Leaderboard
Popular Content
Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/06/2025 in all areas
-
I was reminded of one of Inverness football’s finest moments - a decade before the Celtic Park epic whose silver jubilee approaches - when I saw this January 1990 photo of snowbound Telford Street in today’s PandJ. There’s a fair chance that this was taken in relation to Caley’s Scottish Cup replay against Airdrie on a snowy night at Telford Street, where the team from the Highland League edged its Scottish second tier opponents 5-4 on penalties after a 1-all draw. The outcome, a decade before going ballistic, was another episode in Inverness’s proud Scottish Cup history. One of my great regrets is having had to miss this legendary occasion. The game started 7 minutes late to allow a 3485 crowd in and Caley went a goal down but Wilson Robertson equalised to send the tie to penalties where John Docherty missed Caley’s first one. Airdrie also missed one, taking the shootout to sudden death where Danny MacDonald (the current manager’s brother-in-law) buried Caley’s sixth and Hamish Morrison saved Airdrie’s next to send Telford Street wild. This was a golden era for Inverness in the Scottish Cup since this game came just a few years after Thistle beat Kilmarnock 3-0 at Kingsmills to earn a trip to Celtic Park and Caley played both Rangers and Hearts - although I recollect that at least two of these games ended in 6-0 defeats. Then in 1992, Caley held visitors St Johnstone to a draw and that was just four years before Caley Thistle reached the quarter finals against Rangers. Fast forward another 3 and 4 years and we have back to back semi-final appearances at Hampden… and there were still two finals to come. Putting that lot together makes quite a Scottish Cup saga across four decades!3 points
-
2 points
-
My money is on the Administrator knowing the Companies Acts better than RM. Just weigh this up: The Companies Act 2006 codified certain common law and equitable duties of directors for the first time. The act sets out the general duties of directors, which are: to act within powers in accordance with the company’s constitution and to use those powers only for the purposes for which they were conferred to promote the success of the company for the benefit of its members to exercise independent judgement to exercise reasonable care, skill and diligence to avoid conflicts of interest not to accept benefits from third parties to declare an interest in a proposed transaction or arrangement2 points
-
Entirely possible that Aberdeen want Bavidge and Stewart playing first team games and would rather they get minutes than have a club contribute towards some of their wages but not actually play them (more thinking Bavidge here given how little he featured at Ayr).2 points
-
Slightly off thread but does anyone else feel really old knowing Alfie is Martin's son?! I remember Martin signing for us as a youngster!2 points
-
What's it all about Alfie Inverness bolstered their squad with a couple of Alfie's on loan from Aberdeen, Bavidge and Stewart. Jack Walker also returned from Nairn County ahead of the visit of fellow Administration side Dumbarton, in what has been described as a six-pointer and it's only the 4th of January. The covers were removed in double quick time thanks to around fifty volunteers who turned up to help get the pitch ready for today's game after a week of frost on a brisk Saturday morning with the sun splitting the sky. It turned into a bitterly cold afternoon but new signing Alfie Bavidge warmed the home fans palms when he opened the scoring after fifteen minutes. The Sons had to replace keeper Brett Long before the break after he caught a ball but landed awkwardly and had to get helped from the pitch. Replacement keeper Paddy O'Neil pulled off a tremendous save just on the interval but he had no chance with a powerful drive from Charlie Gilmour who doubled the lead twenty minutes from the end. The Sons battled hard and Finlay Gray struck the post but Inverness took the points to narrow the gap on Annan Athletic to seven points with a game in hand. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ With Alfie Bavidge running the channels up front alongside Billy Mckay and often Adam MacKinnon backing them up it was no surprise that Inverness were on the front foot in the early exchanges. It was no surprise that the hosts opened the scoring after fifteen minutes when a superb ball down the right wing from Luis Longstaff curled invitingly into the feet of Adam MacKinnon who had made the run forward. He went to the byeline before swinging in a dangerous first time ball into the Sons six yard box which they failed to deal with effectively. Alfie won't score an easier goal this season as the ball broke to him inside the box and he swept it into the net for a debut goal. Lovely moment for the young striker. His next attempt minutes later was not so profitable as a wild swing saw him slice the ball out for a throw in fifty yards wide. We'll ignore that one. There followed a bit of a lull with Inverness dominating play and Dumbarton looking to keep the damage to a minimum. They almost conceded a second when Billy Mckay was threaded through on the left side, however after skipping wide of Brett Long, the keeper recovered sufficiently to get a touch on Mckay's effort from the tightest of angles, the ball running across the face of the goal and out for a corner. The Sons then had to replace keeper Long ten minutes before the break after he caught a ball but landed awkwardly and had to get helped from the pitch. MacKinnon tested the sub keeper with a low shot from the edge of the box and the replacement keeper Paddy O'Neil pulled off a stunning save just on the interval diving high to his left to deny a thunderous Luis Longstaff volley from the edge of the box as he tipped the ball out for a corner which never happened. HALF TIME: 1-0 Dumbarton looked a bit more aggressive after the break and Ethan Brown's blocked shot brought about appeals for a penalty, but to no avail. Mckay had an effort saved as the hosts continued to dominate and with twenty-minutes remaining Charlie Gilmour side footed in a second goal after a short corner routine saw MacKinnon cut the ball back to Gilmour fifteen yards out and he first timed a side footer high into the net with power. That goal stung Dumbarton into action and they eventually managed to create a couple of opportunities of their own. Dibaga blocked well from Gray as he sprinted clear on the left side of the box. From the corner, Clark's header grazed the top of the bar although there may have been an infringement in the build up. Either way, a goal kick or free kick was given. Gray was then unlucky with twenty minutes remaining when he was put through on the left side again, this time he beat Dibaga at his near post but the ball rebounded to safety off the base of the post. Devine headed wide late on and a couple of promising moves broke down on the edge of the visitors box as Inverness then saw out the game in control. The only downside was an injury to Longstaff who was replaced by Alfie Stewart for his debut. FULL TIME: 2-0 A thoroughly deserved win after last weeks disappointing result against Cove Rangers. New signing Alfie Bavidge was rightly awarded the MotM, not just for his debut goal, but he was a constant threat, tirelessly running the channels like his olde man did back in the day and with plenty of pace and a good first touch. He also seemed to give Billy Mckay an extra spring in his step and he was unlucky not to score. He will certainly be an asset for the Caley Jags in 2025 and Alfie Stewart got a few minutes under his belt as well. Good start to the year for us and hopefully the springboard to go on a wee run and get back into the pack. Pos Team Pld Gd Pts 1 Arbroath 20 8 34 2 Stenny 20 9 31 3 Kelty Hearts 20 9 30 4 Cove 20 5 28 5 Alloa Ath 20 4 28 6 Queen of St 19 -4 25 7 Montrose 20 -2 24 8 Annan Ath 20 -16 20 9 Inverness CT 19 -1 13 10 Dumbarton 20 -12 07 Date: 04/01/2025 Venue: Caledonian Stadium Attendance: 1894 Referee: Dan McFarlane Inverness CT: 2 Manager: Scott Kellacher Lineup: Dibaga; Bray, Devine, Savage, Nolan, Longstaff (Stewart 75), Gilmour, Allan, MacKinnon (Cairns 85), B Mckay, Bavidge (C Mackay 94) Subs (not used): Rebilas; Strachan, J Walker, MacLeod, R Thompson Scorers: Bavidge (15), Gilmour (77) Booked: none Sent Off: none Dumbarton: 0 Manager: Stephen Farrell Lineup: Long (O'Neil 37); Pignatiello, Lynas (Durnan 68), Brown, Clark, Wilson (Hilton 68), Niang, Gray (Mumbongo 85), Blair, Shiels (McGuffie 85), Orsi Subs (not used): Young, Wallace, Doyle, Nicol. Scorers: none Booked: Shiels (60), McGuffie (88) Sent Off: none a2 points
-
1 point
-
I have now managed to establish the route by which Cameron and Morrison acquired control of the ICT Property Company and hence of the lease of the car parks and of the so called Bermuda Triangle at the far end of the North car parks. This was purchased from a body that was effectively Tullochs, which also tells us that about 8ish years ago, when the stadium was given back to the club by Tullochs, they retained the car park lease under Propco whose two directors, before Cameron and Morrison took over in August 2023, according to Companies House, were George Fraser, former Chairman of Tullochs and a Cesidio de Ciacca who appears to have been a minor Propco shareholder. This means that, contrary to what many, including myself, had thought, the club gained nothing from the acquisition so the transaction was not apparently made as a bail-out. So why, then, did Cameron and Morrison acquire this intangible but potentially valuable asset if it wasn’t to keep