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Leeds United Reserve Team Players:
Surname | Forename/aka | Debut Date | Leeds Career | Position | POB | DOB | DOD | Details |
Maddock | Steve | 23-01-1982 | 1982-1982 | F | | | | A consistent goalscorer in the 1981-82 season for the Juniors, he scored once in seven appearances for the Reserves in the same season, but did not progress further. |
Madeley | Paul Edward/Paul | 27-08-1962 | 1962-1981 | CH/MF | Beeston, Leeds | 20-09-1944 | | Capped twenty-four times by England, one of the Leeds all-time greats, he was a regular in the great Leeds teams of the late sixties and early seventies and yet never had a regular position, such was his versatility. He joined Leeds from Farsley Celtic in May 1962, when he played mainly at Centre-half and like his fellow players in the Juniors soon progressed through the Reserve team, although with Madeley he did not make his first team debut until January 1964 and it was a couple of years before he was truly a regular. Nevertheless, he became a member of the team that swept all before them and was an integral part of their success until he finally retired at the end of the 1980-81 season, with his record of thirty-three goals in seven hundred and twelve starts and fifteen games from the bench in all competitions. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Maguire | Peter | 30-04-1987 | 1986-1989 | IF | Holmfirth | 11-09-1969 | | Started with the Leeds Youth Training Scheme, progressing through the Juniors and Reserves to make his first team debut in May 1988. He played two League games for Leeds before moving to Huddersfield Town for £10,000 in September 1989. There he scored once in seven League games, six of which were from the bench. He also started twice on loan with Stockport County in September 1990. He later played a handful of games in Scottish football. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mahon | John/Jack | 14-09-1929 | 1929-1935 | OR/OL | Gillingham | 08-12-1911 | 00-12-1993 | After he started with New Brompton Excelsior, he joined Doncaster Rovers but never made the first team and Leeds signed him in June 1929. It took him a couple of seasons to break into the Leeds first team in January 1932, but scored twenty goals in seventy-eight League games before he was signed by West Bromwich Albion in September 1935. He went on to score thirty-nine goals in one hundred and thirteen League games at the Hawthorns before leaving for Huddersfield Town. He had made just six League appearances when WW2 intervened. He returned to Elland Road as a war-time guest and scored ten goals in thirty-three games. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Major | Wallace | 30-04-1921 | 1921-1921 | Gk | Seaton Deleval | 00-00-1897 | | Played the final two games of the 1920-21 season for the Leeds Reserve team. |
Makinson | James/Jim | 09-11-1935 | 1935-1944 | RH | Aspull | 25-01-1913 | 00-00-1979 | He was signed from Clitheroe on 12th November 1935 after a trial with the Leeds Reserve team. He made his first team debut in February 1936 and soon became a regular, which was quite a feat with internationals Willis Edwards, Wilf Copping and Bobby Browne all vying for the two wing half positions. He went on to make seventy first team appearances, but his career was ruined by the WW2, as although he made over one hundred war-time appearances for United, he was in his prime at that time and time and injuries meant that he could not play for United after the Football recommenced after WW2. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Malt | Robert | 30-11-1968 | 1967-1970 | CF | Ryehope | 04-11-1951 | | Joined Leeds from school and signed professional forms in November 1968. He progressed to the Reserves but never made the first team. He left to join Darlington in June 1970, but made just two League starts and two games from the bench. |
Mander | | 25-12-1951 | 1951-1952 | CH | | | | Nothing is known about this player who played just one game for the Reserves on Christmas Day 1951. |
Mangnall | David/Dave | 24-03-1928 | 1927-1929 | CF | Wigan | 21-09-1905 | 10-04-1962 | He started his career with Maltby New Church and Maltby Colliery and it was while with them that he had trials with Huddersfield Town, Rotherham County and Doncaster Rovers before being taken on by Leeds in November 1927, United had an abundance of strikers at the time and he was restricted to just nine League games in which he scored six goals. Huddersfield saw the potential and signed him on 11th December 1929 and he rewarded them with sixty-one League goals in seventy-nine games in four seasons. Throughout his career he maintained a high scoring ratio, with fourteen League goals in thirty-seven games while at Birmingham, twenty-eight in thirty-five at West Ham United, thirty-two in fifty-eight at Millwall and three in three at Queens Park Rangers. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mann | James Arthur/Jimmy | 08-03-1969 | 1967-1974 | CF | Goole | 15-12-1952 | | First noticed by Leeds as a twelve year-old he became an apprentice on leaving school before signing professional forms in December 1969. An England Youth International, he was 5ft 6 1/2ins and 11st 1lb as he progressed through the Leeds Juniors and into the Reserves before making the first team, as a substitute in September 1971 and going on to make four further starts in all competitions. He left Leeds for Bristol City in May 1974 and stayed there for almost eight seasons, scoring thirty-one goals in two hundred and five League starts and twenty-six from the bench. He moved to Barnsley in February 1982 and made fourteen League starts and had one game from the bench, without scoring. He started two games on a non-contract basis with Scunthorpe United in January 1983 before finishing his career with Doncaster Rovers, a month later where he made thirteen League starts.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Marginson | Karl Kevin/Karl | 27-05-1991 | 1991-1991 | OL | Manchester | 17-11-1970 | | The trialist from the Manchester area made only one appearance for the Leeds Reserves, as a fortieth minute substitute, for the injured Glynn Snodin. His career started with Stockport County as a Junior and then was with Blackpool, Curzon Ashton and Droylsden without playing first team fixtures. He joined Ashton United in 1990 and scored sixty-two goals in one hundred and forty-six appearances. He was twenty-two when he joined Rotherham United from Ashton United in March 1993 for £15,000 and went on to score once in eleven League starts and four more from the bench. The left footed midfield player found it difficult to adapt to the higher status and never really made his mark. His only goal came from the penalty spot in a 2-0 home win against Leyton Orient on October 22nd, 1994, and at the end of that season he was released to return to non-league football again. He was loaned to Macclesfield Town in March 1995 and scored once in seven appearances in the 1994-95 season. He was signed on a permanent basis in the close season and scored once in fourteen appearances, which gave him a total of two goals in eighteen starts and three games from the bench. He never really got a foothold in the first team and moved to Chorley in the summer of 1996. While at Chorley he was loaned to Ashton United and scored three goals in six appearances before leaving for Barrow in 1997. He helped them win the Northern Premier League, scoring the title clinching goal against nearest rivals Boston Utd. He moved to Stalybridge Celtic in 1999 and scored thirteen goals in thirty-four appearances before leaving in 2000. He joined Hyde United and scored once in twelve starts, and one game from the bench, before leaving in the same year and joining Salford City. From there he moved to Radcliffe Borough in 2003 and scored once in ten appearances. He moved to Flixton in 2004 and finally to Bacup Borough before moving to FC United of Manchester in 2005 and became manager. |
Markham | Frank | 02-11-1946 | 1946-1946 | CF | | | | Markham was a trialist from Newtown in the West Yorkshire League. He played for Portsmouth while in the forces. |
Marks | Jamie | 07-04-1994 | 1993-1994 | RH | Belfast | 18-03-1977 | | He joined Leeds as a trainee in 1993 and represented Northern Ireland Schoolboys and Youth teams. He started fifteen games and came off the bench twice in 1993-94 for the Juniors and he made one substitute appearance for the Reserves. He did not sign professional forms for Leeds but in April 1994 he signed for Hull City. He started eleven League games for the Tigers and came off the bench four times. In 1996 he went on loan to Linfield where he played four games. He signed permanently for them in the 1997 close season and went on to score seven goals in ninety-five appearances before moving to Ballymena United in 2003 and scored four goals in thirty-two games in two seasons. He joined Portadown in the 2005 close season and made forty-eight appearances, without scoring in three seasons. He joined Crusaders in 2008 and played twelve games without scoring before joining Belfast side, Harland & Wolff Welders in 2010. |
Marsden | Jack | 28-08-1950 | 1950-1959 | CH | Leeds | 17-12-1931 | | He started with Osmondthorpe YMCA, joining the Leeds United Juniors in August 1948, signing professional on 25th August 1950. He soon progressed to the Reserves and went on to make his League debut in March 1953. He was for a few seasons in direct opposition to Jack Charlton for the Centre-Half position once John Charles had moved to the forwards. It was in that period that he made his seventy-five first-team appearances. However, the future World Cup winning centre-half prevailed and Marsden had to be satisfied to play second fiddle in the Reserves. This he did for several seasons before joining Barrow in March 1959. He made forty-seven League appearances for them before moving to Carlisle United in September 1960. He made eighty-eight League appearances at Brunton Park, before leaving in July 1964 to finish his League career with Doncaster Rovers with two League games in 1964.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Marsh | Clifford/Cliff | 09-10-1948 | 1948-1949 | IF | Atherton | 29-12-1920 | | After starting with Tyldesley & Nelson, Marsh joined Leeds from Winsford United on 29th September 1948. He soon made his first team debut in October 1948 and went on to score once in five games. He left for Bournemouth in May 1949, where he scored twice in thirty-nine League games until he left for Non-League Worcester City in June 1952.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Marshall | Robert | 31-03-1951 | 1950-1951 | FB | Burton-on-Trent | | | Marshall was thought to be a Wolverhampton Wanderers Junior, who joined Leeds early in the 1950-51 season. He did play some Resrve games but never was in contention for the First team. He was released at the end of the season on 2nd May 1951. He is thought to have joined Bristol Rovers on a free transfer on 24th July 1951, but never made their first team. |
Martin | Alan | 04-05-2000 | 1998-2002 | CH/FB | Dublin | 21-11-1981 | | Joined Leeds as a Trainee from school and left his home in Rush in Fingal, County Dublin, in July 1998 and made his progress through the Junior teams to the Reserves but that was as far as he went and was released at the end of the 2000-01 season. He went for a trial with Hull City from 30th April to 2nd May 2001. |
Martin | Cornelius Joseph/Con | 24-04-1948 | 1947-1948 | CH/G | Rush, Dublin | 20-03-1923 | 24-02-2013 | He joined United in December 1946 for £8,000 from Glentoran. He was sold to Aston Villa for £10,000 in October 1948 as Leeds struggled financially and on the field. He scored once in forty-nine games for the first team and was a regular and ever-present unless injured or on international duties. While he never played in goal for Leeds he was a first class keeper, appearing for almost a complete season for Aston Villa and also played in that position for Ireland. He was capped thirty times by the republic and six times by Northern Ireland. He scored once in one hundred and ninety-four League games and nineteen F.A. Cup ties for Aston Villa before returning to play for Waterford before retiring.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Martin | Geoffrey/Geoff | 20-08-1960 | 1960-1961 | OL | New Tupton | 09-03-1940 | | Starting with Parkhouse Colliery, he signed for Chesterfield in October 1958 and had made two League appearances when he signed for Leeds in May 1960. He did not make a League appearance for United but did play one game for them in the League Cup, curiously against his former club, in November 1960. At 5ft 9ins and 11st 6lb he was handily built for a winger, but after spending his time mostly in the Reserves, he left for Darlington in July 1961. He joined a succession of clubs after scoring six goals in twenty League games at Feethams. In May 1962 , he went to Carlisle United, where he scored twice in fifteen League games, then to Workington in December 1962, where he spent several seasons, scoring twenty-four goals in one hundred and forty-four League games until he joined Grimsby Town in November 1966, which saw him score five goals in seventy-one League games. He completed the full circle when he returned to the Spireites in July 1968 and in his final season helped them to the Fourth Division Championship before retiring in June 1970, having scored four goals in forty-three League appearances in his second spell with the club.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Martin | John/Jack | 20-12-1924 | 1924-1926 | OL | Bishop Auckland | 10-12-1904 | 00-03-1984 | He joined United in July 1924 from Darlington. He only managed two games for the first team, but was more often in the United Reserves. He left for Accrington Stanley in June 1926. There he scord eight goals in forty-four League appearances before he left for a succession of Non-League clubs.