A TEAM is only ever as strong as its weakest link. That player prone to the odd mistake or poor judgement at critical moments sometimes defines a season just as much as the talismanic striker that inspires you to dream of silverware and glory.
Sometimes leagues are judged in this way too, their poorest relative touted when feeling the need to disparage a division for whatever point during a postmatch pint at the local.
But, sometimes, it is those perceived weakest links, those perennial basement bedfellows who help illuminate the great strength and worth of a league. Leagues like the Scottish Highland League.
The most northerly senior division in Britain, the Highland League spans a vast distance across some of Scotland’s most stunning scenery.
From Wick Academy a few miles shy of John o’ Groats in the far north, to Inverurie Loco Works (a ten-hour round trip for the Scorries of Wick) situated a few miles north west of Aberdeen, the league traverses mountain ranges, country parks, thick forests, grand, mystical lochs, and lush valleys that are home to some of the most famous whisky distilleries in the world.
But beyond it all, isolated away out on the west coast of Scotland, huddled beneath the towering shadow of the ominous Ben Nevis, stands the Highland League’s ‘weakest link’ – Fort William Football Club.
Formed in 1974 to provide senior football to a region of Scotland that had never been represented before, Fort William joined the Highland League 11 years later. After a couple of mid-table finishes in their first two seasons, The Fort’s isolation and paucity of local talent saw them drift to the foot of the league, finishing in the bottom three all but four times in the following 32 years.
This story is from the February - March 2020 edition of Late Tackle Football Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the February - March 2020 edition of Late Tackle Football Magazine.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
THE RISE OF SEDONS
CAM HOWE REPORTS ON THE SUNDAY LEAGUE YOUTUBERS NOW ATTEMPTING TO TAKE NON-LEAGUE FOOTBALL BY STORM
TIGERS' CHRISTMAS CRACKER
COLIN ALLAN RECALLS WHEN HULL CITY HOSTED ROTHERHAM UNITED ON CHRISTMAS DAY 6 YEARS AGO...
THE CHOCOLATE BOX
YOICHI IGAWA RECALLS A DREAM TRIP TO LA BOMBONERA
NO MOUNTAIN, NO PROBLEM
POET AND WRITER CHRIS TOWERS TREKKED TO NORTH WALES TO WATCH FLINT MOUNTAIN IN ACTION IN JD CYMRU NORTH
THE BATTLE OF HIGHBURY
LIAM HARDING RECALLS AN INFAMOUS MATCH BETWEEN ENGLAND AND ITALY
ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACH
TREVOR HEFT TELLS US ABOUT THE FUNNIEST SIGHT IN FOOTBALL
RECALLING THE MIRACLE OF CASTEL DI SANGRO
JONNY BRICK CELEBRATES THE SILVER ANNIVERSARY OF A FOOTBALL BOOK SET IN ITALY AND WRITTEN BY AN AMERICAN CRIME WRITER TURNED CALCIO CONVERT...
THE ONE AND ONLY JOHAN NEESKENS
ROBERT J WILSON PAYS TRIBUTE TO THE LATE, GREAT DUTCH MASTER
HANDSOME PETER
BOB BOND TAKES A LOOK BACK AT THE CAREER OF FORMER PRESTON AND NOTTINGHAM FOREST FORWARD PETER HIGHAM
BLACK CATS ON THE PROWL
BARNABY ROSTANT TAKES A LOOK AT SUNDERLAND'S REVIVAL AND THE IMPACT OF FRENCH BOSS REGIS LE BRIS