Posts Tagged: Scottish football


2
Nov 09

A Dutch solution to a Scottish problem (Part I)

I completely missed every single game of football across the British Isles at the weekend.

I was too busy to turn on the radio for the Scottish games, and I fell asleep somewhere during the Arsenal-Spurs highlights on the Saturday evening. I was awake long enough to see van Persie scoring, but the next thing I remember is being woken by the familiar Match of the Day tune as the credits rolled by. A pity really, because it seems I missed a tremendous weekend of football.

Continue reading →


21
Oct 09

Rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic

The 4-1 defeat of Rangers at the hands of Romanian champions Unirea Urziceni last night was the second 4-1 defeat Walter Smith has had to endure in this seasons Champions League campaign and leaves the Ibrox side firmly rooted at the bottom of their group, with only an outside chance of qualifying for the next stage; a victory away in Romania in the next game is an absolute requirement. Continue reading →


2
Oct 09

Scottish Football Week in Review

Saturday’s fixtures provided no real shocks, with the results pretty much going the way of the form teams.

Celtic overcame St Mirren, a welcome win to get them in the mood for a much anticipated Europa League fixture later in the week. Rangers’ preparation for the second game in their Champions League group on the other hand amounted to their third 0-0 draw in a row, this time against Aberdeen at Ibrox.

Falkirk got themselves off the bottom of the league following their 1-1 draw with Kilmarnock. Taking their place are SPL new boys St Johnstone who continued their excellent scoring record, but their defence continues to let them down as their opposition continually outscores the Perth side. This weekend was no exception: they scored twice, yet still lost 3-2 to Dundee United.

Motherwell and Hibs turned out to be an exciting enough game. At one point Hibs where playing a somewhat unusual 4-2-4 formation, something not regularly seen in football since the 1920’s. It’s that kind of cavalier approach to the game that landed John Hughes the Manager of the Month award for September. Hibs are now level on points with Rangers in third spot and could jump into second place should Rangers lose the first Old Firm derby of the season and Hibs overcome Dundee United. Hearts also moved up the table following their 2-1 win over Hamilton.

In the First division, we have a new leader. Queen of the South took advantage of Ross County’s slip-up against Dundee to leapfrog the Dingwall side. The Doonhamers thrashed Dunfermline 4-1. Managerless Morton picked up their first 3 points of the season with a 1-0 win over fellow basement dwellers Airdrie United.

Inverness CT are continuing to make heavy weather of their First division campaign. Caley went down 3-2 at home to Partick Thistle. The battle of the promoted teams was won by Ayr United, Kenneth Connolly scoring after 12 minutes to secure the points against Raith Rovers. Despite their off-field problems, Stirling continue to do stirling work in the league. They 2-1 win over Cowdenbeath moves them 3 points clear of Alloa, who lost at home to Arbroath. In the Third Division, Livingston started the week with a win against Queens Park, but somewhat surprisingly lost 3-1 away at East Stirlingshire in mid-week in the re-arranged opening day fixture. Berwick continue to lead the division: they won 2-0 at bottom side Montrose.

In mid-week, our remaining European contenders took to the field once more. Rangers faced a tricky tie against Spanish side Sevilla. Given their less than impressive start to the season, there was plenty to be scared of. Rangers had a good first half and should have been awarded a penalty when Naismith was fouled by Konko but the referee waved play-on. How the game would have gone had Rangers scored first is a matter of debate, but what is certainly not a matter of debate are the four second-half goals in 25 minutes from Sevilla’s Abdoulay Konko, Adriano, Luis Fabiano and Frédéric Kanouté that killed the tie very quickly.

The following day it was Celtic’s chance to show-up their Glasgow rivals when they took on Rapid Vienna in a game much anticipated by both fans and press alike. The cause of the tension between these two sides stems from a bad-tempered European Cup Winners’ Cup game in 1984. Rapid claimed that defender Weinhofer was struck by a bottle thrown from the crowd. Despite claims from Celtic and the fans that the bottle had in fact landed quite some distance from the Austrian, UEFA forced the tie to be replayed (Celtic had won the original tie 3-0) at Old Trafford, which Rapid won 1-0.

The goal was scored by Peter Pacult, ironically enough the manager of the same Rapid Vienna side that came to Glasgow on Thursday. The 2009 version of this fixture ended in a 1-1 draw, with Rapid scoring after only 3 minutes when Nikica Jelavic took advantage of some slack defending in the Celtic penalty area. Scott McDonald later equalised for Celtic, but the result leaves them bottom of the group, after Hamburg’s 4-2 win over Hapoel Tel-Aviv (the team to which Celtic had lost their opening game in the group).

