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The 1977/78 season was an unmitigated disaster for Celtic; fifth place in the league and no trophies won meant no European place for the first time since 1961, but perhaps the biggest debacle was the defeat to Kilmarnock in the Scottish cup replay at Rugby Park. Celtic were lucky to survive the first game and only a late Roddy MacDonald goal had saved the Celts’ blushes against the part time first division Ayrshire men. Killie deservedly won the replay and the gloomy mood of the huge number of Celtic fans who left Rugby Park on that dark February night and travelled back over the Fenwick Moors was compared by one scribe as akin to ‘Napoleon’s retreat from Moscow’.
There was one talking point amongst the Celtic support after the game and that was the performance of the Kilmarnock right winger, Davie Provan. He had tortured Celtic’s left flank in both cup ties, firstly giving Tommy Burns and then John Dowie a torrid time. The fact that Celtic had played two midfield men out of position at left back did not detract in any way from Provan’s sparkling performances.
In late summer 1978 I was in St. Gerard’s secondary school in Govan and
my PE teacher was a guy called Jackie McGillivray who was at that time
an Albion Rovers player and had previously been with St Mirren and
Kilmarnock. On the morning it was announced that Davie Provan had
signed for Celtic he was ecstatic and said it was Celtic’s best signing
for years. And he was not wrong, although Provan’s transfer was not to
be a smooth one. Kilmarnock were desperate for money but their board
were not happy about his destination and only the threat of Provan
going full time at a Paisley whiskey bond was to push the deal through.
And so on September 18th 1978 Davie Provan became a Celtic player in a
£125,000 record Scottish deal.
Davie was an immediate hit at Celtic and was a fans’ favourite for the
next eight years. He was one of a select band of players who was
comfortable playing in a wide position and was a superb crosser of the
ball (a dying art in this part of the world) particularly whilst on the
run and his entertaining style of play was to create many goals for
Celtic in the following years. His distinctive flowing curly locks
(look at him on TV these days and to think I used to presume he had
naturally curly hair !), jersey hanging over the shorts and socks
around the ankles made him a unique figure on the field of play.
Provan, unusually for a winger, was a marvellously consistent player
and was a stand out even in an era when there were many quality wingers
in the Scottish game such as Weir, Cooper, McLean, Milne, Scanlon and
Doyle. The irony is that Provan’s arrival was seen as the end of Johnny
Doyle’s Celtic career but Doyle was versatile enough to play in a
number of positions and the two of them became great friends. Doyle
even invested in a permed hair style and from a distance it was then
difficult to tell them apart.
By all accounts Davie also had a sense of humour and was heard to
remark to a snarling Alex MacDonald of Rangers in the heat of a Glasgow
Derby, that he could ‘keep a beach ball off him in a telephone box…!’
He was an integral part of two of the finest Celtic forward lines of
the modern era in the early 1980’s. The first being Provan, Sullivan,
McGarvey, Burns and McCluskey and the second – Provan McStay, McGarvey,
Burns and Nicholas. He had many great games for Celtic although perhaps
his finest was the League Cup Final in December 1982, when he ripped
the Rangers defence apart at Hampden, on a day of vile weather. Davie
created both goals that day in the 2-1 victory and also a hatful of
chances that were not taken, making the margin of victory tighter than
it should have been.
At the start of the 1985-86 season Davie had a return to form and was
giving his best performances for some time. Unfortunately his health
was now affected by Myalgic Encephalopathy (ME), better known as post
viral fatigue syndrome. Despite a courageous effort to continue his
career he had to retire in 1987 and 42,000 Celtic fans turned out on a
bitterly cold night to attend his testimonial against Brian Clough’s
Nottingham Forest side.
Davie Provan is currently an articulate newspaper columnist and erudite match summariser on Sky Sports.
Around 2000 I attended a charity night talk show in aid of the Little
Sisters of the Poor in a parish hall in Paisley, the name of which I
can’t recall, at the back of St Mirren’s old ground at Love Street.
Brian Dempsey organised it and had assembled an impressive array of
guests. As well as Dempsey, there was Paul Cooney, Hugh Keevins,
Charlie Nicholas, Gerry McNee and Davie Provan in the hall that night.
The panellists had brought various items with them to auction in the course of the evening to help raise funds.
Nicholas brought what I heard described as a ‘scabby pennant’. Provan
donated his first Scotland cap from 1979 and his 1985 Scottish Cup
Final jersey, the game in which he had scored such a dramatic equaliser
against Dundee United. Brian Dempsey at first refused to accept them
saying that they were of tremendous personal and sentimental value to
Provan and that he may regret this kind act in later years.
Provan, however, was adamant stating that he had the memories which
were priceless and that he was delighted they should go to help finance
such a worthy cause in helping the poor of the Third World. Gerry McNee
won the auction with a benevolent bid of £1000 and he now had Provan’s
1985 cup final top to go alongside his famous ‘Jimmy McGrory’ medal.
The elderly Mother Superior in the hall was totally overcome with
emotion, never thinking for a minute that such a vast sum of money
would have been raised on the night for the Sisters’ good deeds.
It wasn’t as if Davie Provan shared the faith of the Nuns he was
assisting that evening but he still gave generously. I could recall a
packed Jungle many years before chanting ;
‘There’s only one Davie Provan…!’
And having witnessed his charitable deed that night in Paisley, I knew there was indeed still, only one Davie Provan.
As for the pics, number 1 is an action shot from Rangers v Celtic match at Hampden on November 11th 1978.
Number 2 is a questionnaire from Match Weekly in 1980. Wonder whatever
happened to the 18 year old Celtic striker he picked for a player of
the future ?
Number 3 is from Match weekly also in 1983.
Number 4 is from Roy of the Rovers in 1980, the Aberdeen player being another fine winger of that era, Ian Scanlon.
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