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Queen's Park F.C.

Queen's Park Football Club is a Scottish professional football club based in Glasgow, which currently plays in the Scottish Championship, the second tier of the Scottish football pyramid. Queen's Park is the oldest association football club in Scotland, having been founded in 1867, and is the oldest in the world outside England and Wales.[1]

Queen's Park
Full nameQueen's Park Football Club
Nickname(s)The Spiders
Founded9 July 1867; 155 years ago (9 July 1867)
GroundOchilview Park, Stenhousemuir
Capacity3,746 (626 seated)
PresidentDavid Hunter
Chief executiveLeeann Dempster
Head coachOwen Coyle
LeagueScottish Championship
2021–22Scottish League One, 4th of 10 (promoted via play-offs)
WebsiteClub website
Current season

The club was fully amateur for the first 152 years and has played in white and black hoops as shirt colours for the vast majority of its existence.[2] For many years the club was the only fully amateur club in the Scottish professional leagues, until its membership voted to end that status in November 2019.[3][4] The club's amateur status was reflected by its Latin motto, 'Ludere Causa Ludendi' – 'To Play for the Sake of Playing'.[5]

Queen's Park is also the only Scottish football club to have played in the FA Cup Final, achieving this feat in both 1884 and 1885. With 10 titles, Queen's Park has won the Scottish Cup the third most times of any club, behind only Celtic and Rangers, although their last such win was in 1893. Having also been the first winners, Queen's were the record holders of the Scottish Cup for 51 years until Celtic claimed the trophy for the 11th time in 1925.

For over a century the club's home was Hampden Park in south-east Glasgow, a Category 4 stadium[6] which is also the home of the Scotland national team. The club are due to move into their reserve and training ground adjacent to the main stadium, Lesser Hampden, with plans to redevelop it into a 1,774-seat stadium.[7]

History

Beginnings (1867–68)

The Queen's Park Football Club was founded on 9 July 1867 with the words: "Tonight at half past eight o'clock a number of gentlemen met at No. 3 Eglinton Terrace for the purpose of forming a football club."[8]

Gentlemen from the local YMCA took part in football matches in the local Glasgow area which gave the club its name.[9][10] During the inaugural meeting, debate raged over the club's name. Proposals included: 'The Celts'; 'The Northern' and 'Morayshire'. Perhaps such choice of names suggest a Highland influence within the new club. After much deliberation, 'Queen's Park' was adopted and carried, but only by a majority of one vote. Although Queen's was not the first club in Britain, that honour going to Edinburgh's Foot-Ball Club, formed in 1824, they can certainly claim to be the first Association club in Scotland.[11] Opposition first came in the form of a now defunct Glaswegian side called Thistle F.C. and Queen's won 2–0 on 1 August 1868.[12]

Early domination (1868–1900)

Within the context of the emerging Association game in Scotland, the historian and broadcaster Bob Crampsey compared the role of the Queen's Park club with that of the Marylebone Cricket Club in Cricket and The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews in Golf. The Glasgow club's control of the early playing rules in Scotland, early management of the Scotland national team, and instigation of the Scottish Football Association and Scottish Challenge Cup provide evidence of its status as the ‘Premier’ or ‘Senior’ club of Scotland.

On 30 November 1872, Scotland faced England at the West of Scotland Cricket Club ground at Hamilton Crescent. For the one and only time all eleven Scots players were from Queen's Park and they wore blue jerseys, as those were the current colours of Queen's.[13] 4,000 spectators watched Scotland play with a 2–2–6 formation and England with a 1–1–8 line-up.[14]

Queen's Park formed the Scottish Football Association on 13 March 1873, with eight other clubs.[15] The match against Dumbreck on 25 October was the first match to be played at the first Hampden Park.[16] It was also the first match which saw Queen's Park players wear their custom black and white hooped jerseys, which lent the club the nickname of 'The Spiders'.[13] David Wotherspoon, a Queen's Park player and committee member, has been credited with the introduction of the black and white hoops.[17] Most importantly, it was the first Scottish Cup tie and Scottish competitive match for the club and Queen's won 7–0. In the final, Queen's defeated Clydesdale 2–0 at Hampden.[18]

Success in the Scottish Cup followed in the next two years with final victories over Renton and Third Lanark. In drawing 2–2 with Clydesdale in the 1875 semi-final, Queen's conceded their first ever goals.[19] Defeat for the club was first experienced with a 2–1 defeat to Vale of Leven in the 5th round in December 1876.[16] Third Lanark and Rangers eliminated the Spiders before Queen's reclaimed the cup in 1880 with a win over Thornliebank. Dumbarton were beaten in the final in successive years. In 1881, Queen's had to beat them twice after Dumbarton successfully appealed that the crowd at Kinning Park had encroached following a 2–1 defeat.[20] Dumbarton got revenge in 1883 but Queen's won again in 1884 without even having to play the final after Vale of Leven refused to play on the date stipulated by the SFA.[21]

In the early days of England's FA Cup, Scottish clubs were often invited to compete. As a result, Queen's Park twice finished runners-up in this competition, in 1884, when they lost 2–1 to Blackburn Rovers and in 1885, when they lost 2–0, again to Blackburn Rovers. 1886–87 was the last time that they entered the FA Cup competition.[22]

Afterwards, the domination in the competition that the club had enjoyed began to lessen as more teams strengthened. The trophy was reclaimed in 1890 with a replay win over Vale of Leven and the club's 10th and final success came in 1893 with a 2–1 win over Celtic at Ibrox. In the same year, professional football was acknowledged by the SFA.[13] Three years previously, the Scottish Football League had been formed but Queen's declined to join, stressing their amateur principles[8][23] Queen's Park joined the Scottish League in 1900 and took part in the 1900–01 season (being added directly to the top division rather than the lower division).

Nevertheless, the Queen's players of the time were held in high regard throughout the country and some are still remembered today.[24] Charles Campbell won eight Scottish Cup winners medals with Queen's and earned 13 Scotland caps. Wattie Arnott was a near ever-present in the successful teams of the 1880s. Robert Smyth McColl scored a remarkable number of goals for Queen's and soon moved on to Newcastle United and Rangers. In an unprecedented move, he returned to Queen's and scored six goals in his final match.[25] Andrew Watson was the first black football player in Britain.[26] He won three Scotland caps and starred in one of the club's earliest sides. J.A.H Catton, a notable sports editor, named Watson in his all-time Scotland team in 1926.[27]

Pioneers of the modern passing game

 
Queen's Park have won the Scottish Cup on ten occasions, third on the all-time list of winners

Queen's Park are accredited with introducing a collective and 'scientific' form of team based passing which would become known as 'combination' football.[28] Although rudimentary forms of passing existed prior to 1872, and Queen's themselves appear to have indulged in this, the combination game as a systematic form of passing was being played by the club at the time of the first official international match between Scotland and England. This changed the nature of the Association game as the culture in London at this time was largely one of dribbling and 'backing up'. Scotland's promotion of the combination game would ultimately lead to the introduction of professionalism in England in 1885, due to the large importation of Scottish players (known as Scotch Professors) into the midlands and the north of England.

During the late 1860s and early 1870s the club practised regularly and experimented with playing styles. According to Richard Robinson, who wrote the club's official 50th anniversary history,

Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays were fixed upon as the nights for play...Whoever selected the teams on practising nights had the power to place their men on the field, or appoint substitutes, and the players shall be bound to adhere to their instructions.[29]

Robinson also explains the means by which the passing game was developed,

The club... never neglected practice, and this practice was indulged in systematically. Sides were arranged— North v. South of Eglinton Toll, Reds v. Blues, Light v. Heavy Weights, President's Team v. J. Smith's Team (a series of six games), and Clerks v. The Field, etc. In these games the dribbling and passing, which raised the Scottish game to the level of a fine art, were developed. Dribbling was a characteristic of English play, and it was not until very much later that the Southerners came to see that the principles laid down in the Queen's Park method of transference of the ball, accompanied by strong backing up, were those which got the most out of a team. Combination was the chief characteristic of the Queen's Park play.[30]

Queen's were certainly playing a passing game by the time of their FA Cup tie (March 1872) with Wanderers, the most successful English side of the 1870s. Of the Queen's Park team, The Field magazine notes that, "They dribble little and usually convey the ball by a series of long kicks, combined with a judicious plan of passing on."[31] It is the first official international match, played on 30 November 1872, where the first reference is given to their style as a culture of passing. The Graphic, a London-based weekly illustrated newspaper, provides the following insight into the game,

Individual skill was generally on England's side, the dribbling of Kirke-Smith, Brockbank and Ottaway being very fine, while Welch, half-back, showed himself a safe and good kick. The Southrons, however, did not play to each other so well as their opponents, who seem to be adepts in passing the ball.[32]

 
The 1874 Queen's Park team that won the Scottish Cup

The Glasgow Herald report on the game makes the following observation of the differences between both sides,

The Englishmen had all the advantage of weight, their average being about two stones heavier than the Scotchmen and they had also the advantage in pace. The strong point of the home club was that they played excellently well together.[33]

The newspaper article which features Queen's Park's 5–0 victory over Wanderers in October 1875 (a match in which C.W. Alcock and the Anglo Scot A.F. Kinnaird played in for Wanderers) gives a concise description of the style of combination adopted by the club, particularly in the section which describes the second and third goals,

After a “hand” within thirty yards of the Wanderers’ lines, Weir got possession, and, successfully charging the English forwards, passed it on to Herriot, who in turn placed it to Campbell, who by a well judged kick dropped the ball just below the bar, thus securing another goal for the Scotsmen in sixteen minutes. No sooner had the English captain started the ball than Herriot, Weir and Lawrie, by neat passing sent it back, and after the backs and half backs had shown good play, the two M'Neills brought it along the left side, and passing it to Lawrie, the latter made a shot for goal, but the ball passed just outside the goal post. The play was now in the centre, the Queen’s Park men dribbling and passing, while their opponents indulged chiefly in heavy kicking. In 33 minutes from the commencement of operations H. M'Neill, obtaining possession, kicked the ball to Herriot, who unselfishly serving it to Lawrie, the latter again made a shot for goal, this time with more success, as the ball, passing above the goalkeeper’s head, went clean through thus obtaining the third goal.

