Pierce O'Leary

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Pierce O'Leary
Personal information
Full name Pierce O'Leary
Date of birth (1959-11-05) 5 November 1959 (age 64)
Place of birth Dublin, Ireland
Position(s) Defender
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1977–1981 Shamrock Rovers ? (2)
1978 Philadelphia Fury (loan) 14 (0)
1981–1984 Vancouver Whitecaps 61 (1)
1984–1988 Celtic 39 (1)
International career
1978–1980 Republic of Ireland U21 5 (0)
1979–1980 Republic of Ireland 7 (0)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Pierce O'Leary (born 5 November 1959 in Dublin) is an Irish former professional footballer. Pierce is the brother of former Arsenal star and fellow Irish international David O'Leary.

Football career

O'Leary signed for Shamrock Rovers in 1977 under Johnny Giles and made his debut in October[1] and went on to win the FAI Cup in 1978. A week after the Cup Final he signed for Philadelphia Fury where he spent three months. In 1981 he signed for Vancouver Whitecaps before joining Celtic in November 1984.

O'Leary earned youth caps and 7 Republic of Ireland national football team caps while at Milltown, five Republic of Ireland national under-21 football team caps and made three appearances for Rovers in European competition. The tall centre-half made his Celtic debut in a 2–1 Scottish Cup victory at Hamilton Accies on 30 January 1985. He came on as substitute in the 1985 Scottish Cup final as Celtic came from behind to defeat Dundee United 2–1. He then made enough appearances to claim a League Championship medal after Celtic pipped Hearts for the title on the final day of the 1985–86 season. He was forced to retire in 1988 due to recurring pelvic trouble.

Pierce's son Ryan O'Leary is now a professional footballer with Kilmarnock.

Post Football career

Prior to retiring from football in 1988, O'Leary had set up an industrial cleaning business in Glasgow in partnership with Pat Bonner.[2][3] Bonner's involvement only lasted a few years, but under O'Leary the business secured numerous contracts with offices, shops and hospitals. However, O'Leary went bankrupt in March 2013 and a new business has since been set up with his wife as director/[3]

Honours

References

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  3. 3.0 3.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Sources

External links

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