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tm4tj

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  1. Brechin City edging towards the first division with Roy, Rory and Kevin on board. 0-2 at the moment after 2-2 in first leg with Cowdenbeath.
  2. Sounds like a slow start for us, Dougie Imrie getting the usual stick, and with the crowd all in the one stand let's hope it does not get out of hand.
  3. In case you forgot about it, or even care about it, this game can be viewed on SKY Channel 993 which is ITV London. Man City v Stoke City..................mon the City Could be a Manchester double as United clinched the Premiership earlier today.
  4. HT: 1-1 FT: 1-2 1st scorer ICT: Sutherland 1st scorer Opp: Crawford Crowd: 1988 1st Yellow Card: Mensing
  5. Going by the tweets, they have all arrived at Hamilton. Great effort guys, we still lubs ya
  6. there were a few error messages displayed yesterday, scotty or don will no doubt be on the case.
  7. Bye Bye Hamilton. Hamilton play their last SPL game for at least one season after confirming their status in midweek. They almost managed to reel in St Mirren but it was too little too late for the Accies when they ran out of games and defeat to St Johnstone in midweek, coupled with St Mirren beating Aberdeen meant relegation for Billy Reid and his Academicals. Inverness will not be too sad about the demise of the Accies as they tended to make life difficult for us and to be honest, were one of the reasons we were relegated ourselves in 2009. We were unable to win any of our games against them that season, taking only two points from a possible twelve as they brought time wasting to a new level, although they ultimately cost Craig Brewster his job. Or was it the show of shoes that did it? Whichever, that signalled the coming of Terry & Mo, so every cloud has a silver lining. It's one win each this season so far. They got their customary 1-0 victory in Inverness although we overturned that in the return fixture at Hamilton with a 3-1 hammering. The other game in Inverness was a 1-1 draw. The first game had barely started when former ICT player Dougie Imrie scored one of the goals of the season with a thunderous thirty five yard effort which stunned the home fans and Ryan Esson. Imrie also opened the scoring at Hamilton, but we were on our unbeaten away run and were not giving that away so easily. A brace from Rooney and a Jonny Hayes goal meant we remained unbeaten, and Accies dismal home form continued. The draw at Inverness was courtesy of a Dani Sanchez strike being cancelled out by an Antoine - Curier penalty, cue plenty of time wasting and ten men behind the ball. With only one stand being open for this game, it would appear that interest is low in Hamilton with relegation assured, but sometimes these meaningless games throw caution to the wind and can be entertaining. Russell Duncan is back in the squad for this game after his dubious red card against St Mirren. It would be a fitting tribute for Russell to be captain for the day and let's hope he can round off his 10 year affair with Inverness on a high. If he plays at Hamilton it will be Russell's 353rd time in an ICT shirt. Another player making his final appearance will be Grant Munro. A former captain of the club, he has been released after 12 years fantastic service and saturday will be his 367th appearance for his beloved Caley Jags. Grant is a home grown lad and this will be a big wrench for him. He made his Caley Thistle debut in 1999 against Livingstone and under the guidance of Bobby Mann he established himself in the heart of the defence and has never looked back. He was a proud man as he captained Inverness back into the SPL at the first time of asking. At only 30 years old, some have questioned Butchers decision to release Munro as we will need to fill the void for next season, with no recognised central defenders being retained other than Ross Tokely. It's also the end of the line for another legend Stuart Golabeck, our captain for the first season in the SPL and the man who scored our first ever SPL goal. Golly was instrumental in our rise through the leagues and formed a formidable back line with Rossco, Caff and Mann. He left for a spell at Livingstone but returned to the fold, although at 37, his days were numbered at ICT. Roy McBain who is also departing will be in action for Brechin City in their play off game at Cowdenbeath, good luck to him with their tie poised at 2-2 going into the second leg. Brechin also have former players Rory McAllister leading the line for them and another ex-player in Kevin Byers playing regular games. C'mon the 'Hedge'. It is the end of an era for Inverness Caledonian Thistle and time to give these great sevants a massive send off. Thanks for the memories everyone that is departing. Gone but never forgotten. Alternative Maryhill will give us one more treat as he gives us this insight for tomorrows game at NDP. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The Highland Marchers are closing in on another new finishing line; Terry and Mo are looking out their cricket whites; Richie Foran is polishing his fishing tackle; and somewhere in Scotland, Richie Hart is getting in the festival mood. The close season is almost upon us, after what has seemed a very long year back in the SPL: overwrought hysteria in Paradise, mind-numbing efficiency at Greyskull, spectacular underachievement at Pittodrie, Celtic-rivalling paranoia at Tynecastle, schizophrenic displays at Easter Road, and bubbling away under all that, Inverness Caledonian Thistle quietly rebuilding themselves into a force to be reckoned with while Hamilton Academical meekly took their leave of the SPL. It has been a season of contrasting fortunes in the league for Caley Thistle and Hamilton, yet for both clubs it will be a time for goodbyes on Saturday. For ICT’s supporters, it will not only be a chance to acclaim a truly impressive first season back in the SPL, but also, hopefully, an opportunity to say a final farewell to at least some of the ten players being released by the club; Hamilton’s supporters, meanwhile, will be able to pay tribute to their team’s performance over three consecutive seasons in the SPL. Of course, most ICT supporters won’t be at all unhappy to see the back of Hamilton: each time a fixture between the clubs comes round on the calendar, sinking feelings set in that can only be rivalled by those of Hibs fans contemplating a trip to Inverness. The seven league matches between the clubs have ended in three 1-1 draws, three 1-0 victories for Hamilton, and a solitary 3-1 away win for ICT, last November. Only Aberdeen out of the other bottom nine teams in the SPL can boast an all-time record anywhere near as good against Caley Thistle; and even that has taken a bit of a kicking this season. We perhaps shouldn’t be too surprised by Caley Thistle’s struggles against Hamilton, however; although Hamilton are the only team in SPL that we can say with certainty are, nowadays, a ‘smaller’ club than ICT, their record in their first two seasons in the top flight does not reflect the modesty of their set-up. In 2008-09 they finished in ninth position, with forty-one points; last season they were seventh, with forty-nine. Given the wide praise ICT have received this season for finishing in that position and having accumulated, at the time of writing, fifty points, we must acknowledge how impressive much of Hamilton’s time in the SPL has been, no matter how offended we might be by the New Douglas Park gazebo, or its strange toilet set-up, or Dougie Imrie’s objectionable face, or the sneaking suspicion that the Paixao twins are actually some sort of novelty act. And if we are giving credit to Hamilton, we must also, reluctantly, give credit to their generously-jowled manager, Billy Reid. Reid’s record is exceptional: since taking over Hamilton in 2006 he has not only won the first division then kept the club in the SPL for three seasons, but has also taken Accies to three cup quarter finals and overseen the development and eventual transfers to the English Premiership of some outstanding players: James McCarthy, James McArthur and Brian Easton. Reid manages the clever trick of hiding his undoubted footballing genius under a blizzard of impenetrable clichés, as evidenced by his interview with the BBC after Hamilton’ relegation on Tuesday evening: “I'm sitting here tonight and I'm a manager who has been relegated and I am quite happy to take that. I realise the size of the club and the restrictions we work under. It has been a strange season. Fifteen penalties in the one season - that tells you everything. It has been a fantastic ride for us.” At the risk of being pedantic, what does “fifteen penalties in the one season” actually tell you? That Hamilton were a bunch of cloggers this season? That their central defenders were guilty of some quite unbelievable clumsiness? That there was a serious lack of pace at the back? Or that Scottish referees are shiftless, conniving conspirators that should all be sacked? Surely no-one would imply that... Anyway, when Billy and the boys return to the giant hamster wheel of the first division, they will be sorely missed, but here’s hoping that ICT’s sympathy does not extend to continuing the underwhelming record against Hamilton, and that the players can maintain an impressive post-split run that has seen them chalk up four wins out of five. While Graeme Shinnie and Jonny Hayes are still unavailable, Terry Butcher has a fairly full squad to choose from and will probably be torn to some extent between fielding the players he sees as representing the club, and giving final appearances to those whom he has already decreed have no futures in Inverness. Surely Grant Munro, at least, will be in the starting line up and, from a personal point of view, I would love to think that there might still be the chance he will be offered a new contract after all. There seems to be no way back for Russell Duncan, and it will be interesting to see whether he is given any game time if, as is suggested on the CTO forums, his suspension has not yet kicked in. It would also be nice to see Dani Sanchez, a player who made some fine contributions to the side over the last two seasons, make an appearance. Yet equally, it is exciting to see players such as Shane Sutherland and Gavin Morrison emerge, and it would surely benefit the team to give them as much first team experience as possible. Hamilton, meanwhile, have already started to clear out players with Billy Reid vowing to return to the philosophy of building around youth that got the club promoted to the SPL in the first place. Club captain Alex Neil, out with injury for most of the season, will be available, however, as will Simon Mensing and Thomas Cerny, who were, along with Neil, starters in Hamilton’s first ever game in the SPL. Defender Mark McLaughlan is suspended for this SPL send off, but Ziggy Gordon and David Hopkirk are back from U19 squads in Denmark, and with emerging talent like Ali Crawford, Hamilton have plenty to be pleased about. Prediction: Precedent in this fixture, coupled with the likely determination of Hamilton’s players to give their supporters something to smile about with relegation confirmed, should make me pessimistic about this one. However, after a long period of underachievement over the winter there seems to be something about ICT again at the moment, and I foresee another Grant Munro-inspired clean sheet, and a win to end a very satisfying season. Hamilton Academical 0 – Inverness Caledonian Thistle 1 There you have it folks, your last preview of this season and another gem from wordsmith Alternative Maryhill.
  8. Here it is, your last chance to catch one of Maryhills brilliant previews. Academicals counting the cost of failure
  9. Fantastic stats produced by Ian are used by many, and portrayed as our own. Like many, I am indebted to his dedication and impeccable information. Thanks Mr Broadfoot.
  10. is it along the lines of the Manchester City song from yonks ago.
  11. someone posted a week or so ago saying they won and had a great time and the new strip is great.
  12. Dee Glee for Heilan Dee
  13. Also announced at the stadium that he was the fans player of the year, could be a clean sweep here.
  14. Nick Ross finally gets off the mark, and how. Richie Foran had given Inverness a first half lead with a powerful header, although there was some debate as to whether Adam Rooney had the last touch. It was a low key first half which explained why Hibs were languishing in the lower quarter of the league. They had plenty of possession but did little with it. In the second period, Inverness began to take control and Nick Ross making his 50th appearance for the club scored a superb second goal to secure the points. He met a great Adam Rooney cross on the edge of the box to half-volley a curling shot into the top corner off the underside of the bar. It has taken Nick plenty games to score an SPL goal, but when it came it was well worth the wait. Inverness then threatened the Hibees goal on a number of occasions after that but a third goal never came and Hibs were well beaten long before the end, with youngsters Ross and Sutherland proving a handful for the under pressure Hibs rearguard. However, the biggest cheers of the night were the farewell lap of honour from the home side, with Grant Munro and Russell Duncan getting a guard of honour as they left the pitch. Davie has his final home story for your eyes only this season, here is the report............................................ 