Archive for the ‘Meat Pie’ Category

New Manager Syndrome

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

Jimmy Calderwood didn’t get off to the best of starts as he tries to rekindle his managerial career – his Kilmarnock side went down 3-0 at home to Motherwell.

We often hear about the effect that a change of manager has on a side. For many trigger-happy chairmen, it’s the main reason why they sack their current gaffer. The theory is that a new manager supposedly propels a side to new heights of motivation and victory. So, did you ever wonder if there really is such a thing as “New Manager Syndrome”? How did the current crop of SPL managers fare in their first games in charge?

Well, wonder no more. (more…)

Predicting the winners and the losers

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

It’s one of those comments you read and hear so often: “the team leading the table on New Years Day usually goes on to win the league”. We’ve always wondered just how true that was, because, in effect, that would have you believe that the league is finished by the time you’re finishing off the last of that Christmas turkey.

Now, for most non-Old Firm fans the Scottish League is mostly over way before New Year anyway (October is traditional), but in the interest of science and a cheeky bet, Inside Left puts on a lab coat, rubber gloves and oversized safety goggles, and sets out to investigate…

(more…)

Meat Pie – The Inaugural SPL Season 1998/99

Friday, June 5th, 2009

The inaugural season of the SPL season ended 10 years ago. Rangers won the title, the Scottish Cup and the League Cup again under new manager Dick Advocaat, while Celtic finished second. Funny how things don’t change eh? Dunfermline where relegated, St. Johnstone (who make another appearance this season) finished third, and there where managerial changes aplenty as Aberdeen lost another manager when Alex Miller was sacked, as did Dundee United, Motherwell and Dunfermline.

The £5.5m transfer of Andrei Kanchelskis from Fiorentina to Rangers also set a new Scottish transfer record. Henrik Larsson’s 27 goals for Celtic made him the leagues top scorer and Kilmarnock played in Europe via the Fair Play league.

To celebrate, in this weeks Meat Pie we round up all the players who played in that first season and who are still in playing in the SPL 10 years later …

Aberdeen:
Jim Hamilton (St Mirren), Dennis Wyness (St Mirren), Derek Young (Aberdeen)

Celtic:
Jackie McNamara (Falkirk)

Dundee:
Jamie Langfield (Aberdeen)

Dundee United:
Alan Combe (Kilmarnock)

Dunfermline:
Colin Nish (Hibernian)

Hearts:
Jim Hamilton (St Mirren), Gary Locke (Kilmarnock), Grant Murray (Kilmarnock), Neil McCann (Falkirk), Scott Severin (Aberdeen), David Weir (Rangers)

Motherwell:
Stephen Craigan (Motherwell), Lee McCulloch (Rangers)

Rangers:
Barry Ferguson (Rangers), Neil McCann (Falkirk)

St Johnstone:
Darren Dods (Dundee United)

