Gordon McQueen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gordon McQueen (born June 26, 1952 in Kilbirnie, Ayrshire, Scotland) was a football player. As a central defender he won numerous honours in football with Leeds United and Manchester United.
McQueen was a goalkeeper as a schoolboy but then switched to his defensive position which caught the attention of St. Mirren who signed him as an 18 year old.
Settling into first team football came easily and naturally to McQueen, who soon had scouts monitoring his progress, and it was Leeds who finally took the plunge as they sought a long-term replacement for the ageing Jack Charlton. They offered St. Mirren £30,000 for McQueen and the defender was soon heading south.
Charlton played for some of the 1973 season but had decided to quit as it drew to a close. McQueen playes six times in his first season but missed out on the FA Cup final, with manager Don Revie preferring the experience of utility player Paul Madeley.
With Charlton gone and Madeley as the team's player-of-all-positions, McQueen was in the team for most of the 1974 season, which turned out to be the most impressive under Revie, and also the last. Leeds went 29 games without defeat at the start of the season, sealing up the League championship issue quickly with McQueen playing a crucial part as Norman Hunter's new partner. At the end of the season, McQueen was called up to the Scotland squad for his debut against Belgium.
McQueen and Hunter excelled at the back the following season, notably in Leeds' campaign in the European Cup, during which McQueen scored three goals. McQueen was suspended for the final after being sent off in the semi-final against Barcelona; Leeds lost 2-0 to Bayern Munich. With Revie gone and the mentors around him starting to leave or retire, McQueen found himself labelled as one of the bright prospects for Leeds' post-Revie future.
A first goal for Scotland had come for McQueen against Romania in 1975. His second came in 1977 against Northern Ireland during the annual Home International tournament involving the four United Kingdom nations.
His most famous goal for his country may have been against England at Wembley. McQueen rose above the England defence to head home a corner in the first half; a second goal from Kenny Dalglish sealed a 2-1 win. The Scots fans invaded the pitch on the final whistle, ripped up the turf and broke one of the crossbars. He was in the 1978 World Cup squad in Argentina but did not play due to injury, and played his last match for Scotland in 1981, attaining 30 caps and scoring 5 goals.
In February 1978, McQueen moved from Leeds to Manchester United in a £495,000 move which shocked Leeds fans, especially as striker Joe Jordan had gone exactly the same way a month earlier. McQueen settled in quickly at Old Trafford and reached the FA Cup final in 1979, scoring a late goal as Manchester United came back from 2-0 down against Arsenal to level up, only for their opponents to wrestle the Cup back with a last-minute winner. McQueen stayed in the team for the first half of the 1980s, finally winning the FA Cup in 1983 after a replay against Brighton & Hove Albion. He also was in the team which lost the League Cup final to Liverpool in the same season.
McQueen stayed at Manchester United until 1985, leaving after the arrival of Paul McGrath who took his place in the centre of defence. His careers at Elland Road and Old Trafford were almost identical - 171 appearances and 19 goals for Leeds; 184 appearances and 20 goals for Manchester United. He decided not to continue playing after leaving Old Trafford and retired aged 33.
He coached abroad and then briefly managed Airdrieonians. When McQueen's friend and former team-mate Bryan Robson became manager of Middlesbrough, McQueen joined him as reserve team coach. He left the club when Robson did, and has since become an articulate pundit for Sky Sports.
Memories remain strong among some Leeds fans; when Rio Ferdinand left Leeds for Manchester United in 2002, a banner was seen at the next Leeds game adding Ferdinand's name to a list of "traitors" who had made what Leeds fans regarded as an unspeakable, bridge-burning move. Also on the banner were the surnames Cantona, Jordan and McQueen.
[edit] External links
- Short biography at RedCafe.net
Scotland squad - 1974 FIFA World Cup | ||
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1 Harvey | 2 Jardine | 3 McGrain | 4 Bremner | 5 Holton | 6 Blackley | 7 Johnstone | 8 Dalglish | 9 Jordan | 10 Hay | 11 Lorimer | 12 Allan | 13 Stewart | 14 Buchan | 15 Cormack | 16 Donachie | 17 Ford | 18 Hutchison | 19 Law | 20 Morgan | 21 McQueen | 22 Schaedler | Coach: Ormond |
Scotland squad - 1978 FIFA World Cup | ||
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1 Rough | 2 Jardine | 3 Donachie | 4 Buchan | 5 McQueen | 6 Rioch | 7 Masson | 8 Dalglish | 9 Jordan | 10 Hartford | 11 Johnston | 12 Blyth | 13 Kennedy | 14 Forsyth | 15 Gemmill | 16 Macari | 17 Johnstone | 18 Souness | 19 Robertson | 20 Clark | 21 Harper | 22 Burns | Coach: MacLeod |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from June 2006 | All articles lacking sources | 1952 births | Living people | Scottish footballers | St Mirren F.C. players | Manchester United F.C. players | Leeds United AFC players | Seiko players | Scottish football managers | Airdrieonians F.C. managers | Scotland international footballers | FIFA World Cup 1974 players | FIFA World Cup 1978 players