the club afloat? In Cameron’s case, it’s especially mysterious since the gentleman is 82 years old and there are other gestures he could have made that might have helped the club more. As for Morrison, five months after he acquired his share of that lease, he also made a loan of £1.65 million to the club, but with the security of the Stadium plus the land on which it stands and right out to the pavement. As previously mentioned, this security (Charge) may, in the opinion of the administrator, be subject to challenge, but as things stand, Cameron and Morrison - who resigned as club directors respectively in July and May 2024 - potentially have complete control over the stadium and all that surrounds it. It was also made pretty clear at the administrator’s press conference on December 23rd that Cameron and Morrison - respectively based in Aviemore and Broughty Ferry - have been attempting to play hardball over the car park lease, leading us to ask whether they are looking for pretty big bucks for it? It is therefore very clear that these two former directors pose the biggest obstacle that the administrator has to clear as he tries to ensure that this club survives and moves forward. As a post script, it was my firm understanding back in 1994 that the Common Good Fund granted the original lease specifically for the purpose of taking Scottish League football to Inverness so any attempted change of use might rank alongside the query over Morrison’s loan in terms of what is going for the club here.1 point
-
Thats a possibility. The land may be worthwhile to the council in terms of selling it on or leasing it as part of the freeport area if we were to be relocated or perhaps they let it lie fallow for a few years to truly drive the value down. However, where would we go and how would we finance a new stadium? Would this be part of any deal to reclaim the reclaimed land? I have no idea of the legalities of this, but if the lease has been "acquired" out from underneath us then no-one can cry foul if the council do it to them! RM once told me - when we were discussing potential links over here - that he would sell his stake in the club for £1 if the right person came along. I challenge him to do that now! Come to the table, work things out for the benefit of all. Was going to cut out parts of this for brevity but I simply cannot. You are right Charles. There has been a lack of clarity and transparency going on for years, one that you have highlighted here and elsewhere for some time and which our posters on here have also been concerned about for years. There is a lot that doesnt pass the sniff test, and it has got stinkier every year, month and week. As shareholders we have been treated like mushrooms, kept in the dark and fed on s*** ! There has to be some dereliction of process and duty of care in this somewhere.1 point
-
1 point
-
Perceptive, as ever, Cherlie! Although there is still some information to be uncovered - and in particular exactly how and from whom Caley Thistle Properties and hence the car park lease was acquired by Morrison and Cameron - the last six months or so have gone a considerable way towards revealing what has been going on in the club in recent years. (I would also emphasise that this has been happening while minimal information has been given to shareholders and other interested parties with for instance the Board defaulting on the holding of AGMs.) We now realise that for a period of years, the latter part of it under the chairmanship of Ross Morrison, the club has been allowed to sleepwalk into a massive amount of debt with some aspects, such as the Cameron Harper Carlisle move and the absurdly large Puma contract, so extreme that they still need credible explanation. And while this unsustainable way of operating hurtled, latterly under Ross Morrison’s chairmanship, towards administration, Morrison kept the ever more ricketty bandwagon on the road by a process that made the club heavily indebted to him. However he did so by means which, should the train hit the buffers during or immediately after his chairmanship, ensured (or so he thought) that he had an iron personal grip over the assets in the form of a Charge on the stadium and joint control of the car park lease. Basically he presided over a situation where the club was allowed to sleepwalk more annd more deeply into debt in a manner where he continually covered it, but knowing (or perhaps believing?) that he would get his money back in kind if (when?) it all went pear shaped. That’s a scenario that doesn’t sit comfortably with me insofar as he protected himself from liability in a dangerous situation which he played a leading role in creating. However I do see one possible chink of light which is the statement from the administrator that the Charge may be invalid due to some technicality about its timing that I don’t understand. But how on earth this could have been allowed to progress as far as it did in full sight if the rest of the Board (who had far more access to information than shareholders and fans had) is beyond understanding.1 point
