The 1873–74 Scottish Cup – officially the Scottish Football Association Challenge Cup – was the first season of Scotland's most prestigious football knockout competition. A total of 16 teams from the west of Scotland entered the competition, but only 14 played a match after two teams withdrew. The competition began with a match between Renton and Kilmarnock on 18 October 1873 and concluded with the final on 21 March 1874. After 16 matches and 38 goals, the inaugural cup was won by Queen's Park who defeated fellow Glasgow club Clydesdale 2–0 in the final.
Queen's Park had been founded in July 1867 and became the first Scottish club to join the previously solely England-based Football Association three years later. They had contributed to the cost of the FA Cup trophy and entered the competition in its inaugural season. However, the cost of travelling to England for matches was prohibitive. In both 1872 and 1873, they were forced to withdraw from the competition in the semi-finals.[5][6][7]
In March 1873, the club took out an advertisement in a Glasgow newspaper to invite football clubs to a meeting in the Dewar's Hotel with the intention of discussing the formation of a football association for Scotland. The club's secretary Archibald Rae also wrote a letter to a number of clubs, including Kilmarnock – who had been influenced by Queen's Park to play association football rather than rugby – to invite them to the meeting. Committee members from Queen's Park were joined by representatives from six other clubs – Clydesdale, Vale of Leven, Dumbreck, the 3rd Lanarkshire Rifle Volunteers (more commonly known as 3rd Lanark RV or 3rd LRV), Eastern and Granville – at the meeting and a letter of support was received from Kilmarnock who were unable to attend.[8][9][10] The eight clubs agreed to establish the Scottish Football Association (SFA) and resolved that:
The clubs here represented form themselves into an association for the promotion of football according to the rules of The Football Association and that the clubs connected with this association subscribe for a challenge cup to be played for annually, the committee to propose the laws of the competition.[8]
Eight further teams joined the SFA over the next few months and subscription fees from fifteen of the members were used to pay for the trophy. The Scottish Cup is the oldest trophy in association football. It has been awarded to the winner of every edition of the competition and is competed for on an annual basis by SFA member clubs.[11]
As 16 teams entered the competition, the first edition of the Scottish Cup took on the format of a straightforward knockout tournament. In future years, the number of entrants would expand to regularly include over 100 teams which resulted in the need for byes before the introduction of the Scottish Football League in 1890 and the Scottish Qualifying Cup in 1895.[10][12]
For the first round, the names of the 16 teams were placed into a single lot and drawn into pairs. The home team for each tie was determined by the toss of a coin unless it was mutually agreed or only one of the two clubs drawn against one another had a private ground. In the event of a draw, the team who lost the toss would have the choice of ground for the replay. This process was repeated for the quarter-finals and semi-finals. The choice of venue for the final and any replay(s) was reserved to the SFA.[13]
Rules
The inaugural competition was played according to the rules of The Football Association, known as the Laws of the Game. Matches were 90 minutes long with a break after 45 minutes. Pitches could be no more than 200 yards (180 m) by 100 yards (91 m) and goals were marked by two upright posts at either end, 8 yards (7.3 m) apart, with tape between them at height of 8 feet (2.4 m). A coin toss decided the ends each team would shoot towards and which team would kick off. A goal was scored when the ball passed between the posts below the tape. Ends were changed after each goal was scored unless no goals were scored in the first half. In the event that no goals were scored in the first half, ends would only be changed at half time. A player was considered "out of play" if he was nearer to the goal than a teammate who kicked the ball to him, unless there were at least three opponents between him and the goal. Players who were out of play could not touch the ball or prevent any other players from doing so until they were back "in play". The rules specifically forbade players from kicking and hacking their opponents as well as from wearing "projecting nails, iron plates or gutta-percha" on the soles of their boots.[14]
Teams
All 16 teams entered the competition in the first round. Of the clubs that entered, eight were founder members of the SFA. Those included Clydesdale, Granville, Queen's Park and 3rd Lanark RV from Renfrewshire as well as Dumbreck from Lanarkshire, Eastern from Glasgow, Ayrshire side Kilmarnock and Vale of Leven from Dunbartonshire. A further five Glasgow clubs – Alexandra Athletic, Blythswood, Callander, Rovers, and Western – entered alongside Dumbarton and Renton from Dunbartonshire and Southern from Renfrewshire.[11]
