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Kilmarnock -V- Inverness CT – Report

Humanity is alive and well.
Another great away day in Kilmarnock as Inverness took all three points in an entertaining tussle.  An Adam Rooney spot kick and a Jonny Hayes super sprinter strike gave Inverness the cushion needed as they saw out a punchless Kilmarnock despite Rui Miguel reducing the deficit with a sweet header.  Russell Duncan was restored to the frey and he was to play a big part in the resultant scoreline.  Inverness' defence which looked to struggle last week against St Johnstone were also prominent and resolute as Alternative Maryhill will recount.  After the game we also saw some unselfish humanitarian duties carried out at the station, well done red card.
 
23rd October 2010 Rugby Park, Kilmarnock KILMARNOCK 1 - Rui Miguel (74)  TEAM: Bell, Wright, Sissoko, Gordon, Bryson (Rui Miguel), Hamill, Silva, Kelly (Taouil 80), Pascali, Sammon (Forrester 63), Eremenko
SUBS: Letheren, Clancy, Hay, Invincible - Booked: Pascali (41), Sissoko (43), Hamill (88) 
INVERNESS CALEDONIAN THISTLE 2 - Rooney (42pen), Hayes (66) TEAM: Esson, Duff, Tokely, Munro, Shinnie, Duncan, Hayes, Ross, Odhiambo (Morrison 77), Foran, Rooney (Sutherland 89)
SUBS: Tuffey, Golabek, McBain, Sanchez, McCann - Booked: Munro (39), Duff (67) 
Referee Euan Norris Attendance 4508  
Another away day, another great result. This isn’t supposed to happen. Inverness Caledonian Thistle don’t start seasons well. Yet a combination of determined defending, dangerous counter-attacking, a never-say-die attitude and a wee bit of luck has taken Terry Butcher’s team to joint fourth in the table with nine games gone.
Following ICT away these days is such a contrast from two years ago: then, Saturdays tended to start with a sense of impending doom; now they start with a sense of excitement and anticipation. Yesterday’s adventure began at Central Station at 11 am with an odd spectacle: IHE had driven up from Chorley first thing and in the bewilderment of getting up so early had forgotten to glue on his beard before leaving. In The Hunting Lodge in Kilmarnock, however, they still recognised him, and the other ICT boys who have frequented the place in the past. We had an enjoyable couple of hours there – a few beers, a bit of pool, a bit of football on the TV, a spot of cheesy country on the jukebox – then headed off to Rugby Park.
And so to the game. To some extent my report will have to rely on the BBC website’s text service: puzzlingly, although I took notes diligently throughout the game, when I woke up today they had been replaced by a strange code apparently written by a five year old.
After last week’s disappointing first half performance, Terry Butcher reverted to the line-up that had performed so well against Aberdeen, with Russell Duncan returning to the midfield, Stuart Duff playing at right back and Kevin McCann dropped to the bench. It was a wise decision, with Duncan and Duff among ICT’s standout performers. Caley Thistle started brightly, and when a headed clearance from a Hayes cross was returned into the box, Duncan shot just wide from 16 yards. This set the tone for an open first half: throughout the forty-five minutes, play went from end to end, with both teams attempting to play passing football, and only a slight lack of creativity around either box kept the number of chances down.
After an even first ten minutes, ICT begin to exert some sustained pressure on the Kilmarnock goal. In a five minute spell, the Inverness team had three corners and three free kicks in attacking areas, but were unable to find a finishing touch for any of the moves. Kilmarnock then came back into it, with their much-admired summer signings, Alexei Eremenko and David Silva, starting to have some influence. From an Eremenko corner, Connor Sammon had a chance to score but failed to connect properly; Silva then had a shot from distance well blocked by Ross Tokely. Possession continued to switch from side to side and the game continued to flow through the midfield areas then peter out around the eighteen-yard lines until almost half time, when Caley Thistle drew first blood.
A cross from the right was controlled by Odhiambo and laid off to Duncan, unmarked at the left hand side of the box. He turned and knocked the ball past Sissoko and went down heavily under Sissoko’s late challenge. Penalty kick. With Rooney standing over the ball, the result was never in doubt, and he buried the ball in the bottom left hand corner with the keeper going the wrong way. The Kilmarnock players felt Duncan had dived and spent most of the remainder of the half greeting about the injustice of it all, although they did find time to create one decent opportunity, with Pascali heading over the bar from Eremenko’s cross.
Half time: Kilmarnock 0, Inverness Caledonian Thistle 1.
I said ‘Aye’ to a Killie pie – how much do I owe you for that, by the way, Naelifts?
Unsurprisingly, Kilmarnock started the second half showing more urgency than ICT, and within the first five minutes of the restart Sammon, Eremenko and Hamill all had long-range shots on goal, each of which missed the target. For most of the half, though, ICT defended superbly and restricted Killie to very few meaningful chances, with Ryan Esson having little to do apart from dealing with a couple of Eremenko free kicks and taking the sting out of a Sammon shot which Shinnie subsequently cleared off the line. Meanwhile, ICT looked dangerous on the counter attack, and a few minutes after Cammy Bell had saved smartly from a Rooney shot from about ten yards, Hayes’ opportunism put Caley Thistle further ahead.
There seemed to be little danger for Kilmarnock when Eremenko passed back to Frazer Wright on the left hand side of his own half, but as Wright dithered on the ball, Hayes stole it from him and sprinted diagonally towards the goal before sliding the ball past the advancing Cammy Bell and into the corner of the net. It was one of those great experiences to witness, a bit like watching Rooney’s goal against Aberdeen three weeks ago, where time seems to slow down as you see everything unfolding in front of you, and there are a few agonising moments and then the relief and euphoria of seeing the ball in the net. The away support went mental.
Eight minutes later, Kilmarnock guaranteed a nervy finish for that away support when Rui Miguel angled a superb flying header from Harry Forrester’s cross past Ryan Esson. Yet despite having the bulk of possession for the remainder of the game, Kilmarnock were unable to really threaten Esson’s goal, and eventually, with Caley Thistle retaining the ball well in the Kilmarnock half, the match ended, although not before Jamie Hamill had taken out Nick Ross with a reckless, nasty challenge born of frustration. Hopefully Ross, who had another fine game, will not suffer any after effects from it.
Full Time: Kilmarnock 1-2 Inverness CT
It was not ICT’s biggest travelling support by any means but yet again the supporters were terrific, keeping up a continuous chorus of songs and encouragement. The gratitude of the players, particularly Russell Duncan, was obvious at the end. The mutual appreciation that appears to exist between supporters and players and management is as strong at the moment as I can ever remember it being, and well-organised and determined performances like this will only serve to strengthen that. Bring on Ibrox.
With the game over and three more points in the bag, we took a detour back passed the Hunting Lodge en route to the legendary Fanny by Gaslight before jumping on the train. Somewhere along the way we captured a County supporter. Back in Glasgow, we took him to the Horseshoe and watched him experimenting with alcohol. By that point, however, I had reached the sleeping standing up stage, and long before everyone else went off to Brechin’s for the lesbian karaoke, I had headed off to pass out in the safety of Maryhill.
Another great day then; and I was promised yesterday that name-dropping in match reports guarantees a better rating, so in the spirit of shameless self-prostitution, take a bow Mannie, Naelifts, IHE, Red Card, Govan Jaggie, itn jnr, Capital Caley, Carol, Christian, Yompa, Iain, Moraywanderer, and everyone else, names unknown or since forgotten; you were magnificent.
By Scotty in Reports 2010-11 ·

