Personal
Fullname: Kenneth Mathieson Dalglish
aka: Kenny Dalglish, King Kenny, Kenny-D
Born: 4 March 1951
Birthplace: Milton, Glasgow, Scotland
Height: 5 ft 8 (1.73m)
Position: Right half/centre forward/striker
Player signed: May 1967
Player left: 10 Aug 1977
Internationals: Scotland under 23/Scotland full
International Caps: 102 caps
International Goals: 30 goals
First game: Hamilton Accies away 4-2 League Cup 25/9/68
Last game :
Motherwell 2-2 away league 10/5/77
First goal : Rangers 2-0 away League Cup 14/8/71
Last goal : Motherwell 2-2 away League 10/5/77
Biog - Player

Kenneth Mathieson Dalglish is unquestionably one of the finest players of his generation and among the very greatest footballers Britain has ever produced.
Brought up in the shadow of Rangers' Ibrox Park,Kenny was as a follower of Celtic's city rivals Rangers.When Sean Fallon interrupted a family holiday to go up to Kenny's house to get him to sign for Celtic Kenny readily admits he had to rush to his bedroom to tear down his Rangers posters not that for one second it would have stopped Sean from signing him.
Kenny Dalglish was snapped up by the Bhoys in the wonderful month of May 1967 when the youngster signed provisional forms with the Hoops. Dalglish would be farmed out to Cumbernauld United before returning to Celtic Park as a full-time professional in April 1968.
Among a crop of talented youngsters at
Parkhead - known as the
Quality Street Gang - Kenny would make his Celtic debut on September 25th as a sub in a 4-2 League Cup win at Hamilton. His impact may not have been immediate but such was the strength of Celtic at that time they could afford the luxury of bedding talented youngsters in. Celtic fans who had watched his tremendous displays for the reserve team were raving about his ability and there was great anticipation of his promotion to the first eleven.
He was a late developer and he was almost 21 by the time he nailed down a first team spot in August 1971, long after his contemporaries such as
Macari and
Hay. Between August 14th and September 11th 1971 Celtic defeated Rangers three times at Ibrox. Dalglish scored in every game and in the first game he had scored his first competitive goal for Celtic with a coolly taken penalty. He was the the biggest sensation that Scottish football had seen for years and scored 23 goals, the best of which were the sensational hat trick he scored against Dundee on October 16th in a 3-1 win. Although he faded slightly later in the season and had reverted on occasion to his original position of right-half, he was at inside-left in the 6-1 annihilation of Hibs in the '72 Scottish Cup final as Celtic clinched another double. Capable of playing in any of the front line positions Dalglish would be a wonderful asset to Celtic in the coming years.
In 1972/73 Dalglish scored 41 times and developed a magnificent partnership with
Dixie Deans which propelled Celtic to their 8th consecutive league title. On April 28th 1973 Dalglish and Deans were on fire on the day and shared the goals as Celtic won the title by beating Hibs 3-0 at Easter Road in front of an incredible 45,000 crowd, an estimated 35,000 Celtic fans having travelled to that game. Such was his talent that there fans who would go along just to see him play which is quite a compliment given the luxury of talents that Jock Stein had available to him at that time. By this time he was an established Scotland international and only a magnificent save by England goalkeeper Peter Shilton prevented him scoring at Wembley in May 1973.
By the 1973/74 season he was the darling of the Celtic support and a mainstay of the Celtic team whether in midfield or attack. He scored 22 times and was instrumental in Celtic's League and Cup double victories. On April 27th 1974 he scored the goal which brought Celtic's ninth consecutive title to Parkhead at Brockville. On a sadder point he had suffered tremendous abuse against the thugs of Atletico Madrid as Celtic bowed out of the European Cup at the semi final stage. He had developed even further at this point and as Celtic were going through a stage of regeneration Kenny had by now become an experienced and reliable player. In September he was in the Scotland team that qualified for the 1974 World Cup finals in West Germany.
