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tm4tj

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  1. tm4tj

    Knee Jerkers

    At least it provoked a sensible post from you. I must have been on holiday on the moon then. Proffesional decision, of course it was a professional decision. The depleted team was only partly due to squad changes to 'rest' some players. The rest of the changes were down to injuries. I look at it this way. If he had gone hell for leather to stay in this competition and lost or knackered two or three of our top players, with spl points up for grabs three days later against one of our main rivals, and a more achievable goal, is it not prudent to take the foot off the gas a little. Of course there is the gulf in class that money can buy. A team assembled from fat cheques should really cuff a team of bits and pieces. We were not only thrashed by the fact that our team was weakened by both injury and tactics, but by a far superior team quality wise, and that is hard to say. As far as glory hunting is concerned, I would still be following my boyhood team of Hearts if that were the case.........not much glory there either, I'll stick to my season ticket thanks at my local club. Unfortunately filling the clubs pockets with money is practically everything. No money, no club. We tend to run on a shoestring, hence the Niculae fiasco being restrictive within our budgets. If you had read my post elsewhere, can't be bothered looking, you would not have needed to ask the question. Last year was the most enjoyable I can remember, not for the bank balance of the club though, and another season or two in the first would probably have seen us slip into mediocrity. The players on the park on wednesday are all big boys. If beaten by quality, then it's no disgrace. Celtic and Rangers should be doing this to teams most weeks. And as far as Butcher preserving himself, do you think Ferguson gets the same accusations at Man U. They are all at it. The competition lends itself to this type of situations. Had it been the scottish cup then I am sure our full team of fit players would have been on duty, however, staying up is the most important factor. Relegation.........we had a tremendous wake in the Innes when we got relegated, the place was awash with singing and chanting. Enjoy the patronising, you seem to excel at it yourself.
  2. Stunning piece of literature.
  3. Maryhill has surfaced since the Celtic doing and his report is now on the home page, as is the St Mirren preview.
  4. Back to the bread & butter this weekend with another trip to the Central belt. After the one set whitewash from Celtic in the CIS Cup, Inverness fans will be hoping for better things in Paisley in what could be a six pointer. ICT looked as bedraggled as an apathetic Andy Murray as their body language gave it away at Parkhead. Some of this down to injuries, the rest was down to manager Terry Butcher's generosity to give some players a break. The ICT expansive injury list Lee Cox has become the latest victim on the treatment table after a serious looking studs up challenge from the Korean Ki Sung-Yeung, in the Parkhead debacle. Early signs are that Butcher will be without the tenacious midfielder for a possible six weeks, (ligament damage). This was the last thing that Butcher needed coming back to the SPL fixtures and possibly vindicates his decision to rest some players at Parkhead. Let's start from the back, both full backs Kevin McCann and Kenny Gillet are injured along with ex-Buddy Chris Innes. The afore mentioned Cox is definitely out, as is Gil Blumenshtein, although he is back in light training. Danni Sanchez has missed the last two games after starring as a substitute against Hibernian. Add to that list, players like Jonny Hayes, Richie Foran and Stuart Golabek who are just returning to fitness after missing pre-season, then you can see why Mr Butcher was over cautious in midweek. So, who will play for ICT? Ryan Esson will be back at his No1 position with Proctor, Tokely, Munro, and A N Other at left back. Holding midfield will have a more settled look with Russell Duncan surely partnering Stuart Duff in the absence of Coxy. The forward midfielders will have a more familiar look about it with Hayes, Odhiambo and Ross providing for Adam Rooney. Foran is working back to full fitness but it would be harsh to remove Nick Ross after the youngster has shown a much improved workrate over the last few weeks. Left back: Now that has been a problem position for some time. We have had Hastings, Djebi Zadi, Golabek, Tokely, Shinnie, McBain, Gillet and Tom Dick & Harry playing there, but nobody has been able to lay claim to the jesey until Kenny Gillet came along. Now that he is also injured we have a dilemma. Maybe it's time to bite the bullet and give Roy McBain a run. The injuries this season has highlighted the reasons for strength in depth, something fairly new to Inverness who are now working on the bare minimum. Old Buddies St Mirren are in the same mini league as Inverness and this game will no doubt be a keenly contested match. One player that both sets of fans look forward to seeing is Ross Tokely. Ross and St Mirren go back a long way and even in our last SPL season he was getting some stick from the Buddies after scoring the decisive goal in a 1-2 victory for Inverness. Alas it was all in vain as Saints unexpectedly beat Falkirk away from home in the next game and we ultimately crashed into the first division when Falkirk came calling in Inverness. One bright light at Paisley came from an unlikely source. On a day resembling a Christmas card scene in February 2004, Darran Thomson scored the winner in a Scottish Cup tie. Who would have thought that. Davie's views are similar........... The thought of another trip to Glasvegas on a bus is enough to make my legs and bladder stop working, especially after the comprehensive hallumphing dished out to us on Wednesday at "paradise", when our reserves were outclassed by about twenty million or so quid as well as six goals. And yet, what was obvious was that this was the big game all week. Last week's report said it: crucial game, six pointer, must win, pick your own euphemism. At 4.45 on Saturday we have got be coming off the park at Paisley 3 points to the good, or the storm clouds will slowly start to gather. It's getting to that stage already. Paisley's new ground, already referred to universally as the "methadome" is a quaint affair seemingly made of Meccano (or Lego) and it's not been the best of homes for St. Mirren since they sold Love Street. It's a good place to start winning. St. Mirren as we know and rejoice at, are in the second bottom slot in the SPL, although we'll gloss over the fact that they are on the same points as us. They seemed destined for a long hard season this year, having sacked their manager (Gus MacPherson) and losing the quality out of their squad (Dorman, Ross, Mehmet etc.) Replacing the above with an en masse injection from Cowdenbeath seemed less than wise, and grumblings from New St. Mirren Park are evident even at this early stage in the season. Why else would you ban the newspapers? If they are poor for morale, I'd ban their access to Pie & Bovril as quick as you can Saints, or you'll be jumping off bridges. The record this year is remarkably similar to ours: D,L,W,L,L with the last loss at St. Johnstone being a particular sickener. They also have injury problems, which will prevent the reappearance of one Craig Dargo, and a calf tear will sideline Steven Thomson for up to six weeks. These two injury blows are offset by the news that Paul McQuade is ready to get back into contention, along with Paul McGowan after his ban. Likewise at Inverness, it would probably be easier to list who is fit for ICT rather than who aint. Lee Cox followed a host of others into unavailability after being launched skywards with an almost broken ankle on Wednesday night, ligament damage apparently. So, forget Gillet, Blumenstein, Innes, Sanchez and McCann as well and you can see the extent of our woes, reflected in the L, W, L, D, L so far. Butcher must be buying up every piece of cotton wool he can find. Formations for this one are likely to be dictated by who's fit (Tuffey for left back?!), but we will see the return of Esson, Rooney, Odhiambo and Foran after Wednesday and that quartet would make a difference to any side. This one will be tighter. Honours are pretty even over the piece, with 5 wins for ICT, 4 for St. Mirren and 3 draws. The word "draw" seems to feature heavily in my mind right now, but you never know. The match referee is Stephen Finnie. tm4tj prediction I will be sitting on the fence for this one as well and a draw after the humiliation of Parkhead will be no mean feat given the restricted squad at our disposal. With our defence at sixes and sevens, (and that's not just the goals against column), we could be in for a torrid afternoon, but I am looking for the midfield to share the burden and take the weight off the back four and hopefully minimise the opportunities for the Saints to run at us. So, my mind is set on a scoring draw.
  5. tm4tj

