Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

How a £10 steak voucher kicked off legend’s career

- BY GRAEME STRACHAN

MAURICE Malpas never looked back after winning a £10 steak voucher following his Dundee United debut 40 years ago.

The man-of-the-match performanc­e against Airdrie on November 21 1981 was the first of 830 appearance­s during a career spanning two decades.

Initially he combined his football career with full-time study at Bell Street Tech.

And come the heady days of European competitio­n and the arrival of silverware at a rather hungry Tannadice trophy cabinet, he was still a student by day and the lonesome, part-time footballer by night.

Malpas is a Fifer. He was born in Dunfermlin­e in 1962. He attended Queen Anne High School, gained schoolboy caps while a pupil there, and trained from time to time with Dunfermlin­e Athletic.

But as he progressed to Leven Royals under-14s, he was spotted by Dundee United scout Jock Speed and was signed as a midfielder on a schoolboy form.

Malpas was called up as a parttimer in 1979 but struggled to make an impact and was close to being freed before switching to right-back in a reserve game.

Malpas said: “I had never played in defence until we went to Falkirk with the reserves one night and I only switched because we were short at the back.

“The manager asked me to play right-back and I was happy to give it a try. I am lucky I did, as things might have been different if I hadn’t. In fact, as a midfielder, there was talk of me being freed. Graham Low, who coached the part-timers, had spoken to me about my lack of height and it was obvious they weren’t happy with my progress.

“It maybe sounds strange, but although I had probably realised a free was a possibilit­y, I was never really worried by it; though, of course, I tried to prove I should be kept on.

“I had signed part-time forms only because I wanted to continue my education. I was at the College of Technology in Dundee and was really determined I was going to pass my exams there. That’s why I didn’t feel under pressure about possibly being released by United.

“To be honest, I probably also had a part-time attitude to my football at that time.”

Instead of carrying on and risking being put on the scrapheap, he began to work harder and make progress towards the first team. Instead of training just three times a week, he started coming in every night. “At that time, there were plenty of people to train with and I was one of a dozen or so part-timers. Boys like Derek Stark all had jobs outside football and even Davie Dodds was just turning full-time.”

He made his first-team debut in November 1981, aged 19, when he replaced the injured Derek Murray in the 4-0 win against Airdrie at Tannadice.

“It was a home game against Airdrie and the thing I remember most about it was being manof-the-match and getting a £10 voucher for steak,” he said.

He won a place on the bench for the following week’s 1981 League Cup final at Hampden where United went down 2-1 to John Greig’s Rangers.

His early performanc­es at the club marked him out as a star of the future and he picked up eight under-21 caps for Scotland.

That a right-footed player should go on to become one of the best left-backs Scotland has produced was down to his father Danny’s belief that footballer­s should be versatile.

“He had a bugbear about players being able to use both feet and he would often practise with me by throwing the ball to my left,” he said.

Realising the team could be stronger with Malpas on the left and a young Richard Gough at right-back, Jim McLean set about making sure a right-footed player on the left would not be a weak link. The first of many senior honours came his way when

 ?? ?? Maurice Malpas went on to become a Dundee United and Scotland hero.
Maurice Malpas went on to become a Dundee United and Scotland hero.

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