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Inverness CT -V- Elgin City – Preview

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Nostalgia ain't what it used to be.
Scottish Cup 4th round action this weekend at the Tulloch Caledonian Stadium in Inverness.  Maybe just what the Doc ordered after a barren Christmas schedule saw Butcher's boys lose all three SPL fixtures, one of those ending the undefeated away run at Perth.  The slump in form has come at the right time for former Highland League arch enemies Elgin City, who can now see a chink in the armour of the SPL club and with their own form on the up, then the possibility of another scalp to add to the many in the Moray club's locker is looking more feasible by the minute.
This will be the first ever competitive fixture between these two clubs since they joined the big boys league.  When the dust settles, that will be the full house for Inverness as they will have played every other SFL and SPL club in Scotland, so that's another tick in the box for Inverness Caledonian Thistle.
Elgin City were formed from two clubs when Elgin Rovers and Vale of Lossie amalgamated on 10th August 1893.  By October they had played their first competitive match when they defeated another local side Rangers Athletic 4-2 in a North of Scotland cup tie at Association Park.  They joined the Highland league two years later and beat Citadel 7-2 in their opening fixture at Milnefield Park Elgin, where one Bob Hamilton scored four goals.  Incidentally, Inverness Thistle were the inaugural Champions ahead of Inverness Caledonian.  By 1898 Elgin had won the North of Scotland Cup by defeating Clachnacuddin 2-1 at Kingsmills Park Inverness, the first team outside of Inverness to do so.  Fast forward to 20th August1921 when they arrived at their present home of Borough Briggs and duly christened the stadium with a 3-0 win over Citadel in a Highland League encounter.  It was not until 1931/32 season before Elgin won the first of their fourteen Championships, beating Keith to the title and replacing Inverness Caledonian as champions.  The best was yet to come for Elgin as from 1959/60 season, they won eight out of the next eleven Championships before the early seventies saw Caley and Thistle return to prominence.  Elgin's last title win was in 1992/93, but they had the title removed from the record books after fixture irregularities, which saw their final game being brought forward to avoid suspensions being their downfall.  Elgin were voted in to the SFL system in 2000 but have struggled to make any impact, remaining in the third division, but this season has seen them climb to fourth in the table as we speak, no doubt the influence of former ICT legend Barry Wilson is starting to pay dividends.
The Black & Whites are steeped in Scottish Cup history, mainly from the sixties and seventies when they were the most successful Highland League club.  Beating SFL clubs became part of the norm and in season 67/68 they reached the quarter-finals before narrowly going down 2-1 at Cappielow to first division Greenock Morton, with Gerry Graham scoring a spectacular goal for City.  During that run they had some memorable games in front of record crowds at Borough Briggs.  Second division Albion Rovers were first up and they went down 3-1, then another non league club Tarff Rovers were beaten 3-2 away from home.  Forfar Athletic went the same way as Albion, another 3-1 at Bourough Briggs in front of a healthy crowd, but the best was saved for Arbroath, as Elgin progressed to the quarter-final after a 2-0 victory over the smokies.  This game brought out a record crowd in Elgin, which still stands today as 12,608 witnessed that scalp.  Arbroath were promoted that season to the top tier.  The season before this saw Ally McLeod reduced to tears after his first division Ayr United were dumped out of the cup 2-0 up North.  The prize for the winner of that tie in 1967 was a lucrative match in Glasgow against Celtic, (whatever happened to them).  Aye, those were the days, large crowds, standing shoulder to shoulder, jam packed into the smoke filled arena and cup shocks galore, (remember Berwick),  I'm young enough to have been part of that record.
Of course there are some records that Elgin are not so pleased with, losing 14-1 to Hearts in the same competition in 1939 would have been a sore one, although beating Brora Rangers 18-1 in the North of Scotland Challenge Cup is hardly recompense for that in 1960.  With goals in abundance it is no surprise that Willie Grant notched a remarkable 348 of them.  The ultimate measure of Willie's goal scoring is that it took him only 255 games to achieve this.
Fourteen Highland League championships, 5 Highland League Cups, 7 Scottish Qualifying Cups and 17 North of Scotland Cup final victories sees Elgin as one of the most successful ever Highland League sides.  Inverness Clachnacuddin and Inverness Caledonian are two of the clubs that can boast of a better record than Elgin in terms of Highland League titles and this weekend Inverness Caledonian Thistle turn back the clock and provide Elgin with a local adversary to rekindle the fire and the passion of bygone days.
The howden end is back to give us this look back to days of yore, where men were men, and paper hadn't been invented....................................read on.
In a seventies revisited nostalgic look back at the good old days, our own Immortal Howden Ender has gone back to his youth, and that's a long time ago, and here are his thoughts and memories ahead of the return of the Caley Animals.
The Highland Football League was formed on 4 August 1893, at the Inverness Workman's Club. The original league consisted of seven teams: Inverness Thistle, Caledonian, Clachnacuddin, Forres Mechanics, Inverness Union, Inverness Citadel and Cameron Highlanders. Ross County were an eighth original member, but resigned membership in November 1893. Elgin sneaked in to the league in 1985 when they became another merger team when Elgin Rovers and Vale of Lossie joined forces. As with recent times they stayed in the wilderness for years until they moved to Borough Briggs in 1921 - and the ground hasn’t changed a lot since and nor has the fashion sense of the local support. Their first home game was against Citadel !!
The 60’s were the heady days for Hellgin Shittee and they even drew a crowd of 11,207 to Borough Briggs for a Scottish Cup game against Cellic in 1961.
My fave memories are of the mid 70’s to 80’s when the rivalry between Hellgin and specifically Caley were at their “best” - Hellgin won the league in the 73/74 season ahead of the Jaggies but would not win another title until 1989/90 whereas the Telford Street Massive took six titles and three runner up spots in between whilst the Jaggies sneaked it in 86/87.
Caley also won 5 Qualifying Cups in that era whilst the Jaggies scored a hat trick. The only Hellgin players who I really had any respect fer was Ian Wilson who went on to prove himself at a level that suggests that he was only extracting the urine at Borough Briggs
But the Caley v Elgin clashes of the 70’s and 80’s bring the glorious memories of meeting up with the lads from the Elgin “Staigo” although it would be mostly their backs and running styles that I could ever remember. The Caley support was usually a mix of the old gangs from the Ferry, Dalneigh, Hilton and the unforgettable Caley Animals - possibly the most feared football outfit of those heady days.
Can ya no remember slipping on the Oxford Bags, the Harrington, the knee length bovver boots and the ritual scarves around the wrists and hanging from the waist bands - I used to favour a Leeds / Caley divide scarf and we all wore the Howden End Animal badges as personally manufactured by Stormin Norman Gordon - and Rodger McDonald once got a job at the Football Times but was thrown out after a day when he was found mass producing calling cards proclaiming “ You have just met the famous Caley Animals”.
Home or Away we used to give Tom Jones and his mate some feckin jip - whether it was smashing the buses down the Carse Road and 100 waiting in ambush in the Merkinch School playground, the famous fight up the Hill when we went in to their end and showed the Jeggies how it should be done - and there was always a bit of fun when we changed ends at Telford street but turned back and kicked them out of the Howden End.
And who can recall scraps bursting out on a Friday or Saturday night at the Caley ballroom, the Keppoch, the Nairn Ballerina, the Two Red Shoes and even the Strath - there was only one or two places that I can ever recall the Staigo and the Caley joining forces to take on a venerable army of tinks - and the second was a surreal Beach barbeque after a Slade concert in Nairn in 1970.
And what about the crowds - 7-8000 at times and the packed 500 football specials - which were unfortunately banned after a bunch of Caley boys who had been reading the “Skinhead” best seller and had donned lead pipes and chains decided to loot Woolies in Elgin and lay waste on the hill down to the Main Stand. And those terraces at the Briggs - desolate now but I can recall they looked massive and no separating fence.
It was so good that most finals were played in either Elgin or Sneck and we could have a go at each other even if we weren’t playing these others. I can only recall being battered once and that was in a Qualifying Cup Tie which went to a game and two replays and we had the smallest and most precarious support at the middle 0-0 game and then rejoiced as wee Donnie Park knocked in a double as we won it at the third attempt.
And despite that, in later years, I have met up with quite a few Staigo boys on tour with the Tartan Army and we had a good old drink drowning our sorrows. In many ways I miss Hellgin City and recall how we were - with the Jaggies - the main sources of winners in the Highlands. And for the kiddies Caley and Thistle were mainly bantering mates - there was a wee bit more dislike between Caley and Clach - Caley enjoyed the trips to Dungwall and Peterhead as they through up a wee bit of challenge - on and off the pitch - but Caley HATED Elgin and Elgin HATED Caley - Oh those were the days !!
I wont be there tomorrow but I will be glued to the internet singing - My old man said be an Elgin fan - I said feck aff bullocks yer a **** - we took the Jail End in half a minute - we took the Briggs with the Staigo init.
THE HOWDEN END IS CALLING YOU - here is hoping for a draw and a midweek replay.
There you have it, a one time Caley Animal looks back with affection at the good olde days, thanks IHE.  I would expect a knock on yer door from the plod soon asking a few questions to tidy up some unfinished business. So, back to the future:- Squads for 2011 cup game   Terry Butcher has no fresh worries since the disappointing festive fixtures, but may be looking to freshen up the starting eleven after some jaded looking performances.  Tuffey might get the nod for the cup games and look for McBain, Golabek and Sutherland to push for a start along with forgotten man, Spaniard Dani Sanchez.  This means that Jonny Hayes is still recovering from his ankle injury, and misses out along with Gillet, Morrison, Proctor and McCann. Jack Ross may go for the experience of former ICT legend Barry Wilson to try and spring a cup shock.  Jamie Duff and Jake Inglis also have something to prove as they make a return to the Tulloch Stadium.  Elgin may pin their hopes on pacey forward Craig Gunn, an ex-County player who also has something to prove. Disclaimer.........any names used in this preview are purely fictional, and spelling errors are deliberate, but if you need help, speak to the Immortal Howden Ender.
By tm4tj in Previews 2010-11 ·

