Due to the knee injury, he was unable to play in the 1907 fixture and the same injury dashed further Scotland representation.[4]
International career
Qualified for both Scotland and England, Scoular chose to play for Scotland.[5]
He played for Scotland five times, selected in 1905 and 1906.[6]
In 1907, the Dundee Courier of 21 January seemed unsympathetic to Scoular's twisted knee when he could not fulfil his selection to play against Wales.
J. G. Scoular has cried off owing to injuries. Sloan will play full back. It is probable Scoular has played his last game.
Scoular was originally selected in hope by the Scotland selectors but the injury could not heal sufficiently.[7]
Military career
During the First World War, Scoular was a 2nd Lieutenant with the Royal Garrison Artillery. In the newspaper obituary of the Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer of Friday 11 September 1953, he was recorded as Major John Gladstone Scoular.
Engineering career
Before the war, Scoular lodged with a Ernest Gerard Banham, a mining engineer; and Scoular became a mining engineer with the Nostell Colliery Ltd in Wakefield. He became a mining manager for the Oughterside Colliery, south of Carlisle.
Family
His parents were George Scoular (1849-1912) and Janet Robb (1848-1933). They had 4 daughters and 3 sons, including John.
He married Nancy Todd in September 1917 at Tynemouth in Northumberland.
Death
He died at his home in Sandal, Wakefield.
His funeral took place at Wragby church, near Wakefield; before his cremation at Lawnswood.[8]