Club career Bradford City McCall was signed by
George Mulhall in 1980 from Farsley Celtic on his 16th birthday, before becoming one of the club's two apprentices in June 1981. Mulhall's successor,
Roy McFarland, gave McCall his first-team debut at
Reading on 28 August 1982 – the opening day of the
1982–83 season – when he deputised for
Ces Podd at
right back. He had played just six league games by 29 January 1983 when he made the first of 134 consecutive league appearances, all in midfield under new manager
Trevor Cherry. City finished 12th in
Division Three that season. The
following season City struggled to make up for the absence of
Bobby Campbell, who had left to join
Derby County, and won just one of their first fifteen games, until Cherry bought Campbell back from Derby, and City won a record ten consecutive games on their way to a seventh-place finish. McCall was an integral part of the team as City won the Division Three championship in
1984–85, during which he scored eight goals as one of two ever-present players. The league title was paraded before the final game of the season on 11 May 1985 at home to
Lincoln City. However, the club's title was overshadowed when 56 people died in the
Bradford City stadium fire when the
Valley Parade ground's main stand caught fire after 40 minutes of play, during which McCall's father, who was with other family members, was badly injured. After the fire, McCall, still in his kit, spent several hours driving from the ground to his sister's house, then to
Bradford Royal Infirmary and
Pinderfields Hospital trying to find his father. His father had suffered severe burns and needed skin grafts on his hands and head and was in hospital for several weeks. During Bradford's time away from Valley Parade, McCall also turned his back on Leeds United, the team he had supported as a child, after their fans set fire to a chip van at
Odsal Stadium. They mounted a promotion challenge in
1987–88 and were top for much of the season until they faltered in the New Year. When promotion was missed initially by one point on the last day of the season after a 3–2 defeat against
Ipswich Town and then through
play-off defeat to
Middlesbrough, McCall left the club, signing for
Everton for
£850,000 in June 1988. His departure was soured when he was forced to go to
the Football League with a
Professional Footballers' Association representative to win £8,327.15 of an unpaid signing-on fee.
Everton McCall joined Everton at a time when its former triumphant side of the mid-1980s had broken up, following the ban on English sides competing in Europe, which marked the start of a period of underachievement at
Goodison Park. His Everton debut came in a 4–0 victory over
Newcastle United on 27 August 1988 against his former teammate Hendrie, who was making his debut for Newcastle. McCall also returned to
Valley Parade for a
League Cup tie, but his Everton side were knocked out by Bradford 3–1 on 14 December 1988. He started 29 league games in
1988–89 as well as another four substitute appearances, but failed to score in the league. He was also a substitute in the
1989 FA Cup Final when he scored Everton's stoppage time equaliser in the
Merseyside derby against
Liverpool to take the game into extra-time. He scored another equaliser during extra-time, but Liverpool's own substitute
Ian Rush also scored two to secure a 3–2 victory for Liverpool. McCall made a second appearance in an Everton shirt at Valley Parade, when he was invited by former teammate
Mark Ellis to bring a side for his testimonial. In three seasons at Everton, McCall played 103 league games as well as earned his first
caps with
Scotland but he failed to lift any trophies as the club finished eighth, sixth and ninth in the league. Apart from the FA Cup final defeat in 1989, the closest he came to winning a trophy at Everton was in the
1989–90 season, when Everton topped the league in late autumn and remained in contention for the title for most of the rest of the season until disappointing form in the run-in saw them finish sixth.
Rangers In the summer of 1991, McCall signed for Scottish club
Rangers for £1.2 million. Rangers had just won their third successive
Scottish Premier Division title. Under newly appointed manager
Walter Smith, McCall ended up playing in the final six of the club's
nine successive Scottish league titles, and with Rangers also winning a string of cup competitions during that time, McCall picked up a total of ten major trophies north of the border. McCall also enjoyed European success that season when the Glasgow club narrowly missed out on an appearance in the
UEFA Champions League 1992–93 final, coming second in the semi-final group stage to eventual winners
Olympique de Marseille. Citing the reason for their success as the spirit which Smith instilled in the team, McCall later said: "It was an incredible season. We won the domestic Treble, we went 44 games unbeaten and we did not lose a single game in Europe. And, though we said we would do it again next year, we all knew it was unrepeatable." He placed fourth for the
SFWA award in 1993. In
1993–94, Rangers added another
Scottish League Cup title along with the league championship, but lost 1–0 in the final of the
Scottish Cup to
Dundee United, surprisingly being denied a second successive treble. The following season saw Rangers win the league by their greatest margin as they finished 15 points ahead of
Motherwell, but they failed to reach the final of either of the domestic cups. Although their winning margin was reduced to four points, from city rivals
Celtic, in
1995–96, Rangers' points tally of 87 was a record-high total. McCall played in his fourth Scottish Cup final as Rangers defeated
Hearts 5–1. His Rangers side again pushed Celtic into second place in
1996–97 and defeated Hearts 4–3 in the Scottish League Cup (McCall had suffered an injury prior to that final which ruled him out until the end of the season, and he did not play in sufficient league games for a medal).
