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tm4tj

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  1. Who did put the O and the Y in County? This weekend, with the focus away from Inverness, and Scottish Cup semi-finals being played, I took a look at what's been happening in the lower league, and look what I found. Our friends and good neighbours from 'over the bridge' are coming to join us next season in the big boys league. They have taken their time getting there, but now they have done it in style with five games still to play and an unbeaten run stretching way back to the second game of the season when Hamilton Accies whipped their ass' 5-1. They seemed to learn from that drubbing and have shown the rest a clean pair of heels since then and are now confirmed as champions after nearest challengers Dundee dropped a point in midweek. The quaint market town of Dingwall will be hearing a new sound sound come August as all sorts of neanderthals will converge on Victoria Park when the football season starts. The peaceful village sounds of cattle mooing their way along the highways and pegs being sold on the High Street will be a thing of the past. Yes folks, our neighbours have made the grade, moving up from the SFL and into the bad boys league in the SPL. No longer will it be Queen of the South or Raith Rovers visiting in their dozens, but five thousand Old Firm fans will be trying to squeeze into the revamped Viccy Park, at either end of the ground and the locals now have a massive selection and life style choice to make. Follow Follow, Hail Hail, or Ole Ole Ole Ole.....County, County. It's now the time to leave your Old Firm allegiances behind and support your local team. Like it or not, congratulations are in order. Let's not piss on their parade. Instead, remember the enjoyment we had on our special day at Ayr and how much fun that brought with it, not to mention a seven goal football feast and a sermon from Allah Butcher, from the pinnacle of the Somerset Park Stand. Aye, memories are made of this. Let them enjoy their moment, for soon enough the harsh reality of SPL life will slowly grind them down and the enjoyment and expectation that promotion brought with it will be a distant memory. The step up to SPL life may not seem like a big one, as most division one teams see the bottom six in the SPL as no better than half of the fizzy pop league. That may be the case in one off games, but the dog-eat-dog SPL quickly absorbs any silky football, any free flowing flair, and replaces it with cut-throat long ball boredom and defend at all costs, where not losing is seen as more satisfactory than winning games. Very soon the adrenaline rush will be sucked from the fans and replaced with fear and trepidation, the fear of losing, the fear of your rivals winning and the very real fear of relegation, a word synonymous with the SPL. But don't let me put you off. It's not all doom and gloom. There can be days when the world appears to be a better place, days like beating the Old Firm, days like Kilmarnock (3-6) and days like your first win over certain teams, Aberdeen springs to mind for Inverness fans. However, these can be overshadowed by a string of less than favourable results, the January transfer window or failing to beat teams because your own team are simply inadequate. County's rise to the promised land has not been meteoric, more pedantic, but nonetheless they have broken free this season after 18 years in the doldrums. Their unbeaten run of thirty league games and counting is a fantastic achievement akin to our own winning season, when Dundee's relentless march to the SPL was halted by our own winning streak as we overturned a 15 point deficit to win the league by 12 points. The similarities are uncanny. We won the title in midweek when Raith beat Dundee, County winning the title in midweek when Dundee failed to win. Our next game:- a celebration at Ayr, County's next game a celebration at Ayr. Then the chance to really celebrate at home, against Dundee, County have the same Dundee in Dingwall this weekend. It's all very Deja Vu. How the Gudgies will cope with life in the SPL is open to debate. They have a winning mentality at the moment, and that will give them a boost going into the top flight, but when you have to perform at your best week in, week out, then it starts to wear thin. A few home losses then the euphoria turns to anxiety, the anxiety to reality and the reality to a relegation battle, where tension takes over and underachievement is boss. It's a vicious circle, trust me, Inverness have gone through this, worn the T shirt got the hat, but as long as you can come out the other end smiling, then the SPL is for you. There are a few positives to be drawn from County's success. First on the list are three or four local derbies, ye canna beat them for the rivalry and banter, big crowds and a few drams. Secondly, the Central belt clubs will be a bit cheesed off having to travel the A9 twice as often next season. Third positive for Inverness is less travelling to away games (derbies) and the thought of taking 9 points off County is just magic. I suppose this is as close to a congratulation as Ross County will receive from CTO, but it would be churlish of us to begrudge them their little bit of history, one which like us, they have earned. There has been the usual mix of emotions on the forums inside here, but the general concensus of opinions is that the fans will welcome the derbies and the opportunity to put one over your nearest rivals. The banter created when the two teams meet will be a new SPL experience for both of us and one which should be embraced by fans of both sides. A Highland derby in the SPL, who would have thought that 18 years ago? ps. I never did find out who put the O and the Y in County.
  2. http://caleythistleo...ict-report-r934 A wonderful acccount of the days events from the St Johnstone game. Happy Easter from Alternative Maryhill
  3. Aye, surprise surprise, but he also talked about redemption, so maybe most of the culprits from last week will get the chance to atone for their misdemeanours.
  4. Our very own Master Wordmonger, Alternative Maryhill has come out of hiding and has cast his eye over the Pros and Cons of our visit to Perth this Easter. http://caleythistleonline.com/page/index.html/_/previews-2011-12/st-johnstone-v-inverness-ct-preview-r933 worth a read to see if there is any light at the end of the tunnel.
  5. It's a Fair City right eenuff. It's back to the now Fair City of Perth this Saturday for our last game before the split. Let's hope this weekend is more productive than the last one when we crumbled badly against Hibernian, losing 2-3 in Inverness. That was on the back of a 0-1 defeat at the hands of St Johnstone last midweek and the long knives are out as the home fans get a reality check. The fable about Perth being a town has now been laid to rest, what will the fans find to squabble about next? Two winnable games and two poor performances have seen questions raised over the management teams ability to change things around and lift spirits. In all honesty, it's not just the last couple of games that has miffed most fans. We seem to be playing as poorly as we have done in the SPL and the system being deployed has not worked often enough. Does that make us a bad team? The harsh reality at the moment is yes, it does. Are we getting the best out of the players at our disposal? For most it would appear to be no. That is where our leaders come in and we need to see a bit more swashbuckle, a bit of panache, a bit of swagger even, but confidence would seem to be thin on the ground at the moment. Butcher has bemoaned the fact that injuries have curtailed our performances this season. That is correct, but most clubs go through this at some stage. Has he lost sight of the fact that it was him that removed half of our players before the season started, and we have never replaced them with adequate performers. The long ball tactic will go down in folklore up here, but it must be frustrating for 5ft 7in Billy McKay to watch numerous balls floating high over his head onto giant defenders nappers. I doubt we have used our players to the best of their somewhat limited ability, but surely Terry and Mo have a plan 'B' when things go awry and surely we need to get substitutions on the park earlier for them to make a contribution, especially when we are chasing the game and not just playing out time. It's not all doom and gloom although it sometimes feels like it. Jonny Hayes made his comeback from injury and showed us what we have been missing and was our most productive and creative player against Hibs. In spells, we did play some decent stuff, but errors crept into our game after we went ahead and some individual lapses made it easier for Hibs to take advantage of the situation. We were given and scored our first penalty since November 2010 (yay). Greg Tansey stepped up and buried it brilliantly. Why can't he be so effective with the numerous free kicks he wastes. He has not been the only wasteful one though and Tade and McKay need to up their strike rate after more guilt edged chances went astray. So Terry, charisma and spin alone are not going to keep us in this league, Dunfermline will manage that for us, but it would be nice to see a change of pattern, a change in the way we go about our business. Maybe the shackles that the SPL puts on teams holds them back, the fear of losing being greater than the joy of winning. Whatever it is, I hope we can be set free and lets get back to entertaining the fans and making it worth the money to come along. Alternative Maryhill has found the time to scribe the preview for this one, let's hope a change of author will get us back on track. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two football clubs, both alike in dignity In fair Scotia where we lay our scene... If Caley Thistle supporters were pushed to identify the Scottish club most like ICT, I’d hazard a guess that the majority would opt for St Johnstone. The clubs are from similarly-sized cities, both are run to small, tight budgets, both have spent the last decade either in the SPL or in the First Division, each has yet to win a major trophy, each has found it difficult to expand its fan base beyond a core of around three thousand, both are (happily) remote from the central belt and the fans of both have been accused, by unimaginative supporters from the central belt, of loving animals just a little too much (meh). Last season’s SPL seemed to underline the similarity in size and potential of the two teams, with ICT finishing in seventh place and St Johnstone in eighth. Yet fast forward a year and St Johnstone are assured of a top six finish and contemplating the possibility of European football, while ICT are in tenth, with many supporters fearing for the club’s prospects next season. So why the dramatic change? The last fixture between the teams, just ten days ago, did not reveal an obvious gulf in quality: the difference in what was apparently a dreadful game was made by a penalty for St Johnstone. Looking at the St Johnstone team that started the