My partner laughs when we are watching a Premier League game, which she thinks is the only place football is played (apart from La Liga) and I say, 'former Charlton player'.
When Alfie Doughty was 18 he was sent on loan
from the Addicksto Kingstonian in the Isthmian League. He
spent around 10 weeks playing in the seventh tier of English football before
returning to his boyhood club.
Five and a half years on, and Doughty has played in the
fifth tier in the National League with Bromley, experienced relegation from the
Championship with Charlton and struggled to get into the team at Stoke City.
Now he is 24 and has not only helped Luton Town get
promoted to the Premier League but has become one of their standout
players in England’s top flight.
Doughty spent 15 years at Charlton’s academy, coming through
with Liverpool defender Joe Gomez and Aston Villa centre-back Ezri
Konsa. His aim has always been to play in the top division and he is doing it
with aplomb.
His versatility and trustworthiness have meant he has been
relied on both sides of the pitch at wing-back, and heading into their match
with Burnley, no Luton player had created more chances than Doughty. A high number of those chances have arrived
from set pieces, with Doughty in charge of free kicks and corners. Only West
Ham United midfielder James Ward-Prowse has created more chances
from set pieces in the Premier League than the Luton player this season.
Doughty’s drive and deliveries are among the top reasons
Luton remain in a fight to stay in the Premier League. As for Doughty, this
level looks more and more like one he belongs at.
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