Cafe Football at the TCS

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CaleyThistleOnline has been asked by 'Bronson', one of our long time members, to post the following story/information regarding an organisation called Cafe Football and we are happy to oblige.
My name is Simon Macdonald and I work for the Highland Council as a family support worker. Over the years I have helped to create a football group for teenagers with learning, physical, social and emotional difficulties who attend all the home Inverness Caledonian Thistle Football Club games.
I have developed a great relationship with ICT and was recently approached about becoming involved with an organisation called "CAFE FOOTBALL" . CAFE stands for "Centre for Access to Football in Europe" and one of their vision's is to improve the footballing experience for supporters with disabilities by setting up local supporters groups and raising awareness of any issues.
CAFE FOOTBALL have the support of Uefa, the SPL and the SFL and are to meet with the SFA soon. Disability Support Associations are now in place at Aberdeen, Dundee, Dundee United, Dunfermline, East Fife, Falkirk, Hearts, Kilmarnock, Livingston, Motherwell and Rangers and all these clubs have pledged their support. Although DSA's are not in place at Airdrie, Celtic, Hibs, ICT, St Johnstone and St. Mirren, positive contacts have been established and it is hoped that they will soon be on board too.
I have been in touch with Keith Ferguson the UK and Eire Development Officer and we have arranged a meeting on Monday 25th October at 7pm at the Tulloch Caledonian Stadium to which any disabled supporters, family members, carers and representatives from organisations are invited. Keith will be there and will hopefully be able to gain the views of those interested and look into the possibility of creating a Disabled Supporters Association for the club.
I would also appreciate it if you could forward this information to anyone you think would be interested in attending the meeting and I ask that those interested in attending send me a private message to enable me to gauge interest levels and numbers. [send PMs to username Bronson]
I look forward to meeting all interested parties on the 25th,
Regards Simon Macdonald
By Scotty in News 2010-11 ·