-
As the remaining details of the debt and leased land are finally laid bare the club finds itself in an insidious position with one person, Ross Morrison (the former Chairman no less), holding all the cards and ultimately the future survival /destiny of the club. Through his actions and acquisitions he has the club tied up like a ham joint in a butcher’s window for the world to see. I don’t dispute RM poured a lot on money into the club and had to make some provision to mitigate the extent of loss. (Spoiler alert – No board member /Chairman in my memory, enters into football expecting to make money). As mentioned by others what grates me is deliberate action to make timely arrangements he knew could be punitive to the clubs existence if things went pear-shape, (which they spectacularly did). These actions (floating charge loan and ICTP buy-out), would have been done in full view or knowledge of the board, and either through ignorance, stupidity or just saying nothing never questioned whether this was done in the best interests of the club. Most have run to the hills for cover, but as things unwind they will not be forgotten. We (the club), need the stadium to play in the league. We don’t have sufficient fans (3500-4000?) to finance a Championship level operation, so it appears any buyer for the club needs to include the purchase of a number of the ICTP land plots so none football revenue can be made to meet the running costs. ICTP (RM) foreseen this I expect, so can hold out to maximise this advantage to see what they can get in any arrangement or ‘deal’. The only pressure I see we can put on RM is the threat to hand back the stadium to the Council and go elsewhere. i.e Value of land crashes. The floating charge it seems we are stuck with – merely whether RM will hold out for the full 1.65M Whilst he may have not done anything wrong (politician like), I return to would the actions be considered in any way as an infraction on the best interests of ICTFC that he was the Chairman at that time? Maybe he was just four steps ahead of everyone. No simple or cheap answers I fear. bc1 point
-
1 point
-
Well..... He trird a shot from 35 yards earlier... He's born again I tell ya.1 point
-
1 point
-
If you take all the above posts into consideration, then it is quite possible that the administrators are aware of transfer interest for some existing players which they are mindful to accept to improve finances. This might leave a hole in the squad whereby we could not fill the bench so recalling loanees and adding incoming players on loan, which is not a long-term cost and is likely to be offset either by the parent club, or perhaps by a sponsor, is a sensible approach. It hopefully keeps us competitive and allows us a chance to stay in the current division rather than drop down even further making a buyout of the club even more less likely and of no benefit to current creditors, staff or anyone else. I am sure there are lots of wheels in motion and lots of moving parts that we have no idea about, but if it helps the club's survival then it benefits all the people you (quite rightly) feel concerned about.1 point
This leaderboard is set to London/GMT+01:00
-
Newsletter
-
-
Our picks
-
Squad for Season 2025-2026
tm4tj posted an article in News 2025-26,
Some familiar faces re-appearing in Joe Chalmers, last here in season 2018/2019 and guys like Paul Allan and Remi Savage coming back for more alongside our experienced players in Danny Devine, Billy Mckay, Luis Longstaff.-
-
- 2 replies
Picked By
tm4tj, -
-
Season Tickets 2025/26
Scotty posted an article in News 2025-26,
Inverness Caledonian Thistle FC are delighted to announce 2025/26 Season Tickets will be available from Monday 9th June 2025 at 10am from the Club Shop and online from eticketing.co.uk/ictfc-
- 0 replies
Picked By
Scotty, -
-
Site Upgrades - Summer 2025
Scotty posted a topic in Caley Thistle,
We will be upgrading the site to a new major version of the forum software during the summer. The look and feel of the site will not change too much, but some features may be added or deleted based on the capability of the new software.-
-
- 3 replies
Picked By
Scotty, -
-
Lewis Nicolson Leaves Football
tm4tj posted an article in News 2024-25,
Lewis, 21 years-old, has suffered two serious knee injuries during his time with the club and has now decided to pursue career opportunities elsewhere...-
- 0 replies
Picked By
tm4tj, -
-
CTO Player of the Year 2024-2025
IBM posted an article in News 2024-25,
You picked him and he is your CTO Player of the Year....
It's 11 goal Keith Bray-
- 1 reply
Picked By
tm4tj, -
-