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Masinga | Philomen Raul/Phil/Chippa | 17-08-1994 | 1994-1996 | IR | Klerksdorp, South Africa | 28-06-1969 | | Masinga started his football career at Primary School, and joined the coaching schools of Jomo Sono and joined Jomo Midas Cosmos in 1988. He was soon noticed by Mamelodi Sundowns and he moved to them in 1991. He was an almost instant success with the Pretoria side and was called up by South Africa for his first cap against Cameroon at Kings Park Stadium in Durban on 7th July 1992. He scored his first International goal in his third International, just four days later against the same opposition. He and Lucas Radebe were spotted by Leeds United's scout Geoff Speight. Striker Masinga completed his move to Leeds in August 1994 for £250,000 from Mamelodi Sundowns and Lucas Radebe was bought from Kaizer Chiefs for the same amount. The tall goalscorer had helped the Sundowns to the South Africa title the previous season with eighteen goals and was first choice for Bafana Bafana and soon settled into his scoring rhythm in Leeds' pre-season friendlies, scoring five times in two games against poor opposition in Italy, as he set about trying to force himself into the Leeds team. He was already up against Rod Wallace, Brian Deane and David White, as well as up-and-coming Noel Whelan and Jamie Forrester, but late in his first season goalscoring sensation Tony Yeboah also arrived. However, he quickly showed his poaching talents at the top level, scoring a nine-minute extra-time hat-trick after coming on as a substitute against Walsall in an FA Cup replay. His first season at Leeds saw him progress, but with the advent of Tony Yeboah and the rise of Noel Whelan and the arrival of Tomas Brolin, he was only used sparingly in his second year, although he collected an African Cup of Nations winners’ medal when the competition was staged in his native South Africa. Tall and leggy, he showed good ball skills, but his individual style did not always fit in with United’s system. Christened "Waltzing Masinga", he was popular with the fans, who appreciated his wholehearted endeavour. He scored five League goals in twenty starts and eleven games as a substitute, while at Elland Road. He had taken his International appearances to twenty-five before he left Leeds for Swiss club St Gallen in July 1996 for £500,000, after being unable to get an extension to his work permit, due to the lack of first team appearances. He only featured in ten games in Switzerland before joining Italian side Salernitana later in the 1996-97 season and there he scored four goals in sixteen games. He then moved on to Bari, where he established himself as a successful fringe player, scoring twenty-four goals in seventy-five games in his five seasons' stay. He had remained a regular with Bafana Bafana during his European sojourn and was part of the team that finished second to Egypt in the 1998 African Cup of Nations. He also scored the goal in 1997 against the Democratic Republic of Congo which took South Africa to the 1998 World Cup in France. In July 2001 he signed for Coventry City but ran into work permit problems once more. He went to Al-Wahda in Abu Dabai for the 2001-2002 season. He retired after an injury to a knee that had already been the subject of two operations. Masinga represented South Africa fifty-eight times Fifty-three starts and five appearances as a substitute scoring nineteen goals, making his final appearance as a sixty-ninth minute substitute against Sweden in Stockholm on 15th August 2001 and scoring his nineteenth and final goal in the twenty-sixth minute of his fifty-fifth International appearance in a 2-1 win over Malawi in the World Cup Qualifier on 25th February 2001. South African fans remained faithful to Masinga and he had a considerable following, being widely regarded as one of the best South African strikers of all time. In 2006 he briefly coached PJ Stars in the Mvela Golden League. He was also an ambassador for South Africa’s bid for the 2010 World Cup. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mason | Clifford Ernest/Cliff | 08-12-1962 | 1962-1964 | LB | York | 27-11-1929 | | Mason started with Sunderland in January 1950, but never made the first team and moved to Darlington in July 1952. He played one hundred and seven League games for them before moving to Sheffield United in August 1955. While not always first choice, he remained at Bramall Lane until March 1962, having scored twice in ninety-seven League games. He then joined Leeds, who were fighting to stave off relegation and enlisted the help of several experienced players. His experience did ensure survival for Leeds and, for a time, he was captain and a steadying influence but Leeds had several youngsters, and the converted Willie Bell, who soon overtook him in the fight for the left back position. So, in February 1964, after thirty-three appearances in all competitions, he moved to Scunthorpe United where he scored once in twelve League games before the end of the season, when he joined Chesterfield in July 1964 and managed five League appearances before he retired at the end of the 1964-65 season. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mason | George | 12-02-1921 | 1920-1923 | OR | Church Gresley | 16-09-1896 | 00-07-1987 | Signed from Frickley Colliery in July 1920 and soon became the first choice Outside-Right with the first team, missing but a handful of games in the 1920-21 season and making just two appearances for the Reserves. In the 1921-22 season he and Walter Coates vied for the position and in his third season there was a three way competition as Alan Noble staked his claim. He left for Swindon Town in June 1923. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mason | Robert/Bobby | 01-04-1922 | 1922-1927 | CH | Whitburn | 13-05-1901 | 00-00-1981 | He was signed from Whitburn on 20th March 1922 after a period on trial in which he had made his Reserve team debut. He added two or more games before the end of the season and soon became the Reserve team first choice Centre Half and a more than capable deputy for Ernie Hart, whenever the need arose, with the first team. He gave the club outstanding service until the end of the 1926-27, when he was transferred to Bristol Rovers. He failed to make a League appearance at Eastville and he returned to the North-East where he scored once in thirteen appearances with Hartlepools United in the 1928-29 before finishing his playing days at West Stanley. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Matassa | Vince | 28-09-1995 | 1995-1995 | Gk | Perth, Western Australia | 21-09-1973 | | He was part of the Young Socceroos squad that toured Europe in March 1992 and he took part in five games against European club opposition. This was the forerunner to the World Youth team internationals held in Venezuela in September 1992 where he played five of the six games Australia played before they lost the play-off for third place. He then played one of three friendlies in Chile and Uruguay. In 1993 he represented the Australian Under Twenty team, playing five games in the 1993 Under-Twenty World Cup, and was at the Australian Institute of Sport. He joined Perth Italia at the beginning of 1993, but moved on to Perth Kangaroos IFC early in 1994 until July 1994. He moved to the Morwell Falcons in the NSL in August 1994 for the1994-95 season and made twenty-two League appearances for them and also played twice in the 1994-95 play-offs. He then sought to break into European football and trialled for several English clubs, one of which was Leeds United, where he played twice for the Reserves in late September/early October 1995, but ran into visa problems. He rejoined Perth Glory in the NSL in July 1996 and made eleven appearances for them in the 1996-97 season. He had a spell with Basingstoke Town in 1999-2000 then Woking in 2000-01 and also Salisbury City and Dorchester before he returned to Australia in October 2001 where he rejoined Perth Glory in the NSL and started one game in each of the seasons of 2001-02, 2002-03 and 2003-04. He then moved to Stirling Lions SC in April 2004 before retiring in December 2004.
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Matthewman, Arnold | Arnold | 09-03-1955 | 1955-1955 | Gk | | | | He signed for Leeds on 9th March 1955 from Farsley Celic, having previously been an amateur with Kippax Legionnaires & Carlton Utd. He left Leeds at the end of the season and later played for Selby Town in the 1955-6 season
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Matthews | David | 23-12-1978 | 1978-1980 | WH | Shipley | | | He joined Leeds as an apprentice in May 1978. A midfielder who could play in attack, he broke into the Reserve team and soon found the net on two occasions, but he did not make the first team. |
Matthews | Lee Joseph/Lee | 28-12-1995 | 1995-2001 | CF | Middlesbrough | 16-01-1979 | | The 6ft 1ins 13st 3lb Centre Forward scored on his debut in the Reserves in his only appearance for them in the 1995-96 season, but in his first year traineeship he had shown his worth with seventeen goals in sixteen starts and six from the bench for the strong Leeds Youth team that finished runner up in the Northern Intermediate League. It got much better for the Juniors the following year as they won the League and the F.A. Youth Cup, with Matthews playing a leading role with twenty-six goals in twenty-two starts in the League and five goals in ten starts and one game from the bench in the Cup. He also scored once in three starts and two games from the bench in the Reserves. He signed professional forms in August 1997 and in early 1998 he made three substitute appearances for the first team, but with Rod Wallace, Jimmy Floyd Hasselbank and Alan Smith in front of him in the pecking order he had to bide his time, but when the first two left they were replaced by Darren Huckerby and Michael Bridges and in 2001-02 Mark Viduka was added. In September 1998 he was loaned to Notts County, where he started five games, before he was injured and only recovered in March 2000, when he was loaned to Gillingham and started five games. He was then loaned to Bristol City on 15th March 2001 and scored when making his debut as a substitute on 20th March 2001. He was signed on a permanent contract for £100,000, but in three years he had only scored eight goals in a further fourteen starts in the League but had also come on as a substitute in twenty-eight more. He had been a regular initially but he missed many games due to an ankle injury. He was going to have an operation in the close season but opted to rest it instead. Manager Danny Wilson was frustrated by the situation and placed him on the transfer list in April 2002. The 2002-03 season was a disaster as Matthews suffered a slipped disc and it took him ten months to recover. The 2003-04 season was another failure as he was used mostly as a substitute and was loaned out to three clubs, Darlington, from 10th December 2003 to 11th January 2004, when he scored once in six starts, Bristol Rovers, from 12th January to 17th March 2004, when he started nine League games without scoring, and to Yeovil Town, from 18th March to 9th May 2004, where he started two and was a substitute twice in the League without scoring. He joined Port Vale on a free transfer on 9th June 2004 and found form with ten goals in the League from twenty-one starts and thirteen from the bench but while he justified himself in the 2004-05 season, 2005-06 was a disaster as his injury problems worsened and he played just three games. He was released at the end of that season. He then joined Crewe Alexandra on a free transfer on 30th August 2006 but failed to score in ten substitute appearances as injuries again took their toll and he was released on 31st May 2007. He was signed on a free transfer by Scottish side Livingston on 1st July 23007, but only started three League games and two games from the bench in which he failed to score and was released on 31st May 2008. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Matthews | Robert David/Robbie | 27-11-1991 | 1991-1991 | IR/CF | Slough | 14-10-1970 | | An English Schoolboy International, who also represented Great Britain, along with David Wetherall in the World Student Games. He was playing with Loughborough University, when he had trials with Leeds, coming on as a seventy-first minute substitute on debut and then scoring a hat-trick in his second game when he was a half-time replacement. He started two further games at centre-forward, in which he failed to find the net. Notts County signed him on a free transfer on 26th March 1992 and in three years he scored eleven goals in forty-thre games, of which twenty were from the bench. Luton Town signed him for £80,000 on 17th March 1995 but he failed to score in six starts and five games from the bench. York City paid £90,0000 for him on 8th September 1995 and he scored once in seventeen League games of which three were from the bench, before Bury signed him for £100,000 on 12th January 1996. He stayed there for almost three years, scoring eleven goals in in fifty -four starts and twenty from the bench. Stockport County signed him for £120,000 on 13th November 1998 and he went on to score four goals in twenty-nine League starts and nine games as a substitute. While at Edgeley Park he was twice loaned out. Firstly to Blackpool for a month in January 2000 when he scored twice in five starts and one game from the bench, and then in February 2001, when he was at Halifax Town, where he scored twice in eight League starts. On 21st March 2001, he was signed on a free transfer by Hull City and he scored three goals from nineteen League starts and six games as a substitute. He then joined Northwich Victoria on a free transfer on 26th July 2002, but only started three League games and came off the bench three times, without scoring, before moving to Mossley on 28th October 2002. He stayed at Mossley for two seasons scoring twenty-seven goals in fifty-nine appearances, before retiring due to family illness and he played his final game for them on 7th February 2004. |