Kilmarnock -V- Inverness CT – Preview

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Jimmy Says "aye" to a Killie pie........the sequel.
Rugby Park is the place to be this weekend as Inverness hit the road to Ayrshire.  Football at a ground called Rugby Park, whatever next.  After last weeks slow start, Inverness will be looking to get back on their winning ways against Kilmarnock, a team who have struggled to get the results their play has merited under the guidance of new manager Mixu Paatelainen.  Terry Butcher was none too pleased with the first half showing against St Johnstone, as Colin Samuel ghosted in at the back post to strike the ball past an exposed Ryan Esson after the defence left a long diagonal ball to find it's way to the strikers feet.  Jonny Hayes sprinted clear onto a Richie Foran slick through ball to level the scores in the second half, but the fans had maybe expected better, especially in the first half, and Inverness will look to get out of the blocks quicker.
Alternative Maryhill has given us this cultural, economics and historical lesson, complete with pub guide, of one of his favourite away days, so settle down, and get your reading glasses on.  You might need to try this one in installments, but like a good book, you will keep going to the end.
Kilmarnock v Inverness Caledonian Thistle, Saturday 23rd October 2010 
It’s been far too long. Four interminable weeks since Caley Thistle’s last away game, HMS Sneck finally sets sail again this weekend on its longest journey of the season: the 193-mile trip to Kilmarnock. Understandably, this has been one of the less well-attended fixtures by ICT supporters over the years, but anyone still mulling over whether to make the trip this weekend should be encouraged to do so: Kilmarnock is well worth a visit, for various reasons.
Since Caley Thistle and Kilmarnock last met on league business, the East Ayrshire town has been unusually prominent in the media. One reason for this was the announcement of the imminent closure of Kilmarnock’s Johnnie Walker bottling plant, a decision that will rob the town of one of its great institutions and, more importantly, deprive up to 900 people of their livelihoods. A happier reason for the recent spate of headlines involving Kilmarnock was the town’s role as host to BBC ratings smash ‘The Scheme’, a heartwarming tale of everyday folk, vengeful drug dealers, teenage joyriders and faithful dogs named Bullet, that had knickers twisting throughout the more genteel sections of Scottish society until it was pulled for legal reasons.
If breathing the same air as Marvin, Gordon, Dayna, Candice et al is not reason enough for the Inverness masses to make the pilgrimage to Ayrshire, however, then there is also the fact that Kilmarnock is, simply, a great place for a pint. Rugby Park is closer to the town centre than most SPL grounds, and supporters are thus spoiled for choice. For cheap bar meals and pool there is the Hunting Lodge, where IHE, Govan Jaggie, Red Card and co traditionally tie up their horses before a game; others prefer the Portland Hotel, which provides a big beer garden and large screen TVs showing lunchtime football, and is only two minutes walk from the ground. There is also the Brass and Granite, which will always have a fond place in the hearts of travelling ICT supporters for the free hot buffet its staff offered away supporters on the night of the aborted cup replay in 2001. As for after-match entertainment, meanwhile, there is only one place to head to: the incomparable Fanny by Gaslight. It might look a bit of a dive, but it is directly opposite the railway station, has cheap beer, a decent juke box, a pool table, a ‘Who-can-punch-hardest?’ machine and, best of all, that wonderfully gothic name, taken from Michael Sadleir’s novel of Victorian London. The fact that this fine name is unlikely to get past this website’s decency filter is a sad reflection of the misappropriation of our fair tongue by the potty minded elements of society...
Anyway, the pubs alone should be sufficient to persuade any right-thinking ICT supporter onto that Ayrshire-bound train, but in case they are not, it is also worth pointing out that over the years this fixture has produced some cracking games, and a surprisingly high number of goals.
History of the Fixture
Inverness Caledonian Thistle and Kilmarnock have met on twenty-two occasions in competitive fixtures: eighteen times in the SPL and four times in the Scottish Cup. Kilmarnock have eight wins (six in the league, two in the cup), ICT have seven wins (six in the league, and one in the cup) and seven games have been drawn.
This very even-looking record between the clubs throws up a few unusual statistics: of the seven draws between the clubs, none has finished 0-0 while four have finished 2-2; all of the league matches between the clubs in season 2005-06 finished in draws; Darren Dods was ICT’s top scorer against Kilmarnock in season 2006-07, with three goals; and, ironically, ICT’s relegation season, 2008-09, was by some distance ICT’s most successful against Kilmarnock, the Inverness club recording three league victories and a cup win. Before then, Kilmarnock was a team against which ICT had struggled more often than not.
