Blackburn Rovers usurped as derby rivalry has been reversed

DERBY DELIGHT: Ross Wallace at the final whistle and (below) a Burnley fan enjoys his day outDERBY DELIGHT: Ross Wallace at the final whistle and (below) a Burnley fan enjoys his day out
DERBY DELIGHT: Ross Wallace at the final whistle and (below) a Burnley fan enjoys his day out
Matt Smith (Doctor Who), Margaret Thatcher, Lee Mack, Jim Bowen, James Beattie, Jack Straw, Phil Jones, Robbie Savage, Jack Walker, Gary Bowyer and David Dunn – your boys took one hell of a beating!

Remember the date – Sunday, March 9th 2014. Treasure it, savour it and store that episodic memory indelibly in the mind. Nobody can touch it. Nobody can take it away.

Remember the unison of 4,500-plus fans housed within the Bryan Douglas Darwen End. Remember reactions, interactions and celebrations. Remember the joy and elation shared by supporters, players and staff alike. Remember captain Jason Shackell’s primal scream and the despondency on the faces of the opposition. Remember how that triumph made us more than just record-breakers. It embodied our progression, ambition and just how together we are as a club.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

It was a moment that ranked among our two Wembley visits, that night at Stamford Bridge, the Carling Cup semi-final tie with Spurs, and an unprecedented triumph over Manchester United. It was reward for our patience, our perseverance, our endeavour. It was a privilege to witness such a comeback – not just in terms of the result, but in the fortunes of the respective clubs.

A chicken fan 

Photo by Dave Howarth/CameraSport

Football - The Football League Sky Bet Championship - Saturday 9th March 2014 - Blackburn Rovers v Burnley - Ewood Park - Blackburn

© CameraSport - 43 Linden Ave. Countesthorpe. Leicester. England. LE8 5PG - Tel: +44 (0) 116 277 4147 - admin@camerasport.com - www.camerasport.comA chicken fan 

Photo by Dave Howarth/CameraSport

Football - The Football League Sky Bet Championship - Saturday 9th March 2014 - Blackburn Rovers v Burnley - Ewood Park - Blackburn

© CameraSport - 43 Linden Ave. Countesthorpe. Leicester. England. LE8 5PG - Tel: +44 (0) 116 277 4147 - admin@camerasport.com - www.camerasport.com
A chicken fan Photo by Dave Howarth/CameraSport Football - The Football League Sky Bet Championship - Saturday 9th March 2014 - Blackburn Rovers v Burnley - Ewood Park - Blackburn © CameraSport - 43 Linden Ave. Countesthorpe. Leicester. England. LE8 5PG - Tel: +44 (0) 116 277 4147 - [email protected] - www.camerasport.com

And now Rovers’ only hold over Burnley – that had stretched close to 35 years – has gone up in smoke. Which antiquated claims of superiority will be regurgitated by those at Ewood Park now? Premier League champions of 1995? Who cares. We’ve been champions of England twice and we didn’t buy it once!

The performance at Turf Moor earlier in the season suggested that the margins were tightening, but now that tangible string of hope which Rovers had been desperately clinging on to has finally thawed. The East Lancashire rivalry has seen a reverse, and Rovers have been usurped.

For a club that was a single game from oblivion in 1987 – competing against neighbours who would go on to enjoy a lucrative two-decade spree of splashing the cash courtesy of Walker’s riches – it’s a phenomenal achievement.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

That dominance has been vented so vehemently by those just 15 miles down the M65 for years – ever since the club inherited the fortune to make £5m striker Chris Sutton the first £10,000 per week footballer.

But those halcyon days, where Rovers were once cast in Burnley’s overbearing shadow, could be set to make a return. A huge gulf separated the clubs when the Clarets returned to England’s top tier as Second Division champions in 1972/73, with Rovers glued to the hierarchy’s Third Division following relegation in 1970/71.

That’s where, folklore suggests, the phrase “No Nay Never” was coined and popularised. And that historic expression could soon have renewed meaning in the current clime.

Talk of a return to the Premier League could still be premature, but promotion could postpone one of the country’s fiercest and most passionate derbies for some period. Or at least negate that competitive edge. This group has shown no fear and, Michael Duff aside, they don’t know how it feels to lose a derby. That’s enhanced the trepidation down the road.

Hide Ad