11th May 2011 Tulloch Caledonian Stadium I.C.T. 2 - Foran (42), Ross (51) TEAM: Tuffey, Tokely, Munro, Gillet, Hogg, Duff, Cox, Ross (Doran 89), Foran, Rooney (Polworth 90), Sutherland (Sanchez 86) SUBS: Esson, Morrison, MacDonald, Odhiambo Booked: none Sent Off: none HIBERNIAN 0 - TEAM: Divis, Hanlon, Stephens, Booth, Towell, Stevenson (Horner 77), Wotherspoon, Taggart (Sodje 68), Miller (Scott 77), Palsson, Vaz Te SUBS: Brown, Smith, Forster, Handling Booked: none Sent Off: none Referee Stephen Finnie Attendance 3344 The last home game of the season passed, with little real incident and a comfortable margin of superiority into history. A couple of goals either side of half time sealed it, but in truth ICT could have scored at will, especially in the second half. Hibs were unremittingly, gob-smackingly awful all night, but still managed to put together a stubborn enough rearguard to keep things respectable. All in all a quiet night when, in the maroon half of Edinburgh everything that’s worst about Scottish football was laid out to public gaze. None of that at TCS, though. The first half meandered along from a sluggish start and you know it’s going nowhere when socialising in various parts of the stand becomes possible, and the match followed with one eye. Occasional attention was demanded, often prompted by the excellent Shane Sutherland looking to cut in and shoot at any opportunity, and by the direct running of Ricardo Vaz Te, who looks a useful acquisition for Hibs. He is, though, an ideal illustration of why ex premiership players should be banned from Mohican style haircuts. Take note El Haj. Highlight of uneventfulness was a quite magnificent sliced clearance by Grantie that bounced a couple of times off the north stand roof before dropping into the car park. It was chased by a glum looking ball boy, clearly affected by the end of season apathy around him. ICT looked in the mood, none more so than the normally hairstyled Nick Ross who was conducting everything through the midfield. A couple of half chances came and went, until in 41 minutes Foran was played in by the aforementioned Ross after useful midfield work by Ross Tokely. Foran’s header then caused consternation to the BBC by cannoning off the left post before either (a) being diverted over the line by the ever alert ROONEY or (b) going in unaided. Take your pick. We in the stadium, including our intrepid announcer, thought Rooney and I’d stick with that. The big man is really coming back onto a game right now, and I hope it’s not a swansong. (apparently the goal has been credited to Richie Foran, davie) Half Time: Inverness CT 1 Hibernian 0 Jonny Tuffey must have thought that, what with the first half being money for old rope, he might have something to do in the second half. Actually, no. After another free kick from Liam Miller was fired directly into the sorry band of Hibees in the south stand, ICT processed neatly to the other end of the park, neat passing causing some concern for the men in green. A fabulous Gillet ball wide right was cut back by Rooney near the six yard box to ROSS, who rifled the ball into the net via the crossbar from 18 yards. After a bit of did it/didn’t it? faffing, celebrations were had of the lads richly warranted 1st SPL goal. Hibernian at this stage still offered nothing, and it looked like a question of how many ICT would score. Rooney had chances, Sutherland was pressing but nil of note happened until Hibs introduced Sodje in 67 minutes. This chap looks like a heavyweight boxer and appeared to take the curious decision to bypass football entirely in a one man mission to wind up Ross Tokely in a succession of verbals, sly digs, kicks and nips and a quite blatant slap around the head all of which was studiously ignored by Tokely but drove Butcher to apoplexy. The fact that no official saw anything was probably down to the fact that they thought no-one stupid enough to wind up Superman in this way. Hibs shuffled the pack to no avail, and Sutherland departed to be replaced by Sanchez. Adios, Dani. The two biggest cheers of the evening so far were then reserved for Nick Ross (Doran coming on) and the late introduction of Liam Polworth who became the first teams youngest ever player at 16. Take a bow, and I hope you get longer at Hamilton. A farewell canter around the pitch was had after full time, and that was lights out on another vintage season at TCS. What with all the changes afoot, next year could be even better. Full Time: Inverness CT 2 Hibernian 0 Man of the match was made memorable for the fact that I agreed for once with the sponsors – Nick Ross by a mile. Thanx davie for all the contributions this season, much appreciated.
