St Patrick’s Day 1991 is forever remembered as the St Patrick’s Day massacre, due to the events that unfolded at Celtic Park in the Scottish Cup quarter final that afternoon.
Graeme Souness, then Rangers manager, publicly apologised for the indiscipline of his team after three of his men were sent off. Celtic also had a man dismissed as Peter Grant was dismissed first for charging down a free kick, an incident he later laughed at in an interview with the Daily Record. “It was my only Old Firm red card and I’d rather have been sent off for punching someone,” Grant said. “When you tell people it was for charging down a free-kick you become a bit of a laughing stock. I remember thinking if we lost the game I would get it but moments later I heard a set of studs coming down the tunnel and then another and it was the Rangers boys who were in bother. It was funny as that day Hurlock and I had been in the Sunday Mail bold as brass trying to show our caring, family side then we both got sent off!”
Rangers, who hadn’t won the Scottish Cup for a decade at the time, were outplayed before the mayhem began. They may have come from behind to win the ordering-off contest, but never looked likely to level the scoreline after Creaney and Wdowczyk’s first-half goals.