Last weekend was a big one in Scottish and English football and senior leagues. Both contained for many fans matters of near life and death as a host of clubs battled to remain in their top leagues or to face relegation with all the pitfalls that entails.
A normal conclusion to the business end of the season. But there was a major difference between the two nations on football. While the English Premier League saw all the big relegation matches involving Everton, Leeds United and Leicester City on Sky Sports and BT Sport, the same was not true for Scotland and its Premiership.
Despite (or because of) the Sky Sports deal to cover the Scottish game on the Sunday involving three matches in the bottom half of the league, with the fates of Dundee United, Kilmarnock and Ross County in the balance, Sky showed none live. Instead, they decided to show Saturday's Celtic versus Aberdeen match at which nothing was at stake, with Celtic having won the league and Aberdeen finishing third.
Such is the predictable lack of imagination and due care with which broadcasters regard the Scottish game, treating teams outside 'The Old Firm' and their fans with contempt and seeing them as little more than backdrops for the occasional encounter and defeat from one of the Glasgow two.
This short-sightedness is a missed opportunity. The Scottish game cannot compete with the grotesque monies of the English Premier, but it still has a fair share of shocks, drama and excitement. This year, the small Ayrshire town of Darvel created international news by knocking Aberdeen out of the Scottish Cup; this cost then Aberdeen manager Jim Goodwin his job after a further 6-0 defeat to Hibs with him moving to Dundee United (more on which below). Meanwhile, the conclusion of the Championship, the second tier of the league, had all the Premiership did not, with a last day of the season title decider between Dundee and Queen's Park (won 5-3 by the Dark Blues).
Living with going down again
My team – Dundee United – have just concluded one of the most bizarre, accident-prone and self-destructive seasons in the club's history. After finishing a very decent fourth the previous season, they started off proudly competing in Europe, played impressively in a 1-0 home victory against Dutch side AZ Alkmaar, before crashing out 7-0 to the team who got to the semi-finals of the tournament (losing to West Ham). This was followed by a 9-0 record home defeat to Celtic which led to Jack Ross being sacked as manager.
Their season involved three managers, brief periods of hope as they battled at the bottom of the league, followed by disappointment. Chaos abounded in how the club was run behind the scenes, clearly suggesting that American owner Mark Ogren had no real plan or strategy. Tony Asghar, Ogren's man on the ground, embodied many of the problems and became a lightning rod for fans who demanded his removal, which happened in February 2023.
Meanwhile, on the pitch, United's recruitment was a shambles, with major problems in the goalkeeping position, defence and strikers. All these disastrously cost United league points – and ultimately their league place. The January transfer window came and went, and none of these fundamentals were addressed. Tony Watt was bought from Motherwell after a particular purple patch of goalscoring, then inexplicably loaned out to St Mirren. This put an enormous weight on the shoulders of veteran striker Steven Fletcher who, as the season concluded, spoke of the lack of 'nastiness' and 'fight' in the squad – words echoed by manager Jim Goodwin. But these words masked more fundamental weaknesses which could have been rectified.
United's relegation was avoidable but a slow air of inevitability hung over the season, although this is true of many relegations after the event. This is the third time that United have gone down in my adult life – 1995 and 2016 being the other two occasions. My overwhelming emotions are of acceptance – and the predictability of all of this – along with getting used to supporting a club that often gets relegated.
When United went down in 1995, it was in the aftermath of Jim McLean's golden years, after the club won the league and dismissed numerous European giants on their way to making a name for themselves across the continent. Stern disciplinarian McLean was followed by seemingly carefree Croatian Ivan Golac, with his reputed 'smell the flowers' attitude. In his first season, he won United the Scottish Cup, which had eluded McLean, but they were relegated the following year. I was shocked, hurt and bewildered, and wrote my first football article for
The Scotsman causing a friend to comment (tactfully perhaps): 'That was a great article on football, full of emotion. Maybe you should write less on politics and more on football'.
United came back up after one season which might have been an aberration. Then in 2016 it happened again, this time flagged up by the selling of our best players, including Stuart Armstrong and Gary Mackay-Steven to Celtic. The club, which until then had a good relationship between those in charge and the fans, was then rent asunder by allegations that led to a breach of trust which continued to fester. The second relegation filled me with anger – a sentiment widely felt among United fans.
On this occasion, we took four seasons coming back up from the hyper-competitive Championship. And now we have only spent three years in the top league, becoming a 'yo-yo club'. To add to the mix, our rivals Dundee FC won the Championship and hence passed United as they ascended into the senior league. A final twist of irony is that United have gone through all this on the 40th anniversary of winning their one league title in 1983.
The teams at the other end and how the game is represented
This is what football entails for many football fans: disappointment, resignation and acceptance of the slings and arrows of fortune – unless you support one of the big teams. In Scotland, only one football team have had a 100% record in the senior league – Celtic – so fans of most clubs know the emotional mix involved.
