I've returned to my blogging just in time for the second quarter of
the season in the Iron Bru Scottish Football League Division 1. So maybe
this is an opportune time to start my personal take on the various
venues that I come across on my travels. For the rest of this season
there will be nowhere new to visit as the first quarter including the
cup games has taken me to the strange fields once before.
Therefore this weeks venue was Dens Park home to Dundee.
Location
As
any football trivia buff will know Dundee's Dens Park is just along
Tannadice street from Tannadice home of Dundee United. And therefore is
one half to the trivia question which two league grounds are closest in
the UK. In fact as away fans are located in the Bob Shankly stand, the
end closest to Tannadice much supporters coaches catch sight of Dundee
United's stadium first before they see Dens Park once they turn the
corner into Tannadice street.
Getting to the ground
cars and coaches are best to take the ring road and then come off down
either Clepington Road or Strathmartine Road to get in towards the
stadium. Unfortunately is two miles uphill from Dundee's railway
station, so for a visiting fan who is looking after their carbon
footprint the best option really is to grab a seat on one of your
visiting clubs supporters coaches, as unless you can work out the bus
timetables you'd be relying on getting a taxi up from the station.
Although
with the ongoing work to the Forth Road Bridge, we spent 25 minutes on
our coach staring toll booths before getting to them, 18 of which were
on the roundabout on the approach from Kirkliston, so we turned up only
15 minutes before kick off.
The Ground
As
already mentioned the away fans are housed in the Bob Shankly stand
behind the eastern goal and is a single tier. There is dedicated
wheelchair seating at entrance level with a companion seat beside the
wheelchairs' slots. Which yesterday afternoon gave us a brilliant view
of Dundee's spectacular first goal by Bob Davidson a screamer from 30
yards into the top right hand corner. The late evening sun at this time
of year did start to get in our eyes towards the end of the match, so
much so that I was considering urging Dundee Council to move one of the
tower blocks, to the south of the stadium, slightly further east to act
as a sunshade.
Opposite behind the other goal is the
nearly identical twin to the Shankly Stand the Bobby Cox stand. To the
right as away fans view the pitch is the Main (North) Stand, which is
unusual in that it is the one section that remains of the old oval
ground, meaning that those who sit on the halfway line are actually
furthest away from the action on the park. It is two tiered however,
there are very few seats in the lower tier, with the majority being in
the upper tier.
That leaves the Southern Enclosure
known locally as the Derry. Nobody has yet explained coherently to me
exactly how this stand came to be known by the name of the city of my
father, outwith the connection to a sectarian style chant that has had
the words altered subtlety from the original Loyalist connotations.
This though is where the most vocal Dundee supporters congregate in what
was the last terrace; the Derry Boys and Dark Blue 62 Ultras.
The Atmosphere
Fortunately
the design of the two goal end stands does add to the atmosphere as the
ability to make a great deal of noise is greatly enhanced. As my
previous visit was for the CIS Cup game that went to penalties this was
definitely the case in a tense tight game. As with many grounds the
vocal home support is close to the away support which adds to the
atmosphere as the banter does flow between the two adjoining sections.
The Programme
Cost
£2. Had four pages dedicated to the visitors profiles. As well as a
four page interview with one of the home players. The centre was the
season stats section. With a great deal more stats than some other clubs
include. There is a collector's section which this week featured the
1947 Great Britain versus Europe programme from Hampden Park.
Pie and Bovril
There
is a bridie or macaroni pie available. But I went for the steak and
gravy pie to accompany my bovril, cost £2.10 + £1.50. The steak in the
pie was gorgeously tender, the crust was cooked just right and wasn't
too thick or burnt, and the gravy while hot wasn't scalding, excellent
fayre. However, by Bovril wasn't warm enough so I'm quite glad it wasn't
really the depths of winter when I rely on it as much to warm my hands
as my insides.
Cost
Admission = £16
Programme = £2
Pie and Bovril = £3.60
Total = £21.60
Match Report
Livingston
started strongest and could have been up even before Czech Thomas 'Tam'
Pesir scored in the 14th minute but Kenny Sampson had pulled off a
spectacular save. Livingston continued to dominate even though Bob
Davidson released his spectacular equaliser 6 minutes later. However, a
combination of poor finishing and more saves from Sampson, some of which
a poacher might have leapt on as they bounced free from the keeper, kept
the scores level at half time.
At the start of the
second half Livingston continued to have the lions share of territory,
possession and chances. But shots seemed to be nowhere on target. Then
Jan Zemlik got on the end of a move started by Dixon who found McDonald
in the box who laid it off for the second Czech to beat Mariusz 'Super
Mario' Liberda in the Livi goal.
The third Dundee goal
came seven minutes late in the 68th minute and was a second for
Davidson, who made a run across the penalty box. It was clear from the
away end that he pulled on Dermot 'Des' McCaffrey's shirt in order to
get past him to get his shot in, but the goal was allowed to stand
effectively killing of the game as a contest. Five minutes later it was
as Derek Lyle on a a substitute for Zemlik made it 4 for the home team.
Although there were calls for offside and protests after the goal from
Livingston.
Final Score Dundee 4 (Davidson 20, 68, Zemlik 61, Lyle 73) Livingston 1 (Pesir 14)
Effect on the relative teams' positions. Dundee remain in 2nd Livingston remain 8th.
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