The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

McGowan’s debt to Strachan

Star has never forgotten kindness shown back in Celtic days

- SEAN HAMILTON

It was the scariest period of Dundee star Paul McGowan’s young life.

His first child had been born prematurel­y and kept in hospital.

Meanwhile, his manager at Celtic, Gordon Strachan, was a spiky figure who demanded respect.

As a new member of the first team squad at Parkhead, McGowan, then just 21 years old, was trying to keep his cool both at home and at work.

But amid the uncertaint­y – and the fear – Strachan, now technical director at Dundee, reacted with warmth, generosity and, above all, humanity.

The ex-Scotland boss was there for McGowan on a profession­al level, handing him a shock Champions League bow at Celtic Park.

Yet it is the personal touch that really endures for the Dee fans’ favourite – and ensures his regard for Strachan will never diminish.

“(Gordon would) deny this – it’s just the way he is,” explained McGowan, speaking on the latest episode of Open Goal’s Keeping The Ball On The Ground podcast.

“My wee boy Leo was premature, he was two or three months premature, kept in the hospital.

“I was round about the (Celtic) squad at the time, never close to playing, just about the squad.

“We were still in the Champions League and the bonuses there were a joke. Even just getting a draw, even getting in the squad, for sitting in the stand, you were still getting ‘X’ amount of money.

“Obviously, it came out my baby was in hospital and we had a game against Villarreal and I was in the squad.

“He put me on the bench. We were 2-0 up at half-time. Me and (Paul) Caddis were sitting on the bench, then warming up at half time wee Cadds was like ‘I think you’ll get on, Gowser’.

“I wasn’t even caring, as long as we won the game.

“Then, about 75 minutes, the manager was like: ‘Gowser, get stripped, you’re on.’ I said it to my mum and dad: ‘I think he just put me on to give me money,’ but if you said that to him he’d say no.

“To be fair, he’d phoned, he’d asked who was at the hospital with me. He was like that: ‘Me and the wife will come up and see you.’ I was a young boy, he didn’t need to do that.”

Fate has brought McGowan and Strachan back together 12 years later.

Like former Dee boss Paul Hartley before him, McGowan considers his old Celtic gaffer a mentor.

But seeing him around Dens Park on a daily basis is an altogether different experience than being managed by him as a young player.

“I had a bit of fear,” McGowan told Open Goal regulars Simon Ferry, Paul Slane and Kevin Kyle.

“See when you’re doing boxes (at training) and he’s standing there like that: ‘What are you doing there?!’”

Strachan had – and most likely still has – the ability to send a jolt of panic up players’ spines – just as with journalist­s.

But McGowan revealed he was once on the receiving end of a serious blast after shouting at establishe­d first team players during a Celtic training session.

“That was just me. I wasn’t intentiona­lly shouting,” said the Dundee star. “But (Strachan) stopped training and went: ‘He’s a coach, he’s a coach,’ then pointed at the goalie coach: ‘He’s a coach. You’re not a ******* coach. Shut up.’

“That was me for about a month. I never said a word.”

McGowan has no qualms about being vocal these days.

And he also reserved a word for Strachan protégée Hartley, whom he does not believe gets enough credit for his spell in charge of Dundee.

“We were top six – that didn’t really get spoken about,” insisted McGowan.

“Considerin­g it was a whole new team. Compare that to (later), the seasons have been a slog.

“I don’t think it was looked on as an achievemen­t when we did it. “Greg Stewart was different class. “That was a good team.”

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 ?? Pictures: SNS. ?? Paul McGowan, above, comes close to scoring against Villarreal after being sent on as a sub by Gordon Strachan, left.
Pictures: SNS. Paul McGowan, above, comes close to scoring against Villarreal after being sent on as a sub by Gordon Strachan, left.

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