Queen's Park in the Football Association

In 1870 Queen's joined The Football Association which is based in London – the only football governing body in existence at the time.[10] Their main attraction was to the new Challenge Cup and contributions were made to pay for the trophy.[10] Queen's reached the first semi-finals in 1872 but had to withdraw due to lack of funds after drawing their first competitive match 0–0 with The Wanderers at the Kennington Oval. Financial constraints meant that Queen's played little part in the competition until 1884 where they stormed to the final before losing 2–1 to Blackburn Rovers at The Oval.[34] Another loss to Blackburn the following year was the closest Queen's got to winning the English trophy. In 1887, Scottish clubs were banned from entering by the Scottish Football Association. Although the solid crossbar first appeared in the Sheffield Rules code, Queen's Park was responsible for its use in Association football when the club successfully put forward a motion for its introduction at a meeting of the Football Association in 1875.[35]

Queen's Park were invited to play in the annual Sheriff of London Charity Shield, a precursor of the FA Community Shield in 1899 which pitted the best amateur and professional sides of the season against each other. They would play the Football League First Division champions Aston Villa. The amateur side was usually represented by Corinthian, however Queen's Park had defeated them 4–1 at Hampden Park earlier that year and the trophy committee decided that they deserved the honour.[36] The match ended in a scoreless draw which saw the sides share the honour, holding the trophy for six months each.[37]

Queen's in the Scottish League top flight (1900–58)

However, as the 20th century drew nearer, Queen's found themselves playing in only cup competitions and the Glasgow League. A remarkable run to the 1900 Scottish Cup Final saw Queen's only narrowly lose 4–3 to Celtic. The previous 25 years had Queen's achieve great success in cup competition but after ten years of resistance they finally took the big step to the Scottish League, first entering Division One in 1900–01.

 
The 1917–18 team

Queen's struggled with top-flight football and the professional sides which surrounded them. An early high-point was a 1–0 victory over Celtic at the opening of the new Hampden Park in 1903. By previous standards, however, unspectacular seasons followed and the club even finished in the relegation zone on five occasions. Queen's were spared by vote until 1922 when, after a few solid seasons, the team were eventually relegated in second-last place.[38] Queen's bounced back immediately, winning Division Two at the first attempt. In a league season of 24 victories and only five defeats, the Spiders even managed a 4–3 win over Celtic in the Glasgow Cup, with James McAlpine scoring a hat-trick. McAlpine's fine play inspired Queen's to their greatest ever placing in the Scottish League, when they finished 5th in Division One in 1929. He would go on to set a goal scoring record for the club and his appearance record was only beaten by Ross Caven at the turn of the next century. In 1928, the same side also came closest to any Spiders team since 1900 to winning the Scottish Cup but lost 2–1 to Celtic in the semi-finals.

 
Chart of yearly table positions of Queen's Park in the League.

World War II helped Queen's stay in the top league a little longer as at the end of 1938–39 season, the club were relegated. Six seasons in the Southern League followed, and it gave youth and many new players a chance to develop at Hampden as the players of before left to serve their country. Bobby Brown was one such player who started at Queen's in 1939 but left in 1941 to serve as a pilot. When he returned at the end of the War, he found his goalkeeping position occupied by a teenage Ronnie Simpson who had made his debut at the age of 14.[39] Although obviously a bleak time for everyone, this period gave many footballers at Queen's Park an opportunity to play at the highest level under little pressure.

When War ended, Queen's joined the Scottish 'A' Division, where they stayed for three seasons, before relegation in 1948. The next few years were erratic but gradually a great team came together. Fourth place in 1954–55 was followed by first in 1955–56. The side was composed of players familiar with each other and the success was a reward for such longstanding legends as Charlie Church and Bert Cromar. Cromar played in every league game, as did goalkeeper Frank Crampsey (brother of journalist and Queen's fan Bob), who kept 17 clean sheets. Queen's only lasted two seasons in the top Division and were relegated in 1958, having only won four league games all season, and losing heavily on many occasions.

League reconstruction (1958–1994)

With stalwarts such as Cromar, Hastie and Omand all having moved on, the mid-1960s saw a new side which promised much. Future Scotland Internationalist Bobby Clark played in goal in 1964–65 season as Queen's finished fourth. That finish was again achieved in 1968, with Queen's winning 20 games (eight in succession towards the end) and scoring 76 goals. It was a formidable side which featured established Spiders Malky Mackay Sr. (the father of Malky Mackay), Peter Buchanan and Eddie Hunter. Ultimately, no success was gained, however, and as that side splintered, the club toiled until the mid-70s.

The 1975–76 season saw the reconstruction of the Scottish Leagues and Queen's entered the Second Division (third tier).[8] Coinciding with this, Queen's appointed a head coach for the first time.[8] Davie McParland led Queen's to 4th place but left at the end of the season to join Partick Thistle. Joe Gilroy was his successor and Queen's finished 5th, 7th and 13th under his guidance before his departure at the end of 1978–79.

Former player Eddie Hunter took charge and within two seasons, Queen's had been promoted as 1980–81 champions. The talent in the side was obvious. Derek Atkins was an ever-present in goal, John McGregor a high scoring defender and Jimmy Nicholson and Gerry McCoy netted a combined tally of 28 goals.[40] Much of the side was inexperienced, with full-back Bobby Dickson one of the few who had been a mainstay in previous years. After a highly respectable finish of 8th the following season, Queen's finished bottom and were relegated in 1983. The main reason for this was the loss of some of the best players who had won promotion. In particular, John McGregor and Alan Irvine departed, leaving for Liverpool and Everton respectively. During the same season, Queen's lost 2–1 to Rangers at Hampden in the Scottish Cup quarter-finals.

Recovery took a while but eventually a good side featuring Stevie Ross, Kenny Brannigan, Ian McCall and Ross Caven finished 4th in 1985–86 – winning three more games than the Championship side of 1981. Queen's lost narrowly by 2–1 at Celtic Park in the Fourth round of the Scottish Cup in the February 1986.

1987–88 was a further improvement but 21 victories was only enough for 3rd place. 1990–91 was another season of frustration as Queen's squandered a chance for promotion after having been in contention for so long and finished 5th, only four points behind 2nd place Montrose.[41]

Modern history (1994–2019)

 
Facade of Hampden Park

Eddie Hunter

Eddie Hunter was fired in December 1994 as Queen's failed to recapture the achievements of the previous decade. Former Alloa Athletic manager Hugh McCann was appointed as his successor but after an 8th-place finish in the new 10 team Third Division, he left the club. Graeme Elder took over as player/coach but the team continued their disappointing run and he eventually resigned. A happier memory from this time was the 5–1 demolition of Albion Rovers at Hampden in August 1997, the opposition finishing the match with seven players. There was also an incredible 5–5 draw at East Fife in Hunter's last season, with fan favourite Brian McPhee scoring four goals for Queen's.[42]

John McCormack

The club's constitution was changed prior to the appointment of the next manager, which meant that Queen's could sign former professionals provided they were not paid by the club.[8] Former Dundee manager John McCormack was unveiled in July 1998 as the new head coach. Like Eddie Hunter, McCormack succeeded in winning the league after just two seasons. The new boss used the new legislation to great effect and even persuaded the club to allow the loaning of professionals.[8] The ex-pros and the committed amateurs combined to give Queen's a superb start to the league season and it was November before defeat was felt. A 4–0 loss to challengers Forfar Athletic towards the end of the season was quickly forgotten as Queen's won their last five matches, clinching the Championship at Cowdenbeath on the final day of 1999–2000. The addition of ex-pros such as Neil Inglis, Paul Martin, Graham Connell and Johnny Whelan helped. The late loan signing of Paul Walker from Stranraer also proved to be very shrewd as he scored two winning goals in the final run-in.[43] After nearly 20 years of service to the club, Ross Caven won a Championship medal and there was also success for the hard-working Danny Ferry who had been with Queen's through the lean spells of the 90s.[44][45]

Having won promotion, the Spiders only lasted one season in the Second Division. A good start was made but after the New Year results became increasingly hard to come by and Queen's were relegated on the last day on goal difference. The following season featured a new and largely inexperienced team and Queen's did not win a match until November. There was a period of revival for the team and some great results were achieved, but the poor start meant that Queen's finished bottom of the Third Division, and thus, bottom of Scottish football, for the first time in their history. The start to the following season was unspectacular but the team managed to get to the semi-finals of the Challenge Cup before losing 4–3 to Brechin City at Hampden. Months before, McCormack had been made part-time by Queen's.[46] When Morton made an approach for his services in November 2002, he left to take the full-time position.

Kenny Brannigan

After a lengthy wait, former player Kenny Brannigan was announced as the new manager of Queen's Park in January 2003. His short term at the club was unsuccessful and only a couple of memorable results were achieved, notably a 2–1 win over Inverness Caledonian Thistle in the League Cup. A reasonable start to season 2004–05 came to a halt when Brannigan physically confronted a player and a supporter during a match against Elgin City.[47] Queen's lost the match 1–0 and Brannigan lost his job.

