A Rolls Royce car mechanic who dreamed of owning one of those iconic vehicles, Steve Archibald's journey to football superstardom is the story of a born winner. His career started with part-time football at Clyde, where he had to avoid the greyhounds also using the stadium's race track. Steve honed his winning mentality at Aberdeen, under the ultimate winner, Sir Alex Ferguson, helping bring glory back to the Granite City. Determined to keep on pushing himself, his next stop was London and Tottenham Hotspur. His goals and his strike partnership with Garth Crooks quickly established Steve as a fans favourite, and his winning mentality helped Spurs to success at home and in Europe. But a dispute with the manager set him on course to a new adventure in a new country, when he signed for Spanish giants Barcelona. Archibald may have found himself wearing the Number 10 shirt recently vacated by Diego Maradona, but that wasn't going to daunt him. Again, his winning mentality brought success, with Steve's goals helping Barcelona to a league triumph that had evaded his Argentinian predecessor, and earning Archibald the nickname "Archi-goles". Loved by the fans in Barcelona as much as he had been by the fans in Aberdeen and London, Steve's time in the Catalan capital would be cut short by a rule that only allowed 2 foreigners to be registered to play at Spanish clubs. But he would be loved by the fans at his next club too, bringing some sunshine and goals to Leith when he joined Hibernian in 1988. With 27 caps for Scotland, Archibald speaks on how it's not just enough to play for your country, and of his frustrations at the time his Scotland career ended. But with his attitude bringing success on the pitch throughout his career, did he ever get his hands on the keys to that Rolls Royce?
—CaldoTheKid