Remove ads

William John McStay (born 26 November 1961) is a Scottish former footballer and manager of clubs including Sligo Rovers, Újpest FC, Ross County and Celtic Nation.

Quick Facts Personal information, Full name ...
Willie McStay
Thumb
McStay in 2011
Personal information
Full name William John McStay[1]
Date of birth (1961-11-26) 26 November 1961 (age 63)[1]
Place of birth Hamilton,[1] Scotland
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)[2]
Position(s) Defender
Youth career
Celtic Boys Club
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1981–1987 Celtic 67 (2)
1987 Huddersfield Town 9 (0)
1987–1990 Notts County 45 (1)
1990Hartlepool United (loan) 3 (0)
1990Partick Thistle (loan) 5 (0)
1990–1992 Kilmarnock 29 (0)
1992–1994 Sligo Rovers 48 (0)
Total 206 (3)
Managerial career
1992–1994 Sligo Rovers
2007–2009 Celtic Reserves
2009–2010 Újpest FC
2010–2011 Ross County
2013–2014 Celtic Nation
*Club domestic league appearances and goals
Close

Playing career

Born in Hamilton, McStay played for Celtic from 1979 to 1987. McStay made his debut on 2 April 1983 when he came on as a sub in Celtic's 3–1 home win over Motherwell and went on to make 65 league appearances, including 10 as a substitute, scoring two goals. McStay transferred to Huddersfield Town in March 1987 and later played for Notts County and Hartlepool United.[3]

Coaching career

McStay was player/manager at Sligo Rovers from 1992 to 1994 and he led them to a historic treble in 1993–94, when they won the First Division, First Division Shield and the FAI Cup.[4] In 1994, the Scot left Sligo just before the start of the new season after being approached by Celtic to become their youth team coach.[5]

McStay was appointed the head coach of Celtic Reserves in January 2007,[6] and worked in that role at the club until July 2009, when he left to take up the role as manager of Újpest FC in Budapest, Hungary. His assistant at Celtic and at Újpest was Joe McBride.[7] McStay resigned as Head Coach of Újpest in April 2010,[8] and was replaced by Géza Mészöly.[9]

McStay returned to Celtic in April 2010 to take charge of the reserve side again after leaving Újpest,[10] before departing 2 months later.[11]

On 25 November 2010, McStay was appointed manager of Ross County.[12] McStay left the club by mutual consent after less than three months as manager.[13] McStay had taken charge of only nine games, none of which were won, during that time.[14]

McStay was appointed assistant manager of Stockport County in July 2011 by manager Dietmar Hamann.[15] After Hamann's departure, in November, new manager Jim Gannon kept McStay on as his assistant.

McStay took over as manager of Northern League Division One team Celtic Nation in September 2013.[16] McStay led his side to their first trophy as Celtic Nation on 29 April 2014, defeating Aspatria 3–0 in the Cumberland Cup Final.[17] McStay went on to lead the side to a second-place finish in the league, and went undefeated in their final 14 league games of the season.[18] However, this was not enough to gain promotion to the Northern Premier League.[18][19] Over the following weeks, a financial review was carried out at the club which resulted in many of their players leaving.[20] Matters reached a head in July 2014 when owner Frank Lynch sold the club on to former chairman Steve Skinner. Amidst the turmoil at the club, McStay resigned.[21]

Remove ads

Personal life

McStay is a member of a notable football family, being the elder brother of former Celtic and Scotland midfielder Paul.[12] Their younger brother Ray had a less notable career as a footballer after also starting out at Celtic, and their father John worked as a scout for the club.[22] Great-uncles Willie and Jimmy McStay also played for Celtic and both captained the team in the 1920s, with Jimmy later also serving as manager.

Willie's son John was also a footballer who played as a defender for Motherwell and Ayr United in the 2000s[23] before becoming an academy coach at Celtic;[24] he should not be confused with Johnny McStay who played for various clubs at Junior level in the 2010s;[25][26] who is the son of Willie's cousin, former player Jock McStay. His nephew Chris (Paul's son) is also a footballer.[27]

Remove ads

Honours

Player

Celtic

Sligo Rovers

Manager

Sligo Rovers

Celtic

Reserves
Youth
Celtic Nation
Remove ads

References

Wikiwand in your browser!

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.

Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.

Remove ads