:1957 Scottish League Cup final
{{Use British English|date=May 2015}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2015}}
{{ infobox football match
| title = 1957 Scottish League Cup final
| image = 1957 Cup Final.jpg
| caption = The 1957 Scottish League Cup final match programme
| event = 1957–58 Scottish League Cup
| team1 = Celtic
| team1score = 7
| team2 = Rangers
| team2score = 1
| details =
| date = 19 October 1957
| stadium = Hampden Park
| city = Glasgow
| man_of_the_match1a =
| man_of_the_match1atitle =
| man_of_the_match1b =
| man_of_the_match1btitle =
| referee = Jack Mowat
| attendance = 82,293
| weather =
| previous = 1956
| next = 1958
}}
The 1957 Scottish League Cup final was the final match of the 1957–58 Scottish League Cup. The football match was played on 19 October 1957 at Hampden Park, in which Celtic beat rivals Rangers in a record 7–1 victory. The final was nicknamed "Hampden in the Sun", a phrase coined by Celtic supporters as the title of a terrace song. It has since been used in other songs, poems and a book about the game.
The 7–1 scoreline remains a record for a major domestic cup final in British football.
Overview
{{main|1957–58 Scottish League Cup}}
Celtic entered the final as holders, having beaten Partick Thistle after a replay in the previous year's final. Rangers were the reigning league champions. The match was the 12th League Cup final, and the first contested by the Old Firm. It was held at a sunny Hampden Park in Glasgow, at 2.45pm on the afternoon of 19 October 1957.
Celtic attacked from the start, with shots hitting the post twice in the first twenty minutes.{{cite news |work=The Glasgow Herald |title=Celtic's seven goal triumph in League Cup Final |date=21 October 1957 |first=Cyril |last=Horne |page=4 |url=http://www.thecelticwiki.com/page/1957-10-19%3A+Celtic+7-1+Rangers%2C+League+Cup |access-date=6 January 2020}} The first goal was scored by Sammy Wilson, from a Charlie Tully cross on in the 22nd minute. Rangers defended for the remainder of the first half,{{cite news |work=Evening Times |first=Gair |last=Henderson |date=21 October 1957 |url=http://www.thecelticwiki.com/page/1957-10-19%3A+Celtic+7-1+Rangers%2C+League+Cup |title=All hail, McPhail |access-date=6 January 2019}} however in the 44th minute Neil Mochan scored a solo goal after a run down the left wing.{{cite book |title=Heroes are Forever |last=Cairney |first=John |publisher=Mainstream Publishing |date=2005 |page=183 |isbn=978-1-84596-103-9}} Within eight minutes of the restart Billy McPhail scored Celtic's third goal with a header from a Bobby Collins cross. Rangers narrowed the margin five minutes later, a goal by Simpson, however it only served to reinvigorate the Celtic attack as McPhail, then Mochan scored their second goals.
In the 80th minute, McPhail claimed his third, a hat-trick of goals all scored with his head.Rej, Arindam . [http://football.guardian.co.uk/News_Story/0,1563,1379020,00.html Veterans battle to prove brain damage link], The Guardian, 23 December 2004 As the game drew to a close violence flared in among the fans,{{cite book |title=Heroes are Forever |last=Cairney |first=John |publisher=Mainstream Publishing |date=2005 |page=184 |isbn=978-1-84596-103-9}} but in the final minute McPhail was fouled in the Rangers' penalty area. He declined the opportunity to score a fourth goal, a feat never achieved by a player in an Old Firm match, instead Willie Fernie took the kick. In addition to the seven goals, Celtic hit the woodwork four times. They were permitted to keep their jerseys as a souvenir of the day.{{cite news |url=http://image.wikifoundry.com/image/1/16QIjFg_AO-rsZwdo0h2Xw178832/GW695H867 |title=Just one word for Celtic – Magnificent! |first=Jack |last=Harkness |work=The Sunday Post |date=20 October 1957 |access-date=14 April 2015}}
Much of the blame for the poor defensive display by Rangers was attributed to centre back John Valentine, who had signed from Queen's Park earlier that season. Bobby Collins told The Sunday Post "I don't know if Valentine had no faith in George Niven or Niven had no faith in Valentine, but ultimately they had no faith in themselves, something you can sense very quickly on a football field, and inevitably the game became a rout."
