Dundee Football Club were this week delighted to announce that the Players’ Lounge is to be renamed the Doug Cowie Players’ Lounge in honour of the man who has played the most times for The Dee, is the Club’s longest serving player with the most winners’ medals in the Dark Blues’ history.
There are those who would argue that Doug Cowie is the greatest Dee of all time and they certainly have a case. Cowie is the player with the most appearances in a Dundee shirt, is the only Dundee player to have played in two World Cups, won two League Cup winners’ medals, played in front of almost 140 000 for Dundee at Hampden in the Scottish Cup Final, was runner-up in the League Championship, won twenty full caps for Scotland, five League caps and one B international cap and is the Club’s longest serving player in which his sixteen seasons in Dark Blue were to prove to be among the most successful periods in the Club’s history, playing alongside some of the greatest names Dundee has ever witnessed.
Cowie arrived at Dens in 1945 when the men of Dundee were returning from war with a craving for some return to normality centred on sport and the masses were returning to Dens Park in search of inspiration and solace to ease their hurt. Perhaps a form of escapism, they found new Dundee manager George Anderson was in the process of building a great team and he looked towards an apprentice riveter working in the John Lewis shipyard in Aberdeen to be one of his heroes.
Cowie was within hours of signing for his local side Aberdeen but the bowler-hatted Anderson was prepared to get his man and after a quick discussion with Doug’s father who was working across the road, the young centre-half signed for Dundee from his junior club Aberdeen St. Clements.
Doug played 446 competitive games for Dundee, a club record but incredibly it could have been so much more. At the age of nineteen, he made his competitive debut on 23rd February 1946 in Dundee’s first ever League Cup match in a 2-0 defeat at Stirling Albion but it was his only appearance of the season. In the following year Doug played just three times despite featuring prominently in a pre season tour of West Germany, Austria and Italy and one wonders just how many appearances he could have chalked up!
The highlight of his career came when Dundee won back to back League Cups against Rangers in 1951 and Kilmarnock in 1952 but he missed out on a treble when Dundee lost the 1952 Scottish Cup Final which was sandwiched between the League Cup triumphs. Favourites Dundee lost 4-0 to Motherwell in front of an amazing crowd of 136, 990 at the national stadium which is a record crowd for a Hampden final which did not feature either of the Old Firm but was a huge disappointment to all in Dark Blue who had not won the trophy for forty-two years.
That cup final disappointment was perhaps even greater than the last day disappointment of 1948/49 when Doug was part of the side that travelled to Brockville knowing a win would give them a first League title but a nervy Dundee capitulated 4-1 to Falkirk after missing a penalty a 0-0 leaving them one point behind Rangers in second place.
He started his career at centre-half but always preferred to play left-half and became part of the famous half-back line of Tommy Gallagher, Doug Cowie and Alfie Boyd. Playing in either position made no difference to Doug as his skill and elegance were always on show and many Dundee players of the forties and fifties often quoted Doug as the best player they played alongside.
Amongst those was the mercurial Billy Steel who signed for Dundee in September 1950 and who was known for putting his team mates on the sharp end of his tongue but for Cowie he reserved his greatest complement by stating that the Aberdonian could ‘play a wee bit.’
In 1953 Doug made his international debut alongside Steel against England at Wembley and the 2-2 draw was the first of twenty caps which make him the second most capped player in the Club’s history.
In 1954 Doug became the first Dundee player to play at a World Cup when he played in two games in the Swiss finals against Austria (0-1) and Uruguay (0-7) and four years later in Sweden played in another two matches against Yugoslavia (1-1) and Paraguay (2-3) which turned out to be his last game for Scotland.
Cowie played under three managers at Dens, namely George Anderson, Willie Thornton and Bob Shankly and all three made Doug captain at one time or another.
However on the eve of Dundee’s greatest triumph, in the summer of 1961, Shankly decided to free the thirty-four year old Cowie citing age as the reason why but just a few weeks later, Doug was disappointed to see Shankly sign Gordon Smith who was three years Doug’s senior. When Dundee went on to lift the League Flag just twelve months later, it meant that Cowie was denied a league winners medal for a second time and despite that great triumph at Muirton, there were many that thought that Doug had been released just a little too early.
Near the end of his playing days in 1961 Doug still lived in a Dundee tenement which is changed days indeed from now. It should therefore be remembered that football then was a working man’s sport and they were a different breed of player in those days. No agents, no fancy hair styles, no perms or after shave, no fancy cars or lucrative wages. Some came from the shipyards or coal mines to play for their professional sides and Doug Cowie was one of those gems. He was among a generation who played with a pride in their team that would put most modern players to shame when the elements rarely caused a match to be cancelled or anything other than a serious injury cause them to miss a game. They played with boots that covered their ankles, kicking and heading a ball that grew heavy if it rained, with a lace that hurt the head if by chance it met the napper straight on.
Always a gentleman, Doug was honoured by the Club when they named one of their original hospitality lounges at Dens as the Doug Cowie Lounge and with many renovations at the stadium over the years they are delighted to now rename the players lounge, the Doug Cowie Players’ Lounge. In his book Dundee Greats, author Jim Hendry described Cowie as a player with ‘the touch of an angel’ and this ‘angel’ was deservedly inducted into the inaugural Dundee F.C. Hall of Fame with a legends award in 2009.
Doug was at Dens this week to open the lounge, aptly at the Raith Rovers game, a club he managed after leaving Dens. He took the opportunity to look round the stadium which he described in the foreword of the Dundee’s Hampden Heroes book as “beautiful” and the club are proud to name the players lounge in Doug’s honour at the “beautiful” old ground which was 115 years old this month.
Honours at Dundee:
Scottish League Cup winner: 1951/52, 1952/53
Scottish League Championship runners-up: 1948/49
Scottish Cup runner-up: 1952
Scottish League B Division champions: 1946/47
Scotland full caps: 20
Scotland B caps: 1
Scotland Trial Internationals: 2
Scottish League caps: 3
Dundee F.C. Hall of Fame: 2009 Legends Award
Appearances, Goals:
League: 341, 19 goals
Scottish Cup: 32, 1 goal
League Cup: 73, 4 goal
Totals: 446, 24 goals