The Scotsman

How Scotland’s ‘Super League’ flopped in 1992

- By STEPHEN HALLIDAY

It did not have the same the global reach, but Scottish football was consumed by a similar furore almost 30 years ago with plans for a breakaway ‘Super League’.

For those of a certain generation in Scotland, controvers­y and outrage sparked by an intended football Super League breakaway is nothing new.

It may not have generated the kind of global headlines prompted this week by the announceme­nt of a European Super league, but scottish football was consumed by a similar furore almost 30 years ago.

Aberdeen, Celtic, Dundee United, Hearts and Rangers caused shockwaves when they tendered their resignatio­n from the Scottish Football League and declared the formation of a new eight-team Scottish Super League. The two-year notice period required to quit the SFL, the original governing body of senior league football in Scotland since 1890, meant the new Super League was intended to begin at the start of the 199495 season. The prime movers behind the breakaway were Wallace Mercer and David Murray, the entreprene­urial chair men and owners of hearts and Rangers respective­ly.

Unhappy with the existing 12- team top flight premier divisionof the sfl, with its 44- game schedule, the public relations campaign behind the proposed Scottish Super League looked to strike an altruistic tone as they claimed it would benefit “exhausted players and bored supporters”.

But in the year when the English Premier League had been formed and the European Cup was being rebranded as the Champions League, no-one was in any doubt that the prime motivation was to grab a bigger slice of commercial and broadcasti­ng income.

Hibs, motherwell and st john stone joined the five founding clubs in committing to the plan as Scottish Super League Limited was formally registered. At a media conference in Edinburgh in August 1992, Rangers supremo Murray insisted the rebels would not be deter red by the SFL’S insistence their resignatio­ns were legally invalid.

"We are not going to be bluffed into a situation,” said Murray. “We are going forward, we have taken legal opinion, we believe we are in the right. We've been forced into this situation. I know supporters of the smaller clubs will say 'rules for one, rules for others, and it could be to the detriment of the game.' I am sorry. My job is to look after Rangers Football Club, as it is the chair men to look after their clubs. We see this as the way forward for a better standard of football and that's it." No relegation was planned for the first two years of the Super League which would adopt a bizarre system of three points for an away win, two points for a home win and one point for a draw.

Concerns were raised over the loss of gate income in a 28- game, eight-team season. par tick thistle and Dunfermlin­e were then signed up to increase the quota to ten clubs. But momentum behind the plan soon stalled. Celtic’ sb ac king lacked conviction­with chairman kevin kelly saying his club“fervently hoped it never came to pass”, even though they fully agreed with the need for change. their preference was for it to be achieved within the SFL.

The acrimony continued for several months before a peace deal was brokered with the sfl in the form of league reconstruc­tion and a 10-team Premier Division from 1994. But it was an uneasy alliance which was shattered forever just three years later when the Scottish Premier League was formed.

 ??  ?? 0 Former Hearts chairman Wallace Mercer formally announced the proposed breakaway Scottish Super League at a press conference.
0 Former Hearts chairman Wallace Mercer formally announced the proposed breakaway Scottish Super League at a press conference.
 ??  ?? 0 Sir David Murray was one of the prime movers back in 1992
0 Sir David Murray was one of the prime movers back in 1992

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