The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

How Liney became true Dark Blue icon

- GRAEME STRACHAN

Pat Liney might never have gone on to achieve legendary status with Dundee FC if it was not for an injury to one of his school chums.

Playing for school team St Mirin’s Academy in Paisley, he regularly turned out as a right-winger or striker before he was asked to take over in goal.

Dundee fans know the rest is history.

Liney, who has died at the age of 86, signed for junior team Dalry Thistle before joining Dundee in 1957 under manager Willie Thornton.

The former Rangers star had assembled a good side at Dens Park since arriving in 1954 and was already laying the foundation­s that would lead to future success.

Liney’s first years at Dens were spent as understudy to Scottish internatio­nal goalkeeper Bill Brown.

When Brown signed for Bill Nicholson’s Tottenham Hotspur for £16,500 in 1959, Liney soon made the Dens yellow jersey his own.

Thornton, however, resigned in October 1959 and returned to Glasgow to become manager of Partick Thistle.

The club advertised the job and Bob Shankly duly answered the call, after previously managing Falkirk and Third Lanark.

Shankly was to make some shrewd signings at Dens to build on the solid foundation­s which had already been establishe­d by Thornton.

But his masterstro­ke was the signing of 37-year-old Gordon Smith who had been pensioned off by Hearts in the summer of 1961 following a recurring ankle injury.

Dundee had enjoyed great days before, most recently the two League Cup wins in 1951 and 1952, but their first top-flight title win, in 1961-62, was by far the pinnacle of their achievemen­ts, and one of the major factors behind it was the togetherne­ss among the players.

“There was seven of us living in one house together,” recalled Liney.

“We lived together, played football together, went to the dancing together and became great friends together.”

Author, broadcaste­r and authority on Scottish football Bob Crampsey declared that Shankly’s Dundee side in the early 1960s were better than Jock Stein’s Lisbon Lions and “the best pure footballin­g team produced in Scotland since the war”.

Indeed, now – even 60 years on – that heroic Dundee XI of Liney, Hamilton, Cox, Seith, Ure, Wishart, Smith, Penman, Cousin, Gilzean and Robertson still trips off the tongue of Dark Blues fans.

Dundee began the campaign with two wins and a defeat before going on a 19-game unbeaten run that included a double over Celtic and Rangers in early November.

That left Dundee seven points clear of title-holders Rangers before an ill-timed dose of the winter-time blues which brought just two draws from their next five games.

But Shankly’s men proceeded to win their next five matches with Liney highlighti­ng a gift of a good luck charm as a possible reason for their change in fortune.

One day, during that bad patch, a woman and her daughter gave Liney a piece of dried meat from a River Tay seal with dark blue ribbons wrapped around it.

Liney took it on to the park for his next game and put it in the net behind him.

Dundee never looked back.

The title race in 1961-62 went down to the wire after those five wins.

Dundee and Rangers were now level on points with two games to go.

Dundee played St Mirren at home while Rangers were away to Aberdeen.

Alan Cousin put Dundee in front before St Mirren got a penalty with 12 minutes to go.

Centre-half Jim Clunie stepped up from 12 yards to take the spot-kick.

Liney’s father was a St Mirren fan and when the sides met in the Scottish Cup in January he told his son that Clunie would go for the top-right corner if they got a penalty.

“It goes right back to when I was playing under17 football in Paisley – and one game in particular against our arch rivals,” recalled Liney.

“My dad used to stand right behind my goal and, in this game, the opposition, a team called Glentyan Thistle, were given a penalty.

“As soon as the taker picked the ball up, I thought to myself: ‘I’ve seen that guy take a penalty and put it to the keeper’s right’.

“Then I heard my dad’s voice behind me: ‘Go to your right, Pat’.

“When you’re a teenager, you don’t want to hear your dad telling you what to do.

“So I went the other way and landed in a puddle, soaking, while the ball hit the net.

“I was lying there and from behind me I heard my dad say the immortal words: ‘Told you’.

“All those years later, in 1962, my dad, who used to go to Love Street every other Saturday without fail, said to me: ‘If St Mirren get a penalty, Clunie always goes for the top-right corner’.”

He remembered his father’s advice and got a hand to it when Clunie took his kick.

Liney smothered the ball when he landed.

Andy Penman went up the park almost immediatel­y and made it 2-0.

“When I told my dad later on that I’d remembered what he told me and that’s how I’d saved that penalty, he was so proud,” Liney said.

“It didn’t matter that he was a St Mirren supporter at all.

“The family ties are more important.

“And I’m glad he was able to get the same enjoyment out of it as I did.”

Aberdeen defeated Rangers 1-0 and police had to force their way through the crowd to rescue Liney from jubilant fans who streamed on to the pitch to celebrate.

Gordon Smith came up to Liney after the game and told him: “People will remember that forever.

“If we win the league on Saturday you’ll be famous for ever more.”

Dundee were two points ahead again and needed only one point at Perth against relegation­threatened St Johnstone to clinch the Scottish League title.

Saints were not giving up their place in the top flight easily but a brace by Alan Gilzean either side of halftime settled any Dundee nerves.

In the 67th minute, Penman sealed the deal from a Gilzean set-up, drilling home from 15 yards to confirm a 3-0 victory and their moment of history.

Liney lost his place to Bert Slater the following season as Dundee would go on to terrorise the Continent, only falling in the European Cup semifinals to Italian giants AC Milan.

The ousted goalkeeper kept himself busy during the lay-off from first-team action and finally got his chance in the spotlight again – as a singer at the JM Ballroom.

Liney was booked to deliver a few ballads and was backed up by the orchestra and team-mates Alex Hamilton, on piano, and Hugh Robertson on guitar or drums.

Liney was sold to St Mirren in 1963 and Bert Slater left for Watford in 1965 after Ally Donaldson establishe­d himself as firstchoic­e goalkeeper at Dens Park.

Liney enjoyed spells with Bradford Park Avenue and local rivals Bradford City before a short spell as a nightclub singer after giving up football.

He was Bradford City’s host for pre-match hospitalit­y until 1978 before eventually returning “home” to Dens to help out on match days in the lounges.

He was back between the sticks when Dundee and Leeds did battle again in 1993 in a rerun of the 1968 Fairs Cup semi-final to mark the 25th anniversar­y of the game.

Dundee United manager Jim McLean played for Dundee in a team which also included Dark Blues legends Bobby Cox, Jocky Scott and Gordon Wallace.

Liney was inducted into the Dundee FC Hall of Fame in April 2011.

He died in the 60th anniversar­y year of Dundee’s title win but his legacy will live on along with memories of the famous Dens Park side that made history.

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 ?? ?? Pat Liney lining up alongside his Dundee team-mates before a match against Aberdeen at Pittodrie September 1961. in
Pat Liney lining up alongside his Dundee team-mates before a match against Aberdeen at Pittodrie September 1961. in
 ?? ?? DENS PARK TIES: Legendary goalkeeper Pat Liney returned to Dundee to help out as a host on match days.
DENS PARK TIES: Legendary goalkeeper Pat Liney returned to Dundee to help out as a host on match days.

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