Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Danny Mills

English professional footballer (born 1978)


English professional footballer (born 1978)

FieldValue
nameDanny Mills
fullnameDaniel John Mills{{Cite book
editor-firstBarry J.
editor-lastHugman
titleThe PFA Footballers' Who's Who 2003/2004
year2003
publisherQueen Anne Press
isbn1-85291-651-6
page60
imageDanny Mills Legend.jpg
birth_date
birth_placeNorwich, England
height1.81m
positionRight-back
youthyears11993–1994youthclubs1 = Norwich City
years11994–1998clubs1 = Norwich Citycaps1 = 66goals1 = 0
years21998–1999clubs2 = Charlton Athleticcaps2 = 45goals2 = 3
years31999–2004clubs3 = Leeds United
caps3101goals3 = 3
years42003–2004clubs4 = → Middlesbrough (loan)
caps428goals4 = 0
years52004–2009clubs5 = Manchester City
caps551goals5 = 1
years62006clubs6 = → Hull City (loan)
caps69goals6 = 0
years72007clubs7 = → Charlton Athletic (loan)
caps719goals7 = 0
years82008clubs8 = → Derby County (loan)
caps82goals8 = 0
totalcaps321totalgoals = 7
nationalyears11994–1995nationalteam1 = England U18nationalcaps1 = 2nationalgoals1 = 0
nationalyears21998–2000nationalteam2 = England U21nationalcaps2 = 14nationalgoals2 = 3
nationalyears32001–2004nationalteam3 = Englandnationalcaps3 = 19nationalgoals3 = 0

| editor-first = Barry J. | editor-last = Hugman

Daniel John Mills (born 18 May 1977) is an English former professional footballer, his main position was right-back, though he could also play as a centre-back.

He earned 19 caps for the England national team and was starting right-back in the five games that England played in the 2002 FIFA World Cup. He retired in 2009 from the game at the age of 32 due to an ongoing knee injury.

Club career

Early career

Mills began his career with Norwich City after coming through their youth system. He was unable to establish a regular place in the side and moved to Charlton Athletic in March 1998 and helped them win promotion to the Premier League via the play-offs, playing in their dramatic win over Sunderland in the play-off final, winning 7–6 on penalties after a 4–4 draw.

Leeds United

In June 1999, Mills signed for Leeds United in a £4.1 million transfer. He played a part in helping Leeds reach the 2000–01 UEFA Champions League Semi-final. Mills' Champions League debut came in Leeds' 4–0 defeat by Barcelona at the Camp Nou.

Mills spent the 2003–04 season on loan at Middlesbrough, where he played in the 2004 Football League Cup final to help Middlesbrough to their first ever major trophy.

Following relegation from the Premier League at the end of 2003–04, Leeds could no longer afford to retain Mills' services, and he moved to Manchester City on a free transfer in the close season, signing a five-year contract. As part of his severance package with Leeds, Mills continued to receive part of his wages from the Yorkshire club for the duration of his original Leeds contract. Mills often said that he would've liked to go back to Leeds again (along with Olivier Dacourt), but this never materialised. Mills has been seen at Leeds games with his son after the club's relegation to the Football League Championship.

Manchester City

Mills made his Manchester City debut in the opening fixture of the 2004–05 season, a 1–1 draw against Fulham at the City of Manchester Stadium. He started the majority of matches in his first season at Manchester City, but was dropped from the first team when Stuart Pearce replaced Kevin Keegan as manager in March 2005. He regained his place for the start of the 2005–06 season, and on 2 October 2005, he scored his first and only goal for Manchester City, a powerful shot from 25 yd against Everton. One month later, he sustained a shin injury which resulted in a fifteen-game absence. The injury coincided with the emergence of Micah Richards who deposed him as first choice right-back; after Richards made his debut, Mills made only five further first team appearances in the remainder of the season.

On 14 September 2006 he joined Hull City in a two-month loan deal. He returned to Manchester City in January and was on the verge of being sent on loan to Hull City again or Leeds United, but a decision was made to keep him at City. Following the appointment of Sven-Göran Eriksson as Manchester City manager, Mills was transfer listed for loan. He re-joined former club Charlton on a loan deal until the end of 2007.

He joined Premier League strugglers Derby County on loan, in January 2008 until 2 May. However, he was injured in only his second game for the Rams, returning to City shortly after. On 1 July 2009, he was released by Manchester City after his contract finally expired. On 7 August 2009 Mills announced his retirement from all football during an appearance on BBC Radio 5 Live.

