Peter McParland

Peter James McParland MBE (born 25 April 1934) is a former professional footballer.

Peter McParland
Personal information
Full namePeter James McParland
Date of birth (1934-04-25) 25 April 1934 (age 90)
Place of birthNewry, County Down, Northern Ireland, UK
Height6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Playing positionOutside left
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1951–1952Dundalk14(2)
1952–1962Aston Villa293(98)
1962–1963Wolverhampton Wanderers21(10)
1963–1964Plymouth Argyle38(15)
1964–1965Worcester City?(11)
1965Toronto Inter-Roma
1965Peterborough United0(0)
1965–1967Worcester City?(7)
1967–1968Atlanta Chiefs54(14)
1968–1971Glentoran7(3)
National team
1954–1962Northern Ireland34(10)
Teams managed
1968–1971Glentoran
1980Hong Kong
* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only

McParland was born in Newry, County Down, Northern Ireland.

During his time with Aston Villa, McParland got influenced by Jimmy Hogan,[1] later won the FA Cup in 1957, scoring twice in the final against Manchester United.

McParland also won the Second Division title in 1960 and the League Cup in 1961 while with Aston Villa.

McParland represented Northern Ireland 34 times and scored twice in his debut against Wales in 1953–54 season.

He also starred for Northern Ireland in the 1958 FIFA World Cup in which he scored five goals and helped his team to the quarter-finals.

International goals

# Date Venue Opponent Result Competition
1 31 March 1954 Wrexham, Wales   Wales 2–0 1954 British Home Championship
2 31 March 1954 Wrexham, Wales   Wales 2–0 1954 British Home Championship
3 11 June 1958 Halmstad, Sweden   Argentina 1–3 1958 FIFA World Cup
4 15 June 1958 Malmö, Sweden   West Germany 2–2 1958 FIFA World Cup
5 15 June 1958 Malmö, Sweden   West Germany 2–2 1958 FIFA World Cup
6 17 June 1958 Malmö, Sweden   Czechoslovakia 2–1 1958 FIFA World Cup
7 17 June 1958 Malmö, Sweden   Czechoslovakia 2–1 1958 FIFA World Cup
8 22 April 1959 Wrexham, Wales   Wales 4–1 1959 British Home Championship
9 22 April 1959 Wrexham, Wales   Wales 4–1 1959 British Home Championship
10 9 November 1960 Glasgow, Scotland   Scotland 2–5 1961 British Home Championship

References