  15. HT: 2-0 FT: 5-0 1st scorer ICT: Foran 1st scorer Opp: Nish Crowd: 3516 Bonus points game ICT 1st Scorer = 4pts
  16. Hibs looking to end abysmal Highland form. Last home game of the season sees capital opposition in the shape of Hibernian on Wednesday night 19:45 KO. Colin Calderwood's side have not had the best of times up North, failing to win at Inverness in any SPL games. Six defeats and two draws are the statistics in favour of Inverness at the Tulloch Caledonian Stadium. Hibs only success away from home against Inverness came at our surrogate home of Pittodrie, a 2-1 win for the Edinburgh side, but this season alone, it's one win apiece and a 1-1 draw between the sides. The last encounter up North saw Adam Rooney score Inverness' first ever hat-trick in the SPL in a swashbuckling display of attacking football, 4-2 on the day for ICT. Hibs won the February game in Edinburgh 2-0. One of Hibernian FC all time greats Eddie Turnbull was laid to rest this week, but to be honest, he must be turning in his grave at the thought of some of the performances offered by Hibs this season. Mediocrity has seen a clear out at Easter Road and Colin Calderwood will endeavour to once more bring the Hibees back to life. Their final league game against Aberdeen will be a fitting honour to Mr Turnbull, with both sides being associated with the 88 year old legend. How Hibs would love to unearth a new 'Famous Five'. Hibs did set one record this season, they became the first side to lose an SPL match at New Douglas Park, such is their unpredictability. February saw Hibs race clear of the relegation mire with five wins on the bounce, including a 2-0 victory over ICT in Edinburgh, their next nine games have seen then amass only three points, and that has included home and away defeats to Hamilton. The highlight of the Hibees season will be the 3-0 drubbing they handed out to Celtic, astonishingly sandwiched between getting knocked out of the Scottish Cup by Ayr-Ayr super Ayr super Ayr United. 1-0 after a nil-nil draw at Easter Road. So, no continuity for Hibs has given the fans a mixed season and probably one to forget. A couple of things have been sorted this midweek, Hamilton Accies have been relegated after they lost 1-0 to St Johnstone and St Mirren beat Aberdeen by the same scoreline. Accies almost got out of jail, clawing back St Mirren but their SPL bubble finally burst and next weeks game is now a formality. And Ryan Esson can not now be overtaken to win the Caley Thistle Online Player of the Year for 2011. He is the first goalkeeper to win this award and his consistency and considerable skill has earned him this coveted trophy. We are still waiting for Craig Levein to give Ryan a phone call though. Thanks to everyone who voted throughout the season and thanks to hislopsoffsideagain for doing the mathematics and totting up the scores. Ryan takes over the mantle from last seasons winner Jonny Hayes. Davie will tell us more about the Hibees in his preview, read on............................................... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Well, that went by quickly, didn’t it? Welcome to the last home preview of the year. It seems like yesterday that we ventured forth with a first home game against Celtic and here we are; lots of water under the bridge, some great results, great days and great memories. Likewise, there have been low lights; drawing and losing to the Hibees in Edinburgh for instance (I’m sure you could name others) but we remain unbeaten by them at TCS. In 18 meetings all in, we have won 9, drawn 3, lost 6. As the powerbrokers of Scottish football, we sandwich this game in between deciding who is relegated (well, we could have until last night) and who wins the championship, and go in on our customary topsy turvey form. The last three ICT games can universally have been said to be dire (Aberdeen) stratospheric (Celtic) and hard fought (St. Mirren) Who turns up tomorrow night? In many ways, 7th spot being sewn up, Wednesday is for pride, saying goodbye or playing for that elusive contract so it could be any of the above three that make an appearance. ICT news Russell Duncan is obviously and depressingly missing, but thereafter there are no fresh injury worries for Terry Butcher. Proctor remains missing of the contractees and it remains to be seen who, of the others make a farewell appearance. Chris Hogg remains unable to say farewell to his