We Were Juniors

A look back at the glory days of "The Juniors"

HOWIE FOUND FAME ON HIS DOORSTEP

HOWARD POSES BEFORE THE 1985 JUNIOR CUP FINAL v PETERSHILL

When it comes to much feted goalkeeper Howard Sammeroff, there is no such thing as hyperbole.

Hard to say otherwise because how can one be accused of overstating a career which has a veritable array of extraordinary strands to it, not least of all playing between the sticks for Scotland and Great Britain teams as well as winning every silverware prize at Junior level on top of coming under the management of a trio of iconic Scottish footballing figures during a three year stint with his one and only Senior club.

Before all that, Howie was born and raised in the upper crust area of Glasgow’s Southside  (Giffnock)and firstly attended Williamwood Secondary before graduating to Eastwood High School where he played for a school team run by P.E.teacher Bruce Livingstone , by a quirk of coincidence, the then Pollok goalkeeper.

He reminisced ,” We had a number of decent players such as Kenny McMenemay who stepped up to St Mirren and I can recall Graham Kyle signing for Morton before later being reinstated into the Juniors at Bailleston however our star turn was undoubtedly Robert Torrance whom most people will remember from making his breakthrough as a teenage striker under Alex Ferguson at Love Street.

“Looking back now, that team of ours could and should have been really successful in terms of winning trophies yet the sum total of our achievements other than winning the local Renfrewshire Cup, was making it all the way to the semi-finals of the Scottish Schools Cup where we lost out to a St Mirins Academy side that we somewhat ironically comfortably beat when coming up against them in another Cup-tie just a week later.”

The young Howie initially twinned his school team appearances with keeping goal for amateurs Glasgow Wingate prior to joining East Kilbride based Claremont Boys Club, where he thrived under the tutelage of Bill Campbell in a side containing team mates , soon to become  fierce Junior adversaries,  John McLymont (East Kilbride Thistle and Glenafton), Graham Ferguson (Cumnock)  and Peter Allan (Shotts Bon Accord).

Howie also briefly featured as a youthful trialist with Queens Park, Airdrie and St Rochs (without success)  however these inauspicious beginnings did not prevent word of his emergence as an outstanding  goalkeeping prospect coming to the attention of legendary Campsie Black Watch manager Gerry Marley who duly invited him to play in a specially arranged trial match for the best young talents going the rounds.

The shotstopper takes up the story,” It doesn’t get any better for a goalkeeper playing as a trialist to save a penalty kick and for good measure score a goal from a long kick-out so Gerry was never going to let me go home that day without signing on the dotted line .

“What did concern me though was him asking how many goals I could guarantee for the following season just as I was in the act of putting pen to paper ?

”He was joking of course ( I think) however I don’t have any regrets with how things then panned out .”

Howie was to blossom  further with the crack Lennoxtown outfit and did not look out of place playing alongside the likes of Kenny Ashwood ,snapped up by East Stirling, John Fitzpatrick( St Johnstone )and more notably his later in life Pollok team mate Gordon Wilson ,back then a midfield talent on the verge of stepping into the Senior ranks with Kilmarnock.

Their team won numerous trophy prizes, including the much coveted Scottish Cup and Howie’s displays earned him further unsuccessful trial outings with Kilmarnock, Falkirk and Petershill however towards the end of his second full season the  arduous chore of a three times per week trek from  the Glasgow Southside to East Dumbartonshire led to him pleading with Marley to help find a club closer to his home..

The soon to be 65 year old laughed as he recounted,” I had thought Gerry would use his many contacts in the game to get me a move to one of the top  Junior clubs on my doorstep such as East Kilbride Thistle , Pollok or Benburb ,but instead he brokered a move to Rob Roy ,just a handful of miles closer to Glasgow than Lennoxtown???.”

