John David Gaskell (5 October 1940 – 24 January 2025) was an English footballer who played as a goalkeeper. He started his career with Manchester United, becoming their youngest ever player. He helped United win several trophies during the 1960s. He left the club for Wigan Athletic in June 1968 before joining Wrexham a year later.
Gaskell was not with the Manchester United squad when their aeroplane crashed at Munich on the way home from a European Cup tie on 6 February 1958, killing eight players.
By the early 1960s, Gaskell had become a regular in the United first team, covering for first-choice goalkeeper Harry Gregg. The zenith of Gaskell's career came in 1963, when he kept goal for United in their 1963 FA Cup Final win over Leicester City.
A succession of injuries to Gregg meant that Gaskell was in and out of the first team on a regular basis, but the signing of Pat Dunne in May 1964 meant that Gaskell was relegated to the position of third-choice goalkeeper. Both Gregg and Dunne left in 1966, but the arrival of Alex Stepney and the emergence of young Jimmy Rimmer meant that Gaskell was still third-choice at the club. For the last two years of his Manchester United contract he was in dispute with Matt Busby and refused to play for the reserve teams and instead turned out for Orrell R.U.F.C.. He was released in the summer of 1968, and signed for non-League club Wigan Athletic.
A year later, Gaskell returned to League football and signed for Wrexham, and remained there for three years. He worked for Post Office Telephones (now BT) for a short period before moving to South Africa, where he played for Arcadia Shepherds until his retirement. After recovering from a serious knee injury, he made a rugby comeback in his late thirties for Wrexham RFC in the WRU Challenge Cup against some of Wales'
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