The First Trophy Celtic won in Season 1966/67 turned out to be the hardest

Everyone knows that 1966/67 was the season in which Celtic won everything including the European Cup. And yet it was the League Cup in which they came closest to defeat, particularly in that nerve wracking final on 29 October 1966.

There was no problem in the sectional stages as Hearts, Clyde and St Mirren were simply swept aside with almost embarrassing ease after an opening day triumph at a very wet Tynecastle. Joe McBride managed to score a total of 13 goals.

Dunfermline Athletic might have provided a certain amount of resistance, but the first leg in the quarter final at Parkhead saw a remarkable 6-3 score line (some great goal scoring but also some slapdash defending by both sides), and then 3-1 at East End Park.

The goals were fairly flying in that autumn of 1966, but the semi-final against Airdrie on Monday 17 October at Hampden was a more restrained occasion with Airdrie defending competently until well into the second half when Bobby Murdoch hammered one through a sea of defenders, and then Joe McBride headed home a Bertie Auld cross.

Thus it came about that Celtic played Rangers for the third year in a row in Scottish League Cup finals. On this occasion, an honest Celtic supporter must hold up his hands and say that Rangers were at least as good. The difference lay in the sheer professionalism of Celtic who “dug deep” and held out for their 1-0 win.

The goal was a good one – what was called a “three card trick” goal by those who played a lot of cards in that involved three players. A Bertie Auld ball from just inside the Rangers half found the head of Joe McBride who headed it down to the in-rushing Bobby Lennox who ran past the Rangers defence and scored. It was a great goal.

Thereafter was hard work. Referee Tom Wharton correctly disallowed a Rangers “equaliser”, and equally correctly refused a penalty for each side. And then came the moment that almost defined the Celtic career of Willie O’Neill with his goal line clearance. About 50,000 hearts behind that goal missed a beat or two there!

But full time came, and Celtic had won a hard-fought victory to seal their fourth Scottish League Cup.

The Celtic side was Simpson, Gemmell and O’Neill; Murdoch, McNeill and Clark; Johnstone, Lennox, McBride, Auld and Hughes (Chalmers).

David Potter

David Potter on Celtic’s League Cup Triumphs – our next triumph will be featured tomorrow on The Celtic Star. The first time Celtic lifted this cup was in 1956 in a 3-0 replay win against Partick Thistle  – see HERE.

This was followed up the next season with Celtic’s most famous domestic cup win of them all, at Hampden in the Sun on 19 October 1957 when the final score Read Celtic 7 Rangers 1…see HERE.

The Celtic support had to wait until 1965 when two penalties against Rangers earned Celtic a 2-1 victory. The Rangers supporters seemed to have reacted very badly to this set-back with some running onto the pitch to confront Celtic players. Big Yogi and Cesar hardly looked too concerned though but laps of honour were banned for a while as a result – see HERE.

About Author

The Celtic Star founder and editor David Faulds has edited numerous Celtic books over the past decade or so including several from Lisbon Lions, Willie Wallace, Tommy Gemmell and Jim Craig. Earliest Celtic memories include a win over East Fife at Celtic Park and the 4-1 League Cup loss to Partick Thistle as a 6 year old. Best game? Easy 4-2, 1979 when Ten Men Won the League. Email editor@thecelticstar.co.uk

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