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2004–05 in Scottish football - Wikipedia Jump to content

2004–05 in Scottish football

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Football in Scotland
Season2004–05
← 2003–04 Scotland 2005–06 →
2004–05 in Scottish football
Premier League champions
Rangers
First Division champions
Falkirk
Second Division champions
Brechin City
Third Division champions
Gretna
Scottish Cup winners
Celtic
League Cup winners
Rangers
Challenge Cup winners
Falkirk
Junior Cup winners
Tayport
Teams in Europe
Celtic, Dunfermline Athletic, Heart of Midlothian, Hibernian, Rangers
Scotland national team
2006 World Cup qualification

The 2004–05 season was the 108th season of competitive football in Scotland. [1]

Major transfer deals

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2004

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2005

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League Competitions

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Scottish Premier League

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The 2004–05 Scottish Premier League season saw Rangers win the title after a last day win over Hibernian as Celtic were beaten by two late Motherwell goals from Scott McDonald, a win would have been enough for Celtic to retain their title regardless of Rangers' result. Dundee, also on the last day of the season, were relegated to the Scottish First Division after a draw with Livingston. Rangers and Celtic both qualified for the UEFA Champions League while Hibernian, in manager Tony Mowbray's first season in charge, went into the UEFA Cup. Inverness Caledonian Thistle, in their first season in the top flight, finished in 8th place.

Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Qualification or relegation[a]
1 Rangers (C) 38 29 6 3 78 22 +56 93 Qualification for the Champions League third qualifying round
2 Celtic 38 30 2 6 85 35 +50 92 Qualification for the Champions League second qualifying round
3 Hibernian 38 18 7 13 64 57 +7 61 Qualification for the UEFA Cup first round
4 Aberdeen 38 18 7 13 44 39 +5 61
5 Heart of Midlothian 38 13 11 14 43 41 +2 50
6 Motherwell 38 13 9 16 46 49 −3 48
7 Kilmarnock 38 15 4 19 49 55 −6 49
8 Inverness Caledonian Thistle 38 11 11 16 41 47 −6 44
9 Dundee United 38 8 12 18 41 59 −18 36 Qualification for the UEFA Cup second qualifying round[b]
10 Livingston 38 9 8 21 34 61 −27 35
11 Dunfermline Athletic 38 8 10 20 34 60 −26 34
12 Dundee (R) 38 8 9 21 37 71 −34 33 Relegation to the Scottish First Division
Source: Scottish Professional Football League
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Goal difference; 3) Goals scored
(C) Champions; (R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^ Teams played each other three times (33 matches), before the league split into two groups (the top six and the bottom six) for the last five matches.
  2. ^ As Celtic, the 2004–05 Scottish Cup winners, qualified for the UEFA Champions League via their league position, the place in the UEFA Cup was passed onto Dundee United, the cup runners-up.

Scottish First Division

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1 Falkirk (C, P) 36 22 9 5 66 30 +36 75 Promotion to the Premier League
2 St Mirren 36 15 15 6 41 23 +18 60
3 Clyde 36 16 12 8 35 29 +6 60
4 Queen of the South 36 14 9 13 36 38 −2 51
5 Airdrie United 36 14 8 14 44 48 −4 50
6 Ross County 36 13 8 15 40 37 +3 47
7 Hamilton Academical 36 12 11 13 35 36 −1 47
8 St Johnstone 36 12 10 14 38 39 −1 46
9 Partick Thistle (R) 36 10 9 17 38 52 −14 39 Relegation to the Second Division
10 Raith Rovers (R) 36 3 7 26 26 67 −41 16
Source: "2004-2005 First Division - SPFL Archive". SPFL (in Malay). Retrieved 29 April 2021.
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

Scottish Second Division

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion or relegation
1 Brechin City (C, P) 36 22 6 8 81 43 +38 72 Promotion to the First Division
2 Stranraer (P) 36 18 9 9 48 41 +7 63
3 Greenock Morton 36 18 8 10 60 37 +23 62
4 Stirling Albion 36 14 9 13 56 55 +1 51
5 Forfar Athletic 36 13 8 15 51 45 +6 47
6 Alloa Athletic 36 12 10 14 66 68 −2 46
7 Dumbarton 36 11 9 16 43 53 −10 42
8 Ayr United 36 11 9 16 39 54 −15 42
9 Arbroath (R) 36 10 8 18 49 73 −24 38 Relegation to the Third Division
10 Berwick Rangers (R) 36 8 10 18 40 64 −24 34
Source: "2004-2005 Second Division - SPFL Archive". SPFL (in Malay). Retrieved 29 April 2021.
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (P) Promoted; (R) Relegated

Scottish Third Division

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Pos Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts Promotion
1 Gretna (C, P) 36 32 2 2 130 29 +101 98 Promotion to the Second Division
2 Peterhead (P) 36 23 9 4 81 38 +43 78
3 Cowdenbeath 36 14 9 13 54 61 −7 51
4 Queen's Park 36 13 9 14 51 50 +1 48
5 Montrose 36 13 7 16 47 53 −6 46
6 Elgin City 36 12 7 17 39 61 −22 43
7 Stenhousemuir 36 10 12 14 58 58 0 42
8 East Fife 36 10 8 18 40 56 −16 38
9 Albion Rovers 36 8 10 18 40 78 −38 34
10 East Stirlingshire 36 5 7 24 32 88 −56 22
Source: "2004-2005 Third Division - SPFL Archive". SPFL. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) goal difference; 3) number of goals scored.
(C) Champions; (P) Promoted

Other honours

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Cup honours

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Competition Winner Score Runner-up Report
Scottish Cup 2004–05 Celtic 1–0 Dundee United Wikipedia article
League Cup 2004–05 Rangers 5–1 Motherwell Wikipedia article
Challenge Cup 2004–05 Falkirk 2–1 Ross County Wikipedia article
Youth Cup Celtic 2–0 St Mirren
Junior Cup Tayport 2–0 Lochee United

Individual honours

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SPFA awards

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Award Winner Club
Players' Player of the Year
(shared)
Wales John Hartson
Netherlands Fernando Ricksen
Celtic
Rangers
Young Player of the Year Scotland Derek Riordan Hibernian

SFWA awards

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Award Winner Club
Footballer of the Year Wales John Hartson Celtic
Young player of the Year Scotland Derek Riordan Hibernian
Manager of the Year England Tony Mowbray Hibernian

Scottish clubs in Europe

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Summary

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Club Competition(s) Final round Coef.
Celtic UEFA Champions League Group stage 7.00
Rangers UEFA Champions League
UEFA Cup
Third qualifying round
Group stage
6.50
Heart of Midlothian UEFA Cup Group stage 5.00
Dunfermline Athletic UEFA Cup Second qualifying round 0.50
Hibernian UEFA Intertoto Cup Second round N/A

Average coefficient – 4.750

Celtic

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Date Venue Opponents Score[2] Celtic scorer(s) Report
Champions League Group stage
14 September Celtic Park, Glasgow (H) Spain FC Barcelona 1–3 Chris Sutton BBC Sport
29 September San Siro, Milan (A) Italy A.C. Milan 1–3 Stanislav Varga BBC Sport
20 October Shakhtar Stadium, Donetsk (A) Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 0–3 BBC Sport
2 November Celtic Park, Glasgow (H) Ukraine Shakhtar Donetsk 1–0 Alan Thompson BBC Sport
24 November 2004 Nou Camp, Barcelona (A) Spain FC Barcelona 1–1 John Hartson BBC Sport
7 December Celtic Park, Glasgow (H) Italy A.C. Milan 0–0 BBC Sport

Rangers

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Date Venue Opponents Score[2] Rangers scorer(s) Report
Champions League third qualifying round
10 August Dynamo Stadium, Moscow (A) Russia CSKA Moscow 1–2 Nacho Novo BBC Sport
25 August Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow (H) Russia CSKA Moscow 1–1 Steven Thompson BBC Sport
UEFA Cup first round
16 September Estádio dos Barreiros, Madeira (A) Portugal Marítimo 0–1 BBC Sport
30 September Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow (H) Portugal Marítimo 1–0
(4 – 2 pen.)
Dado Pršo BBC Sport
UEFA Cup Group stage
21 October Stadio Amica, Wronki, Poland (A) Poland Amica Wronki 5–0 Peter Løvenkrands, Nacho Novo, Fernando Ricksen,
Shota Arveladze (pen.), Steven Thompson
BBC Sport
25 November Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow (H) Austria Grazer AK 3–0 Nacho Novo, Shota Arveladze, Hamed Namouchi BBC Sport
2 December Alkmaarder Hout, Alkmaar (A) Netherlands AZ Alkmaar 0–1 BBC Sport
15 December Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow (H) France Auxerre 0–2 BBC Sport

