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Aberdeen 6 - 2 Heart of Midlothian

HT Score: Aberdeen 2 - 2 Heart of Midlothian

League Cup Semi Final
Aberdeen scorers: Baird 12, Wood o.g. (OG) 37, Hamilton 48 (Pen), McCall 76, Hamilton 71 (Pen), Hamilton 80.
Heart of Midlothian scorers: Kelly 21, Urquhart 34

22/03/1947 | KO: 15:00

ABERDEEN HAVE CHANCE TO MAKE HISTORY

Having been drawn as the away team for the semi-final, Aberdeen wear a change strip of blue with white sleeves at neutral Easter Road. Although Baird opened the scoring for the Dons, Hearts dominate the first half but fail to keep their lead for the turnaround when Wood scores an own goal. The story is different in the second half, with Geroge Hamilton scoring a hat-trick as the Dons caught fire.

After a promising first half display, Heart of Midlothian fell heavily at Easter Road to Aberdeen, whose superiority was not over-emphasised by a score of 6 goals to 2. Hard pressed in the latter stages, the Hearts' defence could not counter the combined play of the Aberdeen forward line, in which there was no weak link. As an attacking force the Edinburgh side faded out after the interval, although Urquhart and McFarlane tried hard until the end. Baxter emerged with credit in defence.
Aberdeen took the lead through Baird after twelve minutes play, and Kelly scored a clever equaliser. Urquhart put Hearts ahead, but the cores were levelled before half-time by Wood heading through his own goal. Three second half goals by Hamilton - one from a penalty - and another by McCall put the result beyond doubt.

Source: The Scotsman, 24th March 1947

Of Aberdeen's many successful post-war semi-finals there are probably two that stand out as being amongst the club's greatest victories. The first in the 1954 Scottish Cup saw the 6-1 hammering of the Rangers side who only a year before had beaten the Dons in the final itself. More recently, Rangers were on the receiving end once again when Aberdeen crushed them by five goals to one in the 1976 League Cup semi-final.

Before either of those celebrated victories however, the Dons had an equally sensational victory in the League Cup semi-final. The trail to that semi began in 1946 with a qualifying section that contained Falkirk, Motherwell and Queen of the South and, despite the two defeats at the hands of the Fir Park outfit, it was the Dons name that went into the hat for the quarter-final draw. The last eight pairings brought Aberdeen and Dundee together for a two-leg tie. With the draw made, the League Management Committee of the day then decided, in their wisdom, to delay the actual playing of the quarter-finals until March 1947. It was a decision that due to the unforeseen events of an extremely harsh winter almost proved to be calamitous.

Amidst arguments over when postponed Scottish Cup and League games were to be played the quarter-finals went ahead and the first leg at Dens Park saw Aberdeen gain a single goal victory. A week star the Dons won a hard fought tussle by the odd goal in five and qualified for the semi-finals where they were drawn against Hearts.
On 22nd March Aberdeen took the field at neutral Easter Road in unfamiliar dark blue shirts with white sleeves. Hearts for their part had changed to white shirts in compliance with the rules of the day on colour clashes.
The inclusion of Archie Baird at inside-left was a moral booster for the blue and white shirted Dons. Cartilage trouble had kept him out of the side since the New Year's Day game against Falkirk and his return was seen as a good omen. Within twelve minutes Archie had made his presence felt. Billy McCall put the inside-forward in possession on the edge of the box and sheer tenacity saw the number ten work a scoring chance in front of goal. Hearts centre-half Baxter put in a despairing last ditch challenge only to see his clearance rebound off Baird and into the net for the opening goal.
Nine minutes later Kelly beat Dunlop in a race for possession and calmly placed the ball past Johnstone for a deserved equaliser, In 34 minutes strong running Hearts took the lead when Urquhart first-timed a Dewar flick past the helpless Johnstone. As half-time approached it seemed that Aberdeen would be doing well to hold the Edinburgh side to 2-1 over the first '45', then suddenly Harris broke clear on the right and crossed hard and low across the goal. Right-half Wood dived to head clear only to see his 'clearance' fly past his own goalkeeper to put the Dons level.

Five minutes after the restart both wingers came into play as the Dons took the lead. McCall made ground on the left but seemed to have wasted a good opportunity by hitting his cross too deep, but Taylor had cut in from the right and headed the ball back across the goalmouth where Hamilton out-jumped Brown to make the scoreline 3-2 in Aberdeen's favour.
The game hung in the balance well into the second period but gradually the strain of Hearts first-half efforts began to show. With 17 minutes remaining Stan Williams beat Brown with a powerful drive but full-back MacSpadyen popped up to fist the ball out from under the crossbar. George Hamilton made his usual immaculate job from the spot. Three minutes later Billy McCall netted the rebound from a Harris shot to put the Dons in a commanding 5-2 lead. But Aberdeen had not finished yet and a typical flash of Hamilton genius saw the inside-forward grab his hat-trick when he took advantage of indecision between Miller and Baxter to race in and score.

