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John McGinlay

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Full name
  
John McGinlay

1978–1982
  
Position
  
Forward

Years
  
Team

Height
  
1.75 m


Playing position
  
Striker

Role
  
Footballer

Name
  
John McGinlay

Children
  
Michael McGinlay

John McGinlay John McGINLAY League Appearances for Bolton Bolton

Date of birth
  
(1964-04-08) 8 April 1964 (age 51)

Place of birth
  

John mcginlay goal for bolton wanderers vs middlesbrough 09 09 1995


John McGinlay (born 8 April 1964) is a Scottish former footballer, who played as a striker and is perhaps best known for his spell at Bolton Wanderers in the mid to late 1990s.

Contents

John McGinlay John McGinlay to scout for Scotland Daily Record

John mcginlay goal for bolton wanderers vs arsenal 31 09 1995


Early years

John McGinlay wwwtheboltonnewscoukresourcesimages2548845

A supporter of Celtic in childhood, McGinlay's first senior game was as a 16 year old for his home town club Fort William in a Highland League game in August 1980 against Elgin City. After spending a year in playing in New Zealand and a three-year stint with English Football Conference club Yeovil Town, McGinlay returned to the Highland League with Elgin in 1988.

John McGinlay Kevin Davies testimonial adds more star names From The

He then progressed through English League football, initially playing with Shrewsbury Town then with Bury. After a successful loan spell with Millwall, in which he scored during their unsuccessful participation in the 1991 Football League play-offs, McGinlay moved to The Den permanently for the 1991–92 season. He scored 27 goals in 52 league matches for the London club.

Bolton

John McGinlay Wigan Athletic John McGinlay Joins The Latics Backroom Staff

McGinlay is perhaps best known for his five-year spell with Bolton Wanderers between 1992 and 1997, where his scoring exploits led to him being nicknamed 'Super John'. After his goals eliminated FA Cup holders Liverpool from the competition, he successfully partnered fellow Scot Andy Walker as the Trotters gained promotion from the third tier in 1993, with McGinlay scoring the match winning penalty in the last fixture against local rivals Preston.

John McGinlay The official web site of John McGinlay

Further cup 'giant killings' over teams such as Everton and Arsenal followed the next year, with McGinlay featuring prominently – he scored 33 goals across all competitions during the campaign, and the team became known in local media as 'white hot' due to the performances. In the 1995 he was in the side which gained promotion to the Premier League via the play-offs, playing all 120 minutes of the dramatic 4–3 victory over Reading (they were relegated in the subsequent campaign), and also started in the League Cup Final (lost 2–1 to Liverpool) in the same season.

In April 1997, he scored the last goals at Burnden Park, finishing as the club and the division's top scorer with 24 goals from 43 games as Bolton returned to the top level, this time as champions. A notable individual achievement in that year was scoring a hat-trick in a 6–1 cup win over Tottenham. He made seven further league appearances for the club at the outset of the the next season before joining second-tier Bradford City in November 1997 for £625,000 in what would be an injury-hit move. He later had the Bolton club crest tattooed on his arm.

Later years

McGinlay had short spells with Oldham Athletic and American team Cincinnati Riverhawks before moving into management with non-league sides Ilkeston Town and Gresley Rovers. In 2013 was also employed by as a chief scout by Wigan Athletic, appointed by former Bolton teammate Owen Coyle during his spell as manager, after spending time working in similar roles in the United States with Cincinnati Kings (where he had also finished his playing career after serving as a manager), and with the Scottish Football Association.

International

During his time with Bolton, McGinlay earned 13 international caps for Scotland, scoring four goals; his last and most important strike was the only goal of a 1–0 victory over Sweden (which featured a memorable goalkeeping display by Jim Leighton) and helped the national side qualify for World Cup 98, although he did not make the squad for that tournament, nor for the Euro 96 competition. McGinlay lined up for Scotland alongside his childhood friend from Fort William, Duncan Shearer, who also spent much of his career in England – the two never played in the same team at club level. He also featured in the infamous '3-second match' in Estonia and its replay in Monaco, and missed the birth of his daughter in order to travel to Belarus for another qualification game the following year.

Club

Bolton Wanderers
  • Football League First Division (1): 1996–97
  • Individual

  • First Division PFA Team of the Year (1): 1996–97
  • References

    John McGinlay Wikipedia