|
|
Do You Remember ?
Walter McRae OBE
Born: 1929, in Kilmarnock,
Died: 22 September, 2006, in Kilmarnock, aged 77.
Walter McRae 1968-73
Walter joined Killie as trainer in 1956 and was also the Scottish
International team trainer for many years. Walter's training duties were
filled by Hugh
Allen (pictured left) who still
helps in
this role as of season 2001-02.A strict disciplinarian he formed a fine
partnership with Willie Waddell and Killie were always reckoned to be
the fittest side in Scotland. Walter was unfortunate during his time as
manager, the club due to financial pressures decided to go from full
time to part time. Walter left the club in 1973 and returned in 1980 as
Secretary, before retiring in November 1991. Walter was awarded an OBE
in 1992.
Sadly Walter passed away in Sept of 2006.

Walter in May of 2005 with the 64-65 Championship trophy.
YOU could have picked a representative "all time Kilmarnock XI" from the
mourners at Walter McCrae's funeral, even if more than one admitted they
were there to make sure that the legendary and seemingly indestructible
former Kilmarnock trainer and manager was actually dead.
McCrae never wore the jersey but did more for Kilmarnock than most. He
was Kilmarnock through and through, born in the town 77 years ago, a
member of both the rugby XV and cricket XI at Kilmarnock Academy and
apart from his time in National Service he never left Kilmarnock.
After school, he studied physiotherapy then did his National Service in
the Royal Marines. These two years had a profound effect on him. For the
rest of his life, his erect military bearing made it clear he could only
have served in one of two outfits - the Guards or the Marines.
Returning to Kilmarnock, McCrae became involved in the local junior
team,
Kilmarnock
Juniors, where he was goalkeeper, trainer, committee member and office
bearer. Then after the club folded, he went senior as assistant trainer
at Rugby Park.
His elevation to first team trainer came at a fortuitous time with
Willie Waddell arriving as manager to form a formidable management
team with McCrae.
With his Rangers upbringing, Waddell was maybe never as totally at
ease as his contemporary and great rival Jock Stein, when tracksuited
and on the training field with his players. Waddell was a first-rate
tactician and motivator but he tended to delegate the weekday training
to McCrae, confident that on a Saturday he would take charge of a
Kilmarnock team which was fit, raring to go and able to run for 90
minutes.
In the first half of the Sixties decade, with the pre-Stein Celtic in
the doldrums, Kilmarnock and Hearts were the rivals to the then
all-conquering Rangers team inspired by Jim Baxter. They pushed
Waddell's old club all the way and, fittingly in 1965 in Waddell's final
game as manager, Kilmarnock beat Hearts in a winner-take-all last-day
match to win the club's
only Scottish League title.
Waddell promptly retired to journalism, Stein went to Celtic to change
the face of Scottish football while McCrae remained at Kilmarnock.
Sir Matt Busby tried to lure him to Old Trafford as trainer while
Waddell, on taking over the Rangers managership, tried to reunite the
pairing at Ibrox.
However, neither man could persuade McCrae to leave the club he loved.
Kilmarnock sadly slipped back, managers came and went and even McCrae,
such a great number two, failed as number one to resurrect the golden
days when he and Waddell had run the team.
He then did quit Kilmarnock but the divorce was short-lived as one of
his team-mates in the Kilmarnock Academy Rugby XV, Bob Laughlin, by now
a Kilmarnock director, enticed McCrae back to the club as secretary and
general manager.
Killie's on-field troubles continued but off the field McCrae ran an
efficient club. He also became the shield for an increasingly
beleaguered board, bearing the brunt of several fans' demonstrations
when more correctly their anger should have been directed at the board.
On more than one occasion, however, a post-match glare from the erect
figure with the hawk-like stare quietened the anger-filled chants from
disgruntled supporters.
Such was his commitment to the club, he had a house just a free kick
away from Rugby Park.
How this went down with his wife, Isobel, we do not know, but as she
admitted in her eulogy at the funeral, their two daughters, Mairi and
Lesley, revelled in the freedom of their Rugby Park summer playground to
the extent of even playing with the legendary club mascot, Angus the
sheep.
McCrae did his share of globetrotting with Kilmarnock and Scotland, but
unlike other football men, he never neglected his family and Mairi,
whose birth coincided with an Aberdeen v Kilmarnock match at Pittodrie,
and Lesley who entered the world while her dad and Kilmarnock were in
Seattle, regularly received welcome presents from all over the world -
Italian leather bags, Mexican shawls, African dolls and dresses from
Fifth Avenue, New York.
When Bob Fleeting won a somewhat acrimonious takeover of the club in the
early Nineties, McCrae stayed on to oversee a seamless transference of
power before retiring. He continued, however, to be a welcome visitor to
the club and enjoyed Kilmarnock's
1997 Scottish Cup win
as much as any native of the town.
Away from football, he was a stalwart member and past president of
Kilmarnock Rotary Club and a prominent member of his local kirk. His
final year was blighted by illness, but he bore his troubles with the
stoicism which had marked his life.


Killie Manager
History 1957-Present Here
|