Billy Stark

Billy Stark was installed as Kenny Brannigan's replacement in August 2004 and the season ended with Queen's in 4th place. Inconsistency prevented Queen's from reaching the first ever play-offs the following season but in 2006–07 the Spiders were promoted. Not unlike the successful side of 1981, there were few veterans, and the team mostly consisted of young players with little or no experience of football away from Queen's Park. In August 2006, Queen's defeated SPL side Aberdeen in a League Cup penalty shoot-out to record one of their greatest ever victories.[48][49] League form dramatically improved after the New Year as only one home match was lost in the second half of the season. Queen's went on a run of eight consecutive victories, during which goalkeeper David Crawford set a new club record by keeping seven successive shut-outs. Queen's finished 3rd in the league, acquiring only one less point than the side which had won the Championship 7 years earlier. Promotion was achieved via the play-offs. Queen's defeated Arbroath in the semi-finals 4–1 on aggregate and then East Fife in the final 7–2 on aggregate. Richard Sinclair and Frankie Carroll became the first players in the club's history to win promotion on more than one occasion. Queen's Park's cavalier playing style was one which was lauded by coaches from opposition sides during the season and they were acknowledged as being well worthy of their promotion.[50]

Combining the end of the promotion season and the start of 2007–08, Queen's managed 11 consecutive victories (8 league wins) in all competition. Although Billy Stark had signed a new contract in the summer of 2007,[51] he left midway through the following season to take the managerial post of the Scotland under-21s.

Gardner Speirs

Stark was replaced in February 2008 by Gardner Speirs who secured safety from relegation and an 8th-place finish. Queen's lost many talented players in the summer of 2008 to paying clubs[52] but only narrowly lost 2–1 to Celtic in the Scottish Cup fifth round in February 2009.

After finishing 9th in the Second Division in season 2008–09 and then being defeated in the end-of-season play-off semi-finals (losing 1–2 on aggregate v Stenhousemuir), Queen's Park were relegated to the Third Division. In January 2010, David Murray scored the Spiders 3000th competitive home goal.[53]

Despite poor starts in their last two Third Division campaigns, on both occasions Queen's Park did enough to qualify for the end of season playoffs. They lost at the semi final stage in both ties, firstly to Arbroath and then to Albion Rovers. In season 2012–13, faced with greater public scrutiny due to Rangers being accepted into the bottom tier, Queen's had their best season in years, finishing third and playing attractive attacking football. They failed to achieve promotion in the play-offs and the side, which contained players such as Andrew Robertson, Lawrence Shankland, Aidan Connolly, Paul McGinn and Blair Spittal was broken up in the close season.[54][55][56]

Gus Macpherson

After finishing fourth in the 2015–16 league season, they were promoted after beating Clyde in the playoff final. Queen's Park celebrated their 150th birthday on 9 July 2017, with events held to mark the occasion.[57] Following a ninth-place finish in 2017–18, they were relegated to Scottish League Two at the end of the season after a 3–2 aggregate loss to Stenhousemuir in the play-offs.

Mark Roberts

In the 2018–19 Scottish Challenge Cup, the Spiders recorded a 4–2 penalty win over Champions League regulars, The New Saints of the Welsh Premier League in the Second Round of the competition.[58]

It was announced on 31 December 2019 that Roberts had left Queen's Park by mutual consent.[59]

Turning professional and back to back promotions (2019–present)

A major change to the club's constitution was proposed in 2019, with its members asked if they wished to end amateur status and to allow the hiring of professional players.[56] Part of the motivation for the proposal was that several good players had been lost without the club receiving any compensation due to its status.[56] The club's members voted to move to professional status following a motion on 14 November 2019. 91% of QPFC members elected to go pro, enabling the club to sign players to longer-term contracts and collect transfer fees.[3]

Former Dundee United and Falkirk coach Ray McKinnon was appointed as the club's new head coach in January 2020.[60][61] He became the first manager of Queen's Park since the 1980s to secure two wins in his first two matches in charge, before the league two season was ended prematurely due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In the summer of 2020, Queen's Park signed many professional players from higher placed Scottish teams including Grant Gillespie, Jai Quitongo and former Dundee United striker Simon Murray to name but a few and the team went on to win the 2020–21 Scottish League Two title and gain promotion to League One.[62]

On 12 January 2021, former Motherwell and Hibernian CEO Leeann Dempster was appointed as the club's new chief executive.[63]

Ray McKinnon would leave his role as head coach at the end of the 2020–21 season.[64]

Owen Coyle was announced as the new manager of Queen's Park in March 2022.[65]

Queen's Park were promoted to the 2022–23 Scottish Championship after beating Dunfermline Athletic 1–0 in the play–off semi-final and then beating Airdrieonians 3–2 in the final of the Championship play-off, thus securing back to back promotions from the fourth to the second tier of Scottish football.[66]

Stadium

When Queen's Park was formed in 1867, the club initially played on the Queen's Park Recreation Ground at Crosshill, from where they took their name.[67] In 1873 they moved to their first enclosed ground, naming it Hampden Park after a nearby street, Hampden Terrace.[68] A grandstand and pavilion were erected over the next few years and the ground became a regular venue for international matches and cup finals, but in 1883 the club were forced to vacate the site to make way for the construction of the Cathcart Circle railway.[67] After a year playing at Clydesdale Cricket Club's Titwood ground, a second Hampden was opened in October 1884.[67] Whilst the club continued to attract major fixtures, they faced increasing competition as other Glasgow venues such as Celtic Park and Ibrox were developing their facilities more rapidly.[69] To maintain their position in Scottish football, Queen's Park decided to purchase some farmland at Mount Florida, where the third Hampden was opened in 1903.[70] Second Hampden was subsequently taken over by Third Lanark, who renamed it after their previous ground, Cathkin Park.[71]

'Hampden' is one of the homes of football and celebrated its centenary on 31 October 2003. The stadium also houses the offices of the Scottish Football Association (SFA) and the Scottish Football Museum. Despite its large capacity and worldwide profile, it was owned by Queen's Park and leased by the SFA until 2020.[72] It is the national football stadium of Scotland, the venue for all major cup finals and most Scotland international fixtures, and has hosted several continental showpiece events. Hampden Park was the largest stadium in the world until 1950, when the Maracanã in Rio de Janeiro was completed. Many of the record attendances in football were set at Hampden in the mid-20th century. After the release of the Taylor Report in the wake of the Hillsborough disaster, among other football tragedies, it was converted to an all-seater. Hampden's capacity following redevelopment was 51,866,[73] although Queen's Park's average league attendance is around 600–700.

With matches in the 2012 Olympic Games having been played there, Hampden was converted into an athletics venue to be the main stadium of the 2014 Commonwealth Games.[74] This meant Queen's Park had to move its home games to the Excelsior Stadium in Airdrie for a full year; the cup finals and Scotland matches also went elsewhere.[75][76] The stadium has hosted other sports including rugby union, American football, motorcycle speedway and boxing, as well as many music concerts.

Lesser Hampden is a smaller ground to the west of the main stadium which Queen's Park traditionally used for training and reserve team or youth matches. In 2018, a deal was made for the SFA to purchase Hampden from Queen's Park upon the expiry of the lease in 2020 for a fee of £5 million, with the club intending to improve Lesser Hampden and play their matches there.[72] In November 2019 the club announced plans to redevelop Lesser Hampden into a 1,774 capacity ground.[7] As of August 2020, ownership of the main stadium had been transferred to the SFA and a new facility was under construction at Lesser Hampden.[77] Queen's Park played their last match at Hampden on 20 March 2021, as their lease on the ground expired at the end of the month.[78] They groundshared at the Falkirk Stadium for the rest of the 2020–21 season,[78][79] Firhill during 2021–22,[80] and Ochilview in 2022–23. The club released a revised plan in December 2021.[81][82]

 
A panoramic view of Hampden Park

Support

Some of the Spiders' support call themselves the "Irn Bru Firm" and the Spangle Army currently share a friendly relationship with supporters of German club SG Wattenscheid 09. This friendship resulted in Queen's spending their pre-season in the former city, which has been part of Bochum since 1975, for three consecutive years, in 2006, 2007 and 2008.

The club has an Honorary Patron, Lord Macfarlane of Bearsden.

Queen's Park Supporters' Association (QPSA)

The Queen's Park Supporters' Association was founded over fifty years ago to help bring together people that share a common interest in the Queen's Park Football Club. In recent years membership has increased steadily, with supporters now registered throughout the world. As well as providing a channel to keep members informed of activities in and around Hampden, the association generates income which in turn goes towards helping to maintain the various activities within the club such as donations toward the youth set-up, club website or acknowledging the service of past and present players.[83]

Running a club shop on match days and providing supporters' buses to away grounds as well as organising social events are some examples of the work the Association carries out every season.

Current squad

First team

As of 31 January 2023[84]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
1 GK   ENG Calum Ferrie
2 DF   ENG Marcel Oakley (on loan from Birmingham City)
3 DF   ENG Tommy Robson
4 DF   SCO Lee Kilday (captain)
5 DF   ENG Charlie Fox
6 MF   SCO Liam Brown
7 FW   SCO Louis Longridge
8 MF   SCO Jack Thomson
9 FW   SCO Euan Henderson (on loan from Heart of Midlothian)
10 FW   SCO Josh McPake (on loan from Rangers)
11 MF   SCO Dom Thomas
12 DF   SCO Jake Davidson
No. Pos. Nation Player
14 MF   SCO Lewis Moore
16 DF   SCO Cameron Bruce
17 GK   SCO Jacques Heraghty
18 MF   SCO Calum Biggar
19 FW   SCO Scott Williamson
21 FW   SCO Grant Savoury
22 FW   SCO Aaron Healy
25 MF   SCO Alex Bannon
27 MF   ENG Patrick Jarrett
29 FW   SCO Connor Shields (on loan from Motherwell)
42 MF   ENG Malachi Boateng (on loan from Crystal Palace)
66 DF   NGA Stephen Eze

Young Queen's Park

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
20 MF   SCO Alex Fairlie
24 DF   SCO Archie Graham
32 DF   SCO Zach Mauchin
33 DF   SCO Kane Thomson
34 MF   SCO Liam McQuaid
35 DF   SCO Lewis Reid
36 MF   SCO Andrew Lind
No. Pos. Nation Player
37 FW   SCO Chris Mahon
38 MF   SCO Liam McLeish
39 FW   SCO Lucas McCormick
40 FW   SCO Lennon Connolly
41 GK   SCO Callan McKenna
GK   SCO Liam Russell

On loan

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No. Pos. Nation Player
15 DF   SCO Max Gillies (on loan at Forfar Athletic)
26 FW   SCO Gregor Nicol (on loan at Gala Fairydean Rovers)
No. Pos. Nation Player
DF   SCO Callum Yeats (on loan at Stenhousemuir)

Coaching staff

  • Director Of Football: Marijn Beuker
  • Head Coach / First Team Manager: Owen Coyle
  • First Team Coaches: Sandy Stewart, Owen Coyle Jnr
  • Goalkeeping Coach: Glen Johnson
  • Sports Scientist: Sam Harrison
  • Head Physiotherapist: Euan Duffy
  • Club Doctors: Simon Gibson, Kevin Thomson
  • Head of Youth & Pro Programme: Paul Nuijten
  • Head of Academy Coaching: Tommy McIntyre
  • Head of Children’s Programme: Thomas Ruesink
  • Young Queen's Park Head Coach: Paul Nuijten
  • Under 18s Head Coach: Charlie King
  • Under 16s Head Coach: Lee Mitchell
  • Under 15s Head Coach: David Watt
  • Under 14s Head Coach: Ryan McSherry
  • Under 13s Head Coach: John McNeil
  • Under 12s Head Coach: Ian McCall
  • Under 11s Head Coach: Robert Armour

Source:[85]

Rivals

Despite being located midway between Celtic and Rangers, Queen's Park's long resistance to professionalism has resulted in not having competed in the same division as those teams for long periods of time, and thus turning to rivals in lower divisions, such as Partick Thistle, Clyde, Albion Rovers and Third Lanark (the latter being the Spiders' closest neighbours until they went defunct in 1967).

Records

Most capped player:

Most league points in a season:

Most league points per game in a season:

Most League goals in a season: Willie Martin (30 goals – season 1937–38)

Record victory: 16–0 vs St Peters (Scottish Cup, 26 August 1885)

Record defeat: 0–9 vs Motherwell (Division One, 29 April 1930)

Record attendance: 95,722 vs Rangers (Scottish Cup, 18 January 1930)

Honours

Major

League

Cup

Minor/Reserve

See also

References

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  3. ^ a b Bienkowski, Stefan (14 November 2019). "Queen's Park: Scotland's oldest club vote to go professional after 152 years as amateurs". BBC Sport. Retrieved 14 November 2019.
  4. ^ Davenport, Sean (14 November 2019). "Historic vote for change at Queen's Park Football Club". The Queen's Park Football Club. Retrieved 14 November 2019.
  5. ^ "To play for the sake of playing". The Herald. 20 January 2009. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  6. ^ Database, World Stadium. "List of UEFA Category 4 Stadiums". www.worldstadiumdatabase.com. Retrieved 16 July 2016.
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  9. ^ David Goldblatt, The Ball Is Round, Page 39
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  11. ^ . Nas.gov.uk. 13 November 2007. Archived from the original on 7 March 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  12. ^ The man who owned ‘the first football in Glasgow’ - a hidden history of the 1860s, Andy Mitchell, Scottish Sport History, 4 July 2021
  13. ^ a b c "Queen's Park – Historical Football Kits". Historicalkits.co.uk. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
  14. ^ Mitchell, Paul. "A Sporting Nation – The first international football match". BBC. Retrieved 23 March 2012.
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  16. ^ a b The Men with the Educated Feet, F.H.C Robertson, Page 10
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  28. ^ Chapter by William McGregor on Queen's Park FC, in Gibson A. and Pickford W. (eds); Association Football and the Men who made it, Vol IV, London 1906, P15.
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  31. ^ Quoted in Sanders, R; Beastly Fury, The Strange Birth of British Football, London, 2009, P66.
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  33. ^ Glasgow Herald newspaper, 2 December 1872.
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  68. ^ O'Brien (2010), p. 40.
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Sources

External links

Official Website
  • Official website
Unofficial Websites
  • Spiders Talk – A Forum For Queen's Park Fans
  • QPFC.com - A Historical Queen's Park FC Website
News sites
  • BBC Queen's Park
History
  • History of the Queen's Park Football Club 1867 – 1917

