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Scottish
League Division 3 |
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Queen's
Park
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3
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Weatherston,
Quinn, Ferry
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Elgin
City
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0
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Saturday,
October 21, 2006
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Last time Homer was in our spiritual home, Scotland were
giving it to France, big-time. What a wonderful day, and night.
Sunday morning could have been a tad less painful, mind you
(I blame Gulliver and the Big Bar Steward).
But
what the heck, a small price to pay for witnessing history
first hand, and few and far between are those opportunities
these days.
Homer is mature enough - no, he is, really - to remember when
history-making days at Hampden were more common-place; at
least it seemed that way in one's youth, like sun-kissed summers
and caramel cake and pink custard.
Real Madrid v Eintracht Frankfurt, by common consent the greatest-ever
match at this great stadium; John Greig's piledriver to shock
Italy (watched from the middle of the west terracing with
school pal Innes Campbell, who realised too late he suffered
from claustrophobia); Celtic beating the might of Don Revie's
Leeds United; Kenny Dalglish nutmegging Ray Clemence; Tam
Forsyth's crunching tackle on Mick Channon; Peter Buchanan's
love affair with referees; Ross Caven's crunching tackles
on everybody.
Gulliver was perhaps even more fortunate; he was a ballboy
during some of the aforementioned. Homer thought Gulliver
had made a comeback when France coach Raymond Domenech complained
about the ''boy balls'' after Thierry and Co had been put
to the broadsword. As Walter Smith confirmed later, the Queen's
Park ballboys and our delightful ballgirl Ms Gordon were "terrific''.
Couldn't have been old Gulliver, then.
But I digress (and don't complain, I could yet bore you with
tales of the finest team in Europe at the time, the Lisbon
Lions, conceding three goals to the original Hoops at Parkhead;
or Malky Mackay's stunning scoring debut; or the countless
opponents Malky stunned; where do you think the term Malkied
came from, for goodness sake?).
But those highlights were not at Hampden, and again I digress.
We were discussing 1-0 against France, the return of the Hampden
Roar, the confirmation if any were needed that this special
place is the only true home of our national game.You want
atmosphere?
Which brings me to Brian Irvine, a fine, upstanding man and
the manager of today's opponents Elgin City.
A rugged central defender in his day - with the accent on
rugged, if Homer may say so and Brian will permit - he had
the honour of striding these cherished acres with Aberdeen
and with Scotland in the early 1990s. He didn't need our ''rebirth''
against France to know what it means to play here. And it
is that knowledge he says he will try to impart to his players
today by way of inspiration.
(So you're finally getting to today's action, then?)
Homer is tired typing it, and you dear reader - assuming you
are still with me - are equally tired of hearing it, but every
team gets a lift playing at Hampden Park (even France; they
got a lift to the airport).
This week Irvine, an erudite man, was making just that point.
It was on obvious plank on which to base a team talk - like
pinning on the dressing room wall the derogatory newspaper
remarks of some future opponent - but when you are trying
to motivate a team that only last week collected their first
win of the season and, whisper it, are even below the Shire,
well, nothing ventured, eh?
But does he realise this is Queen's Park he's talking about?
Does he appreciate that there are many in this parish not
convinced that the granny has been lifted by Elgin's first
victory of the season last week, achieved with a 5-0 thumping
of the said Shire.
So Queen's cannot now extend to this season's early also-rans,
namely Elgin, our traditional gift of a first three points
which is normally reserved for Shire. Thank goodness for that,
we all cried. But wait. Elgin haven't won an away game all
season. Cue fresh panic.
So what's the problem? We're on the back of a 3-0 win over
league leaders East Fife and a victory at Arbroath. The problem
is the game sandwiched in between - a defeat at, whisper it,
the Shire. You know, maybe we should sign Frodo Baggins, at
least he could control the Shire.
What Billy Stark is trying to control within his young squad
is the ability, as he says in today's programme, to bridge
the gap between winning and losing.
We can beat any team in the league, but you have to maintain
that form for 90 minutes - every game.
The win at Arboath was terrific, and all the more commendable
because it was achieved without three main strikers - Weatherston,
Carroll and Dunn.
Billy Stark enthused about the contribution of Richard Bowers
and today, with Weatherston back but Ronald joining Carroll
and Dunn on the sidelines, he teamed young Richard up with
Weatherston. A pacy front line and no mistake, but would they
get the service to allow their pace to punish the Elgin rearguard?
That was the only change from the Gayfield victors, but the
players faced very differerent conditions. Where Gayfield
had been bright and breezy, Hampden was grey and grotty. Not
the kind of day keepers relish, and one that called for safe
hands.
We had to wait just 12 seconds to see the first glimpse of
Bowers' as he sneaked onto a ball from weatherston and was
promptly upended as he left Easton in his wake. The free-kick
came to less than nothing, sadly.
The absurdity of the new offside rule was suitably demonstrated
after just two minutes. Easton was around four miles offside
as the ball came though, but as he made no attempt to play
it, he was "not active". He soon became active when
Johnston's knockback left him in acres of spece, but thankfully
his shot went wide.
With three minutes on the clock, Weatherston marked his return
in fine style. Heeacted first to the through ball and cool
as you like lobbed the large figure of Renton.
The slippy conditions made sure chances were going to be created
ta both ends and Queen's then had to survive a few edgy moments,
most noticable when Campbell rattled Cairns' crossbar from
the corner of the box.
Then it was our turn, and two glorious chances made and missed
within a few seconds just on the 10 minute mark.
