Andy Rolland

Andy Rolland
Personal information
Full name Andrew Rolland
Date of birth (1942-11-12) 12 November 1942
Place of birth Cowdenbeath, Scotland
Playing position Full back
Youth career
1959–1961 Cowdenbeath Royals
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1961–1962 Cowdenbeath 7 (3)
1962–1964 Dundonald Bluebell
1964–1967 Cowdenbeath 93 (15)
1967–1978 Dundee United 327 (33)
1978 Fort Lauderdale Strikers 15 (0)
1978 Los Angeles Aztecs 12 (0)
1978–1980 Dunfermline Athletic 42 (8)
1980–1982 Cowdenbeath 78 (7)
Total 574 (66)
National team
1976 Scottish League XI[1] 1 (0)
Teams managed
1980–1982 Cowdenbeath

* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only.


Andy Rolland (born 12 November 1942 in Cowdenbeath) is a Scottish former footballer who played as a right back.[2]

Career

Rolland began his senior career in 1961 with Cowdenbeath but was released at the end of the season. After a spell in junior football, he returned to Central Park in 1964 and remained for three seasons, before a £10,000 move to Dundee United in 1967. Rolland played at Tannadice for eleven seasons, picking up a Scottish Cup runners-up medal and making some 429 competitive appearances, putting him in the top ten for United players. In summer 1978, Rolland moved to the United States to play in the North American Soccer League, featuring for Fort Lauderdale Strikers and Los Angeles Aztecs, the latter involving a swap deal for George Best. Rolland returned to Scotland after the summer and signed for Dunfermline, although he experienced relegation in his first season. Midway through 1980-81, Rolland returned to Cowdenbeath for a third spell, becoming player/manager shortly afterwards. During that season, Rolland missed the all-important penalty in a match which denied Cowden promotion. Rolland left the club in March 1982, and later returned to junior football at the age of 40 with Leven Juniors.

Although Rolland never appeared for Scotland, he was selected for the Scottish League team against the Football League at Hampden in 1976.[1] This was the final of these matches, as this occasion drew less than 9,000 spectators.[3]

Honours

1973-74

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.