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| During
the five previous seasons spent in the East of Scotland
First Division, Vale had become used to looking back
at the end of a campaign considering near misses and
dropped points and wondering what might have been. But
in 2009-10 happily it was a case of what was, as the
team finally managed to gain a place back in the Premier
Division. Success on the field of play for Vale - and
for Leithen Rovers, who ended the season as Border Amateur
League Champions - was especially welcome, as Innerleithen
itself had endured a miserable time of it, with the
closing down of one of the last remaining cashmere mills
in the town having a devastating effect on local employment. |
|
 |
As
manager Rab Paget (left), coaches Stewart Churchill,
Stuart Gray and goalkeeping coach David McGinley gathered
the squad together for their first full season in charge,
missing from the squad for the first time in a decade
was Robbie Clark, who had decided to join Leithen Rovers.
Also departed were Steven Notman who returned to the
SFL with Berwick Rangers, Raymond Fleming and Mike Osborne
to Spartans Juniors, captain Campbell Forsyth to the
newly formed Border Amateur League club Linton Hotspur,
Neil Nisbet to Leith Athletic Under-21s, while Chris
Graham made the decision to give up football as it was
proving increasingly incompatible with his commitments
as a DJ in clubs in Edinburgh. Coming in were a clutch
of strong signings; striker Steven Dongo from Lothian
Thistle, midfielders Darren Gillon from Eyemouth United,
Paul Greenhill from Civil Service Strollers, John Hall
from Edinburgh City and Alex Munro from Oklahoma University.
Defender and former Leith Athletic captain Michael Stewart
arrived at Victoria Park, as well as experienced goalkeeper
Darren Walker, previously on the books of Whitehill
Welfare, Edinburgh Athletic and Peebles, from Civil
Service Strollers. Bringing an exotic touch to the squad
was left-sided midfielder Ousman Sonko, a Gambian who
had been capped at youth level for his country. |
|
Paget had gathered
the players together early to work on core fitness,
but a pre-season friendly against Annan Athletic was
arranged for early July, in which goals from Stevie
Dongo and Gavin Tainsh gave Vale a morale-boosting 2-1
victory over the SFL side. A win against Lothian &
Edinburgh Amateur FA club Newcraighall Leith Vics followed
two weeks later, but a game against Edinburgh University
at Peffermill was abandoned in the 77th minute amid
a torrential thunderstorm with the scoreline blank and
Vale went down 2-0 to Scottish Junior FA team Edinburgh
United at Victoria Park. The second pre-season visit
to Innerleithen from English club Shields United of
the Northern Alliance League proved a useful workout
as well as strengthening the bond between the clubs.
Holidays and working commitments saw only nine players
available, but three players were borrowed from the
visitors and the game went ahead, ending in a 1-1 draw.
Pre-season was rounded off with another visit to Westfield
Park to meet Kirriemuir Thistle, Vale going down 3-1
despite a good performance. |
|
Vale
got their league campaign off to a flying start with
comfortable victories over Peebles and Hawick Royal
Albert, while Kelso United were overcome at Woodside
Park. The next visitors to Innerleithen were fellow
promotion hopefuls Gretna 2008, and a double from Aaron
Somerville and a strike from Darren Gillon saw Vale
3-0 up. Shaun Milligan and Curtis Wood pulled back a
couple of quick-fire goals in injury time to take the
shine off the result, but it had been a significant
three points for Vale. Another excellent result came
when Stirling University came to Victoria Park in September
for what would prove to be their only league defeat
of the season. Vale went ahead in the 37th minute as
Ger Rossi knocked home a Gavin Tainsh cross, but Stirling
had a great chance to level when they were awarded a
penalty in the 77th minute after Paul Lee was adjudged
to have pushed Craig Mason in the area. Mason took the
spot kick himself, but his low shot was blocked by Darren
Walker and Riteesh Mishra put the rebound inches wide.
Already a group of four teams - Vale, Stirling, Gretna
and Craigroyston - was forming at the top of the table
and Vale further enhanced their promotion prospects
when a goal from Aaron Somerville gave them victory
at home to Craigroyston, a game which had also seen
an impressive debut from centre-half Paul Thomson, who
had joined the club on loan from Spartans Juniors. |
|
The Active Nation
Scottish Cup First Round draw paired Vale with East
of Scotland Premier Division side Edinburgh University.
