Allan Johnston

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Allan Johnston
Allan Johnston Sunderland 1998.jpg
Johnston (Sunderland) in 1998
Personal information
Full name Allan Johnston [1]
Date of birth (1973-12-14) 14 December 1973 (age 50)
Place of birth Glasgow, Scotland
Position(s) Midfielder
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1990–1996 Heart of Midlothian 84 (12)
1996–1997 Rennes 23 (2)
1997–2000 Sunderland 87 (19)
1999Birmingham City (loan) 8 (0)
2000Bolton Wanderers (loan) 19 (3)
2000–2001 Rangers 14 (0)
2001–2004 Middlesbrough 17 (1)
2002–2003Sheffield Wednesday (loan) 12 (2)
2004–2009 Kilmarnock 115 (5)
2009–2010 St Mirren 10 (0)
2010–2013 Queen of the South 61 (7)
Total450(51)
International career
1994–1996 Scotland U21 [2] 3 (0)
1998 Scotland B [3] 2 (0)
1998–2002 Scotland 18 (2)
Managerial career
2012–2013 Queen of the South [4]
2013–2015 Kilmarnock
2015–2019 Dunfermline Athletic [5]
2019–2022 Queen of the South
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Allan Johnston (born 14 December 1973) is a Scottish football player and coach, who was most recently the manager of Queen of the South.

Contents

Nicknamed 'Magic', Johnston started his professional playing career with Heart of Midlothian and then followed on to French club Rennes before a spell in English football with Sunderland before returning to Scotland with Rangers. Johnston then returned to England with Middlesbrough and Sheffield Wednesday. Johnston returned to Scotland and played out his playing career with Kilmarnock, St Mirren and Queen of the South. Johnston played for Scotland 18 times in full internationals, and also played for the Scotland under-21 and B international teams.

Johnston started his managerial career in 2012, as player-manager of Queen of the South. Johnston won the Second Division championship in his first season as a manager, then moved to Kilmarnock. Johnston departed Rugby Park after 18 months after a dispute with the club's board about the sale of a player. Johnston was appointed manager of Dunfermline Athletic in 2015, where he won the League One Championship in his first season.

Playing career

Club

Heart of Midlothian

Johnston began his career with Heart of Midlothian, becoming a first-team regular in the mid-1990s. In January 1996, Johnston scored his first career hat-trick, scoring all three goals in a 3–0 win against Rangers at Ibrox. [6] Johnston picked up a Scottish Cup runners-up medal that season in the defeat to Rangers where Brian Laudrup dominated the final.

Rennes

During the summer of 1996, Johnston moved to French club Rennes (Aberdeen defender Gary Smith making the same move), but he left after less than one season. [7]

Sunderland

Johnston finished the season with FA Premier League side Sunderland as they were relegated to the Football League First Division. Although Sunderland were defeated in the 1998 play-off final, the club won the title the following season. During the summer of 1999, with just one year left on his contract, Johnston began negotiations about an extension. During this time, interest in Johnston was expressed by Rangers and after negotiations broke down with Sunderland, Johnston stated his desire to move to Glasgow. Despite previously being a first-team regular he never appeared for Sunderland in 1999–2000 season and was subsequently loaned to Birmingham City and Bolton Wanderers, the latter with whom he appeared in the FA Cup semi-final. However in the semi-final versus Aston Villa he was one of two Bolton players to have their penalty saved by David James as they crashed out in a shoot-out. [8]

Johnston was the scorer of the final competitive goal at Roker Park in a 3–0 win over Everton in the final home game of the 1996/97 season. [9]

Rangers

At the end of the 1999–00 season, having not featured for Sunderland in the entire campaign, Johnston moved to Rangers on a free transfer, scoring on his debut in a Champions League qualifying match against FBK Kaunas. [10] He scored twice more for Rangers, his strikes coming against Herfolge in another Champions League qualifier [11] and Brechin in the Scottish Cup. [12]

Middlesbrough

Little over twelve months later, in late August 2001 and with the FA Premier League season already underway, Johnston moved to Middlesbrough in a £600,000 deal, making his debut in the derby defeat to Newcastle United the following weekend. Johnston scored in his second match against West Ham [13] but failed to score again all season, missing February and March due to injury. The following season, Johnston spent much of the season on loan with Sheffield Wednesday, scoring twice, having only played in two League Cup matches for Boro, subsequently missing the entire 2003–04 season.

Kilmarnock

Johnston signed for Kilmarnock in August 2004, reuniting him with former Hearts management team Jim Jefferies and Billy Brown. [14] In April 2007, with his contract about to expire, Johnston agreed a new two-year deal, which wasn't extended upon its expiry in June 2009, resulting in his release from Rugby Park. [15]

St Mirren

On 8 August 2009, Johnston played in a trial match for St Mirren against Wigan Athletic. [16] After the match, manager Gus MacPherson said that he would love to sign him, but felt he might be out of their price range. [17] After making 10 appearances for St Mirren, he was released at the end of the season.