Scottish Football Under The Spotlight

Also taking place this week was the open forum debate into the state of the Scottish game. Inside Left had submitted some questions to the “Scottish Football Under The Spotlight” forum, but according to our delegate and fellow Inside Lefter Andy Kennedy, they never made it to the platform.

The main point we where interested in was the panels view on a pyramid structure. Our view had always been that most, if not all teams in the Scottish league system would welcome a setup that would allow them to promote themselves up the league and potentially the Holy Grail of the SPL (and the regulation poundings by the OF). Somewhat to our surprise, it seemed that most Junior sides actually thought the idea of upward mobility was not really in their interest. Most would rather win ‘local’ silverware and compete against their local rivals than against the likes of East Fife, Montrose, Dunfermline or Rangers.

It’s an angle we’ve not though of before here. We always presumed that the removal of the glass ceiling that limited clubs ambitions would be high on the list of priorities for chance, but I guess we underestimated the level of ambition in the Scottish game.

But by far the most depressing aspect of the conference was the fact that the majority of those attending had little or no faith in the report that Henry McLeish was putting together and the impact it is going to have on the game. Henry McLeish himself knows that, like every other report before his own, his final report in nothing but a series of recommendations and that he has no power or authority to force those recommendations through the byzantine league structure, the very same league structure that has come under a lot of flak lately. In other words, it is unlikely that the turkeys will vote for Christmas.

A good write-up of the debate can be found at the excellent Voices of Football site.


28
Sep 09

The Great Scottish Football Debate

Ahead of former First Minister Henry McLeish’s eagerly anticipated Scottish Football review, Stirling University will this evening host a question-time style debate featuring the main men in Scottish football.

Although this particular panel has no authority, the opportunity to quiz some of the people who are involved with football in Scotland at a high level is certainly welcome, and their answers eagerly anticipated by this site.

Chaired by Jim Spence, the participants to this public debate are:

Henry McLeish (former First Minister, instigator of the latest review into Scottish football)
Gordon Smith (SFA Chief Exec)
Iain Blair (SPL Operations Director)
David Longmuir (SFL Chief Exec)
Fraser Wishart (PFA Scotland Chief Executive )
James Proctor (Supporters Direct Development Manager )

We’ve spent some time thinking about the issues we think need to be addressed, attached it to the nearest homing pigeon and sent it off to Stirling. Here are the questions we’ve forwarded to the panel.

1/ Does the panel admit that Scottish football is in a poor state and that it needs  a complete overhaul?

2/ How does the panel think the task force led by Henry McLeish will make any difference when many previous attempts to reform Scottish football appear to have failed?

3/ Would the panel recommend the implementation of the same League structure and the same League management structure if Scottish football started from scratch today?

4/ Does the panel support the idea of a pyramid system with relegation from the SFL 3rd Division and promotion from the HFL/West of Scotland Premier League?

5/ We hear a lot about the youth systems in place in European countries such as The Netherlands. Does the panel feel that such systems actually work, and would similar scheme work in Scotland. If not, why not?

6/ The Old Firm have been dominating the league for many years. What does the panel suggest would bridge the gap between the Old Firm and the rest of the SPL?

7/ Although attendances in the SPL are reasonably stable, the majority of games are never sold out. What does the panel suggest should happen to encourage greater numbers back to the stadiums?

8/ What does the panel suggest should be done to stop clubs from overspending and potentially going into administration?

9/ On what grounds would the panel oppose moves by the Old Firm to leave the SPL and play in England?

10/ Does the panel support the idea of a longer winter break and a shorter summer break?

We’re interested in the answers the panel give, providing our homing pigeon make it to the venue of course.

If you think there are any other issues that need to be addressed or you have your opinions about the 10 questions we’ve posted here, feel free to leave a comment and we’ll post them on the site.

‘Scottish Football under the spotlight’ will be held at the Macrobert Arts Centre, on the University of Stirling campus, on Monday 28 September, kicking off at 6.30pm.

Tickets are free. Confirm your attendance via e-mail to sportevents@stir.ac.uk or call 01786 466 498. Please provide your name, contact details, a suggested question for the panel if you wish and which team/organisation you represent if appropriate.


