Hugh McDonald (footballer)
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Hugh McDonald | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Hugh Lachlan McDonald | |
Date of birth | 1884 | |
Place of birth | Kilwinning, Ayrshire, Scotland | |
Date of death | August 27, 1920 | |
Playing position | Goalkeeper | |
Youth clubs | ||
Ayr Westerlea Maybole Ayr Academical Beith |
||
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1905-06 1906-08 1908-10 1910-11 1911-12 1912-13 1913-14 1914-15 |
Woolwich Arsenal Brighton & Hove Albion Woolwich Arsenal Oldham Athletic Bradford (Park Avenue) Woolwich Arsenal Fulham Bristol Rovers |
74 (0) 18 (0) |
2 (0)
1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Hugh Lachlan McDonald (1884 – August 27, 1920) was a Scottish football goalkeeper.
McDonald was born in Kilwinning, Ayrshire and played for a variety of local junior clubs including Ayr Westerlea, Maybole, Ayr Academical and Beith, before moving south to London to join Woolwich Arsenal in January 1906. McDonald was understudy to Arsenal's regular goalkeeper, England international Jimmy Ashcroft, and played only two league games in what was to be his first spell at Arsenal, his debut coming against Blackburn Rovers on February 17, 1906. At the end of the 1905-06 season he moved to Southern League Brighton & Hove Albion and spent two years there.
In May 1908 he returned to Woolwich Arsenal after they sold Ashcroft to make ends meet, and McDonald was an ever-present for the entire 1908-09 season, and only missed two games of 1909-10. He left Arsenal in July 1910 for Oldham Athletic, spending one season there before moving to Bradford Park Avenue.
In December 1912 he returned to Arsenal for a third time (making him one of the few, if not the only, players to have played for the club in three separate spells). He took over from Harold Crawford and played 18 of the last 21 league games of the 1912-13 season, in which Arsenal were relegated to the Second Division.
McDonald left Arsenal for a third and final time in November 1913, having been ousted from the team by Joe Lievesley. He saw out his career with first Fulham and then Bristol Rovers, before World War I intervened and ended competitive league football. He died, aged 36, in 1920.