1970-04-28: Fraserburgh 0-7 Celtic, Friendly

Match Pictures | Matches: 19691970 | 1969-70 Pictures

Trivia

  • Following Celtic’s last League game of the season against St Mirren on the 18th April the team faced a hiatus till the European Cup Final against Feyenoord in Milan on the 6th May. Some of the players were involved in the Homer International series, but in an attempt to keep the squad fit and active these two friendlies in the north east were organised.
  • Tommy Gemmell was mildly injured when he crashed his car on the 20th April.
  • Davie Hay, Bobby Lennox, Jimmy Johnstone, Tommy Gemmell, Billy McNeill, Bobby Murdoch and John Hughes all spent time training or playing with the Scotland squad in the home internationals. McNeill and Hughes were later withdrawn with injuries.
  • A freezing gale-force wind whipped in off the North Sea as 6,500 braved the elements to see The Broch take on Celtic at Bellslea Park and in the process raise around £2,000 for the benefit of the Fraserburgh lifeboat disaster fund.
  • Tommy Gemmell and George Connelly were both out – Gemmell with a knock from the Home International series and Connelly was with the Reserves.
  • There can have been little learned by Celtic from this benefit match played on the narrow, bumpy Bellslea Park that would prepare them for their European Cup Final at the San Siro stadium the following week.
  • On this day three Rangers internationalists–Jim Baxter, Davie Provan, and Erik Sorensen–were given free transfers and Orjan Persson was put on the transer list by manager Willie Waddell – who took over from David White five months ago – who has pruned his playing staff in a bid to cut costs.
 

Review

 

Teams

Fraserburgh:
Elrick, Rodger, Stephen, McCann, Milne, Malley, Fordyce, Duthie, Noble, W. Bruce (G. Bruce 58), Reid.

Celtic:
Williams, Craig, Hay, Murdoch, McNeill, Brogan, Johnstone (Callaghan 45), Lennox (Hood 58), Wallace, Auld, Hughes (Chalmers 70)
Goals:- Milne OG, Wallace, Craig Hughes 2, Auld, Hood.

Referee:- I. K. Bain (Bankhead).
Att:- 6,500.

 

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Articles

ET report Fraserburgh v Celtic 1970
GH report Fraserburgh v Celtic 1970
The Aberdonian


On this day 50 years ago, Celtic team travelled to Fraserburgh to honour lives lost in lifeboat disaster

by Jamie Ross
28/04/2020, 6:17 pm
https://www.eveningexpress.co.uk/fp/the-aberdonian/on-this-day-50-years-ago-celtic-team-travelled-to-fraserburgh-to-honour-lives-lost-in-lifeboat-disaster/Today marks 50 years since the charity match between Fraserburgh and Celtic
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It was a poignant occasion 50 years ago today, when two football teams came together to pay their respects to community heroes.
Three months earlier, on January 21, the port’s Duchess of Kent lifeboat overturned in a freak wave while aiding a Danish fishing vessel to safety.

It resulted in the loss of five men and has had a lasting impact on both the families affected and the character of the town itself.
When news of the tragedy travelled south, legendary football manager Jock Stein was determined to honour the men.
He brought with him a Celtic side littered with stars, including Billy McNeill, Jimmy Johnstone, Bobby Lennox, and Bobby Murdoch.
And despite the freezing, gale-force winds that welcomed them that day, 6,500 people attended the game at Bellslea to raise £2,000 for the disaster fund.

Speaking after the match, which Celtic won 7-0, Jock described the men of the RNLI as “heroes”.
He and his side also met and spoke with the families of the men who died.

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Today, yearly memorials are still held observed for the tragedy.
And in January this year, it was revealed that both sides have once again agreed to replay the 1970 fixture.
The date of the replay has yet to be finalised, however.

Celtic chief executive Peter Lawwell said: “Clearly we have a very close connection to the tragic events of 1970, with Jock Stein and the club ensuring in 1970 that the local disaster fund was supported.
“We know for many in the local area that these events will still cause hurt and pain even after 50 years.
“However, after discussions with Fraserburgh FC we felt that once again we should mark this anniversary year, come together and pay our respects to those who were lost and their families.”
The five men who lost their lives that day were Coxswain John Stephen, Mechanic Frederick Kirkness and crew members William Hadden, James R.S. Buchan and James Buchan.
A sixth man, Assistant Mechanic John (Jackson) Buchan, was flung clear and saved by a nearby Russian trawler.


The Fraserburgh Lifeboat Appeal Match

jb banalJanuary 12, 2022Uncategorized
https://ntvcelticfanzine.com/2022/01/12/the-fraserburgh-lifeboat-appeal-match/
[The Fraserburgh Lifeboat Appeal Match]

On the eve of their European semi-final against Leeds Celtic played a friendly in Fraserburgh in aid of a recent lifeboat disaster. Derek Knox takes up the story.