Two goals from Aaron Somerville put Vale in the driving
seat at Peffermill, with midfield players Paul Greenhill
and Darren Gillon doing a great job nullifying the University
threat before Stevie Dongo added a late goal. The Second
Round saw Vale handed their first Scottish Cup home
tie for over two years, with Highland League side Keith
the visitors. Postponements in the East of Scotland
League against Eyemouth United and in the South Region
Cup against Lothian Thistle had seen Vale play only
one competitive game since the previous round - a draw
away to Leith Athletic, thus ending their 100% league
record - and various attempts to arrange bounce games
against Border Amateur sides had floundered for one
reason or another. Vale faced an uphill struggle after
falling behind just five minutes into the game to a
Wayne Mackay goal, but Aaron Somerville continued his
amazing Scottish Cup scoring record with an equaliser
in the 26th minute. Despite giving a good account of
themselves, Vale fell behind again just past the hour
mark as Mackay curled a spectacular free kick into the
top corner from 25 yards. Vale pushed forward in a bid
to salvage the tie, but a quick break upfield saw Gary
Harris slide home Keith's third nine minutes from time
to assure them of a place in the next round. |
|
Vale’s Image
Printers East of Scotland Qualifying Cup run was another
highlight of the season. After requiring extra time
to defeat Ormiston at Recreation Park, the Second Round
was an away tie at Coldstream, which went to a penalty
shoot-out after it ended 2-2 after 120 minutes. Incredibly,
seven of the ten penalties were missed, with Michael
Stewart tucking away the winning kick. The next round
saw Vale visit Whitehill Welfare with a squad decimated
by injuries and suspensions, and question marks hanging
over the fitness of several of those who did play. But
against the odds, a fantastic individual goal by Aaron
Somerville put Vale ahead halfway through the first
half and despite losing Paul Thomson to injury and having
Stevie Dongo sent off, Vale hung on to book a semi final
spot against Spartans. |
|
With the agreed
two year sponsorship of the South Region Challenge Cup
by the SFA having run its course, the competition was
played in an altered format to ease the financial burden
of travel for clubs, with the early rounds played in
East and South sections until the quarter final stage.
Vale received a bye before being paired with Lothian
Thistle in the Second Round. The game went ahead at
the third time of asking, with the original date in
October being postponed because of a swine flu bug that
swept through the Lothian Thistle squad. Then, the rearranged
date was pushed back a week after Aaron Somerville,
Andy Martin and Ousman Sonko were named in the East
of Scotland U-23 select team to play Livingston at Almondvale,
although this match was also postponed due to rain.
Under the floodlights at Saughton Enclosure, Vale took
an early lead through Somerville, who then had a penalty
saved by Lothian keeper Mark Swain. The home side equalised
on the hour mark through Gary Black and went ahead ten
minutes later as Craig Hume nodded home. Vale were still
very much in the game, but disaster struck as Vale keeper
Darren Walker received an accidental kick on the head
and the game was held up for around five minutes as
he was removed from the pitch. With back-up keeper Mark
Wilson injured and not on the bench, Ger Rossi took
over the gloves, but his first touch was to fumble a
high ball into the box and Black was conveniently placed
to take advantage. Walker was sped in an ambulance to
the ERI with a suspected skull fracture, but happily
it turned out to be only concussion, although this still
saw him out of action for three months. |
|
Back
in the Image Printers Cup, the Semi Final game against
Spartans saw Vale produce their best performance of
the season on their first ever visit to the Edinburgh
side’s smart new Ainslie Park ground. Vale took
the lead in the 26th minute as Aaron Somerville superbly
volleyed home an Ousman Sonko corner. It was a good
goal, but Somerville’s second six minutes into
the second half was even better. Running on to a long
ball forward, Somerville checked back to lose his marker,
before unleashing a stunning shot into the top corner
of the net from 25 yards. Gavin Malin pulled a goal
back for the home side, and it was backs to the wall
time as Spartans laid siege to the Vale goal, with keeper
Mark Wilson pulling off an astonishing save as he tipped
away a Keith McLeod shot destined for the top corner.
Donal Henretty hit the bar and an agonising moment in
injury time saw a McLeod shot hit off the inside of
the post and trickle along the line, but Vale held out
for a memorable victory. |
|
While things could
hardly have been going better for Vale, a black day
for Innerleithen itself came in January with the news
that the mill bordering Victoria Park, JJ & HB 1788
Ltd, formerly Ballantyne Cashmere, had entered administration
with 132 people - almost three quarters of the workforce
- laid off. Those losing their jobs included workers
with over three decades of service to the company and
the knock-on effect in the local community was obvious.