International career

Following a series of impressive performances for Leeds United, Mills received his first England callup in 2001, making his international debut on 25 May 2001, as a substitute in a friendly against Mexico at Pride Park. His first England start came on 27 March 2002 in a friendly against Italy. At the 2002 FIFA World Cup, Mills was chosen as England's first choice right-back following an injury to Gary Neville, and he played every minute of England's five matches.

Outside football

Mills is a patron of Shine (formerly the Association for Spina Bifida And Hydrocephalus), and has raised money for the charity since the death of his son Archie from the condition in 2002. He has also appeared on BBC Radio 5 Live's Fighting Talk. Mills now acts as a regular pundit and commentator (often alongside Alan Green) for BBC Radio 5 Live's coverage of the Premier League, League Cup, FA Cup, UEFA Champions League and England national football team matches. He also works as a pundit on Talksport.

In 2010, he competed in the Brighton Marathon in a wheelchair to raise money for Shine and the National Association of Disabled Supporters, completing the race in two hours, 43 minutes.

Mills was a runner up, along with Michael Underwood, on the 2012 series of Celebrity MasterChef. He was beaten by Emma Kennedy in a closely contested final.

In 2016, he ran the London Marathon for The Bobby Moore Fund, finishing in a time of 3 hours 14 mins 46 seconds. He had previously run the Yorkshire Marathon for the Jane Tomlinson Appeal in 3 hours 17 minutes.

Personal life

His son George Mills won the 1500 metres British title in athletics. His younger son Stanley is a professional footballer who played for Everton and Oxford United.

Career statistics

Club

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotalDivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsTotal6602051731Total453103020513Total101370412901414Total5111020541Career total32171402123103879
Norwich City1995–96First Division1400031171
1996–97First Division3201020350
1997–98First Division2001000210
Charlton Athletic1997–98First Division9120111
1998–99Premier League3621030402
Leeds United1999–2000Premier League171101120212
2000–01Premier League2301000160400
2001–02Premier League281102080391
2002–03Premier League331401030411
Middlesbrough (loan)2003–04Premier League2802070370
Manchester City2004–05Premier League3201020350
2005–06Premier League1810000181
2006–07Premier League10000010
Hull City (loan)2006–07Championship9090
Charlton Athletic (loan)2007–08Championship19000190
Derby County (loan)2007–08Premier League201030

International

National teamYearAppsGoalsTotal190
England200130
2002100
200350
200410

Honours

Charlton Athletic

  • Football League First Division play-offs: 1998

Middlesbrough

References

References

  1. "Danny Mills". AFS Enterprises.
  2. (7 August 2009). "Mills opts to end playing career". BBC Sport.
  3. (8 September 2018). "Leeds United: Let's enjoy it while we can says former defender Danny Mills".
  4. "Charlton to sell Mills for GBP 4.1 m". Evening Standard.
  5. (29 February 2004). "Boro lift Carling Cup". BBC.
  6. "Keegan delighted with Mills signing". Manchester Evening News.
  7. "£7m consolation for missing out on promotion – Leeds still moving in right direction, says Bates". Professional Footballers' Association.
  8. James, Gary. (2006). "Manchester City – The Complete Record". Breedon.
  9. "Pearce salutes Mills attitude". Manchester Evening News.
  10. (2 October 2005). "Man City 2–0 Everton". BBC Sport.
  11. "City: Mills will fight youth brigade". Manchester Evening News.
  12. "Mills deal done". Charlton Athletic F.C..
  13. "Footballer Danny Mills praises new Helpline". ASBAH.
  14. "Footy stars team up for Danny boy". icCoventry.
  15. "Mills in defence of stars". [[The Northern Echo]].
  16. Laura Bowyer. (21 October 2009). "Leeds United: Ex-player's wheelchair challenge".
  17. (23 June 2018). "Danny and George Mills – like father, like son".
  18. (31 January 2025). "Mills leaves Everton for Oxford United". BBC Sport.
  19. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 1996
  20. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 1997
  21. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 1998
  22. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 1999
  23. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 2000
  24. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 2001
  25. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 2002
  26. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 2003
  27. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 2004
  28. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 2005
  29. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 2006
  30. {{soccerbase season. 5470. 2007
  31. (29 February 2004). "Boro lift Carling Cup".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Danny Mills — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report