St Johnstone -V- Inverness CT – Report

Great while it lasted.
Oh well, the run is over !!!! After going 19 away league games unbeaten covering the full calendar year of 2010, the first game of 2011 saw that record evaporate.
Collin Samuel scored in 85 minutes of the game and Caley Thistle had no reply. In fact, without Jonny Hayes' presence in the last few games, Caley Thistle have had no reply to anything !!!
It was fantastic while it lasted, and it had to come to an end at some time, but when it came we let it slip away without too much fight, and if I'm honest, this has been coming for a while now.  That's not to take anything away from the year long sequence of undefeated away results on SFL & SPL duty, but maybe it is for the greater good of the overall performances that we have got the good monkey off the back and we can now concentrate on picking up points at home as well as on the road.
I suppose we should really be congratulating St Johnstone rather than bemoaning our loss today, after all, they have done something that none of the other teams managed.  However, the manner of the defeat is what will be concerning the Inverness fans, after losing three very winnable games on the trot, three games that could have seen us all but safe for another SPL season and even pushing for top six.  It could yet be a long and arduous road until the end of the season and the return of Jonny Hayes will be a bonus, so still plenty to look forward to.
 
2nd January 2011 McDiarmid Park, Perth ST JOHNSTONE 1 - Samuel (85) TEAM: Enckelman, MacKay, Anderson (Maybury 62), Duberry, Grainger, Taylor (Davidson 59), Millar, Morris, Craig, MacDonald (Samuel 72), Parkin
SUBS: Smith, Caddis, Reynolds, May - Booked: none 
INVERNESS CT 0 - TEAM: Esson, Duff, Tokely, Munro, Shinnie, Cox (Sutherland 71), Innes, Ross, Blumenshtein (Foran 46), Odhiambo, Rooney
SUBS: Tuffey, Golabek, McBain, Duncan, Sanchez - Booked: Sutherland (90)
Referee George Salmond Attendance 3126  
Alternative Maryhill has the grim task of sharing the details with us all.
In the end it came not with a bang but with a whimper. Caley Thistle’s long unbeaten away run is over, and there is something very ICT about the fact that it ended on a grey winter’s afternoon against a lower-placed team rather than at the ground of a better-resourced, title-challenging side. Many supporters yesterday admitted to feeling slightly relieved that the run was over, believing that it had become a distraction, an additional pressure and possibly even a contributing factor to the team’s poor home form. There may be some truth in that and the biggest concern about yesterday was not really the final result, but the utter poverty of the side’s performance. In terms of invention and confidence, this ICT looked a million miles away from the team that dismantled Dundee United just a few month ago, and if they continue to play like they did yesterday, then the players will struggle to win another game all season. Considering the time of the year, there was a fine ICT support in attendance yesterday, probably somewhere between three and four hundred, and they deserved better, not only from the players but also from the St Johnstone stewards. Naelifts has already summarised their killjoy tactics very eloquently on the forum; suffice to say that if it is the aim of these guys to drive attendances down even further, then they are going the right way about it. Typically, the Caley Thistle supporters dealt with the persistent harassment with good humour and a few choruses of ‘sit doon for the Caley Jags’, and by the second half the stewards had got bored and given up trying to force everyone back into their seats, which raises the question: why bother in the first place? There were lots of calls for Terry Butcher to freshen up the team for this game after the successive defeats against St Mirren and Kilmarnock, and sure enough, he made changes. Few would have predicted the line-up that took the field for ICT yesterday, however. Richie Foran and Russell Duncan were dropped to the bench. Chris Innes came back into central defence, with Ross Tokely going to right back and Stuart Duff moving into midfield. Gil Blumenshtein also came into the side, playing what I assume was supposed to be a wide attacking role in support of Rooney, with Odhiambo on the opposite side. Innes had a solid enough game defensively, but Blumenshtein was utterly anonymous, and on yesterday’s evidence it is hard to see what he can bring to the side. Throughout the first half there was a clear lack of strength and bite up front, and no real composure or creativity anywhere in the side. If the purpose of the changes was to improve the passing in midfield and to allow better attacking play in the wide areas, then they did not work, unfortunately. The long ball is back, and that is always a bad sign for Caley Thistle. The first half, was, in all honesty, pretty poor viewing all round. St Johnstone looked more inventive in possession, particularly Chris Millar and winger Cleveland Taylor, and they created the better of the chances. Esson saved well from Taylor, Peter McDonald and from a Millar cross that deflected off Graham Shinnie towards the goal, and Liam Craig also went narrowly wide with a close-range header. Caley Thistle’s best opportunity fell to Adam Rooney, whose shot from eighteen yards after running onto a ball from Nick Ross was parried by Peter Enckelman. The rebound fell to Rooney and he had the chance to play in Odhiambo, but pulled his cut back too far behind his team-mate. Apart from these chances, though, the half was dominated by scrappy midfield battles and ineffective punts and crosses that were too easily dealt with.
Half Time 0-0 At half time the consensus among the ICT supporters I spoke to was that the game had been poor and the team’s performance frustratingly ineffective, but that things could only get better. For a while, it seemed this was going to be the case. Terry Butcher has been criticised recently for not making changes quickly enough when the team is underperforming. He could not be accused of that yesterday. Richie Foran was brought on for Gil Blumenshtein at the start of the second half, and immediately made a difference, adding more aggression in midfield, more invention and accuracy to the team’s passing, and bringing Odhiambo into the game more. For the first fifteen minutes of the second half, Caley Thistle controlled most of the play: the only spell in the game when they looked the better side. Despite this, however, they created very few decent chances: Odhiambo was presented with a decent opportunity after neat build-up play from Foran and Ross, but despite making room for himself well, hit a weak final shot at the keeper; the closest ICT actually came to scoring in this period was when Nick Ross got himself free on the right hand side of the pitch and mishit a deep cross, which glanced off the crossbar. As the second half wore on, more uncertainty crept into ICT’s play, and St Johnstone came back into the game and began creating chances again. Ryan Esson had to make sharp saves from Dave Mackay, Sam Parkin and, on 75 minutes, from substitute Collin Samuel, after a poor Munro header back to his goalkeeper fell short of Esson and into Samuel’s path. In between times, Danny Grainger also had a chance inside the box, but shot over the bar after being closed down well by Esson. With St Johnstone looking the more likely to score, Terry Butcher made his second change and again resisted the temptation to give an opportunity to Dani Sanchez, instead replacing Lee Cox with Shane Sutherland. Sutherland worked characteristically hard but failed to make any real impact on the game. With about ten minutes remaining, St Johnstone had a decent claim for a penalty when Samuel’s downward header appeared to strike Grant Munro’s hand, but the referee ignored the appeals. Then, on 83 minutes, IC T almost grabbed an unexpected, and undeserved, lead when Eric Odhiambo latched onto a header across the area and hit a shot that took a slight deflection, forcing Peter Enckelman into a full-length save to tip the ball round his post. Two minutes later, however, St Johnstone got the goal their superior play merited. From a corner which the ICT defence failed to clear, Dave Mackay got a shot in. Ryan Esson made a block, and for a moment it looked as if he had saved Caley Thistle yet again, but Collin Samuel was first to the rebound and he hammered the ball into the roof of the net. St Johnstone 1 – Inverness Caledonian Thistle 0 From that point, there was only going to be one winner. In sharp contrast to the Celtic game just five weeks previously, there seemed to be no self-belief among the players, and no sign of them being able to raise their game to create any real threat to St Johnstone. The solitary opportunity they had was a shot by Shane Sutherland, which was comfortably saved by Enckelman. At the end of the game, many of the ICT supporters remained to applaud in tribute to what the team had achieved with their thirteen-month unbeaten away run; most of the players, however, appeared too dejected to notice or acknowledge this as they trooped off the field. What now then for this Caley Thistle side? Despite three straight defeats and no wins in six games, there is no crisis in Inverness yet. Every team is likely to go through a poor period at some stage of the season, and ICT’s sudden dip in form has probably acquired greater significance precisely because the team has performed so well over the first part of the season. If ICT are going to turn their form around again, however, it is a little difficult at the moment to see exactly where the inspiration will come from. There is no guarantee of new signings this month, with the manager admitting that players will have to be moved on before others can be brought in, and although the return of Jonny Hayes should add some much needed pace and creativity to the attack, it is not healthy or fair to assume that he will make the vital difference between losing and winning. Yet both last season and this, Terry Butcher has proved himself to be a good motivator, and also someone who is unafraid to make changes and take unpopular decisions. We may not always agree with his team selections, but it is better that we have a manager who is prepared to keep examining his own decisions and change if necessary, rather than someone who adopts an ostrich mentality, or lays all the blame at the players’ feet. The hope is, though, that he can find the winning blend again sooner rather than later: hopefully Elgin in the cup next week will be the first step in that direction.
Great report Maryhill, I think that just about sums up the feelings of most fans.
By tm4tj in Reports 2010-11 ·

