League Cup Group
Posted in Dumbarton FC at 12:00 on 29 May 2016
Sons have drawn Dundee, Peterhead, Forfar Athletic and East Fife.
Which will be the two away games is yet to be announced at time of writing.
Posted in Dumbarton FC at 12:00 on 29 May 2016
Sons have drawn Dundee, Peterhead, Forfar Athletic and East Fife.
Which will be the two away games is yet to be announced at time of writing.
Posted in BBC Alba, Dumbarton FC at 20:03 on 17 April 2016
SPFL Tier 2, The Rock, 16/4/16.
It started well. It finished; well…..
Pity about the bit in between. And the injury to big Christian Nade is a blow as we’ve only looked a team this season after he joined us.
I watched this courtesy of BBC Alba of course and things were looking okay at half time. Tom Walsh had even hit a good cross!
What happened in the second half though? We totally fell out of it even before Nade’s injury. Jamie Ewings didn’t have much of a hope with any of the three goals; a poorish kick-out led to one of them but the defence should still not have let Raith through so easily. They seemed to just walk through for two of the three, the other coming from a not deep enough clearance by Fraser Wright.
Despite never having hit a decent cross before this game Tom Walsh ended this with two assists, and doesn’t Steven Saunders love a goal against Raith? Too little too late of course.
We really need something from Saturday now but a draw against St Mirren might not be good enough. We don’t want to be relying on Rangers and Raith even if Queen of the South do the needful.
I note that with Rangers and Hibs progressing to this year’s final East Fife’s record of being the only team outwith the top division to win the Scottish Cup has now been lost. And wouldn’t it be just the thing if Hibs finally win the thing again after totally horsing up the league? (Or Hibsing it as now seems to be the parlance.)
Mind you it’d be a laugh to see them navigating a European campaign from the second tier.
Then again maybe not.
Posted in Dumbarton FC at 14:09 on 6 September 2015
SPFL Tier 2, The Rock, 5/9/15.
OK, so it’s not me who is the jinx. I wasn’t at this one.
But this is the sort of game we need to be winning – or at least not losing.
It looks like the cup games against East Fife and Queen’s Park were the true harbingers for our season and the first two league games were aberrations. The outlook is much less bright than it was a fortnight ago. Will our chronic inability to score be the decisive feature this season?
Posted in BBC Alba, Dumbarton FC at 12:00 on 23 August 2015
SPFL Tier 2, The Rock, 22/8/15.
OK. I admit it. It’s me. I’m the jinx.*
The three games we’ve won this season I’ve not been at. The three we haven’t won, I have. (Though this was the first time I’ve seen us beaten over 90 minutes.) And Queen of the South also kept their record of never having lost a goal at the Rock.
Queens were also more than a cut above either Queen’s Park or East Fife. They never looked in danger of losing said goal. I’ve just looked at the stats and they pretty much confirmed my impression. We only threatened with a Willie Gibson free-kick which the keeper pushed round the post.
Their first goal came when Mark Docherty got done by their wide man. The cross wasn’t cut out, came right across the goal and former Son Ian Russell did what he always does against us.
The second goal killed it (but to be fair, the first one had.) We switched off at a corner kick, allowing it to be played short and a cross to come in. Keeper Mark Brown was left exposed to try to contest the ball with their forward. Brown missed, the forward didn’t.
After that it was only a case of would they increase their lead? We never looked like reducing it. Debutant loanee Scott Brown came on but didn’t have much time to influence things, plus had a few wayward passes. Maybe when he’s had time to integrate with the squad. Midfielder Jon Routledge was given Sonstrust MOM. I couldn’t disagree. But he and Kevin Cawley were the only bright sparks. Garry Fleming just doesn’t look like a centre forward. He and strike partner Steven Craig never got into the game. From what I’ve seen of us so far this season it seems we’re going to struggle to score goals apart from set pieces. We got precious few set pieces today.
The main reason I went today was to try to buy a home top from the club shop. The queue before kick-off was so long I’d have missed some of the game. There was a steward blocking access at half time. At full time there was a sign up saying the shop was shut. I came home with no new top.
*I’m thinking of giving the game at Falkirk on Friday a miss. But it’s on BBC Alba. Will watching it on the TV make a difference?
PS:- I’m sad to see from the club website that three season stalwart Andy Graham has left “by mutual consent.” I think it’s fair to say new boss Stevie Aitken didn’t fancy him as first choice centre half. Sons fans will have fond memories of Andy. In particular his performance at Pittodrie in the cup quarter-final in season 2013-4 was immense.
Posted in Dumbarton FC at 12:00 on 2 August 2015
Scottish League Cup, New Bayview, 1/8/15.
My first match watching the new look Sons….and we’re a work in progress. Not surprising considering that only two of last year’s squad started the game. Three finished it as one had come off but two later came on.
The match was preceded by an announcement to the owner of a Vauxhall Zafira to go back to the car – not an unusual thing to hear at a football ground but the following words were. I quote. “This is Methil and you’ve left your windows open.”
The first half was pretty uneventful. We had one close effort saved by their keeper, I think from Scott Taggart. Mark Brown didn’t have a save to make. We dominated the second half apart from a few breakaways on one of which they scored. The attacker was allowed too much room and Mark Brown had come too far off his line and was lobbed. They had the ball in the net a minute or so later but it was chalked off for a foul on the defender on the way through. For about two minutes East Fife threatened but then we got on top again.
