List of Queen's Park F.C. international players
Founded in 1867 in Glasgow, Queen's Park F.C. had a pivotal role in the development and expansion of the game of association football in the 19th century. Among other achievements, 76 of the club's players were selected for the Scotland national football team, with 252 appearances in total, between 1872 and 1946 (the majority coming before 1900).
Background
[edit]1870s
[edit]Queen's Park won the first three Scottish Cup competitions in the 1870s, reached the final of the English FA Cup twice in the 1880s and introduced several innovations in playing tactics and stadium procedures.[1][2] Their contribution to the Scotland national football team was fundamental: all 11 players who appeared for the home side in the 1872 Scotland v England football match were officially representatives of the club (although some are known to have had strong links to other teams).[3] The Spiders provided the majority of the Scotland team for the next two decades, particularly in the most important annual fixture against England.[4][5][6][7] Scotland played without Queen's Park representation for the first time in 1885, but this was an anomaly: the club needed their players for an FA Cup semi-final against Nottingham Forest, and their absence was not felt – the 'weaker' Scotland team defeated Ireland 8–2.[8][9]
1880s and 1890s
[edit]As football increased in popularity across Britain, talented Scottish players were regularly enticed to English clubs with unofficial financial inducements, which the Scottish Football Association and its members in general, and the Queen's Park club in particular, railed against, insisting that the sport was to be enjoyed by gentlemen for recreation on an amateur basis. This stance meant that when professionalism was legalised in England in the mid-1880s, Scottish teams withdraw from the FA Cup and the SFA ignored the 'mercenary' Scotch professors employed over the border, selecting only home-based players, a practice which continued even after the introduction of the Scottish Football League in 1890 (two years after England's Football League began); as standard-bearers of the amateur ethos, Queen's Park refused to join the league as they felt it would lead to professionalism among the larger clubs pursuing success which would lead to the demise of smaller provincial teams[12] (also, it has been reported, weakening their own commercial appeal in playing occasional lucrative exhibition matches around the country).[13] In this period the club had its only active international player from outwith Scotland: Humphrey Jones was already captain of the Wales team when he moved to Scotland in 1887 to work as a teacher, and gained his last two caps while registered as a Queen's Park player[14] (he also turned out for East Stirlingshire and for other teams in England and Wales when circumstances allowed, with his amateur status meaning he was not tied to any one club).[15]
While the effects of wider professionalism in England were not immediate – Scotland continued to post strong results throughout the first decade of the British Home Championship which began in 1883–84[7] – gradually the economic and physical benefits of the more organised English system became clear, and with 'shamateurism' already rife in Scotland, professionalism was legalised in the SFL in 1893 and the better-supported clubs, including Queen's Park's city rivals Celtic and Rangers, could now compete with English clubs in recruiting and retaining the best talent. English-based players were admitted to the Scotland team in 1896 to arrest their larger rival's increasing dominance of the Home Championship, and Spiders representatives became increasingly rare.[16][17]
Early 20th century
[edit]By the end of the 19th century Queen's Park had been displaced as the country's leading club; the divide in quality with the bigger professional clubs was initially not so wide that they could not still compete to some extent, but they never challenged for the Scottish League championship after belatedly joining the competition in 1900. The 1901–02 season was the first in which no Queen's Park player was involved in any of the three international fixtures, and tellingly the first time that none played in the prestige England match.[8] the Spiders were relegated from the top division in 1922, though quickly regained their place in the top division and held it until 1948, after which they were largely a lower-tier club. With an unremarkable status as a league member, they provided only 14 different players to the Scottish League XI (ranking 16th in this respect),[19] and only 12 of the club's players with over 100 appearances also gained a Scotland cap while at the club,[20] with the vast majority of internationals being from the earlier era when only a small number of official cup fixtures were played each season. Instead, as they battled to compete at a high level with limited resources, the club became the main provider to the Scotland national amateur football team which was active from the 1920s to the 1970s – several of those players also represented Great Britain in Olympic football.[21] In the 1930s, Mustafa Mansour, an Egyptian international goalkeeper, played for Queen's Park after moving to Glasgow to study, but it appears he was not capped during his time at the club.
