Tag Archives: scottish football

Win a Stramash

Roll up roll up. The good people at Scottish Football Forums have a Stramash to give away: Enter here

Win, and you’ll feel like Gordon Ottershaw, 6.39 in:

Stramash in the box

Stramash makes a pleasant appearance in the latest Scottish Football League official newsletter. Look: Linkoln City

As it appeared at the head of this rather brilliant newsletter. Subscribe: you'll not regret it

It’s the first time I’ve been in a newsletter since 1997, when the local version repeated a complaint about the noise coming from our garage. If only they’d not stopped my band Popular Front practicing, the village-based socialist realist post-post-punk we know and love today would have had a very different sound indeed.

Also in this edition (and indeed in Stramash, plugging fans), highlights from Raith’s stupendous 1994 cup victory against Celtic. Days before that match, a buck-toothed snapper named Anthony Charles Lynton Blair popped into Stark’s Park. Blair’s meeting with manager and Countdown fan Jimmy Nicholl passes unmentioned in A Journey. Typical of the man.

Record maker

Stramash made the centre pages of Saturday’s Daily Record with a feature article by Frank Morgan. Brilliant stuff. Aside from the 50 Years of Coronation Street quiz, easily the best thing in that edition: Linkage

Start of the website version and a cryptic golf-based advert.

Whistles on the picket line

For the left-tumbling football supporter, the referees’ strike presents something of a dilemma. I was planning on heading to watch the Alba Challenge Cup Final on Sunday, but will this represent crossing the picket line?

Is it even a proper strike if a ballot hasn’t been taken a fortnight in advance and the Daily Express haven’t accused those taking part of being Trotskyite wreckers hell-bent on sending the country back to the Dark Ages (not the actual Dark Ages, the 1970s ones, when people were forced to burn the dead for heat)?

For fans, the referee is the keenly studied subject of ridicule, a moving totem in black at which to hurl insults and 2ps. Nothing is more amusing than when he falls over, in the same way that nothing is more amusing for a three-year-old than an adult blowing a raspberry. So the idea of having to support them because of political reasons is a bit like that moment when you grow older and start to see that your teachers weren’t actually bad people (or, at least, you begin to regret flicking your fountain pen at their blouse when their back was turned for the 37th time; the other 36 were fine).

As always with anything serious like moral dilemmas, it’s best to make a joke of it all. To that end, I’ve been imagining what a picket line of Scottish referees would look like. Firstly, they’d all be in garish full kit, occasionally stopping to jokingly book one another for knocking over the stack of foam tea cups.

Other officials would be scrawling tiny slogans into their books, causing cars to drive dangerously close as they strained to read the words ‘Honk if you support our claim to not get shouted at in the face by Neil Lennon as defined by the Human Rights Act 1998’.

Around a barrel of fire, Dougie McDonald and Willie Collum would stand rubbing their hands together and occasionally blowing for imaginary free-kicks or sending bypassing pram-pushing mothers to the stands.

I am concerned about the impact on tonight’s Stramash book launch, of course. I’ve already had a number of call-offs and am hoping the SFA have plans to send in a group of mystery foreign guests. But would that make me a scab? Nothing is certain any more. Pass me the fingerless gloves, Dougie.

Stramash launches imminent: author in Midget Gem meltdown

The proper Midget Gems are in. Pies with especially dubious fillings have been sourced just to annoy people who read Observer Food Monthly. It’s launch time (like lunch time, but with slightly more tepid white wine).

The book's called 'Stramash', in case you were wondering.

Tomorrow, Friday November 19th, the venue is Riddles Court, 322 Lawnmarket, Edinburgh, from 5.30pm until 7.30pm.

Then next Thursday 25th, we move to Glasgow and the Iron Horse Bar, 115 West Nile Street, 5.30pm until 7.30pm.

Whoever you are (unless you are Ron Atkinson, Danny Alexander MP or Nick Tilsley from Corrie), please join me/us.

Man with toadstool-shaped head writes book

Lovely stuff from the Greenock Telegraph. Page three has not seen the likes since a young and poverty-stricken Anne Widdecombe bared all.

Update: Early November

It’s all go at Stramash Towers. I’ve not seen Diagnosis Murder this week.

Sunday’s event with Carol Craig at the ever-brilliant Radical Book Fair went pretty much to plan, with 47% of my jokes producing laughs and a further 13% titters. I’ve been reading her The Tears That Made the Clyde and it really is compelling stuff. No mention of Broadwood Stadium, though.

Stramash should be generally available online in the coming days, and in shops by the middle of the month. In the mean time, here’s a shot of the cover, photograph courtesy of the immense Stuart Clarke:

Stramash: a reminder that a jacket is always worthwhile at this time of year no matter how nice it is when you set off

Stramash at the Edinburgh Independent Radical Book Fair

Sunday October 31st. 1.15pm, Out of the Blue Drill Hall, Dalmeny Street

Rouse from your hangover. Come and hear a few – potentially amusing and informative – words about Scotland’s nether regions, followed by a discussion with Carol Craig .

If the delivery driver puts out his fag and shakes a leg, it might just be the first place from which to buy copies of Stramash*.

Full details: here

*Sentence construction for G. Daring

Update: June

Realising it’s been over a month since last I updated the blog version of Stramash! I had better type something in this space.

Each day of writing Stramash! brings with it a new favourite team, town or figure. I’m rapidly amassing a set of heroes I’ll never meet: Vic Kasule, a legend of Albion Rovers once booked for singing a George Benson song at a referee; Hyam Dimmer, not an Ikea light fitting but a pre-war ball magician at Ayr United; Gutty McKenzie, a bloke in 1940s Alloa who used to earn money on the High Street by pretending his bike was a bucking bronco.

Lately, I’ve been visiting a few people to collect their views on the towns and teams in the book. Ian Rankin’s tales of Cowdenbeath, Cardenden and the Kingdom were particularly brilliant; the biggest problem has been the fact he left me with an awful lot of wheat and no chaff (it’s been a bugger picking it out of our carpet).

I’m becoming quite an expert in World Cup avoidance. There’ s an easy way of turning against proceedings, like trying to put yourself off someone you fancy by picturing the head of David Cameron on their shoulders: find out when Robbie Savage is going to be on 5Live, turn on, tune in and drop out of the whole thing in annoyance. The only thought I have on vuvuzeli is this: what a great name that would be for a local newspaper, e.g. The Cowdenbeath Vuvuzela.

Having written a post that reads a bit like the bullet points in Simon Hoggart’s Achingly Bourgeois Week, I’m off to read about Gordon Dalziel. As compensation for my departure, have a photo of the most annoying new housing estate names I have seen this month:

Choose life?