1993 Scottish Challenge Cup Final

The 1993 Scottish Challenge Cup Final, also known as the B&Q Cup Final for sponsorship reasons, was an association football match between Falkirk and St Mirren on 12 December 1993 at Fir Park in Motherwell.[3] It was the fourth final of the Scottish Challenge Cup since it was first organised in 1990 to celebrate the centenary of the Scottish Football League.

1993 Scottish Challenge Cup Final
Event1993–94 Scottish Challenge Cup
Date12 December 1993
VenueFir Park, Motherwell
RefereeDouglas Hope (Erskine)[1]
Attendance13,763[2]

The match was Falkirk's first national cup final in 36 years since winning the Scottish Cup Final in 1957; whilst it was St Mirren's first in only six years since lifting the Scottish Cup in 1987. The tournament was contested by clubs below the Scottish Premier Division, with both finalists from the First Division.

The match was goalless after 45 minutes, but Falkirk took the lead two minutes into the second half with a goal from Neil Duffy and only one minute later were 2–0 up with a goal from Richard Cadette. The final goal of the game came from John Hughes, which was enough for Falkirk to win the match 3–0 and the tournament for the first time.[2]

Route to the final

Falkirk

Round Opposition Score
First round Alloa Athletic (h) 2–1
Second round Cowdenbeath (h) 3–0
Quarter-final Dunfermline Athletic (h) 4–1
Semi-final Livingston (h) 3–2

Falkirk faced neighbours Alloa Athletic at home in the first round with the home team producing a 2–1 victory.[4] The second round draw saw Cowdenbeath travel to Brockville Park, in another home game for Falkirk with the team winning 3–0[4] to progress to the quarter-final. The reward for reaching the quarter-final was a third home game of the tournament against rivals Dunfermline Athletic with The Bairns emerging 4–1 winners.[4] The semi-final opposition was Livingston, and a fourth consecutive home game at Brockville with Falkirk winning 3–2[4] to book a place in the Scottish Challenge Cup Final for the first time.[4]

St Mirren

Round Opposition Score
First round Clyde (a) 1–0
Second round Morton (a) 4–2
Quarter-final Airdrieonians (a) 1–0
Semi-final Ayr United (a) 2–1

St Mirren faced a trip to Clyde in the first round which saw the team emerge 1–0 winners.[4] The second round was another game on the road against Renfrewshire rivals Morton with The Saints producing a 4–2 victory[4] to progress to the quarter-finals. A third away game of the tournament saw St Mirren travel to Airdrieonians, winning 1–0.[4] The reward for reaching the semi-final was another away game with the opponents in the form of Ayr United at Somerset Park. St Mirren won 2–1[4] to book a place in the final. St Mirren reached the Scottish Challenge Cup Final for the first time.[4]

Pre-match

Analysis

Falkirk played all of their games preceding the final at their home of Brockville Park, in the process scoring twelve goals and conceding four. On the other hand, St Mirren played all four of their games on the road with no matches played at their home of Love Street. Despite playing all of their games away from home, St Mirren scored eight goals and conceded only three, whilst keeping two clean sheets compared with Falkirk's one. This was the first appearance for both Falkirk and St Mirren in the Scottish Challenge Cup Final since its inauguration in 1990.[4]

Match

Falkirk3–0St Mirren
Duffy  47'
Cadette  48'
Hughes  65'
Report
Attendance: 13,763

Teams

Falkirk:
GK  Tony Parks
DF  Joe McLaughlin
DF  John Hughes
DF  David Weir
DF  Tommy McQueen
MF  Eddie May
MF  Ian McCall 78'
MF  Brian Rice
MF  Neil Duffy
FW  Kevin Drinkell 78'
FW  Richard Cadette
Substitutes:
GK  Ian Westwater
DF  Neil Oliver 78'
FW  Greg Shaw 78'
Manager:
Jim Jefferies
St Mirren:
GK  Campbell Money
DF  Robert Dawson
DF  Martin Baker
DF  Norrie McWhirter
DF  Barry McLaughlin
MF  Neil Orr
MF  Alex Bone 55'
MF  Jim Dick
MF  Barry Lavety
FW  David Elliot
FW  John Hewitt 87'
Substitutes:
GK  Alan Combe
DF  Paul McIntyre 87'
FW  Ricky Gillies 55'
Manager:
Jimmy Bone

Match rules

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

References

  1. McKinney, David (13 December 1993). "Football: Falkirk find their fire". The Independent. London. Retrieved 21 March 2015.
  2. Bell's Cup, scottishfootballleague.com. Scottish Football League. 2 November 2005. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  3. "Scottish League Challenge Cup Finals". RSSSF. Retrieved 1 April 2010.
  4. Scottish Challenge Cup, statto.com. Retrieved 2011-06-16.
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