Mauchlen | Alistair Henry/Ali | 25-03-1992 | 1992-1992 | RH | Kilwinning, West Kilbride | 29-09-1960 | | Mauchlen started with Irvine Meadow before joining Kilmarnock in July 1978, where he scored ten goals in one hundred and twenty-three games, of which nine goals and one hundred and twelve starts and six games from the bench were in the League. He then moved to Motherwell four years later, in July 1982, for £40,000, where he met up with Gary McAllister. After scoring four times in seventy-six League games, starting in all but one, the two were both sold to Leicester City for a combined fee of £250,000 on 18th August 1985. At Leicester he made two hundred and twenty-eight League starts and another eleven from the bench and scored eleven League goals. In the closing weeks of their championship season of 1991-92 season he went on a month’s loan to Leeds United and, while he never set foot on the pitch in the famous white shirt, he was an unused substitute in the 5-1 thrashing of Wimbledon at Elland Road on 14th March that season, and again in the 0-0 home draw with West Ham United. He did, however, also start five games for the Reserve team. He had been largely overlooked by new Leicester Manager Brian Little and when Leeds did not extend his loan period he moved back north of the border to Hearts. He remained at Hearts from 22nd July 1992 to 25th August 1993, making sixteen Scottish League starts and two substitute appearances without scoring. He joined up with Irish League club Glenavon on 1st December 1993. He arrived at Ballymena United, in July 1995, where he scored twice and made twenty-two appearances in the following season, before leaving Ireland in May 1996. He returned to the Midlands with Leicester United, until they went out of existence and then had spells with Corby Town, VS Rugby, Hinchley Town and then coached his old team Glenavon and Oadby Town. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Maybury | Alan Paul/Alan | 21-12-1995 | 1995-2001 | RB | Dublin, Republic of Ireland | 08-08-1978 | | The 5ft 8ins and 11st 4lb defender started at Leeds in central defence before being converted to right back but had the versatility to play most defensive positions. He had been discovered playing with Dublin Junior club, St Kevin's Boys Club, who he started with in August 1994 but signed as a Trainee with Leeds on 17th August 1995. He made his first team debut in February 1996, made thirteen appearances for the Reserve team in the 1995-96, as well as twenty-three starts in the Youth team. He started seven and came off the bench on two more occasions for the reserves in the 1996-97 season and was a regular in the Youth team that won the Northern Intermediate League and the F.A. Youth Cup, starting twenty-five League games together with one from the bench, while in the Cup he started all eleven ties. He went on to start ten and came of the bench on four occasions in the League for the first team in his six year stay at Leeds, as Gary Kelly was almost ever-present in the right back role. So he featured regularly in the reserves and was twice loaned out to other clubs. He was loaned to Reading from 25th March to 9th May 1999, making eight starts and then from 6th October to 5th November 2000 with Crewe Alexandra where he started six League games. Rather than face life in the Leeds Reserves he opted to move to Heart of Midlothian in Scotland for £100,000 on 12th October 2001. He made one hundred and twelve Scottish League appearances at Tynecastle, of which two were as a substitute before leaving for Leicester City on 6th January 2005. He scored four goals in eighty-five League games for the Foxes of which two were from the bench in a three year stay. He was released by Leicester on 15th May 2008. He moved back to Scotland, on loan with Aberdeen on 31st January 2008, starting thirteen Scottish League games before leaving on 23rd May 2008. He had a trial with Bristol City on 23rd July 2008. After a three week trial, he went to Colchester United on a free transfer on 12th December 2008 and signed a further contract on 23rd June 2009. He started twenty-six League games and had one as a substitute before returning on 20th August 2112 to Scotland with St Johnstone. He started thirty-eight Scottish League and also came off the bench on another fourteen occasions. On 1st August 2012 he joined Hibernian on a free transfer on a one year contract, and made forty-one Scottish League appearances, of which three were as a substitute. He extended his contract for another year in 2013 as a player and also coach of the development team. The club was relegated at the end of 2013-14 season and Maybury was released. Now rising thirty-six, he looked to the future and coaching when he joined Falkirk on 3rd July 2014 He took charge of the club's Development squad but still played six games, including one as a substitute but had not played since 22nd November 2014. While always in the shadow of Gary Kelly, he made two appearances for the Republic of Ireland's Under-Twenty-One in 1998 and in the same year he represented the "B" team once. He gained ten full caps for the Republic.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Mayers | Derek | 02-09-1961 | 1961-1962 | OR | Liverpool | 24-01-1935 | | He started as a Junior with Everton, signing professional in August 1952 and scored seven goals in eighteen games before moving to Preston North End in May 1957. He had a good spell at Deepdale scoring twenty-five goals in one hundred and eighteen League games before moving to Elland Road in June 1961. He was in the starting team for the first three games of the 1961-62 season but, while he was sometimes left out for Gerry Francis, he did manage to score five times in twenty League games before losing his place to the rising star, Billy Bremner, and he left for Bury in July 1962. At Gigg Lane he scored six goals in thirty-two League games before leaving in October 1963 to finish his career with Wrexham where he scored twice in twenty-one League games.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Maxfield | Scott | 10-04-1995 | 1995-1995 | OL | Doncaster | 13-07-1976 | | Starting as a Trainee with Doncaster Rovers, he went on to sign professional for them in July 1994 and scored once in twenty-two League starts and seven games from the bench. He came to Leeds on trial and played one game for the Reserves, before returning to Belle Vue. He went on to join Hull City in March 1996 and started twenty-three League games for them together with twelve as a substitute. He was released by the Tigers at the end of the 1997-98 season and he return to Doncaster and scored once in forty-five starts in the Conference League. He was released at the end of the 1999-2000 season and joined Barrow where he played three seasons before retiring. |
McAdam | David Frederick/David | 21-08-1948 | 1948-1950 | HB | Hereford | 03-04-1923 | | Played for Aston Villa as an amateur and joined Leeds from Stapenhill W.M.C. on 3rd May 1948. He made twenty-four appearances for the Leeds first team after his debut in September 1948. Joined Wrexham in May 1950, where he made ten League appearances. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McAdams | | 23-11-1957 | 1957-1957 | OL | | | | Nothing is known of this player who made just one appearance for the reserves. |
McAdams | William John/Billy | 14-02-1962 | 1961-1962 | CF | Belfast | 21-01-1934 | 13-10-2002 | He joined Leeds from Bolton Wanderers in December 1961 and left for Brentford in July 1962. He played a few games with the Reservesbutwas generally in the first team.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McAllister | Gary | 31-03-1993 | 1990-1996 | IR | Motherwell | 25-12-1964 | | He started with Fir Park Boys Club, before joining the professional ranks with his native Motherwell in 1981. He was blooded into the Motherwell side at a very early age with a substitute appearance in each of the 1981-82 and 1982-83 seasons before making seventeen starts and four substitute appearances as Motherwell were relegated from the Scottish Premier Division in 1983-84. He was then part of the Motherwell team of 1984-85 which gained promotion to the top flight as Champions of the Scottish First Division, scoring six goals in thirty-four starts and one substitute appearance. There was constant speculation in Scotland about his future because of his great vision and passing accuracy and on 15th August 1985, after one game further for Motherwell in the 1985-86 season, he headed for Leicester City with teammate Ally Mauchlen, later to have a month’s loan with Leeds, in a £250,000 deal. He scored six goals in fifty-two starts and seven substitute appearances in the Scottish League while at Fir Park. He settled in well at Filbert Street and his classic passing style soon gained him plenty of admirers and international recognition as he was called up by Scotland "B" firstly on 28th April 1987 in a 1-1 draw with France "B" at Pittodrie, when he scored the Scottish goal, and two days later at the same venue and against the same country he was again on target as the scoreline was repeated in his Under-Twenty-One debut. He went on to gain a second Under-Twenty-One cap on 14th November 1989 in a 2-0 win over Norway at Muirton Park, Perth, home of St Johnstone, and on 27th March 1990 he returned to his former home ground of Fir Park to gain his second "B" cap in a 0-0 draw with Yugoslavia, before making his full Scotland debut on 25th April 1990 in a 0-1 defeat by East Germany at Hampden Park. His Leicester career had seen him establish himself as a major force in their midfield and an outstanding talent in the Second Division once Leicester had been relegated in 1986-87. He had regularly contributed to the Foxes' goal tally with seven in thirty-one games in 1985-86, and nine in thirty-nine games, while they were in the top flight and this continued as they fell into the Second Division. He was the even club's leading goalscorer in two seasons, as he scored nine in forty starts and two games from the bench in 1987-88 and ten goals in forty-three starts in 1989-90, but his best season was 1988-89 when he scored eleven goals in forty-six starts. He had established his danger from set pieces, particularly from the penalty-spot and free-kicks within shooting range. It was clear he was destined for greater things, but he rejected a £1.15 million move to Nottingham Forest because he was unimpressed by Brian Clough’s blunt approach. With Forest out of the picture and McAllister out of contract, Leeds swooped and a transfer tribunal set the fee at £1 million. After scoring forty-seven goals in one hundred and ninety-nine starts and two substitute League appearances, while at Filbert Street, he arrived at Elland Road with three caps to his name but soon became a Scotland regular and became rated as one of Europe’s best midfielders. Midfield Architect McAllister proved the most consistant Leeds player in his six seasons at Elland Road, and was as articulate off the field as on it. His purchase after United's rise to th EPL signalled a change of emphasis as Leeds sought to add skill to the muscular aspect of their game. Leeds performed well in 1990-91, McAllister's first season at Elland Road. The club finished fourth in the table and reached the League Cup semi-finals, not a bad accomplishment for a newly promoted side. McAllister dovetailed perfectly with Gordon Strachan, David Batty and Gary Speed and the all-star international midfield quartet were magnificent as Leeds won the 1991-92 First Division title and followed up by taking the Charity Shield. The rest of McAllister's time at Leeds saw the club fail to recapture those heights. Despite this, between 1992 and 1996, he captained the side and won a special place in the hearts of Leeds United fans with his fine attitude and blistering long-range strikes. His final season with Leeds, 1995-1996, may have been disappointing, as they finished sixteenth in the Premiership, but it allowed McAllister to achieve one of his first footballing ambitions, to captain a side at Wembley. He led his side out in the 1996 League Cup Final but the game ended in a dismal 0-3 defeat by Aston Villa. McAllister succeeded Gordon Strachan as captain for both club and country and rarely missed a match in his time at Elland Road. He led Scotland’s assault on the 1996 European Championships but unfortunately for him, he would not want to dwell on the competition after missing a penalty which would have drawn Scotland level against England at Wembley. It was all the more unusual, as apart from being the possessor of a wide variety of skills, he was a proven deadly exponent of free-kicks and penalties. He always looked comfortable in possession, packed a powerful shot and proved an intelligent ambassador for the club before his sale to Coventry City for £3 million in July 1996. He scored thirty-one League goals from two hundred and thirty starts an one more as a substistute at Elland Road. While at Leeds his International career had seen him score four goals in thirty-seven starts and four games from the bench to bring his caps to forty-four. From 1996 until 2000 McAllister served Coventry first under manager Ron Atkinson and then former Leeds team-mate Gordon Strachan. He scored twenty goals in one hundred and nineteen starts in the League at Highfield Road. His International career came to an end on 31st March 1999, when he Captained Scotland at Celtic Park as they went down 1-2 to the Czech Republic and he had added thirteen more caps to his collection to bring it to fifty-seven, including five as a substitute. In his forty-eighth start for Scotland on 8th June 1997, in a 1-0 win in Minsk over Belarus in a Group Four World Cup qualifier he scored from the penalty spot to register his fifth and final International goal to get the Scotland winner. He had just won the Coventry City "Player of the Year" award for the 1999-20000 season, so it came as he shock when, on 1st July 2000, he completed a surprise move to Liverpool. Not many would have doubted McAllister's ability but many Reds fans may have questioned manager Gerard Houllier’s decision to sign a player who was by now thirty-five years old. With Liverpool he won a League Cup winners’ medal, an F.A. Cup winners’ medal and a UEFA Cup winners’ medal in 2000-01, in which he also won the "Man of the Match" award in the final, and also won the Charity Shield and European Super Cup in 2001-02. He scored five times in fifty-five League appearances, twenty of which were as a substitute, while at Anfield. On 13th May 2002 he became Player-Manager and scored ten goals in fifty five League starts, in his second spell at Coventry. As the holder of more than fifty caps he became a member of the Scotland Football Hall of Fame. He was a member of the Scotland 1990 World Cup squad and captained their Euro 1996 team. In 2001 he received an MBE for services to football. He became Manager at Elland Road on 29th January 2008 and led the club to the League One Play-off Final at Wembley. During his second season as Manager McAllister was sacked on 21st December 2008 after a poor string of results. Since then he has coveted the Motherwell Manager's job, turned down the offer of a job on the coaching team for Scotland, and then finally decided not to become Paul Hart's assistant at Portsmouth. On 20th May 2010 he was appointed First Team Coach at Middlesbrough by Gordon Strachan. On 18th September 2010, he became Gerard Houllier's Assistant Manager at Aston Villa. After Houllier was rushed to hospital McAllister became Caretaker-Manager for the Premier League home game against Stoke City on 23rd April 2011, which ended in a 1-1 draw. Although Villa went down 1-2 at West Bromwich Albion a week later, McAllister was then in charge of the team in a 1-1 home draw with Wigan Athletic the following weekend followed by a 2-1 away win against Arsenal on 15th May 2011 and a 1-0 home win over Liverpool a week later. Despite this, it was announced on 17th June 2011, that after the appointment of Alex McLeish as Manager, that McAllister would not return to the club.
