Dundee United F.C.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Dundee United F.C. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Full name | Dundee United Football Club | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Nickname(s) | The Terrors The Tangerines The Arabs | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Founded | 1909 (as Dundee Hibernian) 1923 (as Dundee United) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Ground | Tannadice Park, Dundee | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Capacity | 14,209 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chairman | Image:Flag of Scotland.svg Eddie Thompson | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Manager | Image:Flag of Scotland.svg Craig Levein | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| League | Scottish Premier League | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2005-06 | Scottish Premier League, 9th | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Dundee United Football Club is a Scottish football club located in Dundee. Officially, United are nicknamed The Terrors and the supporters known as The Arabs, though the latter term has been applied equally to the club in recent times by the sporting media. The Tangerines is another term used to describe the club.
United currently play in the Scottish Premier League and following the departure of Craig Brewster on October 29 2006, Craig Levein has been appointed as the new manager. Eddie Thompson, chairman since September 2002,<ref name="chairman">"Dundee Utd takeover complete", BBC Sport website, September 26, 2002.</ref> is the majority shareholder of Dundee United, whilst the supporters - under the guise of ArabTRUST - own the second majority. In 2005-06, Tannadice attracted an average attendance of 8,197,<ref name="crowd">2005-0 Statistics: Attendance. SPL Official Website.</ref> the sixth-highest average in the SPL.
In European competition, United are Scotland's third best-represented team, competing 22 seasons in Europe, in a total of 104 European matches (five more than Aberdeen).<ref name="europe">All Scottish European results. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref> During the club's many European competition runs in the late 20th century, English-based media sometimes incorrectly called the team Dundee - the name of their city rivals. This still occasionally happens today.
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[edit] History
[edit] Beginning
Inspired by the examples of Hibernian in Edinburgh and Celtic in Glasgow, the Irish community in Dundee formed a new football club in 1909, following the demise of Dundee Harp. Originally called Dundee Hibernian, the club took over Clepington Park (renamed Tannadice Park) from Dundee Wanderers and played their inaugural game on 18 August, 1909 against Hibernian, with the match ending in a 1-1 draw. The club was saved from going out of business in October 1923 by a group of Dundee businessmen. They decided to change the club's name to Dundee United in order to attract a wider appeal.<ref name="name">History. Dundee United FC. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref> The name Dundee City was considered but was protested by city rivals Dundee.
For many years, the club languished in the lower reaches of the Scottish league, competing in the top division only four seasons, until the appointment of Jerry Kerr as manager in 1959. Kerr ended the club's 28-year absence from the First Division in his first season in charge, winning promotion through finishing second in the Second Division. Some notable players from this period included forwards Dennis Gillespie and Jim Irvine, and defenders Doug Smith and Ron Yeats (who went on to captain Liverpool in the 1960s).
In the following season, United finished in the top half of the league (one place above city rivals Dundee), where the club would stay with few exceptions for the next 35 years. The sixties were highlighted by the playing skills of the some notable imports from Scandinavia: Orjan Persson, Finn Seemann, Lennart Wing, Finn Døssing and Mogens Berg. These players also helped give United their first taste of the European scene, where they sensationally eliminated Barcelona in 1966, who were the then-holders of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup (now known as the UEFA Cup).
[edit] Jim McLean
Jim McLean, who was a coach at city rivals Dundee F.C. at the time, took over from Jerry Kerr in 1971 and the most successful era in the club's history began. Up until this point, United was the smaller and less successful of the two Dundee-based football clubs. However, this would change as McLean (and for a time, with assistant manager Walter Smith) took United to their first ever Scottish Cup final in 1973-74. They achieved a record high of third place in the Scottish Premier Division in 1978 then again in 1979, before guiding the side to several major honours; the first by winning the Scottish League Cup in 1979-80, with the trophy being retained the following season. McLean's use of youth was seen as key in the club's success for the next two decades.<ref>History. Dundee United FC. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref>
Dundee United's best season came in 1982-83 when they won the Scottish Premier Division title for the first time in the club's history, with what was then a record number of points and record number of goals scored. By then, United had already established a reputation in Europe with impressive wins over sides like AS Monaco, Borussia Mönchengladbach, PSV Eindhoven, Anderlecht and Werder Bremen.
In the resulting European Cup, United reached the semi-final stage in their first run, only to be narrowly eliminated by A.S. Roma. After winning the first leg 2-0, United lost 3-0 away, although the Italian side were later fined for attempting to bribe the referee.<ref name="bribe">Dundee United A - Z (I). Dundee United FC. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref>
The pinnacle of their achievements in Europe came later in 1986-87 when United became the first Scottish club to reach the final of the UEFA Cup. Along the way, United repeated their earlier 1966 feat of again eliminating FC Barcelona then managed by Terry Venables and featuring British players Gary Lineker, Mark Hughes and Steve Archibald, with victories home and away. United are the only British side to achieve this in any European competition, with a record of four wins from four games.
Although they failed to beat IFK Göteborg in the two legged final, there was glory in defeat as FIFA awarded a first-ever Fair Play Award to the club for the sporting behaviour of the fans on a memorable night at Tannadice Park.<ref name="uefa">FIFA Fair Play Prizes. FIFA. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref>
During those years, Dundee United and Aberdeen broke the traditional dominance of the Old Firm in Scottish football, and the two clubs became known as the New Firm.<ref name="newfirm">The New Firm and the Dons' Cup-Winners' Cup glory in 1983. A Sporting Nation. The BBC. Retrieved on September 29, 2006.</ref> As Dundee F.C. were not always in the top flight at that time, the New Firm derby had superseded the Dundee derby.
Dundee United had come a long way under McLean, progressing from comparative obscurity to become one of Scotland's foremost clubs. However, after nearly 22 years at the helm he relinquished the position in the June 1993, whilst remaining Chairman of the Club.
[edit] After McLean
Filling his shoes was the first continental to be appointed manager of a Scottish club - Ivan Golac. He inherited a healthy legacy with some of Scotland's finest young talent, though his first action was to sell Duncan Ferguson to Rangers for a fee of £4 million, breaking the record transfer fee involving two British clubs. According to one source,<ref name="everton">Kenrick, Michael (May 2006). Duncan Ferguson. ToffeeWeb. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref> United had already turned down £3million bids from Bayern Munich, Leeds United and Chelsea before accepting Rangers' record bid.
In Golac's first season, he brought the Scottish Cup to Tannadice Park for the first time in 1994 after six previous failures, thus completing the full set of domestic honours for the club. United beat Rangers 1-0 with Craig Brewster scoring the winner from close range, sparking headlines of 'seventh heaven' in various newspapers.
However, the club's fortunes took a turn for the worse after this, as despite enjoying a relatively average campaign in season 1994-95, a late run of defeats, culminating in a 1-0 defeat at home to Celtic on the last day, saw them relegated to the First Division. Despite being title favourites at the lower level, they eventually finished second. This left them facing a two leg playoff against Partick Thistle for the right to play in the Premier Division in the 1996-97 season. Dundee United won 3-2 on aggregate, thus becoming the only club to be promoted through this short-lived play-off system.
In recent years the club has struggled to maintain such success, much like the previous provincial powers of Scottish football. In 1997-98, United reached the League Cup final, but lost 3-0 to Celtic. United reached their first Scottish Cup final for eleven years in 2004-05, only to be beaten by Celtic again, 1-0.
[edit] Colours and badge
- The jerseys below are meant to reflect either a change in colour or prominent design. Please see the discussion page for more on this.
United's playing kit is distinct: tangerine in colour, first used when the team played under the Dallas Tornado moniker in the United Soccer Association competition of 1967, which they were invited to participate in after their first European excursion had created many headlines in the football world.<ref name="tangerine">Dundee United A - Z (D). Dundee United FC. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref> After persuasion by the wife of manager Jerry Kerr, the colour would soon be adopted as the club's own in 1969 to give the club a brighter, more modern image. The new colour was paraded for the first time in a pre-season friendly against Everton in August.
When originally founded as Dundee Hibernian, they had followed the example of other clubs of similar heritage by adopting the traditionally Irish colours of green shirts and white shorts. By the time the club became Dundee United in 1923, the colours had been changed to white shirts and black shorts as they sought to distance themselves from their Irish origins. These colours persisted in various forms up until 1969, sometimes using plain shirts, but also at various times including Celtic-style broad hoops, Queen's Park-style narrow hoops and an Airdrie-style "V" motif.
The present club badge was introduced in 1993, and saw the previous Lion Rampant design rebranded in a new circular logo incorporating the club colours<ref>Dundee United A - Z (C). Dundee United FC. Retrieved on September 28, 2006.</ref>. Previously, the lion (presumably adopted as a symbol of Scottish patriotism) had been represented on a simpler shield design. Although this "classic" version had been used as the club crest on the cover of the matchday programme as early as 1956, it had never appeared on the players' strip prior to 1983. Since 1959, various other designs had been worn on the shirts, incorporating either the lion rampant or the letters DUFC, often on a circular badge.
