Alec Mackie (Irish footballer) explained

Alec Mackie
Full Name:John Alexander Mackie
Birth Date:23 February 1903
Birth Place:Monkstown, County Antrim, Ireland
Height:[1]
Position:Right back
Years2:19??–1922
Years3:1922–1928
Years4:1928–1936
Years5:1936–1938
Years6:1938
Clubs1:Monkstown
Clubs2:Forth River
Clubs3:Arsenal
Clubs4:Portsmouth
Clubs5:Northampton Town
Clubs6:Sittingbourne
Caps3:108
Caps4:257
Caps5:19
Goals3:0
Goals4:2
Goals5:0
Nationalyears1:1923–1935
Nationalteam1:Ireland (IFA)
Nationalcaps1:3
Nationalgoals1:0

John Alexander Mackie (23 February 1903 – June 1984) was an Irish footballer who played as a right-back for various clubs, including Arsenal and Portsmouth in the English Football League.

Career

Born in Monkstown, County Antrim, Mackie started out at Monkstown and Forth River in Belfast, before being spotted by Arsenal in 1922.

It is suggested in many reports that Mackie demanded a pet monkey in place of a signing-on fee, a request Arsenal managed to satisfy thanks to chairman Sir Henry Norris's contacts in international trade. However, a re-analysis of the sources of this story in 2014 suggests the story is fanciful.[2]

Mackie was a young, strong right back, and made his debut on 9 December 1922 against Birmingham City. He soon became a regular in the Arsenal side, making 23 league appearances that season and 31 the next. He also made his debut for Ireland, against Wales on 14 April 1923. However, he became injured early on in 1924–25 and missed most of that season. Although Mackie would return to first-team football, managing 35 league appearances in 1925–26, future Arsenal skipper Tom Parker joined in spring 1926 and soon ousted Mackie from the side altogether.

Mackie played two more seasons for Arsenal, mostly in the reserves, before leaving for Portsmouth in 1928. In all, he made 119 appearances for Arsenal, scoring one goal. At Portsmouth, Mackie became a stalwart for the next seven seasons; he made over 250 league appearances for Pompey, and played in two FA Cup Finals – against Bolton Wanderers in 1929 and Manchester City in 1934, losing both. He also won two more caps for Ireland. He left Portsmouth in 1936, and finished his career at non-league Northampton Town and then Sittingbourne. He died in 1984 at the age of 81.

References

Notes and References

  1. News: Prospects of the clubs in the First Division of the League. Arsenal . Achates . Athletic News . Manchester . 20 August 1923 . 5.
  2. Arsenal History Society blog 2014 http://www.blog.woolwicharsenal.co.uk/archives/11464