Souness and McCoist relive Scotland days and rivalry with England
Graeme Souness and Ally McCoist relive Scotland days and rivalry with England in fun-packed interview… as the two nations prepare to face off once againÂ
- Graeme Souness and Ally McCoist regale Mail Sport with tales of their past
- There’s plenty of banter and memories shared in their chat with Craig HopeÂ
- The two will broadcast for Channel 4 when England play Scotland next Tuesday
Graeme Souness and Ally McCoist have spent the morning laughing. Punches recalled, punchlines landed. Only, Scotlandâs record against England isnât that funny. Souness won once and McCoistâs best was a goalless draw.
âF***ing pudding,â says Souness, of the striker he managed at Rangers. âNo wonder I subbed you all the time!â
That draw was at Hampden Park in 1987 and during the annual Rous Cup showdown between Scotland and England. A match report records McCoist having had an opportunity to win it.
âI have to admit, it was nae a half-chance, thereâs no getting away from that!â he says. âIt was the miss of the season, over the bar.â
Souness and McCoist will be working together for Channel 4 when the Auld Enemies meet again in the fixtureâs 150th Anniversary Match at Hampden on Tuesday. Between them, they played for Scotland from 1974 to 1998, yet never in the same team. The end of Sounessâs international career marked the start of McCoistâs.
Graeme Souness and Ally McCoist recalled their days playing for Scotland in an interview with Mail Sport – though they never featured togetherÂ
Souness was captain of the national team but bowed out before McCoistplayed for them
McCoist, seen here challenging Peter Shilton, was controversially left out of a couple of tournamentsÂ
Did the latterâs emergence, just before the 1986 World Cup, hasten the formerâs decision to retire after the tournament? âToo right it did!â says Souness, although his affection for the younger man is clear, if you stick around.
They would have been Scotland team-mates had McCoist gone to the finals in Mexico.
âFergie (Sir Alex Ferguson, then-Scotland manager) did me like a kipper,â says McCoist. âI was in the plans for the World Cup. One day, I hear Big Jock Wallace (Rangers manager) giving Fergie a mouthful down the phone. He summoned me to the office, which you did once or twice yourself, Graeme.
âBig Jock threw the phone at me and said, âFergie wants a word, heâs not taking youâ. Fergie says, âYouâre doing great, but Iâve decided youâll not be in my squad. But if anyone drops out, youâll be first inâ. The very next morning, Kenny Dalglish pulls out, and he brings in Steve Archibald!â
Would you have taken him, Graeme? âWould I f***! You had some stern competition. Archibald. Kenny. Charlie Nicholas. Frank McAvennie. Graeme Sharp. You were still too young.â
McCoist went to Italia 90 but was controversially left out at France 98. Same question, Graeme, would you have included him?
âDefinitely⊠but not to play! Just for camaraderie, have him around the place.â
McCoist, it should be noted, has been laughing throughout.
Alex Ferguson decided not to take McCoist to the 1986 World Cup – and even reneged on a promise to include him if someone dropped out!Â
âLet me tell you,â says Souness. âIn all the dressing rooms I was in, if you want someone to solidify that dressing room and get a winning mentality, Alistair is your man. If you want Alistair to turn up at a supportersâ club at 8pm on a Tuesday, forget it! But in the dressing room, heâs an 11 out of 10.â
McCoist had been around Scotland squads with Souness before making his debut in 1986. He remembers one in particular.
âBig Jock Stein was manager and we were at Gleneagles. Kenny invited me down for a coffee after training. You were there, Graeme, and Big Jock was joining us. Kenny said, âRight, what do you want?â. I said the same as you guys, âJust a cup of teaâ. Weâre all sat and Kenny comes back with the teas and coffees, and puts a pint of lager down in front of me! Big Jock was in on it, but I was mortified!â
When Souness retired from the national team after Mexico 86, he was appointed player-manager at Rangers, where McCoist was his top marksman. Their team included England stars such as Terry Butcher, Trevor Steven, Trevor Francis and Ray Wilkins â at the time of the Rous Cup â and that cross-border rivalry would serve as inspiration for domestic success. Never was that more evident than on a Friday morning.
âWe had Scotland-England training gamesâŠâ begins Souness. âI had to play for England, because I couldnât get in the Scotland side!
âWalter (Smith) was ref. Weâd be losing 3-1 and had played for half an hour. It was meant to be a short, sharp session. Walter says, âLast minuteâ. Iâd say, âNo itâs f***ing not!â. Weâd play close to an hour so we could get back in the game!â Which was more competitive, that five-a-side or the Rous Cup?
âF*** me, the five-a-side!â says McCoist. âYou were lucky to get off the pitch with a pulse! It used to drive us insane him playing for England. Iâll never forget, he put one on wee Ian Durrantâs chin, and deservedly so. Durranty was giving it the old, âOle, ole, oleâ. Graeme came in and left a beauty of a tackle on him. Durranty was like one of those Weebles, he went down and bounced back up. He put his foot on the ball and says, âIs that your best?â. Graeme says, âAs a matter of fact, Ian, no, itâs not. This is!â. Bang! I would pay fortunes to watch it again. Magic.â
Guilty, Graeme?
âYep, but as you get older you must lose your strength, because he still got up! There was a mass brawl after that.â
McCoist takes over. âSo weâre all sitting in the dressing room wondering what Graeme is going to do. He walks in and says, âLads, thatâs exactly the spirit Iâm looking for!â. We loved that.
