Charles Nicholas (born 30 December 1961) He began his career as a youth with the Celtic Boys Club, before signing for Celtic in 1979. He made his first team debut at 17 years of age on 14 August 1979 in a Glasgow Cup tie against Queens Park, scoring Celtic's second goal in a 3–1 win. Aside from his goal, the youngster displayed alertness and confidence. Nicholas returned to playing for the reserves again for the rest of the season. His next first team outing was in July 1980 in a Drybrough Cup tie against Ayr United. Celtic lost 1–0 in a poor showing, although Nicholas continued to impress with his quick and busy play.

His first appearance for Celtic in a major competition came on 16 August 1980 when he replaced the injured Frank McGarvey during the second half of Celtic's 3–0 win away against Kilmarnock in the league. Nicholas began to feature regularly for Celtic, and on 30 August scored his first goals in major competition when he netted twice during a 6–1 win over Stirling Albion in the Scottish League Cup. Playing up front alongside one of either Frank McGarvey or George McCluskey, he went on to score 20 goals in 23 games up to the end of December 1980. adding that "The world is going to hear a lot more about Charlie [Nicholas]". He finished the season with a total of 28 goals, the last of which he scored in a 1–0 win over Rangers at Ibrox in April 1981, and Celtic went on to clinch the Scottish Premier Division title days later with a win away at Dundee United. Nicholas' form saw him win the 1981 Scottish PFA Young Player of the Year Award.

The following season saw Nicholas play less regularly, having lost his place in the side to McCluskey. Worse, he suffered a broken leg in a friendly match against Morton in January 1982 and missed the rest of the season.

Nicholas returned to the team for the start of season 1982–83 in August 1982, playing in all six matches of the group stages of the 1982–83 Scottish League Cup, scoring seven goals as Celtic qualified with ease, including a four-goal haul in a 7–1 rout of Dunfermline. Celtic, and Nicholas, continued their goalscoring form into the league campaign, and by mid September Nicholas had amassed a total of 16 goals. Celtic faced Ajax in the first round of the European Cup in September 1982. Nicholas scored a penalty in the first leg at Parkhead, which finished 2–2 on the night. Celtic went into the second leg as underdogs, but an outstanding goal by Nicholas put Celtic ahead in Amsterdam. In a move also involving Paul McStay and Frank McGarvey, Nicholas received the ball from McGarvey and ran into the Ajax penalty box. He evaded two tackles from Ajax defenders before curling an excellently placed left-foot finish past goalkeeper Piet Schrijvers. Ajax later scored themselves, but a last minute winner from George McCluskey saw Celtic progress 4–3 on aggregate. Nicholas later said of his goal, "That was probably my all-time favourite goal. My greatest game."

Nicholas was now being described as the most outstanding young player to emerge in Scotland since Kenny Dalglish. After New Year, Nicholas became the centre of intense media speculation linking him with a move to England; with television, radio and newspapers journalists travelling north to cover Nicholas' goalscoring exploits. The Celtic star was featured regularly on the Saturday lunch-time television show Saint and Greavsie which showed Nicholas' latest goals. In the final league match of the season, Nicholas scored twice from penalty kicks as Celtic recovered from a 2–0 deficit at half-time against Rangers to win 4–2. At the end of the game he ran behind the goal to wave what appeared to be his "goodbyes" to the Celtic fans. The weeks that followed the end of the season saw Liverpool, Manchester United and Arsenal all being strongly linked with signing Nicholas. Liverpool's Kenny Dalglish and Graeme Souness, whom Nicholas knew from being with in the Scotland international squad, made strenuous efforts to persuade Nicholas to come to Anfield.

Arsenal

Terry Neill signed Nicholas for Arsenal on 22 June 1983 for a transfer fee of £750,000 (£ today), making him at the time the second most expensive export from the Scottish league. As a 21-year-old at the time of his move to Arsenal, he reportedly became the highest paid footballer in Britain and was described as being "the most exciting player to emerge in Britain since George Best". He made his competitive debut for Arsenal in the opening league match of the season on 27 August 1983 at Highbury against Luton Town. Although he did not score, Nicholas turned in an impressive performance and helped his side to a 2–1 win. Former Scotland international Ian St John said that Nicholas showed he was a player of "genuine class" and that there was a "buzz of excitement every time he moved on to the ball". Two days later, Nicholas scored his first goals for his new club in a 2–1 win away at Wolves.