[edit] Stadium
Dundee United's home ground throughout their history has been Tannadice Park, located on Tannadice Street in the Clepington area of the city. It is situated just yards away from Dens Park, home of Dundee F.C.; the two grounds are the closest senior football grounds in the United Kingdom. The club have only ever played one home fixture at another venue. This was a League Cup tie against Rangers in March 1947, when despite snow rendering Tannadice unplayable, the match was able to go ahead across the road at Dens.
The possibility of both clubs moving to a new, purpose-built shared stadium has been suggested on occasion. The most serious proposal for this was put forward as part of Scotland's bid to joint-host the 2008 European Football Championship,<ref name="stadia1">"Dundee clubs plan stadium share", BBC Sport website, June 29, 2001.</ref> with several clubs seeking to benefit from a new stadium<ref name="stadia2">"Deadline day for new stadia", BBC Sport website, July 31, 2001.</ref> with planning permission given to a proposed site at Caird Park.<ref name="stadia3">"Dundee clubs get stadium boost", BBC Sport website, April 30, 2002.</ref> Special dispensation was requested to proceed with the proposal,<ref name="stadia4">"Dundee rivals request groundshare", BBC Sport website, September 17 2002.</ref> as rules forbade SPL teams from groundsharing. Following Scotland's failed bid to host the tournament, the scheme was shelved.<ref name="stadia5">"Dundee rivals to rethink stadia plans", BBC Sport website, December 12, 2002.</ref>
[edit] Supporters
There have been several stories regarding the origins of the 'Arabs' term. The most popular view is that the name was coined during the severe winter of the 1962-63 season. It was so bad that between December and March, Dundee United were able to play only three times.
One of these was a Scottish Cup tie against Albion Rovers, for which the management, in a desperate attempt to get Tannadice playable, hired an industrial tar burner to melt the several inches of covering snow and ice. Not only did this work but removed the grass, too. Several lorry loads of sand were ordered and spread across the barren surface with the regulation playing lines painted on top. United adapted well to this playing surface and won the game 3-0, prompting observers to comment that they had taken to the new surface like Arabs.<ref name="arabs">Dundee United A - Z (A). Dundee United FC. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref>
Other sources point to earlier usage, with a "1950s sandtrap" used as one such reference.<ref name="sandtrap">10 Differences between Ben Aden and Sir Anthony Eden. The Angry Corrie Issue 12 April/May 1993.</ref>
The fans, however, used the term to describe themselves. The term was then later resurrected during the early 1990s through the pages of the popular Dundee United football fanzine, The Final Hurdle, with supporters soon declaring that they were 'Proud To Be An Arab'. Deacon Blue singer and long-time Dundee United supporter Ricky Ross even wrote a song declaring this fact.<ref name="ricky">Ross, Ricky. Proud To Be An Arab Lyrics. LyricsDownload.com. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref> By then, even the official club souvenir shops were selling replica keffiyehs in tangerine and black. The term was now firmly connected with Dundee United.
The former Dundee United Supporters Association (DUSA) is now known as the Federation of Dundee United Supporters' Clubs, whilst on 1st February 2003, the Dundee United Supporters Society - ArabTRUST - was officially launched<ref name="trust1">ArabTRUST - the Dundee United Supporters’ Trust. Dundee United FC. Retrieved on September 28, 2006.</ref>, and after regular share purchase and investment into the Club, ArabTRUST not only hold the largest shareholding in the club behind the Thompson family, but were also granted an Associate Directorship in the Club in early 2004.<ref name="trust2">ArabTRUST News. Dundee United FC. Retrieved on September 28, 2006.</ref> The official club weekly email newsletter is known as ArabNeWS, and the club website has an ArabFORUM. Various supporters clubs and fan websites have 'Arab' in their names too.
Elsewhere, the football media tend to refer to the club mostly as The Arabs, although the official website confirms this refers to the fans and the club nickname is The Terrors.<ref name="arabs">Dundee United A - Z (A). Dundee United FC. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref>
In a BBC online poll in March 2006, Dundee United fan Zippy was named as Britain's favourite sporting celebrity by a landslide margin.<ref name="zippy">"Zippy is top fan", BBC Sport website, March 10, 2006.</ref> Other famous Arabs include:
- George Galloway<ref name="galloway">Pattullo, Alan. "Galloway divests Arab links for day", The Scotsman, May 28th, 2005.</ref>
- Geoffrey Hayes<ref name="geoffrey">"Arab Zippy is top sports fan", The Courier, March 11, 2006.</ref>
- Billy Kay<ref name="billy">Wilkie, Jim. "Exploring musical links between the Gaidhealtachd and North America", The West Highland Free Press, August 20, 2004.</ref>
- Lorraine Kelly<ref name="kelly">GMTV Who's Who: Lorraine Kelly. GMTV. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref>
- Ricky Ross<ref name="ricky-fan">"Ricky’s show cancelled due to poor ticket sales", The Courier, May 26, 2005.</ref>
- Lord Watson
[edit] Players
[edit] Current squad
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- For recent transfers, see the 'Major transfer deals' section of 2006-07 in Scottish football.
