www.cowdenbeath.net
About CFC
General Info
 
Cowdenbeath Football Club
Central Park
Cowdenbeath
Fife
KY4 9QQ
 
01383 610166
 
Chairman - Gordon McDougall
 
Vice Chairman - Albert Tait
 
Directors - Robert Brownlie, Edward Baigan, Ian Fraser,  Brian Watson.
 
Secretary - Tom Ogilvie
 
Commercial Manager - Joe McNamara
 
Accountant - Robert Turnbull
 
Manager - Keith Wright
 
Assistant Manager - Mickey Weir
 
Club Captain - Craig Winter
 
Youth Coaches -  David Liddle, Stevie McCleish, Carlo Crolla, Gary McAlpine.
 
Goalkeeping Coach - 
 
Physio - Neil Bryson
 
Kitman - Bert Johnson
 
Programme - Andrew Mullen, David Allan
 
Club Shop - John & Evelyn Anderson
 
Photographer - Paul Brown
 
Coach Driver - Tom Morton
 
Catering - Lilian McDougall, Ann Deas
 
Groundsman - Gordon McDougall jnr
 
Match Announcer - Davie Sutherland
 

Cowdenbeath play their football in the Third Division of the Scottish Football League. The Club is part time and attendances currently vary between 250 and 500. They are near neighbours of Dunfermline Athletic, Raith Rovers and East Fife.
 
The town of Cowdenbeath is situated in West Fife, has a population of 9000 and is an ex-mining community. Neighbouring towns include Lochgelly and Kelty. The area is also a hotbed of junior football with half a dozen teams within a few miles, although none in Cowdenbeath.
 
The club own Central Park which has been their home since 1917. The stadium is also used for stock car racing and in addition hosts a highly successful weekly market. The revenue generated from these ventures ensures that the football club continues to exist on a firm financial footing.
 
The chairman is Gordon McDougall who owns around 85 percent of the club. Gordon is a stock car promoter by trade and he bought the club in 1991 when they were deep in debt. The marriage between the stockies and the fitba may not be to everyone's taste but it is a mutually beneficial arrangement to both sides. Gordon works a 10-hour shift at Central Park and it's difficult to see where the club would be without him. There simply isn't enough space in this column to list the number of duties he undertakes on behalf of CFC.
 
The manager is Keith Wright who formerly starred in the Premier League with Hibs and Dundee. Initially joining Cowden as a player, Wright was subsequently appointed assistant manager to Gary Kirk. When Kirk was sacked, Wright assumed the role of manager and helped keep the club in the Second Division but suffered the disappointment of relegation the following year. He appointed former Easter Road colleague Mickey Weir as his right-hand man.
 
The club have been running a highly successful under-19 side for several years and were a founding member of the Scottish Professional Youth League. In these heady days the Cowden lads regularly defeated the likes of Rangers, Celtic and Hearts. Inevitably, a club of Cowdenbeath's size couldn't sustain this standard and the growth of professionally organised youth football has seen the big clubs form their own set-up.
 
Players who have come through the ranks to star for the Blue Brazil are Craig Winter, Gary Wood, Graeme Brown, Ross Godfrey, Wes Mitchell, James Lakie, Martin Humphries, John Dixon and Liam Buchanan. The man in charge of the youths is Davie Liddle and he donates an incredible amount of time to the club, even driving the lads to far-flung destinations such as Elgin and Dumfries.
 
The reserve was recently relaunched and competes in the Scottish Reserve League East. This ensures that fringe players are kept on their toes with a series of competitive fixtures.
 
After spending most of the 90's crawling out of a financial black hole, Cowden are now run on a strict no-debt policy, an eminently sensible measure given the current precarious nature of the game. What a difference it makes when income can be used to benefit the club rather than keep the wolf from the door.
 
After a period of local indifference, the Supporters Club was relaunched in the year 2000 and a coach now travels to every away fixture to give the Blue Brazil vital backing.
 

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CLUB HISTORY
 
The Cowdenbeath Football Club was formed in 1881. It is the oldest of the remaining four senior football clubs in the Kingdom of Fife.
 
