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What happened to David Batty, who shook off penalty miss against Argentina?

England midfielder David Batty quickly shook off his penalty miss against Argentina in 1998. As the two teams prepare to meet in the World Cup knockout stage again, BBC Sport asks: what happened to him?

What happened to David Batty, who shook off penalty miss against Argentina?

Few players take their first penalty as a professional at a World Cup, but that was exactly the situation David Batty found himself in back in 1998.

England's breathless last-16 tie against Argentina had gone to a shootout and it fell to the midfielder to keep his side in the tournament with the fifth spot-kick.

The country held its breath as Batty stepped up, only for goalkeeper Carlos Roa to make the save to send Argentina through.

Rather than collapsing to the turf in tears, or pulling his shirt over his face, Batty held his head high.

When he emerged from the dressing room that night, he even questioned why his friend and agent, Hayden Evans, had come down from the stands to check on him.

It was as if nothing had happened.

It was only when a fast food company later wanted Batty to feature in an advert campaign making light of his penalty miss that he showed his feelings.

The angry Yorkshireman did not want to profit off the disappointment of those who had travelled out to the World Cup. No wonder he was a cult figure with supporters.

As England prepare to meet Argentina in the knockout stage of the World Cup once more, we revisit a piece about Batty's enduring popularity and his low-key retirement.

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'I don't think anyone has seen him since we played'

Dozens of phones buzzed across the globe last December.

Rio Ferdinand, Mark Viduka, Jason Wilcox, even former manager David O'Leary were among those alerted to new messages in their Leeds United WhatsApp group.

It was Batty's 57th birthday.

Only no-one who shared a dressing room with the ex-midfielder had the slightest idea where he was.

"I don't think anyone has seen him since we played together," Viduka said. "Everyone was wishing him happy birthday – but he's not even in the group."

To say Batty has kept a low profile since retiring in 2004 would be an understatement.

A series of amusing rumours have spread over the years as a result, amid claims Batty has become a superbike champion under a fake name, trained to be a master butcher and gone off grid to live in a caravan.

The reality is a little different, but this was someone who was never going to stay involved with the game.

Batty's agent, Evans, knew that better than most.

"It was clear from day one that he would never go into coaching, for example, and never seek that as a route back into football," he said.

"David has been as good as his word, which is him through and through.

"He always said, 'When I retire, that will be it. I won't have anything to do with the football industry'."

So just what happened to Batty?

A valued team-mate in title wins

It is a question that has been repeatedly asked.

Not least at the various reunions to mark Leeds' title triumph in 1992 or Blackburn Rovers' Premier League win three years later.

Batty was involved in both of those landmark achievements, but ex-Blackburn midfielder Mark Atkins has not caught up with him since their playing days.

"We have tried to get him to the dos we have had, but nobody can get hold of him," he said.

"He's not that type of person. Even if he was living five miles away, he wouldn't turn up because he's a very personal guy, really."

Aside from a rare trip to Elland Road to lay a wreath on the pitch in memory of his close friend Gary Speed, following his tragic death in 2011, Batty has tended to keep out of the public eye.

Viduka, who quietly opened a cafe in Croatia after hanging up his boots, can relate.

"In this day and age, everyone shows off everything they do in every moment, like what they had for breakfast," he said. "Who cares?

"If anyone was not going to be like that, it was Batts."

Rather than entertaining corporate guests, representing footballers or working in the media, Batty always planned to dedicate his time solely to his family in Yorkshire after retiring.

It has only added to the cult surrounding a player who former Leeds team-mate Eirik Bakke called one of his "heroes".

"If someone tackled you, Batts was always there to stand up for you," he said. "You don't find those types of players a lot. You could always rely on him."

Batty was more than a mere enforcer, however.

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