The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

A season that will never be forgotten

- SCOTT LORIMER

After Arbroath eventually secured their Championsh­ip place by a single point in the 2020-21 season, no one would have envisaged what was to come.

It was so close to being the story of Scottish football, perhaps even the footballin­g world, as the plucky Lichties pushed favourites Kilmarnock all the way for the title.

In the end, it wasn’t quite to be. A heartbreak­ing late defeat at Rugby Park ended their title hopes.

Then a few weeks later, a penalty shootout put a stop to their promotion hopes in the play-offs.

But when the dust settles, there will be plenty of memories for Arbroath fans to treasure.

Rugby Park Part 1

After losing on the opening day to Inverness at Gayfield, Dick Campbell’s men embarked on a sevengame unbeaten run through to the middle of October.

It was too soon in the season to be thinking of any miracles, with the Lichties faithful happy enough just to be in the top half of the table.

However, the second quarter of the season would see Arbroath begin to turn heads.

It was their late winner away to Kilmarnock on November 20 which really stamped their authority on the league.

An Anton Dowds header stunned Rugby Park but it was no more than they deserved on the day – and for their efforts since August.

December 18

With Killie suffering three defeats on the bounce, the Lichties took their chance to go top of the league on a foggy afternoon in December.

A late 2-1 victory over Morton sent Dick Campbell’s men to the summit, where they would remain until March.

The team showed grit and determinat­ion to win it after the Ton levelled the scoring minutes earlier.

But December 18 would ultimately prove significan­t for Killie, too, with Tommy Wright getting the sack.

In the aftermath, the league was hit with fresh Covid restrictio­ns, limiting attendance­s to just 500. Arbroath were fortunate that they only had one fixture, against Inverness, affected.

Scott Allan – the one that got away

Dick Campbell had his

work cut out at the beginning of 2022. The talismanic Joel Nouble and Anton Dowds, scorer of crucial goals, returned to their parent clubs.

Competing alongside full-time teams with bigger appeal and budgets, the Arbroath gaffer spoke of the difficulty of bringing top players to the club.

Familiar faces in Jack Hamilton and Craig Wighton were brought back after previous loan spells.

In addition, forwards Sam Ford and Michael Bakare were brought in from left-field.

And Courier Sport can now reveal that Hibs midfielder Scott Allan was very close to signing for the

Lichties in the January window.

The sides had agreed terms but, at the final moment, the player decided against the move and stayed at Easter Road.

The 30-year-old would play for just 68 minutes across four appearance­s for the rest of the season.

Had the deal gone through, it would have been a massive statement of intent from the Lichties – and potentiall­y one which could have helped them seal the title.

Rugby Park Part 2

After a slight dip in form – and after 10 games at the top of the table – Arbroath were finally overtaken by Kilmarnock on the weekend of March 11-12.

A 3-1 win in the Ayrshire derby saw Mcinnes’ men leapfrog the Lichties, who crashed to a 3-0 defeat at Inverness.

From March, it looked destined to come down to the penultimat­e game of the season between Arbroath and Killie on April 22.

Just like a Hollywood script, that’s exactly how it played out.

An early James Craigen goal had 1,500 travelling Lichties dreaming of a final-day tilt at the title.

But late goals from Ash Taylor and Blair Alston meant Kilmarnock were victorious, not just on the night but over the season, sparking wild celebratio­ns.

It wasn’t the blockbuste­r

ending many were hoping for, but there were still the play-offs.

Inverness play-offs

Billy Dodds’ side had provided stubborn opposition in previous meetings. In fact, they were the only team Arbroath had failed to score against at Gayfield.

A stalemate at the Caledonian Stadium was almost inevitable, setting up an all-or-nothing tie in front of a packed crowd on the Angus coast.

Fans, home and away, came in their numbers, with 5,154 in attendance – the highest in 10 years.

Despite the sides being the two top scorers in the division, neither of them could be separated in 210

minutes of football, including extra-time.

It was a game to forget with just two shots on target in the 120 minutes. Even with Caley down to nine men, Arbroath couldn’t find a way through, meaning their Premiershi­p dream came down to penalties.

With the cruellest of twists, it was club hero Bobby Linn who missed from the spot, leaving Kirk Broadfoot to slot home and send Inverness to the playoff final.

After 286 days of an incredible Championsh­ip season, Arbroath came full circle, losing out to Inverness at Gayfield.

But it was a campaign no Lichtie will ever forget.

 ?? ?? GOOD TIMES: Arbroath players celebrate a goal against Dunfermlin­e during a season in which they came so close to winning the Championsh­ip.
GOOD TIMES: Arbroath players celebrate a goal against Dunfermlin­e during a season in which they came so close to winning the Championsh­ip.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom