 goals.

Full name Douglas James Loft[1]
Date of birth (1986-12-25) 25 December 1986 (age 39)[2]
Place of birth Maidstone, England
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)[2]
Quick facts Personal information, Full name ...
Doug Loft
Loft playing for Port Vale in April 2013
Personal information
Full name Douglas James Loft[1]
Date of birth (1986-12-25) 25 December 1986 (age 39)[2]
Place of birth Maidstone, England
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)[2]
Position Midfielder
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
–2006 Hastings United
2006–2009 Brighton & Hove Albion 39 (2)
2009Dagenham & Redbridge (loan) 11 (0)
2009–2014 Port Vale 174 (18)
2014–2016 Gillingham 62 (5)
2016–2018 Colchester United 20 (0)
2018–2019 Shrewsbury Town 1 (0)
2019Dagenham & Redbridge (loan) 12 (0)
2019–2021 Billericay Town 28 (2)
2021 Margate 0 (0)
2021–2023 Tonbridge Angels 27 (1)
Total 374 (28)
* Club domestic league appearances and goals
Close

A non-League player at Hastings United, Loft moved to Championship club Brighton & Hove Albion in January 2006. He remained on the fringes of the first team throughout his stay and was loaned out to Dagenham & Redbridge in February 2009. He signed with Port Vale in June 2009, where he found regular first-team football. Voted as the club's Player of the Year in 2012, Loft helped the club secure promotion to League One the following season. He signed for Gillingham in June 2014 before moving to Colchester United in July 2016. He signed with Shrewsbury Town in July 2018 and in January 2019 rejoined Dagenham & Redbridge on loan. He signed with non-League side Billericay Town in July 2019 and moved to Tonbridge Angels in June 2021.

Career

Brighton & Hove Albion

Born in Maidstone,[2] former England Schoolboy international Loft was signed by Brighton & Hove Albion from non-League side Hastings United in January 2006.[3] He made his professional debut for Mark McGhee's side as a 90th-minute substitute in Brighton's 0–0 draw with Preston North End on 11 March 2006.[4] In only his third game, Loft scored his first goal, a consolation in Brighton's 5–1 home defeat by Stoke City on 30 April 2006.[5]

Loft made 13 league and cup appearances for Brighton during his first full season with the club, scoring one goal.[6] He agreed a new one-year deal at the end of the 2006–07 campaign.[7] He made 17 appearances in all competitions during the 2007–08 season, scoring one goal in the FA Cup.[8] He was awarded a new one-year contract in June 2008.[9]

In the 2008–09 season, Loft had made nine appearances for Brighton before joining League Two side Dagenham & Redbridge in February 2009 on loan until the end of the season.[10] After impressing in his loan spell,[11] and after making ten appearances for the Daggers, Brighton manager Russell Slade recalled Loft.[12] He returned to Brighton to make seven further appearances before the end of the campaign.[13]

Port Vale

In May 2009, Loft was one of 14 players who left Brighton following the expiry of their contracts.[14] He signed for Port Vale on a two-year contract in June 2009, teaming up with former Brighton manager Micky Adams.[15] He missed the opening two weeks of the 2009–10 pre-season with illness,[16] though started to find his best form after settling in to the side. He was transfer listed in late September, along with the entire Port Vale squad, after Adams saw his team slip to a third consecutive defeat.[17] After calf and heel injuries kept Loft out of contention, he returned to the first-team with a "rasping half-volley" in a 2–2 home draw with Torquay United on 23 November.[18] He ended the season with three goals and 37 appearances in all competitions.[19]

At the beginning of the 2010–11 season, Loft was out of the first-team with suspected bruised ribs. His ribs eventually transpired to be broken, and he had also suffered a collapsed lung, keeping him out of action for three weeks.[20] Despite a tore calf and a hamstring injury keeping him out of action for portions of the second half of the campaign, Loft was awarded a new two-year deal in May 2011.[21]

Loft began the 2011–12 season with four goals in six games, which earned him a nomination for League Two Player of the Month for August, which he missed out on to Dagenham & Redbridge's Mark Arber. After a successful campaign which returned five goals in 46 appearances,[22] Loft was voted as the club's Player of the Year, while also picking up the Away Travel Player of the Year and Players' Player of the Season awards.

Loft was appointed club captain in July 2012 following the departure of Marc Richards.[23] He scored his only goal of the season with a 25 yards (23 m) drive in Vale's 2–1 defeat to Oxford United at the Kassam Stadium on 2 March 2013.[24] Three days later, he received a red card for violent conduct in a goalless home draw with Bradford City.[25] Loft featured for Vale 36 times,[26] as the club went on to achieve promotion to League One with a third-place finish. He signed a new one-year contract in the summer.[27]

During the 2013–14 season, Loft had been a regular fixture in the first-team, scoring nine goals in 43 league and cup appearances,[28] until April 2014, when an alleged training ground altercation between Loft and teammate Daniel Jones left Loft out of action for the remainder of the season.[29] Manager Micky Adams stressed that Loft was the innocent party in the confrontation that left Loft with a broken cheekbone and Jones was sacked following a club investigation.[30] He was voted onto Port Vale's team of the 2010s by readers of The Sentinel, alongside Anthony Griffith, in February 2020.[31]

Gillingham

In June 2014, Loft turned down a new deal to remain with Port Vale, instead choosing to sign for Gillingham on a free transfer.[32] He chose to sign for Gillingham in order to return to his home county of Kent with his young family.[33] He was made club captain,[34] and made his club debut on 9 August 2014 in a 4–2 defeat to Milton Keynes Dons.[35] He was sent off in a 3–0 League One defeat to Scunthorpe United in October 2014,[36] before scoring his first goal for the club in a Football League Trophy win over Crawley Town on 11 November.[37] He ended the season with two goals in 42 appearances.[38]

Loft spent much of the 2015–16 season plagued by injury, missing much of pre-season and the early stages,[39] and suffering an Achilles injury which restricted his number of games to just four between mid-February and May 2016.[40] He scored four goals in 28 games,[41] and was released by the club at the end of the season.[34]

Colchester United

In July 2016, Loft signed a two-year contract with League Two side Colchester United.[42] He made his debut for the club in the EFL Cup during Colchester's 4–0 defeat by Brighton & Hove Albion.[43] His problematic hamstring and Achilles injuries recurred in late August 2016, keeping him out of first-team action. It was reported on 9 September that Loft would remain out of action for two to three months.[44] He finally made a return to competitive action as a late substitute in Colchester's 1–1 draw with Doncaster Rovers on 14 April 2017,[45] completing the season with nine first-team appearances to his name.[46] He was struck down by a shoulder injury after a bad fall in November 2017.[47] He was released by Colchester at the end of the 2017–18 season after manager John McGreal admitted that "we only ever saw glimpses of him because of his injury problems and it just hasn't worked out for him here".[48]

Shrewsbury Town

On 21 July 2018, Loft signed a one-year deal with Shrewsbury Town after impressing manager John Askey on a trial basis in pre-season friendlies.[49] However, he failed to break into the "Shrews" first-team, playing just 66 minutes of League One football at the New Meadow.[50] He appeared more frequently in the EFL Trophy and scored his only goal for the club in that competition against Walsall.[51] On 21 January 2019, he returned to Dagenham & Redbridge, who were now playing in the National League, on loan until the end of the 2018–19 season.[52] Manager Peter Taylor said that "he is a very experienced midfield player that I felt we needed".[53] He was released by Shrewsbury manager Sam Ricketts in May 2019.[54]

Later career

On 17 July 2019, Loft joined National League South club Billericay Town.[55] He scored two goals in 24 appearances in the 2019–20 season, which was permanently suspended on 26 March due to the COVID-19 pandemic in England, with Billericay in 18th-place.[56] He played eight games in the 2020–21 season, which was also curtailed early due to the pandemic.[57][58]

On 3 June 2021, Loft joined Isthmian League Premier Division club Margate; manager Jay Saunders described him as a "key signing".[59][60] However, eight days later he was revealed as a Tonbridge Angels signing after he walked out on Margate to remain in the National League South with Tonbridge.[61] He played 27 games in the 2021–22 season and was retained in the summer.[57][62] However, he played just one game of the 2022–23 campaign before suffering a season-ending ruptured Achilles injury at the end of August.[57][63]

Style of play

Loft was a versatile midfield player, and in November 2010, was described by Port Vale teammate Gareth Owen as "...one of the fittest at the club, but he's got a lot of skill with it... I've been surprised by how strong he is. He's got a good footballing brain and I like having him outside me (at wing-back) because he always wants the ball and I know he'll do his defensive duties as well.[64] He could play in other positions, and received praise for his performances at left-back and his "excellent attitude" from Port Vale manager Micky Adams.[65]

Career statistics

More information Club, Season ...
Appearances and goals by club, season and competition
Club Season League FA Cup League Cup Other Total
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Brighton & Hove Albion 2005–06[66] Championship 31000031
2006–07[6] League One 111002000131
2007–08[8] League One 13031001[a]0171
2008–09[13] League One 12000103[a]0160
Total 392313040493
Dagenham & Redbridge (loan) 2008–09[13] League Two 110110
Port Vale 2009–10[19] League Two 323203000373
2010–11[67] League Two 29130101[a]0341
2011–12[22] League Two 444101100465
2012–13[26] League Two 32110102[a]0361
2013–14[28] League One 37930102[a]0439
Total 17418100715019619
Gillingham 2014–15[38] League One 36110104[a]1422
2015–16[41] League One 26410001[a]0284
Total 625201051706
Colchester United 2016–17[46] League Two 8000100090
2017–18[68] League Two 120100000130
Total 200101000220
Shrewsbury Town 2018–19[69] League One 1000004[b]151
Dagenham & Redbridge (loan) 2018–19[57] National League 120120
Billericay Town 2019–20[57] National League South 212503[c]0292
2020–21[57] National League South 70001[d]080
Total 2825040372
Tonbridge Angels 2021–22[57] National League South 261001[d]0271
2022–23[57] National League South 10000010
Total 2710010281
Career total 3742821112123243032
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  1. Appearance(s) in Football League Trophy
  2. Appearances and goals in EFL Trophy
  3. Appearances in Essex Senior Cup
  4. Appearances and goals in FA Trophy

Honours

Port Vale

Individual

References

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