Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

When ‘Sinky’ double sank the Buddies

- BY TOM DUTHIE

WHEN Dundee face St Mirren in the Scottish Cup at Dens Park on Saturday, the Dark Blues will be red-hot favourites to make it through.

As well as being a league above the Buddies, Paul Hartley’s team have hit fine form at home, winning four and drawing the other in their last five Premiershi­p outings.

In contrast, Jack Ross’s beleaguere­d St Mirren have been struggling for wins anywhere and they head for Tayside in a break from what’s become a desperate battle to avoid relegation from the Championsh­ip.

Things, though, were not always that way when these two met in the cup and tonight we look back to a tie in the late 1970s when the roles were, to an extent, reversed.

It was at the beginning of March 1979 when Jim Clunie’s team travelled from Paisley, not just as Premier League leaders, but on the back of having knocked out a very strong Dundee United at Tannadice in the previous round.

Under the guidance of Tommy Gemmell, Dundee’s main focus that season was to get back to the top flight, something they would eventually manage after the tightest of First Division promotion races.

In fact, with the weather hitting hard and leading to a backlog of league fixtures, in some ways the cup was a distractio­n for the home side.

When the in-form Paisley men arrived, though, Gemmell’s team rose to the occasion and pulled off one of the shocks of the fourth round.

And it was thanks in no small part to the contributi­on of a fans’ favourite, who at the time had become something of a forgotten man around the squad.

Eric Sinclair had made 17 appearance­s already that season but had dropped out of the squad in early December and was a surprise recall for this tie.

It proved a masterstro­ke by the manager because the robust striker’s presence unsettled the St Mirren defence and the two goals he got that

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom