‘It was rare to see so many youngsters playing in the first team together. As with most youngsters they could lack self-confidence and belief in themselves. What they needed was some old heads to lift them both on and off the park. They’re a talented bunch.’
Those are the
words of a former Scotland internationalist who played for Hearts at the end of
an illustrious, if controversial playing career. However, Willie Johnston
wasn’t talking about the current crop of youngsters plying their trade at
Tynecastle. In his excellent biography ‘Sent Off at Gunpoint’, Johnston was
talking about the group of young players with dodgy 1980s hairstyles who were
trying to break into the Hearts first team more than 30 years ago in 1982. One
of the finest left wingers ever to play for Scotland, ’Bud’ Johnston was 35
years old when he was signed by then Hearts manager Alex Macdonald in September
1982. The likes of John Robertson, Gary Mackay, John Brough and Davie Bowman
were the future of a club that was almost on its knees in 1981 before Wallace
Mercer saved Edinburgh’s oldest and finest football club from oblivion. Three
decades on and it seems the more things change the more they stay the same…
I wrote in a
previous article about the sad demise of Scotland’s international team and how,
in my view, things have been in a steady decline since the World Cup Finals in
Argentina in 1978. Willie Johnston doesn’t need reminding he was sent home from
those finals after admitting to taking a banned stimulant. The truth was he had
taken anti hay fever medication which contained traces of the stimulant. He
certainly didn’t take it to enhance his performance – Willie was one of the
fastest players in the world and had no need to take any performance improving
drug. As Scotland manager Ally MacLeod said at the time, perhaps unwisely,
there was no way Johnston could have taken drugs on top of all the alcohol he
had the night before. The bold Ally was jesting, of course, but the SFA viewed
it as a serious matter and Johnston never played for Scotland again.
Johnston may
have been nearing the end of a career which included two spells at Rangers –
the first of which saw him score two goals to help the Ibrox side lift the
European Cup Winners Cup in 1972 – West Bromwich Albion and Vancouver
Whitecaps. However, Alex Macdonald saw Bud as the ideal man to bring his
considerable experience to the likes of Robbo, Mackay and company, not only on
the pitch but off it too.
Of course,
controversy was a constant companion of Bud’s and I was at Celtic Park in March
1983 when the little winger was sent off during a Scottish Cup tie after an
‘altercation’ with Celtic’s Davie Provan. Johnston maintains to this day he
barely touched the Celtic winger but the man in the hoops collapsed to the
pitch and Bud was shown a red card. I couldn’t believe what I was witnessing
and perfectly understood Bud’s initial reaction when he refused to leave the
pitch. To Hearts credit they backed their man and Wallace Mercer wrote to the
SFA to protest at the treatment of the man from Cardenden. When two police
officers at the game then came forward to say Willie had not struck Provan, the
SFA knew there had been a miscarriage of justice and other than the automatic
one match ban, there was no further punishment meted out to the veteran Hearts
man.
Bud was
someone who proved invaluable in the development of the younger players at
Tynecastle at that time. John Robertson and Gary Mackay still regale a Bud
story or three to this day and they readily acknowledge the contribution the
great man made to their development. Yes, he could be a controversial character
– but he was a character, something you don’t see much of in the game today.
As the curtain
falls on a disappointing season for Hearts, it would be good to think today’s
young Jambos could be influenced by someone who has done it all in the game,
like the left winger who helped to nurture the Hearts youngsters of three
decades ago.
Bud Johnston –
Willie no come back again?!
Mike Smith
Twitter @Mike1874
Character? You get sent off for that!
ReplyDeleteI was waiting for a train in Dundee after a Hearts game 30 years ago. Bud walked into the pub - not only did he acknowledge every Hearts fan there he bought us all a pint. A great man as well as a great footballer.
ReplyDelete