former team-mates. Hibs are likewise in rude health, but their form is not. Calderwood & Adams have obviously given up on this season, and half of the squad that played and have eyes firmly fixed on next year. Hopefully the fact that they are actively courting Gregory Tade means that they have given up on Adam Rooney. Otherwise, we welcome back John Rankin and Mark Brown in order that they can ponder the success of their career moves away from TCS. Likewise the enigma known as Riordan, who qualifies as the most spectacularly wasted talent in Scottish football. Francis Dickoh serves a suspension and joins Ian Murray, Danny Galbraith and Michael Hart on the sidelines as the trio rest troublesome injuries. Goalkeeper Graham Stack and midfielder Matt Thornhill remain out. Last but not least, good luck to a bunch of Internutters who are going to walk from Inverness after tonights game to Hamilton for kick off time on Saturday, proper Internutters. You can follow their progress on Twitter with updates on the CTO Forums. Highland March 9, yes, the ninth time these folks have strolled from the penultimate game to the final one, sometimes detouring up and down mountains on the way.....................as I said, Nutters everyone of them. Good Luck to all of you.
  17. davie has a few words for us HM 9 starts here
  18. Fave ICT Player Ever:--------------------------------Bobby Mann Fave Band/Solo Artist:-------------------------------Neil Young Fave Album:------------------------------------------On the Boards (Taste) Fave Movie:------------------------------------------American Graffiti Fave Celeb:------------------------------------------Rin Tin Tin Fave Other Footie Team:------------------------------Portsmouth Fave Comedy Series:----------------------------------Only Fools and Horses Fave Website:----------------------------------------CTO Fave Drink:------------------------------------------Guinnes Fave Celeb to hate:----------------------------------Jordan Fave Bit of Trivia about yourself? ------------------400 metre record holder at school------it was the first metric year.
  19. If I had to choose it would be Rangers for all the reasons above not to choose Celtic, namely Neil Lennon, but I don't have to choose so I'm not.
  20. Full report now added, two for the price one. Buddie hell
  21. Russelldinho & Granto
  22. tm4tj

    Referee

    208 MW
  23. Forgettable first half, decent second half electified by the introduction of our very own Adam Rooney. His first strike was a bicycle kick which would have been goal of the season, the next two were unluckily thumping, the gvoal was a beauty. Great result, the performance was enough.
  24. The Adam Rooney cameo show downs sorry Saints. He was only on the park for a few minutes when he hit the first of his hat-tricks, Lionel Messi eat yer heart out. What a display from Rooney. Woodwork hat-tricks that is. His first attempt was an audacious overhead kick that smacked the bar, absolutely brilliant attempt when he whipped the ball off the defenders head whilst facing Jonny Tuffey. His next two woody's were impeccable, apart from entering the net. His fourth bash almost burst the net after he muscled in on goal and unleashed a ferocious shot from six yards. Take a bow Adam Rooney, and please sign a new contract. On the down side, Russell Duncan's swansong ended in tears as he was red carded after a bit of shenanigans when he was upended in the box. This was a terrible way for a club legend to end his career here. Shame on you Saints. Chin up Russell, I'm sure the offers will flood in. 7th May 2011 Tulloch Caledonian Stadium I.C.T. 1 - Rooney (85) TEAM: Tuffey, Tokely, Munro, Gillet, Duff, Duncan, Morrison (Ross 64), MacDonald (Rooney 53), Odhiambo (Cox 75), Foran, Doran SUBS: Esson, Innes, Sutherland, Sanchez Booked: none Sent Off: Duncan (71) ST MIRREN 0 - TEAM: Gallacher, Barron, Mair, McGregor, McAusland, Thomson, Goodwin (Cregg 40), Mclean (Mooy 76), Dargo, Higdon, McGowan SUBS: Samson, van Zanten, Potter, McKernon, Wardlaw Booked: Goodwin (28) Sent Off: none Referee Bobby Madden Attendance 3446 The day was set, bright sunshine and a cooling breeze, one team free from hassle, the other needing at least a point to help their cause. With so much at stake for the Buddies, one has to wonder at their seemingly tentative approach to this game. Was Danny Lennon holding out in the hope of gaining one point instead of trying to