game, however, what struck me immediately was how familiar most of the names were: this sort of continuity is something of a rarity in SPL teams these days. Moreover, almost every member of that St Johnstone team, even the more recent arrivals, had significant SPL experience as well as, in some cases, experience at a higher level: in defence, Dave Mackay, Frazer Wright, David McCracken, Alan Maybury have all played many times in the top Scottish division; Jody Morris, Chris Millar and Liam Craig provide similar SPL experience and continuity in midfield (and on Wednesday were supported by Lee Croft who, although a recent addition to the SPL, has several years’ experience with English Premiership and Championship clubs); while strike partners Sandaza and Sheridan, revelatory this season, had both shown plenty of promise, if not consistency, with established SPL teams in the past. All this without mentioning the SPL experience on the bench, in the shape of David Robertson and Steven Anderson, and also held by the temporarily unavailable Calum Davidson and Murray Davidson. By contrast, six of the starting eleven for Inverness (Piermayr, Golobart, Tansey, Jones, Tade, Mackay) had never played in the SPL, or with each other, until this season; and three more (Tuffey, Shinnie, Sutherland) would be classed by most as having had limited SPL experience. Only Tokely and Foran can compare favourably with the large majority of the St Johnstone team in terms of the number of SPL games played. When the two teams are considered in terms of their experience in this league, their experience of playing together, and the levels they have played at, is it any wonder that St Johnstone sit eighteen points and five places better off than ICT at the time of writing? Pointing this out is not intended as criticism. Terry Butcher felt he had to rebuild last summer, and opted to go, for the most part, with young players from the English reserve and lower league football, having previously had success with this policy in the shape of Jonny Hayes and Lee Cox. Yet most would agree that, even bearing in mind the injuries ICT have endured this year, the season has been disappointing and that further work will have to be done on the squad over the summer. The model of the current St Johnstone squad would suggest that, if possible, it would be a shrewd move to seek out experienced Scottish players to bolster ICT’s squad and ensure SPL survival, allowing the younger players to develop under less pressure. Anyway, enough of worrying about the future for now. Before that, Terry Butcher’s players have an opportunity on Saturday to make amends for the defensive errors and goalmouth profligacy that led to them throwing away a game they dominated against Hibs last Sunday, as well as to prove to St Johnstone and their own supporters that the gap between the teams is not in fact a fair reflection of any gap in quality. Individual errors apart, the performance against Hibs did contain some glimmers of hope: the return of Jonny Hayes from injury provided a greater attacking threat and more of an outlet for balls from the back, and consequently, in the first half at least, there was far less of the long-ball stuff that we had seen the team revert to in recent weeks; Roman Golobart again showed that he is a defender prepared to carry the ball forward and look for the opportunity to start attacking moves, rather than merely clearing his lines; and Greg Tansey had a more effective first half than I have seen him have for a long time although, by the second half, his game seemed to have deteriorated along with that of the rest of the team. Bearing in mind that the last game against St Johnstone was a close-run thing, and that ICT were still without Jonny Hayes when it was played, all hope for Saturday is not lost: if we can cut out individual errors at the back; if McKay and Tade can show more composure in front of goal; if we show patience with the passing game and our players are prepared to take their players on; then we have a chance. But we seem to have been saying ‘if’ an awful lot this season... Whatever happens, the CaleyAway crowd will be there as usual: small but vocal, pessimistic but defiant, pished but standing, and hating everything in a high-visibility jacket. See you in the Muirton. Or the Tulloch. Or the 208. Or all three. Alternative Maryhill's Prediction:- St Johnstone 1 – Inverness Caledonian Thistle 1 ***Latest Team News*** Inverness have no fresh injury worries on top of the long term missing Chris Hogg and Andrew Shinnie. Jonny Tuffey will still deputise for Ryan Esson and Aaron Doran will look to get involved as he will need match fitness after his lengthy lay off. If you have not already done so, take at look at this http://chrishoggthef...blogspot.co.uk/ This will tell you all you need to know about the man and his battle to get back to fitness, but it is also an intriguing insight into how the mind works when faced with adversity. Good luck with the rehab Chris. St Johnstone are without the suspended Fraser Wright. Marcus Haber may miss out, and the Davidson's, Calum and Murray are pushing for fitness. Should they be fit, then Maybury and Millar could make way to accommodate them. Derek Riordan could make his SPL comeback should Steve Lomas require an extra striker of proven quality, but he may have to start on the bench.
