Dundee chairman Tim Keyes. McPake sympathises with Nelms and owner Tim Keyes James McPake thought watching player after player lose their jobs at Livingston was bad enough. From a classic Frozen Gin and Tonic to…
Super tasty and fabulously fruity, frozen gin cocktails are a great way to transform your favourite tipple into the ultimate cooldown slushie. It is a good question.“The Academy was our goal when we came in but we got side-tracked when we won the league and went up. Dundee finished 8th in the 2015–16 Scottish Premiership, notably relegating rivals Dundee United at Dens Park. They don’t want to be doing it.“They don’t want to see people losing their jobs and they don’t want to be asking their players to take wage cuts. The floating Copenhagen islands are made from recycled materials and aim to offer visitors places for relaxing, fishing and entertaining. The Mediamatic ETEN greenhouse restaurant is helping people enjoy outdoor dining again and could point the way to the future of global restaurants. The Championship club’s ballot paper was … Dundee’s main supporters group have knocked back the latest offer from the club’s American owner to buy shares from … Dundee owner Tim Keyes, left, and managing director John Nelms have been in regular discussions Dundee say it was their “intention” to vote against the SPFL’s proposals to call a halt to the Scottish season. I would like to see the new stadium.“I think if things were stagnant then maybe we would re-evaluate.“But with this coming in (Performance Centre) and hopefully getting the new stadium off the ground, will keep us here for the next five, 10, 15 years.”Keyes jets in to Scotland for Dundee games when he can but most of the time he views the club’s games back in the States on TV and he admitted what unfolded last season was a painful watch.He also confessed he was baffled that the Dark Blues still dropped out of the Premiership despite having a big budget.Keyes said: “It was very difficult and very painful.“But the most painful of all for us was I had seen a statistic somewhere that said we had the sixth highest payroll in the Premiership last year.“Then you see our results and I said to John (managing director Nelms), ‘How can we be relegated?’.“It was not like we weren’t spending the money to stay up. Dundee owner Tim Keyes admits the cost of running the club has been more than he initially bargained for but he is still determined to … Sport Football Tim Keyes says he’s at Dundee for the long term IT IS not such a new phenomenon in England, where there are as many as five top-flight clubs owned by American investors. Dundee owner Tim Keyes insists he is aiming for long-term involvement at the Dens Park club. Dundee owner Tim Keyes admits the cost of running the club has been more than he initially bargained for but he is still determined to oversee long-term success on and off the field for the Dark Blues.The American has pumped a small fortune into Dens since he took control in 2013.Overall, it would be fair to say he has not had a satisfactory return on his investment, especially considering the devastating blow of relegation last season.Despite that, Keyes is still very much committed to the club and he welcomed developments such as the Academy moving into their new home at the Regional Performance Centre for Sport at Caird Park.He also admitted that he would like to see tangible progress on the mooted stadium development and if there was, he could envisage being the Dundee owner for the foreseeable future.When asked if he still saw the club as a long-term project, Keyes said: “Yes, I think we do.“It has been a little bit more financially demanding than what we thought but we got into it partially because we love football.“I started playing soccer in the US when I was three so it has been a lifelong ambition for us.“We are still here and we want to see things progress.
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