“ Not surprisingly , I was close to turning down this opportunity but my mind was changed by the  Rabs Match Secretary Davie Smith, one of the most genuine club officials I ever came across, who promised I would get a chance to prove my worth even though it was generally felt I was only going there as understudy to the long established Stevie Anderson  who had been the Roy goalkeeper in  the previous season when they lost 3-1 to Kilbirnie Ladeside in the 1977 Scottish Junior Cup Final .

“But as luck would have it, I got the chance to make my mark sooner than expected after Stevie picked up an unfortunate injury and I ended up holding down the No 1 jersey for the rest of the season .

Howie went on , “ In those days ,the Rob Roy Committee picked the team and on more than one occasion I arrived at Adamslie to be greeted by the sight of 11 or 12 officials standing in or around the centre circle and raising their hand (or not)  when a player’s name was read out. “

1977 Junior Cup worthies Willie Bachelor, Archie Lochrie, Joe Wark (cousin of Scotland and Ipswich Town midfielder John) and Eddie Docherty were inhabiting the Kirkintilloch dressing room along with veteran stopper Paul McMillan and John Gray when Howard first came onto the Rabs scene and he also recollects the arrivals of striker Gavin Murray and the Fanning brothers , Jim and Billy going into his second season however a third campaign was to be cut short after he impressed while playing as a Motherwell Reserves trialist in a game against Morton that ended in a 0-0 stalemate .

He remembers, “Cammy Murray was the Well coach in charge of the Reserve team and he said the manager Ally McLeod would be in touch but never in a million years did I expect him to turn up at my parents` house the following night and spend all of two hours waxing lyrically about the various merits of coming on board at Fir Park.

“Going there as a part-timer I was always going to be second choice not least because Hugh Sproat, the regular Well keeper at that time was a favourite of Ally’s from having previously played under him at Ayr United however he then opened the door for me by calling in sick ahead of a game against Queen of the South and I was given the nod to play in a side containing Ian McLeod, Brian McLaughlin, John Gaughan, Graham Forbes, Bruce Clelland and Joe Wark that ran out 2-0 winners .

HOWIE IN HIS MOTHERWELL DAYS

“ Sproat was to be back wearing the gloves for the next game despite my clean sheet but any hopes of me building on that first ever top team performance were dashed within a matter of weeks when Ally was sacked and  replaced by Davie Hay whose preference for a  full time goalkeeper. aka Sproat, was all too obvious and I managed only 4 games in total albeit three of them were shut-outs en-route to Motherwell being crowned First Division title winners and earning promotion into the Premier League.”

Hay took up the post of Celtic manager during the close season and Motherwell moved quickly to fill their void by appointing  Rangers great Jock Wallace to their manager’s chair, assisted by ex-Celt Frank Connor but having two former goalkeepers at the Fir Park helm did not exactly work in Sammeroff’s favour… anything but.

One of their early signing captures was Nikky Walker who had played under Wallace at Leicester City and he very quickly was established as the first-pick yellow jersey wearer with the experienced Sproat on stand-by and Howard consigned to seeing out the end of his contact by making do with limited outings for Motherwell’s under 18 side along with turning out for Hamilton Accies Reserves on loan .

Being granted a free transfer at the end of the 1982/83 season brought a demand for his services , most notably from Ayrshire big guns Glenafton where memories were still fresh of him putting in a stellar performance playing for Rob Roy in a Cup clash between the clubs .  

He insisted, “ Talks had been arranged with Pollok coach Tam Young prior to the Glens coming on the scene with a lucrative contract offer that blew every other interested club out of the water but Tam’s response when I revealed the terms was to say `If it’s money you’re after then just go there because you can only become a big earner at this club if you’re successful`

“ His words struck a chord with me and I was already  dreading the prospect of the long journey down to New Cumnock so it was a no-brainer to sign for Pollok  and it’s a decision I never ever had cause to regret.”