Return to Bradford City McCall still had one year left on his Rangers contract in 1998, but much of the team that Walter Smith had built had left and McCall was allowed to leave on a free transfer by new manager
Dick Advocaat, as long as he joined an English club. Rookie manager
Paul Jewell put together a squad which emerged as surprise promotion contenders after two seasons spent battling relegation, adding other new signings, including central midfield partner
Gareth Whalley and
striker Lee Mills, who went on to be club's top goal-scorer. The season started off slowly with just one win from the first seven games, but by the latter half of the season, City were vying with
Ipswich Town and
Birmingham City for the second promotion spot behind runaway leaders
Sunderland.
Loan signing
Lee Sharpe and
Dean Windass were added to the ranks and City had the chance to seal promotion in their penultimate game against relegation-threatened
Oxford United. The game finished as a 0–0 draw, with McCall heading over the goal in the final minutes, taking the promotion bid to the final game of the season. Days later he was named the club's player of the year. A 3–2 victory over
Wolverhampton Wanderers at
Molineux on 9 May 1999 ensured promotion to the
Premier League and denied Ipswich Town – the team that had thwarted McCall and Bradford 11 years before. Bradford were expected to struggle in their first season in the top flight for 77 years. When Jewell left only days after the season ended, McCall was appointed assistant manager to
Chris Hutchings, and subsequently served as caretaker manager for two games when Hutchings was dismissed after just 12 games of the
2000–01 league season. City were relegated with just 26 points. During a 6–1 defeat to
West Yorkshire rivals
Leeds United in the penultimate game, McCall and team-mate
Andy Myers fought on the pitch. McCall stayed on for one more season before he was released by manager
Nicky Law in May 2002, shortly before the club went into
administration for the first time after finishing 15th in
Division One. His playing career at Bradford City had looked uncertain in December 2001 before Law arrived, when previous manager
Jim Jefferies had left McCall out of the side in a 3–1 defeat at
Manchester City following a training ground dispute. However, it was Jefferies who lost out in the dispute when he resigned his post a week later after summit talks with chairman
Geoffrey Richmond. In April 2002, McCall's
testimonial match against Rangers attracted a crowd of more than 21,000 to
Valley Parade. McCall gave part of the proceeds from his testimonial to the Bradford burns research unit, which was set up following the 1985 fire. Two years after his benefit match, McCall played one more time in City colours in a Save Our City appeal match organised by Bradford's evening newspaper, the
Telegraph & Argus, to raise funds for the club, who were now in administration for a second time.
Sheffield United On 2 July 2002. McCall joined
Sheffield United, where he played an integral part in their first-team side, despite being 38, and also coached the reserves to the league title. He played 71 league games over the next two seasons, and scored twice, including a winner against former side Bradford. He was in the side that reached the
Division One play-off final in 2003 as well as the semi-finals of both cup competitions that year. However, he and Dean Windass, who was also now at Sheffield United, were both left out of the play-off final, as United lost 3–0 to Wolverhampton Wanderers. McCall played just two League Cup games in the
2004–05 season, and retired just a few weeks before his 41st birthday. His career total of 763 league games placed him in 13th position on the all-time appearance list of British footballers.
International career during
Euro 96 McCall was picked for
England and
Scotland under-21 sides on the same day in 1984, and chose to join the England under-21 squad for their game against
Turkey. However he was only picked as a substitute and the referee blew the final whistle, with McCall waiting to come on. He later told Scottish newspaper
Glasgow Herald, "I felt it was a mistake almost from the start. I was put on the bench and they tried to bring me on with a minute to go. But I took my time re-tying my boots and generally warming up and luckily didn't get on, otherwise that would have been that." Since he had not actually played for England, McCall was still eligible for Scotland. He eventually switched allegiances to the latter, for whom he qualified through his father. He made his Scotland debut at under-21 level in March 1988, ironically against England. Later the same year, McCall was called up to the
Scottish senior team. He won his first
cap on 28 March 1990 in a 1–0 friendly victory over
Argentina. He played in five friendlies in 1990 which earned him a call up to the
Italia 90 World Cup squad. He played in all three of Scotland's World Cup games. They lost their first game 1–0 to
Costa Rica, before McCall scored what would be his only international goal against
Sweden in a 2–1 victory. However, Scotland failed to qualify for the knock-out stage when they were defeated 1–0 by
Brazil. McCall represented Scotland at the European Championships in
1992, when they again failed to go beyond the group stage after defeats to
Netherlands and
Germany, and in
1996 when they were edged out in the first round by Netherlands. Scotland failed to qualify for the World Cup in
1994. McCall played just two qualifying games for the
1998 World Cup and his last cap came in a friendly against
Denmark on 25 March 1998, as he was overlooked for the final squad for the finals in France along with team-mate
Ally McCoist. He was capped a total of 40 times for Scotland, scoring one goal. McCall's caps included 11 while at Everton and 29 during his career with Rangers. ==Coaching and managerial career==