Derek John McInnes (born 5 July 1971) is a Scottish professional football manager and former football player who is the head coach of Scottish Premiership club Heart of Midlothian. He featured prominently for Greenock Morton, Rangers, West Bromwich Albion and Dundee United during his playing career. He won two caps for the Scotland national team while with West Brom.
McInnes became manager of St Johnstone where he had been on the playing staff, in November 2007. He guided the club to promotion to the Scottish Premier League in 2009 and retained that status for two seasons. McInnes was appointed manager of Football League Championship club Bristol City in October 2011. Despite avoiding relegation in 2011–12, McInnes was sacked by Bristol City in January 2013 with the club bottom of the Championship. He was appointed Aberdeen manager in March 2013 but was sacked eight years later in March 2021, having won the Scottish League Cup in 2014, finished Scottish Premiership runners-up on four occasions and reached three other cup finals during his spell in charge.
In January 2022 McInnes was appointed manager of Kilmarnock, succeeding Tommy Wright. McInnes guided Kilmarnock to promotion later in 2022 and then European qualification in 2024. At the end of the 2024–25 season he left Kilmarnock to become the head coach of Hearts.
During his time in Glasgow, McInnes had a loan spell at English club Stockport County, where he made 13 league appearances. He was also briefly at French side Toulouse FC during a season in which the club was promoted from the second division, although he only featured in three league matches.
McInnes was the first West Brom player to be sent off in the Premier League. He was dismissed in the second half of the club's first Premier League match against Manchester United at Old Trafford in August 2002. He played in the majority of West Brom's Premier League games during the 2002–03 season but was unable to prevent them from being relegated. He made 88 league appearances and scored six times for the West Midlands club.
In April 2006, United manager Craig Brewster announced that McInnes was free to leave the club at the end of the season, despite having a year of his contract left to run. He made 83 appearances for Dundee United, with four goals scored.
During the 2009–10 close season, McInnes was linked with the managerial positions at West Bromwich Albion and Watford. He remained at St Johnstone, however, and in October 2009 he signed a new contract with the Perth club.
McInnes was granted permission by St Johnstone to be interviewed by Bristol City for their managerial position, alongside former Barnsley manager Mark Robins and another unnamed candidate, in October 2011. His managerial record with the Perth club was 177 games in charge, where he won 71 games, drew 53 games and lost 53 games.
On 6 November 2012, following City's 2–0 loss to Birmingham City, McInnes gave £300 to 17 stranded fans who had their minibus tyres slashed outside St Andrew's Stadium.
During the 2012–13 season, Bristol City suffered a club record seven consecutive defeats. McInnes was sacked on 12 January 2013, after a 4–0 home defeat to Leicester City left the club eight points adrift of safety. After being sacked by Bristol City, McInnes said that he was "very desperate" to succeed and that his time at Bristol City was difficult.
Aberdeen remained unbeaten in September 2013, winning twice and drawing once in the league and progressing to the quarter-final of the League Cup with a 5–0 win over Falkirk. The team's excellent form earned McInnes the Manager of the Month award for September.
The club had a positive start to 2014, taking maximum points from games against Dundee United, Kilmarnock and Hibernian. At the end of the month, Russell Anderson scored in the 94th minute to level the game at 2–2 and secure a point for the Dons against Motherwell at Fir Park to keep them in second place. McInnes praised his players and believed they "showed good determination to get something from the game." He was rewarded for his efforts as he picked up the Manager of the month award for February. Ahead of the League Cup final, McInnes signed an extension to his contract, tying himself to the club until the summer of 2017.
Aberdeen won the 2014 Scottish League Cup Final 4–2 on penalties, after a goalless draw, a success that saw them lift their first trophy in 19 years. McInnes led Aberdeen to European qualification for the first time since 2009, achieved through a third-place finish in the league campaign. However, McInnes was unsatisfied with the outcome when Motherwell beat Aberdeen 1–0 to take the second place. McInnes criticised the referee for ignoring the challenge when goalkeeper Jamie Langfield was fouled by John Sutton, which later led to the goal scored by Craig Reid. At the end of the season, McInnes was awarded both PFA Scotland Manager of the Year and SFWA Manager of the Year.
