The-Rangers-Archives-Logo-animated-reel

Match Details

Dunfermline Athletic

2-3

Rangers

League
East End Park
6 February, 1937

Dunfermline Athletic

Farquharson
Hogg
Bourhill
Bolt
McAllister
Syme
McGrogan
Chalmers
Benson
Reid
Gourlay

4

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11

Rangers

Jerry Dawson
Dougie Gray
Robert McDonald
James Kennedy
Tom McKillop
George Brown
Bobby Main
Bob McPhail
Jimmy Smith
Alex Venters
David Kinnear

Match Information

Goals

McGrogan 6, 84
J Smith 83
Kinnear 26
McPhail 67

Match Information

Manager: Bill Struth
Attendance: 8,000
Referee: M.C. Hutton (Glasgow)
Matchday:  Saturday

Match Trivia

This Dunfermline team is as big a mystery to me as ever. I never see them playing like a relegation team. Yet they keep on getting relegation results. I can’t help feeling Dunfermline is the unluckiest team in the League. I haven’t much time normally for the customary prattle about ‘lucky breaks’, etc. But, in very truth, this club’s experiences have convinced me there are such tings – and the other fellows invariably get them! There were periods in this game when a gentle bow from Fortune would have been enough to transform the whole outlook. Times when a matter of inches beat the pass, or wood beat the shot. Make no mistake, Rangers had to fight for this win. My sympathy for Dunfermline in their death-or-glory struggle doesn’t blind me to the fact that Rangers were the more polished fellows. At the same time, they got a real fright. It seemed incredible that 18 other clubs separated these two on the league chart, and all of them above Dunfermline. Up to the last minute, scored for the home team, and there was quite a fuss from then to the finish. Most Dunfermline folk maintain that actually Rangers should not have won. They claim that Ibrox defenders conceded two penalty-kicks, and that there should have been a free-kick for Dunfermline before McPhail scored Rangers’ third. If we work it out in this way, then it seems the score might have been 4-2 for Dunfermline. And that would have been a ‘lucky break’ all right. Because, in my opinion, neither penalty claim was justified. But I will say the free-kick claim seemed perfectly warranted. The score was 2-1 for Rangers when the McPhail goal came along – 22 minutes after the interval. My eyesight is pretty good, and I’ll swear I saw Venters interfere with a defender before the ball reached McPhail. Indeed, most of us thought the referee had actually signalled an offence and that Big Bob was merely shooting home for the ‘fun of the thing’. But if it was funny to Rangers, the home team and crowd couldn’t be expected to see the joke. This gave Rangers a lead they certainly didn’t deserve, and likewise Dunfermline a sickener they didn’t deserve either. The first half saw three goals scored – McGrogan for Dunfermline in six minutes, Smith for Rangers two minutes later, and Kinnear in 26 minutes, when Dougie Gray was in the pavilion with a bleeding nose. Rangers’ second goal was a surprising affair. Surprising in so far as Whitey McDonald was almost the scorer! From 35 yards he suddenly released a proper hum-dinger of a shot. Farquharson threw himself across the goal and did mighty well in beating the ball down. Alas, however, Jimmy Smith caught it almost on the line and screwed it home with one of these button-hook shots he appears to have copyrighted. Rangers have often had less trouble from clubs in the top half of the table. They weren’t a great team. But they had tons of resource and refused to be put off by the keenest of tackling. I watched young McKillop closely. He was terribly loose at the start, when Benson, the new man from Falkirk, beat him often in the air. But he warmed to, and with the game. He finished quite strongly. Kennedy had a sparkling first-half for Rangers, and sat back to let Brown take the honours in the second. Both Main and Kinnear had a tin first-half, but their venturesome raiding after the interval was a godsend to an Ibrox team pegged back for spells after the interval. The three inside men were always ready for a ‘dare’. Nothing wrong with the defence. Jerry Dawson added some more ribbons to his medals. The most impressive player on the field, to my mind, was Bolt, the Dunfermline right-half. He thundered into the tackle and through the melee with unbounded enthusiasm and skill. At times he seemed only to have an ounce of energy left – but he gave it just the same! Dunfermline might have done more damage had their extreme wingers shown more devil. Benson, the new centre, missed a few good chances, but is a clever plater none the less. Stewart Chalmers is still the prince of football ‘kidders’ – there were times when he foxed defenders to blushes. But this kidding got the fans’ goat. And I don’t blame them. McAllister had a good day against the tenacious Smith, while young Hogg looks as if he’ll be a real good back in time. One thing annoyed me. And it isn’t the first time it has done so. When will linesmen realise that a ball is NOT out of play until it has actually passed over the line? The fellow on the stand side inflamed the crowd on two occasions with annoying misinterpretation of this rule.
Please consider making a donation to support our website and help us continue to provide valuable content and services.
The-Rangers-Archives-Logo-animated-reel

The Rangers Archives

crossmenu linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram