St Mirren F.C. Explained

Clubname:St Mirren
Fullname:St Mirren Football Club
Nickname:The Buddies
The Saints
Ground:St Mirren Park, Paisley
Capacity:7,937[1]
Chairman:John Needham
Manager:Stephen Robinson
Mgrtitle:Manager
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Leftarm1:FFFFFF
Body1:FFFFFF
Rightarm1:FFFFFF
Shorts1:FFFFFF
Socks1:FFFFFF
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Current:2024–25 St Mirren F.C. season
Website:http://www.stmirren.com

St Mirren Football Club is a Scottish professional football club based in Paisley, Renfrewshire, that competes in the Scottish Premiership after winning the 2017–18 Scottish Championship. Founded in 1877, the team has two nicknames: The Buddies and The Saints.

St Mirren have won the Scottish Cup three times, in 1926, 1959 and 1987, and the Scottish League Cup in 2013. They have played in European competition four times: in the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup in 1987–88 and the UEFA Cup in 1980–81, 1983–84 and 1985–86. The club will return to Europe for the first time in 37 years in the 2024–25 UEFA Conference League. They are the only Scottish team to win the Anglo-Scottish Cup, beating Bristol City 5–1 over two legs in 1979–80.

The club's home ground since 2009 is St Mirren Park, an all-seater stadium on Greenhill Road, Paisley. It has a capacity of 7,937. The club's former home from 1894 until 2009 was also officially named St Mirren Park, but was more commonly known as Love Street.

History

St Mirren Football Club was originally a gentlemen's club which was formed in the second half of the 19th century and played, among other sports, cricket and rugby. The increasing popularity of football ensured that by 1877 the members had decided to play association football and 1877 is the football club's official foundation date. They are named after Saint Mirin, the founder of a church at the site of Paisley Abbey and Patron Saint of Paisley. There is also a street in Paisley named St Mirren Street. The team's first strip was scarlet and blue but, after one season, the club changed to the current black and white striped shirts, which have been worn every season bar one in the 1900s, when cream tops were used.

St Mirren played their first match on 6 October 1877, defeating Johnstone Britannia 1–0 at Shortroods. Two years later, the club moved to another ground named Thistle Park at Greenhills. St Mirren's first Scottish Cup match was on 4 September 1880, a 3–0 victory over Johnstone Athletic. The following year, St Mirren reached their first cup final but were beaten 3–1 by Thornliebank in the Renfrewshire Cup. In 1883, the scores were reversed with St Mirren winning the Renfrewshire Cup, 3–1 against Thornliebank. It was in 1883 that the club moved to its third home, that of West March (early maps indicate the area as West March rather than the commonly used Westmarch), defeating Queen's Park in the first game there. In 1885, St Mirren played their first match against Morton, resulting in a defeat.

The 1890 season was a historic season for St Mirren, as they became founder members of the Scottish Football League along with fellow Paisley club Abercorn. Of the eleven founder clubs, only five survive in the current league system. It was during the match against Morton at Cappielow in 1890 that St Mirren played one of the first night games under light from oil lamps. The club moved to Love Street in 1894 and the team reached their first Scottish Cup final in the 1907–08 season but were defeated 5–1 by Celtic. St Mirren went on to lift the trophy in 1926, 1959 and 1987.

thumb|Cigarette card published in 1909 depicting Robert RobertsonIn 1922, St Mirren were invited to play in the Barcelona Cup invitational tournament to celebrate the inauguration of Les Corts, the then home of Barcelona. They won the tournament by beating Notts County in the final.

In the 1979–80 season, St Mirren achieved their equal highest-ever finish in the top-flight finishing third behind Aberdeen and Celtic. That season Saints also became the first and last Scottish club to win the Anglo-Scottish Cup, defeating Bristol City in a two-legged final.[2] The following season, St Mirren competed in European competition for the first time and won their initial game 2–1 vs. IF Elfsborg in Sweden, followed by a 0–0 draw in the second leg. The next round saw them play French team Saint-Étienne. Although St Mirren's home leg ended up a 0–0 draw, Saint-Étienne pulled off a 2–0 victory in the second leg to put St Mirren out of the cup.

The club have been relegated from the Scottish Premier League twice (2000–01) and (2014–15) and the Premier Division of the Scottish Football League once (1991–92) having escaped relegation from the latter in 1991 after league re-construction. In 2001, St Mirren finished bottom of the Premier League despite losing only one of their final seven matches. The Saints however managed promotion after clinching the First Division title in 2005–06, a season which also saw St Mirren win the Scottish Challenge Cup, defeating Hamilton Academical 2–1 in the final at Airdrie United's ground, the Shyberry Excelsior Stadium, with goals from Simon Lappin and John Sutton.

In 2010, they reached the final of the Scottish League Cup where they were defeated 0–1 by Rangers despite having a two-man advantage.[3] However, three days later, they recorded a famous win over Celtic, a match that The Buddies won 4–0 with doubles from Andy Dorman and Steven Thomson.[4] In March 2013, St Mirren won the Scottish League Cup beating Heart of Midlothian 3–2 at Hampden to win their first cup since 1987.[5]

In the 2010s the club drew praise for their youth development, bringing through several players from their academy (despite it not being listed among the 'elite' group assessed by the SFA in 2017)[6] including Stevie Mallan, Jack Baird, Kyle Magennis, Jason Naismith, Kyle McAllister, Sean Kelly and full Scotland internationals Kenny McLean, Lewis Morgan and John McGinn.[7] [8]

Stadium

See main article: St Mirren Park and Love Street (stadium).

St Mirren played at four different venues before moving to their ground at St Mirren Park, or Love Street, in 1894. The record attendance for the ground was 47,438 versus Celtic in 1949. Love Street saw extensive redevelopment in the late 90s to comply with both the recommendations of the Taylor Report and SPL regulations and the ground eventually became a 10,866 seater venue. The ground had four stands of which the most recent, the West or Reid Kerr Family Stand, was built in 2000 in order for Love Street to meet the criteria for entry to the Scottish Premier League. The oldest stand was the main stand which had a basic wooden construction. The north bank was popular with the hardcore St Mirren fans while the largest stand, the steeply raked West Stand, housed a sporting facility underneath.

On 24 May 2005, Renfrewshire Council granted permission for the club to develop their old ground. This involved the sale of the ground to a supermarket chain, and the construction of a ground in Ferguslie Park, Paisley (through a separate planning permission). The sale of their old ground allowed the club to finance the new stadium as well as clear their debts. In April 2007 it was announced that a deal had been struck with supermarket giant Tesco and on 15 January 2009 St Mirren moved to a new 8,000-seat stadium, also called St Mirren Park.

The opening game finished as a 1–1 draw with Kilmarnock, with Killie's Kevin Kyle scoring the first goal, and Dennis Wyness equalising. St Mirren's first notable win at the new stadium came on 7 March 2009 in a 1–0 victory over Celtic in the Homecoming Scottish Cup Quarter Final.

The stadium had a total seating capacity of 8,023 which was reduced in 2017 to 7,937[1] following the installation of a new disabled access platform.[9]

The stadium was known as The Simple Digital Arena after the club agreed a four-year, six-figure deal with Simple Digital Solutions on 13 June 2018.[10]

It is currently known as The SMiSA Stadium.[11]

Colours and sponsors

thumb|left|150px|St. Mirren shirt exhibited at the Scottish Football MuseumThe traditional home colours of St Mirren are black and white stripes, however for the first season the colours were scarlet and blue. There is some dispute as to why the colours black and white were chosen. A popular theory is that the stripes represent the Black and White Cart rivers which run through Paisley. In recent years there has been evidence unearthed that the Monks in the local abbey wore black and white striped habits. The team strips have varied very little in the long history of the club, however the thickness of the stripes have often varied. Some years have seen horizontal stripes used.

Having first played in black and white vertical stripes in 1884, Saints were the first club in the world to do so, six years before Notts County.

Away tops are traditionally red or all black, but in some cases strips have varied from orange to light blue, as seen on the 2010–11 strip. From 2007 to 2011, the Danish firm, Hummel International, replaced Xara as kit manufacturers. After spells with Carbrini (2011–2012, 2015–2017), Diadora (2012–2014) and Joma (2017–2023) the club signed a deal with kit manufacturers Macron.

St Mirren has had several main sponsors, mainly in the transport industry, with several local bus companies and car dealerships like Arriva and Phoenix Honda sponsoring in the club. St Mirren were sponsored by Braehead Shopping Centre, a local shopping centre four miles away in Renfrew from 2005 to 2017. They are currently sponsored by Consilium Contracting Services.[12] In August 2010, the club confirmed Barrhead company Compass Private Hire would have their name displayed on the back of the first team players' shirts as well as on their shorts. Compass Private Hire were co-owned by former St Mirren player, captain and manager, Tony Fitzpatrick.

Kit suppliers
PeriodSupplier
1977–1981 Umbro
1981–1987 Adidas
1987–1994 Matchwinner
1994–1996 Core
1996–1997 Admiral
1997–1999 Uhlsport
1999–2007 Xara
2007–2011 Hummel
2011–2012 Carbrini Sportswear
2012–2014 Diadora
2014–2017 Carbrini Sportswear
2017–2023 Joma
2023–present Macron
Front of shirt sponsors
PeriodSponsor
1983–1987 Graham's Buses
1987–1989 Clydeside Scottish
1989–1992 Kelvin Homes
1992–1993 Ingram Volkswagen
1993–1995 Clanford Ford
1995–1997 Phoenix Honda
1997–1998 Phoenix Mitsubishi
1998–1999 Arriva
1999–2000 Cetco
2000–2003 LDV Vans
2003–2005 Phoenix Kia (Home), Phoenix Suzuki (Away)
2005–2011 Braehead Shopping Centre
2011–2012 Fila (Home), Braehead Shopping Centre (Away)
2012–2013 Diadora
2013–2014 Blacks Life Outdoors
2014–2017 JD Sports
2017–2021 Skyview Capital
2021–2024 Digby Brown
2024–present Consilium Contracting Services
Back of shirt sponsors
PeriodSponsorPosition
2010–2011 Compass Private HireTop
2012–2014 Mana PremiereTop
2014–2017 Infinity Cars (Home), UWS (Away)Top
2017–2018 Infinity CarsTop
2018–2019 Infinity Cars (Home), Intu Braehead (Away)Top
2018–2019 UtilitaBottom
2019–2023 First Vehicle LeasingTop
2020–2022 Clarke ePOS (UK) LtdBottom
2022–2023 Consilium Contracting ServicesBottom
2023–2024 Consilium Contracting ServicesTop
2023–present Macklin MotorsBottom
2024–present Ultimate Home SolutionsTop
Shorts sponsors
PeriodSponsor
2008–2010 Braehead Shopping Centre
2010–2011 Compass Private Hire
2012–2013 Braehead Shopping Centre
2013–2017 Intu Braehead
2020–2021 The Energy Check
2021–2023 Aspray Glasgow West
2023–present KPP Chartered Accountants

Mascots

In recent years, St Mirren have been represented by three mascots, the Pandas. They are Paisley Panda, Junior P and Mrs Panda. The regular mascots are Paisley Panda and Junior P.

Rivalries

See also: Renfrewshire derby. The club has a fierce rivalry with neighbours Greenock Morton,[13] a rivalry which sees a large amount of animosity between the two sets of fans.[14]

Club records

Players

On loan

Club staff

Coaching staff

NameRole
Stephen RobinsonManager
Diarmuid O'CarrollAssistant manager
Jamie LangfieldGoalkeeping coach
Allan McManusHead of academy
Stephen McGinnU18 Coach
Scott GallowayHead of academy coaching
Craig McLeishHead of youth programme
Brian KerrPDP coach
Martin FoyleHead of recruitment
Ross HorsburghHead of analysis
Gerry DochertyHead of physiotherapy
Gary McCollHead of sports science
Tommy DochertyGroundsman
Joe HayesKitman

Board of directors

NameRole
John NeedhamChairman[17]
Jim GillespieVice-chairman
Jim IrvineDirector
Mark MacMillanDirector
Paul McNeillDirector
Alex WhiteDirector
Chris StewartSecretary
Keith LasleyChief operating officer
Tony FitzpatrickClub ambassador

Managers

European record

See main article: St Mirren F.C. in European football.

SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponentHomeAwayAggregate
1980–81UEFA CupFirst round IF Elfsborg0–02–12–1
Second round Saint-Étienne0–00–20–2
1983–84UEFA CupFirst round Feyenoord0–10–20–3
1985–86UEFA CupFirst round Slavia Prague3–0 (a.e.t.)0–13–1
Second round Hammarby IF1–23–34–5
1987–88UEFA Cup Winners' CupFirst round Tromsø1–00–01–0
Second round Mechelen0–20–00–2
2024–25UEFA Conference LeagueSecond qualifying round Valur4–10–04–1
Third qualifying round SK Brann1–11–32–4

Honours

Major honours

Minor honours

2005

1919

1979–80

1943

Other sports

Robert Mitchell of St Mirren F.C. won the Scottish 880 yards title five times between 1889 and 1894, missing only in 1893, and shares with Duncan McPhee (West of Scotland H., 1914 to 1923) the most wins in this event in Scottish AAA history. He also set Scottish records at two distances. At the St Mirren FC Sports, at West March, Paisley, on 19 July 1890 he ran 2:00 2/5 to establish a new Scottish All-comers record for 880 yards, beating a record set by Thomas Moffat at the Scottish championships in 1883. And at the Rangers Sports at Ibrox Park, Glasgow, on 3 August 1889 he ran 1:15 3/5 to establish new Scottish All-comers and Native records for 600 yards. In 1898 he was permanently suspended from amateur athletics for collaborating with betting on races.[19] [20] [21] [22]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: St Mirren Football Club . Scottish Professional Football League . 25 December 2018 . 16 November 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20201116174635/https://spfl.co.uk/clubs/st-mirren . live .
  2. News: When Saints were kings: How St Mirren made history in the Anglo-Scottish Cup 40 years ago. 16 April 2020. The Scotsman. 27 July 2022. 27 July 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220727083343/https://www.scotsman.com/sport/football/when-saints-were-kings-how-st-mirren-made-history-in-the-anglo-scottish-cup-40-years-ago-2539752. live.
  3. News: A silver lining for cup-winning Rangers. 22 March 2010. The Times. 22 March 2010. London. Graham. Spiers. 15 September 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230915053336/https://www.thetimes.co.uk/. live.
  4. News: St Mirren 4–0 Celtic. BBC Sport. 25 March 2010. 15 March 2011. 16 December 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20191216230312/http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/scot_prem/8583337.stm. live.
  5. News: Scottish Communities League Cup final: St Mirren 3 Hearts 2 . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220112/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/teams/st-mirren/9936384/Scottish-Communities-League-Cup-final-St-Mirren-3-Hearts-2.html . 12 January 2022 . subscription . live . 17 March 2013 . The Daily Telegraph . London . 20 March 2013 .
  6. Web site: SFA confirms Project Brave academy placings. The Scotsman. 15 November 2017. 19 September 2019. 30 July 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180730021352/https://www.scotsman.com/sport/football/teams/celtic/sfa-confirms-project-brave-academy-placings-1-4613908. live.
  7. https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/amp/football/42684143 Scottish clubs urged to keep faith with youth by former St Mirren academy boss
  8. https://www.stmirren.com/teams/youth-academy/hall-of-fame Youth Academy: Hall of Fame
  9. Web site: St Mirren Install Disabled Access Platform . Scottish Supporters Network . 10 November 2016 . 25 December 2018 . 26 December 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181226084154/http://www.scottishsupporters.net/st-mirren-install-disabled-access-platform/ . live .
  10. Web site: St Mirren stadium renamed after six-figure sponsorship deal is agreed . The Herald . 13 June 2018 . 25 December 2018 . Alasdair . Mackenzie . 26 December 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181226084205/https://www.heraldscotland.com/sport/16287862.st-mirren-stadium-renamed-after-six-figure-sponsorship-deal-is-agreed/ . live .
  11. Web site: St Mirren rename stadium as club move closer to fan ownership . The Herald . 6 November 2020 . 14 December 2020 . 5 April 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230405003727/https://www.heraldscotland.com/sport/18852673.st-mirren-rename-stadium-club-move-closer-fan-ownership/ . live .
  12. Web site: A CLASSIC REBORN INTRODUCING OUR 2024/25 HOME KIT . St Mirren FC . 26 June 2024 . 8 August 2024.
  13. News: St Mirren 3 – 1 Morton: Saints win Renfrewshire derby. The Scotsman. 6 September 2016. 19 August 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160819094030/http://www.scotsman.com/sport/football/competitions/championship/st-mirren-3-1-morton-saints-win-renfrewshire-derby-1-4102483. live.
  14. Web site: Morton fans turn Record Sport story into banner to poke fun at St Mirren rivals. Record Sport. Online. 22 November 2015. 6 September 2016. 16 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160916084049/http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/sport/football/football-news/morton-fans-turn-record-sport-6878202. live.
  15. Book: Ross, David. The Roar of the Crowd: Following Scottish football down the years. Argyll publishing. 2005. 978-1-902831-83-1 . 94, 214.
  16. Web site: St Mirren Records . Stmirren.info . 7 June 2010 . 3 March 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160303231012/http://www.stmirren.info/id45.html . dead .
  17. Web site: New chairman statement. StMirren.com. 29 July 2021. 29 July 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210729100549/https://www.stmirren.com/all-news/4053-new-chairman-statement. live.
  18. From 1893 to 1975, Division Two was the second tier of league football. With the introduction of the Premier Division in 1975, the second tier became known as the First Division. Since 2013, the second tier has been named the Championship.
  19. Scottish Athletics 1883–1983, John W. Keddie (1982)
  20. Web site: Scottish Championship Results – Track . 10 August 2023 . 9 October 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20221009060257/https://app.box.com/s/u16zxc5a0os7edqw6dguny19ias3ptum . live .
  21. Web site: Scottish Athletics Record Book . 10 August 2023 . 22 July 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230722173838/https://www.scottishathletics.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/Scottish-Athletics-Record-Book.pdf . live .
  22. "Glasgow Evening Post", Mon 27 Jun 1892 p. 6