Of the 16 teams to enter the first round, Southern were the only team who would not play a single match in any edition of the Scottish Cup. By 1967, all the teams had become defunct except for Dumbarton, Kilmarnock, Queen's Park and Vale of Leven and, as of 2023, only the first three of these still compete regularly in the competition.[11][15]
Calendar
1873–74 Scottish Cup calendar
Round
First match date
Fixtures
Clubs
Original
Replays
First round
18 October 1873
8
0
16 → 8
Quarter-finals
8 November 1873
4
3
8 → 4
Semi-finals
13 December 1873
2
0
4 → 2
Final
21 March 1874
1
0
2 → 1
First round
At a committee meeting of the Scottish Football Association on 9 October 1873, the first round ties were drawn.[16] The first match took place on 18 October 1873 when Renton defeated Kilmarnock (who played the entire match with 10 players)[9] 2–0 in the first round.[17] The match was played in Crosshill, at the neutral Hampden Park.[18] Newspaper reports from the time suggest Kilmarnock may have been at a disadvantage as they were more used to playing rugby.[12] Later on the same day, Alexandra Athletic and Eastern recorded wins over Callander and Rovers respectively[12] and the following week Queen's Park began the competition with a 7–0 win over Dumbreck in the highest scoring game in the inaugural competition.[11][19]John McPherson scored the first ever Scottish Cup hat-trick[20] as Clydesdale defeated Granville 6–0 in what would be the latter's only Scottish Cup match and Blythswood won 1–0 away to Western.[11][12]
Southern and Vale of Leven scratched their first round matches against Dumbarton and 3rd Lanark RV respectively.[11]
The quarter-final stage began on 8 November 1873 when Clydesdale and 3rd Lanark RV drew 1–1 at Kinning Park to set up the first Scottish Cup replay eight days later.[10] This match also finished in a draw meaning a second replay was played on 6 December.[12] In the meantime, Dumbarton lost 1–0 to Renton in a replay on a public park in Renton on 29 November 1873 after the first match had finished goalless a week earlier at the same venue.[21][22] Queen's Park's match against Eastern was due to kick off at 15:00 but, due to the late arrival of the Eastern captain, kick-off was delayed by 20 minutes and the match was abandoned with 10 minutes still to play due to darkness as a result. Queen's Park were leading 1–0 and the result was allowed to stand.[23] Blythswood also reached the semi-finals without the need for a replay as they defeated Alexandra Athletic 2–0.[11] In the last match of the quarter-final stage, Clydesdale defeated 3rd Lanark RV 2–0 at Kinning Park in their second replay.[24]
The two semi-final matches were played a week apart in December 1873.[11] Queen's Park were the first team to reach the final as they defeated Renton 2–0 at the original Hampden Park on 13 December.[19] Clydesdale then booked their place in the inaugural final a week later as they recorded a 4–0 win over Blythswood at Kinning Park. The match had been abandoned after the fourth goal due to darkness but the result was allowed to stand.[25]
After 15 matches played and 36 goals scored, the tournament culminated in the 1874 Scottish Cup final on 21 March 1874.[26] The match, played at the original Hampden Park in Crosshill, was watched by 2,500 spectators and refereed by James McIntyre of Eastern.[11][12] As Hampden Park was the home of finalists Queen's Park, the match was one of a few cup finals in Scotland that were not played on neutral territory.[12][27]
Both goals came in the second half courtesy of the Scotland internationals Billy MacKinnon and Robert Leckie. Queen's Park won 2–0 to claim the trophy for the first of their 10 triumphs.[11][12]
^"JD Welsh Cup". Football Association of Wales. Retrieved 31 October 2023.
^"F.A. Cup 1871–72". The Football Club History Database. Archived from the original on 3 February 2023. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
^"F.A. Cup 1872–73". The Football Club History Database. Archived from the original on 21 April 2008. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
^Scottish Football Association (1890). Scottish FA Annual 1890–91. Glasgow: Hay Nisbet & Co. pp. 59–63. Archived from the original on 28 October 2023. Retrieved 25 October 2023 – via Scottish Football Museum.
^ abcMathers, Stewart (2017). The Beautiful Dribbling Game: The Scottish F.A. Challenge Cup in the 19th Century. Great Britain: Stewart Mathers. pp. 7–13, 252, 362. ISBN978-0-9956998-0-9.
^ abcdefghiPotter, David; Jones, Phil H. (2016). The History of the Scottish Cup: The Story of Every Season 1873–2016. Worthing: Pitch Publishing. pp. 12–13. ISBN978-1-78531-214-4.
^ abRoss, David (2001). Every Game: The New Official History of Kilmarnock Football Club. Irvine: Kilmarnock Football Club. p. 153. ISBN0-9541653-0-6.
^ abRobertson, Forrest H. C. (1984). The Men With The Educated Feet: A Statistical History of Queen's Park. Glasgow: The Queen's Park Supporters' Association. p. 10. ISBN0-9510047-0-0.
^"Clydesdale v. Granville". The Scotsman. 27 October 1873. p. 7. Retrieved 7 November 2023 – via British Newspaper Archive.
^"Football". The Glasgow Herald. 25 November 1873. p. 6. Archived from the original on 28 October 2023. Retrieved 25 October 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Football". The Glasgow Herald. 1 December 1873. p. 3. Archived from the original on 28 October 2023. Retrieved 25 October 2023 – via Newspapers.com.