Queen of the South

In July 2010 Johnston played as a trialist in four games for Dumfries club Queen of the South. Johnston was then confirmed on the club's website as having signed a one-year contract on 16 July 2010. [18] Johnston's competitive league debut for Queens was on 22 August 2010 when he played in central midfield during a 3–1 away win at Cowdenbeath. [19] Johnston scored his first Queens goal in a league win at Palmerston Park versus Partick Thistle on 18 September 2010. [20]

International

Johnston made 18 appearances for Scotland between 1998 and 2002, [21] and was also capped at under–21 level.

Coaching career

Queen of the South (first spell)

Queen of the South announced on 21 June 2011 that Johnston had signed a contract as player coach. [22] On 3 May 2012, Johnston was appointed as Queens new player-manager. [4] [23] Johnston led Queens to a historic double in his first full season in management, winning the Scottish Second Division Championship and the Scottish Challenge Cup. [24] [25]

Kilmarnock

Johnston and his assistant, Sandy Clark both signed two-year contracts to join Kilmarnock as the club's new management team on 24 June 2013. [26] Queen of the South receive around £30,000 in compensation. [26] Kilmarnock narrowly avoided relegation in Johnston's first season in charge, winning their last two games to finish above the relegation play-off position. The club performed better in the league during his second season, but in February 2015 Johnston announced his intention to leave the club at the end of the season. [27] He had been upset by the sale of Robbie Muirhead, which Johnston said had only been advised to him after the transfer window had closed. [27] The Kilmarnock board then decided to remove Johnston from his position immediately. [28]

Dunfermline Athletic

On 8 May 2015, after three months out of work, Johnston was appointed manager of Scottish League One side Dunfermline Athletic on a one-year contract. [5] [29] His first season with the club saw him twice named Scottish League One Manager of the Month, [30] [31] guide the Pars to the league title and promotion to the Scottish Championship, [32] and additionally, saw the side compete well against Scottish Premiership opposition in both the Scottish Cup and Scottish League Cup. [33] [34] In April 2016, Johnston was rewarded for his achievements with a new two-year contract, keeping him at East End Park until Summer 2018. [35]

Johnston's first season in the championship saw the club finish in fifth place, four points off the play-off positions. [36] The following season, Dunfermline finished one place better off which saw them contest the quarter-final play-off against Dundee United. After a goalless first leg, [37] the Pars lost the return leg 2–1 at Tannadice. [38] On 22 May 2018, Johnston signed a new two-year contract. [39] In January 2019 Dunfermline were not in contention for a play-off spot. On 9 January the club announced Johnston had been relieved of his duties 4 days after Alloa Athletic scored a 94th minute equaliser against Dunfermline after Dunfermline having been 2-0 ahead. [40]

Queen of the South (second spell)

On 5 May 2019, soon after Queens ended their league campaign in the 2018–19 Scottish Championship relegation play-off position, the Doonhamers appointed Johnston and his assistant, Sandy Clark on a two-year contract for their second spell at the Dumfries club ahead of the play-off matches versus Montrose. [41] [42]

On 16 April 2021, Johnston and Clark signed a contract extension to remain as the Queen of the South management team until May 2023. [43]

On 13 February 2022, Johnston and Clark departed the Doonhamers by mutual consent (4 wins in 24 matches) as the Dumfries club languished in the automatic relegation place in the Scottish Championship. [44]

Personal life

His son Max Johnston is also a footballer (a Motherwell youth product, he made his senior debut in 2021); elder brother Sammy Johnston also played professionally for St Johnstone and Partick Thistle among others. [45]

Career statistics

International appearances

Appearances and goals by national team and year [21]
National teamYearAppsGoals
Scotland 199820
199952
200040
200110
200260
Total182
Scores and results list Scotland's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Johnston goal.
List of international goals scored by Allan Johnston
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
15 June 1999 [46] Svangaskard, Toftir, Faroe IslandsFlag of the Faroe Islands.svg  Faroe Islands 1–01–1 UEFA Euro 2000 qualifying
29 June 1999 [47] Generali Arena, Prague, Czech RepublicFlag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 2–02–3UEFA Euro 2000 qualifying

Managerial record

As of 13 February 2022
Managerial record by team and tenure
TeamFromToRecordRef.
GWDLWin %
Queen of the South 3 May 201225 June 2013473575074.47
Kilmarnock 25 June 20136 February 201566201036030.30
Dunfermline Athletic 8 May 20159 January 2019168794445047.02
Queen of the South 7 May 201912 February 2022104302648028.85
Total38516487134042.60

Honours and achievements

Player

Sunderland

Queen of the South

Individual

Manager

Queen of the South

Dunfermline Athletic

Individual

Queen of the South

Dunfermline Athletic

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References

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