queen, park, confused, with, zealand, football, club, queens, park, english, football, club, queens, park, rangers, welsh, football, club, queens, park, queen, park, football, club, scottish, professional, football, club, based, glasgow, which, currently, play. Not to be confused with the New Zealand football club Queens Park AFC the English football club Queens Park Rangers F C or the Welsh football club Gap Queens Park F C Queen s Park Football Club is a Scottish professional football club based in Glasgow which currently plays in the Scottish Championship the second tier of the Scottish football pyramid Queen s Park is the oldest association football club in Scotland having been founded in 1867 and is the oldest in the world outside England and Wales 1 Queen s ParkFull nameQueen s Park Football ClubNickname s The SpidersFounded9 July 1867 155 years ago 9 July 1867 GroundOchilview Park StenhousemuirCapacity3 746 626 seated PresidentDavid HunterChief executiveLeeann DempsterHead coachOwen CoyleLeagueScottish Championship2021 22Scottish League One 4th of 10 promoted via play offs WebsiteClub websiteHome coloursAway coloursCurrent seasonThe club was fully amateur for the first 152 years and has played in white and black hoops as shirt colours for the vast majority of its existence 2 For many years the club was the only fully amateur club in the Scottish professional leagues until its membership voted to end that status in November 2019 3 4 The club s amateur status was reflected by its Latin motto Ludere Causa Ludendi To Play for the Sake of Playing 5 Queen s Park is also the only Scottish football club to have played in the FA Cup Final achieving this feat in both 1884 and 1885 With 10 titles Queen s Park has won the Scottish Cup the third most times of any club behind only Celtic and Rangers although their last such win was in 1893 Having also been the first winners Queen s were the record holders of the Scottish Cup for 51 years until Celtic claimed the trophy for the 11th time in 1925 For over a century the club s home was Hampden Park in south east Glasgow a Category 4 stadium 6 which is also the home of the Scotland national team The club are due to move into their reserve and training ground adjacent to the main stadium Lesser Hampden with plans to redevelop it into a 1 774 seat stadium 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 1867 68 1 2 Early domination 1868 1900 1 2 1 Pioneers of the modern passing game 1 2 2 Queen s Park in the Football Association 1 3 Queen s in the Scottish League top flight 1900 58 1 4 League reconstruction 1958 1994 1 5 Modern history 1994 2019 1 5 1 Eddie Hunter 1 5 2 John McCormack 1 5 3 Kenny Brannigan 1 5 4 Billy Stark 1 5 5 Gardner Speirs 1 5 6 Gus Macpherson 1 5 7 Mark Roberts 1 6 Turning professional and back to back promotions 2019 present 2 Stadium 3 Support 3 1 Queen s Park Supporters Association QPSA 4 Current squad 4 1 First team 4 2 Young Queen s Park 4 3 On loan 5 Coaching staff 6 Rivals 7 Records 8 Honours 8 1 Major 8 1 1 League 8 1 2 Cup 8 2 Minor Reserve 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory EditSee also List of Queen s Park F C seasons Beginnings 1867 68 Edit The Queen s Park Football Club was founded on 9 July 1867 with the words Tonight at half past eight o clock a number of gentlemen met at No 3 Eglinton Terrace for the purpose of forming a football club 8 Gentlemen from the local YMCA took part in football matches in the local Glasgow area which gave the club its name 9 10 During the inaugural meeting debate raged over the club s name Proposals included The Celts The Northern and Morayshire Perhaps such choice of names suggest a Highland influence within the new club After much deliberation Queen s Park was adopted and carried but only by a majority of one vote Although Queen s was not the first club in Britain that honour going to Edinburgh s Foot Ball Club formed in 1824 they can certainly claim to be the first Association club in Scotland 11 Opposition first came in the form of a now defunct Glaswegian side called Thistle F C and Queen s won 2 0 on 1 August 1868 12 Early domination 1868 1900 Edit Within the context of the emerging Association game in Scotland the historian and broadcaster Bob Crampsey compared the role of the Queen s Park club with that of the Marylebone Cricket Club in Cricket and The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews in Golf The Glasgow club s control of the early playing rules in Scotland early management of the Scotland national team and instigation of the Scottish Football Association and Scottish Challenge Cup provide evidence of its status as the Premier or Senior club of Scotland On 30 November 1872 Scotland faced England at the West of Scotland Cricket Club ground at Hamilton Crescent For the one and only time all eleven Scots players were from Queen s Park and they wore blue jerseys as those were the current colours of Queen s 13 4 000 spectators watched Scotland play with a 2 2 6 formation and England with a 1 1 8 line up 14 Queen s Park formed the Scottish Football Association on 13 March 1873 with eight other clubs 15 The match against Dumbreck on 25 October was the first match to be played at the first Hampden Park 16 It was also the first match which saw Queen s Park players wear their custom black and white hooped jerseys which lent the club the nickname of The Spiders 13 David Wotherspoon a Queen s Park player and committee member has been credited with the introduction of the black and white hoops 17 Most importantly it was the first Scottish Cup tie and Scottish competitive match for the club and Queen s won 7 0 In the final Queen s defeated Clydesdale 2 0 at Hampden 18 Success in the Scottish Cup followed in the next two years with final victories over Renton and Third Lanark In drawing 2 2 with Clydesdale in the 1875 semi final Queen s conceded their first ever goals 19 Defeat for the club was first experienced with a 2 1 defeat to Vale of Leven in the 5th round in December 1876 16 Third Lanark and Rangers eliminated the Spiders before Queen s reclaimed the cup in 1880 with a win over Thornliebank Dumbarton were beaten in the final in successive years In 1881 Queen s had to beat them twice after Dumbarton successfully appealed that the crowd at Kinning Park had encroached following a 2 1 defeat 20 Dumbarton got revenge in 1883 but Queen s won again in 1884 without even having to play the final after Vale of Leven refused to play on the date stipulated by the SFA 21 In the early days of England s FA Cup Scottish clubs were often invited to compete As a result Queen s Park twice finished runners up in this competition in 1884 when they lost 2 1 to Blackburn Rovers and in 1885 when they lost 2 0 again to Blackburn Rovers 1886 87 was the last time that they entered the FA Cup competition 22 Afterwards the domination in the competition that the club had enjoyed began to lessen as more teams strengthened The trophy was reclaimed in 1890 with a replay win over Vale of Leven and the club s 10th and final success came in 1893 with a 2 1 win over Celtic at Ibrox In the same year professional football was acknowledged by the SFA 13 Three years previously the Scottish Football League had been formed but Queen s declined to join stressing their amateur principles 8 23 Queen s Park joined the Scottish League in 1900 and took part in the 1900 01 season being added directly to the top division rather than the lower division Nevertheless the Queen s players of the time were held in high regard throughout the country and some are still remembered today 24 Charles Campbell won eight Scottish Cup winners medals with Queen s and earned 13 Scotland caps Wattie Arnott was a near ever present in the successful teams of the 1880s Robert Smyth McColl scored a remarkable number of goals for Queen s and soon moved on to Newcastle United and Rangers In an unprecedented move he returned to Queen s and scored six goals in his final match 25 Andrew Watson was the first black football player in Britain 26 He won three Scotland caps and starred in one of the club s earliest sides J A H Catton a notable sports editor named Watson in his all time Scotland team in 1926 27 Pioneers of the modern passing game Edit Queen s Park have won the Scottish Cup on ten occasions third on the all time list of winners Queen s Park are accredited with introducing a collective and scientific form of team based passing which would become known as combination football 28 Although rudimentary forms of passing existed prior to 1872 and Queen s themselves appear to have indulged in this the combination game as a systematic form of passing was being played by the club at the time of the first official international match between Scotland and England This changed the nature of the Association game as the culture in London at this time was largely one of dribbling and backing up Scotland s promotion of the combination game would ultimately lead to the introduction of professionalism in England in 1885 due to the large importation of Scottish players known as Scotch Professors into the midlands and the north of England During the late 1860s and early 1870s the club practised regularly and experimented with playing styles According to Richard Robinson who wrote the club s official 50th anniversary history Mondays Wednesdays and Saturdays were fixed upon as the nights for play Whoever selected the teams on practising nights had the power to place their men on the field or appoint substitutes and the players shall be bound to adhere to their instructions 29 Robinson also explains the means by which the passing game was developed The club never neglected practice and this practice was indulged in systematically Sides were arranged North v South of Eglinton Toll Reds v Blues Light v Heavy Weights President s Team v J Smith s Team a series of six games and Clerks v The Field etc In these games the dribbling and passing which raised the Scottish game to the level of a fine art were developed Dribbling was a characteristic of English play and it was not until very much later that the Southerners came to see that the principles laid down in the Queen s Park method of transference of the ball accompanied by strong backing up were those which got the most out of a team Combination was the chief characteristic of the Queen s Park play 30 Queen s were certainly playing a passing game by the time of their FA Cup tie March 1872 with Wanderers the most successful English side of the 1870s Of the Queen s Park team The Field magazine notes that They dribble little and usually convey the ball by a series of long kicks combined with a judicious plan of passing on 31 It is the first official international match played on 30 November 1872 where the first reference is given to their style as a culture of passing The Graphic a London based weekly illustrated newspaper provides the following insight into the game Individual skill was generally on England s side the dribbling of Kirke Smith Brockbank and Ottaway being very fine while Welch half back showed himself a safe and good kick The Southrons however did not play to each other so well as their opponents who seem to be adepts in passing the ball 32 The 1874 Queen s Park team that won the Scottish Cup The Glasgow Herald report on the game makes the following observation of the differences between both sides The Englishmen had all the advantage of weight their average being about two stones heavier than the Scotchmen and they had also the advantage in pace The strong point of the home club was that they played excellently well together 33 The newspaper article which features Queen s Park s 5 0 victory over Wanderers in October 1875 a match in which C W Alcock and the Anglo Scot A F Kinnaird played in for Wanderers gives a concise description