News Script

St Mirren, Thistle face all-or-nothing clash for Premiership lifeline

5/25/2026 · Sport

Paisley and Glasgow clubs collide in a must-win play-off second leg where only one side will survive Scotland’s top flight. Alex Gogic and Cammy Logan lead their teams into a showdown steeped in history and high emotion.

The fate of two proud west of Scotland clubs hangs in the balance Monday when St Mirren and Partick Thistle lock horns at the SMiSA Stadium in a winner-takes-all play-off second leg that will decide who plays in the Scottish Premiership next season.

14,783Supporters already queuing for tickets as demand surges past last season’s play-off average

Thistle arrive off a 12-game unbeaten run that has carried them through the Championship play-offs and into this decisive tie, while St Mirren — once the overwhelming favourites to stay up — have stumbled into crisis. Three wins in their last 11 league games and the loss of manager Stephen Robinson to Aberdeen have left interim boss Craig McLeish scrambling for a lifeline.

Key Points

  • ⚔️ St Mirren need a win to secure Premiership survival against Partick Thistle
  • 🔥 Thistle unbeaten in 12 games and chasing a historic return to the top flight
  • 📍 SMiSA Stadium set for a sell-out as emotions run high on both sides

Defender Alex Gogic, a former St Mirren youth player now captaining Thistle, speaks with quiet respect for the Paisley side but insists his team’s hunger cannot be ignored. “It’s a huge game,” Gogic told reporters Sunday. “I’ve been in tight play-offs before, but this one feels different. The stakes are everything—the fans, the staff, the whole club. We have to keep our heads, play free, and go get the win.”

AspectSt MirrenPartick Thistle
Form (last 6 games)2W 1D 3L5W 1D 0L
Home record in play-offs5 wins in 71 win in 3
Top scorer (goals)Evan Ferguson (8)Kane Hester (12)

Across Paisley, the mood is one of urgency tinged with nostalgia. McLeish, installed after Robinson’s exit, has guided the Saints through a turbulent spell but now faces the ultimate test. “It’s not just about survival,” he said. “It’s about giving this club and these supporters something to believe in again.”

💡 Pro Tip

Focus on set-pieces — in five of Thistle’s last six unbeaten games, their only conceded goal came from a dead-ball situation. St Mirren’s aerial threat, led by 6’5” centre-back Ross Docherty, could exploit this.

On the Thistle side, defender Cammy Logan reflects on the club’s remarkable turnaround since a 5-1 defeat to St Johnstone in August. “That day stung,” Logan said. “But it woke us up. We were soft, predictable. Now we press higher, defend smarter. We’ve grown up.” He admits the dream of returning to the Premiership would mean “the absolute world.”

History favours the home side in play-off finals at the SMiSA — St Mirren have won six of the last eight contested there. Yet Thistle’s recent momentum and a 1-1 draw at Firhill in the first leg have shifted momentum firmly in their direction. The away side only needs a draw to progress thanks to the 1-1 scoreline.

📋 By The Numbers

  • 13,728 — Record attendance at SMiSA for a play-off final (2022)
  • 22 — Days since St Mirren last tasted victory in the league

The clock ticks toward 8 p.m. Monday. For one set of supporters, it will be jubilation. For the other, defeat. The players know the stakes: one club will sleep easy; the other will face a summer of reckoning. As Gogic put it, “It’s not just a game. It’s everything.”

  1. First half — Thistle to press high; St Mirren to exploit counter-attacks through winger Ryan Leak.
  2. Second half — McLeish likely to introduce loanee striker if goals are needed.
  3. Post-whistle — One manager will walk out relieved; the other, potentially out of a job.

No second chances. No excuses. Just one final act in a drama that began in March and ends Monday night under the Paisley floodlights.

St MirrenPartick ThistleScottish Premiershipplay-offfootball