However, he failed to score again until Boxing Day. By this time Arsenal had endured a slump in form and were lying sixteenth in the First Division, resulting in the sacking of manager Terry Neill on 16 December 1983. The festive period saw Nicholas return to scoring form: He scored twice in a 4–2 win over North London rivals Tottenham Hotspur on Boxing Day, endearing himself to the supporters. Under new manager Don Howe, Arsenal improved in the second half of the season and eventually finished in sixth place. The 1983–84 campaign would prove to be Nicholas' best at Arsenal, with him scoring a sum of 11 times in the league:

Nicholas's lifestyle in the capital was the subject of much tabloid speculation, earning him the nickname "Champagne Charlie".

With the lack of a striker of the ilk of Frank McGarvey to play alongside at Arsenal, Nicholas barely broke double figures in the following seasons, not helped that he was also often played just off the main striker. Arsenal, however, did reach the League Cup final against Liverpool in April 1987. Liverpool's Ian Rush gave his side the lead on 23 minutes, but Nicholas equalised seven minutes later after a goal mouth scramble. In the second half, he appeared to be fouled in the penalty box by Gary Gillespie, but the referee ignored Arsenal's claims for a penalty. With seven minutes left, Nicholas received a cross from Perry Groves and shot at goal. The ball took a deflection off Ronnie Whelan, and went into the goal having deceived Bruce Grobbelaar. Arsenal held on to win 2–1. With this Wembley brace Nicholas thus became a club hero.

Nicholas was linked with a return to Celtic in 1987, but this did not materialise. He was dropped from the Arsenal team four games into the start of the 1987–88 season, in favour of Perry Groves as the strike-partner for new signing Alan Smith.

He maintained his form into what transpired to be his final season, 1989–90, and in October 1989 picked up his first silverware since returning to Scotland, as Aberdeen defeated Rangers 2–1 in the Scottish League Cup Final. The two helped Aberdeen win the Scottish Cup, both scoring their penalty kicks in Aberdeen's penalty-shoot win over Celtic in May 1990.

Looking back on his time in an interview for Aberdeen's Red Matchday magazine, Nicholas stated "Looking back with hindsight, I know I should never have left Aberdeen when I did".

Return to Celtic

In summer 1990, Nicholas returned to Celtic. He was in Scotland's squad for the 1986 World Cup, playing in the group matches against Denmark and Uruguay. He won the last of his 20 senior caps for Scotland on 26 April 1989 in a 2–1 win over Cyprus at Hampden Park. The last of his five goals for Scotland had come on 17 October 1984 in a 3–0 win over Iceland at Hampden Park early in the World Cup qualifying stages.

In January 2014, Nicholas was inducted into the Scottish Football Hall of Fame.

Career statistics

Club

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

|+ Appearances and goals by club, season and competition

|-

!rowspan="2"|Club

!rowspan="2"|Season

!colspan="3"|League

!colspan="2"|National Cup

!colspan="2"|League Cup

!colspan="2"|Continental

!colspan="2"|Other

!colspan="2"|Total

|-

!Division

!Apps

!Goals

!Apps

!Goals

!Apps

!Goals

!Apps

!Goals

!Apps

!Goals

!Apps

!Goals

|-

|rowspan="5"|Celtic

|1979–80

|Scottish Premier Division

|0||0||0||0||0||0||0||0||2||2||2||2

|-

|1980–81

|Scottish Premier Division

|29||16||5||3||7||6||4||3||2||0||47||28

|-

|1981–82

|Scottish Premier Division

|10||3||0||0||4||3||1||0||0||0||15||6

|-

|1982–83

|Scottish Premier Division

|35||29||3||4||11||13||4||2||0||0||53||48

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!74!!48!!8!!7!!22!!22!!9!!5!!4!!2!!117!!84

