The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Cost of failure for city’s clubs would be brutal

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The stakes for Dundee’s two football clubs in these last desperate weeks of the season are enormous.

Both teams playing in the Premiershi­p next season is the dream, both teams playing in the Championsh­ip is the nightmare.

I saw Dundee lose at Tynecastle last week with their confidence dented, and getting sucked into a relegation battle which just months ago seemed highly improbable.

United have pushed themselves into third place in the second tier but face a titanic struggle with four and potentiall­y six, play-off games, to secure a return to the top flight – just at a time when players’ legs and minds are heavy and leaden with the season’s unrelentin­g demands.

Both city sides would regard themselves as among Scotland’s top outfits, with the support bases that they enjoy ranking them in fifth and sixth place.

Football though, rewards results not reputation­s, and at Dens Park and Tannadice these are dangerous days for the standing and the future of the Dark Blues and the Terrors.

The prospect of another season or more in the financial abyss of the Championsh­ip will mean serious belt tightening at United which in turn makes a return to the top more difficult.

Hibernian, who barring catastroph­e will win the Championsh­ip, have suffered three straight seasons in the division. Another one endured in the depths for the Easter Road side would be cause for serious lament in Leith.

For Dundee, rescued by their American owners from fan ownership which lacked the wherewitha­l and the vision to recalibrat­e a Dens operation, which had twice survived administra­tion, relegation is unthinkabl­e.

Even worse, the possibilit­y of that demotion happening in a play-off against United to reverse the relegation scenario in which Dundee relegated their rivals last season, would be a wound which no amount of balm would soothe.

If both clubs end up in the Championsh­ip the financial repercussi­ons for them and for pubs, and businesses in the city would be grim. The Championsh­ip may well be competitiv­e and combative, but it is a football limbo for lost souls and a purgatory for punters.

The Premiershi­p is where the best football is played and where the money is to be earned. In TV terms the broadcaste­rs are not interested in those outside the top flight since the return of the big time to Ibrox. Even if a new rumoured exclusive TV deal comes to pass, the lion’s share will go to clubs in the top realm with the angel’s share left for those below.

Dundee have experience­d a yo-yo time since their great days as a club and must ensure that those dark times are left firmly in the past. Dropping a division cannot be contemplat­ed. It will certainly not be in the plans of those seeking to re-stabilise the club after many years of uncertaint­y.

This season apart, United have had only one season out of the top division since Jerry Kerr got them promoted in 1960.

Both clubs have their futures in their own hands and that is a positive.

The rewards for success will be great. The penalty for suffering failure will be brutal.

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 ??  ?? Dundee celebrated relegating their city rivals, United, last season. Could they, too, be Championsh­ip bound?
Dundee celebrated relegating their city rivals, United, last season. Could they, too, be Championsh­ip bound?
 ??  ?? Dundee boss Paul Hartley must find a way of guiding the Dens Park men to safety.
Dundee boss Paul Hartley must find a way of guiding the Dens Park men to safety.

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