A
STORY in the Edinburgh Evening
News this week got me and some other Scottish football History
“anoraks” in a wee bit of a tizz. The excellent Barry Anderson of
the EEN ran a wee story about the SFA presenting former Hearts centre
half Alan Anderson with a cap, to mark his participation in the 1967
World Tour.
Gary Locke presents Alan Anderson with his cap
picture courtesy of the Edinburgh Evening News
This
tour was made by “A
Scotland XI” rather
than “Scotland,”
and the 19 players who took part were never awarded full caps –
since the international sides they faced: Israel,
Hong Kong and
Australia (three
internationals), were
not considered worthy of facing us in full internationals. There was
also an “international” against Canada,
however, this game,
in Winnipeg, was against the Canuck's amateur Olympic Games squad.
The
status of the Hong Kong game remains in doubt, but, the Israeli and
Australian football authorities have subsequently faced Scotland in
full-cap internationals, and indeed, these games in 1967 have
subsequently been upgraded to “full A international” status by
them – but, not yet by the SFA.
Anderson,
who is now in a care home, played in seven of the eight games in the
tour, including the “internationals” against Israel, and all
three in Australia. Awarding him the cap is a nice gesture from the
SFA, but, if they can do this for Alan Anderson, why not for the
other five players who played in these non-cap internationals, and
never in a full-cap game.
Leading
this quintet is a certain Sir
Alexander Chapman Ferguson,
who scored our winner in Tel Aviv; bagged a brace in our 4-1 win in
Hong Kong; got the only goal in the first international, in Sydney;
then scored both goals in our 2-0 win over the Socceroos in
Adelaide. Six goals in five internationals – and a total of ten
goals in seven tour games; not bad going.
Five internationals, six goals, Fergie could play a bit
The
others who never got a cap were goalkeeper Harry
Thomson of Burnley,
Harry Hood, then
of Clyde, former Partick Thistle full back Hugh
Tinney, then plying
his trade with Bury and Anderson's Tynecastle team mate, Jim
Townsend.
For
the record, the remaining players, all of whom either already had
been, or subsequently would be capped, were:
Willie
Callaghan (Dunfermline
Athletic
Eddie
Colquhoun (West
Bromwich Albion)
Jim
Cruickshank (Heart
of Midlothian)
Doug
Fraser (West
Bromwich Albion)
Joe
Harper (Huddersfield
Town)
Bobby
Hope (West
Bromwich Albion)
Jim
McCalliog (Sheffield
Wednesday)
Jackie
McGrory (Kilmarnock)
Tommy
McLean (Kilmarnock)
Willie
Morgan (Burnley)
Andy
Penman (Rangers)
Ian
Ure (Arsenal).
Spare
a thought for the final player, John
Woodward (Arsenal)
– who played in three games: against the New
Zealand Under-23s
in Wellington,
the Auckland
Provincial XI
in Auckland
and Vancouver
All-Stars
in Vancouver,
but
didn't feature in the internationals. Indeed Woodward played as many
games for the Scotland XI on that tour, as he made first-team
appearances for the Gunners, three, before going on to make 167
appearances for York City.
Actual
international caps are not that expensive; the SFA would only need to
requisition and buy five – so why not? And, if not before, would
presenting these caps to him and the other players might be a good,
and popular way, of marking Sir Alex turning 80 at the end of next year.
Or, they could requisition and present special tour caps, to all 19 players.
Over
to you Ian Maxwell.