The two did cross paths when Jock Stein was in charge and took part in Scotland-England training games togetherÂ
Souness went on to player-manage Rangers, where McCoist was the top marksmanÂ
âHand on heart, Graeme was one of the best I played with. Heâll say we didnât see him at his best, but Iâve never played with anyone who could dictate a game like him.â
Durrant, meanwhile, was also on the receiving end when Terry Hurlock, newly signed by Souness from Millwall, was encouraged by the manager to get involved after a quiet start during an England-Scotland kickabout.
Hurlock told me the story a few years ago. âSouness stops the session, âWhat the f*** have I signed here? Youâre allowed to touch the ball!â. âThe ball goes to little Durrant. I fly in, âWhack!â. Souey stops it again, âF****** easy!â. I said, âDonât wind me up then, you told me to get involved!â.â
The pair remember Hurlock and the others from England with great warmth, but their blood runs cold as we explore the rivalry.
âWe hated them, but the feeling was mutual,â says Souness. âThere is a theory in Britain that the Scots want to win it more than the English. Thatâs a myth. I know. I was in a dressing room with English players like Emlyn Hughes.
âThese games were intense, ferocious. My Liverpool team-mate Terry McDermott knew if I had half a chance, I would leave a bit on him. It fires up the imagination of both nations. Winning the Rous Cup meant nothing, but beating England meant everything.â
McCoist says: âGraeme is spot on, it would be naive to think the Scots boys wanted it more than the English. Looking across the tunnel and seeing Terry Butcher, I can guarantee you he wanted to beat us as much as we did them.
âYou say youâd leave âa bitâ on Terry Mac? I knew for a fact, if Butcher had the chance, he would be leaving âplentyâ on me!â
McCoist said that England players like Terry Butcher ‘wanted to beat us as much as we did them’
The best of enemies is one way of describing the relationship back then. There was mutual respect and, when I ask them for their best England opponent, it says much when they donât stop at one.
âPaul Gascoigne was just ridiculous,â starts McCoist. âAnd Butcher, for showing what representing your country means to someone.â
Souness says: âIâll give you two as well. Kevin Keegan and Bryan Robson. Kevin was perpetual motion, a constant threat, and hated the Scots for 90 minutes.
âAs did Robbo. He was always driving into your box. For me, as a sitting midfielder, I donât want to be tracking players back all the time. The ultimate warrior.â
Gazza. No conversation around England and Scotland is complete without mention of his goal at Euro 96. Even though McCoist was on the pitch at Wembley, he told me over lunch before Euro 2020 of his appreciation for the volley, his Rangers team-mate having flicked the ball over Colin Hendry before smashing past Andy Goram.
Souness has a different take. âI could not appreciate it at all! Not at the time. Could the big blonde centre back have done better?â
Souness: ‘Winning the Rous Cup meant nothing, but beating England meant everything’
âAh, if youâve got to feel sympathy for anyone, itâs big Colin,â says McCoist. âBecause that video gets pulled out and shown every time.â
Souness is softening. âWatching it back, itâs fantastic. Only someone who had supreme ability and believed he could be that cheeky, and get away with it, would ever try that. A goal we all remember.â
An England goal for which there is little sentiment is the last they scored at Hampden. Leigh Griffiths had just netted twice to give the hosts a 2-1 lead in a World Cup qualifier in 2017, when Harry Kane vollyed in a last-ditch equaliser.
âIâve spent most of my life in England,â says Souness. âIâm thankful for being part of the English game but, when it comes to these matches, Iâm only supporting Scotland. I get emotional about it.
âThat Kane goal⊠I was so emotional afterwards. We had them. If weâd won that, I might have been embarrassing on television.â
McCoist was with Souness that afternoon. âWhen Kaneâs goal went in, I was on my knees. Absolutely gutted,â he says. âI also did the co-comms for the game against England at Wembley during Euro 2020. It came to you, Graeme, before kick-off, and you gave a speech about what it meant to Scotland. The commentator said, âWhat did you think of that, Ally?â. I said, âWhat did I think of it?! Iâm ready to march on Carlisle!â.â
That strength of patriotism does not extend throughout the Souness family. âMy son has an England shirt with âSounessâ on the back, which Iâve told him he can never wear to a game! Heâs been to England matches and supports them. Iâd like to think for this one, heâs sitting well and truly on the fence!â
Souness, too, sits on the fence as I ask him how he felt when England were beaten by Italy during the Euro 2020 final. McCoist has no such reservations.
âIâm happy to say, âThank f***, that was close!â,â he says. âWeâre eternally grateful for working down here and the football is brilliant. But youâve no idea how difficult it is for a Scotsman watching England do well. What makes it even worse is that the players and manager are now likeable!â
But there is also fondness for this Scotland team and boss Steve Clarke, who has the nation on the brink of Euro 2024 qualification.
âThe best weâve had for a long time,â says Souness. âThat game at Wembley (0-0 draw), they out-footballed England. I canât think of anyone else who has done that like they did. The manager knows what heâs doing. We have some very good players. We should go into this game with no inferiority complex, like we did at Wembley.â
Predictions? âEngland have better players, if you were picking a composite team,â adds Souness. âBut on the night, that means nothing. I think it will be close, the odd goal in it.â
McCoist remains the tartan side of the fence. âJohn McGinn will score and Scotland will win 2-1!â If so, perhaps Souness will finally âembarrassâ himself on television amid the emotion of a first Scotland victory in 24 years.
âAlistair, before you go, is it casual dress for the game?â asks Souness of their date on Channel 4. âYeah, smart-casual,â says McCoist. âBut your smart-casual will be a hundred times better than my smart-casual, thatâs for sure!â
One last thing, will you two have time for a game of golf while in Scotland? âHe used to fine me for playing golf,â says McCoist. âNow, he canât wait to get me out on the course to take money off me!â
âWe all change,â says Souness. What remains the same is the rivalry between England and Scotland.
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