HOWIE AND HIS POLLOK TEAM MATES CELEBRATE THEIR 1983 SECTIONAL LEAGUE CUP SUCCESS OVER LARKHALL THISTLE

Petershill pipping Pollok  to the league title (by the margin of one goal) in Howie’s first Newlandsfield season led to the appointment of former Lok player Dick Brock as Young ‘s  replacement and  a wonderful run of trophy triumphs ensued, an anything but unlucky 13 all told , inclusive of the game’s ultimate prize in 1985 when the Scottish Junior Cup was won.

The 3-1 Hampden Park replay victory over city rivals Petershill was a personal triumph for Howard whose levels  of consistency had established him as Brock’s goalkeeper of choice and he has fond memories of featuring in a side captained by his once Campsie Black Watch team mate Wilson in which he was the last line of defence behind a backline comprising of stalwarts Stuart Auld, Ally Marshall, Ian Weir and Jeff Curran.

He revealed ,” To also pick up the Premier Division title and Evening Times Cup makes 1985 the best  of  seven glorious years at Pollok  during which I picked up every winners medal  going (some more than twice) though I did have to settle for a place on the bench behind Ian McPhie when the West of Scotland Cup was won in 1987.

“I would have liked to stay longer but among the changes made by Tommy Reynolds when he took over as manager from Dickie in 1990 was to hand the gloves to Brian Cassidy which presented me with the dilemma of having to find another club in order to keep playing.

 “Former team mates had warned it would all be downhill after Pollok and I certainly found that to be the case after an uneventful season at Johnstone Burgh was followed by a three year stint at Yoker Athletic when George Campbell was in charge of team affairs.

“Just reaching the Junior Cup 4th Round was looked upon as a highlight however it was spelled out to me how far I’d fallen when I took part in an end of season game where Yoker needed to avoid losing by four goals in order to escape relegation.

“ We lost 2-0 and not long afterwards ,I made the decision to call time on the Juniors and get reinstated into  the amateur ranks at Glasgow Maccabi whose home games back then were played on  the red ash pitch at Giffnock North.

Howie had an extensive history with the Glasgow Jewish Community side, having previously represented them in 1976 as an 18 year old attacking outfield player ,(he scored a goal) when they became the only non-English side to be crowned British National Cup winners , a feat he was to go on and remarkably replicate in his preferred goalkeeper position in both 1996 and 1999.

English side to be crowned British National Cup winners , a feat he was to go on and remarkably replicate in his preferred goalkeeper position in both 1996 and 1999.

HOWIE AS A GREAT BRITAIN PLAYER IN FRONT OF 40.000 IN TEL AVIV

He added , “ I would hazard a guess that not many footballers are able to say they were trophy winners all of 20 years apart and I am immensely proud of  my achievements with Maccabi.

“ Being picked for a Great Britain side that played in the Maccabiah Games over in Israel was a feather in my cap as was turning out for Scotland in the bi-annual European Games, particularly when honoured with the captain’s arm band in 1999 albeit we were beaten 3-0 in the Peter Morrison Cup Final by Great Britain.

“To be silver medal winners at the age of 41 seemed as good a time as any to bring the curtain down on my playing days and my football involvement ever since has been restricted to very occasionally taking in a Pollok match or as is more the case ,watching games on T.V as a couch potato.

“In saying that, my nephew Joel Taylor is a defender with Kilbirnie Ladeside whom he joined from Stirling University last season so I may be tempted into watching how he develops?”

FIXTURES FOR SATURDAY 8th JULY 2023 (various kick off times). Friendly Matches: Johnstone Burgh v Largs Thistle, Finnart v Vale of Clyde, Dalry Thistle v Neilston, Beith v Blantyre Vics, Irvine Meadow v East Kilbride F.C.,Gartcairn v Thornton Hibs, Pollok v Bo’ness Utd, Vale of Leven v Glenrothes, Auchinleck Talbot v Whitletts Vics, Hurlford Utd v Linlithgow Rose, Camelon v Cumbernauld Utd, Yoker Athletic v Port Glasgow, Maryhill v Glenvale, Ashfield v Irvine Vics, Carnoustie Panmure v Kilbirnie Ladeside, Lanark Utd v Thorniewood Utd,West Park Utd v Glenafton, Benburb v Renfrew, Stirling University v Kilwinning Rangers,  East Kilbride Thistle v St Anthonys, Giffnock v Glasgow Perthshire, Penicuik v Arthurlie, St Cadocs v Sauchie Juniors.    

Regards

Jim O’Donnell

About Author

MAD DOG HAD MANY SPECIAL MOMENTS

MAD DOG HAD MANY SPECIAL MOMENTS

HUGHIE (centre) WITH LONG TIME FRIENDS JOHN McCOOL(left) AND JIM MARNER (right)

Where and How to begin with Hughie McDonald ?

He’s sadly no longer with us after `shuffling off this mortal coil` in September 2021 at 80 years of age but the much loved father and grandfather who was a self-employed carpet fitter for most of his working life also left behind an amazing Junior footballing legacy that more than merits a posthumous airing according to many of those who shared various dressing rooms with him.

Penning his profile and giving it balance would not have been possible without his close friends and former Kilbirnie Ladeside stalwarts John McCool and Jim Marner doing their bit to accumulate details from a veritable array of sources, not least of all Hughie’s daughters Anne and Sandra ,but nevertheless I’ll offer up apologies for what I believe are the perceived gaps in his career story (particularly in his early days)  which quite honestly could only have been filled through chatting with the man himself ?

It’s not going to happen so here goes anyway…

Hughie, came into this world as part of a large sixteen strong Govan family, albeit three of his siblings died very young, and it’s believed he along with his surviving six brothers and six sisters went on to attend Govan High School where his hard tackling and tenacious qualities (Coolser remembers Hughie telling him he was a full back) soon caught the eye and established him as one of the regular picks for a school team alongside another football mad youngster, nowadays better known to all and sundry as Sir Alex Ferguson.

The pair became good friends aided and abetted by them also progressing to play together with the Scotland Schoolboys Under 15’s side that circa 1955/56 travelled down to Wembley Stadium for the then annual meeting with their English counterparts however Hughie reputedly voiced his disapproval at the teacher/manager selecting him to play out of position and subsequently was omitted from the team whereas Sir Alex was picked to play up front .

GOVAN HIGH’S SCHOOL TEAM WITH HUGHIE (standing directly right of the Goalkeeper)AND SIR ALEX (sitting middle row on the extreme right)]

The pair also teamed up together at Drumchapel Amateurs as well as crack juvenile outfit Harmony Row from where they were to go their separate ways after Sir Alex stepped up to join Queens Park at 16 years of age around the same time as Hughie was enticed by Glasgow Perthshire into putting pen to paper ahead of the 1958/59 season.

It couldn’t have been more than a few months later before his failure to settle in Possil’s climes saw Hughie ship out to the closer to home Johnstone Burgh where he is thought to have featured for their 1959 Central League title winning side whose star turns were Billy McDerment (of Leicester City and Luton Town fame ) and a hard as nails striker Jim Peebles (destined to later become a team mate of Hughie’s at Kilbirnie Ladeside)however 1961 found him off on his travels again, to Dalry Thistle this time, where he is credited with spending a season and a bit  prior to somewhat bizarrely deciding to head deeper into Ayrshire and join Kello Rovers way down in the remote Junior outpost of Kirkconnel ???

THOUGHT TO BE A 1993/94 KELLO ROVERS TEAM PIC WITH HUGHIE (third from right in front row)

Trying to understand Hughie plumping for such relative obscurity let alone the travelling time and fuel cost involved is nigh on impossible without him around to explain the whys and wherefores however what’s undeniable is his time as a Super K player spanned at least a couple of seasons given that the scant recollections coming to the minds of those knowing him best have Hughie next turning out in 1965/66 (or thereabouts)with a Kilbirnie Ladeside side whose playing ranks also included a certain Bobby “Sconie” Davidson

From there he more or less disappears off Junior football’s radar prior to being briefly registered as an Ardrossan Winton Rovers signing in 1969 and I say “briefly” in the knowledge there’s a Hughie claim pertaining to that same year,  stating he was reinstated at Dreghorn Amateurs where another short playing stint preceded Dalry Thistle persuading him in 1970 to make a return to Merksworth Park .

