Talk:Derby County F.C.

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[edit] Origin of the Rams nickname

It would be nice if the article explained the origin of The Rams' nickname. From what I've found http://vitaminq.blogspot.com/2005_05_01_vitaminq_archive.html and http://www.ilkcam.com/2002/020310/Derby%20Ram.html it is because men from Derby served in the 1st Battalion Worcestershire and Sherwood Foresters Regiment, whose mascot is the ram. I haven't checked up on how reliable these sources are though, so I haven't added it to the article. KeithD 13:01, 31 July 2006 (UTC)

Are you aware of the old folk-song 'The Wonderful Derby Ram'? (see your second ref.) It's probably pagan-fertility rite in origin?? Bob aka Linuxlad 13:00, 29 May 2007 (UTC)

A match programme from West Ham United (1970s I believe) that I used to possess claimed that the nickname was related to a ram belonging to a local member of the gentry that fell down a well. MnJWalker (talk) 03:16, 19 January 2008 (UTC)


[edit] Famous Derby County Fans

Kelli Young of Liberty X,Simon Groom Ex Blue Peter Presenter Late &70's & Early 80's ,Wendy Holden (Chick Lit Authoress).Tracy Shaw should be removed because she switched to Manchester United—Preceding unsigned comment added by Ariesking (talk • contribs) 1 November 2006

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[edit] Andy Garner

Just wondering if anyone can confirm his league stats while at the Rams. This site lists both his Derby and Blackpool stats as being 159 (37). - Dudesleeper · Talk 19:31, 25 February 2007 (UTC)

Answer provided here. Thanks. - Dudesleeper · Talk 14:07, 27 March 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Recent Years

The part that claims that homegrown talent such as Tom Huddlestone and Lee Grant were sold due to financial issues needs to be changed. Tom Huddlestone was sold, but Lee Grant is still a Derby County footballer.—Preceding unsigned comment added by 161.73.34.121 (talkcontribs) 10 May 2007

[edit] local rivals

Certainly when I was a kid in Derby in the 50s and 60s, the Chesterfield-Sheffield-Leeds axis seemed, (together with Leicester), more 'close' than the people of the West Midlands. It's probably the good communications (midland main line and M1) and the common 'smoke stack' heritage that does it, as much as any FC rivalries. (Oh, and of course the Danelaw, :-)) Bob aka Linuxlad 12:57, 29 May 2007 (UTC)

While I'm not so convinced by Chesterfield (too small) and Sheffield (I'm a Derby ex-pat living there and neither club sees Derby as a local rival), I am in complete agreement with you about the West Midlands clubs not being rivals to Derby. No Derby fan sees them as anything other than another game (there was not mention of the play-off final being a local derby match). There's at least three of us who have reverted the change back, but one anonymous user keeps on putting it back. They also seem to want to downplay the rivalry with Leicester, which, given that some Derby fans see them as bigger rivals than Forest, seems like an odd move. - Green Tentacle 22:13, 30 May 2007 (UTC)

[edit] History Section

After reading comments in the edit summary by Green Tentacle ([2]) I agree that we might need to move the history section to a new page, as it is getting fairly long, and maybe even putting potential readers off reading the article. Maybe we could place the current version of the history on the new page History of Derby County F.C., and leave a shorter outline of the history on this page with a link to the new one. This has been done on the featured article Manchester City F.C., and I think it could work here too. What does everyone else think? - Boy1jhn 09:03, 1 August 2007 (UTC)

If nobody has any objections to the plan outlined above, I'll go ahead and carry it out tomorrow - Boy1jhn 16:14, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Current Squad

The link for Matthew Richards leads to the Matt Richards that plays for Ipswich, unless we have made a new signing that I don't know about I think this is the wrong player.

You're right, I've looked at Matthew Richards profile on the Derby Website (here) and it says he graduated from the Derby academy, meaning the two are different people. I've changed the link. Boy1jhn 11:18, 9 August 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Shirt Sponsors

Further research suggestion: weren't Derby the first English (British?) club to carry shirt sponsorship - for the carmakers Saab? As I understand it the pre-season team photograph (season?) was taken with the newly-adorned strip, but the sponsors name did not appear during a competitive football match. Could be an amendment to the Shirt Sponsor or history section? --Paulowanchope 12:07, 22 August 2007 (UTC)

Yes you are correct, but the move was quahsed by the football authorities. MnJWalker (talk) 03:20, 19 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] web citation.

This article could do with a ref list and a load of citations to help support it. :/ Govvy 16:45, 1 September 2007 (UTC)


[edit] Screwed up Squad

No way Derby has those players. Someone fix that shit up. It's embarrassing. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 121.217.60.11 (talk) 12:32, 14 October 2007 (UTC)

Please don't use offensive language. It has been kept for a record of your actions. Derby do have those players, so live with it if your not a Derby fan. Or, if it really is wrong, then either discuss it, or Be Bold and change it, but leave an edit summary - otherwise you may be reverted for vandalism. Bluegoblin7 13:33, 14 October 2007 (UTC)

Someone, obviously more responsible then yourself fixed the squad up. But earlier, the squad had a bunch of international superstars. Talk is cheap, but there was no way Gomez was the number 10 for Derby. He is at Stuttgart, and I don't think Robinho has ever played at Derby either. I could be wrong though, use your all great patronising insight into the EPL to figure it out. By the way, what you've said has been kept as a record of your actions with Barclays. Derby didn't have those players, live with it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 121.218.205.80 (talk) 12:34, 28 October 2007 (UTC)

No, I agree. Derby didn't have the int'l players, but when I wrote that, there was the proper squad there. And I'm not patronising anything. And, like I said: Be Bold and change it if you have a problem. Bluegoblin7 15:40, 28 October 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Directors