Of the club's 76 different internationals (still the fourth-highest ranking club in this regard),[23] only 18 of those men made their debut in the 20th century[24] (eight after the end of the First World War),[25] though an amateur being selected in an environment dominated by professionals is a notable achievement in itself. The final cap gained by a Queen's Park player was for Bobby Brown in 1946,[26] but this itself was an outlier – more regular representation had ended when Bob Gillespie and James Crawford both won their last cap in a win over England in 1933.[27][28] The final goal was scored by Alan Morton in 1920.[29][22] 89 goals were scored, 3rd in club ranking overall,[30] and 252 appearances made, 10th overall.[31]
Late 20th and early 21st century
[edit]Despite their diminished status in the game as a result of the commitment to amateurism (a status which was ended in 2019 following a vote by club members),[32][33] the club has continued to act as a stepping stone to several players who reached international status later in their career,[20] including Sammy Cox, George Herd, Ronnie Simpson, John Little, Bobby Clark, David Holt, Alex Ferguson and Jamie Paton (for Australia) in the late 20th century, and Malky Mackay, Paul Paton (for Northern Ireland), Barry Douglas, Lawrence Shankland, Andy Robertson and Paul McGinn in the early 21st century. The last three played together at Hampden in the fourth tier during the 2012–13 season,[34][35] with Robertson going on to become the national team captain, as well as gaining the most caps of any former Spiders player (75 as of 2024) and the first club graduate to win the English league championship.[36] Modern-era internationals who played for Queen's Park at youth level include Derek Parlane, Simon Donnelly, Aiden McGeady (93 caps for Ireland) and Steven Saunders.
In women's football which became more organised in the 1990s, Queen's Park were never among the major Scottish clubs although they were a SWPL member before disbanding in 2008, reforming at a local level and eventually returning to the top division in 2024. Detailed records are not widely available before the 2000s, after which Megan Sneddon and Amy McDonald were capped for the national team while registered with the club, while Jen Beattie was selected after moving elsewhere. In the 2020s, Ho Wan Tung featured for Hong Kong.
List of players
[edit]Player | Ref. | Caps | Goals | First cap[b] | Last cap[b] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Walter Arnott | [37] | 14 | 0 | 12 March 1883[c] | 1 April 1893[d] |
Charles Campbell | [38] | 13 | 1 | 7 March 1874[e] | 27 March 1886[f] |
Robert Smyth McColl | [39] | 11[g] | 13[h] | 21 March 1896[i] | 30 March 1901[j] |
Henry McNeil | [40] | 10 | 6 | 7 March 1874[e] | 14 March 1881[k] |
William Lambie[l] | [41] | 9 | 5 | 19 March 1892[m] | 3 April 1897[n] |
Billy MacKinnon | [42] | 9 | 5 | 30 November 1872[o] | 5 April 1879[p] |
Tom Waddell | [43] | 6 | 1 | 28 March 1891[q] | 6 April 1895[r] |
Bob Smellie | [44] | 6 | 0 | 19 February 1887[s] | 1 April 1893[d] |
William Anderson | [45] | 6 | 3 | 11 March 1882[t] | 23 March 1885[u] |
John Kay | [46] | 6 | 5 | 13 March 1880[v] | 29 March 1884[w] |
Joseph Taylor | [47] | 6 | 0 | 30 November 1872[o] | 25 March 1876[x] |
James Crawford | [48] | 5 | 0 | 19 September 1931[y] | 1 April 1933[z] |
Donald Sillars | [49] | 5 | 0 | 28 March 1891[q] | 23 March 1895[aa] |
Eadie Fraser | [50] | 5 | 4 | 27 March 1880[ab] | 12 March 1883[c] |
George Ker[ac] | [51] | 5 | 10 | 13 March 1880[v] | 25 March 1882[ad] |
David Davidson | [52] | 5 | 1 | 23 March 1878[ae] | 14 March 1881[k] |
Robert W. Neill | [53] | 5 | 0 | 25 March 1876[x] | 13 March 1880[v] |
Robert Gillespie | [54] | 4 | 0 | 30 October 1926[af] | 1 April 1933[z] |
William Sellar | [55] | 4[ag] | 4[ah] | 4 April 1891[ai] | 1 April 1893[d] |
William Gulliland | [56] | 4 | 0 | 21 March 1891[aj] | 6 April 1895[r] |
William Berry[ak] | [57] | 4 | 0 | 17 March 1888[al] | 4 April 1891[ai] |
Alexander Hamilton[am] | [58] | 4 | 0 | 21 March 1885[an] | 17 March 1888[al] |
Thomas Robertson[ao] | [59] | 4 | 0 | 9 March 1889[ap] | 19 March 1892[m] |
Thomas Highet | [60] | 4 | 1 | 6 March 1875[aq] | 2 March 1878[ar] |
Jerry Weir | [61] | 4 | 2 | 30 November 1872[o] | 23 March 1878[ae] |
Jack Harkness | [62] | 3[as] | 0 | 26 February 1927[at] | 31 March 1928[au] |
Harry Paul | [63] | 3 | 2 | 1 March 1909[av] | 3 April 1909[aw] |
Alex Christie | [64] | 3 | 1 | 19 March 1898[ax] | 8 April 1899[ay] |
Kenneth Anderson | [65] | 3 | 0 | 28 March 1896[az] | 2 April 1898[ba] |
Davidson Berry[ak] | [66] | 3 | 1 | 24 March 1894[bb] | 25 March 1899[bc] |
David Stewart | [67] | 3 | 0 | 18 March 1893[bd] | 27 March 1897[be] |
James Hamilton[am][bf] | [68] | 3 | 3 | 26 March 1892[bg] | 1 April 1893[d] |
David Allan | [69] | 3 | 2 | 21 March 1885[an] | 10 April 1886[bh] |
John Smith | [70] | 3[bi] | 4[bj] | 10 March 1883[bk] | 15 March 1884[bl] |
Andrew Holm | [71] | 3 | 0 | 25 March 1882[ad] | 12 March 1883[c] |
William Harrower | [72] | 3 | 4 | 11 March 1882[t] | 10 April 1886[bh] |
Andrew Watson | [73] | 3 | 0 | 12 March 1881[bm] | 11 March 1882[t] |
James Phillips | [74] | 3 | 0 | 3 March 1877[bn] | 23 March 1878[ae] |
James J. Thomson | [75] | 3 | 0 | 30 November 1872[o] | 7 March 1874[e] |
Willie Wiseman | [76] | 2 | 0 | 30 October 1926[af] | 22 February 1930[bo] |
Alan Morton | [77] | 2[bp] | 1[bq] | 26 February 1920[br] | 13 March 1920[bs] |
George McWattie | [78] | 2 | 0 | 23 February 1901[bt] | 2 March 1901[bu] |
William Stewart | [79] | 2 | 1 | 26 March 1898[bv] | 3 March 1900[bw] |
Andrew Baird | [80] | 2 | 0 | 19 March 1892[m] | 24 March 1894[bb] |
Humphrey Jones ( Wales) | [14] | 2[bx] | 0[by] | 7 March 1891[bz] | 21 March 1891[aj] |
Allan Stewart | [81] | 2 | 1 | 24 March 1888[ca] | 15 April 1889[cb] |
James Allan | [82] | 2 | 2 | 19 March 1887[cc] | 21 March 1887[cd] |
John Lambie[l] | [83] | 2[ce] | 0 | 19 February 1887[s] | 17 March 1888[al] |
George Gillespie | [84] | 2[cf] | 0 | 10 April 1886[bh] | 28 March 1891[q] |
William Somers | [85] | 2[cg] | 0 | 5 April 1879[p] | 27 March 1880[ab] |
James Richmond | [86] | 2[cg] | 0[by] | 2 March 1878[ar] | 25 March 1882[ad] |
Robert Gardner | [87] | 2[ch] | 0 | 30 November 1872[o] | 8 March 1873[ci] |
William Ker[ac] | [88] | 2 | 0 | 30 November 1872[o] | 8 March 1873[ci] |
Robert Smith[cj] | [89] | 2 | 0 | 30 November 1872[o] | 8 March 1873[ci] |
David Wotherspoon | [90] | 2 | 0 | 30 November 1872[o] | 8 March 1873[ci] |
Bobby Brown | [91] | 1[ck] | 0 | 23 January 1946[cl] | |
Stewart Chalmers | [92] | 1 | 0 | 23 February 1929[cm] | |
William King | [25] | 1 | 0 | 27 October 1928[cn] | |
Peter Pursell | [93] | 1 | 0 | 28 February 1914[co] | |
William Key | [94] | 1 | 0 | 16 March 1907[cp] | |
Thomas Fitchie | [95] | 1[cq] | 0[by] | 4 March 1907[cr] | |
Andrew Richmond | [96] | 1 | 0 | 3 March 1906[cs] | |
Leslie Skene | [97] | 1 | 0 | 12 March 1904[ct] | |
James Irons | [98] | 1 | 0 | 3 February 1900[cu] | |
David Wilson | [99] | 1 | 2 | 3 February 1900[cu] | |
John L. Ritchie | [100] | 1 | 1 | 20 March 1897[cv] | |
John Cameron | [101] | 1 | 0 | 28 March 1896[az] | |
John Gillespie | [102] | 1 | 0 | 21 March 1896[i] | |
Willie Watt | [103] | 1 | 1 | 19 February 1887[s] | |
George Somerville | [104] | 1 | 1 | 27 March 1886[f] | |
John Gow[cw] | [105] | 1 | 0 | 21 March 1885[an] | |
Robert Christie | [106] | 1 | 0 | 15 March 1884[bl] | |
Archie Rowan | [107] | 1[cx] | 0 | 25 March 1882[ad] | |
Angus MacKinnon | [108] | 1 | 1 | 7 March 1874[e] | |
Robert Leckie | [109] | 1 | 0 | 30 November 1872[o] | |
Alex Rhind | [110] | 1 | 0 | 30 November 1872[o] | |
James Smith[cj] | [111] | 1 | 0 | 30 November 1872[o] |
Notes
[edit]- ^ All for Scotland except where stated.
- ^ a b Cap while with Queen's Park, may have had others before or after, as individually noted.
- ^ a b c 1883: Wales 0–3 Scotland
- ^ a b c d 1893: England 5–2 Scotland
- ^ a b c d 1874: Scotland 2–1 England
- ^ a b 1886: Scotland 1–1 England
- ^ 13 caps in total
- ^ 13 goals in total
- ^ a b 1896: Scotland 4–0 Wales
- ^ 1901: England 2–2 Scotland
- ^ a b 1881: Wales 1–5 Scotland
- ^ a b William and John Lambie were brothers.
- ^ a b c 1892: Ireland 1–5 Scotland
- ^ 1897: England 1–2 Scotland
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k 1872: Scotland 0–0 England
- ^ a b 1879: England 5–4 Scotland
- ^ a b c 1891: Scotland 2–1 Ireland
- ^ a b 1879: England 3–0 Scotland
- ^ a b c 1887: Scotland 4–1 Ireland
- ^ a b c 1882: Scotland 5–1 England
- ^ 1885: Wales 1–8 Scotland
- ^ a b c 1880: Scotland 5–4 England
- ^ 1884: Scotland 4–1 Wales
- ^ a b 1876: Scotland 4–0 Wales
- ^ 1931: Scotland 3–1 Ireland
- ^ a b 1933: Scotland 2–1 England
- ^ 1895: Wales 2–2 Scotland
- ^ a b 1880: Scotland 5–1 Wales
- ^ a b George and William Ker were brothers.
- ^ a b c d 1882: Scotland 5–0 Wales
- ^ a b c 1878: Scotland 9–0 Wales
- ^ a b 1926: Scotland 3–0 Wales
- ^ 9 caps in total
- ^ 4 goals in total
- ^ a b 1891: England 2–1 Scotland
- ^ a b 1891: Wales 3–4 Scotland
- ^ a b William and Davidson Berry were brothers.
- ^ a b c 1888: Scotland 0–5 England
- ^ a b Alexander and James Hamilton were brothers.
- ^ a b c 1885: England 1–1 Scotland
- ^ The Scottish FA website merges the statistics of Tommy Robertson (born 1876) and Thomas Robertson (born 1864) into a single profile.
- ^ 1889: Scotland 7–0 Ireland
- ^ 1875: England 2–2 Scotland
- ^ a b 1878: Scotland 7–2 England
- ^ 12 caps in total
- ^ 1927: Ireland 0–2 Scotland
- ^ 1928: England 1–5 Scotland
- ^ 1909: Wales 3–2 Scotland
- ^ 1909: England 2–0 Scotland
- ^ 1898: Scotland 5–2 Wales
- ^ 1899: England 2–1 Scotland
- ^ a b 1896: Ireland 3–3 Scotland
- ^ 1898: Scotland 1–3 England
- ^ a b 1894: Scotland 5–2 Wales
- ^ 1899: Scotland 9–1 Ireland
- ^ 1893: Wales 0–8 Scotland
- ^ 1897: Scotland 5–1 Ireland
- ^ The Scottish FA website merges the statistics of James Hamilton (born 1901) and James Hamilton (active in the 1890s) into a single profile.
- ^ 1892: Scotland 6–1 Wales
- ^ a b c 1886: Scotland 4–1 Wales
- ^ 10 caps in total
- ^ 10 goals in total
- ^ 1883: England 2–3 Scotland
- ^ a b 1884: Scotland 1–0 England
- ^ 1881: England 1–6 Scotland
- ^ 1877: England 1–3 Scotland
- ^ 1901: Scotland 3–1 Ireland
- ^ 31 caps in total
- ^ 5 goals in total
- ^ 1920: Wales 1–1 Scotland
- ^ 1920: Scotland 3–0 Ireland
- ^ 1901: Scotland 11–0 Ireland
- ^ 1901: Wales 1–1 Scotland
- ^ 1898: Ireland 0–3 Scotland
- ^ 1900: Ireland 0–3 Scotland
- ^ 14 caps in total.
- ^ a b c 1 goal in total
- ^ 1891: England 4–1 Wales
- ^ 1888: Ireland 2–10 Scotland
- ^ 1889: Wales 0–0 Scotland
- ^ 1887: England 2–3 Scotland
- ^ 1887: Wales 0–2 Scotland
- ^ Some sources attribute a cap and goal in 1886 to Lambie, who had to withdraw from the team at short notice but was still included in match reports – his replacement, who scored, was James Kelly.
- ^ 7 caps in total
- ^ a b 3 caps in total
- ^ 5 caps in total
- ^ a b c d 1873: England 4–2 Scotland
- ^ a b Robert and James Smith were brothers.
- ^ 5 caps in total
- ^ 1946: Scotland 2–2 Belgium
- ^ 1929: Ireland 3–7 Scotland
- ^ 1928: Scotland 4–2 Wales
- ^ 1914: Scotland 0–0 Wales
- ^ 1907: Scotland 3–0 Ireland
- ^ 4 caps in total
- ^ 1907: Wales 1–0 Scotland
- ^ 1906: Scotland 0–2 Wales
- ^ 1904: Scotland 1–1 Wales
- ^ a b 1900: Scotland 5–2 Wales
- ^ 1897: Wales 2–2 Scotland
- ^ The Scottish FA website merges the statistics of John Gow (born 1859) and John Gow (born 1869) into a single profile.
- ^ 2 caps in total
References
[edit]- ^ Home, Queen's Park Football Club - An Early History
- ^ History, Queen's Park Football Club [official website]
- ^ Chapter VIII.—The First International, History of the Queen's Park Football Club 1867 - 1917, Richard Robinson, 1920, via Electric Scotland
- ^ Chapter XXIV.—Queen's Park and International Games, History of the Queen's Park Football Club 1867 - 1917, Richard Robinson, 1920, via Electric Scotland
- ^ Queen’s Park and the history of Scotland’s first football club formed 154 years ago today, Kirsty McKenzie, Glasgow Live, 9 July 2021
- ^ Brown, Alan; Tossani, Gabriele (22 December 2021). "Scotland - International Matches 1872-1880". RSSSF. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ a b c Brown, Alan; Tossani, Gabriele (22 December 2021). "Scotland - International Matches 1881-1890". RSSSF. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ a b Scotland Players by Club | Queens Park Games by Date, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Matches Played On Saturday., The Glasgow Herald, 16 March 1885, scan via London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022
- ^ Sat 11 Mar 1882 Scotland 5 England 1, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Murphy, Sean (6 October 2020). "The story behind the Hampden Mural restored after being cruelly ruined by graffiti artist". Daily Record. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
- ^ 'Lundere causa ludendi', Ignasi Torne, Panenka magazine, 29 January 2017, via Stuart Spencer / Scottish Football Museum
- ^ New claims show Queen's Park refused to go pro over love for Hampden Park cash, Gordon Blackstock, Daily Record, 26 April 2020
- ^ a b National football team player Humphrey Jones, EU-Football.info. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Scottish Corinthians, Andrew Watson: Corinthian. Retrieved 3 January 2022
- ^ a b Brown, Alan; Tossani, Gabriele (30 September 2021). "Scotland - International Matches 1891-1900". RSSSF. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Brown, Alan; Tossani, Gabriele (30 September 2021). "Scotland - International Matches 1901-1910". RSSSF. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Sat 06 Apr 1895 England 3 Scotland 0, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Scottish Football League Internationals | Queens Park, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ a b Players, QPFC.com - A Historical Queen's Park FC Website. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ McColl, Brian; Gorman, Douglas; Campbell, George. "Forgotten Glories – British Amateur Internationals 1901–1974" (PDF). p. 328. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 July 2017. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
- ^ a b Brown, Alan; Tossani, Gabriele (30 September 2021). "Scotland - International Matches 1911-1920". RSSSF. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Scotland Players By Club Sorted by Most Players, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Mitchell, Andy (2021). The men who made Scotland: The definitive Who's Who of Scottish Football Internationalists 1872-1939. Amazon. ISBN 9798513846642.