win all three, something they achieved around Santa Clause time. With the teams announced you would have thought that Terry Butcher was also trying to help Saints out. No two keeper Jonny Tuffey was given a run out as were Gavin Morrison, Eric Odhiambo and Alex MacDonald. The last throw of the dice was club legend Russell Duncan being given a start in front of the home fans, his 352nd appearance and possibly his last after he left the field distraught and with much dubiety over the incident that saw him depart the field of play. The first half was a hugely disappointing affair with Saints reluctant to open play out and Inverness lacking the urgency to have a go, although Alex MacDonald almost nicked a goal when Gallacher blocked his flick goalwards, but Foran could not take advantage of the rebound. Eric Odhiambo tried his luck with a header which flew wide, but that was it, not enough action in a listless first half to fill an A5 sheet. Half Time 0-0 News would have filtered through to the dressing rooms that Hamilton were leading Hibs, surely that was enough incentive to sting St Mirren into action. Tuffey and Gallacher were in action early in the second half, justifying their wages, but the best was yet to come as Adam Rooney entered the fray in the 53rd minute, replacing the luckless MacDonald. This was the start of the Adam Rooney show. A ball into the box waiting for the defenders to head clear showed us another dimension to Rooney's game as he acrobatically pinched the ball from literally right under the defenders nose. Unfortunately this tremendous overhead effort smacked back off the bar with Gallacher beaten. Saints were stung into action and Tuffey beat away a powerful McGowan drive from 15 yards. With Hamilton still ahead, they needed to pull something out of the bag. Still, it was disappointing that they resorted to simulation to try and stay in the SPL. Russell Duncan was upended in the box by Mair, and in the ensuing tangle, brought down again. Handbags at dawn is the best description I have of the incident, as Mairs' throat grab was countered by Russell's hand off................with his belly. Astonishingly what at best was a pair of yellows was seen by the standside linesman as a straight red card for a distraught Russell, bringing the curtain down on his ICT career in tears. To add injury to insult, no penalty awarded either, all a bit bemusing and embarrassing for the officials and Lee Mair. Back to the football and Rooney was just warming up. He rattled the junction of post and bar with a ferocious shot on the run from 18 yards and seemed to be giving the defence a horrendous time. His next effort looked in all the way as he hit a low shot across Gallacher only for it to hit the base of his left hand post and rebound to safety. A hat-trick of woody's, no luck Adam. Dargo tried his best to breathe some life into sad Saints with a couple of efforts but it was too little too late for them, and Rooney had the final say when he brilliantly controlled Tuffey's long kick out after Doran flicked it on. He raced into the box leaving the defenders trailing in his wake and lashed a shot high past the despairing keeper, what a goal and no more than he deserved for his one man show. Still time for wee Dargo to scoop a shot over from 15 yards, but in all honesty it would have been an injustice had Saint's taken anything from a game they put so little into, considering their predicament. Full Time 1-0 Best for Inverness were Rooney, Tuffey, and Gillet. However, my MoM goes to once again Grant Munro, so reliable at the back and kept the bustling Higdon at bay. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ginger Jaggy saw the days events unfold like this.... After the euphoria of Wednesday night the game on Saturday definitely failed to live up to expectations. At half time I sat in my seat thinking that this report would be easy as nothing happened in what was a dire first half. But thank god for small mercies with the second half making the game a bit more attractive. It was a typical end of season affair but St Mirren to most peoples surprise didn't go at Caley Thistle and it was in fact the home team that played the better throughout. Caley Thistle made a number of changes to the starting 11 giving a few fringe players a chance to say goodbye to the fans as well as give a few squad players a run out. Johnny Tuffey replaced Ryan Esson in goal; the back