    Knee Jerkers

    Some folk need to look at the bigger picture. ICT have bigger fish to fry, hence a side weakened not only by injuries, but also by selection. The CIS Cup is so important, you can't even qualify for Europe from it anymore and unless you get to the final you get pennies for your troubles. In fact, yesterday for the quarter final draw, only four of the eight clubs sent representatives along which speaks volumes to me. It is maybe unfair on the Co-op, who have put in around £1m over the year, but the competition unfortunately means diddley squat. Scarlet, I fear you need to catch up with reality before it's too late buddy, as you seem to be living a fairy tale. Of course we would have rejoiced had we beaten Celtic, is that not what happens. I'm outa here. See this Linkypoo from the Scotsman.
  6. Defensive midfield? Are you asking about our defence
  7. Thats all we need, another crocked player. On the plus side, it gets Russell Duncan back in the starting eleven. Might be able to forge a solid partnership with Duffers.
  8. Apart from the Stokes poke whick went through his hands?
  9. That one made me chortle out loudly Beastie
  10. tm4tj

    Knee Jerkers

    I don't have a problem with us being relegated, last season was the best ever in my opinion, I thoroughly enjoyed it. I doubt that the ICT accountant would share my views though. Aye Johnboy, it certainly woke a few slumbering posters, and highlights the inadequacies of others.
  11. I never realised that we had so many knee jerkers on our website. FFS we have just been thrashed in a small time cup which we had no hope of winning and all hell lets loose. What the hell is wrong with you lot. The ones to feel sorry for are those that made the journey to watch this. Then again, surely a blind man could see what sort of line up was coming, no? Playing against a multi-million pound team full of international players, with freebies and cast offs is asking for trouble. So what? We lost, well got thrashed, laugh it off. We have had so many good times, we were bound to hit the wall. Yes we won the first division at a canter, eventually, but this is a whole new bag of worms. We will do well to stay in the SPL this season, but having a go at everything because we lost to Celtic is, well, it's a joke. This is the team who beat us 0-1 in the meaningful encounter, not such a bad thrashing then was it? If you have been jerking your knee, then please reply below.
  12. Good post jrict. Sorry I can't give you a green dot, Mahonio managed to steal all my votes before I read this.
  13. I only see five of the starting eleven that should start on Saturday. Part of that is due to injuries of course. This should be the first 'eleven' in my opinion if they were all fit etc. Esson McCann Tokely Munro Gillet Duff Duncan Hayes Odhiambo Foran Rooney I'll rephrase it, only four starters last night, the reast were squad players.
  14. tm4tj

    BUTCHER MUST GO!

