Bodyclass: | football |
Headerstyle: | background:#BFD7FF |
Above: | 1999–2000 in Scottish football |
Header1: | Premier Division champions |
Data2: | Rangers |
Header3: | First Division champions |
Data4: | St Mirren |
Header5: | Second Division champions |
Data6: | Clyde |
Header7: | Third Division champions |
Data8: | Queen's Park |
Header9: | Scottish Cup winners |
Data10: | Rangers |
Header11: | League Cup winners |
Data12: | Celtic |
Header13: | Challenge Cup winners |
Data14: | Alloa Athletic |
Header15: | Junior Cup winners |
Data16: | Whitburn |
Header17: | Teams in Europe |
Data18: | Celtic, Kilmarnock, Rangers, St Johnstone |
Header19: | Scotland national team |
Data20: | UEFA Euro 2000 qualifying |
Data21: | ← 1998–99 2000–01 → |
The 1999–2000 season was the 103rd season of competitive football in Scotland.[1]
See main article: 1999–2000 Scottish Premier League.
See main article: 1999–2000 Scottish First Division.
See main article: 1999–2000 Scottish Second Division.
See main article: article and 1999–2000 Scottish Third Division. In the 1999–2000 Scottish Third Division, Queen's Park pipped Berwick Rangers to the title on the final day of the season with a 3–2 victory at Cowdenbeath despite facing the threat of administration four months earlier, Berwick finished second and due to league reconstruction Forfar Athletic were also promoted in third place.
width=180 | Competition | width=140 | Winner | width=80 | Score | width=140 | Runner-up | Report |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999–2000 Scottish Cup | Rangers | 4 – 0 | Aberdeen | Wikipedia article | ||||
League Cup 1999–2000 | Celtic | 2 – 0 | Aberdeen | |||||
Challenge Cup 1999–2000 | Alloa Athletic | 4 – 4 (5 – 4 pen.) | Inverness CT | |||||
Youth Cup | Heart of Midlothian | 5 – 3 | Rangers | |||||
Junior Cup | Whitburn | 2 – 2 (4 – 3 pen.) | Johnstone Burgh |
width=170 | Award | width=150 | Winner | width=140 | Club |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Celtic | |||||
Hibernian |
width=170 | Award | width=150 | Winner | width=140 | Club |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rangers | |||||
Unknown | Unknown | ||||
Rangers |
Club | Competition(s) | Final round | Coef. | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rangers | UEFA Champions League UEFA Europa League | Group stage Third round | 11.00 | |
Celtic | UEFA Europa League | Second round | 6.00 | |
St Johnstone | UEFA Europa League | First round | 2.50 | |
Kilmarnock | UEFA Europa League | First round | 1.00 |
Average coefficient – 5.125
See main article: article, Scotland national football team 1980–99 results and Scotland national football team 2000–19 results.
Date | Venue | Opponents | Competition | Scotland scorer(s) | Report | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 September | Olimpijski Stadion, Sarajevo (A) | 2–1 | ECQG9 | Don Hutchison, Billy Dodds | BBC Sport | |
8 September | Kadrioru Stadium, Tallinn (A) | 0–0 | ECQG9 | BBC Sport | ||
5 October | Ibrox Stadium, Glasgow (H) | 1–0 | ECQG9 | John Collins (pen.) | BBC Sport | |
9 October | Hampden Park, Glasgow (H) | 3–0 | ECQG9 | Don Hutchison, Gary McSwegan, Colin Cameron | BBC Sport | |
13 November | Hampden Park, Glasgow (H) | 0–2 | ECQPO | BBC Sport | ||
17 November | Wembley Stadium, London (A) | 1–0 | ECQPO | Don Hutchison | BBC Sport | |
29 March | Hampden Park, Glasgow (H) | 0–2 | Friendly | BBC Sport | ||
26 April | Gelredome, Arnhem (A) | 0–0 | Friendly | BBC Sport | ||
30 May | Lansdowne Road, Dublin (A) | 2–1 | Friendly | Don Hutchison, Barry Ferguson | BBC Sport | |
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