Summary
STEPHEN Kenny has an acute sense of history for one so young. Just 35, he was not even born when Dunfermline stomped across Europe in the Sixties and reached three domestic cup finals. Now, following in the footfalls of such men as Jock Stein, he prepares to lead the East End Park team into a Scottish Cup semi-final at a stadium the Dubliner has learned to revere.
Earlier this year Kenny attended a Hall of Fame dinner and met Willie Cunningham, a predecessor from those halcyon days. Cunningham took the club to a Scottish Cup final against Celtic, which they lost. But on another two occasions the club triumphed in the final, in 1961 and 1968. It truly was the best of times.See the full content of this document
Extract
Kenny Keen to Seize the Moment
The group of players who then wore the famous black and white stripes have never forgotten the sense of achievement, and comradeship. Many were reunited at the same dinner, and the bonhomie Kenny detected t...
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