,b>Happiest Memory
The half-back play was good, too. Waddell was never at a loss. He invariably got the ball in the air and on the ground. Taylor "made" the left wing triangle. His service to Williams and McCall enabled this pair to wage a "nerves" war on the Clyde defence. My happiest recollection of the game was a bewildering draught-board movement by this trio, which ended in Taylor smashing the ball against the crossbar with a left-foot drive. Dunlop hasn't struck his best form yet, but he was a better Dunlop than have been seeing in recent games. Even more emphatic was Aberdeen's superiority in attack. They played cool, calculating football, and the forwards weren't afraid to shoot. With a little luck they would have finished winners by a much bigger margin. Hamilton, a strong, forcing Inside forward, twice had scoring shots saved by fortuitous circumstances. Williams wss Public Enemy No. so far as the Clyde defence wis concerned, and in McCall he had an energetic and tireless partner.Bright Goals,/p> Tony Harris had both goals and bright efforts they were. The first in twenty-nine minutes came after Sweeney had stopped a counter by Hamilton with his feet. The ball finished up on the right, and Kiddie crossed for Harris to head into the net. The second half was less than half a minute old when Hamilton gave Kiddie a clear run, and the young amateur got the ball to Harris, who banged it into net. Certainly one the Dons' brighter displays. The point is - can they keep it up? A repetition of Saturday's form and I would confidently predict a victory against Rangers on Wednesday. But the Dons' form from game to game is unpredictable.
Source: Press & Journal, 1st September 1946