line was mostly the same as Wednesday with Ross Tokely moving into central defence alongside Grant Munro. It was basically a whole new midfield with Nick Ross, Shane Sutherland, and Lee Cox dropped to the bench being replaced by the departing Russell Duncan, Eric Odhiambo and Gavin Morrison. Skipper Richie Foran returned after suspension to partner Alex MacDonald who replaced the benched Adam Rooney. The first half was an awful affair with both goalkeepers pretty much being unemployed for the whole half. It was Inverness who settled the quicker and started playing some nice passing football, even though with Foran back in the side temptation to revert back to the long ball returned. Defences were on top with both teams attacking players struggling to make any impact on goal. In fact the first time one of the goalkeepers had to make a decent save was after 25 minutes. Aaron Doran who was part of the team to perform so well in midweek played a delightful through ball to Alex MacDonald. The on loan striker miss hit his little lob and weekly chipped it into the midriff of Buddies keeper Paul Gallacher. MacDonald did well to keep the rebound in play and tried to cut it back to Foran who failed to convert after being put under pressure from a host of St Mirren defenders. That was as good as it got with St Mirren's only attempts on goal being poor free kicks which failed to test Tuffey in the Inverness goal. The start of the second half had signs that a football match was about to break out. First Michael Higdon's shot was well saved by Tuffey and then Gallacher at the other end comfortably held onto a Foran drive. MacDonald was getting no change out the St Mirren defenders and so was replaced by Rooney. And the Irish striker made an impact straight away. After bullying Charlie Mulgrew and Daniel Majstorovic, the saint's defenders suddenly found what lay in store. Within minutes of coming on Rooney acrobatically did an overhead kick under pressure,which crashed against the face of the bar. Rooney was trying to emulate his name sake in the Manchester derby and had it come off would have been goal of the season for sure. With the game suddenly coming to life the game was going to make a big turn in favour of the Paisley club. Russell Duncan was juggling with the ball on the edge of the Buddies area and was clumsily fouled by Lee Mair. The officials got it so wrong but were about to make matters even worse. Mair reacted furiously to claims of a penalty and grabbed Duncan by the throat which brought a reaction from Duncan. On the video it looked like Duncan just shoved Mair to the floor and probably deserved a yellow but with some great play acting forced the ref to get a red card out of his pocket. It was a sad end to a great Caley Thistle career and he was visibly upset as he trudged off to a rousing applause. After that incident the onus was now on St Mirren to get a winner with news of Hamilton beating 10 men Hibs at New Douglas Park. Tuffey made an excellent stop from McGowan when he managed to make room in the box. It was the first time in the game that St Mirren found space in the Inverness box and created a real good chance. But after that moment it was Caley Thistle who looked like getting the decisive winner. It was Rooney again who hit the woodwork again with a fierce strike from a lovely through ball from Foran. Substitute Nick Ross was next to play Rooney through onto goal and the striker again beat Gallacher but was again denied by the wood work with the face of the post denying him this time. It looked like it was not going to be Inverness' day. Finally Rooney scored the elusive goal with 5 minutes to play. A Long ball from Tuffey was flicked on by Doran and his flick on found Rooney who controlled the ball so brilliantly before smashing the ball into the top corner. That looked like it would be the winner but there was still time for Ex Caley Jags striker Craig Dargo to miss a glorious chance to get a priceless equaliser. As it was, Caley Thistle picked up three more points in the quest for 50 points. It also confirmed us as 7th place as it is mathematically impossible for anybody to overtake us now which is a great achievement for the club. As for St Mirren they are in major trouble now with their healthy gap over Hamilton now diminished to 3 points with two games to play. Cheers ginger, great minds think alike.
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