  6. tm4tj posted a topic in Other Sports
    It's here again, fabulous setting and compelling viewing. Can Rory do it this year?
  7. 2nd of May should find out who is going down.
  8. Who is this Butcher they speak of? Is he right for the job..........not on present form that's for sure. We could not go through a whole season on this form. Something needs to change.
  9. We did look promising for a while, but it all fell apart as soon as we scored. We can only play with the players we have at our disposal, but what does concern me is how we utilise that players and how we ask them to play when selected. I don't think we are getting the best out of some of our players and maybe Butcher needs to look at his tactics. There seemed to be little point in delaying the substitutions as late as the last two were. Both Sutherland and Jones came on after the ninety minutes had elapsed. FFS we needed a goal five minutes before that............why the delay, is Butcher trying to prove something here. I am simply deflated by these last two results and sick to the back teeth of watching McKay chase long balls way above his head aimed at 6ft 4in defenders, it is criminal. Tade has been poor recently and would find it difficult to trap a bag of cement. Everything that could possibly go wrong recently has done so. We have not had a great return from our strikers this season considering the amount of hits at goal, this is purely down to a lack of talent, no? It is commendable to see one or two still trying to justify our team picking up their wages, but in all honesty, some of the stuff on display is the equivalent of watching the team under Brewster's regime and he was not afforded the same grace. So, come on Terry, show us a new side to your undoubted charisma, a cutting edge development whereby we play the ball neatly around the park to our own players and we put the ball into the opposition goal. Is it too much to ask? It's a while since I have been so gruntled, please fix it for me or let someone else fix it. Yours' Mr Disgruntled.
  10. An excellent hard hitting report from ajsict92 now published after another failure in front of the home fans. http://caleythistleonline.com/page/index.html/_/reports-2011-12/ict-v-hibernian-report-r932
  11. Someone give tm4tj a hug! I need something, this team is driving me to drink. Disheartened was the word of the day in midweek, I think it's just got wose and disheartedness is now sweeping the City.
  12. I despair. That's all.
  13. http://caleythistleonline.com/page/index.html/_/previews-2011-12/inverness-ct-v-hibernian-preview-r931 ajsict92 is getting the hang of this now and the previews are flowing from his pen...............
  14. April Fools prepare for basement battle Hibernian find themselves at the wrong end of the SPL just three points above bottom club Dunfermline and eight points adrift of Inverness, and it's maybe appropriate that they are playing each other on April Fools day. These two clubs have struggled all season to steer a course clear of relegation and as we approach the business end of the season they are still battling to stay ahead of the Pars, although Inverness would appear to have the best chance of avoiding the drop out of these three clubs. Inverness' roller coaster season has seen plenty of contrasting fortunes. Lot's of dips, a few highs but there does not seem to be any middle ground and consistency is a word not used in these parts anymore, unless we talk about Ross County. Hibs have fared even worse so far and they parted company with Colin Calderwood some sixteen games ago, with Pat Fenlon taking over the reigns in November. Sadly for them, he has only succeeded in having a worse record than the previous encumbent, gaining only nine points from those games. Hibs goal difference is shockingly bad at minus 29, and for a club like Hibs to produce that statistic then something is drastically wrong down Leith direction. Disappointment all round for both clubs on their last outing. Inverness slumped badly at home losing to high flying St Johnstone to a dubious Sandaza penalty, but it was the lack of creativity and slackness on the ball that left the home fans numb and CTO forum user Libero summed it up in one word perfectly, and that word of the week was disheartened. Hibs did not best please Mr Fenlon either as they went down 2-0 to the Arabs at Easter Road. He reckons they are suffering from a lack of confidence; sounds familiar. So, we have two sides playing rubbish with no self-belief, frightened to try attacking football for fear of relegation, shipping goals, and disgruntled fans all around us, aye, that's the SPL for you. Stll, we are a strange bunch us football fans and we thrive on these happenings, therefore we will be back in the ground on Sunday for 3:00pm to witness the next installment of life in the lower half of the SPL ................ bring it on! ajsict92 is enjoying it so much, he has started writing about it and theres no stopping him now as he has another preview ready for your pleasure, read on........................ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two of a kind... When I look at ICT and Hibs, I immediately think two things. One is that both sides are in a false position in the table given the squads they have on paper, and two is that both sides seasons have suffered as a direct consequence of failing to put together any real run of form throughout the entire season. Both teams have very different reasons for what has caused this but I must admit it is a very frustrating sight watching a team fail to reach its potential. Anyone who was forced to sit through the dross that was served up to us on Wednesday would have left the game scratching their heads wondering where all the fighting spirit against Aberdeen had gone. Indeed that was the reaction of Terry Butcher who, not for the first time, described it as "11 strangers" that played against St Johnstone and insisted that changes would be made for this weekend. With reports saying that he will have Gillet, Hayes and Doran back at his disposal it really isn't any wonder. Safe to say that ICT's form throughout this season could have been very different had it not been for the amount of injuries picked up all at once and paticularly to such key players like Doran, Hayes and I suppose you could add Andrew Shinnie to that list when you look at what a key player he was this season. You look at those three players and you could safely say that they would be our main creative influence on the pitch and I think the lack of quality we've seen in games like the St Johnstone match is a direct result of not having these players available. Hopefully having two out of those three back could bring about a bit of form and fortune between now and the end of the season. Another home game with Hibs brings about the welcoming of another new Hibs manager to TCS, Pat Fenlon who was appointed in November (the clubs 3rd manager in as many seasons). He boasted a wonderful record in Ireland winning two titles, a league cup and an FA cup with Bohemians and was seen as the man to turn around the rotten form Hibs were suffering under Colin Calderwood but his presence has brought about little change with Hibs only picking up three wins since his appointment and Hibs being deprived of a goal since late February. They also had a very busy time in the market with eight new faces being brought in as Fenlon looked to establish his mark on the side. The impatience of the Hibernian board seems to have been the main factor behind the teams rise and very mighty fall. I remember hearing many Hibs fans feeling that the sacking of John Hughes at the start of last season was a harsh decision and it's safe to say that given the dramatic decline of the team in terms of form and the subsequent appointment of 2 different managers since Hughes's dismissal you could say that perhaps they were right. It was only the 2nd fixture of the season way back in August when Hibs picked up their first ever win at the Tulloch Caledonian Stadium when Garry O'Connor's last minute strike proved to be the difference. It was a game in which ICT dominated and on another day probably would've coasted home. Open goals were missed, posts were struck and blatant penalty shouts were denied. Who thought this would end up being the story of the season. Terry Butcher took the boys down to Easter Road just after Christmas. A 1-1 draw was the result between the teams, Pat Fenlon picking up his first point as Hibs boss in that game. Garry O'Connor was again the thorn in our side but no one will ever forget the wonderful solo goal from our own Jonny Hayes that night. Picked it up before the half-way line and took off, skipping his way through multiple attempts to close him down before unleashing a low, crisp drive into the bottom corner to send the ICT loyals behind the goal delirious. Indeed the real shining moment in what was otherwise a very average game. ajsict92's prediction :- It is essential that ICT bounce back from the dismal display during the week and I see this as an opportunity to right the wrongs from the previous performance and I'm sure Terry Butcher will be trying to scream (literally) that message across to his players. The potential return of our best wingers Hayes and Doran would be a very welcome one having been deprived of having both fit for a large chunk of the season. They may well be a bit rusty but if we can get them involved in the game they could make a real difference in our quest for a result. Hibs may have had a torrid season but