Hughie accomplished the equivalent of laying down roots (for him )by staying all of four years with Dalry1970-74)  during which time the latterly  33 year old must have decided to hang up the boots (due to injury perhaps?) and revert to more of a backroom team  role because he didn’t surface in the grand scheme of Junior things again until former team mate  `Sconie`  ,by then the brash and charismatic manager of Kilbirnie unveiled him as his  new trainer/coach just before the onset of the 1974/75 season.

His breezing into a Valefield dressing room containing the likes of George McFarlane , goalkeeper Marner ,George Kane , Jim Fleeting, John McCool ,  Ian Baillie and skilful wing pair Bobby Davidson and  Davie McIlroy  was hailed as a wonderful Sconie appointment even though that much admired Blasties side were to go on and suffer a surprise 3-2 defeat  in the Scottish Junior Cup semi-finals at the hands of Rutherglen Glencairn.

Hughie’s unwavering enthusiasm for the Juniors fray in tandem with his never less than upbeat manner and acclaimed fitness routines worked the oracle in helping to lift dressing room morale in the aftermath of that confidence denting setback as shown by the following season yielding up League Championship honours for Kilbirnie to go along with Ayrshire Dryborough and National Dryborough Cup triumphs ’

There was however to be another side to the coin as a further dose of  bitter  disappointment  awaited the Garnock Valley kingpins at the Junior Cup’s last but one hurdle when Darvel beat them at Rugby Park by a 2-1scoreline however this much sought after crowning glory so craved by Hughie and a Kilbirnie playing squad, strengthened by the additions of such as Ada McLaughlin, John McCool (back from Notts County), Ronnie Harvey and Joe McGoldrick, was merely put on the back burner for another twelve months until they bested Lesmahagow 1-0  (after a replay)  at the penultimate stage .

And at a sun-bathed Hampden Park on the 25th May 1977, goals from Davidson, Harvey and Tam McGill sparked wild celebrations as the Ayrshire cracks came from behind  to run out 3-1 winners over Rob Roy and lift the Scottish Junior Cup for only the second time in their history.

HUGHIE right) CELEBRATES KILBIRNIE’S WIN AGAINST ROB ROY

Why that wonderful feat did not trigger a run of silverware success for Ladeside and their enigmatic gaffer Sconie remains a mystery to this day but his abrasive manner was certainly thought responsible for rubbing many of his charges up the wrong way and several opted to head out to pastures new, Hughie among them around 1981 according to no less than the Ayrshire club’s well-informed Match Secretary Gordon Ronney.

The  hitherto Blasties team captain Jim Inglis who had departed Valefield  to take  over as Kilwinning Rangers team boss ,wisely brought Hughie on board as part of his backroom team and he was to remain at Abbey Park for close on two seasons before the sacking (or resignation ) of Inglis led to him taking an enforced short-break from the game until a 1985 approach from  the celebrated Auchinleck Talbot manager Willie Knox led to the then  44 year old coming through the doors of a Beechwood Park dressing room inhabited by established worthies such as Albert Morrison, Brian Lannon, Bobby Dickson, Bert Ferguson , Billy Young , Sam McCulloch, Jimmy McMillan and Kenny Paterson.

All these years later, there are some who still attribute Hughie’s arrival on the Talbot scene at that particular moment in time as nothing more than fortunate timing  but  “ a match made in heaven” has to be  a more apt description given what followed ….three consecutive Scottish Junior Cup victories , 1986 v Pollok, 1987 v Kilbirnie and  1988 v Petershill, along with coming up trumps in two West of Scotland Cup Finals and winning three Ayrshire First Division titles  as well as numerous local competitions?

