John Hughes (footballer, born 1943)

John Hughes (born 3 April 1943) is a Scottish former footballer who played for Celtic, Crystal Palace and Sunderland. Hughes was nicknamed 'Yogi',[2] derived from the popular cartoon character Yogi Bear, said to be due to his large build.[3] He is known as one of the Lisbon Lions,[2] although he did not play in the 1967 European Cup Final itself due to injury.[4]

John Hughes
Personal information
Full name John Hughes[1]
Date of birth (1943-04-03) 3 April 1943
Place of birth Coatbridge, Scotland
Playing position(s)
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
Shotts Bon Accord
1959–1971 Celtic 255 (114)
1971–1973 Crystal Palace 20 (4)
1973 Sunderland 1 (0)
Total 276 (118)
National team
1961–1968 Scottish League XI 6 (4)
1965–1970 Scotland 8 (1)
Teams managed
1975–1976 Stranraer
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

Club career

Born in Coatbridge, Hughes signed for Celtic from Shotts Bon Accord in 1959, and scored 197 goals in 435 appearances during his eleven seasons with the club.[5]

He was part of the Celtic squad who won the European Cup in 1967 and became known as the 'Lisbon Lions'. Although Hughes was not in the side that won the final, he was awarded a winner's medal in recognition of the part he played in the team. He had played in the requisite number of matches to qualify for a medal, as had Joe McBride and Charlie Gallagher.

Celtic reached the European Cup final for the second time in 1970, after they defeated English champions Leeds United in both legs of the semi-final. In the first leg, Celtic beat Leeds 1–0 at Elland Road with a goal from George Connelly. The second leg, which was played at Hampden Park in front of almost 140,000 people, was won 2–1 by Celtic. Hughes scored Celtic's first goal in that match,[6] after Billy Bremner had given Leeds an early lead and levelled the aggregate score. Celtic lost the final 2–1 after extra time to Dutch side Feyenoord, with Hughes playing the whole game. Despite playing primarily on the wing, Hughes remains one of Celtic's all-time highest goal scorers (8th in all competitions)[7] and is firmly established as a club legend.

Hughes moved to Crystal Palace in 1971, in a £30,000 joint deal with Willie Wallace.[4] He scored the 1971–72 runner-up in the 'Goal of the Season' award, in a 5–1 win over Sheffield United. He joined Sunderland for £35,000 in January 1973, but injury brought a premature end to his career later that year. He only played 15 minutes of football for Sunderland.

International career

Hughes earned eight full international caps for the Scotland national team between 1965 and 1969. He made his debut in a goalless draw with Spain at Hampden Park.[8] He also scored four goals in six appearances for the Scottish League XI[9] and took part in the 1969 commemorative game Wales v Rest of the UK in Cardiff.[10]

Post-playing career

After coaching with Baillieston, Hughes was appointed manager of Stranraer in 1975, but he left the role after just one year. In 1978, Hughes became the first international team manager of the Scottish Junior Football Association. He later worked as a publican in Glasgow.[2][6][3]

Personal life

Hughes' younger brother Billy was also a professional footballer[11] and played for Sunderland at the same time as John. Billy earned his only Scotland cap five years after John's last international appearance.

Hughes had three sons and a daughter with first wife Mary; he was later married a second time to Theresa.[4][3] In 2014, he confirmed that he had recovered from [[mouth cancer after a five-year battle with the disease.[3] He released a biography that year.[4][3]

gollark: I see.
gollark: There are apparently significant health benefits, so if you lack the general motivational issues preventing me from doing much of this stuff you totally should.
gollark: Too bad.
gollark: https://old.reddit.com/r/slatestarcodex/comments/9h2jbi/you_should_probably_lift_weights/ however.
gollark: So I'm gluing together the API for handling phone calls, a random TTS program I found, and zzcxz.

References

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