David Provan (footballer, born 1956) explained

Davie Provan
Fullname:David Alexander Provan
Birth Date:8 May 1956
Birth Place:Gourock, Scotland
Position:Winger
Youthclubs1:Port Glasgow
Years1:1974–1978
Clubs1:Kilmarnock
Caps1:120
Goals1:9
Years2:1978–1987
Clubs2:Celtic
Caps2:206
Goals2:28
Totalcaps:326
Totalgoals:37
Nationalyears1:1976
Nationalteam1:Scotland u21
Nationalcaps1:1
Nationalgoals1:0
Nationalyears2:1978
Nationalteam2:Scottish League XI
Nationalcaps2:1
Nationalgoals2:0
Nationalyears3:1979–1982
Nationalteam3:Scotland
Nationalcaps3:10
Nationalgoals3:1

David Alexander Provan (born 8 May 1956) is a Scottish former footballer, who played for Kilmarnock, Celtic and Scotland. While playing for Celtic, Provan won four Premier Division medals, two Scottish Cups and one League Cup.

He earned ten international caps and scored one goal for Scotland, and was a non-playing member of their 1982 World Cup squad. Provan also represented the Scottish League.[1]

Provan retired in 1987 after he began to suffer from ME. He has since worked in the media.

Playing career

Kilmarnock

Provan began his senior career at Kilmarnock in 1974, having signed from Junior club Port Glasgow. In his four years at Rugby Park, A Winger, Provan's skill and prowess in crossing at pace saw him make 139 appearances at Kilmarnock, scoring 10 goals in total.[2] Provan played an integral part in two of Kilmarnock's three promotion achieving seasons in the 1970s (1973/74, 1975/76), and played at the start of their third, 1978/79. His form for Kilmarnock in the mid 1970s saw him capped at Under 21 level by Scotland in an away match against Czechoslovakia in October 1976.[3]

In 1978 Provan played for the Scottish League Select in a match against their Italian counterparts in Verona. The same year, he also shone for Killie in their shock Scottish Cup 4th round replay win over Celtic.[4] This was the first time that a club from a lower division had knocked out the holders of the Scottish Cup.

Celtic

New Celtic manager, Billy McNeill signed Provan in September 1978. The transfer fee of £120,000 was at the time a record in Scottish football.[5] He grew up supporting Rangers and his teammates would joke about this while he played for Celtic.[6]

Provan quickly established himself in McNeill's revamped Celtic side, scoring his first goal against Hibernian at Easter Road on 18 November 1978.[7] In May 1979 Provan won his first major winner's medal as Celtic clinched the Premier Division by defeating Rangers 4–2 in the last game of the league season.[8] The following year Provan was voted SPFA Player of the Year by his fellow professionals.[9] Provan was proving to be a huge success at Celtic and his distinctive long curly hair, jersey hanging over his shorts and socks down at his ankles made him - visually alone - a standout figure on the field of play in Scotland.[10]

Provan went on to win a further three League championships with Celtic (1980–81, 1981–82 and 1985–86), along with one Scottish League Cup (1982) and two Scottish Cups (1980 and 1985). The latter Scottish Cup saw Provan write himself into football history, becoming only the third player at that time to score direct from a free kick in a Scottish Cup final.[11] Celtic had been a goal down to Dundee United at the time, and following Provan's equaliser went on to win 2–1.[12]

The start of season 1985–86 saw Provan in exceptional form for Celtic, resulting in intense media speculation that a recall to the Scotland international side was on the cards. However, Provan had to be substituted during a 3–0 Old Firm defeat at Ibrox in November due to illness. This turned out to be M.E. - Myalgic Encephalomyelitis - a long-term condition that leaves the sufferer extremely lethargic and unable to perform much in the way of physical activity.[13] Provan made several attempts at rehabilitation but eventually made the decision in the summer of 1987 to retire from playing football.[14] [15] His last game was coming on as a substitute against Motherwell in January 1986.[16] A testimonial was arranged for Provan, and in November 1987 Celtic played Nottingham Forest in front of 42,000 fans, losing 3–1. Kenny Dalglish made a guest appearance for Celtic, with Provan playing for the first eight minutes.[17]

Scotland

Provan's success at Celtic saw him capped for Scotland 10 times. He made his debut against Belgium in November 1979,[18] scored against Israel in a 3–1 win at Hampden in a 1982 World Cup qualifier,[19] and was part of Jock Stein's 22-man squad for the 1982 World Cup finals in Spain[20] although he did not actually play. John Robertson (Nottingham Forest), Davie Cooper (Rangers) and Peter Weir (Aberdeen) competed with Provan for an international place.[21] [22] [23]

Media work

Since his retirement as a player, Provan has worked in the media as a pundit and co-commentator for Sky Sports. Since the 2012–13 season, he has been one of the main co-commentators on Sky's coverage of the Premier League, Champions League and Scottish Professional Football League.

