| General |
| Alan McInally | ||
| ||
| Personal information | ||
|---|---|---|
| Full name: | Alan Bruce McInally | |
| Date of birth: | 10 February 1963 | |
| Place of birth: | Ayr, | |
| Height: | 1.86 m (6 ft 1 in) | |
| Playing position: | Striker | |
| Senior clubs | ||
| Years | Club | App (Gls) |
| 1980-1984 1984-1987 1987-1989 1989-1993 1993-1994 Total |
93 (32) 65 (17) 59 (18) 40 (10) 8 (0) 265 (77) | |
| National team | ||
| 1989-1990 | 8 (3) | |
Alan Bruce McInally (born 10 February 1963) is a Scottish former professional footballer, who played for Ayr United, Celtic, Aston Villa, Bayern Munich and Kilmarnock.
Ayr-born McInally variously went by the nicknames of Rambo and Big Mac and he is the son of Jackie McInally, who played in Kilmarnock's title-winning side of 1965, scoring 11 goals. He won his first medal in the 1985–86 season, when Celtic won the title on goal difference from Hearts. Although he played only 16 games (with one goal scored), in his third and last season at the club (1986–87), he scored 15 goals in his 38 league games.
He then moved to English club Aston Villa, helping them win promotion in 1988. He was transferred in 1989 to German giants Bayern Munich, where he stayed for four years. In his first season at Bayern he made 31 appearances and scored 10 goals as he helped them win the 1989–90 Bundesliga. During this period he appeared in eight international games for Scotland and was selected for their 1990 FIFA World Cup squad. After playing for Kilmarnock during the 1993/94 season, McInally retired from playing football. He has since worked in the media, most notably for the Sky Sports show Soccer Saturday. He also commentated on the FIFA 19 and FIFA 20 video games.
External links[]
| Scotland – 1990 FIFA World Cup |
|
1. Leighton
2. McNamara
3. Boyd
4. Calderwood
5. Hendry
6. T. McKinlay
7. Gallacher
8. Burley
9. Durie
10. Jackson
11. Collins
12. Sullivan
13. Donnelly
14. Lambert
15. Gemmill
16. Weir
17. B. McKinlay
18 . Elliott
19. Whyte
20. Booth
21. Gould
22. Dailly
Manager: |






