SHINTY players taking to the field in this year's Camanachd Cup Final will pay tribute to their 1914 winning team and the "lost six" who never returned from the trenches.

The climax of the shinty season will be played out on Inverness's Bught Park when Kingussie play Glen Urquhart.

The former's players will turn out in special commemorative jerseys, each embroidered with a poppy and the name of a player from 1914 - when Kingussie defeated Kyles Athletic 6-1 in the final of the same trophy, shinty's most important competition, at Possil Park in Glasgow.

It proved to be the last time those 13 players would ever star together.

Four months later, World War One broke out. Six of the players died in the conflict, while two others survived being shot, and a third was gassed.

Current defender Barrie Dallas, 38, will wear the name of his great-great-uncle Alistair, an army PT instructor, who played in 1914.

Lee Bain, a gamekeeper, will carry the name of Lewis MacPherson, also a gamekeeper and Gunner in the Royal Garrison Artillery, who died from his wounds in 1916.