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*During the COVID-19 pandemic, where fans were not permitted inside stadia, Inverness and Hearts fans virtually sold out the stadium for the match between the two on 26 February 2021, with the final count being 11,356. Though not an official attendance, it is the largest number of tickets sold for a home match involving the club.
Inverness have had a long-standing rivalry with local club Ross County, [57] who are situated a few miles north of Inverness in Dingwall. The rivalry began when both teams were elected to the SFL in the 1994–95 Season. They contest the Highland derby. Inverness are the dominant team within the derby with 27 wins to County's 17.
Inverness Caledonian Thistle; 2021–22 season; Chairman: Ross Morrison: Manager: Billy Dodds [1]: Stadium: Caledonian Stadium: Scottish Championship: 3rd; lost play-off Final 6–2 on Aggregate to St. Johnstone
Aberdeen fans display "1903", the year of the club's establishment, before the cup final. Aberdeen received and sold all of their 43,000 allocation for the final and also had a request for more tickets declined due to safety concerns. Inverness sold 7,000 tickets. [11] [12]
Inverness subsequently entered the 2015–16 UEFA Europa League in the Second qualifying round. As Inverness also finished 3rd in the 2014–15 Scottish Premiership , this enabled St Johnstone to claim the final 2015–16 UEFA Europa League slot (in previous years this place would have gone to Falkirk as runners-up, as it had in 2009 , but the ...
Caledonian won the Highland Football League a record eighteen times. [1] Another Inverness side, Clachnacuddin, equalled this record in 2004.The club's greatest period of league and cup success was in the early 1980s when they won three successive titles under manager Alex Main, a journalist who also wrote the club's centenary book 'Caley All The Way – The First Hundred Years' in 1986.
The 2022–23 Inverness Caledonian Thistle season is the club's 29th campaign in the SPFL, and the club's sixth consecutive season in the Scottish Championship after narrowly missing out on promotion, being defeated 6–2 on aggregate in the Premiership Play-Off Finals by St Johnstone.
The move shocked the Pars' support and 4,000 fans marched on the club demanding his reinstatement as manager. [1] Following his departure from the Pars in 1990, he had unproductive spells with Montrose and Inverness Thistle, and a spell in charge of Fife Junior outfit Rosyth Recreation.