John Wark

Player

Birthday August 4, 1957

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Glasgow, Scotland

Age 66 years old

Nationality Glasgow

Height 5ft 11in

#43111 Most Popular

1957

John Wark (born 4 August 1957) is a Scottish former footballer who spent most of his playing time with Ipswich Town.

He won a record four Player of the Year awards before becoming one of the four inaugural members of the club's Hall of Fame.

Wark had long spells at the club, which bookended his career, and a third, brief interlude dividing his briefer periods at Liverpool and Middlesbrough.

A versatile player, Wark played most of his professional games as a midfielder, although he sometimes played as a central defender and on occasion as a striker.

Born in Glasgow, Wark represented Scotland in international football, winning 29 caps and scoring seven goals.

Wark was born on 4 August 1957, in Glasgow Royal Maternity Hospital to parents Alex and Helen.

The third of four children, he has an older sister Wilma, older brother Alex and younger brother Andrew.

The family lived in a four-storey tenement block in Partick.

The family was impoverished: Wark's parents could not afford a cot and as a small child, he slept in a drawer from a sideboard.

Although christened John, Wark was soon referred to by his family as Johnny, a diminutive that stuck throughout his footballing career.

1960

In the early 1960s, the family moved to another tenement block, this time in Scotstoun, and Wark's father secured employment at nearby Albion Motors.

The new home accommodated a back yard in which Wark played football from the age of six.

He said "[f]ootball seemed to occupy 99 per cent of my time as a youngster" as he tried to emulate his brother Alex, who had become a professional at St Mirren.

Wark attended Scotstoun Primary School, where he became captain of the football team.

On moving to secondary school, he was selected for the Glasgow Schools representative team.

He also played for Drumchapel Amateurs at the under-14 level, where he was, for a period, managed by David Moyes' father, also named David.

During Wark's time at Drumchapel, he attracted the attention of Celtic.

He trained with the club at their Parkhead ground, before receiving an invitation to sign schoolboy forms for the club.

As a lifelong Rangers fan with whom Celtic have a notable rivalry and with interest from "several English clubs", including Bristol City, Manchester City and Ipswich Town, Wark stalled on the offer.

He trialled with both Ipswich Town and Manchester City, and selected Ipswich when the latter remained non-committal.

On arrival at Portman Road, Town manager Bobby Robson, later described by Wark as the person in football "who had the single biggest influence on [him]", personally welcomed him and Wark signed with the club as an apprentice.

Wark started his career at Ipswich in the youth team, initially playing at left back before moving to the centre of defence and occasionally occupying the right back position.

1975

Selected for the senior squad as a replacement for the injured Kevin Beattie, Wark made his first-team debut on 27 March 1975 in the 3–2 FA Cup 6th round (3rd replay) victory over Leeds United; the game was played at Leicester City's Filbert Street.

A nervous and homesick Wark was reassured by manager Robson:

"My debut was in the quarter-final of the FA Cup against the Leeds team of Giles and Bremner. He [Robson] said, 'I wouldn't put you in the team if I didn't think you were good enough'. He was a father figure as well because I was homesick. If it hadn't been for the boss I would have been straight back to Glasgow."

Making four more first-team appearances in place of injured regulars, Wark ended the season still on the youth team, and experienced success in the final of the FA Youth Cup, defeating West Ham United 5–1.

He spent much of the 1975–76 season playing for the reserves, and was presented with the club's Young Player of the Year award, despite making just four appearances for the senior team.

1976

Moving into midfield, Wark made over 30 appearances in the 1976–77 season, scoring his first goals for the club, (10, in all) taking over penalty kicking duty; he also received his first red card.

1977

In June 1977, Wark was selected for the Scotland squad for the first time, for a friendly match against East Germany; however, a torn hamstring sustained in pre-season training ended any chance of an international debut.

1978

The injury also kept him out of first-team football until January 1978, when he returned for a match against Cardiff City in the third round of the 1977–78 FA Cup.

Indifferent league performances that season meant that Ipswich finished just three points above the relegation zone, but the season ended in success in the FA Cup.

Wark scored in a 3–1 victory over West Bromwich Albion in the semi-final, and appeared in the final at Wembley as part of a side that surprised favourites Arsenal, winning the game 1–0.

Wark remarked, "We were underdogs but on the day we hammered them."

Wark did not touch the ball for the first 18 minutes of the match, and as the players left the pitch at half-time, David Geddis said to Wark, "Make sure you hit it between the posts in the second-half. Avoid the white bits."

In the second half of the game, Wark "ignored Geddis' advice and hit Pat Jennings' right post twice with almost identical swerving right-foot shots from outside the penalty area".

1982

This included selection for Scotland in the 1982 FIFA World Cup in which he made three appearances and scored twice.

During his playing career, Wark appeared in the film Escape to Victory.

1996

Since retiring as a professional player in 1996, he has continued to work for Ipswich Town—since September 2008 in the corporate hospitality department.

2009

His autobiography, Wark On, was published in 2009.

2017

He signed up as a professional for the club on his 17th birthday.