Everything about John Greig totally explained
| cityofbirth =
Edinburgh
| countryofbirth =
Scotland
| height =
| currentclub =
Rangers (Director)
| position =
Defender (Retired)
| years = 1961-1978
| clubs =
Rangers
| caps(goals) = 498 (87)
| nationalyears = 1964-1971
| nationalteam =
Scotland
| nationalcaps(goals) =
John Greig MBE (born
September 11,
1942 in
Edinburgh) is a former
Scottish professional
football player who, despite his boyhood allegiance to hometown team
Heart of Midlothian, spent his entire career in
Glasgow with
Rangers as a player and later a manager.
Playing career
A determined, forceful player, Greig made 755 official appearances for Rangers (498 league appearances, 72
Scottish Cup matches, a club record 121
League Cup games and 64 in
European Cup). He scored 120 goals for the club and won three
domestic trebles.
Greig was captain when Rangers won the
European Cup Winners Cup in
1972 beating
Dynamo Moscow 3-2 in
Barcelona. Although Greig's was an enormously successful playing career, his captaincy coincided with a period of sustained success for Rangers' city rivals,
Celtic, from the late 1960s until the mid-1970s. Greig's fortitude during that period further cemented his reputation as one of Rangers' most celebrated captains. He was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire (
MBE) on the
15 November 1977.
He played for
Scotland on 44 occasions, 15 as captain, between
1964 and
1971. Perhaps his finest moment in Dark Blue was his late winner in Scotland's 1-0 victory against
Italy at
Hampden Park on
November 9,
1965.
Managerial career
Greig's playing career ended in
1978 when he was appointed manager of Rangers, replacing
Jock Wallace. His time as Rangers' manager wasn't successful. The club failed to win the
league championship during Greig's time as manager, finishing no higher than the second place achieved in his first season,
1978-79. There were sporadic successes. In his first season, Rangers performed creditably to reach the quarter-final of the
European Cup, defeating Italian champions
Juventus and becoming the first club to win in
European club competition at
PSV Eindhoven's Philips Stadion, before eventual elimination to
Cologne. There was also the partial compensation of success in domestic cup competitions, with two
Scottish Cups and two
League Cups secured over the course of Greig's five full seasons as manager. Greig was also responsible for signing Rangers' greatest ever goalscorer
Ally McCoist from
Sunderland. However, these were isolated achievements, and Greig - under intense pressure from the Scottish media, Rangers supporters and the club's directors - resigned in
October 1983, replaced by the returning Wallace.
After management
After leaving Rangers, Greig worked as a pundit for
Radio Scotland and
BBC television. He was re-employed by Rangers from 1990 as part of the club's public relations team.
Dick Advocaat, manager of Rangers from 1998-2001, re-involved Greig in football coaching, and he continues to contribute to youth development. In 2003, he joined the Rangers
board of directors. Greig was voted "The Greatest Ever Ranger" in 1999 by the Rangers supporters and is one of 64 players elected to
Rangers' Hall of Fame.
Honours
Player:
- UEFA Cup Winners' Cup (1): 1972
- Scottish League Champions (5): 1963, 1964, 1975 1976, 1978
- Scottish Cup (6): 1962, 1963, 1964, 1966, 1973, 1976, 1978
- Scottish League Cup (4): 1964, 1965, 1976, 1978
- Scottish Footballer of the Year (2): 1966, 1976
Manager:
Scottish Cup (2): 1979, 1981
Scottish League Cup (2): 1979, 1982Further Information
Get more info on 'John Greig'.
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