of the style of combination adopted by the club particularly in the section which describes the second and third goals After a hand within thirty yards of the Wanderers lines Weir got possession and successfully charging the English forwards passed it on to Herriot who in turn placed it to Campbell who by a well judged kick dropped the ball just below the bar thus securing another goal for the Scotsmen in sixteen minutes No sooner had the English captain started the ball than Herriot Weir and Lawrie by neat passing sent it back and after the backs and half backs had shown good play the two M Neills brought it along the left side and passing it to Lawrie the latter made a shot for goal but the ball passed just outside the goal post The play was now in the centre the Queen s Park men dribbling and passing while their opponents indulged chiefly in heavy kicking In 33 minutes from the commencement of operations H M Neill obtaining possession kicked the ball to Herriot who unselfishly serving it to Lawrie the latter again made a shot for goal this time with more success as the ball passing above the goalkeeper s head went clean through thus obtaining the third goal Queen s Park in the Football Association Edit In 1870 Queen s joined The Football Association which is based in London the only football governing body in existence at the time 10 Their main attraction was to the new Challenge Cup and contributions were made to pay for the trophy 10 Queen s reached the first semi finals in 1872 but had to withdraw due to lack of funds after drawing their first competitive match 0 0 with The Wanderers at the Kennington Oval Financial constraints meant that Queen s played little part in the competition until 1884 where they stormed to the final before losing 2 1 to Blackburn Rovers at The Oval 34 Another loss to Blackburn the following year was the closest Queen s got to winning the English trophy In 1887 Scottish clubs were banned from entering by the Scottish Football Association Although the solid crossbar first appeared in the Sheffield Rules code Queen s Park was responsible for its use in Association football when the club successfully put forward a motion for its introduction at a meeting of the Football Association in 1875 35 Queen s Park were invited to play in the annual Sheriff of London Charity Shield a precursor of the FA Community Shield in 1899 which pitted the best amateur and professional sides of the season against each other They would play the Football League First Division champions Aston Villa The amateur side was usually represented by Corinthian however Queen s Park had defeated them 4 1 at Hampden Park earlier that year and the trophy committee decided that they deserved the honour 36 The match ended in a scoreless draw which saw the sides share the honour holding the trophy for six months each 37 Queen s in the Scottish League top flight 1900 58 Edit However as the 20th century drew nearer Queen s found themselves playing in only cup competitions and the Glasgow League A remarkable run to the 1900 Scottish Cup Final saw Queen s only narrowly lose 4 3 to Celtic The previous 25 years had Queen s achieve great success in cup competition but after ten years of resistance they finally took the big step to the Scottish League first entering Division One in 1900 01 The 1917 18 team Queen s struggled with top flight football and the professional sides which surrounded them An early high point was a 1 0 victory over Celtic at the opening of the new Hampden Park in 1903 By previous standards however unspectacular seasons followed and the club even finished in the relegation zone on five occasions Queen s were spared by vote until 1922 when after a few solid seasons the team were eventually relegated in second last place 38 Queen s bounced back immediately winning Division Two at the first attempt In a league season of 24 victories and only five defeats the Spiders even managed a 4 3 win over Celtic in the Glasgow Cup with James McAlpine scoring a hat trick McAlpine s fine play inspired Queen s to their greatest ever placing in the Scottish League when they finished 5th in Division One in 1929 He would go on to set a goal scoring record for the club and his appearance record was only beaten by Ross Caven at the turn of the next century In 1928 the same side also came closest to any Spiders team since 1900 to winning the Scottish Cup but lost 2 1 to Celtic in the semi finals Chart of yearly table positions of Queen s Park in the League World War II helped Queen s stay in the top league a little longer as at the end of 1938 39 season the club were relegated Six seasons in the Southern League followed and it gave youth and many new players a chance to develop at Hampden as the players of before left to serve their country Bobby Brown was one such player who started at Queen s in 1939 but left in 1941 to serve as a pilot When he returned at the end of the War he found his goalkeeping position occupied by a teenage Ronnie Simpson who had made his debut at the age of 14 39 Although obviously a bleak time for everyone this period gave many footballers at Queen s Park an opportunity to play at the highest level under little pressure When War ended Queen s joined the Scottish A Division where they stayed for three seasons before relegation in 1948 The next few years were erratic but gradually a great team came together Fourth place in 1954 55 was followed by first in 1955 56 The side was composed of players familiar with each other and the success was a reward for such longstanding legends as Charlie Church and Bert Cromar Cromar played in every league game as did goalkeeper Frank Crampsey brother of journalist and Queen s fan Bob who kept 17 clean sheets Queen s only lasted two seasons in the top Division and were relegated in 1958 having only won four league games all season and losing heavily on many occasions League reconstruction 1958 1994 Edit With stalwarts such as Cromar Hastie and Omand all having moved on the mid 1960s saw a new side which promised much Future Scotland Internationalist Bobby Clark played in goal in 1964 65 season as Queen s finished fourth That finish was again achieved in 1968 with Queen s winning 20 games eight in succession towards the end and scoring 76 goals It was a formidable side which featured established Spiders Malky Mackay Sr the father of Malky Mackay Peter Buchanan and Eddie Hunter Ultimately no success was gained however and as that side splintered the club toiled until the mid 70s The 1975 76 season saw the reconstruction of the Scottish Leagues and Queen s entered the Second Division third tier 8 Coinciding with this Queen s appointed a head coach for the first time 8 Davie McParland led Queen s to 4th place but left at the end of the season to join Partick Thistle Joe Gilroy was his successor and Queen s finished 5th 7th and 13th under his guidance before his departure at the end of 1978 79 Former player Eddie Hunter took charge and within two seasons Queen s had been promoted as 1980 81 champions The talent in the side was obvious Derek Atkins was an ever present in goal John McGregor a high scoring defender and Jimmy Nicholson and Gerry McCoy netted a combined tally of 28 goals 40 Much of the side was inexperienced with full back Bobby Dickson one of the few who had been a mainstay in previous years After a highly respectable finish of 8th the following season Queen s finished bottom and were relegated in 1983 The main reason for this was the loss of some of the best players who had won promotion In particular John McGregor and Alan Irvine departed leaving for Liverpool and Everton respectively During the same season Queen s lost 2 1 to Rangers at Hampden in the Scottish Cup quarter finals Recovery took a while but eventually a good side featuring Stevie Ross Kenny Brannigan Ian McCall and Ross Caven finished 4th in 1985 86 winning three more games than the Championship side of 1981 Queen s lost narrowly by 2 1 at Celtic Park in the Fourth round of the Scottish Cup in the February 1986 1987 88 was a further improvement but 21 victories was only enough for 3rd place 1990 91 was another season of frustration as Queen s squandered a chance for promotion after having been in contention for so long and finished 5th only four points behind 2nd place Montrose 41 Modern history 1994 2019 Edit Facade of Hampden Park Eddie Hunter Edit Eddie Hunter was fired in December 1994 as Queen s failed to recapture the achievements of the previous decade Former Alloa Athletic manager Hugh McCann was appointed as his successor but after an 8th place finish in the new 10 team Third Division he left the club Graeme Elder took over as player coach but the team continued their disappointing run and he eventually resigned A happier memory from this time was the 5 1 demolition of Albion Rovers at Hampden in August 1997 the opposition finishing the match with seven players There was also an incredible 5 5 draw at East Fife in Hunter s last season with fan favourite Brian McPhee scoring four goals for Queen s 42 John McCormack Edit The club s constitution was changed prior to the appointment of the next manager which meant that Queen s could sign former professionals provided they were not paid by the club 8 Former Dundee manager John McCormack was unveiled in July 1998 as the new head coach Like Eddie Hunter McCormack succeeded in winning the league after just two seasons The new boss used the new legislation to great effect and even persuaded the club to allow the loaning of professionals 8 The ex pros and the committed amateurs combined to give Queen s a superb start to the league season and it was November before defeat was felt A 4 0 loss to challengers Forfar Athletic towards the end of the season was quickly forgotten as Queen s won their last five matches clinching the Championship at Cowdenbeath on the final day of 1999 2000 The addition of ex pros such as Neil Inglis Paul Martin Graham Connell and Johnny Whelan helped The late loan signing of Paul Walker from Stranraer also proved to be very shrewd as he scored two winning goals in the final run in 43 After nearly 20 years of service to the club Ross Caven won a Championship medal and there was also success for the hard working Danny Ferry who had been with Queen s through the lean spells of the 90s 44 45 Having won promotion the Spiders only lasted one season in the Second Division A good start was made but after the New Year results became increasingly hard to come by and Queen s were relegated on the last day on goal difference The following season featured a new and largely inexperienced team and Queen s did not win a match until November There was a period of revival for the team and some great results were achieved but the poor start meant that Queen s finished bottom of the Third Division and thus bottom of Scottish football for the first time in their history The start to the following season was unspectacular but the team managed to get to the semi finals of the Challenge Cup before losing 4 3 to Brechin City at Hampden Months before McCormack had been made part time by Queen s 46 When Morton made an approach for his services in November 2002 he left to take the full time position Kenny Brannigan Edit After a lengthy wait former player Kenny Brannigan was announced as the new manager of Queen s Park in January 2003 His short term at the club was unsuccessful and only a couple of memorable results were achieved notably a 2 1 win over Inverness Caledonian Thistle in the League Cup A reasonable start to season 2004 05 came to a halt when Brannigan physically confronted a player and a supporter during a match against Elgin City 47 Queen s lost the match 1 0 and Brannigan lost his job Billy Stark Edit Billy Stark was installed as Kenny Brannigan s replacement in August 