Season 2007-08’s fixtures against Kilmarnock encapsulated the Jekyll and Hyde nature of ICT that season. The first game, at Rugby Park in October 2007, was a 2-2 draw which ended a run of three consecutive league victories for Inverness . These wins had partially salvaged the damage done by six straight defeats at the start of the season, the fifth of these convincing Charlie Christie to resign the manager’s position. Despite his first game being a heavy defeat at Celtic Park, Craig Brewster was hailed as a returning messiah in some quarters after wins against Hearts, Gretna and Falkirk; the Kilmarnock game, however, showed that the ICT revival might not be so straightforward after all. ICT’s frailties were epitomised hilariously in the first minute – Michael Fraser misjudged a through ball, played pat-a-cake with it against his own post, and the ball fell to Aime Koudou, who tapped in with Fraser still chasing his own tail in the six yard area – but the quality that existed in the squad was also demonstrated by Don Cowie’s stunning 25-yard free kick, which levelled the game at 2-2. The second fixture between the clubs that season again came during a period of optimism among the ICT support, following as it did successive 3-2 wins over Celtic and Hearts, and with summer signings Cowie and Niculae both hitting top form. Niculae had arguably his best game in an Inverness shirt, scoring two as Caley Thistle defeated Kilmarnock 3-1. However, the sale of John Rankin in the January transfer window, when he was playing his best football of the season after a slow start, coincided with the start of a shocking run of form for ICT which, after ten games without a win, reached its nadir at Rugby Park on the 22nd of March in a 4-1 defeat. I recall this as the game when concerns about the direction of the club under Craig Brewster really began to hit crisis point, with the team collapsing disgracefully after Killie’s equaliser. Many predicted, correctly as it turned out, that without Gretna there to spare us, Brewster’s management would see Caley Thistle relegated the following season. The final game between the teams that season, a straightforward 3-0 victory for Inverness, came when both teams had nothing meaningful to play for.
And so to season 2008-09: ICT’s most successful season against Kilmarnock to date, yet also the most disappointing season in the club’s history. The first game between the teams, a 3-1 home win for Inverness, did not raise many eyebrows: this was Caley Thistle’s third league win of the season after a characteristically inconsistent start. However, between that game and the next fixture against Kilmarnock, at Rugby Park on November 22nd, a truer picture of ICT’s season began to emerge, with the team losing six games, drawing one and winning only once. A final scoreline of Kilmarnock 1 – ICT 2, with Imrie and Wood scoring for Caley Thistle, was thus greeted with some surprise and hope that the win might put a stop to the rot. Sadly, this was not the case, and this game will go down as Craig Brewster’s last league win as Inverness manager. By March 14th the mood in the Caley Thistle camp was very different. The Inverness side was enjoying its most successful period of the season, with recent league wins against Hibernian and Rangers and draws against Celtic and Dundee United as well as a 2-0 home defeat of Kilmarnock in the fifth round of the Scottish Cup. It came as no shock, therefore, when Caley Thistle ran out 2-1 winners against Kilmarnock, with early goals from Richie Foran and Ian Black doing the damage. Four games, four wins, then; but when it mattered most, Kilmarnock’s players were able to rise to the occasion. The game at Rugby Park on 16th May was contested between two teams still threatened with relegation. At the start of the game ICT looked, on paper, comfortable favourites to stay up, having won the first game after the split with St Mirren and drawn the next two against Hamilton and Motherwell. Yet perhaps the team’s failure the previous Tuesday to hold onto a 2-1 lead against a Motherwell team playing only for pride should have sounded alarm bells. Caley Thistle fought hard, but too often the final product just wasn’t good enough. After Kevin Kyle’s 79th minute winner, which guaranteed Kilmarnock’s safety, the optimistic mood which had prevailed among the Inverness supporters since Terry Butcher’s arrival was suddenly replaced by very real fears that the club could be facing the drop. What happened the following Saturday is only too well known.
