BACK
when I were nowt bu' a lad, the sporting rivalry between
Ayr and Kilmarnock was unique in Scotland. Ayrshire's two biggest
toons didn't just go at each other on the fitba park – there was
mutual antagonism also on the rugby and cricket pitches. No other two
neighbouring towns in Scotland faced each other, at the highest
domestic level, in the three sports.
Sadly,
the Kilmarnock rugby and cricket clubs have since fallen by the
wayside somewhat, and, with the demise of the Ayrshire Cup, the fitba
teams have not met regularly for almost a decade.
But,
that long wait will end at Somerset Park, tomorrow night, when the
Honest Men welcome Killie in a Betfred Cup tie, which will be
televised live on BT Sport TV. I am sure Chris Sutton will enjoy his
trip to Ayr, as an old rivalry resumes.
Jackie McInally - played for both Ayr United and Kilmarnock
At
one point in the 1980s and 1990s, I was: “the only neutral in
Ayrshire”, since my Saturday football beat involved reporting from
Somerset Park one week, and Rugby Park the next. OK, the other hacks
were well-aware, for me my second team was Kilmarnock – in
Ayrshire, your local junior side ALWAYS comes first – but, for all
my insistence that: Brown; Richmond and Watson; Beattie, Toner and
Kennedy; Stewart, McInally, Kerr, Black and Muir was the greatest XI
ever to take the field in Ayrshire senior football, I still had a
guid opinion on the abilities of the likes of Ian McAllister, “Dixie”
Ingram, Eric Morris, Henry Templeton, John Sludden and Hughie Sproat
in a United shirt. That said, “Rambo” was only ever half the
player his faither, “Big Jackie” was.
As did his son Alan "Rambo" McInally
The
diehards in the press box, Mike Wilson of the Ayrshire Post, and Alex
Milligan of the Kilmarnock Standard, struggled to work-out how I
could split my affections down the middle, but, as I pointed out –
the afore-mentioned McInallys, Jim McSherry, Jim Fleeting, Robert
Connor, Robert Reilly and Hughie Burns, to name a handful off the top
of my head, found no problem in turning-out for both sides.
So,
I will be an interested observer tomorrow night – on TV,
unfortunately, due to a prior engagement. Mind you, that will not
prevent me from giving an opinion – I just feel, hard-nosed
Ayrshire-born pros such as Kris Boyd and Kirk Broadfoot will rather
die than see the other half win, so, I expect league status to be
maintained and an away win. But, that said, it is never a good idea
to forecast the outcome of a Scottish sorting derby – these, after
all, are the 21st
century successors to the old clan battles of the Killing Times and
before.
The
pre-game craic in the Wee Windaes will be good tomorrow.
SPEAKING
of Kilmarnock and of Ayrshire football, news came
through from Australia earlier this week of the passing of former
Killie defender Billy Cook. A Valley boy, from Galston, Billy
captained a Scotland Schools team which included future Hibs and
England centre forwardJoe Baker, future Rangers and Liverpool
left-half Billy Stevenson and Sammy Reid, who scored that goal for
Berwick Rangers against Glasgow Rangers.
Billy Cook - back row, third from right, in the Australia team which faced North Korea
Billy
signed for Killie, but, had to be content with just the odd game,
when Matt Watson was injured, before heading off to Australia, where
he played nine games for his adopted country, he is Socceroo #176.
Two of these games were against the Scotland World Tour XI in 1967,
where he marked a certain Alex Ferguson.
His
last years were blighted by dementia, but, Billy enjoyed a good life
in Australia and was always welcomed at Rugby Park on his trips home.
He is one of the few Scots to have played against Scotland in an
international. Australia awarded full caps for the two games against
Scotland, the SFA has still to uprate the games to full-cap status.
Billy also played against the legendary North Koreans in the
qualifying rounds for the 1966 World Cup, when the Australian manager
was future Celtic boss Dr Joe Venglos.
I
SEE the controversy continues to rumble on about
Rangers'
EBTs and the fall-out from “the Big
Tax Case”. As I have said before – had they known EBTs were a
no-no, Rangers would have found some other way to pay their
expensively-recruited players, trying to say they cheated by bringing
them in will never work.
But,
there are grounds for some sort of retrospective sanctions on the
grounds of the so-called side letters written to the players.
However, to take that action will require the SFA to acknowledge,
they did not properly consider their own rules when dealing with the
case.
Now,
common on guys, when have the SFA EVER admitted to getting something
wrong? It simply will not happen. I will be amazed if Rangers are
ever retrospectively punished for breaking the rules.
What's
done is done, forget it and move on, because I expect Hell to freeze
over before any SFA blazer, past or present, puts his hand up and
says: “We were in the wrong there”.
I recall reading of an Ayshire derby in the 60's at Ayr. As a Killie player stepped back and lifted the ball above his head in front of the wee wall a hand reached out and grabbed him. He fell to his doom as the polis rushed into aid. Shame it's not on film.
ReplyDeleteYou are correct (sort of). Ross Mathie was the Killie player. He actually reached over the wall to pick-up the ball and was dragged into the crowd head first.
ReplyDeleteWhen did Jackie McInally play with Ayr United as your photo caption of him says?
ReplyDelete