The Herald - Herald Sport

Plenty of wing wizards have ruled the right flank in Scotland over the past DAY EIGHT: THE R

- Ralph Milne Club Titles Brian Laudrup Clubs Titles

Dundee United (1976 to 1987)

One (1983).

THERE are several players who are strong contenders for the dubious honour of being the best player never to represent Scotland.

John McGovern of Nottingham Forest and

Andy Ritchie of Morton are two. Ralph Milne of Dundee United is most definitely another. How he was overlooked by his country remains a mystery.

Milne (below) excelled for the great Tannadice team of the 1980s domestical­ly and was one of their outstandin­g performers when they won the Premier Division in the 1982/83 season. He scored 15 goals for them from out wide in the league that term. His chipped opener in their vital final game against Dundee at Dens Park was a thing of beauty and quite remarkable in the circumstan­ces.

In Europe he was sensationa­l. He netted four times during United’s run to the European Cup semifinals the following term. That was more than Kenny Dalglish, whose Liverpool team triumphed, managed. In total, Milne was on target on 15 occasions in continenta­l competitio­n. That is a club record which will probably never be beaten.

Alas, Milne was a troubled genius. He drank to excess and gambled and his relationsh­ip with his manager Jim McLean was fractious. He moved on to Charlton Athletic in 1987 and later played for Bristol City, Manchester United and Sing Tao in Hong Kong. He retired from the game at 32 in 1993.

He passed away from complicati­ons caused by liver problems aged just 54 in 2015. His career was a case of “what might have been”. But he certainly enjoyed his share of success and was, at his very best, simply brilliant.

confidence, was an everpresen­t in the first team and became a far more prolific scorer.

At just 28, he has many years ahead of him and is destined to finish his career as one of Celtic’s greatest and most decorated players. 1998) and 1997).

Rangers (1994 to

Three (1995, 1996

IN Shakespear­e’s tragedy Hamlet, the Prince of Denmark is a melancholy and embittered character. Brian Laudrup, who Rangers supporters often refer to by the name of bard’s most famous creation, brought only joy and happiness at Ibrox.

Jim Baxter is considered by many to be the Glasgow club’s most gifted player ever. But Laudrup must run him very close. He was nothing short of a genius.

Smith’s side had won six Scottish titles in succession when Laudrup arrived in a £2.3m transfer from Fiorentina in 1994. But the new signing took them to a new level in the following three seasons and helped them complete

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