HUGHIE (second from right front) WITH AUCHINLECK’S PLAYERS AND THEIR 1986 SCOTTISH CUP PRIZE

All of those who were in and around him on the training ground and matchdays could not help but respond to Hughie’s  sheer passion and relentless urgings to do even better which along with making Talbot’s players fitter  also instilled an even greater determination in them to come out on top.

On a lighter note, carpet fitter Hughie was a great advocate of keeping his focus on work and football in different headspaces so it’s somewhat ironic that the lines were crossed on the biggest stage of all , the aforementioned  1986 Centenary Cup Final clash against Pollok.

The sun beating down on Hampden Park ahead of  the 18th May showpiece occasion caused two gymnasium benches apiece to be placed trackside for use by both teams as an alternative to cramming substitutes, management teams and any unused or injured players into the respective dugouts.

Talbot’s benches had Willie Knox seated to the very outside of one with as many as eight bodies taking up  places  between him and Hughie sitting alongside the twin substitutes Brian Lannon  and Tommy Dowdalls at the other end .

Pollok already 1-0 in front through an early John McCarthy score , doubled their lead 17 minutes in when full back Ally Marshall advanced from his own half and played a couple of one-two’s before slotting the ball past Talbot keeper Ally Wilson at which point Knoxy leaned forward and both gesticulated and shouted for Hughie to come to him.

He , thinking only of events unfolding out on the pitch, told the substitute pair to warm up, saying `I think he’s going to make changes ? ` but upon  shuffling his way along to  Knoxy’s side, Hughie was then rendered  speechless as the  Bot gaffer pulled a carpet sample from his pocket and said “That’s what my daughter Gillian  wants for her bedroom , the size is written on the back”… Astonishing but true!

1989 brought long overdue recognition of Hughie’s methods and inspirational qualities when he gained a first ever Scotland Juniors cap after manager Tommy Reynolds asked him to form  part of his backroom for  a game against the Republic of Ireland , won 2-0 by a Scottish team comprising of Tam McDonald and Alan Pirie(Auchinleck), Rocky Crichton  and Alex Coubrough (Pollok), Raymond Day (Cumnock), Tom Donnelly (Vale of Clyde) Billy Muir (Kilbirnie) and Tony McDonald (Arthurlie) among others.

Further caps were to come Hughie’s way but his close association with Reynolds also led to him bringing the curtain down on his success-laden Auchinleck career chapter to follow in the former midfielder’s footsteps when he assumed the role of Pollok team boss in May 1990.

Newlandsfield’s dressing room was further enhanced by the captures of Muir and Donnelly whose linking up with Scotland team mates Crichton and Coubrough as well as other feted Lok types Ally Marshall, John McGall, John Paisley, Gordon Wilson, John O’Brien, Kevin Ingles and Andy McQuade derived immediate success in the shape of the Sectional League Cup and Central First Division Championship silverware.

Winning the Sectional League Cup again and the West of Scotland Cup (1-0 against Beith) over the ensuing season and a half did not act to sate the appetites of Pollok’s supporting legions and led to Reynolds shouldering the burden by tendering his resignation midway through the 1992/93 season.

Now in his early 50’s , Hughie’s avowed desire to continue as a winner  led to him moving back to Ayrshire where he again excelled himself by “licking into shape”  an Irvine Meadow squad composed of players of the ilk of Bomber Brown , Gary Faulds, Mick McCabe, Colin Johnstone, Neilly McLaughlin, Martin Ferry, John Morrison,  Milton Thomson  and Fraser Davidson that pipped his former club Auchinleck to the 1994 Ayrshire First Division title honours .