In March the company went into voluntary liquidation,
but by then a new company, Caerlee Mill Ltd, had been
formed at the site which had created 37 new jobs, with
the hope of more to follow. Elgin-based company Johnstons,
with a large operation in Hawick, also set up a small
unit employing 12 people in the town, which was further
good news. |
|
 |
A
severe winter saw record levels of snow and temperatures
as low as -17c. Many Borders towns and villages were
cut off as public transport was suspended and roads
closed due to dangerous conditions. Many homes found
themselves without electricity, with service engineers
unable to make it to substations for repair work. Not
surprisingly the East of Scotland League suffered a
slew of postponements that saw Vale manage only two
matches during December and January and the team forced
to hold training sessions on Portobello beach in Edinburgh
(pictured left). Vale were by no means the
worst affected team in the league, with Gala Fairydean
arriving at Victoria Park for a King Cup First Round
tie which would be their first game for two and a half
months. Not surprisingly, Vale were the sharper side,
but the final score of 4-0 - courtesy of goals from
Ger Rossi, Stevie Dongo and a double from Scott Moffat
- certainly flattered Vale. |
|
 |
The
Second Round saw Vale’s second trip of the season
to Newbattle Complex to play Easthouses Lily and the
game was notable for a dramatic return to action for
keeper Darren Walker (left) after injury. Ryan
Curran shot home from a acute angle to give Lily a first
half lead against the run of play, but a Michael Stewart
penalty awarded after Ousman Sonko was brought down
in the box drew the score level. The home side faced
extra time a man short after John Baigrie picked up
his second yellow card, but the 30 minutes failed to
yield a goal and the game went to a penalty shoot out.
Easthouses scored their first three penalties with Aaron
Somerville and Michael Stewart scoring either side of
Paul Greenhill's miss for Vale, but Walker, who had
replaced Mark Wilson with 17 minutes of normal time
remaining, saved Curran’s effort before turning
penalty taker to take it into sudden death. A brilliant
save from Walker to deny Euan Smith left Paul Thomson
to tuck his spot kick away and take Vale through to
a meeting with Preston Athletic. The Quarter Final took
place at Victoria Park, with a disciplined performance
from the East Lothian side seeing them soak up some
early Vale pressure well, before Stuart Miller nodded
home a Gary Wales cross to settle it in Preston's favour. |
|
| Back
in the league, the period of forced inactivity, plus
the cup games had seen Vale slip to fourth, but still
unbeaten and with plenty games in hand over the sides
above them. A well-won point in a tough away game against
Stirling University thanks to a late Aaron Somerville
goal was followed by a midweek trip to Gretna, but the
game was abandoned in the 58th minute when the floodlights
at Raydale Park short-circuited with the home side 2-0
up at the time. Vale fielded former Edinburgh University
players Andrew Cook and Kerr Dodds in a game against
Craigroyston and both were instrumental in a 2-0 win,
with Cook grabbing the second goal after Scott Moffat
had given Vale the lead. It was to be Cook’s one
and only appearance as he joined SFL club East Fife,
but Dodds signed on for the remainder of the season,
turning in some exceptional displays in midfield. |
|
The harsh winter
and the resulting backlog of league games for some clubs
meant that the East of Scotland League took the unique
step of allowing clubs to decline from participation
in the League Cup if they so desired. Vale were one
of five clubs who did so, but they still had one last
cup game to play; the Image Printers Final against Gretna
2008. A postponement on the original date in February
saw it rescheduled for a month later and Vale’s
third cup final in as many seasons again ended in disappointment.