(Leeds United Player Details) |
McCabe | James Joseph/Jim | 24-09-1949 | 1948-1954 | HB | Draperstown | 17-09-1918 | 00-07-1989 | Starting with South Bank he joined Middlesbrough in May 1937, but he did not make his League debut until after WW2 and made thirty-four appearances for the Tees-siders before joining Leeds on 12th March 1948. He went on to gain six caps for Northern Ireland and feature regularly in the Leeds team, making one hundred and sixty-one appearances, before leaving for Peterborough United in May 1954. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McCall | Andrew/Andy | 13-09-1952 | 1952-1955 | W/IF | Hamilton | 15-03-1925 | | After starting with Blantyre Celtic, he joined Blackpool in July 1947. H e scored fifteen goals in eighty-four League games at Bloomfield Road before joining West Bromwich Albion in January 1951. At the Hawthorns he scored three times in thirty-one League games and then moved to Leeds on 1st August 1952. He went straight into the first team at Inside-left but immediately moved to inside-right before giving way to Don Mills after four games. He spent half the season with the Reserves before intermittently regaining his first team spot as inside, and then, outside right. It was a similar story in the following season before he found the outside left spot more to his liking in the 1954-55 season. He went on to score eight goals in sixty-two League games before leaving for Lovell's Athletic in the 1955 close season. On 23rd July 1956 he returned to League football with Halifax Town where he scored fifteen goals in one hundred and thirty-nine League games in a four year stay. The father of Scottish International Stuart McCall, he played for East End Park in the late 1960's, when well into his forties.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McCalliog | James/Jim | 01-04-1963 | 1963-1963 | IF | Glasgow | 23-09-1946 | | A Scottish International Schoolboy he joined the Leeds Juniors as an amateur and signed after a trial in May 1963 and had progressed to the Leeds Reserves and seemed destined to follow in the path of several other Scottish players on the Leeds books at that time but he decided to join Tommy Docherty at Chelsea in September 1963. He scored twice in seven League appearances at Stamford Bridge but he was obviously destined for better things. He did fulfill his potential gaining five full Scottish Caps and as well as caps at each level. In October 1965, he joined Sheffield Wednesday and scored nineteen goals in one hundred and fifty League games. He left the Owls for Wolverhampton Wanderers in August 1969, where he scored thirty-four goals in one hundred and sixty-three League games, including five from the bench. He moved to Manchester United in March 1974 and there scored seven goals in thirty-one League games. Just under a year later, in February 1975 he moved to Southampton, where he scored eight goals in seventy starts and two from the bench in League games before finishing his English career by joining Lincoln City in September 1978 and made nine League appearances at Sincil Bank before leaving for the USA. |
McCarron | Cathol | 30-04-1985 | 1985-1985 | OL | | | | Nothing is known of this player who made just one appearance for the reserves, but laid on the Leeds first goal before being replaced by Tommy McDermott. |
McClelland | John | 30-08-1989 | 1989-1992 | CH | Belfast | 07-12-1955 | | He started in his home country with Portadown at an early age and his games did enough to impress Cardiff City, who paid £8,0000 to signed him in February 1974. He was given his first team chance and had scored once in one League start and three games from the bench by the end of the 1974-75 season. He moved to Non-League Bangor City in June 1975 and became a very sound and much appreciated fan-favourite before Billy Bingham took him to Mansfield Town in February 1978. He scored eight goals in one hundred and twenty-two League starts together with three more as a substitute before Glasgow Rangers paid £90,000 to take him to Ibrox Park in June 1981. He had already started his collection of Northern Ireland International caps, making his debut as a substitute on 16th May 1980 and during his stay with Rangers he went on to become club captain of the Glasgow club and become a regular for them and Northern Ireland finishing with one goal from fifty-one starts and three from the bench for fifty-four caps. He scored four goals in ninety-six Scottish League starts at Ibrox before he was sold to Watford for £225,000 in November 1984. He was to stay at Vicarage Road for almost five seasons scoring three goals in one hundred and eighty-four League starts, when Howard Wilkinson brought him to Leeds for £110,000 in June 1989, as defensive cover. That was to be his role for his time at Elland Road as he understudied Chris Fairclough, Peter Haddock and later Chris Whyte while the younger Jon Newsome and David Wetherill also waited. He was loaned out to former club, Watford, for one game in January 1990, and Notts County in March 1992, where he started six League games. For Leeds, he started twenty-two and came from the bench twice in League games before joining Scottish Premier side, St Johnstone, as player-coach in July 1992. He became their Manager in November 1993. It did not last long and he made twenty-six starts and one substitute appearance for them. He moved back across the Irish Sea for eleven League starts with Carrick Rangers, but soon moved back to Scotland with Arbroath for two games. He then linked up with Wycombe Wanderers in February 1994, but did not play, before joining Yeovil Town in the GM Vauxhall Conference the following month, scoring one goal in twenty-one games, of which one was off the bench. In March 1996 he was appointed assistant to Chris Kamara at Bradford City after playing in the Northern Counties East League with Farsley Celtic. He moved to Darlington in October 1996, but only played one game and suffered a career ending injury. McClelland then conducted tours of Elland Road, on a permanent basis.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McCluskey | George McKinley Cassidy/George | 31-08-1983 | 1983-1986 | CF | Hamilton, Lanarkshire | 19-09-1957 | | Capped Five times at Schoolboy, four times at Youth and seven times by Scotland at Under-Twenty-One level, he joined Celtic from school, progressing through the Celtic Boy's Club before signing professional forms on 22nd July 1974. He had a spell on loan with Thorniewood United but returned and made his Celtic debut in the 1975-76 season. He scored fifty-five goals in one hundred and nine starts and twenty-two League games from the bench, before joining Leeds on 26th July 1983 for £161,000. He went on to score sixteen goals in seventy-three League games, of which sixteen were from the bench before leaving for Hibernian in July 1986. At Easter Road he scored sixteen goals in sixty-one League starts and twenty-two as a substitute, before leaving for Hamilton Academical in September 1989 for £35,000. There he scored twenty-four League goals in ninety-one starts and four from the bench. He joined Kilmarnock for the start of the 1992-93 season and went on to score thirteen goals in forty-seven League starts and ten from the bench. He joined Clyde, his final League club, in October 1994, making twenty-three starts and coming from the bench twelve times while scoring eight League goals in just less than two seasons there. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McCole | John | 12-11-1960 | 1959-1961 | CF | Gweedore, Co Donegal | 18-09-1936 | 00-00-1982 | Brought up in Glasgow, he started with Falkirk in the 1956-57 season and scored twenty goals in thirty-one Scottish League games, before being signed by Bradford City in September 1958. He retained his excellent goal ratio at Valley Parade, where he scored thirty-two goals in forty-two League games, before Leeds paid £10,000 to bring him to Elland Road in September 1959. He immediately made his League debut and went on to score fifty-three goals in eighty-five games in all competitions. Unfortunately his goals could not stop Leeds from being relegated in 1959-60, and after playing in the American League in the Summer,after the following season, he returned to Valley Parade in October 1961 for £8,000. He only stayed just over one season, scoring fifteen goals in forty-six League games, before going to Rotherham United in December 1962. He was out of football for a year with a broken leg, but still scored five in fourteen games before joining Irish Club Shelbourne in June 1963 before returning to England to play with Newport County in October 1964. He scored twice in six League games, and returned to Ireland where he played for Cork Hibernians and Dundalk. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McConnell | Peter | 24-04-1954 | 1954-1962 | RH | Reddish | 03-03-1937 | | Joined Leeds from Stockport Junior football, when just fifteen, before signing professional in March 1954 and he progressed through the Leeds Juniors, "A" team and Reserves to make his first team debut in December 1958. In the meantime he had become a Reserve team regular and although he scored four goals in forty-eight League games in four seasons he never could establish himself as the first choice. He left Leeds for Carlisle United, where he became the club captain and mainstay of their team, scoring twenty-seven goals in two hundred and seventy-two starts and one game from the bench in the League before returning to the West Riding with Bradford City in July 1969. He went on to start seventy-six and come off the bench once in League games in two seasons.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McCrystal | Bryan | 10-05-1999 | 1998-2000 | LH | Dundalk, Republic Ireland | 20-01-1981 | | Educated at St Mary's College in 1992-97, he joined Leeds United, as a Trainee, on leaving school in January 1998 and played with the Irish Youth teams at Under-Seventeen, making his debut against Belgium in a tournament in Israel and then in South Africa, and later at Under-Nineteen. He had played with local side Bellurgan FC and then Dundalk FC before being spotted by Leeds United. He played juniors and reserve team level for three years, while at Elland Road, also making a few appearences for Ireland at Youth Level. His progress had been restricted by injuries and the sheer weight of talent available as the club shored up their ranks to meet their European dreams and he was released by Leeds. It appeared that he had joined Conference side Exeter City as terms seemed to have been agreed. But financial problems at the club caused them to renege and McCrystal returned to his homeland taking up a job in the family jewellery business and also joining Newry Town in the early part of 2000-01 for a short time before joining his hometown team and playing in the European Cup in 2001-02. Injuries once more sidelined him and he rejoined Newry Town on loan for the second half of the 2002-03 season. He returned from the loan and played for Dundalk until the end of 2003 when he finished the 2003-04 season back in Newry, which had become Newry City. Six months later he moved to Dungannon Swifts, before returning to Dundalk for six months. He returned to Dungannon Swifts for a year in July 2005 and finished his career with Dundalk, playing the full 2006-07 season there and retiring in May 2007. He had suffered three anterior cruciate ligament reconstructions during his career and he took up running and cycling as part of his road to recovery. He became a very proficient cyclist and then progressed to becoming a triathlete and became a top class performer in the event in international competitions. |
McDaid | | 10-02-1982 | 1982-1982 | IF | | | | Nothing much is known about this player other than he made one substitute appearance in the 1981-82 season. |
McDermott | Thomas/Tommy | 23-11-1983 | 1983-1984 | OR/OL | | | | Joined Leeds from school in Ireland and progressed through the Juniors and played a few games for the Reserves. He also represented the Republic of Ireland at Youth level, along with Terry Phelan, and once scored the only goal in a victory over England. |
McDonald | Robert Wood/Bobby | 03-02-1987 | 1987-1988 | LB | Aberdeen | 30-04-1955 | | Started as an Apprentice with Aston Villa and signed professional forms in September 1972. He made the first team and had scored three goals in thirty-nine games in the League, which included six as a substitute when, in August 1976, Coventry City bought him for £40,000. He became a regular at Highfield Road scoring fourteen goals in one hundred and sixty-one starts before Manchester City paid £270,000 for him in October 1980. He gave good service at Maine Road scoring eleven goals in ninety-six starts, before leaving for Oxford United in September 1983. There he scored fourteen goals in ninety-three starts and one game from the bench before joining Leeds United for £25,000 in February 1987. He scored once in eighteen League games but missed the F.A. Cup games as he was Cup-tied. He was loaned to Wolverhampton Wanderers on 1st February 1988 and he started six League games for them, but was released by Leeds at the end of the 1987-88 season and went into Non-League football.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McDougall | John/Jock | 12-09-1936 | 1934-1937 | CH | Port Glasgow | 21-09-1901 | 26-09-1973 | Capped once by Scotland, he started with Kilmalcolm Amateurs and Port Glasgow Juniors before joining Airieonians and was signed by Sunderland in May 1929 for £4,500. He scored four times in one hundred and sixty-seven League appearances before joining Leeds on 20th November 1934 for £6,000. He made his Leeds debut four days later and played almost sixty games and captained the team before retiring at the end of the 1936-37 season. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McGee | John/Jock | 04-09-1920 | 1920-1921 | HB | Rothesay | 03-07-1896 | 24-06-1980 | Signed from Harrogate in March 1920 and rejoined them to play in the 1921-22 season. He later joined Hull City. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McGhie | William Lambert/Billy | 11-01-1975 | 1974-1979 | IL | Lanark | 19-01-1958 | | Scottish born but raised in Doncaster from the age of four, he represented the Doncaster Boys and signed as an apprentice for Leeds straight from school in April 1974. He progressed through the Juniors and turned professional in January 1976. He started playing regularly with the Reserves and made his first team debut in April 1977. He scored once in two League starts. Unfortunately he broke his leg in a Reserve game at home to Bolton Wanderers in November 1977 and though he regained his regular spot in the Reserve team, he could not regain a spot in the first team. He left Leeds for York City in December 1979, where he scored once in thirty-nine starts and four games from the bench, in the League.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McGinlay | William David/Billy | 23-11-1970 | 1970-1974 | OR | Dumfries | 12-11-1954 | | 5ft 6ins and 9st 7lb, he was the star of the Scottish Schoolboys team in the 1970-71 season and joined Leeds when sixteen and signed professional in January 1972. He went on to make two substitute appearances for the first team, making his debut in April 1973, but never started a game at that level. He joined Huddersfield Town in September 1974 and scored once in fifteen League games of which four were as a substitute. In June 1975 he moved to Bradford City where he scored eleven goals in sixty League games, which included eight from the bench. His final move was to Crewe Alexandra in August 1977, where he scored twice in thirty-six starts and two games from the bench in the League.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McGoldrick | John | 07-05-1983 | 1983-1985 | RB | Coatbridge | 23-09-1963 | | McGoldrick played for Celtic Boys’ Club before being recruited for Celtic in 1980 but injuries marred his early career. Jimmy Lumsden, Eddie Gray's Assistant Manager at Leeds, had been his Youth team coach at Celtic and he took a chance on him as Leeds signed him on a free transfer in June 1983 after he had had a couple of trial games for the Leeds Reserves. He became a regular with the Leeds Reserves in the 1983-84 season and made his first team League debut in November 1983, but more injuries limited his appearances to just seven and he retired at the end of that season. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McGorry | Brian Paul/Brian | 04-05-1991 | 1991-1991 | RH | Liverpool | 16-04-1970 | | The 5ft 10ins 12st 8lb midfielder started his football career with Liverpool and Chorley and then joined Weymouth in August 1990, where he failed to make the first team
but Impressed enough to make Bournemouth pay £30,000 for him in August 1991. He had been one of the four trialist who had played for the Leeds United Reserves in the final fixture of the 1990-91 season when they were soundly beaten at Nottingham Forest by four goals without reply. He stay at Bournemouth until 10th February 1994 and scored eleven goals in starting fifty-six League games and five more from the bench before Peterborough United paid £60,000 to take him to London Road on 18th August 1995. He had scored six goals in forty-four League starts and eight more from the bench for Posh, when he left to join Wycombe Wanderers on a free transfer in August 1995. For some reason his time at Wycombe was forgettable as he could only manage four appearances as a substitute in the next two seasons but struggled to settle into the first team, making only four appearances (all as substitute) in nearly two seasons. He did go on loan to Cardiff City from March until the end of the season and started seven League games in that time. He left Wycombe on a free transfer and joined Hereford United in March 1997. He was signed to try and stiffen up the midfield but, even though he scored once in seven games, he was unable to save his new club from relegation. He remained with them in their first season in the Conference and when he left the Bulls in July 1998, on a free transfer to Torquay United, he had scored one goal in forty appearances. At Plainmoor he scored once in thirty-one League starts and three games from the bench, before joining Telford United on a free transfer on 9th July 1999. He settled in well at Telford, and was made club captain but remained part-time when Telford went professional. His commitments as a personal trainer ruling him out of a return to full-time football. On 18th June 2001 he left Telford on a free transfer to join Southport, having scored once in sixty-six starts in the League. He never established himself in the eighteen months he spent at Southport and had only seven starts and five games from the bench without scoring. He was, however, loaned to Woking from 4th January to 19th January 2002, where he started two League games before, two days later, he was transferred to Chester City on a free transfer. He stayed with Chester for six months, and started twelve League games without scoring, before moving to Tamworth on a free transfer on 11th July 2002. He played the 2002-03 season with them but then was appointed player coach with Nuneaton Borough. He remained in that position for two seasons before he was released. He became Player-Coach with Vauxhall Motors in January 2006. He ceased playing at the end of that season but carried on as Coach for the following season. After he retired from football he continued with his Personal Training business in Liverpool. |
McGovern | John Prescott/John | 05-10-1974 | 1974-1975 | WH | Montrose | 28-10-1949 | | Twice capped at Under-Twenty-Three level by Scotland he went on to reap the benefits of being in Brian Clough's successful sides at Derby County and Nottingham Forest. He first came into contact with the Manager when they were at Hartlepool, where he was apprenticed and signed professional in May 1967. He scored five goals in seventy-two League games, of which three were from the bench before he followed him to Derby County in September 1968. He scored sixteen goals in one hundred and ninety League games, including four from the bench, before he went to Clough's next club, Leeds in August 1974. There he was never accepted and after Clough's departure he was confined to the Reserves and had made only four League appearances before Clough rescued him and took him to Nottingham Forest in February 1975. He scored six goals in two hundred and fifty-three League games, starting in all but four of them. He finished his career at Bolton Wanderers , who he joined in June 1982 and made sixteen League starts to finish his playing career. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McGrath | | 06-04-1995 | 1995-1995 | RH | | | | Nothing is known other than that he played one game for the Leeds Reserves. |
McGraw | James | 17-09-1938 | 1938-1946 | FB/IF | | | | McGraw was signed from Benurb before the 1938-39 season and enjoyed several games for the Reserves, mostly at inside left. He never made the Leeds first team in peace-time but scored eight goals in eighty-eight appearances during the wartime fixtures, when he played many positions. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McGregor | John Reid/John | 05-11-1985 | 1985-1985 | CD | Airdrie | 05-01-1963 | | Starting with the Airdrie Academy and Bargeddie Amateurs, he joined Queens Park straight from school. He made one hundred and five League appearances for Queen’s Park, scoring nineteen goals before Liverpool beat Rangers for his signature in June 1982. He was a regular in the Reserves at Anfield and played in most positions in the defence, but never made the first team. He had a loan period with St Mirren in the 1983-84 season, playing five League games and scoring once. He joined Leeds United for a month in November 1985 making five starts in four different positions for the first team and three games in the Reserves. Graeme Souness took him to Ibrox in the summer of 1987 and he started twenty-two Scottish League games and a further five as a substitute in his first season of 1987-88 but only played one further game on 12th October 1991 in a 3-2 win at St Johnstone, but his career had been ruined by injury and he retired at the end of the 1991-92 season, when he took up a coaching role at Ibrox.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McGugan | John Hannah/Jackie | 20-08-1960 | 1960-1961 | CH/FB | Airdrie | 12-06-1939 | | After starting with Pollok Juniors he joined St Mirren in 1956 and scored once in sixty-three Scottish League games before being signed by Leeds in August 1960 for £15,000. 5ft 10ins and 11 stone 12 lb centre-half, his only appearance of Leeds came as a right-back in October 1960. With Jack Charlton and Freddie Goodwin defensive rocks in the first team, he moved to Tranmere Rovers in February 1961 for £12,000 and there made thirty-five appearances before a short stay at Cambridge City and a move back North of the Border to Ayr United in March 1962. He had a couple of seasons with Ayr and then one with Greenock Morton before returning in July 1964 to stay with Cambridge City until he retired(Leeds United Player Details) |
McInroy | Albert | 26-03-1937 | 1935-1937 | Gk | Walton-Le-Dale | 23-04-1901 | 07-01-1985 | Capped once by England, he started his career in the Preston area with Upper Walton, Coppull Central, Preston North End, High Walton United, Great Harwood,and Leyland Motors. His first team debut came after he signed for Sunderland in May 1923, and in six years there he made two hundred and fifteen League appearances before joining Newcastle United in October 1929, where he made another one hundred and forty-three League appearances before returning to Sunderland in May 1934. However he could not make their first team and he joined Leeds on 2nd May 1935 and stayed until the end of the 1936-37 season. There he made seventy-one appearances before he joined Gateshead and made another seventy-one League appearances before retiring two years later.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McKay | Dennis | 11-04-1957 | 1956-1960 | LB | Edinburgh | | | Joined Leeds as a Junior from Scotland and progressed through the teams to the Reserves, but did not play at first team level. He left in the 1960 close season. |
McKenna | Francis/Frank | 20-10-1956 | 1956-1958 | OR/CF | Blayden | 08-01-1933 | | An England Amateur International, McKenna rose to fame with top Amateur team Bishop Auckland, but left North Shields to join Leeds and turn professional on 16th July 1956. Strongly built at 5ft 9ins and 11st 10lbs, he scored twice on his Leeds debut in November 1956 and went on to score four goals in six League appearances. But there was strong competition for the striking partner to John Charles, and George Meek was almost ever-present on the right wing. This meant much of his games were at Reserve level and he moved to Carlisle United on 11th February 1958, where he netted eleven times in forty-six League games, before returning to the North East with Hartlepool United in July 1959. There he scored five goals in thirty-two League games before leaving at the end of the season. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McKenna | John | 07-11-1981 | 1981-1981 | Gk | Liverpool | | | Came to Leeds as a nineteen year old from Liverpool, who had played in the Cheshire League with Formby. He played six consecutive games for the Reserves and seemed to cope well enough, but David Seaman came back and established himself as the regular Resrve goalkeeper and nothing further was heard of McKenna. |
McKenzie | Duncan | 31-08-1974 | 1974-1976 | OR/CF | Grimsby | 10-06-1950 | | He started with Nottingham Forest Juniors and signed professional in July 1968. He was twice loaned to Mansfield Town, firstly in March 1970, when he scored three goals in ten League games, three being from the bench, and secondly in February 1973, when he scored seven goals in six League starts. He matured to score forty-one goals in one hundred and five League starts and another six from the bench before Brian Clough took him to Leeds in August 1974 and he made his debut as a substitute in the Charity Shield at Wembley a few days later. He did play several Reserve games but soon established himself as a Leeds regular scoring thirty goals in seventy-six starts and six more from the bench in all competitions. He left for Belgian club, Anderlect, in the 1976 close season but, after scoring sixteen goals in thirty games, Everton took him to Goodison Park in December 1976. He scored fourteen goals in forty-eight starts before moving to Chelsea in September 1978, but did not stay long at Stamford Bridge scoring four goals in fifteen League starts. Then it was to Ewood Park and Blackburn Rovers in March 1979 where he scored sixteen goals in seventy-four League starts before bringing down the curtain on his career in the USA in 1981, where he played with Tulsa Roughnecks and Chicago Sting.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McKiernan | Colin | 19-05-1983 | 1983-1984 | IR/RH/OR | | | | He joined Leeds as an apprentice from school and made his way through the Juniors to make his debut at Inside Right and then played two further games for the Leeds Reserves, in the following season, at Right Half and Outside Right, and did not progress to the first team. |
McMaster | Jamie | 31-08-1999 | 1999-2005 | WH/IF | Sydney, Australia | 29-11-1982 | | Though born in Sydney, McMaster was brought up in Gosford on the Central coast of New South Wales and played football for Umina United. Like Harry Kewell he was a product of the Westfields Sports High School and the Australian Academy of Sport. He began his professional career at Leeds United in 1999 as a sixteen year-old where he joined several Australians in the squad and committed his international future to England. He made his debut for the England Under-Eighteen team on 8th March 2000, and he received five caps at that level and went on to play twice for England's Under-Twenty team. McMaster was loaned out to Coventry City for a month in November 2002 and played twice for them. Terry Venables gave him four substitute appearances in 2002-03, but all were well after the hour mark. He next went to Chesterfield on a month’s loan in January 2004 and made six appearances, including two as substitute and scored twice. Kevin Blackwell had taken over the reins at Elland Road and he gave him five games in the League and one in the League Cup as a late substitute on all occasions, but he included him in the starting line-up for the League Cup tie with Swindon Town on 21st September 2004 and Leeds scored a 1-0 win. McMaster was replaced by Simon Walton after sixty-one minutes but he must have impressed the Swindon Town Manager, Andy King, as he moved to sign McMaster on a month's loan from Leeds in September 2004. He scored once in two starts and two games from the bench in the League. He was recalled to Leeds, bizarrely due to an injury to James Beattie at Southampton! Beattie's injury meant that the Saints recalled Brett Ormerod from his loan spell at Elland Road, and in turn, McMaster returned there as cover. McMaster had once again returned and after two final minutes substitute appearances in early December 2004, he was once again was loaned out, this time he went on loan to Peterborough United in January 2005 where the midfielder helped the team fight relegation and played four games, three in the League and one in the F.A. Cup, without scoring. Upset with the amount of times he had been loaned out, McMaster requested he be transferred from Leeds, while still on Peterborough's list. McMaster never came close to fulfilling the huge expectations placed upon him at Elland Road. He came off the bench on eleven occasions in the League and while he started once in the League Cup, and once off the bench, he never scored. Upon returning to Leeds for the rest of the 2004-05 season he was once again loaned out, this time to Chesterfield with a view to making it permanent. The loan made him available for the match on Saturday and on Monday 7th March 2005 he was given a free transfer and he joined the Spireites. There was scant reward for either the club or the player after so many years of hard work and unfilled promise, he played eight games, including two from the bench. He was not retained by Chesterfield for the 2005-06 season and had trials with Bradford City and Danish club Aarhus GF. He joined Aarhus but did not stay long, playing just five games before returning home to Australia to join the Central Coast Mariners in the A-League. McMaster was the most high profile of the three signings the Mariners made close to the end of the 2005-06 season. McMaster, while brought up on the Central Coast had gone on to represent England at youth level while at Leeds United. Despite this, McMaster was determined to make the Socceroos squad and had come back to Australia to restore his career and move foward with that goal. McMaster was used as a squad player by the Mariners, making one start and five substitute appearances with playing time of just one hundred and forty-three minutes, before the end of the 2005-06 season but 2006-07 saw him make fourteen starts in nineteen appearances, in a twenty-one game competition, and he opened his scoring account with a goal in the sixth minute on 3rd November 2006 in a 3-3 draw at Melbourne Victory. Unfortunately, competition under the salary cap meant he was surplus to requirements in the "A" League and was released on 14th April 2007. After a spell out of the game where he went travelling, McMaster returned to action in the NSW Premier League and joined APIA Leichhardt Tigers in May 2008, who changed their name to Sydney Tigers in December 2008. Now twenty-five, he made his Lambert Park debut as a substitute and became an instant favourite as he scored a goal within minutes of entering the fray in a NSW Premier League clash between Apia Leichhardt Tigers and Sutherland Sharks on 18th May 2008. After being out of the game for so long it gave him renewed confidence. He stayed with them until the end of the season, and he scored five goals in ten starts and one game as a substitute. He stayed until he joined Wollongong (South Coast Wolves) in June 2009, where he scored once in three starts and one game from the bench. He joined Bonnyrigg White Eagles in the New South Wales Premier League for the start of the 2010 season and had scored eight times in forty-two appearances, in a two season stay, before moving to Marconi Stallions for the 2012 season. Marconi beat his former team 2-0 in the Grand Final of the 2012 season and he scored twice in twenty-one appearances in the season. He joined Sutherland Sharks for the 2013 season and they finished fifth, with McMaster scoring twice in eighteen appearances.The first of his goals came on the opening day of the season on 16th March 2013 in a 4-0 away win over his former club, South Coast Wolves and the second came on 25th May 2013 in a 2-2 home draw with Rockdale City Suns. In season 2014 he scored on 19th April against Blacktown City and on 14th June against St George as once more he made eighteen appearances.(Leeds United Player Details) |
McMorran | Edward James/Eddie | 26-02-1949 | 1949-1950 | IF | Larne | 02-09-1923 | 27-01-1984 | Capped by Northern Ireland as a schoolboy, he started his career with Belfast Celtic and represented the League of Ireland before joining Manchester City in August 1947. He scored twelve goals in thirty-three League appearances before joining Leeds on 18th January 1949. He scored six goals in forty games for Leeds before leaving for Barnsley in July 1950. At Oakwell he scored thirty-two goals in one hundred and four League games before moving to Doncaster Rovers in February 1953 and scored another thirty-two League goals in one hundred and twenty-six games. He then joined Crewe Alexandra in November 1957 scoring six goals in twenty-four League games before retiring. He was capped fifteen times by Northern Ireland.
