Huddersfield Town have been forced to lean heavily on youth this season in the Sky Bet Championship, with Carlos Corberan juggling an intense schedule and numerous injuries.  

The likes of Rarmani Edmonds-Green and Aaron Rowe start regularly for Huddersfield, whilst Lewis O’Brien remains another young player, albeit with a bagful of experience under his belt already.

Corberan also has a spine of experienced players running through his side in Fraizer Campbell, Jonathan Hogg and Richard Keogh. Then, there’s others in and around the club, such as Richard Stearman and Tommy Elphick.

On the topic of the elder members of the Huddersfield squad, we’ve dived onto transfermarkt to take a look at the 10 oldest players to have ever pulled on the blue and white of the Terriers.

Click through the following link to see who ranks at No.10

Andy Booth bookended a stellar career with spells at Huddersfield Town.

He broke through initially in the early 1990s, surpassing 150 appearances for the Terriers and returning 63 goals.

Sheffield Wednesday and Tottenham then had the striker on their books, before Booth moved back to Huddersfield not long after the Millennium.

A further 87 goals followed, alongside 301 appearances for the Terriers, the last of which came when Booth was 35 years, four months and 26 days old.

That sees him edge onto this list in 10th place, as one of the oldest players to ever play for the Terriers.

Ken Monkou started his career with Feyenoord but made the move to England as the 1980s became the 1990s.

Initially he linked up with Chelsea, who the defender managed 119 appearances for between 1989 and 1992.

After seeing enough of the defender, Southampton swooped to sign him from Chelsea, with The Dell proving to be another place that Monkou got a hatful of appearances.

Over seven seasons, he made 201 appearances in the league for the Saints, including a further 34 in other competitions.

Monkou then ended up with Huddersfield, who he made 25 appearances for, the last of which came when he was 35 years, nine months and 14 days old.

Kevin Gallacher began his career in the 1980s in Scotland, with the forward playing for Dundee United and making over 150 appearances.

He came south to link up with Coventry City and then Blackburn Rovers.

During his time at Ewood Park, Gallacher was a title-winner, winning the Premier League with Rovers.

Newcastle United was the Scot’s destination on the back of Blackburn, with Preston North End, Sheffield Wednesday and Huddersfield then getting the backend of his career.

At Huddersfield, Gallacher made only eight appearances, with his final one coming when he was 35 years, 10 months and 12 days old.

Martin McIntosh was another Scottish player who was reasonably well-travelled over the course of his career, making 417 club appearances across league and cup competitions.

There were various spells in Scotland to start the defender’s career, with a stint at Stockport thrown in for good measure.

McIntosh then moved to South Yorkshire to link up with Rotherham United, initially on loan and then permanently.

From there, he signed for Huddersfield Town, making 52 appearances for the Terriers between 2005 and 2007.

The last of which came when he was 36 years, one month and 16 days old. From there, he moved to Mansfield as his career truly wound down.

It all began for Whitehead at Oxford United, but the midfielder really made a name for himself with Sunderland and Stoke City after that.

Firstly, with Sunderland, he made 200 appearances before moving on to Stoke.

There, Whitehead made 158 appearances for the Potters.

A two-year spell with Middlesbrough followed, before Whitehead moved to West Yorkshire to link up with the Terriers.

In total, Whitehead made 63 appearances for the Terriers and was with the club at the time when they won promotion into the Premier League under David Wagner.

Whitehead’s final appearance for the Terriers came when he was 36 years, three months and 22 days old, as Arsenal beat Huddersfield 1-0.

Frank Sinclair made a name for himself at Chelsea and Leicester City, teeing himself up for a really good career in English football.

After 194 appearances for the latter, Sinclair moved onto Burnley for a period, before a loan to Huddersfield.

That loan was made permanent, but Sinclair made a combined total of 48 appearances for the Terriers.

The last of which came against Oldham Athletic in a 4-1 defeat, when Sinclair was 36 years, three months and 26 days old.

Sinclair didn’t finish at Huddersfield like some of the others before him, playing for Lincoln City, Wycombe, Wrexham and Brackley.

Iffy Onuora made a name for himself at Huddersfield Town right at the start of his career, making 211 appearances and scoring 40 goals for the Terriers.

The forward moved on to the likes of Mansfield, Swindon Town, Gillingham and Sheffield United, but would eventually see his career go a full 360 when he returned to West Yorkshire towards the end of the 2003/04 season.

It was only a short spell back in West Yorkshire for Onuora, making five appearances towards the end of the season.

In his penultimate game for the Terriers, he scored in a 2-1 win over Lincoln City.

Onuora made his final appearances for the club when he was 36 years, seven months and 28 days old.

Spells with Halifax Town and Bury were the making of Chris Lucketti, but over the Millennium, Huddersfield got their hands on the defender and he made 76 appearances for the Terriers.

Lucketti would go on to have a really good spell at Deepdale with Preston North End after leaving the Terriers, before moving on to Sheffield United and then Southampton.

There was to be a Huddersfield return for Lucketti right at the end of his career, which resulted in another 16 appearances.

The last of those appearances came against Cheltenham when Lucketti was 37 years, five months and 21 days old.

Unsurprisingly, the top two spots on this particular list belong to two former goalkeepers.

Nick Colgan takes second place on the list, having made 332 appearances across his career.

The bulk of those appearances came during spells with Barnsley and Hibernian, with Colgan not quite a first-team regular over his entire spell as a senior footballer.

For the goalkeeper, it all ended at Huddersfield Town.

In November 2011, Colgan featured in goal for a 4-1 defeat to Swindon Town, which proved to be the goalkeeper’s final game in goal for the club.

At the time he was 38 years, one month and 24 days old.

Ian Bennett takes the No.1 spot, with the goalkeeper the oldest player to play for the Terriers this side of the 1970s.

The goalkeeper’s career was really built at Peterborough and Birmingham City, with Bennett making over 350 appearances for Blues.

Leeds United and Sheffield United had the goalkeeper on their books before he eventually ended up with Huddersfield in a different part of Yorkshire.

Bennett made 74 appearances for the Terriers, with the last of those coming at a time when he was 41 years, four months and two days old.

That sees him as No.1 on this particular list, as per the transfermarkt records.