A poor first half display saw Gretna take the initiative
and although Vale came more into the game in the second
half, an unfortunate five minute hold up when trouble
amongst the large crowd flared up seemed to cause the
Innerleithen side to lose their momentum and late goals
from Dan Jeffrey and John Jardine meant it was Gretna
who lifted the trophy. |
|
|
|
Aaron
Somerville feels the force of a Peebles tackle in the
game at Whitestone Park (above left), while Paul Lee
evades one during the same game. |
|
Alex Munro fires in a cross during the game against
Gala Fairydean at Victoria Park. |
A busy end of
season saw Vale playing two games a week, with a comfortable
win over Peebles followed by six points against Gala
Fairydean. The first game at Netherdale saw Gala down
to ten men after just quarter of an hour when Paul Young
received a straight red card for a challenge on Andy
Martin. Vale pummelled the Gala goal, but had to wait
until three minutes from time when Alex Munro blasted
a shot into the net to give them the win. Four days
later the teams met again at Victoria Park, with Gala
again losing a player as Andy Hardie was sent off for
dissent half an hour in, and goals from Greig Shortreed
and another from Munro saw Vale within touching distance
of promotion. The joy of a good victory over in-form
Leith Athletic was increased with the news that both
Stirling University and Gretna had been held to draws
the same evening, meaning that Gretna were now out of
the promotion race and with Craigroyston having only
one game left to play - against Stirling - Vale now
needed only a single point from their five remaining
games to make sure of a promotion place. |
|
The next game
was the rearranged match at Gretna and a 2-0 defeat
saw Vale lose their unbeaten league record, but with
Stirling having beaten Craigroyston with virtually the
last kick of the ball meant that it was Vale and Stirling
would take their place in the Premier Division next
season. Following the match, manager Rab Paget officially
announced his intention to step down from the manager’s
position, his work commitments making it increasingly
difficult to dedicate the time required to the job of
managing the team. |
|
The only thing
that still needed sorted out was whether it was Vale
or Stirling that lifted the First Division championship.
With Stirling’s vastly superior goal difference
- they had hit double figures in league games against
Hawick Royal Albert and Peebles - virtually worth an
extra point, Vale had to win their remaining league
games and hope that Stirling slipped up somewhere. Vale
duly recorded wins in their remaining fixtures against
Hawick Royal Albert, Eyemouth United (twice) and Ormiston,
but there was no slip up by Stirling and a 3-0 win against
Hawick on the final match day saw them champions on
goal difference. The news came through with around half
an hour of the last match at Eyemouth remaining, the
Vale game having been held up after Andy Martin had
been badly injured and taken to hospital in an ambulance.
X-rays showed that his ankle was not broken as had been
first thought, but the winger had suffered ligament
damage, which would keep him out of pre-season 2010-11.
Despite not capturing the championship, it had still
been a marvellous season for Vale - having gone the
whole season only dropping seven points, their points
total of 59 was the highest ever recorded by a side
in the East of Scotland League without having won their
