I suppose the next question the weather may pose could be over this coming Saturday's Scottish Cup tie against Motherwell. Realistically, even if there isn't a significant thaw, it would really require another hugely badly timed big dump of snow to bomb this one out. But, looking out at the winter wasteland brought back a number of memories of Baltic weather and Cup ties in years gone by.
For instance -
Early 1979 - Inverness Thistle v Falkirk. The late 70s produced two consecutive extremely hard winters (to the extent that there was speculation that we were entering another Ice Age!) and this tie at Kingsmills was postponed a record 29 times before it eventually went ahead weeks late (and Jags unforunately went out.)
January 1990 - I seem to recollect that the legendary replay where Caley put out Airdrie on penalties at Telford Street sailed pretty close to the wind in terms of the weather and went ahead on a really bitter night. Amazing, isn't it, that the 20th anniversary of that famous occasion comes up in a few days time.
February 1992 - in similar terms Caley v St. Johnstone looked very unlikely to go ahead but the frost relented and a famous 2 all draw took place in front of a packed house on a pitch the consistency of treacle.
January 1996 - ICT v Livingston at Telford Street. This came at the end of an incredibly cold spell with temperatures below minus 20! No one thought there was any chance at all of this game going ahead but the frost suddenly gave way and the pitch thawed out in the nick of time but was again pretty viscous. ICT took a 2-0 lead but were pulled back to 2 all before Alan Hercher SPRINTED (sic) :D through to grab the winner. Subsequent defeats of East Fife (in a replay at Methil) and Stenhousimuir (1-0 away - wonderful Brian Thomson goal) paved the way to a quarter final against Rangers.
It's a while since we've had a really cold spell and in fact the current one is probably the worst since that extremely severe 95-96 episode, but this weather certainly brings back a few frozen Cup memories.
I suppose the next question the weather may pose could be over this coming Saturday's Scottish Cup tie against Motherwell. Realistically, even if there isn't a significant thaw, it would really require another hugely badly timed big dump of snow to bomb this one out. But, looking out at the winter wasteland brought back a number of memories of Baltic weather and Cup ties in years gone by.
For instance -
Early 1979 - Inverness Thistle v Falkirk. The late 70s produced two consecutive extremely hard winters (to the extent that there was speculation that we were entering another Ice Age!) and this tie at Kingsmills was postponed a record 29 times before it eventually went ahead weeks late (and Jags unforunately went out.)
January 1990 - I seem to recollect that the legendary replay where Caley put out Airdrie on penalties at Telford Street sailed pretty close to the wind in terms of the weather and went ahead on a really bitter night. Amazing, isn't it, that the 20th anniversary of that famous occasion comes up in a few days time.
February 1992 - in similar terms Caley v St. Johnstone looked very unlikely to go ahead but the frost relented and a famous 2 all draw took place in front of a packed house on a pitch the consistency of treacle.
January 1996 - ICT v Livingston at Telford Street. This came at the end of an incredibly cold spell with temperatures below minus 20! No one thought there was any chance at all of this game going ahead but the frost suddenly gave way and the pitch thawed out in the nick of time but was again pretty viscous. ICT took a 2-0 lead but were pulled back to 2 all before Alan Hercher SPRINTED (sic) :D through to grab the winner. Subsequent defeats of East Fife (in a replay at Methil) and Stenhousimuir (1-0 away - wonderful Brian Thomson goal) paved the way to a quarter final against Rangers.
It's a while since we've had a really cold spell and in fact the current one is probably the worst since that extremely severe 95-96 episode, but this weather certainly brings back a few frozen Cup memories.
Let's see what this weekend brings.
Edited by Charles Bannerman