Cowden joined the Scottish League in 1905, becoming a limited company in the process. They won the second championship on two occasions, 1914 and 1915. Unfortunately, there was no automatic promotion in those days, the fate of the top club being decided by vote. Clubs from the east of Scotland regularly found themselves being denied a place in the top flight.
 
The alleged West coast bias prompted the eastern clubs, including Cowdenbeath, to quit the Scottish Football League and form the 'rebel' Central League which proved to be highly successful.
 
In 1921 the SFL relented and introduced promotion and relegation between its two divisions. This move saw the Central League clubs rejoin the national set-up. Cowden constructed a 120 yard long grandstand which seated over 3000. A fantastic achievement for a club from such a small community.
 
This saw the start of Cowden's glory years. They enjoyed a ten year spell in the top division and, in 1924/25, finished in an incredible fifth place. In the early 1930's they were the only Fife club playing at the highest level, often  to crowds of 10,000. Relegation in 1934 proved to be only a temporary setback with the club storming away with the second division title in 1939.
 
With the 1939/40 season only weeks old, Cowden were failed to fulfil a fixture. The excuse that several key players had enlisted in HM Forces cut no ice with the Glasgow committee and the Miners were fined the ridiculous sum of £5000. With no means of paying such an amount, Cowden were forced to resign from the league. Shortly afterwards, the escalating conflict prompted the footballing authorities to declare the season void but Cowden were not off the hook.
 
Tragically, a return to top class football was not to be. When the League resumed in 1946 Cowden were not placed in the top division, a blow from which the club was never to recover.
 
For the next quarter of a century Cowden languished in the second division. However, the club's most famous result was recorded during this period, a 3-2 League Cup win against Rangers at Ibrox in 1949. The second leg attracted a record crowd of 25,000 to Central Park and Cowden were only seconds away from causing a huge upset when Rangers scored a controversial equaliser to take the tie into extra time, eventually going on to win 5-4 on aggregate.
 
The 50's were lean time for Cowden but they had a serious tilt at promotion in 1957 and managed to reach the League Cup semi-final in 1959 where they were resoundly thrashed 9-3 by Hearts at Easter Road. Cash flow problems led to the break-up of that side and the Miners plunged to the bottom of the league.
 
Cowden finally returned to the big time in 1970 but this was to last for a solitary season with the club only managing to collect 17 points. However, a second League Cup semi was reached. This time, Cowden put up a stiffer fight, going down 3-1 to Rangers at Hampden Park. The following season, Cowden appeared to be on course for a swift return to the top league but they proceeded to throw it all away and handed the promotion spot to Arbroath.
 
In 1981, the club came agonisingly close to stepping up to the new First Division but a missed penalty against Queen's Park on the final day of the season was to prove their undoing.
 
After a 22-year hiatus, Cowden won promotion again in 1992. On a hot summers day on the final day of the season, an unbelieveably large crowd assembled at Recreation Park, Alloa, to witness a promotion decider. The match itself was instantly forgettable, a dour 0-0 draw, but the point was enough to see The Blue Brazil go up.
 
Due to league reconstruction the First Division was no longer the top division but it still included luminaries such as Dunfermline, Kilmarnock and Raith. Unfortunately the season turned out to be a disastrous one with Cowden being swiftly relegated. Around this time the famous old main stand was gutted by fire and only half of it remains.
 
This marked a period of decline during which Cowden endured an embarrassing run of 38 matches without a home win. With the club entrenched at the bottom of the league and crowds dwindling away to a mere handful of diehards the footballing future looked bleak.
 
Things began to turn around with the arrival of Craig Levein as manager. A former player at Central Park who was transferred to Hearts in a £40,000 deal, Levein restored dignity to Central Park led them into a promotion challenge. His success didn't go unnoticed at Tynecastle and the Edinburgh side whisked him away to be their new boss midway through the season. Gary Kirk stepped into the breach and successfully continued the good work started by Levein.
 
Under the guidance of Kirk, Cowden won promotion to the second division by beating Brechin 2-1 in a deciding match at Central Park on the final day of the season in front of 3000 spectators. This time, the Blue Brazil managed to stay up although Kirk departed along the way, being replaced by Keith Wright. With the club being relegated the following season, Cowden now find themselves back in the bottom division but the Blue Brazil are aiming for a swift return to the higher level.
 

Cowdenbeath FC