1974–75 in Scottish football

1974–75 in Scottish football
Division One champions
Rangers
Division Two champions
Falkirk
Scottish Cup winners
Celtic
League Cup winners
Celtic
Junior Cup winners
Glenrothes
Teams in Europe
Celtic, Dundee, Dundee United, Hibernian
Scotland national team
1975 BHC, UEFA Euro 1976 qualifying

The 1974–75 season was the 102nd season of competitive football in Scotland and the 78th season of Scottish league football. It was the final season of the old, two-division set up. At the end of the season, the top ten teams in Division One formed the new Premier Division. The remaining eight teams, together with the top six from Division Two went on to make up the new Division One. The remaining 14 teams became the new Division Two. [1]

This season also saw Celtic's record-breaking run of nine consecutive league championships finally come to an end when Rangers won the last ever Division One league title.

Scottish League Division One

P Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1 Rangers 34 25 6 3 86 33 53 56
2 Hibernian 34 20 9 5 69 37 32 49
3 Celtic 34 20 5 9 81 41 40 45
4 Dundee United 34 19 7 8 72 43 29 45
5 Aberdeen 34 16 9 9 66 43 23 41
6 Dundee 34 16 6 12 48 42 6 38
7 Ayr United 34 14 8 12 50 61 11 36
8 Heart of Midlothian 34 11 13 10 47 52 5 35
9 St Johnstone 34 11 12 11 41 44 3 34
10 Motherwell 34 14 5 15 52 57 5 33
11 Airdrieonians 34 11 9 14 43 55 12 31
12 Kilmarnock 34 8 15 11 52 68 16 31
13 Partick Thistle 34 10 10 14 48 62 14 30
14 Dumbarton 34 7 10 17 44 55 11 24
15 Dunfermline Athletic 34 7 9 18 46 66 20 23
16 Clyde 34 6 10 18 40 63 23 22
17 Morton 34 6 10 18 31 62 31 22
18 Arbroath 34 5 7 22 34 66 32 17

Champions: Rangers
Relegated: See explanation above

Scottish League Division Two

P Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1 Falkirk 38 26 2 10 76 29 47 54
2 Queen of the South 38 23 7 8 77 33 44 53
3 Montrose 38 23 7 8 70 37 33 53
4 Hamilton Academical 38 21 7 10 69 30 39 49
5 East Fife 38 20 7 11 57 42 15 47
6 St Mirren 38 19 8 11 74 52 22 46
7 Clydebank 38 18 8 12 50 40 10 44
8 Stirling Albion 38 17 9 12 67 55 12 43
9 Berwick Rangers 38 17 6 15 53 49 4 40
10 East Stirlingshire 38 16 8 14 56 52 4 40
11 Stenhousemuir 38 14 11 13 52 42 10 39
12 Albion Rovers 38 16 7 15 72 64 8 39
13 Raith Rovers 38 14 9 15 48 44 4 37
14 Stranraer 38 12 11 15 47 65 18 35
15 Alloa Athletic 38 11 11 16 49 56 7 33
16 Queen's Park 38 10 10 18 41 54 13 30
17 Brechin City 38 9 7 22 44 85 41 25
18 Meadowbank Thistle 38 9 5 24 26 87 61 23
19 Cowdenbeath 38 5 11 22 39 76 37 21
20 Forfar Athletic 38 1 7 30 27 102 75 9

Champions: Falkirk
Promotion / relegation: see explanation above

Cup honours

Competition Winner Score Runner-up
Scottish Cup 1974–75 Celtic 3 – 1 Airdrieonians
League Cup 1974–75 Celtic 6 – 3 Hibernian
Junior Cup Glenrothes 1 – 0 Rutherglen Glencairn

Other Honours

National

Competition Winner Score Runner-up
Scottish Qualifying Cup - North Peterhead 3 – 1 * Elgin City
Scottish Qualifying Cup - South Selkirk 8 – 2 * Civil Service Strollers

County

Competition Winner Score Runner-up
Aberdeenshire Cup Peterhead
Ayrshire Cup Ayr United 1 – 0 Kilmarnock
East of Scotland Shield Hearts 2 – 1 Hibernian
Fife Cup Dunfermline Athletic 3 – 3 * East Fife
Forfarshire Cup Dundee United 3 – 1 Montrose
Glasgow Cup Celtic 2 – 2 dagger Rangers
Lanarkshire Cup Albion Rovers 2 – 1 Motherwell
Stirlingshire Cup Dumbarton 4 – 1 Stenhousemuir

* - aggregate over two legs
dagger - trophy shared

Highland League

Top Three

P Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
1 Clachnacuddin 30 19 8 3 72 32 40 46
2 Keith 30 20 5 5 90 41 49 45
3 Fraserburgh 30 18 5 7 86 48 40 41

Individual honours

Award Winner Club
Footballer of the Year Scotland Sandy Jardine Rangers

Scotland national team

Date Venue Opponents Score[2] Competition Scotland scorer(s)
30 October Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)  East Germany 3–0 Friendly Tommy Hutchison (pen.), Kenny Burns, Kenny Dalglish
20 November Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)  Spain 1–2 ECQG4 Billy Bremner
5 February Estadio Luis Casanova, Valencia (A)  Spain 1–1 ECQG4 Joe Jordan
16 April Ullevi Stadion, Gothenburg (A)  Sweden 1–1 Friendly Ted MacDougall
13 May Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)  Portugal 1–0 Friendly own goal
17 May Ninian Park, Cardiff (A)  Wales 2–2 BHC Colin Jackson, Bruce Rioch
20 May Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)  Northern Ireland 3–0 BHC Ted MacDougall, Kenny Dalglish, Derek Parlane
24 May Wembley Stadium, London (A)  England 1–5 BHC Bruce Rioch
1 June Stadionul 23. August, Bucharest (A)  Romania 1–1 ECQG4 Gordon McQueen

1975 British Home Championship - Runner Up

Key:

External links

Notes and references

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, February 04, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.