Hearts

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Date Venue Opponents Score[2] Hearts scorer(s) Report
UEFA Cup first round
16 September Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh (H) Portugal Sporting Braga 3–1 Andrew Webster, Paul Hartley, Patrick Kisnorbo BBC Sport
30 September Estádio Municipal de Braga, Braga (A) Portugal Sporting Braga 2–2 Mark de Vries (2) BBC Sport
UEFA Cup Group stage
21 October Feijenoord Stadion, Rotterdam (A) Netherlands Feyenoord 0–3 BBC Sport
4 November Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh (H) Germany Schalke 04 0–1 BBC Sport
25 November St. Jakob-Park, Basel (A) Switzerland FC Basel 2–1 Dennis Wyness, Robbie Neilson BBC Sport
16 December Murrayfield Stadium, Edinburgh (H) Hungary Ferencvaros 0–1 BBC Sport

Dunfermline Athletic

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Date Venue Opponents Score[2] Dunfermline scorer(s) Report
UEFA Cup Second qualifying round
12 August Kaplakriki, Hafnarfjörður (A) Iceland Hafnarfjarðar 2–2 Craig Brewster, Andrius Skerla BBC Sport
26 August McDiarmid Park, Perth (H) Iceland Hafnarfjarðar 1–2 Gary Dempsey BBC Sport

Hibernian

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Date Venue Opponents Score[2] Hibernian scorer(s) Report
UEFA Intertoto Cup second round
3 July Easter Road, Edinburgh (H) Lithuania FK Vėtra 1–1 Garry O'Connor BBC Sport
10 July Vėtra Stadium, Vilnius (A) Lithuania FK Vetra 0–1 BBC Sport

Scotland national team

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Date Venue Opponents Score[3] Competition Scotland scorer(s) Report
18 August Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)  Hungary 0–3 Friendly BBC Sport
3 September Estadio Ciudad de Valencia, Valencia (A)  Spain 1–1[4] Friendly Rubén Baraja (o.g.) / James McFadden[5] BBC Sport
8 September Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)  Slovenia 0–0 WCQ5 BBC Sport
9 October Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)  Norway 0–1 WCQ5 BBC Sport
13 October Republican Stadium, Chişinău (A)  Moldova 1–1 WCQ5 Steven Thompson BBC Sport
17 November Easter Road, Edinburgh (H)  Sweden 1–4 Friendly James McFadden BBC Sport
26 March San Siro, Milan (A)  Italy 0–2 WCQ5 BBC Sport
4 June Hampden Park, Glasgow (H)  Moldova 2–0 WCQ5 Christian Dailly, James McFadden BBC Sport
8 June Dinamo Stadium, Minsk (A)  Belarus 0–0 WCQ5 BBC Sport

Key:

  • (H) = Home match
  • (A) = Away match
  • WCQ5 = World Cup Qualifying – Group 5

Deaths

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Notes and references

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  1. ^ "2004/05 - The Scottish Football League". Archived from the original on 16 December 2012. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e The score of the Scottish team is shown first.
  3. ^ Scotland's score is shown first.
  4. ^ Game abandoned after 59 minutes.
  5. ^ Scottish FA credit Scotland goal to James McFadden [1] Archived 20 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine whereas other sources, BBC Sport, RSSSF and Sporting Life Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine credit goal as a Rubén Baraja own goal
  6. ^ "Gordon Smith dies". BBC Sport. BBC. 7 August 2004. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
  7. ^ "Death of Hearts hero of 1956, keeper Willie Duff". The Scotsman. 31 August 2014. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
  8. ^ Glanville, Brian (7 December 2004). "Bill Brown". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 December 2014.