The Scotland national amateur football team was the amateur representative team for Scotland at football. It was formed in 1926 and continued until 1974.
Following the adoption of professionalism in 1893, the Scotland national football team continued to field both professional and amateur players, but by the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, the number of amateurs winning international caps was in decline. Between the formation of the SAFA in 1909 and 1926, the SFA turned down requests from the SAFA, the FA and the FFF to stage international matches featuring a Scottish team made up of purely amateur players. One reason was that a Scottish amateur national team featuring no players from wholly amateur Scottish League First Division club Queen's Park would not be in the national interest, due to the prospective Scotland amateur matches clashing with Queen's Park's. In August 1926, the SAFA announced that the first Scotland amateur international match would take place against their English counterparts on 18 December that year at Filbert Street, with the team's selection being determined by the SFA. In front of a 10,000 crowd, Scotland won the match 4âÂÂ1, courtesy of two goals from Laurie McBain and one each from George Jessiman and James Crawford.
Between 1926 and 1939, Scottish League First Division club Queen's Park provided the majority of the players for the Scotland amateur team, with many of the players winning full international caps as well. With England as the biggest opponent and crowd draw amongst the Home Nations, the strongest possible team was selected and often included an all-Queen's Park XI. In the same period, Scotland played regular friendly matches against the Wales and Ireland amateur representative teams and the matches were used to experiment with lineups featuring amateur players from other Scottish League clubs, in addition to amateurs playing in the Highland League, East of Scotland League, the Scottish Junior leagues, for Scottish Universities and in England. Friendly matches were played versus France and Denmark in 1932.
In its first entry into the unofficial British Amateur Championship in the 1927âÂÂ28 season, Scotland finished as runners-up to England and won the competition for the first time during the 1929âÂÂ30 season, finishing undefeated. Further victories followed in the 1933âÂÂ34, 1935âÂÂ36 and 1936âÂÂ37 seasons, before the outbreak of the Second World War in August 1939 caused the cessation of amateur international football. Scotland's penultimate match before the declaration of war resulted in its heaviest defeat, 8âÂÂ3 versus England at Champion Hill on 11 March 1939.
Following the end of the Second World War in 1945, the Scottish amateur team did not play again until 1949. The SAFA assumed responsibility for team selection and Scotland's first match in a decade took place versus Ireland at Grosvenor Park on 16 March 1949, with John Boyd scoring a late equaliser to salvage a 2âÂÂ2 draw. The team would win just two more British Amateur Championships over the next 25 years, in the 1951âÂÂ52 and 1961âÂÂ62 seasons. Starting in 1952, amateur internationals were regularly staged against non-Home Nations opposition and two years later, the SFA once again became responsible for team selection. The team entered two competitions in 1963, the FA Centenary Amateur Tournament and the Uhuru Cup in Kenya and finished as winners and runners-up respectively. Scotland finished as runners-up in the 1966âÂÂ67 UEFA Nations Amateur Cup, losing 2âÂÂ1 to Austria at the LluÃÂs Sitjar Stadium in Palma, Majorca. The team played its final match on 5 April 1974, a 1âÂÂ1 British Amateur Championship draw with England at Highfield Road. The team ceased to exist later that year, when the FA abolished the distinction between amateurism and professionalism in domestic football.
The Scotland amateur team predominantly played its home matches at Hampden Park, Glasgow â a ground also home to the full Scotland national team and Queen's Park. Matches outside Glasgow were mainly played in Kilmarnock, Aberdeen and Dumfries.