On this day 64 years ago Celtic were the underdogs as they lined up at Hampden against an arrogant and over confident Rangers side. The final score that sunny day was something that Celtic fans do or at least should still be signing about to this day. Here’s David Potter telling the story of the 1957 League Cup Final, and we also include Jim Craig’s Diary post from on this day in 2018 on The Celtic Star…

HAMPDEN IN THE SUN

If Celtic were slow starters to the Scottish League Cup, they made up for it very soon. Having won the tournament once, they promptly won it again and did so in what is now regarded as the second most famous Celtic game of them all (after Lisbon) … but, yes … I’m coming to it!

The path to the final was impressive.

Airdrie, East Fife and Hibs were no pushovers, but Celtic won 5 games out of 6 (losing to Hibs at Easter Road) with Billy McPhail showing his value once again and a young man called Bertie Auld making his mark as well.

Bertie Peacock was now the captain, having replaced Bobby Evans whose play seemed to improve now that he was divested of the captaincy, and the team was playing with enthusiasm and panache, passing well to each other and scoring some fine goals.

There was, of course, no lack of talent in that side, and if anyone was in any doubt about that, the two quarter final games against Third Lanark would convince anyone. The aggregate score was 9-0 with Billy McPhail, Bobby Collins and new arrival Sammy Wilson, a hitherto disappointing player with St Mirren who had looked as if his career was over, among the goals.

Then on 28 September at Ibrox, Celtic beat Clyde 4-2 in the semi-final. Bobby Collins was at his most irrepressible scoring a goal himself and laying on one each for Fernie, McPhail and Wilson.

The previous year’s League Cup final was played with the possibility of nuclear war hovering in the background – see HERE.

This year the menace was different in the shape of a flu epidemic.

Clyde had been forced to play the semi-final with a weakened side, and some games had even been postponed. It was curious, for it was not really the time of year for the flu germ. Some folk thought it was to do with the Russians launching their sputnik into space. It was all a Communist plot to damage the air and therefore the health of western society, as Mr McCarthy in the USA might have said!

A more realistic assessment might have suggested that the flu epidemic may well have had its origins in the foul atmosphere and industrial pollution that hung permanently over Glasgow.

In 1957, the authorities were surprisingly slow to grasp the link between fresh air and good health.

The flu germ may well have played a part in reducing the crowd for the final to 82,000. It was the first Celtic v Rangers League Cup final and the first in a national competition since 1928. But those who were there on 19 October 1957 will never forget what they saw!

The smart money was indeed on Celtic – they had beaten Rangers in the League at Ibrox a month before – but the sheer extent of the 7-1 victory was simply astonishing.

It was astonishing but it was by no means undeserved. Indeed it could have been a lot more!

Every one of the seven goals (fortunately all available on You Tube) was well worked as Celtic simply showed the world what they could do with Fernie, Evans and Peacock constantly supplying the forward line. Billy McPhail scored a hat-trick, Neil Mochan two, Sammy Wilson one and Willie Fernie scored a penalty awarded by referee Jack Mowat whose sense of justice exceeded his compassion.

Celtic simply ran riot, and poor John Valentine, the centre half of Rangers never played again.

This game is a “John F Kennedy assassination” kind of game where everyone recalls where he was when he heard the result, in my case, too young to be allowed to go to the game, coming home from the Saturday matinee to meet my father, ashen faced, trembling and incoherent (he wasn’t normally any of these three!) talking deliriously about 7-1.

It is also a game that has its own culture. Songs and books have been written about this game.

Evans and Tully had come to blows at training a day or two before and had had to be talked to by the charming Bertie Peacock. The silver tongued Bertie clearly had a way with words!

The BBC’s failure to show highlights was probably just a genuine mistake by some fool in London leaving a lens cap on a camera rather than any conspiracy involving handshakes, flutes and the rolling up of trouser legs, and then there was poor Billy Simpson, Rangers centre forward who can claim to have scored Rangers’ only goal in a League Cup final between 1951 and 1960! Poor Geordie Niven (not a bad goalkeeper incidentally) but whose name rhymed with Seven. So what’s the time? Seven past Niven!

But there was a sad side to it as well.

Almost immediately Celtic dismantled that fine side, and seven and a half years had to pass before another trophy was won. Something biblical about that, was there not? The supporters bragging about “Seven” all the time in fact masked the inadequacies of the side from 1958 until 1964, and there was almost something pathetic about it all.

But no-one thought about that as the Celtic heartlands celebrated that night of 19 October 1957. As in the Coronation Cup triumph of 1953, there was dancing in the streets of the Gorbals that night! And those at death’s door with flu on Saturday morning were up and about on Sunday, and back to work smiling on Monday.

David Potter

Jim Craig – Happy ‘Hampden in the Sun, Celtic 7 Rangers 1’ Anniversary!

Just back from a tour of North America – where, after their victory over Partick Thistle, they had shown off the League Cup to their fans – the Celtic players started well in that same competition in season 1957/58, reaching the final after beating Third Lanark in the quarter-final and Clyde in the semi-final.

On this day in 1957, at Hampden Park, where 83,293 had crowded in, the players of Celtic and Rangers ran out for another epic clash in the long history of their Glasgow rivalry…and on this occasion, Celtic dominated.

In 23 minutes, Billy McPhail headed the ball down from a corner and Sammy Wilson was on the spot to fairly blast the ball into the net from 12 yards. Just before half-time, Neilly Mochan cut in from the left and drove a scorcher past George Niven in the Rangers goal.

Eight minutes after the interval, McPhail made it 3-0.

Rangers then pulled one back but McPhail was quick to score another to make it 4-1. Then McPhail again and Mochan, also for the second time, raised the score to 6-1, before Willie Fernie, right on the whistle, got the 7th from the penalty spot.

It was a great day for every Celtic fan and well remembered in verse and song – ‘Oh! Hampden in the Sun- Celtic 7 Rangers 1’.

Jim Craig

“The second most famous Celtic game of them all (after Lisbon),” David Potter 

Almost immediately Celtic dismantled that fine side, and seven and a half years had to pass before another trophy was won. Something biblical about that, was there not? The supporters bragging about “Seven” all the time in fact masked the inadequacies of the side from 1958 until 1964, and there was almost something pathetic about it all.

But no-one thought about that as the Celtic heartlands celebrated that night of 19 October 1957. As in the Coronation Cup triumph of 1953, there was dancing in the streets of the Gorbals that night! And those at death’s door with flu on Saturday morning were up and about on Sunday, and back to work smiling on Monday.

David Potter

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