2004 and the season ended with Queen s in 4th place Inconsistency prevented Queen s from reaching the first ever play offs the following season but in 2006 07 the Spiders were promoted Not unlike the successful side of 1981 there were few veterans and the team mostly consisted of young players with little or no experience of football away from Queen s Park In August 2006 Queen s defeated SPL side Aberdeen in a League Cup penalty shoot out to record one of their greatest ever victories 48 49 League form dramatically improved after the New Year as only one home match was lost in the second half of the season Queen s went on a run of eight consecutive victories during which goalkeeper David Crawford set a new club record by keeping seven successive shut outs Queen s finished 3rd in the league acquiring only one less point than the side which had won the Championship 7 years earlier Promotion was achieved via the play offs Queen s defeated Arbroath in the semi finals 4 1 on aggregate and then East Fife in the final 7 2 on aggregate Richard Sinclair and Frankie Carroll became the first players in the club s history to win promotion on more than one occasion Queen s Park s cavalier playing style was one which was lauded by coaches from opposition sides during the season and they were acknowledged as being well worthy of their promotion 50 Combining the end of the promotion season and the start of 2007 08 Queen s managed 11 consecutive victories 8 league wins in all competition Although Billy Stark had signed a new contract in the summer of 2007 51 he left midway through the following season to take the managerial post of the Scotland under 21s Gardner Speirs Edit Stark was replaced in February 2008 by Gardner Speirs who secured safety from relegation and an 8th place finish Queen s lost many talented players in the summer of 2008 to paying clubs 52 but only narrowly lost 2 1 to Celtic in the Scottish Cup fifth round in February 2009 After finishing 9th in the Second Division in season 2008 09 and then being defeated in the end of season play off semi finals losing 1 2 on aggregate v Stenhousemuir Queen s Park were relegated to the Third Division In January 2010 David Murray scored the Spiders 3000th competitive home goal 53 Despite poor starts in their last two Third Division campaigns on both occasions Queen s Park did enough to qualify for the end of season playoffs They lost at the semi final stage in both ties firstly to Arbroath and then to Albion Rovers In season 2012 13 faced with greater public scrutiny due to Rangers being accepted into the bottom tier Queen s had their best season in years finishing third and playing attractive attacking football They failed to achieve promotion in the play offs and the side which contained players such as Andrew Robertson Lawrence Shankland Aidan Connolly Paul McGinn and Blair Spittal was broken up in the close season 54 55 56 Gus Macpherson Edit After finishing fourth in the 2015 16 league season they were promoted after beating Clyde in the playoff final Queen s Park celebrated their 150th birthday on 9 July 2017 with events held to mark the occasion 57 Following a ninth place finish in 2017 18 they were relegated to Scottish League Two at the end of the season after a 3 2 aggregate loss to Stenhousemuir in the play offs Mark Roberts Edit In the 2018 19 Scottish Challenge Cup the Spiders recorded a 4 2 penalty win over Champions League regulars The New Saints of the Welsh Premier League in the Second Round of the competition 58 It was announced on 31 December 2019 that Roberts had left Queen s Park by mutual consent 59 Turning professional and back to back promotions 2019 present Edit A major change to the club s constitution was proposed in 2019 with its members asked if they wished to end amateur status and to allow the hiring of professional players 56 Part of the motivation for the proposal was that several good players had been lost without the club receiving any compensation due to its status 56 The club s members voted to move to professional status following a motion on 14 November 2019 91 of QPFC members elected to go pro enabling the club to sign players to longer term contracts and collect transfer fees 3 Former Dundee United and Falkirk coach Ray McKinnon was appointed as the club s new head coach in January 2020 60 61 He became the first manager of Queen s Park since the 1980s to secure two wins in his first two matches in charge before the league two season was ended prematurely due to the COVID 19 pandemic In the summer of 2020 Queen s Park signed many professional players from higher placed Scottish teams including Grant Gillespie Jai Quitongo and former Dundee United striker Simon Murray to name but a few and the team went on to win the 2020 21 Scottish League Two title and gain promotion to League One 62 On 12 January 2021 former Motherwell and Hibernian CEO Leeann Dempster was appointed as the club s new chief executive 63 Ray McKinnon would leave his role as head coach at the end of the 2020 21 season 64 Owen Coyle was announced as the new manager of Queen s Park in March 2022 65 Queen s Park were promoted to the 2022 23 Scottish Championship after beating Dunfermline Athletic 1 0 in the play off semi final and then beating Airdrieonians 3 2 in the final of the Championship play off thus securing back to back promotions from the fourth to the second tier of Scottish football 66 Stadium EditWhen Queen s Park was formed in 1867 the club initially played on the Queen s Park Recreation Ground at Crosshill from where they took their name 67 In 1873 they moved to their first enclosed ground naming it Hampden Park after a nearby street Hampden Terrace 68 A grandstand and pavilion were erected over the next few years and the ground became a regular venue for international matches and cup finals but in 1883 the club were forced to vacate the site to make way for the construction of the Cathcart Circle railway 67 After a year playing at Clydesdale Cricket Club s Titwood ground a second Hampden was opened in October 1884 67 Whilst the club continued to attract major fixtures they faced increasing competition as other Glasgow venues such as Celtic Park and Ibrox were developing their facilities more rapidly 69 To maintain their position in Scottish football Queen s Park decided to purchase some farmland at Mount Florida where the third Hampden was opened in 1903 70 Second Hampden was subsequently taken over by Third Lanark who renamed it after their previous ground Cathkin Park 71 Hampden is one of the homes of football and celebrated its centenary on 31 October 2003 The stadium also houses the offices of the Scottish Football Association SFA and the Scottish Football Museum Despite its large capacity and worldwide profile it was owned by Queen s Park and leased by the SFA until 2020 72 It is the national football stadium of Scotland the venue for all major cup finals and most Scotland international fixtures and has hosted several continental showpiece events Hampden Park was the largest stadium in the world until 1950 when the Maracana in Rio de Janeiro was completed Many of the record attendances in football were set at Hampden in the mid 20th century After the release of the Taylor Report in the wake of the Hillsborough disaster among other football tragedies it was converted to an all seater Hampden s capacity following redevelopment was 51 866 73 although Queen s Park s average league attendance is around 600 700 With matches in the 2012 Olympic Games having been played there Hampden was converted into an athletics venue to be the main stadium of the 2014 Commonwealth Games 74 This meant Queen s Park had to move its home games to the Excelsior Stadium in Airdrie for a full year the cup finals and Scotland matches also went elsewhere 75 76 The stadium has hosted other sports including rugby union American football motorcycle speedway and boxing as well as many music concerts Lesser Hampden is a smaller ground to the west of the main stadium which Queen s Park traditionally used for training and reserve team or youth matches In 2018 a deal was made for the SFA to purchase Hampden from Queen s Park upon the expiry of the lease in 2020 for a fee of 5 million with the club intending to improve Lesser Hampden and play their matches there 72 In November 2019 the club announced plans to redevelop Lesser Hampden into a 1 774 capacity ground 7 As of August 2020 ownership of the main stadium had been transferred to the SFA and a new facility was under construction at Lesser Hampden 77 Queen s Park played their last match at Hampden on 20 March 2021 as their lease on the ground expired at the end of the month 78 They groundshared at the Falkirk Stadium for the rest of the 2020 21 season 78 79 Firhill during 2021 22 80 and Ochilview in 2022 23 The club released a revised plan in December 2021 81 82 A panoramic view of Hampden ParkSupport EditSome of the Spiders support call themselves the Irn Bru Firm and the Spangle Army currently share a friendly relationship with supporters of German club SG Wattenscheid 09 This friendship resulted in Queen s spending their pre season in the former city which has been part of Bochum since 1975 for three consecutive years in 2006 2007 and 2008 The club has an Honorary Patron Lord Macfarlane of Bearsden Queen s Park Supporters Association QPSA Edit The Queen s Park Supporters Association was founded over fifty years ago to help bring together people that share a common interest in the Queen s Park Football Club In recent years membership has increased steadily with supporters now registered throughout the world As well as providing a channel to keep members informed of activities in and around Hampden the association generates income which in turn goes towards helping to maintain the various activities within the club such as donations toward the youth set up club website or acknowledging the service of past and present players 83 Running a club shop on match days and providing supporters buses to away grounds as well as organising social events are some examples of the work the Association carries out every season Current squad EditFirst team Edit As of 31 January 2023 84 Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player1 GK ENG Calum Ferrie2 DF ENG Marcel Oakley on loan from Birmingham City 3 DF ENG Tommy Robson4 DF SCO Lee Kilday captain 5 DF ENG Charlie Fox6 MF SCO Liam Brown7 FW SCO Louis Longridge8 MF SCO Jack Thomson9 FW SCO Euan Henderson on loan from Heart of Midlothian 10 FW SCO Josh McPake on loan from Rangers 11 MF SCO Dom Thomas12 DF SCO Jake Davidson No Pos Nation Player14 MF SCO Lewis Moore16 DF SCO Cameron Bruce17 GK SCO Jacques Heraghty18 MF SCO Calum Biggar19 FW SCO Scott Williamson21 FW SCO Grant Savoury22 FW SCO Aaron Healy25 MF SCO Alex Bannon27 MF ENG Patrick Jarrett29 FW SCO Connor Shields on loan from Motherwell 42 MF ENG Malachi Boateng on loan from Crystal Palace 66 DF NGA Stephen EzeYoung Queen s Park Edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player20 MF SCO Alex Fairlie24 DF SCO Archie Graham32 DF SCO Zach Mauchin33 DF SCO Kane Thomson34 MF SCO Liam McQuaid35 DF SCO Lewis Reid36 MF SCO Andrew Lind No Pos Nation Player37 FW SCO Chris Mahon38 MF SCO Liam McLeish39 FW SCO Lucas McCormick40 FW SCO Lennon Connolly41 GK SCO Callan McKenna GK SCO Liam RussellOn loan Edit Note Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules Players may hold more than one non FIFA nationality No Pos Nation Player15 DF SCO Max Gillies on loan at Forfar Athletic 26 FW SCO Gregor Nicol on loan at Gala Fairydean Rovers No Pos Nation Player DF SCO Callum Yeats on loan at Stenhousemuir Coaching staff EditDirector Of Football Marijn Beuker Head Coach First Team Manager Owen Coyle First Team Coaches Sandy Stewart Owen Coyle Jnr Goalkeeping Coach Glen Johnson Sports Scientist Sam Harrison Head Physiotherapist Euan Duffy Club Doctors Simon Gibson Kevin Thomson Head of Youth amp Pro Programme Paul Nuijten Head of Academy Coaching Tommy McIntyre Head of Children s Programme Thomas Ruesink Young Queen s Park Head Coach Paul Nuijten Under 18s Head Coach Charlie King Under 16s Head Coach Lee Mitchell Under 15s Head Coach David Watt Under 14s Head Coach Ryan McSherry Under 13s Head Coach John McNeil Under 12s Head Coach Ian McCall Under 11s Head Coach Robert ArmourSource 85 Rivals EditDespite being located midway between Celtic and Rangers Queen s Park s long resistance to professionalism has resulted in not having competed in the same division as those teams for long periods of time and thus turning to rivals in lower divisions such as Partick Thistle Clyde Albion Rovers and Third Lanark the latter being the Spiders closest neighbours until they went defunct in 1967 Records EditMost capped player All at club Walter Arnott 14 caps Including some at club Alan Morton 31 total 2 at club Played for club international elsewhere Andy Robertson 55 caps ongoing as of 2021 Most league points in a season 2 points for a win 57 Division Two season 1922 23 3 points for a win 69 Third Division season 1999 2000 Most league points per game in a season 2 points for a win 1 5 Division Two 1922 23 3 points for a win 2 45 League Two 2020 21 Most League goals in a season Willie Martin 30 goals season 1937 38 Record victory 16 0 vs St Peters Scottish Cup 26 August 1885 Record defeat 0 9 vs Motherwell Division One 29 April 1930 Record attendance 95 722 vs Rangers Scottish Cup 18 January 1930 Honours EditMajor Edit League Edit Scottish second tier Winners 2 1922 23 1955 56 Scottish third tier Winners 1980 81 Play off winners 2021 22 Scottish fourth tier Winners 2 1999 00 2020 21 Play off winners 2006 07 2015 16Cup Edit Scottish Cup Winners 10 1874 1875 1876 1880 1881 1882 1884 1886 1890 1893 Runners up 1892 1900 Sheriff of London Charity Shield Winners 1899 shared FA Cup Runners up 1884 1885Minor Reserve Edit Football World Championship Winners 4 1876 1881 1882 1893 Glasgow Cup Winners 4 1889 1890 1899 1946 Runners up 8 1896 1898 1929 1932 1940 1965 1985 2022 Glasgow League Winners 1896 97 Runners up 1897 98 Glasgow Merchants Charity Cup Winners 8 1877 1878 1880 1881 1883 1884 1885 1891 Runners up 20 1889 1890 1894 1896 1906 1908 1917 1919 1920 1922 1923 1926 1928 1931 1933 1935 1937 1953 1955 1957 Ayr Charity Cup Winners 5 1918 1920 1922 86 1923 1925 Scottish Amateur Cup Winners 12 1912 1920 1928 1933 1934 1936 1947 1950 1951 1963 1964 2009 87 SPFL Reserve League Winners 2013 14 SPFL Reserve League Cup Winners 2013 14See also EditClub of Pioneers List of Queen s Park F C players 100 appearances List of Queen s Park F C international playersReferences Edit Scottish Football Association The Scottish FA Football in Scotland The Scottish FA Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 23 March 2012 Queen s Park Historical Football Kits Historicalkits co uk Retrieved 18 September 2020 a b Bienkowski Stefan 14 November 2019 Queen s Park Scotland s oldest club vote to go professional after 152 years as amateurs BBC Sport Retrieved 14 November 2019 Davenport Sean 14 November 2019 Historic vote for change at Queen s Park Football Club The Queen s Park Football Club Retrieved 14 November 2019 To play for the sake of playing The Herald 20 January 2009 Retrieved 22 January 2020 Database World Stadium List of UEFA Category 4 Stadiums www worldstadiumdatabase com Retrieved 16 July 2016 a b Glasgow Football Club Kick Off 1 700 Seater Stadium Plan reGlasgow 20 November 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2020 a b c d e f History The Queen s Park Football Club www queensparkfc co uk Retrieved 13 March 2017 David Goldblatt The Ball Is Round Page 39 a b c History 1867 1874 QPFC com Retrieved 13 March 2017 The Foot Ball Club in Edinburgh 1824 1841 The National Archives of Scotland Nas gov uk 13 November 2007 Archived from the original on 7 March 2012 Retrieved 23 March 2012 The man who owned the first football in Glasgow a hidden history of the 1860s Andy Mitchell Scottish Sport History 4 July 2021 a b c Queen s Park Historical Football Kits Historicalkits co uk Retrieved 23 March 2012 Mitchell Paul A Sporting Nation The first international football match BBC Retrieved 23 March 2012 Scottish Football Association Scottishfa co uk Archived from the original on 16 October 2006 Retrieved 10 August 2013 a b The Men with the Educated Feet F H C Robertson Page 10 Paul Smith 2013 Scotland Who s Who International Players 1872 2013 Pitch Publishing p 289 Ltd Statto Organisation Queen s Park v Clydesdale Glasgow on 21st March 1874 Statto com Statto com Archived from the original on 14 March 2017 Retrieved 13 March 2017 The Men with the Educated Feet F H C Robertson Page 11 The Men with the Educated Feet F H C Robertson Page 14 The Men with the Educated Feet F H C Robertson Page 15 Scotland Cup Results 1873 74 1877 78 and 1889 90 1995 96 RSSSF Retrieved 13 March 2017 New claims show Queen s Park refused to go pro over love for Hampden Park cash Gordon Blackstock Daily Record 26 April 2020 Inductees 2005 Scottish Football Hall of Fame scottishfootballhalloffame co uk Retrieved 13 March 2017 Robert S McColl QPFC com Retrieved 13 March 2017 Black History Month Home 10 June 2010 Archived from the original on 10 June 2010 Retrieved 13 March 2017 Catton J A H Tityrus 2006 reprint of 1926 original The Story of Association Football Cleethorpes Soccer Books ISBN 1 86223 119 2 Chapter by William McGregor on Queen s Park FC in Gibson A and Pickford W eds Association Football and the Men who made it Vol IV London 1906 P15 Robinson R History of the Queen s Park Football Club 1867 1917 Glasgow 1920 P25 Robinson R History of the Queen s Park Football Club 1867 1917 Glasgow 1920 P37 Quoted in Sanders R Beastly Fury The Strange Birth of British Football London 2009 P66 Graphic illustrated newspaper 14 December 1872 Glasgow Herald newspaper 2 December 1872 The Men with the Educated Feet F H C Robertson Page 16 Robinson R History of the Queen s Park Football Club 1867 1917 Glasgow 1920 History of the Queen s Park Football Club 1867 1917 Chapter XXVIII The Corinthians and Other New Year Games Electric Scotland Retrieved 8 March 2017 History of the Queen s Park Football Club 1867 1917 Chapter LXII Miscellaneous Electric Scotland Retrieved 25 January 2017 History 1900 1945 QPFC com Retrieved 13 March 2017 Back of the NET Scottishleague net Retrieved 23 March 2012 The Men with the Educated Feet F H C Robertson Page 123 History 1976 Present QPFC com Retrieved 13 March 2017 BBC SPORT Football Football Focus Queen s Park s cult heroes BBC News 4 September 2004 Retrieved 23 March 2012 Paul Walker Football Stats No Club Age 34 1994 2009 Soccer Base Retrieved 23 March 2012 BBC SPORT QUEENS PARK Queen s Park celebrate promotion BBC News 30 June 2000 Retrieved 23 March 2012 Danny Ferry Football Stats Albion Rovers Age 35 Soccer Base Retrieved 23 March 2012 John McCormack 20 November 2002 BBC SPORT Football Scot Div 3 Morton appoint McCormack BBC News Retrieved 23 March 2012 BBC SPORT Football My Club Queens Park Boss resigns after bust up BBC News 18 August 2004 Retrieved 23 March 2012 Queen s Pk 0 0 Aberdeen 5 3 pen BBC Sport 22 August 2006 Retrieved 24 October 2017 Dons spot of bother ends in humiliation AFC Heritage trust 22 August 2006 Retrieved 24 October 2017 BBC SPORT Football My Club Queens Park Stark hails highlight of career BBC News 12 May 2007 Retrieved 23 March 2012 BBC SPORT Football My Club Queens Park Stark signs new Queen s Park deal BBC News 16 May 2007 Retrieved 23 March 2012 BBC SPORT Football My Club Queens Park Speirs expects squad to break up BBC News 25 April 2008 Retrieved 23 March 2012 SCORER OF FAMOUS QUEEN S PARK GOAL POPS UP IN SHETLAND SPFL 5 June 2014 Retrieved 13 June 2019 Crawford Kenny 5 July 2013 Young Queen s Park trio make rare jump to SPL from Third Division BBC Sport BBC Retrieved 18 October 2014 Dundee United sign Blair Spittal from Queen s Park BBC Sport 12 June 2014 Retrieved 15 October 2018 a b c Bienkowski Stefan 13 November 2019 Queen s Park Scotland s oldest club set to vote on ending 152 year old amateur status BBC Sport Retrieved 13 November 2019 150th Anniversary 9 Jul 17 Ian Cairns Media Irn Bru Cup Results SPFL spfl co uk Retrieved 25 October 2018 Davenport Sean Mark Roberts Departs Queen s Park Retrieved 21 January 2020 Ray McKinnon appointed Head Coach Queen s Park FC 2 January 2020 Retrieved 2 January 2020 Queen s Park name Ray McKinnon their new head coach BBC Sport 2 January 2020 Retrieved 3 January 2020 Scottish League 2 Queen s Park are champions with four games to spare BBC Sport 20 April 2021 Retrieved 13 May 2021 Leeann Dempster Queen s Park appoint former Hibernian chief executive BBC Sport 12 January 2021 Retrieved 13 May 2021 Ray McKinnon Queen s Park manager leaves club after League 2 win BBC Sport 10 May 2021 Retrieved 13 May 2021 Sarkar Sattyik 28 March 2022 Profile Who are Owen Coyle s new club Queen s Park FC khelnow com Khel Now Archived from the original on 28 March 2022 Retrieved 31 March 2022 Queen s Park promoted SPFL 15 May 2022 Retrieved 7 June 2022 a b c Inglis 1996 p 461 O Brien 2010 p 40 O Brien 2010 p 41 O Brien 2010 p 48 O Brien 2010 p 45 a b McLaughlin Chris 11 September 2018 Hampden v Murrayfield Scottish FA opts to keep games in Glasgow BBC Sport Retrieved 15 October 2018 Queen s Park Football Club www spfl co uk Scottish Professional Football League Retrieved 22 January 2014 Lewis Jane McLaughlin Chris 3 December 2013 Glasgow 2014 Pioneering work begins to convert Hampden BBC Sport Retrieved 15 October 2018 Hampden to host League Cup semi finals BBC Sport 28 November 2014 Retrieved 15 October 2018 There s No Place Like Home www queensparkfc co uk Queen s Park F C 21 December 2014 Archived from the original on 23 December 2014 Retrieved 15 October 2018 Scottish FA takes ownership of Hampden Park BBC Sport BBC 4 August 2020 Retrieved 4 August 2020 a b Pattullo Alan 20 March 2021 Mystery hangs over Queen s Park s last ever game at Hampden Park on what should be a hugely significant occasion for Scottish football The Scotsman Retrieved 23 March 2021 Falkirk Stadium Venue Confirmed queensparkfc co uk 26 March 2021 Retrieved 26 March 2021 Queens Park League 1 club to play home games at Firhill next season BBC Sport 3 June 2021 Retrieved 3 June 2021 Bigger And Better For Lesser Hampden Queen s Park FC 4 December 2021 21 02646 FUL Alterations to stadium including erection of directors stand with associated hospitality function Class 11 Lesser Hampden Park Letherby Drive Glasgow Glasgow City Council Planning Application Documents Retrieved 5 December 2021 Fans queensparkfc co uk Queen s Park F C Retrieved 22 December 2020 1st team players queensparkfc co uk Queen s Park F C Retrieved 27 May 2022 Staff queensparkfc co uk Queen s Park F C Retrieved 2 June 2022 QUEEN S PARK WIN A TROPHY Evening Telegraph 10 May 1922 via British Newspaper Archive Queen s win Scottish Amateur Cup Final Scottish Professional Football League 3 June 2009 SourcesInglis Simon 1996 Football Grounds of Britain 3rd ed London CollinsWillow ISBN 0 00 218426 5 O Brien Ged 2010 Played in Glasgow London Malavan Media ISBN 978 0 954744 557 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Queen s Park FC Official WebsiteOfficial websiteUnofficial WebsitesSpiders Talk A Forum For Queen s Park Fans QPFC com A Historical Queen s Park FC WebsiteNews sitesBBC Queen s ParkHistoryHistory of the Queen s Park Football Club 1867 1917 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Queen 27s Park F C amp oldid 1140733311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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