[edit] Notable past players
- Players are ordered by year of United debut. For a list of former players since 1996/97, see Dundee United FC former players.
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[edit] Managers
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*Club closed for 1940/41 season
[edit] Achievements
After their only Premier Division championship win, the team reached the resulting semi-final of the European Cup in 1984. After a marathon season in 1986-87, the team lost in both the Scottish Cup and UEFA Cup finals in the space of a few days. The Arabs won the first-ever FIFA Fair Play Award for their sporting behaviour after this UEFA Cup final defeat.<ref name="uefa">FIFA Fair Play Prizes. FIFA. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref>
- European Cup:
- Semi-finalists (1): 1983-84
- Scottish League Premier Division:
- Winners (1): 1982-83
- Scottish League First Division:
- Runners-up (1): 1995-96
- Scottish League Challenge Cup:
- Runners-up (1): 1995-96
- City of Discovery Cup:
- Winners (1): 2005
[edit] Club records
- Biggest win: 14-0 v Nithsdale Wanderers, Scottish Cup 1st Round, January 17 1931
- Biggest league win: 12–1 v East Stirlingshire, Scottish Football League Division Two, April 13 1936
- Worst defeat: 1-12 v Motherwell, Scottish Football League Division Two, January 23 1954
- Highest home attendance: 28,000 v CF Barcelona, European Fairs Cup 2nd Round 2nd Leg, November 16 1966
- Most capped player: Maurice Malpas (55 for Scotland)
- Most League appearances: Maurice Malpas (617, 1981-2000)
- Most League goals: Peter McKay (158, 1947-1954)
- Most League goals in one season: Johnny Coyle (43 in 1955-56)
- Transfer fee paid: £750,000 for Steven Pressley from Coventry City, July 1995
- Transfer fee received: £4 million for Duncan Ferguson to Rangers, July 1993
- Most team goals (league): 108 in Division Two, 1935/36 (average of 3.2 goals per match, also a club record)
- Most wins in succession: 10 - The last five matches of the 1982-83 season and the first five of the 1983-84 season
- Most league wins in a season: 24 from 36 games (1928-29 and 1982-83)
- Youngest player: Ian Mitchell aged 16 years and four months (against Hibernian in Division One in September 1962).
- Youngest SPL player: Greg Cameron, aged 16 years (against Kilmarnock in the SPL in December 2004).
- Youngest scorer: David Goodwillie, aged 16 years and 11 months (against Hibernian on 4 March 2006; also the SPL's youngest scorer)<ref name="goodwillie">SPL - All Time Records. Scottish Premier League. Retrieved on September 26, 2006.</ref>
- Oldest player: Jimmy Brownlie, aged 40 years and eight months (against Hearts at Tynecastle in February 1926, as an emergency goalkeeper)
- Fastest goal: Finn Dossing, after 14 seconds into the Division One match against Hamilton Academical at Tannadice on October 16 1965
- Largest crowd involving Dundee United: in excess of 100,000 against Selangor for the formal opening of the Shah Alam Stadium, Selangor, Malaysia, in July 1994
[edit] References
<references/>
[edit] External links
[edit] Official links
- Dundee United FC
- ArabTRUST
- Dundee United Youth Development
- Federation of Dundee United Supporters' Clubs
[edit] Supporter links
- A90 Arabs
- Arabdownunder
- ArabFever
- Arabian, The
- BBC - Dundee United pages
- Dundee United Forever
- Dundee United Mad
- Dundee United Online
- Dundee United Wiki
- East Angus Arabs
- East Football Forum - The Shed
- Edinburgh Arabs
- Glasgow, Lanarkshire & Stirling Arabs
- Glenrothes Arabs
- Kara Griffiths Photography
- Proud To Be An Arab
- South London Tangerines
- Tangerine Machine
- Thurso Arabs Online
- 1983Utd.co.uk United Supporters Portal
- When The Hoodoo Comes
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| Preceded by: Rangers | Scottish Cup Winners 1994 | Succeeded by: Celtic |
de:Dundee United es:Dundee United Football Club fr:Dundee United Football Club gl:Dundee United F.C.
ja:ダンディー・ユナイテッド nl:Dundee United no:Dundee United FC pl:Dundee United F.C. pt:Dundee United Football Club sco:Dundee United sv:Dundee United FC zh:邓迪联足球俱乐部