The victory, reported in The Times as "a wonderful exhibition of football",{{cite news |url=http://www.thecelticwiki.com/page/1957-19-10%3A+Celtic+7-1+Rangers%2C+League+Cup?t=anon |title=Glasgow Rangers outplayed |work= The Times |date=21 October 1957 |page=14 |access-date=14 April 2014}} and as an "October Revolution" by The Sunday Post, was comprehensive. The scoreline remains a record in any major British football final, the record margin of victory in an official Old Firm game, and Rangers' record final defeat.
Match details
{{football box
| date = 19 October 1957
| team1 = Celtic
| score = 7–1
| report = http://www.thecelticwiki.com/page/1957-19-10%3A+Celtic+7-1+Rangers%2C+League+Cup?t=anon
| team2 = Rangers
| goals1 =
| goals2 = Simpson {{goal|58}}
| stadium = Hampden Park, Glasgow
| referee = Jack Mowat
| attendance = 82,293 }}
= Teams =
width="100%"
|valign="top" width="50%"| {| style="font-size: 90%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" |colspan="4"|CELTIC : | ||
width="25"| | width="25"| | |
---|---|---|
GK | 1 | Dick Beattie |
FB | 2 | John Donnelly |
FB | 4 | Sean Fallon |
RH | 5 | Willie Fernie |
CH | 3 | Bobby Evans (c) |
LH | 7 | Bertie Peacock |
RW | 6 | Charlie Tully |
IF | 8 | Bobby Collins |
CF | 11 | Billy McPhail |
IF | 9 | Sammy Wilson |
LW | 10 | Neil Mochan |
colspan=4|Manager: | ||
colspan="4"|Jimmy McGrory |
|valign="top" width="50%"|
style="font-size: 90%" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0"
|colspan="4"|RANGERS : | ||
width="25"| | width="25"| | |
---|---|---|
GK | 1 | George Niven |
FB | 2 | Bobby Shearer (c) |
FB | 4 | Eric Caldow |
RH | 5 | Ian McColl |
CH | 3 | John Valentine |
LH | 7 | Harold Davis |
RW | 8 | Alex Scott |
IF | 9 | Billy Simpson |
CF | 10 | Max Murray |
IF | 6 | Sammy Baird |
LW | 11 | Johnny Hubbard |
colspan=4|Manager: | ||
colspan="4"|Scot Symon |
|}
In song
In the summer of 1957, the motion picture Island in the Sun was released in Europe, featuring a title song by Harry Belafonte. The song peaked in the UK Singles Chart in June and went on to become the 5th biggest selling single that year[http://www.everyhit.com/chart1.html Chart Archive: 1950s singles], everyHit.com, retrieved 23 July 2007 Celtic fans composed alternative lyrics to the tune, and began to sing Hampden in the Sun at football matches to celebrate the victory.{{cite web |url=http://www.nafcsc.com/information/hampden_in_the_sun.htm |title=Hampden in the Sun |publisher=The North American Federation of Celtic Supporters Clubs |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20020111033553/http://nafcsc.com/information/hampden_in_the_sun.htm |archive-date=11 January 2002}} The song has since been recorded by artists such as Freedom's sons and regularly features on albums of Celtic football song. The phrase itself has become synonymous with the match, and has since been used in other songs and poems,[http://www.charlieandthebhoys.co.uk/celticoverall.htm Celtic Over All] by Charlie and the BhoysHoops bid farewell to hat-trick legend Billy, News of the World, 6 April 2003 and is the title of a book about the 1957 final and the iconic status it achieved among the Celtic support.Burns, Peter & Woods, Pat (1998). Oh, Hampden in the Sun, Mainstream Publishing, {{ISBN|1-85158-911-2}}
Notes and references
{{reflist}}
See also
External links
- [http://www.soccerbase.com/tournaments/tournament.sd?tourn_id=859 Soccerbase]
{{Scottish League Cup seasons}}
{{Rangers F.C. matches}}
{{Celtic F.C. matches}}
{{1957–58 in Scottish football}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Scottish League Cup Final 1957}}
Scottish League Cup Final 1957
Scottish League Cup Final 1957