Provan was also a columnist for several years for the Scottish edition of the now defunct News of the World and now writes for its sister paper, The Sun.[24]

Personal life

Provan is married to Fiona and the couple have two daughters, Kelly and Anna.

Honours

Club

Celt

1978-79, 1980-81, 1981-82, 1985-86

1980, 1985

1982

Individual

1980

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Davie Provan - Scotland Football League Record from 26 Apr 1978 to 26 Apr 1978 clubs - Kilmarnock . Londonhearts.com . 6 August 2013.
  2. Web site: David Provan - Kilmarnock career info. https://web.archive.org/web/20140714143307/http://www.killiefc.com/DoYouRemember/DavieProvan.htm . 14 July 2014 .
  3. Web site: Scotland U21 Player David Provan Details . Fitbastats.com . 6 August 2013.
  4. News: Reynolds. Jim. Roy Aitken ordered off as Celtic crash out. 8 July 2014. The Glasgow Herald. 7 March 1978. 23.
  5. News: Paul. Ian. £120,000 Provan goes to Celtic. 8 July 2014. The Glasgow Herald. 19 September 1978. 26.
  6. News: Rangers Book Sparks Bias Debate. Daily Record. Keith. McLeod . 24 September 2011. 12 October 2007.
  7. News: Jacobs. Raymond. Faces that tell the tale of two managers. 8 July 2014. The Glasgow Herald. 20 November 1978. 17.
  8. http://www.thecelticwiki.com/page/1979-05-21%3A+Celtic+4-2+Rangers%2C+Premier+Division The Celtic Wiki (Celtic 4 Rangers 2)
  9. [1979–80 in Scottish football#Individual honours]
  10. http://www.celticunderground.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=85:the-bhoy-in-the-picturendavie-provan&catid=36:images&Itemid=60 The Bhoy in the Picture: Davie Provan
  11. Web site: Legendary commentator Archie MacPherson: I had a good run but I'd return to commentary tomorrow . Daily Record . 8 July 2014 . Paul . English . 27 April 2012.
  12. News: Roy of Celtic marches forward for Cup glory . The Glasgow Herald . 20 May 1985 . 8 July 2014 . 17 . Jim . Reynolds.
  13. News: Clark. Graham. Look back in anguish. 13 April 2015. Evening Times. 30 December 1986. 30.
  14. News: Paul. Ian. Mixed feelings as Walker joins up and McClair signs off. 13 April 2015. The Glasgow Herald. 2 July 1987. 15.
  15. News: Davie knew the score.... 13 April 2015. Evening Times. 2 July 1987. 44. 2 September 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170902101447/http://postimg.org/image/teaor8wi9/. dead.
  16. Web site: Provan, Davie. FitbaStats. 13 April 2015.
  17. News: Celtic go down but Provan is the real winner. The Glasgow Herald. 8 September 2013. 1 December 1987. Ian. Paul.
  18. Web site: Scotland Player David Alexander Provan, Games Played . Fitbastats.com . 6 August 2013.
  19. News: Scots hopes soar with victory over Israelis . The Glasgow Herald . 29 April 1981 . 24 . Jim . Reynolds.
  20. http://www.planetworldcup.com/CUPS/1982/squad_sco82.html Planet World Cup - Scotland's World Cup squad 1982
  21. http://www.scottishfa.co.uk/football_player_profile.cfm?page=3129&playerID=113824 Scottish FA - John Robertson
  22. http://www.sporting-heroes.net/football/scotland/davie-cooper-6057/scottish-caps-1979-90_a11238/ Sporting Heroes - Davie Cooper
  23. Web site: RedWeb, Legends - Peter Weir . 30 April 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140714181808/http://www.afc.co.uk/page/legutozindex/0,,10284,00.html . 14 July 2014 . dead .
  24. News: Cameron . Neil . The Big Interview: Davie Provan on a life in football, broadcasting and why Rangers never get criticised by their former players . 9 October 2020 . HeraldScotland . 24 September 2016.