Early in the 2014–15 season, Aberdeen progressed through two qualifying rounds of the UEFA Europa League, including an aggregate victory against Dutch club FC Groningen. Aberdeen finished second in the 2014–15 Scottish Premiership and again qualified for European competition. During the 2015 close season, despite mounting speculation that he was in talks to take over at Rangers, McInnes signed a new contract with the club keeping him at Pittodrie until 2019.
His Aberdeen team pushed Celtic almost all the way in the Scottish Premiership title race in 2015–16, with Celtic eventually beating Aberdeen 3–2 on 8 May 2016 to secure the league title with only two matches remaining. Aberdeen had begun that season winning all of their first eight league matches.
McInnes led Aberdeen to a third straight runners-up spot behind Celtic in season 2016–17. His Aberdeen side also claimed its first win at Ibrox Stadium since September 1991, with a 2–1 victory on 17 May. Aberdeen also reached both domestic cup finals, losing both to Celtic. The team went on a ten-match winning streak at Pittodrie, which surpassed Alex Ferguson's Aberdeen record of nine consecutive home wins in 1985–86 (although not a club record). He was again shortlisted for PFA Scotland Manager of the Year, but lost out to Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers.
In June 2017, Aberdeen granted permission for Sunderland to speak with McInnes about becoming their manager, but he decided to stay with Aberdeen. McInnes and Docherty subsequently signed a 1-year contract extension, keeping them with the Dons until the summer of 2020. Rangers made an approach for McInnes in December 2017 (immediately following two league games in four days between the clubs, both won by the Glasgow side) but he rejected that offer as well.
McInnes was sent off by the referee for gesturing at Celtic fans during a 2018–19 Scottish Cup semi-final in April 2019. He was apparently reacting to sectarian abuse by Celtic fans, which was investigated by Police Scotland.
In July 2019, he signed a new contract with Aberdeen, due to run until 2022. After a poor run of results in early 2021, Aberdeen chairman Dave Cormack said that the board were "fully behind" McInnes. This run of form continued, as Aberdeen scored one goal in nine matches, and McInnes left the club by mutual consent on 8 March 2021.
In the 2022–23 season, Kilmarnock finished 10th in the Premiership, securing their top-flight status with a 3–1 victory over Ross County on the final day. They also reached the semi-finals of the Scottish League Cup, losing to Celtic at Hampden Park, and made the quarter-finals of the Scottish Cup, where they were defeated by Inverness Caledonian Thistle. During this campaign, McInnes introduced several academy players into the first team, notably midfielder David Watson, who broke through between 2022 and 2024 and became a regular starter by the following season.
The 2023–24 season was seen as a major success under McInnes. Kilmarnock finished fourth in the Premiership, their highest league finish since the 2018–19 season, qualifying for the UEFA Europa League second qualifying round. During the season, Kilmarnock defeated Celtic twice at Rugby Park and knocked Celtic out of the Scottish League Cup in the second round in the process. McInnes was named SFWA Manager of the Year for 2024 in recognition of his achievements.
In the 2024–25 UEFA Europa League, Kilmarnock faced Cercle Brugge in the second qualifying round. The first leg at Rugby Park finished 1–1, but Kilmarnock were eliminated following a 1–0 defeat in Belgium, losing 2–1 on aggregate. Following their exit from the Europa League, Kilmarnock entered the UEFA Europa Conference League. In the third qualifying round, they faced Tromsø, drawing 2–2 at home and winning 1–0 away to progress 3–2 on aggregate. In the play-off round, they played Copenhagen, losing 2–0 away and drawing 1–1 at home, resulting in a 3–1 aggregate defeat and elimination from European competition.
Domestically, Kilmarnock endured a disappointing Premiership campaign. Although initially at a point it looked like the club would be challenging for a top-six finish, the club's form deteriorated, particularly away from home, including a 5-1 defeat away to St Mirren in March 2025.
+ Appearances and goals by club, season and competition |
0 |
1 |
1 |
3 |
8 |
2 |
1 |
3 |
1 |
0 |
4 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
1 |
3 |
2 |
2 |
0 |
2 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
St Johnstone | 27 November 2007 | 19 October 2011 |
Bristol City | 19 October 2011 | 12 January 2013 |
Aberdeen | 7 April 2013 | 8 March 2021 |
Kilmarnock | 4 January 2022 | 19 May 2025 |
Heart of Midlothian | 19 May 2025 | Present |
Rangers
West Bromwich Albion
Dundee United
St Johnstone
Aberdeen
Kilmarnock
Individual
|
|