1997–98 in Scottish football

The 1997–98 season was the 101st season of competitive football in Scotland. Celtic won the Premier Division championship, preventing rivals Rangers from winning a record 10th successive championship. [1]

1997–98 in Scottish football
Premier League champions
Celtic
Division One champions
Dundee
Division Two champions
Stranraer
Division Three champions
Alloa Athletic
Scottish Cup winners
Heart of Midlothian
League Cup winners
Celtic
Challenge Cup winners
Falkirk
Junior Cup winners
Arthurlie
Teams in Europe
Celtic, Dundee United, Kilmarnock, Rangers
Scotland national team
1998 World Cup qualification, 1998 World Cup
1996–97 1998–99

Scottish Premier Division

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation
1 Celtic (C) 36 22 8 6 64 24 +40 74 Qualification for the Champions League first qualifying round
2 Rangers 36 21 9 6 76 38 +38 72 Qualification for the UEFA Cup first qualifying round
3 Heart of Midlothian 36 19 10 7 70 46 +24 67 Qualification for the Cup Winners' Cup qualifying round
4 Kilmarnock 36 13 11 12 40 52 12 50 Qualification for the UEFA Cup first qualifying round
5 St Johnstone 36 13 9 14 38 42 4 48
6 Aberdeen 36 9 12 15 39 53 14 39
7 Dundee United 36 8 13 15 43 51 8 37
8 Dunfermline Athletic 36 8 13 15 43 68 25 37
9 Motherwell 36 9 7 20 46 64 18 34
10 Hibernian (R) 36 6 12 18 38 59 21 30 Relegation to the First Division
Source: Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored
(C) Champion; (R) Relegated.

Top scorers

PlayerGoalsTeam
Marco Negri32Rangers
Kjell Olofsson18Dundee United
Henrik Larsson16Celtic
Andy SmithDunfermline Athletic
Tommy Coyne14Motherwell
Jim HamiltonHeart of Midlothian
Owen Coyle11Motherwell
Jorg Albertz10Rangers
Craig BurleyCeltic
Billy DoddsAberdeen
Simon DonnellyCeltic
Neil McCannHeart of Midlothian
George O'BoyleSt Johnstone
Paul WrightKilmarnock

Source: Soccerbot

Scottish League Division One

Table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1 Dundee (C, P) 36 20 10 6 52 24 +28 70 Premier League
2 Falkirk 36 19 8 9 56 41 +15 65
3 Raith Rovers 36 17 9 10 51 33 +18 60
4 Airdrieonians 36 16 12 8 42 35 +7 60
5 Greenock Morton 36 12 10 14 40 47 7 46
6 St Mirren 36 11 8 17 41 53 12 41
7 Ayr United 36 10 10 16 40 56 16 40
8 Hamilton Academical 36 9 11 16 43 56 13 38
9 Partick Thistle (R) 36 8 12 16 45 55 10 36 Second Division
10 Stirling Albion (R) 36 8 10 18 40 56 16 34
Source: RSSSF
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champion; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated.

Top scorers

P Name Goals
1 James Grady (Dundee) 15
2 Alex Bone (Stirling Albion) 13
3 Eddie Annand (Dundee) 12
= Brian McPhee (Airdrieonians) 12
= David Moss (Falkirk) 12
6 Stephen Cooper (Airdrieonians) 11
7 Laurent D'Jaffo (Ayr United) 10
= Paul Hartley (Raith Rovers) 10
= Warren Hawke (Morton) 10
= Marino Keith (Falkirk) 10

Scottish League Division Two

Table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1 Stranraer 36 18 7 11 62 44 +18 61 Promotion to the 1998–99 First Division
2 Clydebank 36 16 12 8 48 31 +17 60
3 Livingston 36 16 11 9 56 40 +16 59
4 Queen of the South 36 15 9 12 57 51 +6 54
5 Inverness CT 36 13 10 13 65 51 +14 49
6 East Fife 36 14 6 16 51 59 8 48
7 Forfar Athletic 36 12 10 14 51 61 10 46
8 Clyde 36 10 12 14 40 53 13 42
9 Stenhousemuir 36 10 10 16 44 53 9 40 Relegation to the 1998–99 Third Division
10 Brechin City 36 7 11 18 42 73 31 32
Source:

Top scorers

P Name Goals
1 Iain Stewart (Inverness CT) 16
2 Graham Harvey (Livingston) 15
= Ian Little (Stenhousemuir) 15
4 Martin McLauchan (Forfar Athletic) 14
5 Colin McDonald (Clydebank) 13
= B Thomson (Inverness CT) 13
7 Ben Honeyman (Forfar Athletic) 12
8 Tommy Bryce (Queen of the South) 11
= Matthew Dyer (East Fife) 11
= Gordon Young (Stranraer) 11

Scottish League Division Three

Table

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion
1 Alloa Athletic (C, P) 36 24 4 8 78 39 +39 76 Promotion to the 1998–99 Second Division
2 Arbroath (P) 36 20 8 8 67 39 +28 68
3 Ross County 36 19 10 7 71 36 +35 67
4 East Stirlingshire 36 17 6 13 50 48 +2 57
5 Albion Rovers 36 13 5 18 60 73 13 44
6 Berwick Rangers 36 10 12 14 47 55 8 42
7 Queen's Park 36 10 11 15 42 55 13 41
8 Cowdenbeath 36 12 2 22 33 57 24 38
9 Montrose 36 10 8 18 53 80 27 38
10 Dumbarton 36 7 10 19 42 61 19 31
Source: Soccerway
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champion; (P) Promoted.