(Leeds United Player Details) |
McNall | | 01-05-1984 | 1984-1984 | IF | | | | Not much is known about this player other than he scored on his debut but never played another game for the Leeds Reserves |
MacNay | Nicholas/Nick | 10-09-1977 | 1977-1978 | CH/FB | Leeds | | | Local-born, played in a central defensive role in the Juniors, and continued in that position in the Reserves, before also playing as a Full-Back. |
McNeish | Samuel/Sam | 24-02-1951 | 1951-1951 | IF | Bo'ness | 04-08-1930 | 00-00-1998 | Son of a former St Mirren player, McNeish joined Leeds from Linlithgow Rose at the age of twenty on 23rd February 1951 when he was 5ft 10ins and 11st. He soon made the first team, but only for one game at inside-left before dropping to the Reserve team. He did go on to play half-a-dozen games for the reserves that season and came back to play another five games for the Reserves towards the end of the 1953-54 season. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McNestry | George | 14-11-1928 | 1928-1929 | OR | Chopwell | 07-01-1908 | 00-03-1998 | Starting with Chopwell Institute he had trials with Arsenal in 1926 before joing Bradford Park Avenue, where he scored once in fourteen League games, before moving to Doncaster Rovers in the 1927-28 season and scoring once in eight League games. He moved to Leeds, as a twenty-year-old and standing 5ft 9ins and 11st 8lb, on 12th November 1928. He could only get three games with the forst team before leaving for Sunderland on 13th November 1929, where he found the going equally as hard and played just four League games without scoring. However he found his next three clubs more to his liking, joining Luton Town in 1930 and scoring twenty-nine goals in sixty-nine League games, before going to Bristol Rovers in 1932 and spending over two years scoring forty-two goals in one hundred and twelve League appearances before finishing his career with Coventry City in 1936-37 season and scoring thirty-one goals in forty-six League games. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McNiven | David Scott/David | 23-09-1972 | 1971-1978 | IF/CF | Stonehouse | 09-09-1955 | | Starting with Larkham Academy he started as an outside right and striker in the Scottish Schoolboys and was their leading goalscorer. 5ft 6 1/2 ins and 11st 4 1/2lb on joining, he became an apprentice with Leeds in May 1971. He signed professional forms on 16th September 1972. He was quickly promoted to the Reserves and was given his first team debut in October 1975. He went on to score six goals in sixteen starts and seven games from the bench in all competitions. He also went on to gain three Scottish Under-Twenty-One caps. He left Leeds to join Bradford City in February 1978 and stayed for five seasons, scoring sixty-four goals in two hundred and twelve League appearances of which ten were from the bench. He moved to Blackpool in February 1983 where he scored eleven League goals in forty-five starts and four from the bench, before leaving for the USA League in May 1984. He returned for a spell with Halifax Town in March 1985 and scored four goals in twelve League starts. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McPhail | Stephen John Paul/Stephen | 28-03-1996 | 1995-2004 | IL | Westminster, London | 09-12-1979 | | While born in London he was raised Dublin and played with Home Farm as a Junior. He joined Leeds as a Trainee in 1995. He established himself in the Youth team with two goals in fifteen starts and two games from the bench as they were runners up in the League and made two starts with the Reserves in 1995-96. The following season saw him captain the Youths as they won the Northern Intermediate League and the F.A. Youth Cup, and he scored six goals, two from the spot, from twenty-five starts in the League, and scored twice, one from the spot, as he started all eleven ties in the Cup, while for the reserves, he started three and came off the bench in two games. He signed professional in December 1996 and made his first team debut, as a substitute in February 1998 and was a regular in the Reserve team that won the Pontins League that season. He represented the Republic of Ireland Under-Seventeens on two occasions, Eighteens, scoring once from ten starts and two games from the bench and Twenty-Ones, again scoring once from ten starts and two games from the bench. He was captain in his only "B" level start. At full-level he scored once when he started five and came off the bench in five. He forced his way into the Leeds team in October 1999 and cemented his position as a regular with some fine performances on both the English Premier and European stages. But his career was blighted by injury and he was loaned to Millwall on 14th March 2002 and made three starts before returning on 3rd May 2002. On a later occasion he went to Nottingham Forest on 26th August 2003 and it seemed as if he was about to make the move permanent but after thirteen starts and one game from the bench he returned to Elland Road on 26th November 2003. He was recalled to the Leeds first team by Eddie Gray as the team fought relegation in the 2003-04 season. He was transferred to Barnsley on a free transfer in July 2004 after scoring three goals in fifty-two starts and twenty-six games from the bench for Leeds. At Oakwell he scored four goals in sixty-nine starts and four games from the bench. He then joined Cardiff City on a free transfer on 14th June 2006 and started a seven year association, which saw him score three goals in one hundred and sixty-seven League starts and nineteen more from the bench before his contract expired on 1st July 2013. He signed for Sheffield Wednesday on 20th September 2013 starting thirteen League games before leaving on 14th February 2014 for Shamrock Rovers where he scored twice in fifty-three starts before retiring in October 2016 and became Sporting Director of the club. (Leeds United Player Details) |
McPhee | John | 07-03-1977 | 1976-1977 | IF | Glasgow | | | He joined Leeds on his sixteenth birthday and played in midfield for the Juniors and a few Reserve team fixtures.. |
McPherson | | 19-02-1921 | 1921-1921 | LB | | | | Nothing is know of this player who only played in his debut game for the Leeds Reserves. |
McQueen | Gordon | 14-10-1972 | 1972-1978 | CH | Kilwinning | 26-06-1952 | | Started with Largs Thistle and had trials with Rangers and Liverpool before joining St Mirren in February 1970 and went on to score five goals in fifty-eight Scottish League games. He moved to Leeds in September 1972 and after several reserve games he made his first team debut in March 1973. He went on to become one of Leeds' best central defenders and gained thirty full caps for Scotland. He scored nineteen goals in one hundred and seventy-one starts in all competitions for Leeds before moving to Manchester United in February 1978. His time at Old Trafford was spoiled by injuries, but he still managed to score twenty goals in one hundred and eighty-four League starts in almost seven years.(Leeds United Player Details) |
MacRae | Keith Alexander/Keith | 31-03-1982 | 1982-1982 | Gk | Glasgow | 05-02-1951 | | He started with Lanark Grammar School before joining Motherwell and making his League debut in the 1967-68 season. He went on to score once in one hundred and twenty-four starts and two games from the bench before moving to Manchester City in October 1973. While at Fir Park he had also gained two Scottish Under-Twenty-Three caps and represented the Scottish League. At Maine Road he started fifty-six League games before joining Leeds on a temporary basis in March 1982. He played the final nine games for the reserves that season and left for Portland Timbers in the USA, where he made twenty starts. He had previously played in the US with Philadelphia Fury in 1978 while still with Manchester City and played twenty-three games for them during the English off-season. |
McStay | Henry Matthew Patrick/Henry | 12-03-2002 | 2001-2005 | CH | Lurgan, Co. Armagh, Northern Ireland | 06-03-1985 | | The 5ft 11in 12st 6lb central defender started his football career with Lurgan Celtic before joining Leeds as a trainee in 2001. He progressed through the Juniors and made his Reserved debut as a sixty-second minute substitute in the latter half of the 2001-02 season. However, with the likes of Lucas Radebe, Jonathan Woodgate, Rio Ferdinand, Dominic Matteo, Michael Duberry, Ted Lucic and Matthew Kilgallon ahead of him, it was understandable that his run-on debut did not come until the last two games of the 2002-03 season. He was one of many Leeds United younger players who were surplus to requirements after the club's financial meltdown and relegation from the EPL. He had had two loan periods with Halifax Town, for a month from 24th September 2004, when he started five League games, before injury saw him return to Elland Road and another for a month from 31st March 2005, when he started two League games and came off the bench once. After his release he had an unsuccessful trial for a week at York City in late July 2005. He then returned home to Northern Ireland to take a physiotherapy course in Belfast and he joined Portadown scoring twice in twenty-six League games. He joined Belgian side Royal Antwerp who were managed by ex-Burnley player, Warren Joyce in early July 2007. He did not settle there and suffering from homesickness he returned to England to join Morecambe at the end of January 2008. He was there for over two seasons until his contract ran out in May 2010. He scored once in twenty-nine League starts and five from the bench, and scored one more in two starts in the F.A. Cup, but did not score in one game as a substitute in the League Cup and two starts and one game from the bench in the Football League Trophy. He rejoined Portadown in June 2010 on a one year
contract and had played fourteen games for them, before leaving in late January 2011 due to the club wanting him to play in midweek, which interfered with his studies. He joined Bradford Park Avenue scored once in seven League starts and four from the bench and one goal in two starts in the League Cup in the 2010-11 season. He was hit by injuries and these eventually caused him to retire at the ens of the 2012-13 season. He is presently the assistant physio at Leeds United.He has represented both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. He represented Northern Ireland at Under-Seventeen level, before opting to represent the Republic. He score twice in five starts for the Under-Nineteen side and the went on to score once in two starts and one game from the bench for the Under-Twenty-one side. |
Mears | Frank | 18-04-1924 | 1924-1928 | CF | Chorlton, Manchester | 00-00-1899 | | He was 5ft 10ins and 12st when he joined Leeds from Stalybridge Celtic in April 1924. Despite showing good form with the Reserves, Leeds had too many strikers for him to feature regularly in the first team and he only played two League and one F.A. Cup tie before he left for Barnsley on 8th May 1928(Leeds United Player Details) |
Meek | George | 30-08-1952 | 1952-1960 | W | Glasgow | 15-02-1934 | | He had just fifteen games with Hamilton Academical before Leeds snapped him up in August 1952. His ability to play on either wing, as was the case with his predecessors Harold Williams and Peter Harrison, served him well as he adapted to constant changes from wing to wing. After few Reserve games he made his first team debut in October 1952 where he became a regular feature until he was called up for National Service and spent a season on loan with Walsall as it was closer to his barracks. He scored six times in forty-four League games while on loan. On his demob he returned to Elland Road and regained his regular spot, helping Leeds to promotion to the First Division at the end of the 1955-56 season. He went on to score nineteen goals in just short of two hundred games for Leeds before leaving for Leicester City in August 1960. At Filbert Street, he only had thirteen League games before moving to Walsall a year later. He scored twenty-two goals in one hundred and twenty-eight League games in his three year stay before going into Non-League football. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Meek | Harry | 20-11-1948 | 1948-1948 | FB | | | | A German P.O.W. who joined Leeds when 25yo, 5ft 8ins and 11st 7lbs. on 28th February 1948. Real name Heinz Mosch, who played for Bremen prior to WW2. Repatriated on 2nd December 1948. |
Mehew | David/Dave | 13-11-1984 | 1983-1986 | IF | London | 29-10-1967 | | 5ft 10ins 11st in 1985, he was on the books of Southampton for eighteen months and Queens Park Rangers for six months. Scored on debut as a substitute for the Reserves in the 4-1 home win over Burnley and made several further appearances. |
Mendes | | 17-08-1994 | 1994-1994 | RH | | | | Nothing is known about this player other than he made one appearance for the Leeds United Reserves. |
Menzies | William John/Bill | 25-02-1922 | 1922-1933 | LB | Bucksburn | 10-07-1901 | 03-01-1970 | He joined United on trial on 25th February 1922 from Scottish Junior team Mugiemoss, and signed professional in March 1922. He was a first team regular for the best part of eleven seasons amassing over two hundred and fifty League and F. A. Cup games for the first team, consequently playing very few games for the Reserves. He left for Goole Town on 12th September 1933.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Melrose | James Millsopp/Jim | 08-10-1987 | 1987-1988 | IF | Glasgow | 07-10-1958 | | A Scottish Schoolboy International, who went on to gain eight Scotland Under-Twenty-One Caps and represented the Scottish League. He started with Eastercraigs Amateurs, and Sighthill Amateurs before he joined Partick Thistle in August 1975 and getting two games as a substitute for the first team in the 1975-76 season. He went on to score thirty-one goals in one hundred and three starts and nineteen games as a substitute in the Scottish League. He seemed to have a bright future and Leicester paid £25,000 for him in August 1980. He scored twenty-one goals in seventy-two League games of which fifteen were as a substitute at Filbert Street and in September 1982 Coventry City took him to Highfield Road giving Leicester Tom English in exchange. He scored eight League goals in twenty-one League starts and three more as a substitute before Celtic paid £100,000 for him in March 1983. He scored seven goals in twenty starts and ten substitute appearances in the Scottish League and in September 1984 he went on loan to Wolverhampton Wanderers scoring twice in six starts and one game from the bench. On 7th November 1984 he left Parkhead for Maine Road for £40,000 and helped Manchester City to promotion in the 1984-85 season. After eight goals in twenty-seven starts, and seven games as a substitute, he was sold to Charlton Athletic for £50,000 in March 1986. He did well in a struggling side at the Valley, scoring nineteen goals in forty-eight League games, of which four were as a substitute. He had also scored two goals to give them victory over Ipswich Town in the semi finals of the relegation/promotion play-offs and, much to United's displeasure, Melrose was on target again when the two-legged final with Leeds United ended 1-1 on aggregate, as he scored a last-minute winner in the first leg at the Valley against Leeds, which helped Charlton scrape through the play-offs at the end of the dramatic 1986-87 season, at the expense of Leeds. On 23rd September 1987 he joined Leeds for £50,000, going straight into the first team, however, after four League appearances, one being as a substitute, without finding the net, he spent the rest of his stay at Leeds in the Reserves. On 1st February 1988 he was sold to Shrewsbury Town for £50,000 and there he scored three goals in forty-nine League games of which twenty-two were as a substitute before being released in June 1990.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Metcalfe | Peter | 01-10-1960 | 1959-1961 | CH | Norton | | | A 5ft 9ins 10 stone 6lb, centre-half signed by Leeds from Upton Colliery, he started with the "A" team and played a few games for the reserves in the 1960-61 season but was released at the end of that season. |