St Johnstone -V- Inverness CT – Preview

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A new year, another away day.
Inverness return to more stable surroundings in their first game of the new year.  An away day fixture at McDiarmid Park Perth, will hopefully banish the blues from our two Xmas fixtures at home.  We were left pointless as St Mirren and Kilmarnock left Inverness with all but the worst home record in the SPL, (thanks Hamilton).  Maybe the fantastic away run has taken the edge off our home performances, but whatever it is Terry Butcher needs to address the balance and start picking up points at home in 2011.
Conditions permitting we will have the chance to get back on track at Perth in what should be an intriguing fixture.  Saints have started somewhat slowly this season after a consolidating  first season back last year and their home form is on a par with ours.  A meagre four goals at home for Saints is one reason for optimism amongst the Caley Jags fans that we can extend our undefeated run, but without Jonny Hayes our attacking options have been minimised and this will be no easy task.
Alterative Maryhill is first to put pen to paper for 2011, here is what he has to say............
St Johnstone v Inverness Caledonian Thistle, 2nd January 2011
A declaration of interest: I love Perth. Having spent a fortnight there every year as a child, it is tempting to drift into a Bannerman-esque reverie about boating on the South Inch, pitch-and-putting at Craigie and falling into burns at Buckie Braes. Football must take priority here, but there will be none of the cynicism that would accompany a preview of a game in the central belt: respect is due to St Johnstone. After all, we thistle-munching, cowpat-trampling, sheep-harassing yokels must stick together.
Watching Mantis’s compilation of news reports from the time of the merger recently, I noticed that one name kept coming up as a model for what a unified Inverness club could achieve: St Johnstone. To some extent this was because, as a Premier League club, they had been held to a 2-2 draw by Highland League Caledonian in the 1992-93 Scottish Cup, a result which was subsequently used to strengthen the argument for an Inverness club’s inclusion in the Scottish Football League. However, there were also strong historical reasons for citing St Johnstone as a worthy model for the new Inverness club to follow. From a town of similar size to Inverness, reasonably remote from the industrialised regions stereotypically held to represent the ‘heartland’ of Scottish football, the Perth club had spent significant amounts of time in Scotland’s top division throughout its history, and had maintained an average crowd of around three thousand. As the Inverness merger underwent its difficult birthing pains, emulating this might have seemed hopelessly optimistic; seventeen years later, with ICT having spent six of the last seven seasons in the SPL to St Johnstone’s two, and with an average attendance consistently higher than that of the Perth club, few would dispute that Caley Thistle can be regarded as a club of similar size and stature to St Johnstone. Yet the Saints’ history still holds lessons for what Caley Thistle could achieve under the right conditions, and also contains a cautionary tale of how quickly fortunes can change in Scottish football.
On the 30th December 1998, St Johnstone sat in fourth place in the SPL table, having accumulated 30 points from 21 games. That season, they would go on to finish in third place, winning a place in the UEFA Cup, as well as appearing in the final of the League Cup and the semi-finals of the Scottish Cup. All this was achieved without the sort of reckless investment in the team that would be the downfall of clubs such as Gretna, Dundee and Livingston. Sound familiar? The following season, Sandy Clark followed this up with a fifth-place finish, but with the sale of playmakers such as Phillip Scott and Miguel Simao, and others such as Roddy Grant and Alan Kernaghan coming to the ends of their top-flight careers, decline set in, and a tenth place finish in season 2000-2001 was followed by relegation the next season. It took St Johnstone seven years to return to the top flight, with even now-highly-regarded managers such as Billy Stark and Owen Coyle unable to win promotion. When they finally made it back to the SPL in 2009-10, however, they did so debt-free and with a squad comprised of a good blend of promising youngsters and experienced journeymen, and comfortably held their own, finishing eighth. I guess the moral of the story, if there is one, is that a club of Caley Thistle’s size can achieve top six, Europe and all the things we have dreamed of this season, but that limited resources will always make sustained success difficult. On balance, though, I would rather that ICT continued to follow the example of Geoff Brown, the St Johnstone chairman, than those of Brooks Mileson or Calum Melville.
All this is terribly sensible, but let’s not forget that St Johnstone has occasionally dipped its toes into the murkier waters of Scottish football. At the team’s Christmas party in 2000, George O’Boyle and Kevin Thomas were allegedly discovered washing down their pints of Inveralmond Thrappledouser with a couple of nosefuls of cocaine, and were subsequently sacked by the club; and the Letham Medici, Stuart Cosgrove, has frequently hinted at a youthful involvement with St Johnstone’s casuals, the Fair City Firm, whose steel-toecapped Hunter wellies wreaked havoc in towns the length and breadth of Scotland in the 70s and early 80s. The Caley Away boys will have to be vigilant on Sunday...
A (Very) Brief History of the Fixture
The unified Inverness Caledonian Thistle’s first competitive fixtures against St Johnstone did not take place until season 2002-03. That season, the Inverness side managed only one win against the Saints, Dennis Wyness and Richie Hart scoring the goals in a 2-1 home win in October 2002. St Johnstone won the three remaining games and ended the season in third position, one place and two points ahead of Caley Thistle. The following season the statistics were reversed, with ICT winning three games to St Johnstone’s one. By far the most significant of these was the final game of the season, when a 3-1 win for Caley Thistle, with goals from David Bingham, Barry Wilson and Paul Ritchie after St Johnstone had taken the lead, brought the SFL helicopter, the first division title, and SPL football north to Inverness for the first time in its history. Memories of that game will live forever in the minds of every Caley Thistle supporter who witnessed it, and for those of us who were stuck at work two hundred miles away and had to run out every five minutes to check the radio, the envy will never die. The only league game between the clubs this season, at Tulloch Caledonian Stadium, finished in a 1-1 draw, meaning that the league record between the clubs ahead of Sunday’s fixture stands at: played – nine; wins – four apiece; draws – one. It couldn’t be closer.
Current Form and Team News
The popular perception is that St Johnstone have struggled to find form this season after the previous respectable campaign. In fact, the Perth side are only one point and place lower than they were this time last season, and in gaining two wins and a draw in their last four fixtures, and managing to hold Celtic until injury time in their most recent game, they would appear to be hitting their stride. By contrast, Caley Thistle have failed to win in any of their previous five fixtures, and although three of those were creditable draws against the current top three teams, successive home defeats to St Mirren and Kilmarnock have a few supporters worried that this could be the start of a slump. The magnificent undefeated away record remains intact, however, and hopefully the team’s determination to maintain this will lead to an improved performance on Sunday.
St Johnstone’s biggest problem this season has been an inability to find the net. They have scored just twelve goals so far, compared to Caley Thistle’s thirty; only bottom club Hamilton have scored fewer. St Johnstone’s main goal threat has come from summer signing Sam Parkin, who has scored four league goals. His experienced partner Collin Samuel has had a disappointing season, and Saints’ second-top league scorers are midfielder Liam Craig and left back Danny Grainger, with two apiece. There is definite quality in midfield for St Johnstone, however, in the shape of former Chelsea player Jody Morris and ex-Livingston starlet Murray Davidson , and also at the back, where another combination of Livingston and Chelsea veterans, Dave Mackay and Michael Duberry, has restricted league opponents to twenty-five goals; the same number conceded by the Caley Thistle defence this season. At the time of writing, defender Graham Gartland, a recent absentee through injury, may be back in contention for Saints after coming through a closed-doors game successfully, but forward Marcus Haber is ruled out for the season; Jody Morris and fellow midfielder Jamie Adams, who missed the Celtic game through suspension, should be available.
For Caley Thistle, the most significant injury is that to Jonny Hayes. While the winger has a tendency to drift in and out of matches, and had probably his poorest game of the season in the recent 1-1 draw to Hearts, he is undoubtedly ICT’s most potent creative force – witness the audacious strike at home against Rangers – and it is surely no coincidence that his absence has been followed by two of Caley Thistle’s least effective performances of the season. Despite some rumours to the contrary, it seems likely that he will miss out against St Johnstone, and it remains to be seen whether Terry Butcher will ask Shane Sutherland or Eric Odhiambo to try to fill his boots, each having been given an opportunity against St Mirren and Kilmarnock respectively, or whether he will try something different by drafting in either Gil Blumenshtein or forgotten man Dani Sanchez for a first start of the season. Elsewhere, right backs David Proctor and Kevin McCann remain unavailable through injury, and there is still no word of left back Kenny Gillet’s return to the match day squad, despite the fact that he is apparently back in training. Central defender Chris Innes is fit, which gives Terry Butcher more options at the back, but despite the recent defeats, Ross Tokely and Grant Munro have probably done well enough over the course of the season to remain the first choice pairing. Adam Rooney is likely to continue as the team’s only out-and-out striker, and despite Shane Sutherland’s decent performance against St Mirren, this must surely be a priority area for Terry Butcher in the transfer window, especially if Rooney chooses not to renew his contract.
Prediction
Given recent performances, and with the creativity of Hayes almost certainly missing, I can’t claim to be optimistic, but bearing in mind our determination to maintain the unbeaten record and St Johnstone’s difficulties in finding the net, I think a low-scoring draw looks the most likely outcome.
St Johnstone 1 – Inverness Caledonian Thistle 1
 
