Alex Johnstone (footballer)
Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Alexander Johnstone | ||
Date of birth | 16 April 1896[1] | ||
Place of birth | Cullen, Moray, Scotland | ||
Date of death | 16 October 1979 | (aged 83)||
Place of death | Preston, England | ||
Height | 5 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1.74 m)[2] | ||
Position(s) | Left half | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
– | Buckie Thistle | ||
1919–1924 | Rangers | 25 | (1) |
1921–1922 | → Third Lanark (loan) | 30 | (0) |
1923 | → Third Lanark (loan) | 0 | (0) |
1924–1928 | Heart of Midlothian | 59 | (1) |
Total | 114 | (1) | |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals |
Alexander Johnstone (alternatively spelled Johnston, 16 April 1896 – 16 October 1979) was a Scottish footballer who played mainly as a left half.
Career
[edit]Hailing from Banffshire, he moved to Glasgow in 1919 to sign for Rangers,[3] playing in one Scottish Football League match during the 1919–20 season as the club won the title, then three in 1920–21 as they retained the championship.[4] Finding the first team breakthrough difficult, he spent virtually all of 1921–22 on loan at Third Lanark.[3] On returning to Ibrox he got slightly more chances in the side, playing in nine league matches of the title-winning 1922–23 Scottish Division One campaign and a Glasgow Cup final (but not its replay)[4] but also being loaned back to Third Lanark intermittently,[3] featuring exclusively in their Scottish Cup run which ended with a defeat at the semi-final stage.[5] He then appeared for Rangers as they claimed the Glasgow Merchants Charity Cup.[6] The 1923–24 season was his last with the Gers and most successful in terms of appearances, playing 12 times in another championship campaign[4] – probably enough to be awarded a medal, unlike the previous years.
Heart of Midlothian paid £1,300 to sign Johnstone in November 1924.[7] He was never an undisputed starter in his four seasons at Tynecastle Park, featuring in an average of 18 league fixtures over his first three seasons – in which time the team's form was a disappointment to their supporters[7] – before falling out of favour after Hugh Shaw joined the club, with only six appearances in his last campaign, 1927–28. He did claim medals from the minor Dunedin Cup (two) and the East of Scotland Shield during his Hearts spell.[8]
Now in his 30s, Johnstone's later playing career path is uncertain, with a Scottish statistical record noting only that he was on the Hearts 'Open To Transfer' list (unlikely to play, but under contract with a transfer fee required to play for other domestic clubs) for the next two seasons.[3] It was common for players in those circumstances to play abroad, and he may have spent some time in the United States - an 'Alec Johnston' played for Fall River F.C. as they finished as winners of the 1928–29 American Soccer League,[9][10] but it has not been confirmed if this was the same player owing to scant details on his origins and position.
References
[edit]- ^ Statutory registers - Births - Search results, ScotlandsPeople (subscription required)
- ^ Season preview 1927/28 – Heart of Midlothian F.C., The Athletic News, 1 August 1927, via Play Up Liverpool
- ^ a b c d John Litster (October 2012). "A Record of pre-war Scottish League Players". Scottish Football Historian magazine.
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(help) - ^ a b c (Rangers player) Johnston, Alex, FitbaStats
- ^ Association Football | Hibernian, 1; Third Lanark, 0., The Glasgow Herald, 12 March 1923
- ^ Glasgow Charity Cup Final, The Glasgow Herald, 14 May 1923
- ^ a b The History of Heart of Midlothian Football Club | 1924 - 1934, Heart of Midlothian FC
- ^ (Hearts player) Alex Johnstone, London Hearts Supporters Club
- ^ Alec Johnston, SoccerStats.us
- ^ Alec Johnston, Stats Crew
- Scottish men's footballers
- 1896 births
- 1979 deaths
- Footballers from Moray
- Scottish Football League players
- Highland Football League players
- Men's association football wing halves
- Rangers F.C. players
- Heart of Midlothian F.C. players
- Third Lanark A.C. players
- Buckie Thistle F.C. players
- 20th-century Scottish sportsmen