The equaliser came from Kevin Cawley, neatly placed to head home after their keeper flapped at it a bit. We had a few more efforts on goal before the 90 minutes were up.
In extra time we carved them open several times but the ball just wouldn’t go in apart from one disallowed possibly for a foul on the keeper but who knows?
The statistics tell the story really.
So it was on to the lottery of penalty kicks. You have to say, 3-2 up with two kicks to one left we ought to have put it away. But we didn’t. Time to concentrate on the league, then. (The Challenge Cup can take care of itself. It usually does.)
Posted in Dumbarton FC at 20:00 on 6 July 2015
Sons’ first round League Cup tie will be against East Fife at New Bayview on August 1st.
That’s like a home game for me!
Posted in Dumbarton FC at 12:00 on 19 January 2014
SPFL Tier 2, Recreation Park, 18/1/14.
Stunning. Simply Stunning. I’d never envisioned this when I looked towards this match.
I can’t remember seeing such a one-sided first half when we were the side on top – especially away from home. (Even the 6-0 at East Fife two and a half years ago wasn’t so lop-sided.) We were two-nil up, at 30 mins in, before they had a decent attack. Stephen Grindlay had had only pass backs and one pick up to deal with until after Mark McLaughlin deflected a cross in and Chris Turner got his head onto another. He did have to make a save from close-in header at 2-0, though. Chris Kane had hit the bar about 5 mins in and late in the first half converted a chase with their keeper to the corner of the box into a penalty which he took himself. There was contact but he’d seen it coming and didn’t avoid it. 3-0 at half time was already dreamland. I’d worked out that our goal difference – not to mention our points – was now better than Alloa’s.
They came out a bit more fired up in the second half but couldn’t make any impression. Jordan Kirkpatrick set up a shooting chance for himself but his piledriver just cleared the post, Mark Gilhaney had a great chance, one-on-one with the keeper whom he rounded but sent his shot over. (Well, we were shooting downhill by then.) They, however, ran up the park and scored but only while Mitch Megginson was temporarily laid out in our penalty area.
Any thoughts of a comeback were snuffed out when a cross reached Chris Kane – what a worker he is; brave too – he played for about an hour with a bandage up his nose after a clash. He ought to have put the cross in with his first touch but instead it teed up for him to belt it past the keeper.
The best was the last, a peach; a superb cross from the right was hit first time on the volley by Jordan Kirkpatrick and rocketed into the net. Jordan’s reward was an immediate substitution! That gave Scott Agnew some game time though.
Brilliant performance. Pass marks all round, I even noticed Colin Rhyming Slang making defensive clearances. Alloa were much poorer than I’d thought they would be. No need for Paul Hartley to chuck in the towel as their manager after the game, I’d have thought though.
Moreover, an unlikely concatenation of results means we’re now fourth in the table. In a promotion play-off spot. Our highest league position in 30 years.*
When will I wake up?
*Edited to add: Our highest league position in nigh on 30 years.
Posted in Dumbarton FC at 17:48 on 25 August 2013
SPFL Tier 2, The Rock, 25/8/13
Well.
We don’t normally do league wins in August.
Having said that, it was only two seasons ago we humped East Fife 6-0 at their place on the 27th (making up for the reverse score the year before.)
But this’ll do nicely.
The two new signings last week, Colin Nish and Hugh Murray, ought to add experience and know-how.
So far the only teams we’ve dropped points against are first and second!
Let’s keep it up at Cowdenbeath and Alloa now, two potentially tricky away games.
Posted in Dumbarton FC at 23:57 on 5 August 2012
Scottish League Cup*, The Rock, 4/8/12.
A win and a clean sheet. It took us some time last season to achieve either of those – and this was a cup match, where our record has been none too strong for too many seasons now.
Still, this was against lower league opposition and we didn’t look that much better than them. I suspect the Wee Rovers will struggle in Div 2 as they didn’t look to have much of a cutting edge. We will struggle in Div 1, ditto.
We started off well but didn’t create much in the way of clear-cut chances then let them into it and they had a fair bit of possession in the first half. Our midfield seemed non-existent at times. Perhaps we’re making too much of Jim Lister’s ability with the high ball. The opener just before half time came from a corner, Brian Prunty reacting to the knockdown in the box – which may have come off their keeper or a defender (it was up the other end and difficult to make out.)
We were more in control in the second half. Jim Lister was one on one with the keeper after a horrible defensive mistake but shot it straight at him. Rovers have one of the smallest goalkeepers I can remember but he made a brilliant reaction save from Prunty a few minutes before we scored again. Another defensive mistake was pounced on by sub Mark Gilhaney (Scott Agnew had had a poor game before being hoiked) who squared it into Jim Lister’s path for a nice controlled finish.
Jamie Lyden was given the right back berth. He had an encouraging start last season at Brechin and East Fife, scoring in both games before losing his way and not featuring again. His confidence looked low to begin with here but I thought he came onto a game.
Andy Graham and Alan Lithgow were more solid at centre-back than last week but will be tested more severely when the league starts.
On to the real stuff next week.
*Okay: it’s the Scottish Communities League Cup now.
Posted in Art Deco, Fife, Woolworths at 12:00 on 14 May 2012
This is in Commercial Road, Leven. It’s an estate agent’s now.
Poundland. I can remember when this was a Woolworths.
This one is on the promenade. It may have been a toilet block. I don’t know what it’s used for now. You can just see New Bayview, East Fife’s ground, in the background over the River Leven. You wouldn’t have been able to see it when Methil Power Station stood in between.