source: the Scottish Premier League

By The Numbers: The Scottish Football Season

Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009

The Scottish football season finally came to a halt as Rangers win the Scottish Cup following their 1-0 victory over Falkirk last Saturday.
The promotion and relegation fixtures have been played; St JohnstoneRaith RoversAyr UnitedStenhousemuir and Dumbarton are all preparing for life in a higher division following their promotions, while for Inverness CaleyClydeAirdrie UnitedQueens Park and Stranraer next season will mean having to adjust to life in a lower league.
So what better time to conclude the 2008/09 season in Scotland than with some tasty statistics, lovingly hand-compiled and fact-checked, sort of.
11 is the number of seasons in the SPL since its inception in 1998. Celtic lead the winners table, with 6 wins. This years champions Rangers trail the Parkhead with 5 wins.
27 is the number of goals scored by Scotland’s top scorer, Rangers’ Kris Boyd. He´s scored 11 more than Scott McDonald of Celtic, his nearest rival for the Tartan Boot (if such a thing exists). Boyd also leads the table for number of hattricks scored this season, 2.
52 is the total number of domestic league wins for this years champions Rangers. In winning the league for the 52nd time since 1891 following their 3-0 win at Tannadice on the final day of the season, Rangers continue to hold the world record for the number of domestic league honours. Having also won the Scottish Cup last weekend, they will need only one more win to equal Celtic’s total number of wins in the worlds second oldest Cup competition; the Hoops have won it 33 times.
calderwood15 stands for the number of managers who lost their job one way or the other over the course of the year. It began with John McCormack’s resignation from Albion Rovers in July and ended with Mixu Paateleinen’s resignation from Hibs on the 28th May of this year. Other high profile departures included Jimmy Calderwood (Aberdeen,pictured left), Gordon Strachan (Celtic), Craig Brewster (Inverness Caley) and Roberto Landi (Livingston).
548 represents the number of goals scored this season in the SPL, down 62 from last season. The most goals scored in one game are the 8 racked up in the fixture between Rangers and Hamilton on the 6th December which the Ibrox side won 7-1. Across the other three senior leagues in Scotland, the most goals outside of the SPL where scored in the Third Division (497) and the lowest, 443, in the First Division. However, these totals are dwarfed by the total number of goals scored in the Highland League – a stunning 789!
Oh, and speaking of Highland League…
Zero is the number of games won by Highland League side Fort William this season. The Fort outdid themselves, scoring the same amount of goals (16) and conceding fewer (121), but last season they managed to win a game. Their one solitary point during the 2008/09 campaign came thanks to a 1-1 draw against Wick Academy.
23 is the number of points between second placed Celtic and third placed Hearts. Not so much a gulf as an ocean of difference when you consider that this gap is five more than the combined points gap between the second and third placed teams across Divisions One, Two and Three.
zaliukas_marius_red_card_VAberdeen14 is for Manuel Pascali of Kilmarnock, who leads the yellow-card table having seen it  produced 14 times this season, but somehow managing not to get sent off all year. In contrast, Marius Zaliukas(right) of Hearts received the most red cards this season – four.
Interestingly, had the Fair Play League not been restricted to the SPL it would be Brechin City, not Motherwell playing in the Europa League. The Angus side picked up only 37 yellow cards and 1 red card all season, which is a whopping 13 fewer than the team that finished top of the Fair Play league, Celtic.
7 is the number of times Perth-based St. Johnstone have won the First division title; they secured their latest promotion when they beat Morton 3-1 at McDiarmid Park on May 29th, putting the Saints back in the top flight for the first time since 1997 when they where founder members of the SPL the following year.
212 is the number of goals you would have missed if you left every Scottish Football League game 10 minutes early.
1286 represents the average attendance across the First, Second and Third divisions. This total is down 23 from last season, suggesting perhaps that football is as popular as ever (or not) despite the credit crunch. The best supported team this year outside the SPL was Dundee. Troubled Stranraer, relegated back to the Third Division and facing an uncertain future had the lowest average attendance, with only 303 paying punters coming through the turnstiles every week.

The Twelve Days of Scottish Football

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

OK, we’re a bit late starting this and no doubt a wee bit early finishing it, but  we’re running out of time: at the end of this week Inside Left is off to Ireland for the festive period and a well earned break.

Scottish football gets such a rough deal on the Internet we feel it’s our duty to put on a Santa hat and get you all into the spirit with some Scottish Football statistics of the season so far. This advent list was inspired by Chris over at Some People Are On The Pitch who is also running a footie-themed advent countdown (with graphs) – go check it out.

Everyone, from the top …

On the 12th Day of Christmas…

Twelve is the number of games Celtic won in a row this season before it all went wrong against Hearts and, more recently Hibernian. Starting with the win over Motherwell in September, Celtic went unbeaten until they lost to Hibernian earlier this month.  Twelve is also the number of weeks Third Division Stenhousemuir have remained at the top of the table. One of only four teams in Scotland to not have lost at home this season (Second division sides Raith, Ayr and Brechin being the others), Stennie recorded two back-to-back 5-0 wins in the Scottish Cup (Threave Rovers and Clachnacuddin). Nice!

On the 11th Day of Christmas..

Eleven stands for the 11th season of the Scottish Premier League. The current incarnation of Scotland’s top football league came into being in time for the 1992/93 season. Of the 10 teams which made up the founding members, only seven still play in today’s SPL – Aberdeen, Celtic, Dundee United, Hearts, Kilmarnock, Motherwell and Rangers. The other three, Dunfermline, St. Johnstone and Dunfermline all play in the First Division now. Needless to say, since the league was formed only two teams have won the competition, with Celtic winning 6 and Rangers winning 4. The SPL has come in for much criticism (Old Firm dominance, strict entrance criteria for teams promoted from the First division and a frankly bizarre league split after the 33rd game) but it’s here to stay for now.

On the 10th Day of Christmas..

Ten points are what separate the team in second in the SPL, Rangers, from the team in third,  Hearts. The gulf between the Old Firm and the rest of the unwashed masses is larger than ever – consider that at this stage last season the difference was only 2 points, though admittedly Rangers had played 3 games fewer than leaders Celtic and the team in third, Dundee United. But while it’s done and dusted at the top of the league (Celtic or Rangers, take your pick for champion), further down eight points separate fourth from seventh while only four points separate eighth from twelfth. All the ingredients then from an exciting middle to the season.

Ten could also represents the largest league win this season in senior football when Deveronvale beat Fort William (who else) 10-0 in their Highland League encounter on the 22nd November.

On the 9th Day of Christmas..

Nine is the total number of own goals scored in the Scottish Football league this season. The first one was scored by Stirling’s David White in his sides 2-1 defeat away at Brechin on the opening day of the season in the Second division, while the last one was scored by Airdrie’s Scott McLaughlin against Partick Thistle last Saturday; his blunder (he turned a Mark Twaddle cross into his own net) lost Airdrie the game.

