1992 Scottish Challenge Cup final

The 1992 Scottish Challenge Cup final, also known as the B&Q Cup final for sponsorship reasons, was an association football match between Morton and Hamilton Academical on 13 December 1992 at Love Street in Paisley.[2] It was the third final of the Scottish Challenge Cup since it was first organised in 1990 to celebrate the centenary of the Scottish Football League.

1992 Scottish Challenge Cup final
Event1992–93 Scottish Challenge Cup
Date13 December 1992
VenueLove Street, Paisley
RefereeJ. J. Timmons (Kilwinning)[1]
Attendance7,391[1]
1991
1993

The match was Morton's first national cup final in 29 years since the 1963 Scottish League Cup final;[3] whilst it was Hamilton Academicals's second consecutive appearance in the final of the tournament having won the 1991 competition the previous season. The tournament was contested by clubs below the Scottish Premier Division, with both finalists from the First Division.

Rowan Alexander scored first for Morton after 11 minutes but Gary Clark equalised after only one minute for Hamilton Academical. Shortly before half-time, Clark scored his second goal to give Hamilton Academical a 2–1 lead and midway through the second half Chris Hillcoat extended their lead to 3–1. With seven minutes remaining Alexander scored his second goal for Morton but Hamilton Academical held on to win 3–2 to become the first team to successfully defend the Scottish Challenge Cup.[1][4]

Route to the final

edit
Round Opposition Score
First round Forfar Athletic (a) 5–2
Second round Brechin City (a) 2–1
Quarter-final Kilmarnock (a) 2–1
Semi-final Montrose (h) 3–1 (a.e.t.)

Morton

edit

The first round draw paired Morton with Forfar Athletic at Station Park with the away team winning 5–2[5] The second round was another away game in Angus at Brechin City, Morton won 2–1[5] to progress to the quarter-finals. A third away game of the tournament saw Morton travel to Kilmarnock and winning 2–1.[5] The reward for reaching the semi-final was a first home game of the tournament with the opposition being Montrose. Morton won 3–1 after extra time,[5] in the process reaching the Scottish Challenge Cup final for the first time.[5]

Hamilton Academical

edit
Round Opposition Score
First round Dumbarton (a) 3–0
Second round Albion Rovers (a) 2–0
Quarter-final Berwick Rangers (h) 5–2
Semi-final Meadowbank Thistle (h) 1–1 (a.e.t.)
(2–1 pens.)

Hamilton Academical travelled Dumbarton in the first round with the away team producing a 3–0 victory.[5] The second round draw saw Hamilton travel to Albion Rovers, in another away game for Accies with the team winning 2–0[5] and a second clean sheet to progress to the quarter-final. The reward for reaching the quarter-final was a home game against Berwick Rangers at Douglas Park with the home team emerging 5–2 winners.[5] The semi-final opposition was Meadowbank Thistle, and a second game at home with Hamilton Academical winning on penalties after a 1–1 draw after extra time,[5] to book a place in the Scottish Challenge Cup final for the second time.[5]

Match

edit

Summary

edit

Details

edit
Morton2–3Hamilton Academical
Alexander   11', 83' Report Hillcoat  
Clark   12',  
Attendance: 7,391

Teams

edit
MORTON:
GK   David Wylie
DF   Derek Collins
DF   Mark Pickering
MF   Stuart Rafferty
DF   Martin Doak
DF   Dougie Johnstone
FW   Alex Mathie
MF   Alan Mahood  
FW   Rowan Alexander
MF   Derek McInnes
FW   Jim Tolmie
Substitutes:
MF   John Gahagan  
MF   Ian McDonald
Manager:
  Allan McGraw
HAMILTON ACADEMICAL:
GK   Allan Ferguson
DF   Chris Hillcoat
DF   Colin Miller
MF   Andy Millen
DF   Jim Weir
DF   Craig Napier
MF   Michael Waters  
FW   Colin Harris
FW   Colin Cramb  
MF   Gary Clark
MF   Paul McDonald
Substitutes:
DF 12   Paul McKenzie  
FW 14   Kenny Ward  
Manager:
  Iain Munro

Match rules

  • 90 minutes.
  • 30 minutes of extra-time if necessary.
  • Penalty shoot-out if scores still level.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Bell's Cup, scottishfootballleague.com. Scottish Football League. 2 November 2005. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  2. ^ "Scottish League Challenge Cup Finals". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 21 June 2011.
  3. ^ McKinlay, Hugh. "Weir tells former captain 'me first'", Herald Scotland, 12 December 1992. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  4. ^ Kelly, Ian (2010). Hamilton Accies 25 Year Roller Coaster Ride, p. 91, 95., Paragon Publishing, Rothersthorpe. ISBN 190761110X.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Scottish Challenge Cup, statto.com. Retrieved 2011-06-18.