ICT’s most recent trip to Rugby Park came in the fifth round of the Scottish Cup, on February 6th 2010, by which time the teams were a league apart. There is an argument which says that, leaving aside the human cost of redundancies , relegation to the first division was a good thing for squad and supporters, both groups having stagnated to some degree. The renewed enthusiasm among the supporters was obvious in the 40-minute, conga-accompanied rendition of ‘Jimmy says Aye to a Killie pie’, but by the end of the game the argument that relegation had benefited the team was not one that would have found a great deal of support among the fans. ICT were already 6 games into the 21-game unbeaten run that would carry them to the title, and had moved to 9 points behind Dundee having played two games less, but although some supporters had begun to talk more seriously of a renewed title challenge, these were probably still in minority. That afternoon, against a Kilmarnock side that had struggled in the SPL all season, an ICT team containing a front three of Hayes, Rooney and Foran fought hard but went down to three soft goals and, in all honesty, looked some distance from a team that could compete in the SPL. What a difference a few months can make.
Current Form and Team News
The teams meet on Saturday with ICT four points and six places above Kilmarnock in the SPL table. Obviously it is far too early in the season to be able to tell if this is a true reflection of the relative merits of the teams, but Inverness supporters can feel justifiably pleased by their side’s start to the season, while Kilmarnock supporters are probably a little frustrated at only being two points off the bottom.
The consensus among Kilmarnock supporters seems to be that their team is playing better football than recent results suggest. After three years of poor football and poor results under Jim Jeffries, which culminated last season in a final-day escape from relegation at the expense of Falkirk, Killie supporters were heartened by the positive way in which new manager Mixu Paatelainen set out his team, and by the obvious ability of new signings such as David Silva and Finnish international Alexei Eremenko. When narrow defeats against Rangers and Motherwell were followed by successive victories against Aberdeen and St Mirren, the Rugby Park faithful could feel hopeful that their team was on the up. Yet since then, Kilmarnock have only taken one point from four matches, and although reports from last weekend’s games suggest that Killie were extremely unlucky not to take anything from Easter Road, lurking in the back of many minds must be a fear that the team could settle into one of those slumps that have characterised their recent seasons.
As for Caley Thistle, the season to date has probably gone better than most supporters dared hope. There has been one absolutely outstanding performance, against Dundee United, two very comfortable wins against St Mirren and Aberdeen, and respectable draws against Hibernian and St Johnstone. Of the club’s three league losses, only the home defeat to Hamilton was entirely without merit. Given the injury problems Terry Butcher has had to contend with over this period, it is a fine record. Yet some questions still exist over what Caley Thistle’s best team is. There was a settled look to the line-up that played most of the match against St Mirren and went on to defeat Aberdeen the following week, yet Terry Butcher raised a few eyebrows against St Johnstone when he opted to drop Russell Duncan, outstanding in recent games, and move Stuart Duff back to midfield to accommodate right back Kevin McCann on his return from injury. By all accounts, the first half witnessed an ICT side completely unable to impose itself on the game, and many observers felt that the absence of Duncan was a key factor in this. The restoration of Duncan to the side for Saturday’s game would be a very popular move in the eyes of most supporters.
The injury situation at the Tulloch Caledonian Stadium is slowly improving, but for Saturday’s game Caley Jags are still expected to be without David Proctor, Chris Innes and Gil Blumenshtein, and the game may also come too soon for left-back Kenny Gillet, with Graeme Shinnie expected to continue as an able deputy. Kilmarnock are without new signing James Dayton, whose fine start to the season was spoiled by a cruciate ligament injury that will keep him out for some months, and goalkeeper Alan Combe, who would probably be no more than a substitute in any case, given Cammy Bell’s excellent performances for Killie.
***Latest News***
Gil Blumenshtein has a hamstring injury to add to his woes and will definitely miss this one and battling midfielder Lee Cox is still recovering from the serious challenge he received at Parkhead.  Add Proctor, Gillet, and Innes to that and we are still short of cover especially at the back.  Killie will have Fraser Wright back in contention after his red card against the Arabs, but Dayton and Combe are long term absentees.
Prediction
Games between these clubs are never easy ones to call. Caley Thistle have the better recent form and a fine record on the road, yet their most recent performance was patchy at best; Killie are by all accounts playing some nice football, have several talented new signings and a squad that also contains players such as Bryson, Taouil and Sammon who have given Inverness sides real problems in the past; yet these same players were also part of the Kilmarnock squad that underperformed in recent seasons. Bearing all this in mind, I will sit on the fence and predict another appearance for the scoreline that has occurred with unusual frequency between these teams in the past:
Kilmarnock 2 – Inverness Caledonian Thistle 2
By tm4tj in Previews 2010-11 ·

