| Personal information | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full name | David Prophet McLean | ||
| Date of birth | (1890-12-13)13 December 1890 | ||
| Place of birth | Forfar, Scotland | ||
| Date of death | 21 December 1967(1967-12-21) (aged 77) | ||
| Place of death | Forfar, Scotland | ||
| Position | Striker | ||
| Youth career | |||
| Forfar West End | |||
| Forfar Celtic | |||
| Senior career* | |||
| Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
| 1907 | Forfar Athletic | ||
| 1907–1909 | Celtic | 24 | (19) |
| 1909–1911 | Preston North End | 49 | (25) |
| 1911–1919 | Wednesday | 135 | (88) |
| 1915–1918 | →Third Lanark (loan) | 85 | (70) |
| 1918–1919 | →Rangers (loan) | 24 | (29) |
| 1919–1922 | Bradford (Park Avenue) | 85 | (49) |
| 1922 | Forfar Athletic | ||
| 1922–1926 | Dundee | 114 | (43) |
| 1926–1931 | Forfar Athletic | 153 | (72) |
| Total | 669 | (395) | |
| International career | |||
| 1912 | Scotland | 1 | (0) |
| 1918[1] | Scotland (wartime) | 1 | (1) |
| * Club domestic league appearances and goals | |||
David Prophet McLean (13 December 1890[2] – 21 December 1967) was a ScottishAssociation footballstriker. He scored over 150 goals in each of the Scottish and English football leagues. At club level he representedCeltic,Preston North End,Sheffield Wednesday,Third Lanark,Rangers,Bradford (Park Avenue),Dundee andForfar Athletic. He had onecap forScotland.
McLean moved fromForfar toGlasgow to joinCeltic as a 16-year-old; he quickly won aGlasgow Cup medal, being selected to make his debut in the replayed final againstRangers and scoring the decisive goal in a 2–1 victory.[3] Though understudy to the established centre-forwardJimmy Quinn and out of favour for a spell after expressing anger at criticism from managerWillie Maley after a poor team performance,[4] he was involved inScottish Football League title wins in his first and second seasons,[5] including a significant part in Celtic's 'famous fortnight' in April 1909, when they played eight games in twelve days to retain the championship.[4] However, he was not able to displace Quinn and moved on toPreston North End while still a teenager.
In England he wasthe top scorer twice in successive seasons in England's top flight when playing forThe Wednesday, as theSheffield club were then named.[6] He shared the distinction with two others on the first occasion, all with 25 strikes, before he was outright winner in1912–13 on 30.[7] In 1915,World War I halted league football in England, but not in Scotland, and McLean was permitted to play forThird Lanark, where he scored 70 goals in less than three seasons,[8] and for Celtic's cross-town rivals,Rangers. In his sole season with theIbrox club he was top scorer in the Scottish League in1918–19 (29 goals in 24 matches);[9] he thus became the first player to be outright top scorer in the top divisions in both England and Scotland. The feat has since only been matched by McLean's future teammate at Dundee,Dave Halliday.[10] He also won another Glasgow Cup, eleven years after his first, with a win over his former employers Celtic; however, they claimed the league title over Rangers by a one-point margin.[11] At the end of the war in 1919, McLean returned to Wednesday but was soon transferred toBradford (Park Avenue) where he spent three years.
McLean joinedDundee in 1922 where in his first season he was a teammate ofAlex Troup. Dave Halliday was top scorer in Dundee's run to the1925 Scottish Cup Final, in which McLean's goal had Dundee leading at half time. Celtic'sPatsy Gallacher equalised beforeJimmy McGrory headed a last minute winner for the Glasgow club.[10][12] After his Dundee spell, McLean closed out his career back home with five more years at Forfar Athletic.[8]
McLean received one cap forScotland, in a1912 British Home Championship match againstEngland.[13] While based in England, he took part in fiveHome Scots v Anglo-Scots trial matches between 1910 and 1920, scoring four times,[8] with further international opportunities limited by the war.
In theInternational Federation of Football History & Statistics updated 2008 list of the world's most successful top division goal scorers (1888–2008), McLean was placed at 43rd equal with 316 top division strikes.
McLean also played cricket for Strathmore C.C. and played in the game in June 1930 at The Hill inKirriemuir whenJ.M. Barrie opened the pavilion, and two members of the touring Australian side, one of them the great Macartney, played before a packed crowd.
He was the elder brother of footballerGeorge McLean who was also a forward.[14] They were teammates at Bradford for one season (1921–22, David's last of three campaigns at the club and George's first of nine) and both closed out their careers at Forfar, but David (eight years older) had retired by the time George came 'home'.
Apart from when his footballing career took him elsewhere, he lived inForfar all his life. He frequently attended football matches and was often invited to be the guest of Celtic at games in which they were involved. He died in December 1967.