Mill issue 1 | September/October 2018

Page 14

BUDDIES

Steven Thompson Steven Thompson enjoyed a successful 20-year career playing for teams such as Dundee United, Rangers and St Mirren, before moving into football punditry for BBC Scotland. Mill tackles him in this exclusive interview.

F

ootball and music don’t tend to mix. Anyone who’s ever heard a Scotland World Cup squad novelty single will attest to that. However, retired footballer Steven Thompson has been tethered to music since his early teens. Born in Paisley yet raised in nearby Houston, he’d often travel by bus to visit Paisley’s fondly remembered record shop, Stereo One. “I actually used to DJ a lot when I was a youngster,” he reveals. “I had the decks and the mixer, so I used to buy tonnes of records from that shop. I spent all my pocket money on records, I must have had about a thousand. I’d turn the music up to a hundred decibels and DJ away in my bedroom. That was my secret passion, not a lot of people knew I did it.” A few years later, Thompson shifted his allegiance from hard-core dance to the happening sounds of Oasis and Blur. After receiving a guitar for his eighteenth birthday – the same year he signed with Dundee United – he spent most of his free time learning how to play. “I’d pick it up most afternoons and became self-taught,” he recalls. “I reached a certain standard and then just plateaued, I never really took it any further. I’m probably still playing the same songs now that I was playing when I was eighteen. I actually had a book called ‘The Three Chord Beatles’ or something like that, so I learned to play basic versions of all these Beatles songs.

14 MILL

You think that you’re some sort of rock star, but you’re not. I also really liked Jimi Hendrix, but I couldn’t play his music!” Despite his passion for music, Thompson never seriously considered it as a career. “I would probably have liked to been a P.E. teacher had I not become a footballer,” he says. “I think that was in the back of my mind at school. I don’t think I could be somebody who’d be able to do an office job or somebody that had to sit still for any period of time.” So how did he make the seismic shift from bedroom DJ and Beatles busker to professional footballer? “Dundee United had a really good scouting network in Glasgow when I was growing up,” he recalls. “I used to play with local boys’ clubs, I played with Gleniffer Thistle, and they would come along and watch games. So they scouted me, and I left Gleniffer to go to Dundee United. Then at 17 they asked me to go up fulltime. I pretty much made my debut that year. It all kind of snowballed very quickly.” Thompson scored 116 goals during his career, eight of them for the Scotland international squad. However, it’s probably no surprise to learn that this lifelong St Mirren fan, who played for the team between 2011 and his retirement in 2016, treasures two goals in particular. “I was very fortunate to score in the semi-final and final of the League Cup win in 2013.” he says, “It’s a real cliché, but that was a dream come true. I went to the 1987 cup final to watch St Mirren play, and I remember Ian Ferguson scoring the winning goal. I probably held that vision in my head my whole life, and then, strangely, it was me doing the very same thing for St Mirren some 20-odd years later.” Although playing for St Mirren was always his dream, Thompson harbours some mild regrets about his time there. “The first three years I was there, I was top goal-scorer and we won the cup, but I should’ve chucked it at the end of the third


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