Inverness CT -V- St Johnstone - Report

Saints and Sinners
An abject display by the home side in the first half saw Saints take a stranglehold on the proceedings. Collin Samuel stole in at the back post to prod the visitors ahead after the Inverness defence inexplicably let a probing through ball find the dreadlocked striker on his lonesome.  Butcher was not a happy bunny at half time but things improved in the second period, well they could not possibly have got worse for the home side, and Jonny Hayes outstripped the Perth defence to slide a ball below Smith to secure a draw.
 
 
16th October 2010 Tulloch Caledonian Stadium Inverness Inverness Caledonian Thistle 1 - Hayes (72) TEAM: Esson, Shinnie, Munro, Tokely, McCann (Duncan 68), Duff, Hayes, Ross, Odhiambo (Sutherland 85), Foran, Rooney
SUBS: Tuffey, Golabek, McBain, Morrison, Sanchez
BOOKED: Hayes (81), Duff (82) 
St Johnstone 1 - Samuel (8) TEAM: Smith, MacKay, Grainger, Duberry, Maybury, Morris, Millar, Craig, Parkin (Haber 64), Samuel (Myrie-Williams 72), Jackson
SUBS: Enckelman, Rutkiewicz, Dobie, Caddis, Moffat
BOOKED: MacKay (50), Grainger (56), Smith (72), Myrie-Williams (83), Maybury (90) 
Referee Alan Muir Attendance 4282  
Davie saw the game like this:-
If we fast forward to the end of this game, the sighs of relief were audible from all sides of the ground, for all sorts of reasons. ICT had almost committed grand larceny at the end of this one, having produced one of the worst first half displays that I can remember for this team. The Perth Saints sighs were on account of the fact that they returned the favour in the second half. In a frankly dire first half, only Ryan Esson acquitted himself. The rest must have been traumatised at the mere thought of Butcher's half time verbal onslaught. The man was apoplectic.
From the first minute, it was evident that fankle was going to be the word of the day as far as the ICT defence went, and Grantie and Co obliged with a textbook demonstration of the meaning of the word. We were not coping with the ball down the flanks, and Jackson's 5th minute header over the bar was a harbinger. Doom was duly supplied by Colin SAMUEL in seven minutes, who ghosted round the back of the ICT defence as Tokely inexplicably ducked out of a header. Esson came out but was beaten by Samuels' low drive. 0-1. After that, the first half was a bomb scare as our central defence missed almost everything and only Esson kept us in it with several good stops, the best of which was against Parkin who was clean through. Kevin McCann looked like a lad short of game time and he'll want to forget that first half. He'll have that in common with the rest of us. I can't remember a decent first half chance until 43 minutes from a Rooney shot that went wide so if it's OK with you dear reader, we'll draw a veil over the rest of it.
Half time: Inverness CT 0 St. Johnstone 1
The general feeling at half time was that Butcher must have taken the paint off the walls in the interval chit chat; it couldn't be that bad in the 2nd half and someone had to go. It was McCann, but only after 68 minutes. Improvement was not quickly evident, as the same side duly came out and a couple of tidy Saints efforts came and, thankfully, went. Some of the tackling was beginning to get "tasty" and in 49 minutes the ref booked MacKay for a breenge on Foran. Rooney made a great chance from the resultant free kick, but the end result was tame. The half was then a procession of Saints possession, but notably more organized resistance from ICT. Rooney had another shot after drifting in from the left, again saved by Smith. This neatly coincided with Russel Duncan coming on for McCann, departing the scene of the crime early. Jonny Hayes, meanwhile, showed signs of having woken up but he must have regretted it – every time he wakes up, he gets kicked. Time after time after time it happened today, Grainger being booked for his robust efforts. It must have annoyed Jonny greatly, because in 70 minutes Odhiambo fed Foran, who swiftly moved the ball on to the self same Jonny HAYES who put a low left foot shot under Smith from 15 yards as he attempted to relocate him back to Dublin on the end of his boot. Hayes in a heap, 1-1. After that, the Perth Saints went into their shell and there was only one team who looked likely to win. Rooney headed a glorious chance straight at Smith when scoring looked easy, Foran headed over and Hayes tried a few tricks before ending up in a heap again. Butcher's first half apoplexy was replaced by a similar whirling dervish display from McInnes in the second half as Inverness took over proceedings. Hayes eventually had enough and was booked for a hilariously bad tackle on Myrie-Williams. It's just not your game, wee man. Duff got him back though. 90 minutes was greeted by the happy realization that it was over and we wouldn't have to watch that again. It's not even on ALBA, and it's bound to get the end slot on Sportscene. Whew!
Referee was Alan Muir, who entered into the spirit of things with some unfathomable decisions, but I think even he was happy with a draw in the end. I know I was.
 