By tm4tj in Previews 2010-11 ·

Inverness CT -V- Kilmarnock – Report

More misery for home fans
Killie piled on the agony for the long suffering home fans after emphatically trouncing Inverness in the Highland capital.  Bryson, Kelly and Hamill put the game beyond Butchers strugglers, with Foran briefly giving the homesters some false hope.  Ross Tokely was one of the few players to emerge from this game with his CV intact as an Eremenko inspired Kilmarnock taught Inverness a harsh lesson.  Killie looked sharper to the ball while Inverness laboured over every task and but for a bright opening quarter the Ayrshire men had all the answers to the few questions that Inverness asked.
 
29th December 2010 Tulloch Caledonian Stadium INVERNESS CALEDONIAN THISTLE 1 - Foran (71) TEAM: Esson, Duff, Tokely, Munro, Shinnie, Cox, Duncan, Ross, Odhiambo (Sutherland 80), Foran (Blumenshtein 83), Rooney
SUBS: Tuffey, Golabek, Innes, McBain, Sanchez - Booked: Munro (18), Shinnie (18), Duncan (40), Tokely (78)
KILMARNOCK 3 - Bryson (26), Kelly (68), Hamill (79) TEAM: Bell, Fowler, Wright, Gordon, Hamill, Taouil (Silva 87), Bryson, Kelly, Pascali, Sammon (Rui Miguel 90), Eremenko
SUBS: Letheren, Clancy, Hay, Sissoko, Kennedy - Booked: Hamill (56) 
Referee Willie Collum Attendance 3735  
Another home game, another defeat.  It is now getting monotonous.  A Hayesless Caley Jags look as though they have been found out in the top half of the league.  Maybe it's not for us, but since hitting fourth spot in the league we look like a rabbit caught in the headlights.  We have become a victim of our own success, the much publicised away form is being ruined by the equally publicised home form.  We can't buy a home win just now and our thin squad looks increasingly fragile as the January sales window looms. 
Let's not take away all that the club has achieved so far, but the signs are ominous that our squad is starting to creak a little.  Only a few weeks ago we had our first hat-trick in SPL games, now Adam Rooney has hit a lean patch and without his Irish supplier Jonny Hayes being fit, he appears to be isolated at times and is struggling to recreate the early season promise he displayed.  The third piece of the Irish jigsaw, Richie Foran also looks to be suffering from the onus of the captains armband.  A player who was giving 110% last season has not been firing on all cylinders this season and he looks as though he is carrying an injury.  Time will tell if our fortunes will change for the better, but at this moment we need to regroup and get back to basics.
davie will maybe put a more positive spin on the game with his match report, we certainly need some cheering up.
Results and games come and go, but this one threw up a fundamental question; who was it that gave Mixu Paatelainen a black eye? The bear was in good form on the touchline, responding to his team’s dismissal of Caley Thistle. There were voices of dissention around the place, and more than one who was angered by this defeat, but the overwhelming feeling was that we were beaten by a better footballing side on the night. Maybe we are finding a level after a long period of overachievement, and as fans we have been getting a bit spoiled. First Half A free kick and a corner in the first couple of minutes after some good pressing play hinted that Caley Thistle were up for this one. Both chances came to naught, but chances they were and a statement of intent was required after Sunday. Kilmarnock were passing the ball well, Eremenko and Taouil showing promise but in ten minutes a Rooney shot brought the first save from Cammy Bell. This seemed to rouse Kilmarnock, who played with a lot more intent thereafter. Munro was booked for a challenge on Taouil that looked innocuous, and Shinnie followed him into Collum’s book for telling him that. The free kick in 18 minutes, taken by Eremenko, was delivered superbly to Esson’s top left corner and was saved just as superbly. 1-0 in the battle of Scotland’s third best keepers. The Killie midfield was bossing the game by this time, Cox and Duncan finding it difficult to build any rhythm, Bryson was looking more impressive and on loan Ben Gordon at centre back was building play well from Caley’s inability to link midfield and forwards. In truth something had to give, especially as Ross Tokely could form a brick wall for only so long. In 25 minutes, so long arrived in the shape of Bryson who scored from close range. Russell Duncan was booked in 30 odd minutes, leaving half our defence walking a tightrope. Further chances came and went for both sides, but 0-1 at the break seemed a fair reflection of play.
Half time Inverness CT 0 Kilmarnock 1
No changes were apparent at half time, and after a brief spell of Killie pressure, Inverness began to assert themselves into the best period of the match. The passing was crisper and there was more direction to the play. Good chances fell to Rooney and Duff from a free kick, there was a feeling that it was now or never for ICT in terms of reclaiming the match, but the final ball, the incisive pass was lacking on too many occasions. When Kelly scored with a header from a lovely ball from Taouil in 67 minutes, it felt all over. The sucker punch delivered, the game would be played out. Inverness are better than that, and certainly fight harder than that, and the response within 3 minutes was heartening. Foran cottoned on to a ball on the left side of the penalty area and pinged a ball under Bell from a tight angle, which might have deflected off a defender on the way. 1-2 and game on? As someone once said, I can stand the despair, it’s the hope that I can’t handle and on 77 minutes the despair set in. Bryson sallied into the box and was upended by Esson. A penalty was always going to be awarded by the somewhat eccentric Willie Collum, but Bryson was doing a fair impression of taking off from Prestwick long before he was touched. As is now almost normal, Esson saved the penalty from Hamill low down to his right but the parry was picked up by Hamill and duly dispatched. 1-3 and Kilmarnock were away down the A9 with all 3 points. Eric Odhiambo left the field after 79 minutes to be replaced by Shane Sutherland. The few boo’s that he got leaving the pitch were curious and unmerited. The lad had done the best he could. Foran was next to be subbed, and Gil Blumenshtein showed enough in his cameo appearance to merit serious consideration for Sunday. A couple of deft touches and drives were suggestive of a good working understanding with Nick Ross. Hope reared her head again in 84 minutes when a quite brilliant stop from Bell prevented Rooney from making it 2-3.
Full Time Inverness CT 1 Kilmarnock 3
We were beaten by a better side. Eremenko lit the game up in the same way that one M. Niculae used to do occasionally in terms of vision and technical ability. Kharkov must be good if they can afford to loan him out. MotM has to be Ross Tokely, as much for manfully trying to protect young Shinnie as anything else. He was a pillar again. Special mention has to go to the Killie fans who made it up a long way at this time of year and still found the energy to sing themselves hoarse, fair play to you. Let’s hope for a better result for Inverness to start 2011; a happy new year to each and every one at CTO and at Caley Thistle. Lang may yer lums reek.
By tm4tj in Reports 2010-11 ·