    Spoilsport
  15. Worse things happen at sea...........well almost worse.
  16. Geezo, it's not important.
  17. Oh goody, we are winning on goals conceded.
  18. pffffftttt diddy cup.
  19. Could probably be our biggest hammering ever tonight. Save the big boys for the bread and butter at the weekend.
  20. Aye, well done again Andrew, some favourable comments from the site visitors..........that's a first!
  21. HT: 2-0 FT: 4-0 1st scorer ICT: Odhiambo 1st scorer Opp: Maloney Crowd: 22473
  22. Oh..........this thread is a bit like the articles, nobody reads them
  23. I can't pin a year down as to when I started using the internet sites. Maybe 2002 or 3ish. I have met some great folk through this site, and the sportsnetwork site. I am a middle of the road poster most times, and for my sins I was asked if I would be able to help out with the moderating. It probably boiled down to the fact I was on the site more often than not, so was around when some bad boys came along. It's a bit like playing cricket for the 2nd Eleven............you get a game if you have a car. It has been an entertaining few years and the pluses outway the minuses. I have also been frogmarched tasked into chief editor...........It's great telling schoolteachers what to write. Hopefully, now that we have a few guys offering their services, you can enjoy some varied previews/reports, that always keeps the site fresh. Anyway, well done Scotty & Don for keeping the site going. I only have to add some sentences, you guys have life sentences.
  24. Back to the field of dreams. CIS Cup business on Wednesday evening as Inverness head to the east end of Glasgow to take on table toppers Celtic. Neil Lennon's side are neck and neck with Rangers in the league while Inverness are struggling to find any consistency, and a spate of injuries to key players is stretching Terry Butcher's squad to the limits. Hopes of a cup shock will always be on the cards, although this seems a distant thought after Inverness crashed 1-3 at home to Hearts, and leaves Inverness pointless at home this season. Settle down, get the kettle filled up, put the kids to bed, and close the curtains, Alternative Maryhill has produced another explicit full length feature before the teams do battle......... read on. Celtic v Inverness Caledonian Thistle, CIS Insurance Cup, Wednesday September 22nd: Match Preview On Wednesday evening, Caley Thistle go to Celtic Park on CIS Cup duty, a little over ten and a half years since the club’s first and most famous match against the Glasgow side. It is a symptom of ICT’s success in the decade that followed that famous Scottish Cup victory, that a trip to face Celtic is now regarded among supporters as a far more routine event than it was in February 2000; yet after a season out of the top flight, and with a floodlit midweek cup tie in the east end of Glasgow having its own special resonances for Invernessians, it is hard not to feel an extra frisson of excitement as the game approaches. Previous fixtures Despite Inverness Caledonian Thistle perhaps being fixed permanently in some people’s minds as ‘conquerors of Celtic’ after the headlines of February 2000, the reality is that of all ICT’s league opponents, no club has taken a higher proportion of the available points than Celtic. Of the sixteen SPL matches between the sides, Celtic have won twelve and Caley Thistle only one, with three having been drawn. Cup ties are, however, a different matter: the teams have met on cup business four times and the honours are currently even. In addition to the famous 3-1 victory achieved by Steve Paterson’s team, John Robertson led Caley Thistle to what was arguably as great an upset when the first division side beat Martin O’Neill’s eventual UEFA Cup finalists in the quarter final of the 2003 Scottish Cup. The 1-0 victory in Inverness, courtesy of Dennis Wyness’s goal, was carved out against a team that had just beaten Liverpool in Europe, and while some pointed to a post-European hangover and the resting of several regulars as reasons for Celtic’s defeat, it should be remembered that Celtic’s starting line-up was still composed almost entirely of full internationalists, including Henrik Larsson and current Celtic manager Neil Lennon. The game which finally brought Celtic’s only Scottish Cup victory against ICT to date also looked for a long time as if it would finish in Caley Thistle’s favour. Graeme Bayne put the home side ahead after eighteen minutes, and thought he had added a second late in the first half, until realising it had been ruled out as offside. Celtic threatened sporadically, but IC T held on until the eighty-ninth minute, when Steven Pressley scored the equaliser with a header. Within two minutes the game had been turned on its head when Kenny Miller scored a late