Evening Telegraph (First Edition)
Which Dark Blues Scottish football’s
A HANDFUL of Dundee greats are in the running to be named in Scotland’s top 50 players of all time – who should make the cut, though?
Alan Gilzean, Alex Hamilton, Bill Brown, Doug Cowie and Billy Steel have all been nominated on a long list to find the nation’s greatestever players.
They are joined by more recent faces who kicked their first ball in senior football in the dark blue of Dundee. Among them are the current technical director at Dens, Gordon Strachan, former Dark Blues manager Neil McCann as well as Colin Hendry and Tosh McKinlay.
It is up to the public to choose who gets in with voting closing on the Scottish FA website last night.
While we wait to see if there is a Dundee representative in there, let’s have a look at the club’s top internationals:
ALEX HAMILTON Scotland caps: 24 Dundee appearances: 359 (1957-68)
The man who has won more caps as a Dundee player than anyone else, classy right-back Hamilton was a key member of the leaguewinning side of 1962 and made his Scotland debut the same season. Lining up alongside club-mate Ian Ure, Hamilton got off to a winning start in the other dark blue as Scotland beat Wales 2-0. Weeks later he was part of a national starting XI that boasted three Dees for only the third time in history alongside Ure again and Hugh Robertson.
DOUG COWIE Scotland caps: 20 Dundee apps: Club record 446 (1945-1961), 24 goals
It’s an appearance record that will take some beating but Cowie did more than just star at Dens Park where he won back-to-back League Cups. Recognised as the country’s best left-half, Cowie made his international bow in a 2-2 draw at Wembley in front of 93,000 spectators in 1953 alongside team-mate Billy Steel. A regular during the 50s, Cowie was the first Dee to play at a World Cup in Switzerland in 1954 before finishing his Scotland career at the 1958 World Cup in Sweden.
BILLY STEEL Scotland caps: 30 (13 while at Dundee), 12 goals Dundee appearances: 131 (1950-54), 45 goals
A superstar of the 1950s, Dundee paid a Scottish record transfer fee to Derby County to bring Steel back to Scotland. The Dark Blues shelled out £22,500 for the 17-times capped international. He would pay back some of that sum by helping George Anderson’s side to two League Cups and the Scottish Cup Final in 1952. As a Scotland player, he netted three times in his first three games in 1947 and scored four times in one match against Northern Ireland in 1950, with a single against Denmark making him the highest-scoring international while a Dundee player.
ALAN GILZEAN Scotland caps: 22 (five while at Dundee), 12 goals Dundee appearances: 190 (1957-64), 169 goals
Another record-holder that’s likely to stand the test of time, Dundee’s greatest goalscorer Gilzean shot the Dark Blues to league glory and then to the European Cup semi-finals before continuing his scoring feats on the international stage. Making his