The end of a two years stint at Meadow Park led to him taking up an invite to assume a trainer/coach post at Rob Roy where his former Pollok charges Gordon Wilson and John McGall were looking after team matters but he’s thought to have been at Adamslie for no more than a couple of years before reverting to an immensely more satisfying role …overseeing the budding career of grandson Max (Anne’s son) who initially signed for Rangers as a player  and is still to be found at Ibrox nowadays working as a Scouting Assistant and Children Academy coach.

THE PROUD GRANDFATHER POSES FOR AN IBROX PIC WITH MAX

Central to all that has been said about Hughie is the affection in which he was and is held by each and every player whose lives he touched, briefly or otherwise . I say this without any fear of contradiction  because nobody I’ve come across in the compiling of this tale  has uttered a bad word about him even if their recollections of the man affectionately called  “Mad Dog” are of him standing in the midst of a blizzard atop a dune slope adjacent to  Irvine beach and demanding players to sprint up the slope and around him while carrying a ball under each arm …and sometimes with a team mate on your back.

I’ll leave you to mull over that vision…

AND IN CASE WE FORGET ???

FIXTURES FOR SATURDAY 14th OCTOBER 2023 (Kick Offs 2 PM unless stated):.P.D.M HUWS GRAY Premier Division.  Darvel v Cumnock, Benburb v Clydebank..P.D.M HUWS GRAYFirst Division., Blantyre Vics v Whitletts Vics, Maybole v Renfrew, Cambuslang Rangers v Petershill.PDM HUWS GRAY Second Division. Larkhall Thistle v  Glasgow Perthshire, Caledonian Locomotives v Glasgow University, Bonnyton Thistle v Wishaw, Kilsyth Rangers v Craigmark,   Muirkirk v Yoker Athletic. PDM HUWS GRAYThird Division. Bellshill Athletic v Kilsyth Athletic, Greenock v Dalry Thistle, Glasgow Utd v Ardeer Thistle. PDM HUWS GRAYFourth Division. Easterhouse v Knightswood,  Eglinton v Rossvale, Saltcoats Vics v Royal Albert, Glenvale v Newmains Utd. SCOTTISH JUNIOR CUP.Second Round.Aberdeen East End v East Kilbride Thistle, Johnstone Burgh v Dundee North End, Carnoustie Panmure v Letham, Forfar Utd v Arthurlie, Kello Rovers v Gartcairn, Dundee Violet v Deveronside,  Vale of Leven v Carluke Rovers, Hurlford Utd v Tayport, Finnart v Dyce SOUTHERN CHALLENGE CUP.Third Round.Cowdenbeath vWhitehill Welfare, Newton Stewart v Leith Athletic,  Linlithgow Rose v St Peters, Jeanfield Swifts v Largs Thistle, Rutherglen Glencairn v Penicuik Athletic, Heriot Watt University v Tynecastle, Maryhill v Lanark Utd, St Anthonys v Dunbar Utd, Gretna 2008 v St Cadocs,Tranent vLothian Thistle,Armadale Thistle v Albion Rovers,  Beith v Arthurlie, Thornton Hibs v St Rochs, Shotts Bon Accord v Kirkcaldy & Dysart, Johnstone Burgh v Kilbirnie Ladeside, Clydebank, Cumbernauld Utd v Forth Wanderers, Thorn Athletic v Threave Rovers, Auchinleck Talbot v Arniston Rangers,Stoneyburn v Kennoway Star Hearts, Musselburgh Athletic v Berwick Rangers, Troon v Abbey Vale,  Caledonian Braves v East Stirling, Kilwinning Rangers v Hawick Royal Albert, Thorniewood Utd v Stirling University, Broxburn Athletic v Lesmahagow, Pollok v Camelon (Friday 7.30PM), Lugar Boswell v BSC Glasgow, Ardrossan Winton Rovers v St Andrews Utd, Hurlford Utd v Rob Roy, Creetown v Ashfield STRATHCLYDE DEMOLITION CUP.Drumchapel Utd v Campbelltown Pupils, Port Glasgow v Neilston.

Regards

Jim O’Donnell