William Lambie (footballer)
William Allan Lambie (10 January 1873 – 16 June 1936) was a Scottish footballer of the 1880s and 1890s. CareerBorn in southern Glasgow and privately educated at the High School of Glasgow,[1] Lambie played mainly at outside left for Queen's Park;[2] he joined the club alongside school friends William Gulliland and Tom Waddell,[1] and together they claimed Scottish Cup runners-up medals in 1892 and winner's medals in 1893 – the club's last triumph in the competition. Aside from a brief spell at Ardwick (Manchester City) in 1892 and one guest appearance for Corinthian,[3] Lambie remained at Queen's Park until around 1900, also claiming winner's medals from the minor Glasgow Merchants Charity Cup (1891, his breakthrough with four goals in the final)[4][1] and Glasgow League (1897); again, these were the last occasions the Spiders lifted the trophies. He was capped nine times by the Scotland national team, making his debut against Ireland in 1892 at the age of 19. He scored five goals, including once in each of his first four appearances,[5] and had a role in three British Home Championship wins (1893–94, 1895–96 and 1896–97). In the 1901–02 season, a man purporting to be Lambie was engaged by Burnley without having been seen playing. In the first few minutes of his first match it became clear that it was an imposter; he was taken off the field during the game and was promptly fired.[6] Personal lifeHis older brother John was also a Queen's Park regular[7] and an international, and holds the records for being the youngest Scotland player and captain of all time.[1] A third brother, Robert, also featured for Queen's Park; the three siblings' careers barely overlapped in terms of playing together.[8][9] International goals
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