Nottingham Forest Davenport was born in
Birkenhead and was spotted by scouts from
Nottingham Forest while playing for
Cammell Laird in the West Cheshire league. In the
1983–84 and
1984–85 seasons, Davenport was Forest's leading goalscorer. Davenport also played in the
UEFA Cup semi-final clash with Anderlecht in 1984, which Forest lost 3–2 on aggregate. While a Forest player, Davenport won his only senior cap for England in a 2–1 friendly win over the Republic of Ireland on 26 March 1985.
Manchester United Davenport completed a transfer to Manchester United on 12 March 1986 for a fee of £750,000. By this stage of the season, United were falling behind
Everton and
Liverpool in the league title race which they had looked so certain to win after a 10-match winning start to the
season. A hectic fixture schedule followed, with 10 games being played between Davenport's arrival on 12 March leading up to his first goal in a 4–0 win over
Leicester City on 26 April. By then, however, the impressive win was too late to revive United's title challenge as it had become a three-horse race between Everton, Liverpool and
West Ham United, with Liverpool eventually winning. United manager
Ron Atkinson had signed him as a successor to
Mark Hughes, who would be signing for
Barcelona at the end of the season. He started 11 league games for United at the end of the
1985–86 season, but only scored once and United finished fourth. Davenport himself did not have a bad start to the
1986–87 season, but United's performances in the league were some of their worst since relegation in the
1973–74 season. By the beginning of November, Davenport had scored five goals in the league and another goal in the
Football League Cup, but United were second from bottom in the league and battling against relegation when just months earlier they had been title contenders. Davenport scored his seventh goal of the season on 4 November 1986, but it came as United were thrashed 4–1 by
Southampton in the fourth round replay of the League Cup. Ron Atkinson was then sacked and replaced by
Alex Ferguson. Ferguson was intent on building a new side, but there were few changes to the line-up while the 1986–87 season wore on and Davenport was undoubtedly one of the best players in the side that season. In December, he scored twice in successive 3–3 draws with title challengers
Tottenham Hotspur and fellow strugglers
Aston Villa. On 20 April 1987 he scored the only goal in a 1–0 home win over deadly rivals
Liverpool which helped end Liverpool's defence of the league title, which was won by Everton. By now, United's relegation worries had long gone and they finished a healthy 11th in the final table. Davenport finished the season as United's top goalscorer with 16 goals (14 in the league and two in the League Cup) and for the
1987–88 season he would have a new strike partner in the shape of
Brian McClair following the departure of
Frank Stapleton. McClair's arrival took the pressure off Davenport as the Scotsman was top scorer for a United side who finished second behind Liverpool in the league in 1987–88, scoring 24 goals in the league and 31 in all competitions. Davenport played in 34 out of 40 league games (13 as a substitute) and scored five league goals. In all competitions he made 40 appearances and scored six goals, vying with
Norman Whiteside (normally a midfielder) for the role of United's second striker. However, the 1988 close season saw the return of
Mark Hughes to Old Trafford after two years away and it was widely expected that Davenport would leave, but he began the
1988–89 season still a United player, and with a regular place in the first team. He scored in successive league games in September and was also on the scoresheet in a League Cup tie but he was then sold to newly promoted Middlesbrough in November 1988 for a fee of £750,000. He had scored his last goal for United on 28 September 1988, finding the net in a 1–0
Football League Cup second round first leg win over
Rotherham United at
Millmoor.
Middlesbrough Davenport walked straight into the
Ayresome Park first team under manager
Bruce Rioch but it took him 11 games to get off the mark, netting in a 1–0 victory against his previous employers
Manchester United at Ayresome Park on 2 January 1989. However, he managed just four goals from 24 games in 1988–89 as Boro slipped back into the
Football League Second Division just one season after promotion.
1989–90 was even tougher as Boro narrowly avoided a second successive relegation and Davenport managed a mere three goals from 35 league games, and by the end of the season Rioch had gone and Boro were now managed by
Colin Todd. In July 1990, he signed for their local rivals Sunderland who had just been promoted to the First Division.
Sunderland Davenport signed for nearby
Sunderland in the summer of 1990, and formed an effective strike partnership with
Marco Gabbiadini in the first half of the season. Despite this, Sunderland were relegated at the end of the season. In the 1991–92 season, Davenport continued to be a prominent player for Sunderland, scoring in the Wear-Tees Derby at
Roker Park on 20 April 1992 with a first time volley from outside the 18-yard box, a goal that has been regarded as being one of the best scored at Roker Park in recent memory. In the same season, he played in the
1992 FA Cup final at Wembley against
Liverpool. Davenport scored the first goal in a famous 2–1 quarter-final victory over
Chelsea during the road to Wembley and formed a partnership with striker
John Byrne (who scored in every round bar the final itself). He played one more season for Sunderland, in the new Division One, before moving north of the border to sign for Airdrieonians, who had just been relegated from the
Scottish Premier Division. Despite the fact that he had played for Manchester United and Nottingham Forest in the 1980s, both teams who fairly regularly won trophies around that time, this was Davenport's first and only appearance in a major cup final. ==End of playing career==