Derby have confirmed that Trevor Birch (CEO) is no longer in their empoyment. http://www.dcfc.premiumtv.co.uk/page/NewsDetail/0,,10270~1147537,00.html —Preceding unsigned comment added by 79.69.147.204 (talk) 12:24, 20 October 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Updating Current Squad

Hi, apologies for the ignorance. How do you update the current squad? When I click to edit that section, it just comes up with the code to bring up the squad (ie: Two open squiggly brackets then Derby County current squad then two closing squiggly brackets", but not the squad itself. Do I have to go to another page to edit this? Thanks all. (The change was that Hossam Ghaly has been given squad number 40). Thanks Duncshine (talk) 11:39, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

Hi Duncshine. The page is a template, accessible at {{Derby County current squad}}, but in the meantime I have made the edit for you. Bluegoblin7 11:51, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Recent Times

Up to when should recent times become part of the clib's history? I moved the taking over of the club by Peter Gadsby et al to club history as it is now almost 2 years ago and the club has a new board now. I propose that the recent times section should be restricted to events of the current season ie. - it should start with the close season prior to the current campaign.

Also I attempted to improve the opening section of the article by including a brief summary of the clubs grounds, formation and trophies though this was removed and accussed of being repetitive vandalism. I don't see how it is considering that the majority of other Premiership and Championship clubs have such a section and I was merely brining the Derby page inline with this.

thanks AnOrdinaryBoy (talk) 15:24, 25 March 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Keeper's defiant gesture to Nazis

As Usual there was plenty to talk about as supporters poured out of football grounds all over Britain on the second Saturday of the 1939-40 season.

Yet the atmosphere on the buses and trams taking fans home for their tea on that sultry afternoon was strangely muted.

The usual post-match chatter about goals scored and chances missed had given way to discussions about much graver concerns.

Germany had just invaded Poland, the Luftwaffe was in the skies over Warsaw and, for the second time in a generation, war appeared inevitable. For once, the result of a football match hardly seemed to matter.

The mood in Derby, where barrage balloons hovered overhead, was no different from any other town or city.

At the Baseball Ground, Jack Nicholas had scored a penalty midway through the second half to give Derby County a 1-0 win over Aston Villa.

The crowd of 8,000 hurried out, pondering the future. As it turned out, they had seen the Rams' last match in the Football League for more than seven years.

The following day, war was declared and the competition closed down for the duration.

The Evening Telegraph commented: "We will see no more football until the whistle blows on the grim conflict on which Britain is now engaged."

If the thoughts of spectators and players were indeed elsewhere, then Nicholas, scorer of the Rams' last pre-war goal, may well have been reflecting on the moment when a Derby County goalkeeper made a brave show of defiance against the Nazis.

Five years earlier, Overseal-born Jack Kirby could not have made his distaste for Adolf Hitler's regime more public.

At the end of the 1933-34 season, the Rams could consider themselves one of the leading sides in the country. They had just finished fourth in the top flight and had reached the fifth round of the FA Cup before going out 1-0 to the legendary team of the era, Arsenal.

The German FA were looking for attractive visitors to make a four-match trip to their country. Derby County were in the top four and their team contained England players Tommy Cooper, Sammy Crooks, Jack Bowers and Errington Keen. The Rams fitted the bill admirably.

By train to Dover and then a cross-Channel steamer to Ostend, the Rams party eventually reached the German border to find a country swathed in the swastika emblem. After Hitler's success in the elections of March 1933, the Nazi State was firmly established.

Dave Holford was a 19-year-old outside-left from Scarborough, excited to be included in the tour party despite his lack of experience.

He recalled: "Everywhere we went, the swastika was flying. If you said 'good morning,' they'd reply with 'heil Hitler.' If you went into a cafe and said 'Good evening', they would respond with 'heil Hitler'. Even then, you could see this was a country preparing for war."

The Rams were scheduled to play four matches, all against various teams styled as a 'German XI'. And it was here that Derby County, one of the strongest teams in England, came to realise the power of German football.

Derby lost 5-0 in Cologne, 5-2 in Frankfurt, 1-0 in Dusseldorf and drew 1-1 in Dortmund.

The Rams lost Cooper and Crooks, who left to play for England in Hungary and Czechoslovakia, but only after the two big defeats. There were no excuses for the Rams coming off second best to some well-organised German teams.

All agreed that, if the football had been hard work, overall the tour had been an enjoyable one. Good hotels and plenty of time to relax and enjoy the scenery were just the ticket after a strenuous English season.

There was, though, one overriding blot on the collective memory.

Just as the England team were obliged to do in Berlin, four years later, the Rams players of 1934 were ordered to give the Nazi salute before each game.

Before he died in 1989, Rams full-back George Collin, who captained the side when Cooper left for England duty, recalled: "We told the manager, George Jobey, that we didn't want to do it. He spoke with the directors, but they said that the British ambassador insisted we must.

"He said that the Foreign Office were afraid of causing an international incident if we refused. It would be a snub to Hitler at a time when international relations were so delicate.

"So we did as we were told. All except our goalkeeper, Jack Kirby, that is. Jack was adamant that he wouldn't give the salute.

"When the time came, he just kept his arm down and almost turned his back on the dignitaries, If anyone noticed, they didn't say anything."

It was a brave gesture by the goalkeeper who went on to play almost 200 games for Derby before moving to Folkestone Town as player-manager. Five years after his defiant stand against the Nazis, all that the Rams party had feared came to pass.

—Preceding unsigned comment added by 172.189.102.65 (talk) 17:07, 30 April 2008 (UTC)