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1985–86 in Scottish football

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FieldValue
headerstylebackground:#BFD7FF
above1985–86 in Scottish football
image[[Image:Flag of Scotland with football.png200px]]
header1Premier Division champions
data2Celtic
header3Division One champions
data4Hamilton Academical
header5Division Two champions
data6Dunfermline Athletic
header7Scottish Cup winners
data8Aberdeen
header9League Cup winners
data10Aberdeen
header11Junior Cup winners
data12Auchinleck Talbot
header13Teams in Europe
data14Aberdeen, Celtic, Dundee United, Rangers, St Mirren
header15Scotland national team
data16[1986 World Cup qualification](1986-fifa-world-cup-qualification), [1986 World Cup](1986-fifa-world-cup), Rous Cup
data17← [1984–85](1984-85-in-scottish-football) [1986–87](1986-87-in-scottish-football) →

The 1985–86 season was the 89th season of competitive football in Scotland.

At a national level, Scotland's qualification for the 1986 World Cup finals in Mexico was marred by the death of Manager Jock Stein. In the end caretaker manager Alex Ferguson was not able to take the team beyond the first round.

In club football, with Rangers once again failing to mount a title challenge, manager Jock Wallace's second spell as manager ended in April when he was sacked and the club appointed Graeme Souness as player-manager, recruiting the former Liverpool midfielder from Sampdoria in Italy. Celtic eventually won the league on the final day after Hearts threw away a two-point lead.

Aberdeen won both the Scottish Cup and the League Cup.

Scottish Premier Division

Main article: 1985–86 Scottish Premier Division

Celtic won the League and became champions in one of the closest finishes in League history. On the final day of the season Hearts were leading Celtic by two points - a draw against Dundee would have been sufficient to see them win their first League title since the 1959–60 season. Hearts lost 2–0 to Dundee at Dens Park thanks to two late goals by substitute Albert Kidd, while Celtic beat St Mirren 5–0 at Love Street. As a result, Celtic won the league on goal difference.

Relegation was suspended due to league reconstruction, therefore Motherwell and Clydebank retained their Premier Division status.

A dispute between television companies and the Scottish Football League resulted in no televised Scottish league football between September 1985 and March 1986. Champions: Celtic

No relegation

Scottish League Division One

Main article: 1985–86 Scottish First Division

Promoted: Hamilton Academical, Falkirk

Relegated: Ayr United, Alloa Athletic.

Scottish League Division Two

Main article: 1985–86 Scottish Second Division

Promoted: Dunfermline Athletic, Queen of the South

Other honours

Cup honours

CompetitionWinnerScoreRunner-up
[Scottish Cup 1985–86](1985-86-scottish-cup)Aberdeen[3 – 0](1986-scottish-cup-final)Heart of Midlothian
[League Cup 1985–86](1985-86-scottish-league-cup)Aberdeen3 – 0Hibernian
Youth CupAberdeen2 – 0Queen of the South
Junior CupAuchinleck Talbot3 – 2Pollok

Individual honours

AwardWinnerClub
Footballer of the YearSCO Sandy JardineHeart of Midlothian
Players' Player of the YearSCO Richard GoughDundee United
Young Player of the YearSCO Craig LeveinHeart of Midlothian

Scotland national team

Main article: Scotland national football team 1980–99 results

DateVenueOpponentsScoreCompetitionScotland scorer(s)
10 September 1985Ninian Park, Cardiff (A)1–1[WCQG7](1986-fifa-world-cup-qualification-uefa-group-7)Davie Cooper
16 October 1985Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)0–0Friendly
20 November 1985Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)2–0[WCQPO](1986-fifa-world-cup-qualification-intercontinental-play-offs)Davie Cooper, Frank McAvennie
4 December 1985Olympic Park Stadium, Melbourne (A)0–0[WCQPO](1986-fifa-world-cup-qualification-intercontinental-play-offs)
28 January 1986Ramat Gan Stadium, Ramat Gan (A)1–0FriendlyPaul McStay
26 March 1986Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)3–0FriendlyGordon Strachan, Richard Gough, Roy Aitken
23 April 1986Wembley Stadium, London (A)1–2Rous CupGraeme Souness (pen.)
29 April 1986Philips Stadion, Eindhoven (A)0–0Friendly
4 June 1986Estadio Neza 86, Nezahualcóyotl (N)0–1[WCGE](1986-fifa-world-cup-group-e)
8 June 1986Estadio La Corregidora, Querétaro (N)1–2[WCGE](1986-fifa-world-cup-group-e)Gordon Strachan
13 June 1986Estadio Neza 86, Nezahualcóyotl (N)0–0[WCGE](1986-fifa-world-cup-group-e)

Key:

  • (H) = Home match
  • (A) = Away match
  • WCQG7 = World Cup qualifying - Group 7
  • WCQPO = World Cup qualifying play-off match
  • WCGE = World Cup - Group E

Death of Jock Stein

On 10 September 1985, the Scotland team travelled to Ninian Park, Cardiff, to take on Wales in their final qualifying game for the World Cup in Mexico. They needed at least a draw to secure a place in the qualification play-off, which they finally achieved in the 81st minute when a Davie Cooper penalty drew Scotland level with Wales, who had gone ahead earlier with a Mark Hughes goal. Just after the final whistle, Scotland manager Jock Stein collapsed from a heart attack at the side of the pitch and died in the medical room shortly afterwards. He was 62 years old.

Aberdeen manager Alex Ferguson, who had been Stein's assistant, was appointed caretaker manager of Scotland after Stein's death. His first match was at Hampden Park on 20 November 1985, as Scotland took on Australia in the World Cup qualification playoff first leg. Goals from Davie Cooper and the debutant Frank McAvennie gave Scotland a 2-0 advantage, and they confirmed their place in Mexico by drawing the second leg 0–0 in Melbourne. Scotland's World Cup campaign began on 4 June, when they took on Denmark in their opening group game, only to lose 1–0. Four days later, they took on West Germany and despite taking an early lead through Gordon Strachan, lost 2-1 and were left with virtually no hope of reaching the knockout stages. Any hope of progression ended five days later when they could only manage a goalless draw against Uruguay.

Kenny Dalglish 100th cap

Three weeks after his 35th birthday, Kenny Dalglish became the Scotland team's first player to be capped 100 times as senior level in a friendly against Romania on 26 March 1986.

References

  1. "1985/86 - the Scottish Football League".
  2. "Jock Wallace | Former Managers | Former Managers | History | Rangers".
  3. "Rangers Home HISTORY".
  4. (5 May 1986). "Celtic keep bargain with a little help from Dundee". Glasgow Herald (Page 10).
  5. "Dens memories reduce former Hearts manager to tears - Scotsman.com Sport".
  6. Scotland's score is shown first.
  7. "BBC - A Sporting Nation - Jock Stein dies 1985".
  8. "新皇冠体育_大赢家体育即时比分足球-万家乐网".
  9. (14 November 2003). "Scotland's play-off past". BBC News.
  10. "Planet World Cup - 1986 - Match Schedule".
  11. "Bill Shankly - This website is a part of LFCHistory.net".
  12. (27 March 1986). "Scotland 3 Rumania 0". Glasgow Herald (Page 28).
Info: Wikipedia Source

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