John Neilson Robertson

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John Robertson
Personal information
Full name John Neilson Robertson
Date of birth January 20, 1953 (1953-01-20) (age 55)
Place of birth    Uddingston, Scotland
Playing position Attacking Midfielder
Club information
Current club Aston Villa
Senior clubs1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1970-83
1983-85
1985-86
Nottingham Forest
Derby County
Nottingham Forest
385 (61)
72 (3)
11 (0)   
National team
Scotland 28 (9)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

John Neilson Robertson (born 20 January 1953 in Uddingston) is a former Scottish footballer. He played for Nottingham Forest when they were at the peak of their success under manager Brian Clough. He also played for the full Scotland national football team, scoring the winning goal against England in 1981 and against New Zealand in the 1982 FIFA World Cup. He joined Aston Villa on August 4, 2006 as Assistant Manager when Martin O'Neill took charge of the club.

Robertson had played for Scotland at Schoolboy and Youth levels and for Drumchapel Amateurs before joining Forest in May 1970, making his debut for the team in October 1970. Although he was an infrequent member of the first team as a midfielder up to 1975, and was on the transfer list when Clough became manager, Robertson became a key player as a left winger under Clough and appeared in 243 consecutive games between December 1976 and December 1980. He scored the winner in the European Cup Final against Hamburg in the 1980 final and provided the cross for the winning goal in Forest's 1979 European Cup Final scored by Trevor Francis against Malmo F.C.

Robertson was sold to Derby County F.C. in June 1983 on a contested transfer (the fee was set by a tribunal) that soured the relationship between Clough and his former assistant Peter Taylor, but was injured soon after joining the team and failed to reproduce the form he had shown when he played for Forest. Although he rejoined Forest on a free transfer in August 1985, he remained well below his former best and moved to non-league Corby Town F.C. at the end of the 1985/86 season. He also had stints with Stamford F.C. and Grantham Town F.C..

Brian Clough, Robertson's manager at Nottingham Forest, was quoted as saying "John Robertson was a very unattractive young man, if one day, I felt a bit off colour, I would sit next to him. I was bloody Errol Flynn compared, but give him a ball and a yard of grass, and he was an artist, the Picasso of our game."[citation needed] In his autobiography Clough noted that "Rarely could there have been a more unlikely looking professional athlete... [He was a] scruffy, unfit, uninterested waste of time...but something told me he was worth persevering with." but that "[He] became one of the finest deliverers of a football I have ever seen - in Britain or anywhere else in the world - as fine as the Brazilians or the supremely gifted Italians." [1]

In 1997, FourFourTwo magazine declared that John Robertson was 63rd in the 100 greatest footballers of all time. He was also voted No 1 Nottingham Forest player of all time, forcing Stuart Pearce into second place, in a 2005 poll run by fans.[citation needed]

After retiring from playing, he has been variously chief scout and assistant manager to former Nottingham Forest team-mate Martin O'Neill at Wycombe Wanderers, Norwich City, Leicester City, Celtic and now Aston Villa.

John suffered a tragedy in October 1996 when his 13-year-old daughter Jessica died.

[edit] International goals

Scores and results list Scotland's goal tally first.
# Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1 June 7, 1979 Ullevaal Stadion, Oslo Flag of Norway Norway 3-0 4-0 ECQG2
2 December 19, 1979 Hampden Park, Glasgow Flag of Belgium Belgium 1-3 1-3 ECQG2
3 April 28, 1981 Hampden Park, Glasgow Flag of Israel Israel 1-0 3-1 WCQG8
4 April 28, 1981 Hampden Park, Glasgow Flag of Israel Israel 2-0 3-1 WCQG8
5 May 23, 1981 Wembley Stadium, London Flag of England England 1-0 1-0 BHC
6 September 9, 1981 Hampden Park, Glasgow Flag of Sweden Sweden 2-0 2-0 WCQG8
7 June 15, 1982 Estadio La Rosaleda, Málaga Flag of New Zealand New Zealand 4-2 5-2 WCG6
8 September 21, 1983 Hampden Park, Glasgow Flag of Uruguay Uruguay 1-0 2-0 Friendly

[edit] References

  1. ^ pp, 152, 155, Clough, Brian (1994), Clough: The Autobiography, Partridge Press

[edit] External links