By Scotty in Reports 2010-11 ·

Inverness CT -V- St Johnstone – Preview

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The Saints are coming.
The last time these two sides met on league business, it proved to be an historic occasion with Inverness winning promotion to the SPL.  It capped a sensational last couple of weeks in the 2003-2004 first division title run in as Inverness overhauled leaders Clyde in the penultimate game at the Ice Station in Cumbernauld with a fantastic 1-2 scoreline and held that advantage with a 3-1 victory over the Perth men on the final day to ensure promotion, albeit after some legal wrangling, but promotion it was for Robbo's lads on helicopter day as the first division trophy ended it's journey in the pubs and clubs of the Highland Capital.  What a night that was.
The game itself was the culmination of a hard season, a season where Inverness came from nowhere to snatch the title in dramatic fashion.  Clyde had squandered a ten point lead, sounds familiar.  Come kick off time, news was already filtering onto the terracing, yes terracing, that rivals Clyde were already ahead of lowly Brechin.  Pat Keogh scored a hat-trick for the Bully wee, his opener came in the first minute.  They would go on to hammer the Angus club 2-5, but it was all in vain as Inverness recorded a tense victory over Perth to win the title.  Brechin for their troubles were relegated, with St Johnstone finishing third some thirteen points adrift of the champions.  Goals from David Bingham, a Barry Wilson penalty and a Paul Ritchie header sealed the victory over Saints, who's goal was one of the best seen at the Inverness stadium.  Keigan Parker collected the ball inside his own half.  He drifted forward on the left wing then cut inside before unleashing a venemous dipping shot on the run from all of 35 yards that flew high past a despairing Mark Brown.  Still it was to be Inverness' day as we eased to vicory and ultimately into the SPL for the first time in our short history.  Not many of the players still at their respective clubs from that sunny May day.  Note one Darren Dods was a sub that day for Saints.  Incidentally, St Johnstone were the last team to beat Inverness before we went on a ten match unbeaten run to clinch the title in 2004, happy days.
Here were the teams:-
Inverness CT: Brown, Tokely, Golabek, Mann, McCaffrey, Hart, Wilson, McBain, Ritchie, Keogh, Bingham. Subs: Munro, Proctor, Thomson, Hislop, Fraser.
St Johnstone: Nelson, Baxter, McQuilken, Forsyth, Weir, Fraser, Stevenson, Fotheringham, Parker, Donnelly, McLaughlin. Subs: Hay, Malone, Dods, Reilly, Cuthbert.
Anyway, I digress..............davie has been doing some homework and here is this weeks preview.
Saturday at 3pm is our return to real football. The horrors of Prague and the hope of Hampden have receded and are replaced by the visit of our SPL brethren from “just down the road”, St. Johnstone. It’s 106.8 miles from TCS to our last opponents ground, which we regard as a derby game. It’s only 115.1 miles to MacDairmid Park, so the brethren title is probably justified for the farmers. ICT and the Saints have bypassed each other in SPL membership, it taking Saints seven years to get back up instead of our one, so there’s nothing to base any hopes and/ or fears about this one. It could go any way. There is a history of meeting in the lower leagues, but hey – we’re big boys now. Managed by Derek McInnes (ex- ger/baggie/arab) Saints sit 9th in the League, with both teams recording 2-0 wins in their last fixtures. Saints beat Hibs, who was it we beat again……? Their last few games have given them a W-L-W-L-L record, with their wins coming at home. In terms of players to watch, Alan Maybury (ex-Leeds & Hearts) and Michael Duberry (ex- Chelsea and Leeds) have real pedigree and Jennison Myrie Williams has points to prove up front. Midfield is bossed by Jodie Morris (ex- Chelsea and, yet again, Leeds) They have absentees for tomorrow, notably Gartland and Anderson (both central defenders) and doubts over Peter MacDonald. ICT on the other hand are in fairly rude health after an injury blighted start. Full back Kevin McCann and forward Dani Sanchez have recovered from injuries, giving Butcher a selection headache for the first time in ages. He might not be complaining. Kenny Gillet, David Proctor, Chris Innes and Lee Cox are all still out, but their deputies have proved more than able. Ryan Esson heads into his 80th game for the club, and has so far been immense this year. If Ryan and the team are as chuffed by recent results as the supporters are, we will go into this match on a real high and with real expectations. Three SPL wins on the bounce? Why not, and celebrate with a £5 hospitality deal in a school holiday special. It’s a difficult one to call tomorrow, but I reckon Derek McInnes might regret not talking to Jonny Hayes for longer during the summer come 4.45pm tomorrow. I’m going for a cheeky wee 1-0 home win. Real football – you can’t beat it!
By tm4tj in Previews 2010-11 ·

School Holiday Hospitality

Teaser Paragraph:
Caley Thistle will be opening up the stadium to families and friends for the game against St Johnstone on Saturday 16th October. For only £10 per adult and £5 per child (not including match ticket which must be purchased separately if you are not a season ticket holder),  you can take opart in a range of activities, get a tour of the stadium, get a chance to pick the man of the match and much much more.
For more details contact Tabitha Walker at the stadium.
[caption id="attachment_2639" align="aligncenter" width="286" caption="click for larger image"][/caption]  School_poster (download PDF)








By Scotty in News 2010-11 ·

Inverness CT -V- Aberdeen – Report

Caley Thistle achieved a rare home win today with goals from Jonny Hayes and Adam Rooney.
This was Caley Thistle's first ever home win in the league against Aberdeen and moves the Caley Jags into the top half of the table.  Aberdeen were well beaten in the end and can have no complaints about the result which matches the only other win for Inverness over the Dons.
 