The fact that the Dons went on to lose the final to Rangers, or more significantly went on to win the Scottish Cup four weeks later, has lead to that fine 6-2 victory becoming 'the forgotten triumph'.

Footnote:

Between the 8th February and the 19th April 1947 Aberdeen played 10 consecutive Cup-ties to become the first side to reach the final of both national trophies.

Source: Match Programme, 28th October 1981

Moved in Top Gear Against Hearts
By Noman MacDonald

The Dons willl never have a better chance to make history than they have this year. They are the only club still actively intersted in the League Cup and Scottish Cup.

If they bring off the double - and few will deny that at their best they have the power and skill to succeed - Aberdeen's name will be written in large letter on the football map of Scotland for all time.
History has a habit of repeating itself. It has done so in the case of the League Cup final. Last year the Dons and Rangers contested the final. On April 5 those giants of Scottish football will again do battle. Will history be repeated in the matter if the result too?
Hearts disputed Aberdeen's right to make the journey to Hampden Park in the final, but it was a most unconvincing argument the Edinburgh team put forward.
Once the high-powered Pittodrie attacking machine went into top gear in the second half at Easter Road it was al over for Hearts/<.br> Only once previously this season have I seen the attack play with the same smoth efficiency, the same neatness and accuracy in their combination and the same scintillating footwork. That was against Celtic at Parkehead on January 2. They won 5-1 that day.
On this form the Dons are capable of bringing honours to the town. But, unfortunately, I wasn't so happy, nor was the Aberdeen team, in the first half against Hearts.
The defence was shaky. The Tynecastle team shot their bolt in this half. They went all out. No real attempt was made to play constructuve football. Backs and half-backs kept smashing the ball into Aberdeen territory, and the forwards followed up at top speed.
I thought they couldn't keep the same pace after the interval, but while they did they rocked the lads from Pittodrie.
Pat McKenna was the best back afield. His tackling, timing and clean kicking stamped him as a player with a future. Frank Dunlop was the most consistent half back, once he got over his bad spell.
There were no failures in attack, in fact, I take this formation as the best that Aberdeen can put on the field at the moment.
George Hamilton was the "Montgomery" of the line. His crisp through passes, his neat slips to either flank, and his ability to make and take chances made him the most accomplished forward afield. He scored three goals and might have had five.
Stan Williams was another "black spot" for the Hearts' defence. Pittodrie's "mighty atom" has come right back to form. He was as elusive and active as quicksilver.
Tony Harris was happy on the right wing. He was strong and forceful and played one of his best games of the season. Willie McCall was a fast and tricky left wing raider.
Archie Baird lasted the pace all right. He was a trifle slow compared with the Archie old, but is as tenacious on the ball as ever and this game will have done him a power of good.

Story of the Goals

Now for the goals. The first came to Aberdeen in twelve minutes. McCall sent Baird through. The inside left was forced towards the bye-line, but ploughed his way into the goalmouth. Baird was set to score when a defender, in attempting to clear, drove the ball against him and it rebounded into the net.
Nine minutes later Miller sent the ball up the middle and Kelly beat Dunlop a race for possession to defeat Johnstone with a grand shot.
In thirty-four minutes Hearts took the lead. When McFarlane crossed. Dewar flicked the ball into the middle with his head and Urquhart first-timed it into the net.
There were only eight minutes of the first half left for plav when Harris broke clear on the right and crossed a low ball. Wood dived to head clear, but to his chagrin sent through his own goal.
Five minutes after the start of the second half McCall crossed too strongly and Harris headed the ball back into the goalmouth. Brown and Hamilton went for it and the Aberdeen inside man beat the 'keeper to head into the net.
Twenty-eight minutes of the half had been clocked when Williams beat Brown with a good drive and McSpadyen fisted the ball out from under the crossbar. Hamilton converted the spot kick.
In thirty-one minutes McCall made the total five after a shot by Harris had been deflected.
The sixth and final goal was a Hamilton masterpiece. While Miller and Baxter hesitated the inside right nipped in to gather the ball. He wheeled round in a flash and drove into the net.

Source: Press & Journal, 24th March 1947

Heart of Midlothian Teamsheet
Brown; McSpadyen, McKenzie; Wood, Baxter, Miller; McFarlane, Currie, Kelly, Urquhart, Dewar
Attendance: 36,201
Venue: Easter Road, Edinburgh
Referee: R. Calder, Glasgow