Inverness CT -V- Kilmarnock – Preview

Teaser Paragraph:
Early chance to make amends
Inverness get a quick return to the scene of the crime on Wednesday night as Kilmarnock are the visitors for the SPL midweek game.  The players will be out to atone for the dismal Boxing Day defeat at the hands of St Mirren.  An unimaginative performance from the home team once again frustrated the fans and left Inverness pointless.  Our home record is in stark contrast to our away form and this is causing some concern.  Only Hamilton have won less home games this season than ICT, and they find themselves bottom of the SPL at the moment.  Kilmarnock have shown a dramatic upturn in their fortune since Mixu Paatelainen took over, and are one of the current form teams in the league.
Terry Butcher was extremely downbeat after the match with St Mirren and felt gutted after all the hard work to get the ground prepared for the game ended up in defeat, especially after taking an early lead.  Praise for Esson and the three youngsters Sutherland, Shinnie and Ross could not ease the pain of yet another home flop and I wonder if this will signal some changes to the way we approach our home games.
Kilmarnock head North after a scare over their goalkeeping choices.  With Combe still injured, Bell and Letheren were struggling with a stomach bug, but they seem to be on the mend and will be in the squad.
davie will tell you about this evenings game, and remember it's a 7:45pm Kick Off
Stroke rates are higher in Ayrshire than anywhere else in Scotland*. This is probably due to Kilmarnock FC appointing a series of formidably apoplectic managers, the latest of whom brings his team up the road for a midweek SPL jaunt. Welcome Mixu Paatelianen. This is a team that my spellcheck just doesn’t cope with, but seems to be gelling in a football sense quite nicely. Beware the Finn and his friends. If their Christmas spirit is anything like St. Mirren’s we might get another dose of humbug.
Kilmarnock FC are all right. Lurking in deepest Ayrshire from 1895 onwards they have leathered footballs between the drink factory and Prestwick airport for years. This must make them the closest that Elvis Presley ever got to Scottish football. Possibly Ayr, but I’m not measuring. They also therefore qualify as the club closest to ICT’s best ever away day. 7, still can’t quite believe that one.
Team News
No Hayes. Again. Since going over his ankle in Dingwall, Jonny has missed out and boy have we seen how crucial he is to this ICT team. No instant out ball for the full backs. No fast breaks, no quality crosses (and goals) and no dragging half a petrified defence in his wake. Get well soon Jonny. Ironically, this has come at a time when the rest of the knees and ankles have improved, apart from Kenny Gillet. Chris Innes could be stiffening for the backbone in this one. There may be changes afoot, and guessing a line up for this would be difficult but for the limited options that TB has.
The Opposition
Eremenko, fit and worth a million, in what might be his last game before recall to Kharkov. Connor Sammon on fire (an expression I never thought I would use) After an extended Christmas break because the heating was on the blink, Killie should have no worries at all. For a club prone to penny pinching, internecine squabbling and factionalism as complicated as Balkan politics, they’re happy. Cammy Bell is still never better than Ryan Esson (get yer erse up here Levein for this head to head) but only if Cammy is fit. News has it he’s got the “turkey trots” and his fellow spewing companion Kyle Letheren are major doubts despite the immodium. Winger Forrester is out, having “done a Jonny” in training on these bad plastic pitches. James Dayton will also sit this one out.  The rest of them are, unfortunately, fit.
Form
No win in the last four. Defeat on Sunday, and only two wins at home this season. Kilmarnock sit 3 points behind us. We have the edge in head to heads though; we hold the advantage on previous meetings between the two in Inverness. Of the 10 games played, Caley Thistle have recorded 5 wins, and Kilmarnock have come away with 3 victories. This included one SFA Cup win by 2-0. Generally, plenty goals to be found in these encounters, and ICT lead the scoring stats 22-16. The highest aggregate was an entertaining if disappointing 3-4 victory for Killie in December 2006.  In April 2008 we handed out our biggest defeat to Killie.  A David Lilley og was sandwiched between an opener from Dougie Imrie and a superb Marius Niculae strike into the top corner to make the final score 3-0.  All the signals are that this could be tighter than an Aberdonian’s purse strings. 1-0 please.
*I made this bit up, before you ask.
"Stroke of genius if you ask me davie"
By tm4tj in Previews 2010-11 ·

Inverness CT -V- St Mirren – Report

Xmas Turkeys
A bad day at the office for Caley Thistle today.
Lee Cox opened the scoring for the CaleyJags but two goals from Steven Thomson, one in each half, saw St Mirren head down the A9 with the perfect Xmas pressie - all three points !!!  But for Ryan Esson, St Mirren could have gone in at half time well on top.  One particular save from Esson was out of this world, the rest were just spectacular.  Inverness got what they deserved, zilch.
 