On the 8th Day of Christmas..

The referee gave to me, eight red cards! Yes, eight is the number of red cards dished out in the most indisciplined league in Scotland – the Third Division. Chris McLeod (Montrose, two weeks in succession!), Gary Wilson (Dumbarton) and Kenny Gilbert (Elgin City) have all been sent off to an early bath twice this season. Derek Ure (East Stirling) and Steven Ferguson (Stenhousemuir) make up the rest. The Third division also has the worst yellow card record this season, 52, a record it shares with the SPL.

On the 7th Day of Christmas..

We could have mentioned the Scotland squad in the number 3 position (number of games drawn and lost) or at number 1 (number of games won) but we had other candidates for those places. Instead, here at number seven is where you will find George Burley to represent the number of games Scotland have played under his flaccid reign. A win against Iceland aside, the national squad are not exactly setting the heather alight. Defeat in Macedonia kicked off the WC2010 campaign, followed by a draw with Norway at Hampden, a game memorable for a miss by Chris Uwelumo (making his debut in the dark blue shirt) in front of goal that my 7 year-old daughter could have put away.  Thankfully other results conspired to keep George Burley’s barmy army in second place, but a game against the Netherlands beckons..

On the 6th Day of Christmas..

The number of managerial changes since the start of the season can best be summarized by the number 6. Since August, Livingston, Dundee, Brechin, Berwick, Montrose and Albion Rovers have all seen changes on the bench. From that list, three where fired, two left for bigger teams and one was deposed by the fans. The betting slips are out for the next managerial casualty, and we’ve got a cheeky fiver on Walter Smith, come the end of the season.

On the 5th Day of Christmas..

My true love sent to me, fiiiiivvvee leaagguee winnnnnns …

Annan Athletic where elected to the Third Division to take the place of fallen Gretna. The Galabankies started well but have faltered lately. Five then, represents the number of games Annan Athletic  have won this season so far. Expectations where not high to be honest – we had them finishing bottom of the league in our pre-season predictions – but in fairness they’ve done better than a lot of people had predicted. An opening day thrashing of Cowdenbeath saw them off to a good start, but heavy defeats to Albion Rovers, Dumbarton, Forfar and Berwick followed. Thank goodness though for Elgin, truly terrible this year, who prop up the bottom of the table, many points behind Annan. Of course, Annan are not in any danger of relegation – yet. Talk of substantial changes to the league structure (the ‘pyramid’) could mean that the glass bottom that protects teams in the Third division from even more lower league obscurity may well disappear soon. Watch out Elgin!

On the 4th Day of Christmas..

Four represents the number of home games Aberdeen have now won in a row! Saturdays win against Falkirk followed home wins against Motherwell, St. Mirren and Kilmarnock. All bottom half stuff, true, but remember that at one point this season, AFC had the worst league record on the entire British Isles. Unable to buy a win at home, the pressure on Jimmy Calderwood was even greater than it normally is – the Aberdeen faithful have never warmed to a man they call ‘Tango’. Still, they’d be wise to remember that he’s the clubs most successful manager since the Big Yin, Alex Ferguson.

On the 3rd Day of Christmas..

Three is the number of SPL teams knocked out by lower league opposition in this years  Scottish League Cup. Hearts and Hibs where knocked out by Airdrie and Morton respectively, while St. Mirren lost out to Dunfermline. Quite an achievement, all things considered. Sadly, the euphoria of success would not last long; Airdrie and Morton both lost out to SPL sides (Dundee United and Inverness) in the next round, while Dunfermline managed to make it to the Quarter Finals, where a single goal from Dundee United’s Scott Robertson ended their participation.

On the 2nd Day of Christmas..

Two is the number of hat-tricks Kris Boyd has scored since taking himself, his toys and his handbag from the Scotland squad. In a good two-fingered salute aimed at Scotland manager George Burley (and probably club manager Walter Smith), Boyd has gone on a scoring spree to prove to all and sundry just how good he is and how wrong Burley was not to play Boyd in his Scotland team. If there where 15 days of Xmas, then Boyd would be there too, 15 being the number of goals the former Kilmarnock player has scored this season.

On the 1st Day of Christmas..

One. That’s the number of points Inside Left favourite Fort William have accumulated so far. That sole point came in the 1-1 draw with Wick Academy back in September. So far the Fort have played 9, drawn 1 and lost the rest and boast a goal difference of -32 with only half the season gone. In some ways it’s an improvement on last season when they didn’t draw any games, but of the 28 they played, Fort William lost 27 and won one. The goal difference they reached last season, -142, seems out of reach for this season (it’s just soooo high) but you never know.

Right, that is our ‘12 days of Scottish Football’. Care to submit your own? Drop us an email via our contact page with the title “12 Days of Scottish Football” and we’ll put your list up on the site.