respective league. |
|
|
The Vale team
line up for their final game of the season at Eyemouth.
Back Row: (left to right) Stewart Churchill (coach),
Alex Munro, Paul Lee, Scott Moffat, Michael Stewart,
Darren Walker, Ricky Burke, Darren Gillon, Stuart Gray
(coach), Rab Paget (manager).
Front Row: Gavin Tainsh, Paul Thomson, Kerr Dodds, John
Hall, Andy Martin, Aaron Somerville, Paul Greenhill. |
|
 |
The
Player of the Year awards were hotly contested, with
many players making an outstanding contribution during
the campaign. Players Player of the Year was captain
Michael Stewart, while Supporters Player of the Year
was Aaron Somerville, who also got the top scorer award,
his 25 goals the highest season total for a Vale player
in a dozen years. President's Player of the Year went
to Darren Gillon, while Rab Paget's final act as manager
was to introduce a Manager's Player of the Year to the
end of season awards. The first winner was Mark Wilson
- a fitting reward for the goalkeeper who had spent
most of the season as understudy to Darren Walker, but
had worked hard to improve his game under goalkeeping
coach David McGinley and produced outstanding displays
when called upon. Players unlucky to be overlooked included
Paul Greenhill, Andy Martin, John Hall, Gavin Tainsh,
Paul Lee, Paul Thomson, Greig Shortreed and Darren Walker,
but the contribution made by each was recognised by
all who followed the fortunes of the club. |
|
| 08/08/09 |
Peebles |
(H) |
5-1 |
Somerville, Greenhill, Martin 2, Dongo |
| 11/08/09 |
Hawick Royal Albert |
(H) |
9-0 |
Martin 2, Dongo 4, Greenhill, Sonko, Moffat |
| 19/08/09 |
Kelso United |
(A) |
2-1 |
Martin, Somerville |
| 22/08/09 |
Gretna 2008 |
(H) |
3-2 |
Somerville 2, Gillon |
| 29/08/09 |
Easthouses Lily |
(A) |
4-3 |
Somerville, Shortreed, Munro, Tainsh |
| 06/09/09 |
Kelso United |
(H) |
3-0 |
Somerville, Rossi 2 |
| 12/09/09 |
Stirling University |
(H) |
1-0 |
Rossi |
| 10/10/09 |
Leith Athletic |
(A) |
3-3 |
Somerville 2, Gillon |
| 31/10/09 |
Craigroyston |
(H) |
1-0 |
Shortreed |
| 21/11/09 |
Ormiston |
(H) |
4-1 |
Somerville 3, Dongo |
| 06/02/10 |
Stirling University |
(A) |
2-2 |
Gillon, Somerville |
| 06/03/10 |
Easthouses Lily |
(H) |
3-1 |
Moffat, Martin, Sonko |
| 13/03/10 |
Craigroyston |
(A) |
2-0 |
Moffat, Cook |
| 10/04/10 |
Peebles |
(A) |
4-0 |
Gillon 2, Martin, Somerville |
| 13/04/10 |
Gala Fairydean |
(A) |
1-0 |
Munro |
| 17/04/10 |
Gala Fairydean |
(H) |
2-0 |
Shortreed, Munro |
| 20/04/10 |
Leith Athletic |
(H) |
2-0 |
Somerville, Gillon |
| 24/04/10 |
Gretna 2008 |
(A) |
0-2 |
- |
| 27/04/10 |
Hawick Royal Albert |
(A) |
2-0 |
Stewart (pen), Moffat |
| 01/05/10 |
Eyemouth United |
(H) |
4-1 |
Somerville 2 (1 pen), Gillon 2 |
| 04/05/10 |
Ormiston |
(A) |
2-0 |
Gillon, Dodds |
| 08/05/10 |
Eyemouth United |
(A) |
4-1 |
Moffat 3, og (Buchan) |
| 26/09/09 |
Edinburgh University |
(A) |
3-0 |
Somerville 2, Dongo |
| 24/10/09 |
Keith |
(H) |
1-3 |
Somerville |
| 10/11/09 |
Lothian Thistle |
(A) |
1-3 |
Somerville |
| *Vale opted out of
season 2009/10 competition due to fixture congestion. |
| 15/08/09 |
Ormiston |
(A) |
4-2 |
Tainsh, Munro, Martin, Somerville |
| 19/09/09 |
Coldstream |
(A) |
2-2 |
Martin, Somerville (pen) |
| (after extra time; Vale won 2-1 on penalties) |
| 07/11/09 |
Whitehill Welfare |
(A) |
1-0 |
Somerville |
| 12/12/09 |
Spartans |
(A) |
2-1 |
Somerville 2 |
| 28/03/10 |
Gretna 2008 |
0-2 |
- |
| 23/01/10 |
Gala Fairydean |
(H) |
4-0 |
Rossi, Dongo, Moffat 2 |
