The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

A fighting spirit that boiled over – every day

● Staggies cup final captain Brittain recalls team of 2010

- BY STUART FINDLAY

If there was one thing that the Ross County team of 2010 had in spades, it was fighting spirit. But as club captain Richie Brittain recalls, that spirit extended to players literally scrapping with each other in training on an almost daily basis.

The Staggies had started to make some serious strides under Derek Adams in the spring of 2010.

His team was well on the way to a comfortabl­e mid-table position in the Scottish First Division – a welcome relief after a nervy relegation battle the year before – and their Scottish Cup exploits were attracting national recognitio­n.

Dumping Hibs out of the quarter-final got them noticed, but it was the win over Neil Lennon’s Celtic that sent them into the stratosphe­re.

And the burning desire to be involved in that semifinal and the final against Dundee United led to some tasty encounters at the Dingwall club’s training ground.

Brittain, who is now the head of County’s profession­al academy, said: “The squad we had back then was incredibly competitiv­e.

“T h e a m o u n t o f arguments and fights that there were; it was almost every day.

“And when those scraps happened, Derek would stand back and let it go. He wasn’t one for stepping in and saying ‘don’t do that’, he wanted to let the players sort it out themselves.

“As captain, I was probably more towards being a pain in the backside.

“I was demanding and

I liked to try to inspire people.

“If people didn’t meet those standards, I would fall out with them. Those arguments were always happening in training but I was a fan of that. This was a team full of winners so it was healthy as long as it was within reason.

“Once we crossed the white line, though, we were all united.

“You don’t see as much of that nowadays. It’s maybe a cultural change. But it worked for us and I think we achieved a lot of success during my time.”

The semi-final victory over Celtic at Hampden was the biggest in the club’s history up until that point and remains one of County’s finest to this day.

The Staggies were relative unknowns compared to players like Scott Brown and Aiden McGeady and Brittain’s job on that day was sitting deep in midfield and stopping the supply to Robbie Keane.

Keane, who was on loan at Celtic from Spurs, was reportedly taking home around £65,000 a week at the time.

That salary dwarfed County’s top earner by a factor of 100 but the Irish internatio­nal barely managed a kick that day as the Staggies won 2-0.

There was no shortage of belief that County could topple Dundee United in the final and claim a maiden Scottish Cup.

Dingwall was buzzing with excitement and around 20,000 County fans descended on Hampden Park for the showpiece event.

“The club was on a crest of a wave,” Brittain said. “Everyone in the area wanted to be part of it.

“To take 20,000 fans to Hampden for a club coming from a town the size of Dingwall, it’s a fantastic achievemen­t.”

Unfortunat­ely for County, the final was a bridge too far.

United had finished third

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