Kenny had an indifferent 1974 World Cup and looked jaded on his return to Parkhead. On December 14th 1974 he had perhaps his best ever game when he scored a scintillating hat trick in 6-0 win against Dundee at Dens Park. However, on January 4th Celtic's bid for 10 in a row hit the skids when Rangers beat Celtic 3-0 at Ibrox. Unfortunately Kenny had an off day and missed several chances that would have changed the outcome of that match. As a consolation Kenny was part of the excellent Celtic team which annihilated Hibs 6-3 in the 1974 League Cup Final and at centre forward on May 3rd 1975 when Celtic defeated Airdrie 3-1 in
Billy McNeill's last game at Hampden.
He put in a transfer request in the summer of 1975 although he withdrew it when Jock Stein was seriously injured in a near fatal car crash, in which it took him along time to recover, and Dalglish was rewarded with the captaincy by Sean Fallon. The team was in transition and Kenny carried the team on his back that season scoring a magnificent 32 goals although no trophies were won. Celtic were in front in the league race until a 3-2 defeat at Tannadice on April 10th, and he had a goal against Aberdeen controversially disallowed one week later which cost Celtic victory and by now Rangers had gained the impetus. Dalglish had a wonderful rapport with the Celtic support but some of them could be critical if he dropped below the high standards he had now set. Other players were allowed to lose form but it was essential to Celtic that Kenny played to full capacity in each game so reliant were they at that time on his talents.
Stein returned in the summer of 1976 and restructured the team.
Pat Stanton and
Joe Craig were much needed new faces and took some of the burden from the overworked Dalglish. He had developed an almost telepathic understanding with
Danny McGrain on Celtic's right hand side which was a joy to behold at club and international level. After a slow start Celtic caught fire and were deserved league champions. He single handedly won the League Cup semi final against Hearts in October 1976 by scoring twice in a 2-1 win although Celts lost to Ally MacLeod's Aberdeen in the final despite dominating almost the entire 120 minutes of a match played in incessant rain. On November 20th 1976 he led a thrilling Celtic fight back in a 4-3 win at Tynecastle and had a great combination with Joe Craig and
Ronnie Glavin which returned 75 goals from all three Celts in 76/77. The title was clinched on April 9th at Easter Road in a 1-0 win and Kenny was hoisted high by his team mates in celebration much to the delight of the massive travelling Celtic support who had travelled through to Edinburgh to back them. At this time Kenny was capable of being shuttled from midfield play maker to goal scoring striker depending on Celtic's requirements in certain games.
He was at his peak in 1977 and the Ayr United defender Alex McAnespie after playing against him, described his talents as being 'unbelievable, like something from an incredible football comic strip'.
On May 7th 1977 Kenny lifted the Scottish Cup after a 1-0 win over Rangers when he had strangely refused the chance to score the winning goal from a penalty,
Andy Lynch doing the needful. He lost his medal in the celebrations afterwards and only found it after a search aided by policemen. Before the Cup Final he had signed a new contract which misled the supporters as it looked as if he had pledged his future to Celtic but had he not signed he would have been ineligible to play in the final due to the complications of the contract system prior to freedom of contract in 1980. He may have signed but privately he had made it clear to the club that he wished to move on.
After scoring Scotland's winner at Wembley and starred in Scotland's South American tour in July against Brazil, Argentina and Chile. Kenny refused to travel to Celtic's tour of the Far East, citing tiredness as the reason. Rumours abounded about his departure and sadly, on August 9th Kenny Dalglish signed for Liverpool for a British record fee of £440,000, Liverpool having just cashed a cheque for £500,000 for the transfer of Kevin Keegan to the West German club SV Hamburg and looking for a replacement. It is said that before he signed Stein had taken him aside privately and asked him if there was anything the club could do to make him stay but he required a new challenge in his career and his destination was Anfield, home of the then current European Champions.
Kenny Dalglish's departure is lamented by Celtic fans to this day. He was creative, scored goals, had stamina, heart and vision and was a great team player. In short, he was closest to the perfect player as you could find. Kenny Dalglish was a Celtic all time great after 320 appearances and 168 goals.
Despite the success he had at Anfield, the Kop could never repeat the roar of the Jungle when Kenny Dalglish was in full flow in the green and white hoops.
Kenny was voted into the Greatest Ever Celtic Team and was also voted Liverpool's Greatest Ever Player - a truly unique fantastic footballer.
Celtic Career Stats
| Club performance | League | Cup | League Cup | Continental | Total |
Season _______
| Club _______
| League _______
| Apps _______
| Goals _______
| Apps _______
| Goals _______
| Apps _______
| Goals _______
| Apps
_______ | Goals _______ | Apps _______
| Goals _______ |
| Scotland | League | Scottish Cup | Scottish League Cup | Europe | Total |
| 1968-69 | Celtic | Division One | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| 1969-70 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 0 |
| 1970-71 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 5 | 0 |
| 1971-72 | 31 | 17 | 4 | 1 | 8 | 5 | 7 | 0 | 50 | 23 |
| 1972-73 | 32 | 23 | 6 | 5 | 11 | 10 | 4 | 3 | 53 | 41 |
| 1973-74 | 33 | 18 | 6 | 1 | 10 | 3 | 7 | 2 | 56 | 24 |
| 1974-75 | 33 | 16 | 5 | 2 | 8 | 3 | 2 | 0 | 48 | 21 |
| 1975-76 | Premier Division | 35 | 24 | 1 | 1 | 10 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 51 | 32 |
| 1976-77 | 35 | 14 | 7 | 1 | 10 | 10 | 2 | 1 | 54 | 26 |
| Total | Scotland | 204 | 112 | 30 | 11 | 60 | 35 | 28 | 9 | 322 | 167 |
Manager
Kenny Dalglish returned to Celtic Park as Director of Football in the summer of
1999. His appointment was backed by the Board but was mainly down to his golfing buddy and recent appointee as Celtic Chief Executive
Allan MacDonald. This appointment was not without a degree of controversy, Kenny having become involved with a 'consortium' which sought control of the club and
Fergus McCann's shares. Having been a former manager of Liverpool, Blackburn and Newcastle United, he was expected to have the nous to get Celtic up and running again, and building on the foundations that
Jo Venglos had left behind. Being the manager wasn't his main interest, and he preferred a back seat role and was principally responsible for the appointment of
John Barnes as Head Coach (who he had managed as a player in the 1980's).
Barnes' abject failure as a manager in his brief reign, meant it fell to Dalglish to take over the reins as interim manager of the first team in the wake of Barnes' dismissal on 9th February 2000. Dalglish's position was always under scrutiny, and he became embroiled with the press during his time in charge. Barnes' dismissal had also irreparably damaged Daglish's reputation for judgement.
Under his management, the team did succeed in winning the League Cup, defeating Aberdeen in the final at Hampden, but his longer-term position was never very clear. With
Tommy Burns appointed as his interim assistant, the team Dalglish inherited still had a chance of winning the Premier League title at the beginning of March but three defeats in that fateful month, one by Hibs and two by Rangers (the second against the Huns being a particularly disappointing display at Ibrox), ensured that Dalglish would not be asked to take over the job on a permanent basis. He became an increasingly marginal figure with little apparent involvement in the search for the next manager.
Following the appointment of
Martin O'Neill, Dalglish's contract was terminated on 29th June 2000. In addition to the reported unwillingness of O'Neill to work under a superior football staff employee, he was aslo unwilling to accept a sideways move, and with little leeway the Board terminated his contract. In any case, Dalglish's fate was probably sealed by the team's distant finish behind Rangers in the league championship, a record 21 points. It was a sad way to see Dalglish's reign end but luck was his enemy as it was with Venglos. Dalglish sued the club for wrongful dismissal. The case was heard at the Court of Sessions in Edinburgh in November and December of 2000.
Dalglish should not have been living off of his past reputation, but he was doing so in part in this case, and we were sorely done by.
Quotes
"Is he better in midfield or up front? Och, just let him on the park!"
Jock Stein on Dalglish 1977 Scotland Career
Links