First up was a glorious flowing move involving Paton and Kettlewell,
who laid it on a plate for Bowers. Sadly the finish failed
to match the lead up play. Paton then slid a delightful ball
to Kettlewell who steadied himself, took aim, and fired right
into the side net.
Queen's were looking potent going forward, but Homer was beginning
to worry about the missed opportunities. There was always
the feeling that Martin Johnston wouldn't be so generous if
a similar opportunity presented itself at the other end.
Despite the nagging fears, one couldn't help but admire the
quality of some of the pass-and-go we were producing. Dare
Homer say Les Bleus would have been hard pushed to supply
prettier patterns?
Ironically, a bit of the old route one gave us the next chance
after 18 minutes. A punt upfield, a header on by Kettlewell
and Weatherston's pace took him in on goal. His left foot
finish was well placed, but keeper Renton did just enough
to deny him.
The pressure was building, and Reilly was next to lose out
when his powerful drive after a corner was blocked on its
way to goal.
Cairns showed sure hands when he clutched a nasty effort from
Dempsie, but still the tide flowed towards the Elgin goal.
Young Paul Paton was showing the best and worst of Queen's
all at the same time. His energy and ball-winning was exemplary,
but too often the final ball was careless in the extreme.
Our pace had won a number of free-kicks in and around the
box but we hadn't made full use of them. We squandered another
after 30 minutes when Trouten hit the wall and Quinn's follow-up
was blocked.
Homer has seen Queen's dominate before and be punished for
our failings in front of goal. But seldom have we been so
much in control with so little to show for it.
One going on six was an appropriate description of the scoreline
as Weatherston headed over from Ferry's cross on 37 minutes.
In fairness to the youngster, the wee dunt he got in the back
just as he jumped did him no favours.
Elgin won a couple of corners as they tried to get a toehold
in the game and the second one resulted in an allmighty scramble
before the ball was finally hoofed clear.
With half-time looming, the sun made it's first appearance
of the afternoon. We could only hope it was a hint of better
things to come as the game had shown worrying signs of fizzling
out.
Half-time
1-0
Elgin came out more fire up after the break, in truth they
could hardly have been as ineffective again. Queen's repelled
the early threat and were soon back making and missing chances.
Dunlop was the first culprit, heading over when he should
at least have hit the target.
Although
Elgin had picked up a couple of bookings, there had been little
sign of aggro in the game, until a little flare-up after 55
minutes. Mick Dunlop's boot was a bit high, but a foul would
have been more than enough punishment had Kaczan not reacted
angrily. Needless to say, the moment he did that, both players
went in the book.
Elgin
tried to change things with a couple of substitutions, Finigan
and Dochert replacing Moffat and Gardiner.
The
changes almost paid swift dividends when Queen's got in a
tangle at the back. Thankfully the slip went unpunished.
Steve
Canning replaced Bowers just before the hour and could have
made an immediate impact when he burst through. His drive
was firm enough, but missed the target and yet another entry
went into the could-have-been column.
Mark
Ferry was next to go close with a fine drive from distance,
then Paton made an entry into an unwelcome column, the ref's
book. The youngster was fouled, but lunged to try and make
the recovery.
He
couldn't argue about the yellow card, but neither could Elgin
complain about the referee giving the foul to Queen's for
the original infringement. And this time Paton responded in
the ideal manner swinging in a dangerous cross that Canning
headed towards goal. His effort was headed into the air by
Dickson, but Tony Quinn and David Weatherston reacted quickest
and Quinn nodded the ball home. Sixty-five minutes on the
clock and the margin was at least a bit more realistic.
Referee
Brown incurred the wrath of the home fans when he failed to
give the striker the penalty he was seeking. He survived a
couple of foul challenges before going down in the box. It
would have been a soft award, but the booking for diving was
equally harsh.
Maybe
that was on David's mind a couple of minutes later when he
chased down keeper Renton and forced the error. But with the
hard part done, he then scuffed a feeble effort back into
the grateful Elgin man's hands.
The
could-have-been column was looking a bit embarrassing by now.
And
the scoreline could have become farcical after 73 minutes
had Mark Cairns not reacted superbly to race off his line
and clear from Johnston as the big man closed in on a woeful
backpass. Queen's were so far ahead that if this was a boxing
match the referee would have stopped the bout to avoid more
punishment. But incidents like this reminded us just how quickly
it could all change.
After
missing so many good chances it was ironic that the third
goal when it came was probably the worst strike we had come
up with. Again the lead-up work was sweet, with Trouen and
Weatherston tearing the visiting defence apart down the right.
The cut-back to Ferry was also perfect, but the midfielder
got his shot all wrong and watched embarrassed as it bounced
into the ground and found its way into the corner of the net.
Seventy-nine
minutes gone; 3-0; surely even Queen's wouldn't have any problems
now?
In
truth, we cruised to the line, although we had a wee scare
when Johnston found space to get off a shot that hit the post
and bounced wide.
With
a couple of minutes to go Billy Stark brought on Tommy Murray
and Paul Cairney to replace Weatherston and Ferry.
They
had little chance to get involved before the referee brought
proceedings to a close. The result was more than satisfactory;
the football in places was a joy and the workrate produced
by every player was simply remarkable.
But,
and it's a great big but, we wont get away with missing chances
like that again.
Finally,
don't be misled by the crime count in tomorrow's papers. There
might have been eight bookings in today's game, but there
wasn't a foul worthy of the name. Homer just hopes our card
count doesn't come back to haunt us at a later stage in the
season.