|-

|rowspan="6"|Arsenal

|1983–84

|First Division

|41||11||1||1||4||1||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||46||13

|-

|1984–85

|First Division

|38||9||3||1||3||2||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||44||12

|-

|1985–86

|First Division

|41||10||5||4||7||4||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||53||18

|-

|1986–87

|First Division

|28||4||4||4||6||3||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||38||11

|-

|1987–88

|First Division

|3||0||0||0||0||0||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||3||0

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!151!!34!!13!!10!!20!!10!!0!!0!!0!!0!!184!!54

|-

|rowspan="4"|   Aberdeen   

|1987–88

|Scottish Premier Division

|16||3||6||2||0||0||0||0||colspan="2"|–||22||5

|-

|1988–89

|Scottish Premier Division

|28||16||5||1||3||1||1||0||colspan="2"|–||37||18

|-

|1989–90

|Scottish Premier Division

|33||11||5||2||5||0||2||0||colspan="2"|–||45||13

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!77!!30!!16!!5!!8!!1!!3!!0!!0!!0!!104!!36

|-

|rowspan="6"|Celtic

|1990–91

|Scottish Premier Division

|13||6||0||0||1||0||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||14||6

|-

|1991–92

|Scottish Premier Division

|37||21||3||0||2||2||4||2||colspan="2"|–||46||25

|-

|1992–93

|Scottish Premier Division

|16||2||0||0||1||0||3||0||colspan="2"|–||20||2

|-

|1993–94

|Scottish Premier Division

|35||8||0||0||3||1||4||0||colspan="2"|–||42||9

|-

|1994–95

|Scottish Premier Division

|11||0||0||0||4||1||colspan="2"|–||colspan="2"|–||15||1

|-

!colspan="2"|Total

!112!!37!!3!!0!!11!!4!!11!!2!!0!!0!!137!!43

|-

|Clyde

|1995–96

|Scottish First Division

|31||5||4||2||0||0||colspan="2"|–||1||0||36||7

|-

!colspan="3"|Career total

!445!!154!!44!!24!!61!!37!!23!!7!!5!!2!!578!!224

|}

International

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"

|+ Appearances and goals by national team and year

|-

!National team!!Year!!Apps!!Goals

|-

|rowspan="6"|Scotland

|1983||7||3

|-

|1984||3||2

|-

|1985||2||0

|-

|1986||6||0

|-

|1987||1||0

|-

|1989||1||0

|-

!colspan="2"|Total!!20!!5

|}

:Scores and results list Scotland's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Nicholas goal.

{| class="wikitable sortable"

|+ List of international goals scored by Charlie Nicholas

|-

!scope="col"|No.

!scope="col"|Date

!scope="col"|Venue

!scope="col"|Opponent

!scope="col"|Score

!scope="col"|Result

!scope="col"|Competition

!scope="col" class="unsortable"|

|-

| align="center"|1 || 30 March 1983 || Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland || || align="center"|2–2 || align="center"|2–2 || UEFA Euro 1984 qualification || rowspan="5"|

|-

| align="center"|2 || 16 June 1983 ||Commonwealth Stadium, Edmonton, Canada || || align="center"|1–0 || align="center"|3–0 || Friendly

|-

| align="center"|3 || 12 October 1983 || Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland || || align=center|1–1 ||align=center|1–1 || UEFA Euro 1984 qualification

|-

| align="center"|4 || 12 September 1984 || Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland || || align="center"|6–1 || align="center"|6–1 || Friendly

|-

| align="center"|5 || 17 October 1984 || Hampden Park, Glasgow, Scotland || || align="center"|3–0 || align="center"|3–0 || 1986 FIFA World Cup qualification

|}

Honours

Celtic

  • Scottish Premier Division: 1980–81,
  • Scottish League Cup: 1982–83

Individual

  • Scottish PFA Player of the Year: 1983
  • Scottish Premier Division Golden Boot: 1982–83, 1988–89 (shared)
  • Daily Record Golden Shot: 1982–83
  • European Golden Shoe: third place (1983)
  • Scottish Football Hall of Fame: 2014

References

</references>