25
Sep 09

Inside Left’s Weekend SPL Fixture Preview

We hope you all enjoyed your mid-week Cup adventures. We know we certainly did. Within minutes of the final whistle going at Dens Park, Inside Left was on the Internet looking up pictures of turds for our feature article.

And let me tell you, searching for images of turds, shit, poop and excrement throws up some interesting, if slightly disturbing images of the sort of thing people with too much spare time and an uninhibited imagination get up to.  All we’ll say is we will never look at a ‘99 in the same way again.

Anyway, on with the games.

St Johnstone’s games against either side of the Dundee divide is technically not a ‘derby’ (there’s 22 miles between Perth and Dundee), the clubs are close enough to make this kind of fixture interesting. St Johnstone would probably consider games against Dundee a bigger deal, but given that high spending Dundee are still in the First division and St Johnstone are not, fans of the Saints can now vent their passion on Dundee United, a.k.a, the tangerine half of the City of Discovery (where the grass is green and the girls are pretty).

It has been more than 7 years since these two sides faced each other in the league, back in season 2001/02 when The Terrors won 3 out of the 4 meetings (the fourth was a 0-0 draw); we have to go back 9 years for the last time The Saints won against United, a 1-0 win in November of 2000, with Keigan Parker getting the winner.  United started out the season quite well, only losing their first game of the league last week against Motherwell. Progression in the League Cup is going well too, so plenty for Craig Levein to be happy about. St Johnstone are hanging in there, second from bottom. They’ve yet to win a game this season: heavy defeats to Celtic and Hibs aside, they’ve drawn against St Mirren, Hearts and Motherwell. Against United we’d expect them not to pick up points, but they’ll be looking to build on the impressive 3-1 win at Easter Road in the Cup on Tuesday.

We said that St Johnstone haven’t beaten United in the league since 2002, but the team from Perth are on record as the winners in the last fixture between the sides round about this time 3 years ago. Then, a team managed by Owen Coyle won 3-0 to knock Dundee United out of the League Cup. And guess which team United have been drawn against in the Quarter Finals of this years League Cup …

Motherwell v Hibs could also be tasty. The teams in 4th and 3rd place respectively in the league emerged from the mid-week Cup fixtures with mixed fortunes. Motherwell progressed at the expense of Inverness, while Hibs crashed out 3-0 to St Johnstone only four days after beating them 3-1 in the league. Inconsistency for Hibs, while two soft goals conceded against Inverness Caley means that we can expect a few goals here.

So, what else? St Mirren against Celtic should be a maximum 3 points in the bag for Tony Mowbray and his the boys in luminous green and yellow. Although we’re not expecting a repeat of the 7-0 drubbing the Buddies got earlier this year, Celtic are in scoring form, given their recent 4-0 trashing of Falkirk on Wednesday.

Hearts did well to come back from a goal down against Dunfermline in mid-week, even though David Obua was accused of going down more easily than an Amsterdam hoor. Their season so far has coughed and spluttered along a bit. The sort of distractions that where kept at bay last year and which saw them finish third have returned to some degree, perhaps affecting their performances to date. We don’t think they’ll have too much trouble against tomorrow’s opponents, Hamilton Accies who where perhaps unlucky to come away with a point against Falkirk last week, Carl Finnigan’s disallowed goal was perfectly alright from what we could see. But hey, that’s football for ye.

So that leaves Falkirk playing Kilmarnock in the penultimate game of the day. Falkirk where stuffed 4-0 by Celtic in the mid-week Cup cavalcade, while Kilmarnock are probably still seething from that last minute Cup exit in mid-week against St Mirren.

To save some time, allow me to copy & paste the following text from any review we write which involves Falkirk. Here it comes: Falkirk played quite well in the game against [insert team here] but where unlucky to come away with a point/a narrow defeat [delete where applicable].

Given their financial woes, it’s always a relief to see the Killie team bus appearing in the car park on a match day. Of all the teams reputed to be in trouble, Killie are apparently in the most precarious situation, yet Jim Jefferies ploughs on ahead regardless.  Compared to Falkirk, Kilmarnock at least have a win to their name, but that was against Hamilton on the opening day of the season. Since them it’s been downhill all the way, with defeats to mid-table peers Motherwell and St Mirren, as well as Hearts. A bad-tempered nil-nil draw against champions Rangers was a welcome point, but as Jefferies faces one of his former teams, the pressure is certainly on to get a result. A win for Falkirk could see them leap-from Killie up the league table.

Right, that’s it. Remember, we don’t do predictions anymore, so if you want a real expert (sic) to guide you here’s Billie Dodds!