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Match Details

Aberdeen

0-1

Rangers

Scottish Cup
Pittodrie Park
7 March, 1936

Aberdeen

Smith
Cooper
McGill
Fraser
Falloon
Thompson
Warnock
McKenzie
Armstrong
Mills
Lang

4

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11

Rangers

Jerry Dawson
Dougie Gray
William Cheyne
Davie Meiklejohn
Jimmy Simpson
George Brown
James Fiddes
Alex Venters
Jimmy Smith
Bob McPhail
Jim Turnbull

Match Information

Goals

Turnbull 87

Missed Penalties

Meiklejohn pen miss 85

Match Information

Manager: Bill Struth
Attendance: 41,663
Referee: J.M. Martin (Ladybank)
Matchday:  Saturday

Match Trivia

A battle of the giants – a glorious, pulsating struggle of thrill after thrill, worthy of the reputations of the contestants. That was the fare served up at Pittodrie yesterday. Rangers just deserved to win, but they left the all-important counter late enough to keep the excitement up to sizzling point to the end. Four minutes from time Turnbull struck the blow that smashed Aberdeen’s Cup hopes. Fiddes hooked the ball over from the right. Smith, the Rangers’ centre, trapped it, held it for a moment, then pushed it along the ground to Turnbull. The Ranger took two strides and smashed the ball into the roof of the net. The remaining minutes of the game passed in a roar of Light Blues jubilation. The excited fans swarmed on the field and had to be cleared off by peevish constables. Aberdeen made only a half-hearted effort to pull the game out of the fire. They had shot their bolt after a long and gallant fight. Just a minute or so before Turnbull’s goal, there occurred the other big sensation of the game – a little drama in which Steve Smith doubled the roles of villain and hero. The Aberdeen goalkeeper fumbled a lob from Turnbull, and the ball went loose. As Jimmy Smith dived in pursuit, his yellow-jersey namesake tackled him low in approved Rugby style. ‘Pheep’ went the whistle with Referee Martin pointing to the penalty spot. Meiklejohn took the kick, and to a gasp from 40,000 throats Smith saved. These were the highlights in a game that sparkled, but Aberdeen once again gave us, in their own inimitable fashion, those flashing interchanges of position among the forwards, carrying the attack to close quarters in bewildering style. Rangers’ forwards methods were direct and orthodox, but no less effective. There was little of the customary Cup-tie looseness about the play, but when Mills tired towards the end of the second half, the magic
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