- ^ a b Brown, Alan; Tossani, Gabriele (30 September 2021). "Scotland - International Matches 1921-1930". RSSSF. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
- ^ Wed 23 Jan 1946 Scotland 2 Belgium 2, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Sat 01 Apr 1933 Scotland 2 England 1, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Brown, Alan; Tossani, Gabriele (22 December 2021). "Scotland - International Matches 1931-1939". RSSSF. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Sat 13 Mar 1920 Scotland 3 Ireland 0, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Scotland Players By Club Sorted by Most Goals, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Scotland Players By Club Sorted by Most Caps, London Hearts Supporters Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Bienkowski, Stefan (14 November 2019). "Queen's Park: Scotland's oldest club vote to go professional after 152 years as amateurs". BBC Sport. Retrieved 14 November 2019.
- ^ Davenport, Sean (14 November 2019). "Historic vote for change at Queen's Park Football Club". The Queen's Park Football Club. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Oliver, David (8 September 2021). "Andrew Robertson and Paul McGinn's last game together before steering Scotland to crucial 1-0 win over Austria in Qatar 2022 World Cup qualifier". The Scotsman. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Hendry, Mark (1 October 2019). "Queen's Park share nostalgic snap of Robertson and Shankland as teammates after Scotland call-up". Glasgow Times. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Andy Robertson’s title win with Liverpool also made history for Queen’s Park, Craig Stewart, The Sunday Post, 28 June 2020. Retrieved 2 January 2022.
- ^ Walter Arnott at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Charles Campbell at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Robert McColl at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Henry McNeil at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Lambie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Billy MacKinnon at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Tom Waddell at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Robert Smellie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Anderson at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ John Kay at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Joseph Taylor at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ James Crawford at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Donald Sillars at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Eadie Fraser at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ George Ker at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ David Davidson at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Robert Neill at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Robert Gillespie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Sellar at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Gulliland at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Berry at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Alexander Hamilton at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Thomas Robertson at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Thomas Highet at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ James Weir at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Jack Harkness at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Harry Paul at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Alex Christie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Kenneth Anderson at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Davidson Berry at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ David Stewart at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ James Hamilton at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ David Allan at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ John Smith at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Andrew Holm at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Harrower at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Andrew Watson at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ James Phillips at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ James Thomson at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Willie Wiseman at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Alan Morton at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ George McWattie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Stewart at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Andrew Baird at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Allan Stewart at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ James Allan at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ John Lambie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ George Gillespie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Somers at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ James Richmond at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Robert Gardner at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Ker at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Robert Smith at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ David Wotherspoon at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Bobby Brown at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Stewart Chalmers at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Peter Pursell at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ William Key at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Thomas Fitchie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Andrew Richmond at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Leslie Skene at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ James Irons at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ David Wilson at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ John Ritchie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ John Cameron at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ John Gillespie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Willie Watt at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ George Somerville at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ John Gow at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Robert Christie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Archie Rowan at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Angus MacKinnon at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Robert Leckie at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ Alex Rhind at the Scottish Football Association
- ^ James Smith at the Scottish Football Association