it can't be denied they have some very talented players. Garry O'Connor has a dozen goals to his name this season which is not a bad return. They also have the crafty, quick influence of Leigh Griffiths though I better not say too much about him, he might batter me if I do. For me I can see us grabbing a 2-0 win from this one. As Terry says the team have mostly bounced back from bad performances this season and will be looking for more of the same. From a Hibs perspective morale is low, they are on a serious goal drought and they really dont enjoy coming up here but I wouldn't write them off completely. Where's Lukey??? :- For all those that aren't at the match and are watching it on the box courtesy of ESPN be sure to look out for the blonde bombshell that is Luke Mackay. Luke is a regular poster on the forum under the quickly thought out name "lukemackay" and has been lucky enough to have been spotted by the cameras in every televised match ICT have featured in this season. To make this easy for you look out for a lad that looks like Robert Eagle, wears dark trackies and will no doubt be wearing his ICT colours and will be situated up in the Section E area throughout the match. He'll no doubt be hiding at the back and going mental if a goal goes in, you can't miss him. (hmmnnnn, will he be wearing his beard on Sunday?) ***Latest Team News*** Terry Butcher has stated that he will make changes to freshen up the side, and that's not difficult to understand after the midweek slump. Still out though are Chris Hogg, Andrew Shinnie and Ryan Esson. The long awaited return of Aaron Doran is fast approaching and Jonny Hayes and Kenny Gillet look set to be included in the squad. So, if all of these guys are fit and raring to go then there will definitely be alterations to the starting eleven with Josh Meekings also available after his red card at Aberdeen. Pat Fenlon is struggling to turn Hibs fortunes around and he might have to do so without captain Ian Murray who is hampered by a hip injury. He could have better luck with Jake McPake and Danny Galbraith who have shaken off knocks, but ex-County midfielder Martin Scott will not take part after being told he is surplus to requirements and is available for loan.
  15. bummer :lol:
  16. tm4tj replied to Dmacca's topic in General Football
    I recall Hearts having four players sent off against Rangers at Ibrox in 1996. I believe that was equalling a record set by Hereford and Stranraer at that time. If a team is reduced to six players the game is abandoned.
  17. The highlights made us look like Barcelona. Perth controlled the ball better than us when in possession and looked more comfortable on the ball. It really was a frustrating performance by us and we should be taking a lot more of these chances han we currently are, think 5th November.
  18. Forgot about Tansey. Sorry but you have done little to earn a place in the team, and your dead balls are rubbish. Where are all these thirty yard free kicks we were promised when you signed from wherever. Not up to scratch in one of our problem areas, our midfield has absolutely no creativity. Hopefully in getting some of the injured players back this will improve, but I'm not holding my breath.
  19. Ach, where do you start with that rubbish. We look so highland league it's unreal. Tade and Sutherland were as guilty as hell of not bringing the ball under control quickly enough. Tudur-Jones can think again if he wants a contract, he was going through the motions and is Piermayr a footballer. We had no midfield and wee Jodie Morris showed everybody how it's done, able to put his foot on the ball and find one of his own players with the ball. We simply could not string more than two passes together, absolutely pathetic. Terry needs to get his finger out if he wants to keep his job. Wrong players on the park were easy enough for 3000 people to spot, but the bold Terence again leaves it too late before replacing the headless ones. We are struggling for quality, simple as that and it won't be Butcher that keeps us up, it will be Dunfermline. I am a big fan of Butcher, but he seems unable or unwilling to change the pattern when things are obviously going tits up. On the bright side. Rossco played his heart out and Shinnie tried hard. Golobart got stuck in and did reasonably well and it was only half price admission. Apart from that, there was no bright side. Hugely disappointing result, but not unexpected, just sums up our lack of invention really.
  20. Cheers Mrs Shop, added to the preview.
  21. Aye, so does our preview........................................
  22. We suspected that Hayes and Gillet will be out until Hibs game and Esson possibly longer, but Terry is full of surprises at times and and can be frugal with the truth........