But it is not just about Dundee United. There is another club facing much more existential challenges in the Scottish game – Albion Rovers from Coatbridge. Albion have finally left the senior league set-up, losing a two-legged play-off to Edinburgh-based Spartans. This, after 120 years of league history and playing at Cliftonhill since 1919.
The golden era of Albion Rovers was a long time ago, probably in the 1920s. But their fate this year was met by a gentle lament that the game was losing part of its history and a club with proud traditions. This is an appropriate response because the football world that is not just about money loves sentimentality and remembrance. The game has to embrace change.
Albion Rovers are the fifth team to lose their league status in the new pyramid set-up, following Brechin City, Berwick Rangers, Cowdenbeath and East Stirling. Some of those clubs were known as historically hapless and regularly finishing bottom of the lowest league. But the game lost something when a club like East Stirling went, and more so with Berwick Rangers, the English-based club playing in Scottish football, and Brechin City, with their world famous (in certain circles) hedge around part of Glebe Park.
None of these clubs have yet made it back after leaving senior football. The emotional pain, loss and disorientation for some of their fans and the towns they represent is incalculable. Being part of senior football has a certain status and having that removed is a major moment – one the rest of us and even most of the football world barely spend a second on.
Many of these rich moments go unnoticed because of how the game is reported on in the media and represented by broadcasters. An exception is the BBC Scotland channel's
A View from the Terrace, which combines a genuine love of the game with curiosity about the smaller fish, unsung heroes and inadvertent comedy of elements of the game. This is a breath of fresh air compared to the now predictable patter of Stuart and Tam on radio's
Off the Ball, which once dazzled but is now a shade formulaic.
A View from the Terrace is fun and authentic, covering the likes of St Cuthbert Wanderers from my home town Kirkcudbright winning the South of Scotland league last year, to the sad decline of Fort William, once the worst team in UK football, who lost their Highland League status last season (and without who the league just seems a lot less romantic).
At the weekend past, BBC Scotland told us of their plans for the forthcoming Scottish Cup Final: a showcase part of the season and a protected game in terms of broadcasting rights. In their wisdom, the BBC have decided that if the English FA Cup Final (kick off 3pm) goes to extra time, the Scottish Cup Final (kick off 5.30pm) will start not on the channel it is meant to be on (BBC One Scotland) but instead on the minority audience BBC Scotland channel.
This form of relegation of the Scottish game does make you wonder about BBC Scotland. One of their few claims to the areas of Scottish public life that they say they champion is the Scottish national game, with wall-to-wall coverage. But here they are potentially agreeing to boot one of the season's biggest matches and occasions from the main TV channel in favour of the English final.
This is what passes for 'the national broadcaster'. While BBC-bashing is something of another national pastime, the bigger picture is the BBC's lack of care in covering Scottish football with a couple of honourable exceptions – the brilliant work of BBC Alba on a tiny budget in recent years being one.
The men's national team matches are missing from BBC and STV (the latter of which used to have a long football pedigree with
Scotsport). In a climate of falling living standards, with people having to make constant financial decisions, lots of Scots and young people are being excluded from watching the game – whether it is the price of going to a senior ground or the cost and complexity of platforms and subscription rights to follow live football.
The list of guilty parties is not confined to media, but includes the principal football authorities: the SFA and SPFL. The football commentator Grant Russell said of the two bodies and wider game over the weekend: 'The whole thing needs outside influences from outside the bubble to come in and revolutionise it'.
And commenting on Sky's non-showing of those crucial relegation games, he said: 'It's easy to blame Sky today. But this is symptomatic of a complete refusal and desire from the SPFL to create a marketable product where a day like today is compelling to a broadcaster'.
This takes me back to why football has such emotional meaning. The third relegation of Dundee United in recent times makes me reflect on my dad, Edwin, and what United meant to him. He saw United with his father through thick and thin, at one point in 1958-59 seeing them play to a crowd of 500 when they were second bottom of the lowest league. He gave me my passion for United and together we saw the rise of the Terrors under Jim McLean, winning the league, two League Cups, and playing and beating the best of Europe.
My dad died in 1993, at the age of just 60, as the Jim McLean era came to a close. For some of us of a certain generation who were there as we thrashed Borussia Mönchengladbach, played Barcelona off the park twice in the 1980s (as well as previously in the 1960s) and hosted a European final at Tannadice, the McLean era lives on and has never ended in our hearts.
We have great memories and stories from those times. This gives football its potential for collective and individual joy, and its edge. But ultimately, as well as these evocative moments, football and its fans have to live in the present.
Dundee United are another club, amongst many, who have to face up to realities and try to thrive, or at least, survive, in the increasingly harsh world of monetised modern football and the obsession of too many with following the successes and excesses of a few fawned global elite brands.