2nd October 2010 Tulloch Caledonian Stadium Inverness Inverness Caledonian Thistle 2 -Hayes (19), Rooney (61) TEAM: Esson, Shinnie, Munro, Tokely, Duff, Duncan (Morrison 90), Hayes (Sutherland 87), Ross, Odhiambo (McBain 90), Foran, Rooney
SUBS: Tuffey, Golabek, Blumenshtein BOOKED: Tokely (73) SENT OFF: none
Aberdeen 0 - TEAM: Howard, McArdle, Diamond, Considine, Ifil, Folly, Young (Paton 51), Jack, Vernon, Mackie, Magennis (Megginson 58)(Jarvis 73)
SUBS: Langfield, Shaughnessy, Hansson BOOKED: Folly (36), McArdle (42) SENT OFF: Paton (67)
Referee Calum Murray Attendance 6144  
Davie seems to have enjoyed his day out, here are his views on the Dismal Dons.
"This club can go as far as it wants" ICT 2 Aberdeen 0 If, after 2 minutes of this game, you had asked me for a report I would have said no. I was hiding under my seat, head in hands. Diamond had just buried a header from a free kick after our first important defensive intervention from Munro in 17 seconds. Followed by a corner in 40 seconds, it looked ominous. Disallowed, either through offside (didn't see) or a push on Munro (did see) that was in truth as close as Aberdeen were ever allowed to get. Our first chance fell to Rooney in 4 minutes, bringing a smart save from Howard and the pattern was set. Playing a 4-4-2, Rooney and Odhiambo won every ball played to them. Rooney, in particular won so many flicks and headers that someone was bound to profit eventually, especially given Odi's pace and Ross and Foran's support through the inside channels. Esson, meanwhile, saved well from Mackie. All of this might have resulted in a close, tense encounter but for Jonny Hayes. Runs in 10, 12 and 17 minutes took Considine apart, and there was a sublime moment where Hayes caught the ball mid flight on the far touch line, trapped it on the bounce and turned leaving Considine for dead. It was no surprise that Caley Jags took the lead in 19 minutes and even less of a surprise that it was scored by Hayes after a run that beat a couple of defenders. The fact that it was a cross mattered little, and Jonny looked suitably embarrassed in his celebrations. Another good chance from a Hayes cross was spurned when Rooney and Odi got in each other's way. Half time approached with a couple of bookings for Aberdeen, but little else of note.
Half Time: Inverness CT 1, Aberdeen 0
The second half burst into life when Rooney outmuscled the hirsute Ifil and shot narrowly wide. Scoring really did look easier, Adam. Considine replied for Aberdeen with a shot that drifted wide and Aberdeen changed things with a couple of substitutions. This resulted in a wee period of pressure that was abruptly ended in 60 minutes after a decent header from Vernon. Esson saved, hoisted the ball to the opposite penalty box whereupon Zander Diamond contrived to make an absolute hash of an attempted chest back to his keeper. Rooney, who had intervened again, duly poked home the world's slowest deft wee chip. I thought it would never cross the line, Diamond hoped it wouldn't. 2-0, and the game was effectively over. The ending of the game as a contest didn't stop the controversy though. In 65 minutes, just after nearly scoring a spectacular own goal, Hayes tackled Paton, who then stamped on him. Red card. Scott Leitch was less than impressed, and got a talking to from Referee Murray for his troubles. His day went from bad to worse shortly after, when Megginson suffered a bad looking injury after a Rossco challenge that flattened him. Rossco got yellow, but in truth was lucky. Red would not have been an unwarranted result. The game could have got ugly after that, but instead it petered out, Sutherland, Morrison and McBain making fleeting but welcome appearances. It could still have been 3 apart from a last minute recovery tackle on Rooney from Ifil.
Full Time: Inverness CT 2 Aberdeen 0
This was as comprehensive a win against Aberdeen as we are likely to see, and a fitting way to get the "never won against them" and the "still got to win at home" monkeys off the back. Aberdeen were, in their injury affected state, toothless and McGhee has a major task with them which he failed to address In a pretty graceless after match interview. That he was in the stand, surrounded by his grim faced Board told it's own story. Scott Leitch offered nothing and the one person who looked like a true leader for them was Hartley. Next manager? Final word, though, goes to the twelfth man. Tremendous support from all parts of the ground, and didn't TB sound chuffed. I was. If you are interested, the quote at the top was from TB in an interview on Alba at half time. It was the only bit I understood!
By Scotty in Reports 2010-11 ·

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