  23. http://caleythistleonline.com/page/index.html/_/news-2011-12/inverness-ct-v-st-johnstone-preview-r929 ajsict92 has penned the preview for tomorrow nights game against the Perth farmers and he will be on the report as well, so have a read and see if his prediction works out. Cheers
  24. Lomas Fancies Chinese Takeaway Shaanxi Chan-Ba: No it's not a spicey Oriental lamb shank, it's where Steve Lomas might get his next Chinese takeaway from in the shape of one of the top SPL scorers of all time, Derek Riordan. The former Hibs and Celtic striker is at a loose end after leaving his club in November, only four months into a two year deal. Lomas would see him as an ideal replacement for Cillian Sheridan and Fran Sandaza should the Perth Club be unable to tempt them to stay at McDiarmid Park beyond the seasons end, and he could sign for them before the weekend to bolster their push for European football next season. But, we are not here to discuss Deek. It's the rearranged SPL game against St Johnstone on Wednesday evening, and if you still have your ticket for a fiver, then it's a cheap night out for you. The original game was scheduled to see Saints as our first footers on the 2nd of January but very heavy early morning blizzards and sleet put paid to that and the game was called off a couple of hours before kick off. The already saturated pitch had worsened and became waterlogged ending any possibility of football being played, much to the chagrin of all concerned. The Perth Saints have sustained their early season surge and sit comfortably inside the top-six, 15 points ahead of injury stifled Inverness, a position even their own fans thought would be difficult to achieve this season. But achieve it they have and they have the opportunity to push for European football come the end of this season with Tayside neighbours Dundee United in fourth place in the league on the same points total prior to this game. So, while St Johnstone have their sights set on a Europa place, we look to jump two places with a home win. That would see us leapfrog Aberdeen and St Mirren into eighth place, commendable given our problems this season. St Johnstone's season has been built around a fantastic away record that boasts only two defeats, both by the same scoreline, 3-2 at Easter Road and Fir Park. That has seen them tally 27 out of their total of 46 points so far this term, scoring 21 times on the road, but more significantly, only conceding a miserly 10 goals away from Perth. Our own season has been hindered by numerous injuries and we have been unable to mount any serious assault on the top half of the table, instead concentrating on keeping a team or two below us. Still without Chris Hogg and Andrew Shinnie we are starting to see one or two return, with Golobart and Tudur-Jones getting more match sharpness at Pittodrie last weekend. Unfortunately, some fresh injuries to other key players are still disrupting our continuity, Hayes, Doran and Gillet sitting out the last couple of games, with Doran's continuing injury nightmare completely ruining his season so far. Ryan Esson was the latest casualty, pulling up in the pre-match warm up at Aberdeen with Jonny Tuffey ably deputising. Remember folks, ticket prices have been halved for tonights game and season ticket holders can bring a friend for a fiver, as long as tickets are bought before reaching the turnstiles. I could ramble on, but I'll let someone else take up the story as ajsict92 has been doing the homework for this preview and will tell us how we are going to tackle the Super J's, read on................................... Long time coming... I managed to win myself a lengthy lie in bed when this fixture was first cancelled way back at the start of the new year but i think given our result against Aberdeen at the weekend then it is probably a good time to challenge ourselves against a team like St Johnstone and look to inflict only their third away defeat on them this season. Building on the weekends performance will be difficult but I think it is important that we do so. All of the boys ran themselves into the ground for that result, showing alot of passion and commitment. Passion and commitment which transmitted to the stands as the team received a standing ovation and chorus of chants at full time. As Big Tel mentioned at the weekend the last time we played three games in the course of a week we won all three and we definitely need that kind of display again. As has been typical of our season though it was a result gained in a lot of adversity with the loss of Ryan Esson through injury and Josh Meekings being sent off. However both Jonny Tuffey and Thomas Piermayr gave very credible displays, couple that with the potential return of the likes of Gillet and Hayes then Tel will have a decision to make on what changes will be necessary to the squad when he chooses his starting eleven. Not a great deal to go on between the two sides as there has only been one fixture previous to this one in which the Saints ran out 2-0 winners. The Saints were on top form at that point and had Spanish hitman Fran Sandaza scoring freely for them. A quality player on top form and given the fact he has clocked up 16 goals this season I would imagine it will be a case of when he departs as opposed to if. The previous encounter between the two sides also proved to be Derek McInnes' final game in charge of the club before he departed for Bristol City. I'm sure when he left many Saints fans would have been concerned about the clubs future, especially given the strides they had made under him. Steve Lomas however seems to be proving a more than capable replacement and given he is also a young manager plying his trade, Geoff Brown may well have difficulty holding