26th December 2010 Tulloch Caledonian Stadium INVERNESS CALEDONIAN THISTLE 1 - Cox (8) TEAM: Esson, Duff, Tokely, Munro, Shinnie, Cox (Blumenshtein 89), Duncan, Ross, Foran (Odhiambo 83), Sutherland, Rooney
SUBS: Tuffey, Golabek, Innes, McBain, Sanchez - Booked: Cox (32) 
ST MIRREN 2 - Thomson (44, 84) TEAM: Gallacher, Barron (van Zanten 79) Potter, McGregor, Travner, McAusland, Thomson, Cregg, Dargo (Lynch 76), Higdon, McGowan
SUBS: Samson, Mooy, McLean, McQuade, Lamont - Booked: McGregor (23), Cregg (27), Thomson (84) 
Referee Craig Thomson Attendance 3819  
As davie will define below, like the Xmas turkey, we were stuffed by the Saints, and in all honesty that was what we deserved after another poor home display left the Inverness fans bewildered and angry.  Angry after yet another poor display at the Tulloch Caledonian Stadium, and bewildered as to why our home form does not match our excellent away form.  Too much talk of Europe, top six and even third place seems to have got to a few heads and after taking an unlikely lead early in the game, we then camped on the edge of our own box, inviting St Mirren to have a go.  This they did as we seemed incapable of creating an opening.  Saints on the other hand took up the challenge and carved us open three or four times in the first half, as easy as slicing a turkey.  Instead of a football feast, we were unfortunately dished up some tripe.
davie's reluctant report
Fair enough, I don’t usually wait until next day before I post my report. Teenagers, drink and the Wife intervened. After Caley’s “abject” display against St. Mirren, I don’t think anyone is going to mind. The day started well enough, with a decent turnout of 3,800 or so sales, party and family gathering refugees sounding optimism from three corners of the ground. Pre-match predictions in the Caley Club ranged from 1-0 to 4-1 and that included the hardy band that had ventured up the A9 from Paisley. No one imagined or contemplated a home defeat in this one. After all, the recent run of form has been impeccable. It had to come to an end, though and it did in quite stunning style as the wheels fell off the ICT bandwagon in front of us.
Jonny Hayes was, as anticipated, absent and his place filled somewhat implausibly by Shane Sutherland. The smart money for that change appeared to be on Dani Sanchez, but the Spaniard again had to be content with a place on the somewhat cold looking bench that hid behind a substantial pile of snow. In the first few minutes, that view might not have looked too bad, as St. Mirren played pretty patterns and got nowhere. The home side were looking the sharper of the two sides early on, and took an early lead through midfielder Lee Cox. Right time, right place as the whipped ball smacked off a buddy backside, the crossbar and Lee’s right boot in that order. 1-0 after 8 minutes and the Caley faithful were looking for a result that they most emphatically were not going to get. Instead of kicking on, they stopped playing at this point and handed the initiative back to the men in black and white. Sure the effort was there, but the guile and vision of recent weeks had gone and in truth the score line was preserved only by a one man act of defiance called Esson. ICT could and should have been 3-1 down by the interval, but for him. Saves from Dargo in 20 minutes, Higdon in 27 and Higdon again in 40 minutes were class, the last being of international class. Going the wrong way, Esson adjusted and parried a netbound shot that he had no right to reach, utter brilliance. The other two were merely excellent. I entertained a sneaking thought that we might make it to half time with the lead somehow intact, like a blindfolded egg and spoon race but in 43 minutes the inevitable happened and Steven Thomson pinged a lovely wee effort into the right side of the goal after good work by Dargo. Not a surprise and the rest of us strained to hear the volume of the tirade that Butcher would surely unleash . 
Half Time 1-1 and happy with it.
Half time was enlivened by another blindfolded race, this time to allow the escape of a couple of pre-match pints in a crowded loo with no lights. Friendships were made and broken in there, I’m sure of it.
Of course, not having the same quality of half time banter ICT started the second half in the same vein as the first. Badly. The same pattern as the first half was repeated, except without the benefit of a sneaky goal against the run of play. The midfield had given up the ghost by this time, with Cox, Duncan and Sutherland creating nothing. Butcher recognised this (although with some unwillingness you suspect) Blumenshtein or the equally creative Sanchez should have been on at the break. I’m not going to detail the substitutions – the guilty know who they are. Foran looked out of sorts, Adam Rooney missed a couple of good chances, and Nicky Ross couldn’t deliver at the end of a couple of those languid runs of his. It came as no surprise then, that in 84 minutes the excellent Dargo fed Thomson again and 2-1 duly arrived. On other days, the siege of the Alamo would have replaced the sense of resignation that appeared at this point. Pass points were achieved by the aforementioned Esson but that’s it.
Full Time 1-2
Roll on Wednesday and a quick shot at redemption and realism. After a quick bout in the confessional, there is a chance to appease the Gods (well, Butcher at least) and get back on track. If we play like that again though, it could be a long night. Europe? Maybe next year.
By tm4tj in Reports 2010-11 ·

