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Gordon Smith
Personal information
Date of birth 25 May 1924(1924-05-25)
Place of birth    Edinburgh, Scotland
Date of death    7 August 2004 (aged 80)
Place of death    North Berwick, Scotland
Playing position Outside right
Youth career
Montrose Roselea
Dundee North End
Senior career1
Years Club App (Gls)*
1941–1959
1959–1961
1961–1964
1964
Hibernian
Heart of Midlothian
Dundee
Drumcondra
Totals
310 (125)
042 0(13)
070 00(9)

422 (147)   
National team
1946–1957 Scotland 019 00(4)

1 Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only.
* Appearances (Goals)

Gordon Smith (25 May 1924 – 7 August 2004) was a Scottish association football player. He is perhaps best known as being the only Scottish footballer to have been a Scottish league champion with three different clubs. What is even more notable is that none of the clubs he won championships with were either of the traditionally dominant Old Firm of Rangers and Celtic.

Smith spent much of his childhood in Angus and showed great footballing promise playing for Montrose Roselea and Dundee North End. Smith was to return to Edinburgh to pursue a career as a professional. It wasn't to be with his boyhood favourites Heart of Midlothian,[1] but their cross-town rivals Hibernian. The "Gay Gordon" soon established himself as an idol for a whole generation of post-war football fans. Smith had been due to sign for Hearts but the 16 year old was snatched by Hibs and played against the Edinburgh rivals the day after signing, scoring a hat-trick in a 5–3 victory on 28 April 1941.[2]

Alongside Bobby Johnstone, Lawrie Reilly, Eddie Turnbull, and Willie Ormond, Smith became part of the "Famous Five", the most celebrated forward line in Hibs' history. During the late 1940s and 1950s Smith and the Famous Five ensured Hibs were one of the most successful sides in Scotland, both sporting-wise and at the turnstiles. The League title was captured three times (1948, 1951, 1952), while 1953 saw Rangers pip Hibs only through the goal average system. Smith was less successful in cup competition however, reaching only one Scottish Cup final with Hibs, which they lost 2–1 to Aberdeen in 1947.

A recurring ankle injury led to Hibs releasing him in 1959. Smith paid for an operation on the offending ankle himself, and then he signed for Hearts. He was to enjoy immediate success at Tynecastle, winning both the League and the League Cup in his first season.

After an injury-plagued second season with Hearts, Smith was released and again the football writers prepared obituaries for the veteran's career. Again Smith was to confound contemporary wisdom, signing for Dundee and forming a part of their first, and so far only, league winning side in 1962. At the age of 38, Smith had achieved the unique distinction of being the only player to win the league title with three different teams, none of them with either half of the Old Firm.

In the following season Smith was paired in a forward line with Alan Gilzean. They helped Dundee to the European Cup semi-finals, where they performed gallantly in an aggregate defeat to A.C. Milan. After leaving Dundee, he played briefly for Drumcondra in the Republic of Ireland before finally retiring.[3]

During his playing career, Gordon Smith was capped 19 times by Scotland, scoring four goals. Smith was compared with his English contemporaries Stanley Matthews and Tom Finney,[1][4] but he did not appear to have a "big-match temperament".[1] Rangers winger Willie Waddell often won selection for the international team ahead of Smith.[1]

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