on to him when bigger clubs come calling. Given the rare but nonetheless beautiful weather we've been having and the Easter hols looming, I'm very much looking forward to this match. With both teams having taken maximum points at the weekend and against tricky opposition they will both be feeling confident going into this one and with the quality of players at each others disposal im hoping to see a reasonably open game of football with two teams going at it. Both still have alot to play for. Saints will be pushing for that one European spot left with Top-Six already secured and looking to do the double over ourselves while we have our own agenda of trying to go two places better than our current position of 10th which we have occupied comfortably for a considerable amount of time now but have always aimed to move up and away from. ajsict92's prediction:- It will be a tense game, despite the disparity in league positions, but I dont think there is a great difference in quality between the sides, especially if we have Jonny Hayes back at our disposal. It will be absolutely essential that we keep the likes of Sandaza and Sheridan quiet or even Marcus Haber who despite not having as prolific a record, has some real pace about him. It will be a big challenge for young lads like Golobart and Graeme Shinnie but with an experienced head like Big Toker's bossing them there is no reason why they shouldn't be able to do so. Boys like Tade and McKay will be looking to replicate their good performances from Saturday and impress in front of the home crowd and if Butcher keeps Tudur-Jones and Foran anchoring the midfield they could well have a big influence in play as well. Both teams will be well up for it but I think with the home crowd on our side and a confident team on the pitch I can see us grabbing a 2-1 win. ***Latest Team News*** Inverness' injury fortunes are still going in and out like a fiddlers elbow. Out are Hogg, Andrew Shinnie and Doran with Ryan Esson (groin) joining the definites and Josh Meekings for his red card will be suspended. The maybe's are Hayes and Gillet (hamstrings) and Owain Tudur-Jones who might need time to re-adjust to full time football again after a classy showing at Pittodrie. The ins will be Jonny Tuffey and his new deputy, u19 keeper Scott Mathieson, Thomas Piermayr who has had to bide his time for the right back position unless Butcher decides to move Ross Tokely back out wide and play Steve Williams alongside the already returned Roman Golobart, with u21 left back Graeme Shinnie wide left if Gillet does not return. Tansey, Foran and Sutherland, Ross or Hayes will make up the midfield with Tade and the industrious Billy McKay looking for the goals. Hayes, Gillet and Doran are more likely to target the Hibs game this weekend for a return to action, but Butcher will keep his options open until the last minute. St Johnstone's Murray Davidson will miss this game after injuring his knee against Hearts, but it's not as serious as first feared and he could be back in a couple of weeks. Callum Davidson (hamstring) should be fit enough to be included in the squad and Steve Lomas has no fresh injury worries ahead of this testing encounter, quoting "We'll have to be at our best to get anything from Inverness." Other ICT news:- Papers saying today that Owain Tudur-Jones is keen to extend his stay with Inverness and repay the faith shown in him since he returned from long term injury. Have to say I think his injury was one of many serious aspects that hindered our season but anyone who has seen him play since he returned can see that if we can get this guy playing regularly and 100% fit he could be different class for us. Hopefully Tel will give him some more game time to impress as the season draws to a close Other SPL news:- Surprise surprise, Neil Lennon has been asked to explain his alleged misconduct in the wake of last weekends fiery Old Firm game where after the dust settled, Rangers emerged with a 3-2 victory and ten men on the park, with Mr Lennon's side being reduced to nine players. Well well, how does this not surprise me. The greetin faced wee toerag has been pushing his luck with officials for as long as Rangers have been cheating the tax man and he still expects to get away with it. Time he learned some manners and the beaks should grow a pair and tell him. Apparently he reckons he was "prevented from doing his job", I could answer that but my lawyer is too expensive. They think its all over....well mathematically it's not quite.........ajsict92 adds, I must admit that I have laughed at Rangers a lot in the last month for most of the same reasons that the rest of the nation have, but on Sunday a part of me wanted to see the Gers frustrate Celtic's attempts to wrap up the league nice and early. For a side in turmoil Rangers, who had nothing to play for gave a quality and spirited performance against their fierce rivals led by a very in form Sone Aluko. Celtic's performance was that of a side who thought they'd already won the game before it began (similar to the CIS Cup FInal) and probably gave them the wake up call that maybe they are not so invincible yet in their quest for total domination. A modern day Old Firm wouldn't be complete without Neil Lennon throwing a twizz worthy of him being sent off and giving an angry interview at full time. This no doubt will be followed by the usual slap on the wrists and small fine from the SPL but he knows only too well his side will never get a better opportunity to win the league at Ibrox.
  25. Ach, forget that rubbish, check out the report on here, much more lifelike. http://caleythistleonline.com/page/index.html/_/reports-2011-12/aberdeen-v-ict-report-r928

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