Inverness CT -V- St Mirren - Preview

Teaser Paragraph:
Cold turkey cure for Boxing Day
The perfect Xmas hangover cure.  SPL football in the Highlands, the ideal present for Inverness Caledonian Thistle fans.  2010, a year that has seen Inverness remain unbeaten on league business, and a season, so far, that has seen Inverness climb to fourth place in the SPL.  It does not get much better than this for ICT fans.  With a head of steam gathering at Tulloch Caledonian Stadium, we can look forward to a feast of football in Inverness with St Mirren being followed by Kilmarnock before the New Year game at Perth on the second of January 2011. (need to get used to writing that)
By the time this game comes around, you will have eaten as much turkey as you can handle.  Roast turkey dinner, turkey stir fry, turkey con carne, turkey with pasta, Turkey with white sauce, turkey on toast and turkey with ice cream and jelly.  Xmas spirit will be coming out of your ears, and grannies sherry trifle will set you up for a day on the bash.  You will grow into your new cardigan, your new best dad in the world socks look cool and the just what you wanted gadgets from poundland will come in handy supposing you never use them.  You will be smelling like a whores drawers with all your after shave, moisturisers and body sprays.  Still, they will come in handy I suppose if we ever have to go back to Dingwall.  Giant Toblerone bars; they are like Santa, you never see them unless it's Xmas, along with those blue tins of tasteless Danish cookies will be lying in wait for you when you get home, oh boy, bet you can't wait.  Never mind, theres always eBay or Gumtree for those unwanted gifts, and remember, ducks are for life, not just Xmas.
Inverness host The Buddies here on Boxing Day for a game that boss Butcher will be hoping to pick up three points from, after our last three games resulted in draws, although they were against the three top teams in the league this season.  Points have not been so easy to come by at home for Inverness, but we remain unbeaten in our last two.  Since we last played St Mirren in September, we have only lost one game in total, at home to Motherwell.  That made it one defeat in eleven games, not bad for a team that most experts reckoned would struggle to cope with the pace of the SPL.  The home performances of both sides are on a par.  Both sides have won two, while Saints have drawn 3 against our two.  Both clubs have lost four games at home.  We have both scored ten goals but Saints have lost two more than us.  What does that mean I hear you say.  It means that Saint Mirren have won nine points at home and we have only won eight.  Our away form has set it's own standards and that is the difference between these two teams, however this is a home game for Inverness to negotiate, and may prove to be more difficult than league positions would indicate.
St Mirren, on the other hand, have had a very erratic season.  A couple of exceptional results interspersed with some poor performances.  A single away victory at Tannadice with home wins over Hibs and Aberdeen see the Buddies at the lower end of the table.  Quite frankly they are struggling and look set to become embroiled in a relegation battle until the end of the season.  They dropped out of the League Cup at the hands of our near neighbours and good friends Ross County.  An exhilarating 3-3 draw after extra time saw County progress in the penalty shoot out.  They have accumulated 13 points with a -13 goal difference.  They have lost 13 goals at home.  They have scored 13 goals less than Inverness away from home.  Unlucky 13 for the Paisley men it is then.  Since Saints last played us, they have lost five, won two and drawn three of their ten games.  Their seasons away form has seen them lose five of their seven games with only that 1-2 victory in Dundee gaining them maximum points.  It's an away game for them, does that make it any easier for us?  I somehow doubt it.
Ginger Jaggy, fresh from his role as one of Santa's little helpers, has written this preview for you.
Hopefully everyone enjoyed their turkey and are ready to get back to action as we welcome relegation candidates St Mirren to the Highlands. We end the year with a home double header starting with the Buddies on Boxing Day and then on Wednesday we welcome Killie north. Caley will hope to continue the unbeaten run which is at 6 games. Our last defeat came at the hands of Motherwell well over a month ago when we lost 2-1 in Inverness. Since then we have remained unbeaten picking up 12 points from a possible 18 with us taking points off the top 3 clubs in the country.
Head to head
St Mirren are sitting in the lowly position of 9th and are only 3 points ahead of Aberdeen at the foot of the table. The Buddies though should not be underestimated from their abysmal league position. It would be easy to be complacent with the year we have had, but as Terry Butcher keeps saying lets take each game as they come. Even though our home record has not matched the height of our unbelievable away form, we should go into this game confident of taking 3 points. We have already met St Mirren this year and their name is included as one of the teams who failed to beat us on our away run. Caley Thistle played really well in that game winning 2-1 thanks to a brace from Eric Odhiambo. The Paisley outfit's reply was a peach of a dipping volley from on loan Celtic striker Paul McGowan. That goal came 13 minutes from time and St Mirren suddenly woke up and attacked us but we held on. They will have the attacking options to cause us problems. The head to head shows that we have the better record, winning 6 out of our 13 league encounters. St Mirren have managed 4 wins against us with the last victory coming on the 13th of December 2008 back at the old Love Street ground.
Inverness form guide
Inverness, as we know, go into this one on the back of a run of 6 games unbeaten which has included 3 draws against the top 3. Celtic at Parkhead ended 2-2 to give us the perfect anniversary present. We continued to remain unbeaten against Rangers with a creditable 1-1 draw in Inverness after an absolute pearler from Jonny Hayes and then last week we went to Tynecastle and ended with a point from a game Hearts dominated. So our form could not be better going into this encounter and with confidence sky high we will hope for a comfortable victory.
St Mirren form guide
St Mirren on the other hand has been inconsistent this season largely due to manger Danny Lennon's new arrivals from Cowdenbeath taking time to adapt to this level. They have only picked up a solitary 5 points from 18 in there last 6 matches. Their only victory in that period came at Tannadice with 2-1 victory over Dundee United. The other points they have mustered have come from a creditable draw at home to top 6 candidates Motherwell, something we never managed, and at relegation rivals Hamilton.