Middlemass | Clive | 11-04-1962 | 1962-1963 | OR/OL | Wortley, Sheffield | 25-08-1944 | | He was part of the Leeds Juniors that produced so many future internationals, and signed professional in July 1962. While he progressed through the Juniors and into the Reserves that was as far as he got and he left to join Workington in November 1963. He remained with them for over six seasons scoring six goals in one hundred and sixty-eight starts and one game from the bench in the League. |
Milburn | George William/George | 06-02-1929 | 1928-1937 | RB | Ashington | 24-06-1910 | | He joined United from Ashington Welfare in March 1928 and while many times captain of the Leeds Reserve team and leading them to the Central League Championship in 1936-37, he played more than one hundred and sixty games for the first team. He left for Chesterfield on 7th May 1937, where he took on the penalty duties and scored sixteen goals in one hundred and seven League games as well as many War-time games. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Milburn | James/Jimmy | 05-03-1938 | 1935-1952 | FB | Ashington | 21-09-1919 | 00-01-1985 | The youngest of the three Milburn brothers that played for Leeds, he was signed from Ashington Welfare on 7th October 1936. After playing with the Leeds Reserves he made his first team debut in September 1939 in the aborted 1939-40 season. He scored four goals in fifty-two wartime games for Leeds before becoming a regular after the Football League recommenced after the WW2. He scored seventeen, many from the penalty-spot in two hundred and twenty games before leaving for Bradford Park Avenue in June 1952.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Milburn | John/Jack | 28-01-1928 | 1927-1939 | FB | Ashington | 18-03-1908 | 21-08-1979 | Eldest of the Milburn clan he joined United from Spen Black and White in November 1927, before playing in the Midweek League and Resrves before making his first team debut in November 1928. He went on to Captain Leeds and make over four hundred peace-time appearances before joining Norwich City on 24th February 1939 but had made just eighteen appearances before WW2 saw him return to Leeds and make over sixty-wartime for the club. After the war he joined Bradford City scoring three goals in fourteen League games in his capacity of player-manager. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Miller | Ernest George/George | 25-11-1950 | 1950-1952 | IR | South Africa | 17-10-1927 | | Signed from Arcadia in November 1950, he was one of several South Africans brought to Leeds in that period. He was the first and probably the most successful. He arrived as a twenty-two year-old, standing 5ft 9ins and weighing 11st 8lbs. Never having seen snow in his native South Africa he sampled it for the first time in his first game for the Leeds Reserves and was soon featuring in the first team. He scored once in thirteen League games but did not stay long, moving to Workington on 13th March 1952, where he played thirteen League games without scoring before returning to South Africa at the end of the season. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mills | Daniel John/Danny | 26-10-1999 | 1999-2004 | RB/CH | Norwich | 18-05-1977 | | Mills attended Sprowston High School and was a product of Norwich City's School of Excellence, signing for his hometown club in July 1993. Impressive in the Norwich youth team, Mills won England Youth caps and was named as a substitute for the Premiership clash with Everton in November 1994 whilst still seventeen. He made three appearances for the England Under-Eighteens. At Norwich, as in his future career, he appeared in a variety of roles in defence (right back, central defender and occasionally on the left), his versatility attracted the attention of Charlton manager Alan Curbishley who was picking a Nationwide League Under-Twenty-one side to play against their Serie A counterparts. Mills captained this side. The transfer listed defender was unhappy at the limited number of first team opportunities at Carrow Road and had sought a transfer since December 1997. Gillingham and Millwall had expressed interest on taking Mills on loan but Mike Walker sought a cash injection to fuel new squad additions prior to the transfer deadline day. Mills joined then fellow First Division side Charlton Athletic for a fee of £350,000 on 18th March 1998. While at Carrow Road Mills made sixty-six League appearances, including twenty as a substitute and scored once. In cup competions he had two FA Cup and five League Cup (including two as substitute) appearances and scored once in the League Cup. Mills' arrival at The Valley coincided with a run of form that almost won them automatic promotion into the Premiership. However, they had to settle for a play-off semi-final against Ipswich which was won despite Mills being sent off in the first leg. He played in the victory over Sunderland at Wembley that took Charlton into the Premiership. Charlton's relegation on 16th May 1999 into Division One led to increased speculation that he would depart from the Valley to fund the club's attempts to return to the top flight. He had now progressed to the England Under-Twenty-One side,and by the time he had signed for Leeds he had become a regular in the team and had six caps. Leeds supposedly made a derisory £1million bid for him but Charlton held out for four times that figure. Their hold-out was backed by his call-up on Sunday 6th June 1999 into the full England squad for the Euro 2000 clash with Bulgaria. Leeds persevered and eventually won their man on 16th June 1999. Norwich City made almost £800,000 from the sale as there was a twenty-five per cent sell-on clause from their sale on March 17th 1998. His move to Leeds ended an excellent season for him despite Charlton's relegation. While at the Valley he scored three goals in forty-five League appearances. He aso played once in the FA Cup, three times in the League Cup and twice in the play-offs. He initially found in hard to settle in Leeds and had been the subject of many a transfer rumour in his initial months at Elland Road. Mills had found it hard to displace Gary Kelly in the Leeds first team. Mills impressed in Leeds' Premiership season and in their impressive European Champions League campaign against the likes of Barcelona, Lazio, AC Milan and Real Madrid. In the meantime he maintained his place in the England Under-Twenty-One team and he went on to add another eight caps to finish with fourteen at that level. Mills' form and an injury to Wes Brown of Manchester United saw him called up for the full England squad for the matches with Mexico and Greece. He made his international debut on 25th May 2001, as a substitute for Emile Heskey of Liverpool in the sixty-seventh minute in the Mexico clash which England won 4-0 at Pride Park. There were two more substitute appearances before Elland Road was the scene of his run-on debut for England in a 1-2 defeat by Italy on 27th March 2002.He was ever-present in England's five games in the World Cup Finals in Korea/Japan and had strong performances in every game and was one of the few players to emerge with credit after the defeat to Brazil. On his return to England, he was soon linked with a £7million transfer to champions Arsenal, as Leeds sought to cut their £77 million deficit by £15 million in the summer of 2002. Failure to agree a new contract saw Mills linked, in November 2002, with a £8 million move to Middlesbrough whose Manager Steve McClaren was known by Mills from their England exploits. The following month saw Arsenal linked with a £5 million move for Mills to replace Oleg Luzhny. Unbelievably, Mills was given a five year contract at £40,000 per week despite the Leeds financial situation. This was to have severe ramifications for the future of the club. Poor form in Leeds' pre-season matches saw Mills dropped from Leeds' first game of the 2003-04 season against Newcastle. He expressed his displeasure at going from European Championship qualifier appearances to the reserves in mere months. Leeds manager Peter Reid didn't appreciate Mills' point-of-view and allegedly told Mills that he had played his last game for Leeds. Birmingham hoped to take advantage of this rift and approached Leeds to take Mills on loan for the 2003-04 season. Middlesbrough also expressed interest in a similar loan deal whilst Kevin Keegan's Manchester City were linked with a £2 million transfer bid. Any of these would have helped Leeds' perilous financial situation. After completing a dozen caps for England by the end of the World Cup, Mills continued to accumulate another five before his "bust up" with Reid. He took his caps to eighteen, while at Leeds United. In the end, he joined Middlesbrough on loan for the 2003-04 season with a view to a later permanent deal. In January 2004, Middlesbrough started exploring the possibility of a permanent move for Mills. He helped 'Boro win the 2004 Carling Cup final, which was their first ever piece of silverware in their entire history. He played his nineteenth and final time for England in a 1-1 draw with Portugal on 18th February 2004. He was linked with a move to Rangers at the end of March 2004 although Alex McLeish faced competition from Boro and Birmingham. He was also linked with a return to Carrow Road but this was quickly dismissed by Nigel Worthington. In the end, Mills signed a five year contract for Kevin Keegan's Manchester City on 13th July 2004 on a free transfer, following Smith, Viduka, Milner, Harte and Robinson out of Elland Road. As part of his severence package with Leeds, Mills continued to receive part of his wages from the Yorkshire club for the duration of his original Leeds contract. While on the season’s loan to Middlesbrough he made twenty-eight League appearances, two in the FA Cup and seven in the League Cup. While at Leeds he scored three League goals in one hundred and one games, of which four were as a substitute, and started six in the F.A. Cup and was one a substitute, without scoring, while there was one goal in four starts in the League Cup and he started twenty-seven and came off the bench twice, without scoring in European competition. He made his City debut at the City of Manchester Stadium in a 1-1 draw with Fulham on 14th August 2004 but after losing his place at Manchester City to Nedum Onuoha, he was linked with a move to Wigan Athletic or Blackburn Rovers. He was later linked with a move to newly promoted Sunderland. Mills made it known that he was looking to leave the club in the summer of 2006 after a row with Manager Stuart Pearce. He joined Hull City on a two months loan on the 14th September 2006. He made nine appearances in the League for the Tigers. Although Mills returned to Manchester City, speculation suggested that he was keen to rejoin Hull on a permanent basis but the sticking point being the £20,000 per week cut in wages. During June 2007, Mills was linked with a move to Scotland to join Rangers. Despite the arrival of his former England manager Sven Goran Eriksson as the Manchester City boss, Mills was placed on the transfer list on 7th August 2007. Despite speculation linking him with Southampton and Hull, he rejoined Charlton on 31st August 2007 on loan until the end of December 2007. Although Charlton were keen on signing Mills permanently, he blotted his copybook with them when he was sent off in the seventy-second minute of his final games game with them on 22nd December 2007 in a 1-1 draw with his former club, Hull City, at the Valley. He played nineteen League games for Charlton. Returning to Manchester City, he was linked in the papers with Leeds United and Hull City but instead joined Derby County on 4th January 2008 on loan until the end of the season. His stay at Pride Park was cut short by injury in only his third game, and he returned to his primary employers. His stay at Manchester City saw fifty-one League appearances, including four as substitute, for one goal. He also made one FA Cup and two League Cup appearances. He made his final appearance for City on 26th August 2006 in a 1-0 home win over Arsenal, and he was released by City as soon as his contract ran out on 30th June 2009. On 7th August 2009 Mills announced his retirement from football as he could not overcome the knee injury after eighteen months out of the game and on specialists' advice he had called it a day. He had nineteen England full international caps, fourteen Under-Twenty-one caps as well as two with England Youth. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mills | David | 31-03-1987 | 1986-1988 | Gk | | | | Joined Leeds as an Apprentice and progressed through the Juniors to make his debut for the Reserves but was released by the club. |
Mills | Donald/Don | 16-02-1952 | 1951-1952 | IF | Rotherham | 17-08-1928 | 00-02-1994 | He started with Queens Park Rangers, signing professional for them in August 1946 and scored six goals in forty-five League games before being loaned to Torquay United for ten months in March 1949. He became very popular at Painmoor, scoring thirteen goals in thirty-four League games but duly returned to Rangers in January 1950 and added a further three goals in thirty-one League games before he was sold to Cardiff City in February 1951. He did not stay long at Ninian Park, making a solitary League appearance before joining Leeds on 26th September 1951. He proved to be a fine player for Leeds, scoring some spectacular goals, but the arrival of Albert Nightingale saw him lose his spot and he left Leeds after ten goals in thirty-seven games on 18th December 1952, signing for Torquay United for that club's record fee at that time. He went on to became Torquay's finest player, scoring sixty-eight goals in three hundred and eight League games and captaining the club for much of his ten years in his second coming at Plainmoor. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mills | Frederick/Fred | 05-10-1935 | 1934-1939 | WH | Hanley | 17-08-1911 | 00-03-1990 | Starting with Middleport, he joined Port Vale in June 1932 and had scored four goals in seventy-three League games before he was bought by Leeds two years later. He did not have a good time with Leeds as his career was riddled with injuries and only his versatility as he alternated between attack, midfield and defence saw him score twice in sixty-seven League games before he retired. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Milne | G. H. | 12-11-1921 | 1921-1921 | RB | | | | From the Manchester area, he was signed from Droylsden on 5th November 1921, as an amateur. He did not play a further game after his debut. |
Milosovic | | 07-02-1984 | 1984-1984 | IF | | | | Nothing is known about this player other than he did not play a further Reserve game after his debut. |
