Billy McNeill

Footballer

Birthday March 2, 1940

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace Mossend, Scotland

DEATH DATE 2019-4-22, Newton Mearns, Scotland (79 years old)

Nationality Scotland

Height 1.87 m

#44475 Most Popular

1940

William McNeill (2 March 1940 – 22 April 2019) was a Scottish football player and manager.

He had a long association with Celtic, spanning more than sixty years as a player, manager and club ambassador.

McNeill was born on 2 March 1940 in Bellshill, Lanarkshire.

His father was a soldier in the Black Watch and later the Army Physical Training Corps.

Aged nine, McNeill moved to Hereford in England where his father was posted, and stayed for two and a half years.

Although he already liked football, he enjoyed playing rugby union in his time there.

He moved to Motherwell and excelled playing football as centre-half at Our Lady's High School.

His schoolboy performances led to him signing for the junior team Blantyre Victoria.

1957

McNeill was signed by Celtic for £250 in 1957 after then reserve team coach Jock Stein saw him playing for Scotland schoolboys against England.

He was given the nickname Cesar after the actor Cesar Romero.

In his early career, Celtic endured some of their most difficult times, and did not win a trophy for eight years.

1960

He was captain during their most successful era in the 1960s and 70s.

1965

After Stein became manager in 1965, however, the club's fortunes improved.

In the 1965 Scottish Cup final, Celtic defeated Dunfermline 3–2, with McNeill scoring the winning goal.

In that season he was named Scottish Footballer of the Year, the first year it was awarded.

With McNeill as captain, Celtic enjoyed their most successful period, dominating Scottish football and regularly competing in the latter stages of European competitions.

They won nine Scottish League championships in a row, as well as seven Scottish Cups and six Scottish League Cups.

1966

Celtic's greatest season was in 1966–67, when they won every competition they entered; as well as a domestic treble and the Glasgow Cup, McNeill led the team to victory in the 1967 European Cup Final.

The team, which became known as the 'Lisbon Lions,’ defeated Inter Milan 2–1 and McNeill (whose last minute goal, a characteristic header from a set piece, had ensured progression against Vojvodina Novi Sad in the quarter-final) was the first British footballer to lift the trophy.

He also became the first player to captain his side to the European Treble, and remains the only captain to win the fabled Quadruple.

1967

McNeill captained Celtic's 'Lisbon Lions' to their European Cup victory in 1967 and later spent two spells as the club's manager.

As a player and manager, he won 31 major trophies with Celtic.

A defender, McNeill played for Celtic for his entire senior career, and holds the club record for most appearances, a total of 822 games over 18 seasons.

The club won nine consecutive Scottish league championships and thirteen other major domestic trophies in this time, and in 1967 became the first British club to win the European Cup.

He also played 29 times for Scotland.

1968

Following another domestic treble in 1968–69, in which another McNeill headed goal set his team on the way to a 4–0 win over Rangers in the Scottish Cup Final, Celtic again reached the European Cup final in 1970, this time losing to Feyenoord.

1972

Their performance in the league was their best since 1972, and three places above Celtic.

1975

McNeill retired as a player in 1975, having made a club record 822 appearances for Celtic and never being substituted.

He won 29 caps for Scotland, scoring 3 goals, and also played 9 times for the Scottish League XI.

After retiring as a player, McNeill began coaching Celtic Boys Club's under 16 team.

1977

He began his management career at Clyde in April 1977, before moving to Aberdeen two months later.

McNeill recorded four wins, three draws from eight league matches and recorded a total of 11 out of a possible 16 points at Clyde.

His last match in charge was a Glasgow Cup semi-final against Celtic, in which Celtic struck two late goals to win 4–2.

McNeill was appointed Aberdeen manager in June 1977, having been recommended by Jock Stein.

He succeeded Ally MacLeod.

In his one season in charge, 1977–78, McNeill led Aberdeen to runners-up finishes in the league and Scottish Cup, and enjoyed a positive working relationship with the club's chairman, Dick Donald.

1978

McNeill managed Celtic for nine seasons, from 1978 to 1983 and 1987 to 1991, winning four Scottish league championships.

1987

This included a league and cup double in 1987–88, the club's centenary season.

He also managed Clyde, Aberdeen, Manchester City and Aston Villa.

2015

In 2015, Celtic installed a statue outside Celtic Park of McNeill holding aloft the European Cup, an iconic image in their history.