Top scorers

Pos Player Club Goals
1 Colin McGlashan Montrose 20
2 Willie Irvine Alloa Athletic 18
3 Billy Spence Arbroath 16
4 Derek Adams Ross County 15
5 Willie Watters Albion Rovers 13
Davie Watt East Stirlingshire
7 Paul Forrester Berwick Rangers 10
Lee Gardner Albion Rovers
Brian Grant Arbroath
Colin McKinnon Dumbarton

Other honours

Cup honours

Competition Winner Score Runner-up Report
Scottish Cup 1997–98 Heart of Midlothian 2 – 1 Rangers Wikipedia article
League Cup 1997–98 Celtic 3 – 0 Dundee United Wikipedia article
Challenge Cup 1997–98 Falkirk 1 – 0 Queen of the South Wikipedia article
Youth Cup Heart of Midlothian 2 – 0 Dundee United
Junior Cup Arthurlie 4 – 0 Pollok

SPFA awards

Award Winner Club
Players' Player of the Year Jackie McNamaraCeltic
Young Player of the Year Gary NaysmithHeart of Midlothian

SFWA awards

Award Winner Club
Footballer of the Year Craig BurleyCeltic
Young Player of the Year Henrik Larsson Celtic
Manager of the Year Wim JansenCeltic

Scottish clubs in Europe

Club Competition(s) Final round Coef.
Rangers UEFA Champions League
UEFA Cup
Second qualifying round
First round
2.50
Kilmarnock UEFA Cup Winners' Cup First round 2.50
Celtic UEFA Cup First round 5.00
Dundee United UEFA Cup Second qualifying round 2.50

Average coefficient - 3.125

Scotland national team

Date Venue Opponents Score[2] Competition Scotland scorer(s)
7 September Pittodrie, Aberdeen (H)  Belarus 4–1 WCQG4 Kevin Gallacher (2), David Hopkin (2)
11 October Celtic Park, Glasgow (H)  Latvia 2–0 WCQG4 Kevin Gallacher, Gordon Durie
12 November Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, St Etienne (A) France 1–2 Friendly Gordon Durie
25 March Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow (H) Denmark 0–1 Friendly
22 April Easter Road, Edinburgh (H) Finland 1–1 Friendly Darren Jackson
23 May Giants Stadium, East Rutherford NJ (A) Colombia 2–2 Friendly John Collins, Craig Burley
30 May RFK Memorial Stadium, Washington DC (A) USA 0–0 Friendly
10 June Stade de France, Saint-Denis (N) Brazil 1–2 WCGA John Collins (pen.)
16 June Stade Lescure, Bordeaux (N) Norway 1–1 WCGA Craig Burley
23 June Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, St Etienne (N) Morocco 0–3 WCGA

Key:

  • (H) = Home match
  • (A) = Away match
  • WCQG4 = World Cup qualifying - Group 4
  • WCGA = World Cup - Group A

Notable events

  • After the end of the season, the 10 Premier Division clubs formed a breakaway Scottish Premier League similar to the one formed in England six years earlier.
  • Celtic won the Premier Division title after nine successive title wins by Rangers.
  • Walter Smith resigned as manager of Rangers after seven years to be succeeded by Dutchman Dick Advocaat.
  • Rangers lost the Scottish Cup final 2–1 to Hearts, leaving them without a major trophy for the first time since 1986.
  • Paul Gascoigne left Rangers in March to return to England in a £3.4million move to Middlesbrough.
  • Ally McCoist left Rangers after 15 years and more than 300 goals to sign for Kilmarnock on a free transfer.
  • Goalkeeper Andy Goram left Rangers after seven years, having just walked out of the Scotland squad for the World Cup in France.
  • Also leaving Rangers after seven years was Stuart McCall, who moved to England and signed for Bradford City.
  • After signing from Perugia in a £3.5million deal at the start of the season, Italian striker Marco Negri had a dream start to his career at Rangers - scoring 23 goals in his first 10 league games. However, after playing 27 league games and scoring 32 goals, his season was ended by a serious eye injury off the field in March.
  • Brian Laudrup ended his four-year spell with Rangers and signed for Chelsea at the end of the season.

Notes and references

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 16 December 2012. Retrieved 27 April 2012.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Scotland's score is shown first.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.