| 13/02/10 |
Easthouses Lily |
(A) |
1-1 |
Stewart (pen) |
| (after extra time;
Vale won 5-4 on penalties) |
| 20/03/10 |
Preston Athletic |
(H) |
0-1 |
- |
|
| 1 |
Stirling University
(Promoted) |
22 |
19 |
2 |
1 |
75 |
16 |
+59 |
59 |
2 |
Vale of Leithen
(Promoted) |
22 |
19 |
2 |
1 |
63 |
18 |
+45 |
59 |
3 |
Craigroyston |
22 |
14 |
3 |
5 |
57 |
23 |
+34 |
45 |
| 4 |
Gretna 2008 |
22 |
13 |
4 |
5 |
53 |
20 |
+33 |
43 |
| 5 |
Leith Athletic |
22 |
11 |
5 |
6 |
68 |
33 |
+35 |
38 |
6 |
Easthouses Lily |
22 |
7 |
6 |
9 |
41 |
38 |
+3 |
27 |
7 |
Gala Fairydean |
22 |
8 |
2 |
12 |
42 |
44 |
-2 |
26 |
8 |
Kelso United |
22 |
6 |
5 |
11 |
32 |
44 |
-12 |
23 |
| 9 |
Ormiston |
22 |
7 |
0 |
15 |
28 |
54 |
-26 |
21 |
| 10 |
Eyemouth United |
22 |
4 |
7 |
11 |
37 |
51 |
-14 |
19 |
| 11 |
Peebles |
22 |
3 |
1 |
18 |
23 |
107 |
-84 |
10 |
12 |
Hawick Royal Albert |
22 |
1 |
3 |
18 |
20 |
91 |
-71 |
6 |
|
| C'ston |
EastL |
EyeUtd |
GalaF |
Gretna |
HRA |
Kelso |
LeithA |
Orm |
Peeb |
StUni |
VoL |
| Craigroyston |
- |
2-2 |
2-1 |
5-1 |
3-1 |
6-0 |
2-0 |
1-0 |
5-1 |
7-0 |
1-2 |
0-2 |
| Easthouses Lily |
1-4 |
- |
2-2 |
0-2 |
1-1 |
5-0 |
2-1 |
1-4 |
7-1 |
3-0 |
1-3 |
3-4 |
| Eyemouth United |
1-3 |
2-3 |
- |
4-3 |
1-2 |
4-1 |
2-2 |
1-1 |
1-2 |
6-1 |
1-1 |
1-4 |
| Gala Fairydean |
2-2 |
1-0 |
1-1 |
- |
1-2 |
3-0 |
3-1 |
1-5 |
2-3 |
2-1 |
2-3 |
0-1 |
| Gretna 2008 |
1-0 |
0-0 |
2-0 |
3-0 |
- |
6-0 |
1-1 |
1-1 |
5-0 |
10-1 |
0-1 |
2-0 |
| Hawick Royal Albert |
0-2 |
1-1 |
3-3 |
1-3 |
1-3 |
- |
2-2 |
0-3 |
1-3 |
1-3 |
0-3 |
0-2 |
| Kelso United |
1-3 |
0-3 |
1-1 |
2-1 |
1-2 |
4-5 |
- |
3-2 |
2-1 |
1-0 |
1-3 |
1-2 |
| Leith Athletic |
2-2 |
1-2 |
3-0 |
2-1 |
2-1 |
10-0 |
2-2 |
- |
4-1 |
8-2 |
1-4 |
3-3 |
| Ormiston |
0-3 |
2-1 |
4-0 |
0-3 |
1-2 |
3-0 |
0-2 |
1-2 |
- |
2-4 |
0-1 |
0-2 |
| Peebles |
2-3 |
2-2 |
1-2 |
0-10 |
1-6 |
3-2 |
0-3 |
0-12 |
1-2 |
- |
0-6 |
0-4 |
| Stirling University |
2-1 |
2-0 |
5-2 |
6-0 |
1-0 |
10-2 |
4-1 |
4-0 |
2-0 |
10-0 |
- |
2-2 |
| Vale of Leithen |
1-0 |
3-1 |
4-1 |
2-0 |
3-2 |
9-0 |
3-0 |
2-0 |
4-1 |
5-1 |
1-0 |
- |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
25 |
Aaron Somerville |
16 |
3 |
1 |
5 |
n/a |
- |
9 |
Darren Gillon |
8 |
- |
- |
- |
n/a |
- |
| 9 |
Andy Martin |
7 |
- |
- |
2 |
n/a |
- |
9 |
Scott Moffat |
7 |
- |
- |
- |
n/a |
2 |
8 |
Steven Dongo |
6 |
1 |
- |
- |
n/a |
1 |
4 |
Alex Munro |
3 |
- |
- |
1 |
n/a |
- |
4 |
Geri Rossi |
3 |
- |
- |
- |
n/a |
1 |
3 |
Greig Shortreed |
3 |
- |
- |
- |
n/a |
- |
2 |
Paul Greenhill |
2 |
- |
- |
- |
n/a |
- |
2 |
Ousman Sonko |
2 |
- |
- |
- |
n/a |
- |
2 |
Michael Stewart |
1 |
- |
- |
- |
n/a |
1 |
2 |
Gavin Tainsh |
1 |
- |
- |
1 |
n/a |
- |
1 |
Andrew Cook |
1 |
- |
- |
- |
n/a |
- |
1 |
Kerr Dodds |
1 |
- |
- |
- |
n/a |
- |
1 |
Own Goal |
1 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
|
Alex Munro |
14 (2) |
Andy Penman |
(7) |
Ricky Burke |
3 (10) |
John Hall |
16 (3) |
Geri Rossi |
10 (5) |
Steven Clee |
1 |
Josh Hall |
(2) |
Greig Shortreed |
14 (6) |
Andrew Cook |
1 |
Fraser Henderson |
2 (2) |
Aaron Somerville |
31 (2) |
Kerr Dodds |
8 |
Dean Jones |
3 (2) |
Ousman Sonko |
13 (7) |
Steven Dongo |
6 (9) |
Paul Lee |
28 (2) |
Michael Stewart |
33 |
Ronald Fleming |
(1) |
Andy Martin |
30 (2) |
Gavin Tainsh |
32 |
Roni Fleming |
(1) |
Ross McManus |
2 (1) |
Paul Thomson |
16 |
Darren Gillon |
23 (2) |
Ryan McManus |
(4) |
Darren Walker |
24 (1) |
Paul Greenhill |
30 (1) |
Scott Moffat |
12 (14) |
Mark Wilson |
9 |
|
|
|
|