Billy Stark Explained

Billy Stark
Fullname:William Stark[1]
Birth Date:1 December 1956
Birth Place:Glasgow, Scotland
Position:Midfielder
Years1:1975–1983
Years2:1983–1987
Years3:1987–1990
Years4:1990–1992
Years5:1992–1993
Years6:1993–1994
Clubs1:St Mirren
Clubs2:Aberdeen
Clubs3:Celtic
Clubs4:Kilmarnock
Clubs5:Hamilton Academical
Clubs6:Kilmarnock
Caps1:255
Caps2:112
Caps3:64
Caps4:22
Caps5:14
Caps6:36
Goals1:60
Goals2:41
Goals3:17
Goals4:6
Goals5:0
Goals6:3
Totalcaps:503
Totalgoals:127
Nationalyears1:1985
Nationalteam1:Scotland U21[2]
Nationalcaps1:1
Nationalgoals1:0
Manageryears1:1997
Manageryears2:1997–2000
Manageryears3:2001–2004
Manageryears4:2004–2008
Manageryears5:2008–2014
Manageryears6:2012–2013
Manageryears7:2017–2018
Manageryears8:2018–2024
Managerclubs1:Celtic (caretaker)
Managerclubs2:Greenock Morton
Managerclubs3:St Johnstone
Managerclubs4:Queen's Park
Managerclubs5:Scotland U21
Managerclubs6:Scotland (caretaker)
Managerclubs7:East Kilbride
Managerclubs8:Scotland U19

William Stark (born 1 December 1956) is a Scottish former football player and coach. He made 500 league appearances in total, including successful spells at Aberdeen and Celtic. He then turned to management, which has seen him take caretaker charge of both Celtic and Scotland - staying unbeaten at manager of both teams in his short spells - with longer roles at smaller club sides in Scotland.

Playing career

Born in Glasgow,[1] Stark made his professional debut in 1975 in nearby Paisley for St Mirren. Two years later he won his first honour, a First Division winners medal. After 255 games for St Mirren, scoring 60 goals, he was signed by Aberdeen for £80,000. During a period of success for the side, he helped Aberdeen to win a European Super Cup in 1983, a Premier Division and Scottish Cup double in 1984, another league title the following year and a League Cup and Scottish Cup double in 1986.

Stark was signed by Celtic in 1987, for a £100,000 transfer fee. In three seasons with the club he won two further Scottish Cups and a League Championship, before leaving for Kilmarnock for two seasons. In 1992, he transferred to Hamilton Academical as a player/coach, but returned to Kilmarnock the following year under manager and former Celtic colleague Tommy Burns. Stark retired from playing in 1994, having scored over 100 league goals.

Coaching career

After retiring as a player, Stark became assistant to Tommy Burns at Celtic. When Burns left Celtic in 1997, Stark managed the side for three matches in a caretaker capacity before leaving himself. Stark then had spells managing Greenock Morton and St Johnstone[3] before becoming Queen's Park manager in 2004.[4]

Stark led Queen's to one of their greatest results of modern times in August 2006 at Firhill Stadium, when Queen's Park beat his former club Aberdeen on penalty kicks after a 0–0 draw in the 2006–07 Scottish League Cup.[5] Stark also led the Glasgow club to promotion from the Scottish Third Division and later hailed the achievement as the highlight of his football career.[6]

Stark left Queen's Park on 1 January 2008 to work for the Scottish Football Association, a role that involved managing the under-21 national team. They reached the qualification playoffs for the 2011 European championship, but they lost out to Iceland.[7] David Goodwillie, Danny Wilson and Barry Bannan were promoted from the under-21s to the full national team selected by Craig Levein in November 2010.[7] The team finished in second place in their qualifying group for the 2013 European championship, but did not gather enough points to be eligible for the playoffs.

Stark was placed in caretaker charge of the Scotland national team for a friendly against Luxembourg in November 2012, following the departure of Craig Levein.[8] Stark resigned from the position of Scotland under-21 manager in November 2014.[9]

In June 2015, Stark was appointed assistant manager to Darren Young at newly promoted Scottish League One side Albion Rovers.[10]

In June 2017, he was appointed manager at Scottish Lowland Football League side East Kilbride.[11] He resigned from this position shortly before the end of the 2017–18 season.[12] Stark then returned to the Scottish Football Association, within this role he became head coach of the under-19 national team.

Stark retired from coaching in April 2024.[13]

Career statistics

Club

Club! rowspan="2"
SeasonsLeagueScottish CupLeague CupEuropeTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
St Mirren1975–76Scottish First Division------
1976–77------
1977–78Scottish Premier Division------
1978–79------
1979–80------
1980–81------
1981–82------
1982–83------
Total25560------34584
Aberdeen1983–84Scottish Premier Division1461055202211
1984–8532155411204020
1985–863085363514615
1986–8736121022204114
Total11241127141111114960
Celtic1987–88Scottish Premier Division3785233204713
1988–892594121313412
1989–902010000030
Total641710354518425
Kilmarnock1990–91Scottish First Division2160021--237
1991–92100000--10
Total2260021--247
Hamilton Academical1991–92Scottish First Division140------14+0+
Kilmarnock1992–93Scottish First Division2833000--313
1993–94Scottish Premier Division8000000080
Total363300000393
Career total50312725+10+21+16+162565+155+

Managerial record

[14] [15] [16] [17]

TeamFromToRecord
PWLDWin %
Celtic (caretaker)19971997320166.67%
Greenock Morton199720009531422232.63%
St Johnstone2001200411547452340.87%
Queen's Park2004200814963533342.28%
Scotland U21200820144517161237.78%
Scotland (caretaker)201220121100100%
East Kilbride20172018-----
Scotland U1920182024-----
Total408+161+156+91+53.37%

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Billy Stark: Profile . worldfootball.net . HEIM:SPIEL . 25 December 2019.
  2. Web site: Scotland U21 Player Billy Stark Details.
  3. Web site: Stark is new Saints boss. BBC . BBC Sport . 5 October 2001.
  4. Web site: Spiders appoint Stark boss. BBC. BBC Sport . 27 August 2004.
  5. Web site: Queen's Pk 0-0 Aberdeen (5-3 pen). BBC . BBC Sport . 22 August 2006.
  6. Web site: Stark hails highlight of career. BBC . BBC Sport . 12 May 2007.
  7. Web site: Coach Billy Stark proud of Scotland U21s development . BBC . . 17 November 2010 . 18 November 2010.
  8. Web site: Craig Levein removed as Scotland manager by Scottish FA . STV Sport . STV Group . 5 November 2012 . 5 November 2012.
  9. Web site: Scotland: Billy Stark 'steps down' as under-21 coach . BBC Sport . BBC . 4 November 2014 . 4 November 2014.
  10. Web site: Rovers role for Stark . spfl.co.uk . Scottish Professional Football League . 15 June 2015 . 15 June 2015.
  11. Web site: East Kilbride appoint former Celtic star Billy Stark as new manager . Paul . Thomson . Daily Record . 16 June 2017 . 16 June 2017.
  12. Web site: Billy Stark quits role as East Kilbride boss . Paul . Thomson . Daily Record . 2 May 2018 . 2 May 2018.
  13. Web site: Billy Stark set to retire from role as Scotland Men's Under-19 Head Coach . Scottish Football Association . 2 April 2024 . 2 April 2024.
  14. Web site: Celtic Manager Billy Stark Details . 2023-03-23 . www.fitbastats.com.
  15. Web site: Morton Manager Billy Stark, Record By Opponent . 2023-03-23 . www.fitbastats.com.
  16. Web site: St Johnstone Manager Billy Stark Details . 2023-03-23 . www.fitbastats.com.
  17. Web site: Scotland U21 Manager Billy Stark Details . 2023-03-23 . www.fitbastats.com.