The Celtic Star
·12 de julio de 2025
Celtic’s crumb of comfort – Hamilton Cup ‘triumph’ in Canada in 1994

In partnership with
Yahoo sportsThe Celtic Star
·12 de julio de 2025
Celtic v Hearts in the Hamilton Cup in Canada in May 1994. Photo The Celtic Wiki
Another honour that was on par with the long forgotten about indoor tournament was a trophy called The Hamilton Cup which was won by the Hoops on the other side of the Atlantic shortly after the conclusion of the 1993/94 campaign.
After yet another disappointing season which seen us finish 4th and empty handed, indeed our only joy was Dundee United beating Rangers in the Scottish Cup final which denied the Ibrox club back to back trebles, Lou Macari took his side to Canada to compete in the mini tournament which also contained fellow Scottish sides Aberdeen and Hearts with Canadian side Montreal Impact also taking part.
Fresh from the Fergus McCann led takeover that saved the club from financial disaster the club arrived in the Canadian City of Hamilton to take part in the mini tournament which was part of a Scottish festival sponsored by Guinness.
Chris Hay of Celtic in action against Hearts in the Hamilton Cup in Canada in May 1994. Photo The Celtic Wiki
Celtic’s first game was played on 22 May against Hearts and both sides would struggle in the soaring heat which was close to 100 degrees, and with the effects of a draining campaign still in the legs of the players they conjured up a 1-1 draw on the astroturf of the Ivor Wynne stadium, the venue for all the matches in the mini tournament.
Simon Donnelly of Celtic in action against Hearts in the Hamilton Cup in Canada in May 1994. Photo The Celtic Wiki
Paul Byrne netted our strike in a game we won on the lottery of spot kicks thanks to the heroics of Keeper Carl Muggleton who saved two Jambos efforts as the Bhoys advanced to the final.
Celtic would play Aberdeen in the final after the Pittodrie side defeated Montreal Impact 2-0, and it was the Hoops who came out on top in front of a crowd of six thousand supporters who were mostly decked in green and white.
Mark McNally collects the Hamilton Cup after beating Aberdeen in the final in May 1994. Photo The Celtic Wiki
Yet again it was a game played in the soaring heat as a Paul Byrne goal was enough to seal victory and take the Hamilton Cup back to Glasgow.
We traveled thousands of miles to take on two fellow Scottish clubs to win a trophy no one cared about, the early 1990s from a Celtic perspective in a nutshell.
23/05/94 – ABERDEEN 0 CELTIC 1 (Byrne, 14 mins)
Aberdeen: Burridge, Wright, McLeish, G. Smith, Titus, Thomson, Grant, Kane, McKinnon (Aitken), Ruddie (Mossavat), Booth Substitute: C. Smith
Celtic: Muggleton, Smith, Martin, McNally (McQuilken), Mackay, Gillespie (McLaughlin), Holt, Hay, Byrne (Whittle), Falconer, Gray
Referee:: B. Laidlaw
Attendance: 6,000 (mostly Celtic Supporters).
Just an Ordinary Bhoy
Remember – no paywall and content that is 100% written by actual Celtic supporters – that’s what you get on The Celtic Star. And our books are also written by Celtic supporters.
Order both volumes of Celtic in the Thirties by Matt Corr and save a tenner! Link below…
Summer sale now on! £5 off all books at Celticstarbooks.com/shop
Celtic in the Thirties by Celtic Historian Matt Corr is published in two volumes by Celtic Star Books.
More Stories / Latest News
En vivo
En vivo