winner. There has been only one match between the clubs in the CIS Insurance Cup competition, and the omens for Caley Thistle from this game are not particularly good. The sides met at Celtic Park on Wednesday 23rd October 2002, with Celtic running out 4-2 winners. Understandably, this game has been overshadowed by the two Scottish Cup wins for Inverness that came on either side of it: Celtic supporters, far happier with the club under Martin O’Neill than they had been with John Barnes’ stewardship, probably felt content that the ghost of the earlier Cup defeat had been laid to some extent, albeit in a lesser competition, while few Inverness supporters realistically expected history to repeat itself. Yet almost three thousand of the faithful still travelled from Inverness and witnessed a typically bold performance from Steve Paterson’s team. Celtic took the lead through Shaun Maloney in just four minutes, but if the Celtic supporters expected Caley Thistle to roll over after that, they were mistaken. Paul Ritchie equalised on the ten-minute mark and ICT continued to try to attack and play football throughout the game. John Hartson and Alan Thompson scored again for Celtic before half time, and Hartson scored again on the hour to make it 4-1, but in 71 minutes Dennis Wyness pulled one back, and my memory of that final 20 minutes is of one of the most exciting, spirited and frustrating performances I have witnessed from an ICT side, with Liam Keogh denied a decent penalty claim and a Bobby Mann header cleared off the line in the final minute. Even Shaun Maloney, who won the man-of-the-match award, admitted that the Celtic players felt they were lucky to have hung on for the victory by the final whistle. It is unlikely, unfortunately, that as many Caley Thistle supporters will make the journey to Glasgow this Wednesday, but those who do attend will be hoping that they see similar spirit and endeavour, and just a little more of the good fortune that could take the team through. Current Form Five games into the SPL season, ICT supporters’ emotions and expectations for the season are likely to be as mixed as the performances of the team. Despite what was ultimately a well-deserved win for Celtic in the opening game of the season, the first quarter of that match provided hope that Terry Butcher’s first division champions could create chances and cause problems for sides in the SPL. The superb counter-attacking performance that brought a 4-0 victory away to Dundee United seemed to justify that optimism, yet that game was followed by a flat performance in a 1-0 home defeat to Hamilton. A point away to Hibernian in a 1-1 draw was a respectable result, yet neither team really seemed capable of taking hold of the game, while in Saturday’s 3-1 home defeat to Hearts, some encouraging signs, in the performances of young midfielder Nick Ross and recent signing Stuart Duff, were negated by the inability of the Caley Thistle defence to cope with the pace of Hearts’ attackers. There is no doubt that the team’s current defensive frailties are to some extent exacerbated by the injuries to full backs Kevin McCann and Kenny Gillet, who started the season promisingly; the return from injury of Richie Foran should add more strength and variety to the team in an attacking sense; and hopes remain high that Rooney, Hayes and Odhiambo can succeed at SPL level. Yet ICT supporters will undoubtedly feel more relaxed when the team has managed to string together two or three good results for the first time this season. There would be no better place to start than Celtic Park. Celtic’s start to the season was dominated by the team’s European exits, first from Champions’ League qualifying at the hands of SC Braga, then from the Europa League after a 4-0 humiliation in Utrecht. Questions were asked about whether Neil Lennon’s lack of managerial experience was showing through on the big occasions and about whether the players recruited to replace those remaining from Tony Mowbray’s short-lived reign were of sufficient quality. Yet in the league, Celtic have made a near-perfect start, with away wins at Inverness, Motherwell and Kilmarnock and two impressive home victories, 4-0 against St Mirren and 3-0 against Hearts. Neil Lennon’s new-look team might have failed in Europe, but plenty of his players are beginning to catch the eye domestically: of the new signings, central defender Danijel Majstorovich looks to be exactly the sort of big, ugly player that the foundations of Martin O’Neill’s Celtic teams were built on, while Baram Kayal and Efrain Juarez have added class in midfield; up front, youth team graduate James Forrest, the rejuvenated Shaun Maloney and previously-overlooked Paddy McCourt provide more creativity than has been seen in many recent Celtic teams. Yet after last season’s