The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

A baptism of fire and a round of applause

Dens Park coach Mackay recalls his first steps as a senior pro under Italians

- GEORGE CRAN

Brighton striker Glenn Murray believes Premier League football is being rushed back too soon amid the coronaviru­s crisis, with the fact England is the worst-hit country in Europe being overlooked by some.

The Premier League invited club captains and managers to share their thoughts on a return to action during conference calls on Wednesday as Project Restart continues.

Murray, 36, was on the call about how and when training will step up ahead of a prospectiv­e mid-June return – a timescale the veteran Brighton forward believes is too rushed given the current backdrop.

“Football isn’t a necessity – it’s a game, it’s a sport,” he said.

“I mean, what if we go through all this rigmarole of trying to get back started, and we have a second peak and we’re stopped anyway?

“I just can’t understand after just sort of loosening the lockdown why we’re in such a rush to get it back.

“Why can’t we just wait a month or so to see if things go to plan?”

Put to Murray that the phasing is in place for a gradual return to action, he said: “Yeah, it is but I mean what’s the point in getting halfway through the phase and then stopping?

“Why not see how the whole country deals with softening the lockdown first before we even think about starting unnecessar­y sports like football when people are dying all around us and the death rates are still high?

“We’re up to like 34,000 now – we’re the worst-hit in Europe. No one seems to take that into considerat­ion.”

Testing yourself against the likes of Georgi Nemsadze and Claudio Caniggia in training would have been an amazing way to start any football career.

And Dundee first-team coach Dave Mackay did exactly that as he made his first steps as a senior pro at Dens Park.

Italian brothers Ivano and Dario Bonetti were appointed as the Dark Blues’ management team 20 years ago this week, heralding the arrival of a number of top stars.

Mackay, meanwhile, was a freshfaced 19-year-old looking for a route into first-team football and had spent time on loan at Brechin and Arbroath.

Then, in late September 2001, Mackay was recalled from Gayfield.

He told the Courier: “My debut was at Kilmarnock, coming on as a sub for an injured Alessandro Romano.

“I was surprised to get on, to be honest, I had only came back from loan at Arbroath that week.

“I knew I was in the squad but there was going to be one left out and I thought it would be me. But then five or six minutes in and I’m on.

“I don’t remember Ivano saying anything before the game but he did afterwards – I think he was surprised at how well I did!

“He got all the players to give me round of applause after the game.

“It was embarrassi­ng – I don’t know if it was just because he was surprised or if everyone got that after their debut. Maybe he was just in a good mood because we had won.”

For anyone associated with Dundee

aat that point it was an exciting time but Mackay says it was “incredible” to pit himself against such top-class players as a youngster, even if it was hard to watch some of the local players get pushed out.

“As a young boy I was happy being around the first team but we had seen a lot of the older pros get cast aside and forced out the door,” Mackay added.

“At times it was a revolving door with player after playing coming in. That happens in football when managers come in, they bring their own players but as well as having outstandin­g players, like Caballero or Nemsadze, there would be three or four who were miles off it.

“That was frustratin­g to miss out when you’re on the fringes of the first team but you felt for establishe­d guys who were moved on.

“It was exciting, the Bonettis were a bit eccentric but you knew they were top players and played for some great clubs. It was great as a young player to play with some of the players of that calibre.

“Claudio Caniggia was a huge star. I mean he moved to Rangers and went to a World Cup (in 2002) after playing for Dundee. Nemsadze was frightenin­gly good.

“Javier Artero had already been at the club but was great, then there were Zurab Khizanishv­ili and Fabian Caballero – to be at a club and be involved in first-team training was an incredible experience.

“It was great to test yourself as a young player against these internatio­nal-class players. “The fans obviously look back at that era with fondness but you wonder about the cost and what happened afterwards if they would want it again.”

Looking back himself, Mackay could see there was more money being spent than just bringing in big-name players.

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