Ginger's Thoughts and Prediction I hope you all have a great Christmas and that everyone is ready to get back on the Caley Thistle bandwagon for the visit of St Mirren. As I have tried to point out in the preview we must not get ahead of ourselves. We have had a great year with us creating many records. But this is a potential banana skin for us. The evidence in the form guide and the difference of 14 points between the two clubs should suggest that we will win this game comfortably. I think teams will now take us more seriously with the year we have had. However, with the performance of the lads so far this season, I can see only one winner in this game and it is Caley Thistle. Terry will have the lads fired up for it and hence make sure that the players will be ready for this one.
Caley to win 2-0 says Ginger Jaggy
Thanks Ginger
Inverness squad overview from tm4tj
The Inverness injury list has been reducing slowly and Chris Innes was introduced for a few minutes last weekend.  Gil Blumenshtein is also regaining fitness and Spaniard Dani Sanchez has not really featured since his substitutes role at Easter Road when he changed the momentum of the game and set up our leveller.  David Proctor is still suffering with his hamstring.  Kevin McCann is still a wanted man by boss Butcher and we will look to securing his signature till at least the end of the season after his return from injury.  Kenny Gillet remains sidelined.
With the enigmatic Irishman Jonny Hayes sitting this one out we may find it a little difficult to prise open the Buddies rearguard.  Hayes can be a match winner for us on his day, and his stunning goal against Rangers is testament to that.  He is likely to be replaced by another enigma in Eric Odhiambo, a player who seemed to start the season like a man possessed, but he has been slowly pulled back into the pack and has only been used sparingly in recent matches.  He was also a scorer against Rangers, at Ibrox, when he came off the bench to net a deserved equaliser.  Eric has pace to burn and can twist and turn with the best of them, but his reluctance to mix it has seen him benched lately. 
Ryan Esson will keep Irish international Jonny Tuffey on the bench, and Tuffey can have no complaint as Esson has been in tremendous form, instilling confidence throughout the team with some inspirational keeping.  In the outfield, Stuart Duff has slotted seamlessly into the right back position vacated by the injured McCann, and his performances of late in that role have eased the defensive issues that we had, accompanied on the other flank by Graeme Shinnie who continues to progress under the guidance of Munro and Tokely in the heart of the defence.  In fact, the central defensive pairing have been pivotal in our unbeaten away run and are a match for most teams that try the aerial route, Rossco being dubbed Butcher mark 2 after last weeks bandages at Tynecastle.  Duncan and Cox are renewing their partnership effectively in the engine room and add a bit of bite to the midfield minders area.  What can you say about Nick Ross that has not already been said?  The lad has blossomed since his introduction to the side last season and has grown in confidence.  The only thing lacking at the moment is goals, and that will come.  His appetite for the game is immense and he does not waste many balls, simple but effective football is his trademark and his U21 recognition is fitting reward.  Captain Richie Foran is a vital outlet for us at goal kicks and a great target in the box.  His wholehearted approach to the game is inspiring and he is as effective in defence as he is up front.  Let's not forget we also have Roy McBain on standby, a bit of a utility man at the moment when required, and he has never let the side down.
Striker Adam Rooney finds himself a wanted man after his goal scoring exploits of the last few months.  We would all like to see Adam sign on again for another couple of seasons, just to augment the abilities he has shown in front of goal.  It's not always about the money, but also about making the right decisions at the right stage of your career.  He is still young, only 22, and will develop quicker on the playing field at Inverness rather than many a player who left provincial clubs to warm the benches at Ibrox or Parkhead. Plenty to think about for our talented flame haired striker, lets hope his mind is fully focussed on the job in hand this Sunday.  Shane Sutherland will be a willing deputy should Rooney decide his future lies elsewhere, although a lack of experience may lead to other options being explored, but at the moment he looks an able replacement when being introduced as a sub.
tm4tj prediction
Given our indifferent home form, and Saints poor away form, the outcome of this one may be more difficult than it would appear on paper.  It points to a bit of a stalemate and with Hayes missing, our attacking flair has been diminished, although Eric will be out to show Butcher that he can handle it.  Not the runaway result that we used to enjoy over the Buddies, but we should still have enough endeavour to overcome what will no doubt be a stubborn Saints searching for their second away win this season.  However, I will go far a narrow win for the homesters, 2-1.
Merry Xmas from all the Editorial Team at CTO.
***Latest team News***
Inverness lose Jonny Hayes after a midweek training injury on the artificial pitch.  His injury is not as bad as originally thought and Butcher hopes to have him back soon, but this weekend is too early for him.  Proctor and Gillet are still not ready for action.
St Mirren have Gareth Wardlaw suspended for this one.  He misses the first of two games this weekend.  Higdon and Dargo could team up in attack.  Dargo has been out for four months, but is training hard and desperate to get back on the park.  His contract expires at the end of the season and he will be looking to make an impact when he returns to action.
SPL News
More games off this weekend, Kilmarnock v Hearts called off on Friday due to burst pipes and frozen pitch.  Dundee United v Hamilton off after third pitch inspection revealed the area in front of the shed end remained frozen.  Motherwell are hoping their game with Rangers goes ahead and have plumbers working on the pipes as we type.
The SFL fixture list has once more been decimated and only a couple of fixtures have beaten the big freeze.  They now have a backlog of 60 matches compared to 11 at the same time last season.
Summer football anyone?
By tm4tj in Previews 2010-11 ·

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