Mr. Rifff wrote:
Btw, here is a fact...henderson got more caps for scotland than Wee Jinky...I wonder why that was
It is pretty straightforward actually. Although both were the same age, Henderson burst onto the stage very early in his career. He was a teenage wonderkid and was rightly Scotland's first choice from the age of 18. He won all of his caps bar 6 by 1966 when he was still only 22. Long term injury problems really hindered him thereafter and he slipped back the way, although still capable of doing the business.
Johnstone only really started to deliver after Jock Stein took over at Celtic in 1965 when he introduced the focus and discipline that Jinky needed. From 1966 onwards Jinky was the first choice Scotland winger.
So the selectors really didn't have much of a dilemma as the pattern of their respective careers really dictated who to select.
So, the real question is why didn't Jinky win more caps over the period when he was first choice? I think the answer lies in his aversion to air travel. Only 5 of his caps were earned abroad. In addition, I think he was more injury prone than Henderson, and that would have curtailed his tally. Out of Henderson's 6 caps in the 5 years after 1966, 3 were home matches over 2 weeks in May 1969 when Johnstone was injured, and the other 3 were away matches when presumably Jinky just shied away from the travel.
An interesting question is who would have been first choice if their career pattern had been similar and both had peaked at the same time. This is where we come back to John's point about the right style and approach to blend with the overall group/team aspiration coming into the equation - and not just natural ability. I suspect the choice might well have come down in favour of Henderson under these circumstances. Although not at the genius level of Jinky, he still had a disgraceful amount of natural talent. While Jinky beat men for fun, he often went back for seconds (and thirds), whereas Henderson beat men for a purpose - which was to get to the line and put over his trademark accurate low level cross for his centre forward to attack. Henderson could also be relied upon to put in a performance whereas Jinky was mercurial; sometimes he was unstoppable (which are the performances that everybody remembers) - but there were games where he just didn't get going. Plus Henderson was much more physically robust than Johnstone which counted for a lot more in those days when football was still a man's game.
So, while not as naturally talented as Johnstone, Henderson was arguably the better player overall by virtue of all of the above - and the safer choice for an international manager where games were few and far between, which meant that players had to be relied upon to perform on the day.