defeat to Ross County and this season’s early European defeats, still the question remains: can Neil Lennon’s Celtic win in cup competitions? Team News Speaking to the Sunday Herald, Neil Lennon promised that he would be ‘putting a strong team out’ for this fixture. However, with the strength in depth Celtic enjoy, it is difficult to predict how many changes Lennon will make from the team that lined up against Kilmarnock on Sunday. The same defence has started Celtic’s last three league games, conceding only one goal, but there has been more rotation in the attacking areas, with Shaun Maloney, Daryl Murphy, Paddy McCourt, Anthony Stokes, James Forrest and Georgios Samaras all featuring at points. Summer signing Gary Hooper, so prolific for Scunthorpe last season, may also come into contention after missing the start of the season through injury, having come through a closed-doors game last week. ICT supporters will hope that McCourt, and Scott Brown, both taken off injured against Kilmarnock, will miss out, but at the time of writing there has been no news on that front from Celtic. ***Latest Celtic News***As Alternative Maryhill had both fingers crossed, Scott Brown, Paddy McCourt and James Forrest will miss out, with Joos Hoiveld being left to the last minute to see if he can shake off a training knock. After an almost injury-free year in the first division, ICT’s players have been making up for non-lost time at the start of this season. Still definitely ruled out for Wednesday’s game are Gil Blumenshtein and left back Kenny Gillet, whose absence was sorely felt against Hearts. Danni Sanchez, who made such a promising late appearance against Hibernian, also missed the Hearts games through a knee injury, although pre-match reports that he hoped to be fit for that game suggest that the injury is not too serious and that he could still be in contention for an appearance against Celtic. On-loan right back Kevin McCann was also reported to be close to fitness for the Hearts game, despite ultimately missing out; given the ongoing absence of Gillet and the fragility of the defence against Hearts, McCann’s return against Celtic would be very welcome. Undoubtedly the most welcome news for Inverness supporters, however, was the return of club captain Richie Foran as a substitute against Hearts. Assuming he came through the game without a bad reaction, he must be in contention to start against Celtic. Yet with a game against St Mirren that must be considered the priority coming up on Saturday, Terry Butcher faces a difficult decision in choosing his team to face Celtic: does he field what he considers to be his strongest line-up, which would almost certainly include Foran, or does he shuffle the pack and give players who have so far been on the fringes of the first team their chances? All will be revealed on Wednesday. ***From the Inverness Camp***Danni Sanchez is still struggling and there is a possibility of Shane Sutherland and Graeme Shinnie making the starting eleven. Prediction Celtic will almost certainly be set up to attack from the off on Wednesday evening, and this could well suit Inverness players such as Jonny Hayes and Eric Odhiambo, whose effectiveness on the counter-attack was amply displayed against Dundee United. I can certainly see ICT scoring on Wednesday evening; reluctantly, however, with the Inverness defence still not at full strength, I predict Celtic will score more and reverse the scoreline that first put us on the footballing map. I sincerely hope I’m wrong. Celtic 3 – Inverness Caledonian Thistle 1 If you have read this far, you will probably need a lie down..........thanks Alternative Maryhill. **TICKET UPDATE** Tickets are still available for our 3rd round CIS Cup game against Celtic this Wednesday at Park Head. Tickets can be purchased in person from the stadium, by telephone by calling 01463 227451 or via the internet by visiting www.ictfc.co.uk. Tickets will be on sale in Inverness until 12pm on Wednesday so hurry and get your ticket TODAY!! Tickets purchased over the phone or via the internet from Monday (20.09.10) will be taken to Celtic Park and will be available for collection from the ICT minibus in the main car park. In addition to this, the ICTFC Supporters Trust will take a supply of tickets to the game for purchase from the minibus. However, we do heavily recommend tickets are bought in advance from the Club to avoid disappointment. Prices are as follows: Adult - £15 Season ticket holder - £10 Concession - £5 (over 65 or under 16)
  25. Hey everybody.......................................and Johndo. Alternative Maryhill has produced another epic tale with a fabulous preview for the CIS cup game against Celtic. Take a looky, it's on the Main Page Cheers dears
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