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Dunfermline Athletic F.C.

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Dunfermline Athletic
Image:Dunfermline Athletic logo.gif
Full nameDunfermline Athletic Football Club
Nickname(s) The Pars
Founded 2 June 1885
Ground East End Park
Dunfermline
Fife
Capacity 11,850
Chairman Image:Flag of Scotland.svg John Yorkston
Manager Image:Flag of Ireland (bordered).svg Stephen Kenny
League Scottish Premier League
2005-06 SPL, 12th
Image:Kit left arm thinstripesonblack.png Image:Kit body thinstripesonblack.png Image:Kit right arm thinstripesonblack.png
Team colours
Team colours
 
Home colours
Team colours Team colours Team colours
Team colours
Team colours
 
Away colours

Dunfermline Athletic Football Club is a Scottish football team based in Dunfermline, Fife. They are currently members of the Scottish Premier League, and finished runners up to Celtic in this season's Scottish League Cup final, played on March 19 2006. They play at East End Park and are nicknamed The Pars. They are currently managed by Stephen Kenny (interview), who joined the club from Derry City. The previous manager Jim Leishman resigned on October 25, 2006, but will remain at the club as the director of football.

Contents

[edit] History

Dunfermline Athletic won the Scottish Cup in 1961 and 1968, and played regular European football in the UEFA and European Cup Winners Cups throughout the 60s and early 70s. They reached the semi-final of the European Cup Winners Cup in season 68-69, losing 1-2 on aggregate to eventual winners Slovan Bratislava. On the way to the semi-final they beat APOEL, Olympiacos and West Bromwich Albion.

[edit] Origins of nickname

According to Black and White Magic, a 1984 book about the club by Jim Paterson and Douglas Scott, there are numerous theories as to the origin of the club's nickname, the Pars. The authors wrote:

Most tend to confirm the more common belief that the name arose from the team's parallel striped shirts, their drinking habits or their style of play. The latter were both described as "paralytic". The earliest theory claims that in the early days when the Football Club was closely connected with the Cricket Club, the footballers were renowned for their performances at the bar and so were called the "Paralytics".

However in the early 1900s it is known that Athletic's nickname was the "Dumps" - shortened from Dunfermline - and this is said to have been coined by English sailors visiting East End Park when their ship docked at Rosyth. After the 1914-18 War they were known as the Pars and some believe the parallel black and white stripes to be the reason.

Another school of thought involves English workers who came to work at the armaments depot at Crombie and at Rosyth Dockyard; they kept their association with their local team by forming the Plymouth Argyle (Rosyth) Supporters Club and it is said that the Dunfermline nickname comes from the banners in evidence around the ground.

Although almost certainly coincidental, there is also a curious resemblence to Dùn Phàrlain, which is the Gaelic name for Dunfermline.

[edit] Songs

Like other football clubs, Dunfermline has a number of songs and anthems. "Into the Valley" by the Skids is one of the most notable sung by the fans.

[edit] Managers

  • William Knight (1922-1925)
  • Sandy Paterson (1925-1930)
  • William Knight (1930-1936)
  • David Taylor (1936-1938)
  • Peter Wilson (1938-1939)
  • Sandy Archibald (1939-1946)
  • William McAndrew (1947-1947)
  • Bobby Calder (1947-1948)
  • Webber Lees (1947-1951)
  • Bobby Ancell (1951-1955)
  • Andy Dickson (1955-1960)
  • Jock Stein (1960-1964)
  • Willie Cunningham (1964-1967)
  • George Farm (1967-1970)
  • Alex Wright (1970-1972)
  • George Miller (1972-1975)
  • Harry Melrose (1975-1980)
  • Pat Stanton (1980-1982)
  • Tom Forsyth (1982-1983)
  • Jim Leishman (1983-1990)
  • Iain Munro (1990-1991)
  • Jocky Scott (1991-1993)
  • Bert Paton (1993-1999)
  • Dick Campbell (1999)
  • Jimmy Calderwood (1999-2004)
  • David Hay (2004-2005)
  • Jim Leishman (2005-2006)
  • Stephen Kenny (2006-)

[edit] Club records

[edit] Famous players

[edit] Current squad (season 2006-2007)

No. Position Player
1 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg GK Roddy McKenzie
2 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Greg Shields
3 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Scott Wilson
4 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg MF Darren Young
5 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg MF Jamie McCunnie
6 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Scott Thomson (captain)
7 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg MF Stephen Simmons
8 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg MF Gary Mason
9 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg FW Mark Burchill
10 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg FW Jim McIntyre
11 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg MF Scott Muirhead
12 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Scott Morrison
14 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Phil McGuire
15 Image:Flag of Northern Ireland (bordered).svg FW Owen Morrison
16 Image:Flag of England (bordered).svg FW Noel Whelan
17 Image:Flag of France.svg MF Frédéric Daquin
18 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Andy Tod
No. Position Player
19 Image:Flag of England (bordered).svg DF Aaron Labonte
20 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg FW Jim Hamilton
21 Image:Flag of England (bordered).svg DF Calum Woods
22 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg FW Craig Wilson
23 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Greg Ross
24 Image:Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg DF Souleymane Bamba
25 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg FW Stephen Crawford
26 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Clark Kaye
27 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg MF Nick Phinn
29 Image:Flag of the Netherlands.svg GK Dorus de Vries
31 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg FW Calum Smith
32 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg MF Ian Williamson
33 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg MF David Muir
34 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg FW Alan McDonough
35 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Neil Fenwick
36 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg DF Derek Howie

[edit] Player out on loan

30 Image:Flag of Scotland.svg GK Sean Murdoch (on loan to Forfar Athletic)

[edit] Honours

  • First Division (2) - 1989, 1996
  • Second Division (2) - 1926, 1986
  • Scottish Cup (2) - 1961, 1968; Runners-up (2) - 1965, 2004
  • Scottish League Cup - Runners-up 1950, 1992, 2006
  • Cup Winner's Cup semi-finalists 1969
  • Cup Winners cup quarter-finalists 1962

[edit] External links

Football in Scotland

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National association National team List of venues List of clubs
League system Seasons Champions History
Competitions in Scottish football
Premier League First Division Second Division Third Division
Scottish Cup League Cup Challenge Cup Junior Cup

Aberdeen | Celtic | Dundee United | Dunfermline | Falkirk | Hearts | Hibernian |
Inverness Caledonian Thistle | Kilmarnock | Motherwell | Rangers | St. Mirren

Scottish Premier League seasons

2000-01 | 2001-02 | 2002-03 | 2003-04 | 2004-05 | 2005-06 | 2006-07

de:Dunfermline Athletic

es:Dunfermline Athletic Football Club fr:Dunfermline Athletic Football Club gl:Dunfermline Athletic F.C. nl:Dunfermline Athletic FC pl:Dunfermline Athletic F.C. sco:Dunfermline F.C. zh:邓弗姆林足球俱乐部

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