In April 1970 Sydney Reid worked as the head barman at the Royal Hotel at the edge of the harbour in Fraserburgh in the North East of Scotland. You would find him there most days and nights. Except on Saturday afternoons.

Every second Saturday you would find him two hundred yards along the road playing outside right for Fraserburgh FC in the Highland League at the Bellslea Park, in front of several hundred loud and partisan supporters, one of the best supported teams in the North. They like their football in “the Broch”, the locals name for Fraserburgh and also the nickname for the football team.

One day Sydney answered the phone at the Royal Hotel.

“Hello, can I speak to Andra?”

Andrew Beattie was the owner of the Royal Hotel at the time. The speaker had a Lanarkshire accent. Sydney knew he should recognise it but couldn’t right place who it was.

“Certainly Sir,” he said, “and can I tell him who is calling?”

“It’s Jock Stein,” came the reply

Sydney took the phone through to Mr. Beattie.

“Who is it?”

“It’s Jock Stein.”

Straight faced Andrew Beattie took the phone. “Hello Jock, it’s Andra…”

Sydney smiled and withdrew, wondering what the outcome would be.

If it was a hoaxer, he was a good hoaxer, sounding just like the great man and why was he phoning the Royal Hotel? A wind-up? A scam?

If it really was Jock Stein then why was he phoning the Royal Hotel?

Jock Stein was the legendary manager of Glasgow Celtic. When he took over as manager of Celtic a few years earlier the club hadn’t won anything for twelve years. He soon changed that by winning the league in his first full season and, incredibly, the European Cup the year after in 1967.

Celtic become serial trophy winners and were again in the final of the European Cup in just a couple of weeks time. That was after beating the English Champions, Don Revie’s mighty Leeds United (Billy Bremner, Jackie Charlton, Johnny Giles, Norman Hunter and all) home and away in the semi-finals just a few days before.

“That was Jock Stein,” Andrew Beattie said as he returned the phone. “He’s taking Celtic up to play your team.”

Andrew anticipated Sydney’s next question. “Next Week. It’s for the Lifeboat.”

NEXT WEEK!!! Celtic were playing a Dutch team in Milan in the European Cup Final in TWO weeks. And they were coming to Fraserburgh to play at the BELLSLEA next week.

Andrew Beattie had been old friends with Jock Stein and they had a conversation just after the Fraserburgh Lifeboat had capsized in January 1970 with the loss of five of the crew.

The commitment of the lifeboat men and the disaster had had a big effect on Jock, as it had the whole nation.

“Andra, if there’s anything we can do to help…”

“Well, maybe if…” Andrew then put his suggestion to Jock about Celtic playing a benefit game for the families of the Lifeboat victims.

“Leave it with me Andra. We’re heavily committed, going for all the trophies again, but I’ll see what I can do.”

Celtic’s season in Scotland had just finished on the 18th. They’d won the League again but had surprisingly been beaten in the Scottish Cup Final by Aberdeen a couple of Saturday’s before.

There would be two and a half weeks before their next competitive game, the big one, the European Cup Final on May 6th at the San Siro Stadium, shared home of AC and Inter Milan in Italy against Feyenord of Holland.

Several of the Celtic players were away for a week playing for Scotland, and Jock wanted to keep the whole team fit and active but relaxed and thought that a couple of friendly matches against lower opposition would be the ideal preparation for the European Cup Final.

And so it was that Glasgow Celtic played Fraserburgh FC at the Bellslea Park on the 28th of April 1970 in front of around 7,000 supporters in aid of the 1970 Fraserburgh Lifeboat Disaster Fund. Eight days before they played in the European Cup Final. With all their stars, all time legends of Scottish Football.

The date of the match, ironically, the 28th April, fell on the 51st anniversary of the first Fraserburgh Lifeboat Disaster in 1919 when two Lifeboat men had died.

Playing for Fraserburgh in the 1970 match was Jimmy Noble whose father had been a victim along with five other crewmen who lost their lives in the second Fraserburgh Lifeboat disaster in 1953.

Sydney Reid played the first half against Celtic before being replaced, not because he was having a bad game, and not for tactical reasons.

It was because he was the head barman at the Royal and he had to get changed quickly and get himself over to the hotel double-quick to get things ready, it was going to be a busy night.

The town council had organised a civic reception for Celtic after the match there and for Sydney it was one of the busiest nights of his career.

Jock Stein said in a televised interview that they came up to Fraserburgh to play the game for the Lifeboat, because, “These are very important people”.

Sydney’s nephew Norman Reid was one of the organisers of the annual Celtic supporters v Rangers supporters charity games in Fraserburgh which have raised thousands of pounds for the lifeboat and other local charities.

The games are played in memory of James Sutherland a long time Celtic supporter whose family have had a long connection with Fraserburgh Lifeboat.