Historical Ranking of Scottish football clubs
Historical Ranking: SCOTLAND
[Last updated: end of 2006-07 season]
| Rank | Club | Points |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 |
Glasgow Rangers Glasgow Celtic Heart of Midlothian Aberdeen Hibernian Motherwell Dundee St Mirren Kilmarnock Partick Thistle Clyde Falkirk |
1046 930 313 300 282 235 233 229 217 208 199 194 |
| Rank | Second Tier Clubs | Points |
| 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 |
Greenock Morton Queens Park Dundee United Raith Rovers Hamilton Academical Ayr United Dumbarton Dunfermline Athletic St Johnstone East Fife |
181 180 155 147 143 138 136 135 135 87 |
| Rank | Third Tier Clubs | Points |
| 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 |
Queen of the South Cowdenbeath Albion Rovers Stirling Albion Arbroath Alloa Athletic East Stirlingshire Forfar Athletic Stenhousemuir Brechin City |
80 79 75 64 63 59 59 54 47 43 |
| Rank | Fourth Tier Clubs | Points |
| 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 |
Montrose Livingston Stranraer Berwick Rangers Inverness & Caledonian Thistle Ross County Gretna Airdrie United Elgin City Peterhead |
38 31 26 24 15 8 6 4 0 0 |
| Rank | Non-league & Defunct Clubs with a Score | Points |
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 |
Airdrieonians Third Lanark St. Bernards Clydebank (1st & 2nd clubs) Leith Athletic Abercorn Vale of Leven Port Glasgow Athletic Renton Arthurlie Kings Park Bo'ness Ayr FC Armadale Edinburgh City Bathgate Johnstone Broxburn United Ayr Parkhouse Linthouse Cambuslang Cowlairs Lochgelly Nithsdale Wanderers Clackmannan Northern Dundee Wanderers Thistle |
176 156 59 58 52 35 35 28 21 20 18 15 13 11 8 7 7 5 5 5 4 4 4 3 1 1 1 1 |
Click here to discuss this ranking on our forum
The About A Ball Ranking is a progressive points scoring system devised by our statisticians to grade each league club according to their historical achievements since the beginning of organised football in that country. We felt such a ranking was necessary in order to help settle age old debates about which is the biggest/best club in each country and which ones historically merit a top division place. Of course, there are only a limited number of places available in the top division of any given country, so who really are the sleeping giants in the lower divisions and which clubs are currently flying well above their historical status?
NOTE: We have limited this ranking to teams currently competing in the top national divisions to keep it relevant to the modern day. There is no point in saying that a now defunct or amateur club is one of the biggest clubs in the country. For example, Third Lanark and Airdrieonians are two of the famous old names in Scottish football but they both folded and dropped out of the league. The new Airdrie United club have not been awarded the points obtained by Airdrieonians because they actually bought out and relocated Clydebank.
We have now included a section at the bottom of the table listing the points
achieved by former league clubs.
NOTE: National championships have been contested in Scotland since the 1890/91 season when eleven teams competed for the inaugural title. The second division began in 1893/94 and the first cup competition was held in 1874.
How it works
Points awarded as follows:
| Champions Cup Win | +15 |
| Other European Trophy Win | +10 |
| League Championship | +10 |
| FA Cup Win | +6 |
| League Cup Win | +3 |
| Second Level Division Win | +3 |
| Lower Division Win | +1 |
| Season in top division | +2 |
| Season in 2nd division | +1 |
| Bonuses: Super Cup; Club Cup; Double | +3 |
Notes: The scores include any points scored by a club under a former name. In cases where clubs have merged or re-formed, the new club has been awarded the points accumulated by its previous incarnations wherever there is a continuation or substantial link between the old and new clubs.
Criticisms and Improvements
There is no account taken of when the points were scored so a team (i.e. Queen's Park) could have scored most of their points a long time ago but are still ranked high up today. The teams did not all join the league at the same time so founder members such as Hearts have had a much longer period in which to accumulate points than the newer menbers. The old clubs will have benefited from the points for a large number of seasons in the top divisions and therefore be above clubs with a more impressive record over a shorter period. Our system only takes account of on the pitch successes and not off the pitch factors such as attendance and annual budget which could indicate a big club. The About a Ball system could be improved (and also complicated) by including points for average attendances and annual budget/profit, dividing points totals by the number of years clubs have been in the league, or by giving less weight to points scored a long time ago. However, we feel that the passage of time should not be taken into account because staying power and longevity are indicators of a great club. Equally, small clubs enjoying a current period of success are not guaranteed to remain big. All in all, we are satisfied that the ranking shows the relative playing merits of the current league clubs based on historical success, and identifies clubs currently under or over achieving.
Conclusions
An emphatic duopoly! Rangers and Celtic have achieved scores far higher than those reached by the leading clubs in any other country. This is mainly down to the large number of league championships and doubles won by each club, and the near total dominance they have enjoyed since competitive football began in Scotland. There is then a huge gap to the other clubs who are fairly closely grouped together. Hearts benefit from having been around longer then Aberdeen to just pip them into third place. Of the historic top twelve clubs, only Clyde, Partick Thistle and Dundee will be outside the top division in the 2007-08 season; all three will be competing at the second level. Two of the clubs that have taken their places in the top flight are now playing three levels above their traditional status, although this is because they are both newcomers to league football. Inverness worked their way steadily up through the divisions after being elected from the Highland League and have now held their own at the top for three seasons. Gretna are the real success story of recent times, having won each division at the first time of asking to move straight into the big time having spent many years in the English lower leagues.
NOTE: Dundee United were previously known as Dundee Hibernian and spent 6 seasons in the league under this name. Livingston have been awarded the points obtained under their previous incarnation as Meadowbank Thistle.
It is strictly forbidden to copy or reproduce these tables without permission. Any breach of copyright may lead to prosecution. The tables will be updated annually and any feedback on the results/corrections to data is welcome.
aboutaball.com 2007
