Coaching Dundee United and Scotland He developed his coaching skills as assistant manager to Jim McLean, at a time when Dundee United were
Scottish champions and
European Cup semi-finalists. He joined Dundee United's board of directors in 1986. Smith accepted the offer and within a few weeks Rangers made an official approach to
Dundee United, who demanded £50,000 in compensation. The then Rangers chief executive
David Holmes duly paid that amount, and Smith was allowed to join Rangers on 16 April. Smith was initially placed in temporary charge of the first team whilst Souness negotiated his own release from his playing contact with Italian side
Sampdoria. With Souness continuing to play regularly until 1988, Smith was the principal figure in the dugout for many matches. In addition, Smith took sole charge of the team in the
1987 Scottish League Cup Final as Souness was suspended. Souness was subject to an extensive touchline ban from February 1989, although he frequently circumvented this by naming himself as a
substitute. When Souness left for
Liverpool in April 1991, Smith was appointed interim manager. Six more league titles in succession followed under Smith's tenure, including a
domestic treble in
1992–93. and 44 matches unbeaten in all competitions. – although in terms of net spend, particularly due to the sales of
Trevor Steven in 1991 for £5.5 million and
Duncan Ferguson in 1994 for £4.3 million, it was comparable for much of that time to the type of support offered across the city to
Tommy Burns at
Celtic. and then lost the
1998 Scottish Cup final to
Hearts.
Everton After success in his native Scotland, Smith's retirement lasted a month as he took the manager's job at
Premier League club
Everton in June 1998. Initially Smith had been linked with the manager's job at
Sheffield Wednesday, but false promises made to him by the Everton chairman of massive transfer funds and unlimited ambition lured Smith to Goodison Park. He was replaced by
David Moyes, who managed Everton to a safe finish in fifteenth place.
Manchester United In March 2004, Smith returned to football when he had a short spell as assistant manager to
Alex Ferguson at
Manchester United at the end of the
2003–04 season. During this time
Manchester United won the
2004 FA Cup Final, beating
Millwall at the
Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.
Scotland national team Smith was appointed manager of the
Scottish national team on 2 December 2004, succeeding
Berti Vogts. Despite a revival of fortunes under Smith, including a home draw with
Italy and an away win against
Norway, hopes of reaching the
2006 World Cup were ended by a 1–0 home defeat against
Belarus. Scotland's world ranking improved by seventy places during his tenure. Scotland recorded a famous victory against World Cup runners-up
France in a
UEFA Euro 2008 qualification match at Hampden and temporarily led their group by three points. A 2–0 defeat against
Ukraine on 11 October 2006 was the first of the campaign.
Return to Rangers On 5 January 2007, press outlets reported that
Rangers had spoken to Smith with a view to hiring him to manage Rangers again, with
Ally McCoist as assistant manager. He succeeded
Paul Le Guen, who had left the club by mutual consent after Rangers had been knocked out of the
2006–07 Scottish League Cup by
First Division side
St Johnstone and fallen 17 points behind
Celtic in the
2006–07 Scottish Premier League; caretaker manager
Ian Durrant (who had previously played under him) was retained on the coaching staff. Smith's first match in his second spell at
Ibrox was a 5–0 win against
Dundee United on 13 January, with two goals from
Kris Boyd and one each from
Barry Ferguson,
Chris Burke and
Charlie Adam. Smith's first final since his return was secured with a 2–0 win over
Hearts in the
2007–08 Scottish League Cup. Rangers played
Dundee United in the
2008 Scottish League Cup Final; the game was drawn 1–1 after normal time, and 2–2 after extra time. The winners were decided by penalty kicks. Rangers won 3–2, with
Kris Boyd scoring the winning penalty (as well as the goals for
Rangers in normal time and extra time). Rangers also narrowly missed out on the league title, partly attributable to an end-of-season fixture backlog due to their cup runs. They added the
2007–08 Scottish Cup with a win over
Queen of the South in what was their 68th match of the campaign; afterwards, Smith revealed that assistant McCoist had been controlling the team in the Scottish Cup run. In the
2008–09 UEFA Champions League second qualifying round, Rangers drew 0–0 with Lithuanian side
FBK Kaunas at Ibrox on 30 July 2008 and lost the return leg 2–1. The loss against Kaunas meant Rangers made an early exit from European competition. Rangers went on to claim the
SPL title – the club's 52nd championship – on 24 May 2009. Smith followed this up with the
Scottish Cup a week later to end the season with a League and Cup double. In December 2009, it was revealed that Smith was to continue as Rangers manager without a contract when it expired the following month. In March 2010, he guided Rangers to win the
League Cup after they had been reduced to nine men in the final. On 25 April 2010, Rangers clinched their 53rd league title with a 1–0 win away to
Hibernian. On 25 May 2010, Smith signed a new one-year deal to continue as Rangers manager throughout the
2010–11 campaign. He stated that it would be his last as Rangers manager, with McCoist to take control thereafter. In this final season as manager, Smith led Rangers to another domestic double, winning the
League Cup and their 54th league championship. The league title was secured on the final day of
the season, with a 5–1 win against
Kilmarnock at
Rugby Park. ==After management==