Ray McStay

Raymond James "Ray" McStay (born 18 May 1970) is a Scottish former footballer who played as a midfielder.

Ray McStay
Personal information
Full name Raymond James McStay[1]
Date of birth (1970-05-18) 18 May 1970
Place of birth Hamilton, Scotland
Position(s) Midfielder
Youth career
Celtic Boys Club
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1987–1995 Celtic 0 (0)
1995–1996 Hamilton Academical 30 (5)
1996Hereford United (loan) 0 (0)
1996–1997 Cardiff City 1 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Playing career

McStay began his career at Celtic, where his older brothers Willie and Paul, as well as his great-uncles Willie and Jimmy had already played. A product of Celtic Boys Club, McStay signed professional forms at the same time as youth teammate Gerry Creaney.[2] Despite being regularly mentioned as having a big future at the club McStay had to wait until the 1992–93 season before being called into the Celtic first team and even then he only made the bench for a single league game against St Johnstone and was not called upon to play.[3]

McStay left Celtic in January 1995 to sign for Hamilton Academical on a free transfer. He made 30 league appearances in nearly two years at the club although he spent summer of 1996 having an unsuccessful trial with Stade Lavallois.[4] He subsequently had a trial with Wycombe Wanderers and was poised to sign for the club in October 1996 but the move fell through for undisclosed reasons.[5] In late 1996 he was loaned to Hereford United where he did not play a league game before, during the 1996–97 season, playing a single game for Cardiff City. McStay quit football soon after this.[6]

In summer 1997, whilst on honeymoon in the Dominican Republic, McStay was admitted to hospital with severe stomach cramps and fever and was reported as suffering a "mystery illness"[7] and was described as critically ill.[8]

Post-football

McStay was the UK commercial director of Midgibyte, a Glasgow-based design consultancy business run by Paul McStay.[9] He now works at a Glasgow digital agency called MadeBrave.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.