Axed Scottish Pair Shame The Nation

Feguson and McGreggor banned for life?

What Scotland needed least of all following a morale-boosting victory over Iceland was a nightmare scenario which sees both the nation’s captain and a promising goalkeeper banned from ever playing for Scotland again.

It was bad enough that Barry Ferguson and Allan McGregor were drinking in the hotel after the defeat to Holland, mind you that game was enough to drive anyone to drink, which saw the pair dropped to the bench for the 2-1 victory against the Icelandics. But giving two fingers to 50,000 fans at Hampden was the final straw for the SFA and the pair were rightfully given their marching orders and neither will pull on the Scotland shirt again.

To add to the debacle both were suspended and fined by Rangers boss Walter Smith, who also stripped Ferguson of the captain’s armband for the second time in his Rangers career.

Only last week George Burley told the press how lucky he felt to be able to field Ferguson in the midfield alongside Darren Fletcher and Scott Brown for the first time since he took over. The fact that he had his three strongest midfielders available was seen as the dawning of a new era which so far under Burley has been more miss than hit. But now the Scotland boss will need to find someone else to complete the midfield triumverate which indeed looked strong, at least on paper. Ferguson is a big loss for Scotland in terms of his tenacity and undoubted ability.

Against Iceland, with Scotland lining up 4-4-2, Burley played Fletcher and Brown in the middle with Morrison and McCormack down the flanks, and of course it paid off. But Scotland’s preferred formation is 4-5-1, especially when playing away and against strong opponents, like Holland last week and last year when the Scots took on both Italy and France. Should they reach South Africa next year it seems likely that this will be the formation of choice, and this leaves Burley with a big task of replacing his midfield general.

There are still some positive signs however, with Scott Brown having flourished into a key player for both Celtic and Scotland this term. And Darren Fletcher, with all of his experience with Manchester United, will no doubt step up into the role of the side’s most important player in the midfield engine room.

The loss of McGregor isn’t as big a blow. As long as Craig Gordon can re-establish himself at Sunderland he provides the Scots with a top class goalkeeper with his best years still ahead of him. But the loss of a top-quality understudy is hardly ideal at this time of the qualifying campaign.

Time will tell if the lifetime ban will indeed be just that. Qualification for the World Cup will probably put more pressure on Burley rather than relieve it, with Scotland still desperate to make the second round for the first time. Fans can be fickle, and if pressure is put on the boss to reinstate the pair to give Scotland their best possible chance of making it, the SFA could potentially buckle.

The biggest losers from this entire scandal could well be Rangers, as they continue to push Celtic all the way for the SPL title. Without their first choice ‘keeper and captain, can they keep up their momentum and take the title? This writer, and probably the fans too, doubts it.

Topics: Rangers, Scotland, Scottish Premier League, World Cup

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11 Comments

  1. Daniel Chung

    Why is “two fingers” an offensive gesture? Is it akin to the one finger or is it some sectarian symbol? Years back in USA’94 Stefan Effenberg gave the middle finger to German fans (in a match against Korea) and was kicked off the national team by then manager Berti Vogts. But I’m interested in what this “two finger” (over the mouth) gesture in Scotland means.

    April 4th, 2009 @ 21:20
  2. CT

    Daniel, I agree. I would like to know what exactly it means. I know in the U.S. the two fingers represent a vagina and the pic shown would mean that they were eating out a vag but I doubt it means the same thing in Scotland. Alan, do you have any idea?

    April 4th, 2009 @ 23:17
  3. Liam

    In british culture 2 fingers is like the middle finger, weird because in America it means peace

    April 5th, 2009 @ 00:06
  4. Jake the Mackem (Sunderland till i die)

    it pretty much means fuck off

    April 5th, 2009 @ 00:17
  5. duffman90

    yeah,over here in ireland the 2 fingers is a culchy(country person) sign for “fuck off”.im glad they got punished,but then again,i do like celtic so…….

    April 5th, 2009 @ 02:25
  6. Kasia

    Liam, British two fingers and American peace sign are different. Your wrist is turned the other way.

    April 5th, 2009 @ 11:47
  7. milner

    Two fingers for Kasia

    April 5th, 2009 @ 18:15
  8. Daniel Chung

    For those who follow Scottish football, does the punishment really fit the crime? Banned for life? Is that contingent on an absence of an apology or straight up ban for life?

    April 6th, 2009 @ 00:59
  9. Matthew

    Im Scottish and a big Rangers fan and yes I feel the overall punishment is harsh. I think they deserve to be dropped, club captaincy stripped and fined wages. However a lifetime ban from international football, when it has been reported that 5 other players took part in the drinking, is really a step too far.

    April 6th, 2009 @ 14:51
  10. Daniel Chung

    @Matthew
    Back in the 2007 Asian Cup (Asia’s equivalent of the Euros) the goalkeeper of Korea (Lee Won-Jae) and then Middlesbrough striker Lee Dong-Guk and several other players had gone out to a room salon (high end Korean type bar where women serve you alcohol and “other” services) the night before Korea were to play Bahrain in a group match. Of course we duly lost that match and were facing early elimination (we ended up third by beating Japan on penalties in case you’re curious) but the players involved were banned for one year from the national team. It effectively has ended Lee Dong-Guk’s international career but Lee Won-Jae has returned to play in goal (which might be more a sad commentary on our goal keeping situation). That seemed a bit more reasonable although Lee Won-Jae was deeply humiliated in the press conference and was unable to control himself (going to a room salon is almost in these circumstances equivalent to going to a brothel).

    April 6th, 2009 @ 15:19
  11. Alan Worrall

    The drinking itself didn’t warrant the ban, the day after the Iceland match the SFA declared the matter over with, only for the pictures of the ‘two fingered salute’ to show up on the internet and in the newspapers, and it was this childish and irresponsible action that lead to the lifetime bans.

    The gestures almost certainly weren’t at the fans, that much you can probably assume, but they should never have made the gestures at all. All of this would have blown over by now had they not. They upped the ante essentially and paid for it.

    Let’s face it, people are supposed to look to their national team’s captain for inspiration and leadership. Scottish fans certainly didn’t get that from Ferguson.

    April 8th, 2009 @ 11:26