Milosovic | Dejan/Danny | 27-01-2000 | 2000-2003 | Gk | Carlton, Melbourne, Australia | 26-06-1978 | | A product of the Australian Institute of Sport, Milosevic started off his professional career with the Canberra Cosmos in the old NSL, where he made fourteen starts, and captained the Under-Twenty Australian side to the World Youth Cup in 1997. He had also had a spell in Germany with Arminia Bielefeld and Preussen Munster, without making their first teams, before joining Perth Glory where he was a high profile signing in 1998. He had a strong start to his time in Perth and soon gained cult hero status and went on to make seventeen appearances before he moved to Leeds for £110,000 in January 2000. Milosevic was capped by Australia at Under-Seventeen, Under-Twenty and Under-Twenty-three levels and represented Australia in the 2000 Olympic Games and the Under-Twenty World Cup in 1997. At Leeds he hardly ever got a chance with the likes of England number two, Nigel Martyn, and future England number one, Paul Robinson, ahead of him. However, he had been signed on a three year contract by David O'Leary in 2000 and later Terry Venables, who took over at the start of the 2002-03 season, had given him a further two year contract when his initial one was almost finished. He had been loaned out by Leeds to Wolverhampton Wanderers for the second half of the 2001-02 season, but a training injury saw him return to Leeds without playing a game. He was also loaned to Plymouth Argyle in November 2002, but he sustained a knee injury in his only game. This was followed by a spell at Crewe Alexandra for the second half of the 2002-03 season but he only played one game in which he had the misfortune to break his wrist. So both spells at Plymouth and Crewe, like the one with Wolves were cut short by injury. While Milosevic never played a game for Leeds in the first team he was an unused substitute for the first three games of the 2001-02 season. He was also the unused substitute on fourteen consecutive games in 2000-01. Terry Venables, who was the Leeds Manager in 2002 told Milosevic that he could be the second goalkeeper at Leeds as Nigel Martyn was looking to move on. Unfortunately for Milosevic, while Martyn did move on, so did Venables, and his successor Peter Reid did not share Venables view. He did not take kindly to Milosevic asking for his time at Crewe Alexandra to be extended. He consequently preferred Scott Carson, who was much younger and a future England Under-Twenty-One and full England goalkeeper. After a short loan spell with Hull City, where he did not play a game, with the writing on the wall and Leeds keen to save money, Milosevic was released from the playing side of his contract at the end of September 2003, but still remained on the Leeds payroll until the end of its duration. In January 2004, he was signed up on a pay as you play contract in Scotland with Celtic. After only a couple of weeks and with the two better keepers at Celtic unavailable, he was set for a call up for the starting eleven but, according to Celtic sources, decided that he wasn't being paid enough and decided to walk out on the club. According to Milosevic, his father, Zoran, had been diagnosed with a heart condition in Australia. "I was told he had a year to live so I packed my bags and headed home," Milosevic said. "My career did not pan out. With the right frame of mind I am sure it would have been different." He never returned to Glasgow, and was without a club until he joined the New Zealand Knights, on a three year contract in 2005, for the inaugural A-League season on the advice of former Leeds and Perth Glory team mate Danny Hay. The Knights first season was a disaster, despite Milosevic's often valiant efforts in keeping scorelines to more acceptable level. He played Fourteen games and was top of the saves made charts by a long distance as he was behind the worst defence in the League. A change in management for the second season saw two able goalkeepers, Mark Paston and Michael Turnbull, brought in as competition, yet Milosevic still started the season as the club's number one. However the poor morale at the club and increasing strain on them to promote more New Zealand players saw Milosevic demoted to the bench with All-White’s keeper Paston ahead of him. Consequently he only made five appearances. Before the close of the A-League's second season Milosevic was released from his contract. He moved to Inglewood United in Western Australia in January 2007 and was there until December 2007 apart from being loaned to Perth Glory as a back-up keeper in September 2007, where he only sat on the bench. He made a surprise appearance on ex-Leeds star Robbie Fowler's North Queensland Fury substitute bench in their friendly against Perth Glory on 18th July 2009.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Mings | | 02-05-1990 | 1990-1990 | OR | | | | Nothing is known about this player other than he did played just the final two games of the 1989-90 season probably as a trialist as he does not seem to have any history as a Leeds Junior. |
Mitchell | Ronald Gilbert/Ron | 22-11-1958 | 1958-1960 | FB | Lancaster | 13-02-1935 | | Represented Lancaster schools and had trials with Preston North End, before joining Morecambe. Leeds paid the Lancashire Combination side £1,000 for him on 22nd November 1958. He made his first team debut in January 1959 and appeared for them in four League games, but was released at the end of the 1959-60 season.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Molenaar | Robert | 09-04-1997 | 1997-2000 | CH | Zaandam, Holland | 27-02-1969 | |
Molenaar started his football career in Holland and signed professional for FC Volendam in August 1992. He was always recognized as a solid and wholehearted defender and was well respected in Dutch football. Leeds Manager, George Graham, signed him for £1 million in January 1997 in an effort to plug a leaky Leeds defence. He scored twice in one hundred and twenty-five games while at Volendam. He went straight into the Leeds team and was a regular from joining until the end of the 1996-97 season. The following season, 1997-98, saw his performances decline and he slipped behind David Wetherall and Lucas Radebe as the first choice central defender. He re-established himself in the following season of 1998-99 and was once more the first choice central defender in place of David Wetherall, but a challenge by Nicolas Anelka in a game against Arsenal in December 1998 saw him suffer cruciate ligament damage, as he fell awkwardly. The injury was similar to that suffered by teammate Martin Hiden at Old Trafford only a few weeks earlier, and he was sidelined until 2000, after he had ruptured the ligament for a second time in April 1999. It proved to be his last game for Leeds and as United had Rio Ferdinand, Lucas Radebe, Jonathan Woodgate, Michael Duberry and Dominic Matteo as central defenders, Molenaar became surplus to requirements and after scoring four League goals from forty-seven starts and four games from the bench, was sold to Bradford City for £500,000 in December 2000 to help their fight against relegation alongside former teammate David Wetherall. He made his debut for the Bantams on 2nd December 2000 in a 2-1 win over Coventry City at Valley Parade. He stayed until 2003 when his contract was not renewed. At Valley Parade he scored twice in seventy-one League appearances, including one as substitute. He returned to Holland in June 2003 with RBC Roosendaal before retiring in the summer of 2007. He scored six goals in sixty-six League starts and three games from the bench with Roosendaal in the top flight. He played his final game in the Eredivisie on 9th April 2006 in a 0-5 defeat at Sparta Rotterdam when he was replaced in the sixty-second minute by Edgar Marcelino Carvalho. He played in the Jupiler League in the 2006-07 season on limited occasions with his final game coming on 3rd November 2006 in a 2-2 draw at FC Emmen. After obtaining the necessary coaching qualifications he became coach of the AZ Alkmaar Under-Nineteen team in June 2011, where he stayed for a year. During his training he had spent time at Bayern Munich and SBV Excelsior and in the 2010-11 season he was an assistant manager to Alex Pastoor at NEC Nijmegen. He became an Assistant coach under his former mentor from mid-2012, along with former Leeds winger Willem Korsten, but when Pastoor was fired, in August 2013, due to results and politics, the two ex-Leeds players went too. Molenaar became the manager of amateur side RKSV Halsteren from 2014 to 2015. He was appointed manager of First Division team FC Volendam in July 2015. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mollatt | Ronald Vincent/Ron | 04-02-1950 | 1950-1955 | WH | Edwinstowe | 24-03-1932 | 00-01-2001 | He started with Chesterfield Juniors but joined the Leeds United Juniors and then turned professional on 10th February 1950. Even though he played just seventeen League appearance for the first team after his debut in September 1951, he was a Reserve team regular and a popular and dedicated clubman. He was a good player and proved it when he joined York City in July 1955, as he went on to lead the Minstermen and made one hundred and twenty-four League appearances in which he scored his only League goal. He left them for Bradford City in July 1960 and went on to clock up another eighty-eight League games for the Bantams before hanging up his boots at the end of the 1961-62 season.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Monk | Brian | 18-09-1957 | 1953-1958 | IF | Leeds | 15-05-1937 | | He started with Market District Boys Club and signed as a sixteen year old amateur on 30th Aprril 1953, signing professional terms in February 1955. He progressed through the Juniors to the Reserves and played for the first team in a friendly but never made it to that level in a senior game. He left for Crewe Alexandra in May 1958, where he made five League appearances, without scoring. |
Moody | James/Jimmy | 28-09-1994 | 1993-1995 | IF | Hull | 16-11-1977 | | He joined Leeds straight from school as a Trainee and two substitute appearances for the Juniors in the 1993-94 season. He was a fairly regular player with that team in the 1994-95 season, scoring seven goals in thirteen starts and six from the bench and also made the Reserve team, scoring once in two starts and another as a substitute. In the 1995-96 season he netted fifteen goals in eleven starts and three as a substitute in the Juniors and made one start in the Reserves, but was released at the end of the season. |
Moore | B. | 31-08-1957 | 1957-1958 | CF/IF | | | | Nothing is known about this player other than he played a few games in the early part of the 1957-58 and 1958-59 seasons, in which he scored. |
Moore | James/Jimmy | 12-09-1921 | 1921-1922 | IF | Boldon, Co Durham | 01-09-1891 | 00-12-1972 | An F.A. Cup winner with Barnsley, he was signed from Southampton in May 1921 and soon became the first choice Inside-Left with the first team, but after switching to Inside-Right to accomodate Jack Swan he was displaced by Bill Poyntz and he left for Brighton and Hove Albion in June 1922. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Moore | Stanley/Stan | 16-09-1931 | 1931-35 | Gk | Worksop | 10-03-1903 | 00-00-1983 | He joined Leeds in August 1931 from Worksop Town He made eighty-three appearances for Leeds and gave four years good service before leaving for Swansea Town at the end of the 1934-35 season in June 1935. He made one hundred and twenty-six League appearances for the Swans before WW2 saw the end of his career. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Moore | William Riddell/Billy | 22-04-1924 | 1924-25 | Gk | Sunderland | 13-12-1909 | 00-00-1962 | He joined Leeds from Seaham Colliery on 12th March 1924. He made his first team debut in November 1924 and went on to make six appearances before joining Southend United, along with teammate Dave Robinson and both went on to make over three hundred appearances for the Shrimpers. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Moorhouse | George | 29-10-1921 | 1921-1921 | LH | Liverpool | 04-04-1901 | 00-00-1943 | A trialist with Leeds, who only played twice for the Leeds Reserves, he was an amateur from the Liverpool district, who later joined Tranmere Rovers, where he made two appearances in the 1921-22 season. He then moved to Canada where he represented Montreal before carving out a career in the USA where he played for Brooklyn Wanderers, New York Giants, New York SC, New York Yankees and New York Americans and went on to represent USA, making nine full international appearances. |
Morgan | Ross | 16-10-1990 | 1990-1990 | LB | Cardiff | 11-10-1971 | | He Joined the Leeds trainee system in the summer of 1989 after attending the Bishop of Llandaff Church-in-Wales High School, but after playing for the Juniors and twice for the Reserves he struggled with injuries and was released. He went back to South Wales and played with Pontypridd Town and other Welsh Premier League teams. |
Morris | J. M. | 28-08-1923 | 1923-1923 | CH | Tamworth | | | He was signed from Tamworth Castle on 10th May 1923. He stood 5ft 10 1/2ins and weighed 11st 6lb but only played a handful of games for the reserves. |
Morton | Norman | 24-11-1945 | 1945-1948 | CF | Barnsley | 02-05-1925 | 00-00-1977 | The 6ft 12st Centre Forward joined Leeds from Sunderland as an amateur in 1944 although he was playing for Barnsley Woolley Colliery. He started in the Leeds Reserves and made one appearance for the first team in the War football League in May 1945. He went on to play one game for Leeds in peacetime in December 1947. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Moss | Jack/Jackie | 01-01-1949 | 1949-1950 | IF | Blackrod, Bolton | 01-09-1923 | 00-00-1975 | Started with Bury in December 1943, scoring twice in seven games in peacetime League football before joining Rochdale in January 1947. After scoring seventeen goals in fifty-eight League games, he moved to Leeds for £7,000 on 7th January 1949, when 25yo and 5ft 9ins and 11st 2lbs. He scored twice in twenty-three games for the Leeds first team after making his debut in February 1949. He left for Halifax Town on 17th January 1951, where he scored ten goals in one hundred and twenty-four League games.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Mossop | J. M. | 24-11-1945 | 1945-1945 | LB | | | | Little is known about this player other than he played for the Reserves in November 1945 |
Moule | Jack | 08-09-1945 | 1943-1946 | OR | | | | A Leeds United Junior who joined the club during the war. He became a regular for the Reserves and went on to make his first team debut in December 1943, during the Wartime League period, scoring seven goals in twenty-one games. He did not play for the first team in peacetime but featured regularly in the Reserves before leaving for Bradford City in November 1947, but never played for their first team. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Mulholland | Peter | 23-09-1961 | 1961-1962 | CF | | | | An eighteen-year-old amateur from Middlesbrough he came on trial in September 1961 but only played in his debut appearance. |
Mullen | | 17-03-1973 | 1973-1973 | FB | | | | Nothing is known about him and he only played a couple of Reserve team games at the end of the 1972-73 season. |
Mulrain | | 11-10-1989 | 1989-1992 | CF | Lambeth | 23-10-1972 | | He joined Leeds from school as an Apprentice and turned professional in July 1991. He had progressed quickly through the Juniors and made the Reserves in his second year. He never made the first team and was released and joined Charlton Athletic as a non-contract player, but did not make the first team at the Valley. However, after joining Rochdale in December 1992 he scored twice in three starts and five games from the bench but that was to be his only Football League exposure. |
Mumby | Peter | 04-12-1984 | 1983-1989 | IF | Bradford | 22-02-1969 | | After representing Bradford and Yorkshire schoolboys he joined United on schoolboy forms in November 1985. He soon progressed with the Juniors and the Reserve team and made his first team debut in September 1987 after having turned professional in July 1987. He started three and came on three times as a substitute. He was loaned to Shamrock Rovers in January 1989, where he scored four times in six games but Howard Wilkinson was pruning the Leeds players to make way for his new ones and Mumby was sold to Burnley in July 1989, where he scored nine goals in forty-six League appearances of which ten were as substitute. He was released by Burnley after the 1991-92 season and went back to Ireland and joined Limerick in August 1992. While at Limerick he scored eight goals in thirty-two appearances. Subsequently he appeared for Bradford Park Avenue, Chorley and for Fields FC, a West Yorkshire League club.(Leeds United Player Details) |
Mundell | Brian | 12-10-1968 | 1968-1970 | WH | Leeds | | | He joined Leeds as an amateur straight from school and progressed through the Juniors to make the odd appearance with the Reserves. |
Murray | Thomas/Tommy | 19-09-1960 | 1960-1961 | OR | Bellshill | 14-01-1933 | | Started with Dalry Thistle before joining Falkirk in 1955. He scored thirteen goals for them in sixty-seven Scottish League games before signing for Queen of the South in the 1959 close season. He moved to Leeds in August 1960. Although he made his debut in September 1960 he was unable to cement a first team spot but scored twice in seven League games before moving to Tranmere Rovers on 8th March 1961, where he scored once in ten League games before returning North of the Border to rejoin Queen of the South in the 1962 close season, where he added four goals in twelve Scottish League games in the 1962-63 season. (Leeds United Player Details) |
Musgrove | Robert/Bob | 13-09-1920 | 1920-1921 | RH | Ryhope | 00-07-1893 | 00-11-1934 | Signed from Durham City in July 1920 and after one season at Leeds, he rejoined them in July 1921. (Leeds United Player Details) |
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