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Osama bin Ant

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  1. Ashfield moved to New Saracen Park in the mid 30s. Perthshire's ground was black ash until 1983. Their first match on the new grass surface was against... Ashfield.
  2. Apart from greyhound racing and speedway, the White City also had cheetah racing around 1939. It was an idea brought north from the London White City. Possibly the same company owned both tracks? The only difference between the two types of animal racing was that the dogs chased a mechanical hare while the cheetahs went after a lump of raw meat. The big factory in the top left corner is the Harland & Wolff "Glasshouse". Under the northern edge of this factory was St Anthony's first park (1904-1906), which never had a name and was described as a patch of waste ground at the foot of Hamilton Street (since demolished and rebuilt as Nethan Street). The ground was not enclosed and had no facilities at all so could not be used for cup-ties. The players used to change in the League of the Cross Hall (aka League Hall) which still stands and until recently was occupied by McKay Flooring Ltd. When the Ants played their first competitive match in 1905 it was played on the Ibrox Practice Ground (top right, opposite the main stand in Edmiston Drive), ironically by permission of Oldco FC! The building which looks like a kiddies' bouncy castle at the south end of the original Moore Park was Moorepark House, which gave it's name to the football ground built in its formerly extensive gardens.
  3. If you mean the one on the east side of Helen Street on the other side of Edmiston Drive, I have seen two aerial photos of it. One where it was definitely a (very small) football pitch. In the other it appeared to be a car park with vans parked on it. I asked around but got no satisfactory answer. So sorry, can't help you.
  4. There are actually three lost Junior grounds visible in the photo of Govan. New Moore Park was originally two pitches running north/south. Many minor teams played there, including works teams, juveniles and the Govan Pleasant Sunday Afternoon team. The Ants took over in 1929 and turned it into one pitch running east/west. Harland & Wolff held the lease. Above New Moore Park in the photo is the original Moore Park (aka Moorepark), lying derelict by this time and awaiting the construction of the "Wine Alley" housing estate. It lay on the west side of Broomloan Road and ran north/south. The Ants took it over in 1906 when Co-operative United FC (a Junior side) went bust. It was always described as a "model enclosure" and probably held five or six thousand fans after the Ants made considerable improvements. You had to go through a works yard to get to the payboxes from Broomloan Road. The Ants sub-let the ground to juvenile teams, including Govan Emerald and Govan Hibs. Fifty yards to the north is Gymnasium Park, Benburb's second ground – just too far away from Moore Park to lob a brick or bottle. It was originally the Govan Police Sports Association ground, renamed by the Bens when they moved in 1912. It was a very tight little ground running east/west and abutting Broomloan Road. The railway goods yard fans out behind the north side of the park and there is a whitewashed factory building at the north-east corner. Fairfield Shipyard held the lease and their Junior team played there a few years before the Bens.
  5. Hi there,

    Thank you for the info on Donald Watt. I've spoken to a few ex-players who feel aggrieved at being listed as players who didn't play a game when they have competed in Glasgow Cup games etc so that was news to me. Thank you.

    I have been advised that he may reside in Falkirk so I'll do a bit of digging there as well and hopefully I'll find him.

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