Hi Guys,
I hope you don't mind me posting this ahead of the game today, but Rochdale fans are trying to raise money for a statue day the ground of a fan who passed away and left everything to the club.
The article below was beautifully written by Matt Dickenson of The Times earlier this week and sums up why we want to raise funds.
David Clough adored Rochdale – now they will immortalise him in bronze
The lifelong fan raised £400,000 for the club and left them his entire estate last year – to be spent on the supporters, not a new striker
According to those who knew David Clough, the idea of a bronze statue immortalising him in his flat cap and thick glasses would have horrified a modest man. He was the last to seek recognition
Salt of the earth? Clough was the very definition of the phrase as he cycled home from work at the local bakery and, most familiarly, did his rounds selling scratchcards and collecting weekly draw tickets for his beloved Rochdale AFC.
“David collected money for the club virtually every waking hour, supported by his dearly loved wife, Dorothy, who took care of the paperwork, and counted t’brass,” the club noted of their most devoted supporter. “Many fans will remember seeing him on the streets of Littleborough on his bike, completely wet through, dutifully collecting 50p here and there for his beloved club, with a smile and a profanity.”
Without the likes of Clough, lower league football clubs would wither. He was a real-life version of Gordon Ottershaw in Ripping Yarns; obsessed by Barnstoneworth United, even after six years without a win; teaching his son (first name Barnstoneworth, middle name United) to recite the great teams off by heart; hurling pot plants through the window in despair at another loss.
Clough was a lifelong Dale fan who witnessed the club’s only three promotions, from their first in 1969, living on the same street as record scorer Reg Jenkins. He took up helping with the Goldbond cash draw and scratchcards, selling hundreds of them weekly and dutifully amassing the coins from his collection rounds.
He could not drive so everything had to be done by bike, which he carried out, unfailingly in all weathers, for almost 30 years. By the time Clough died last June, aged 78, it was estimated that he had single-handedly raised more than £400,000 for Rochdale. Pretty astonishing, but there was more.
Clough and his wife had not been able to have children — “they fostered, which tells you what sort of people they were,” Richard Wild, a close friend, explains — so he left his entire estate to Rochdale. Almost £250,000, it turned out.
Wild, a Championship assistant referee who befriended Clough when he was also working on the club’s fundraising, is one of the executors of his will. He was by Clough’s side when he passed away in a nursing home.
“David said that he didn’t want the money going on a centre forward who would disappear after a couple of years,” Wild says. “He wanted it spent on something to benefit the fans, something he would always be able to look down on and see.”
A new electronic scoreboard at Spotland Stadium, now the Crown Oil Arena, is already in the planning and there are discussions about other ways to upgrade supporters’ facilities that are hard to maintain at a League One club badly hit by the pandemic. Clough’s devotion and generosity will make a lasting difference.
Then came the idea for a statue. Another fan, Mark Cryer, who never met Clough, heard about the bequeathal and thought it was only appropriate to mark Clough’s loyalty.
The notion of a statue was taken from Valencia, who commissioned a lifelike bronze of Vicente Navarro Aparicio and erected it in the fan’s seat at the Mestalla. Aparicio had continued to watch matches despite losing his sight, and there are plenty of parallels with Clough.
One of his last games supporting his beloved Dale was an emotional afternoon in May 2018 when they were saved from relegation by Joe Thompson, who had twice recovered from cancer and then scored the winning goal. Clough was at the match in a wheelchair, blind after a stroke.
“We were commentating for him, screaming our heads off when Joe Thompson scored that goal to save us,” Wild says. “At the final whistle, knowing we were safe, David burst into tears.” He would enjoy one more game, a home win over Accrington Stanley, before passing away.
An initial target of £2,500 to build a statue was quickly passed — a decent version will cost several times that — and the total is climbing towards £6,000, helped by donations from fans of other clubs who have been touched by Clough’s story.
The statue will sit in Clough’s seat in the main stand, where he enjoyed his passion of supporting the Dale through thick and thin. “Hopefully it will be just as he was, with his flat cap and those thick glasses,” Wild says. “He won’t mind me saying he was a quirky looking chap but he was the most wonderful, down-to-earth man you could meet.
“He would have hated all this attention, not his style at all, but it’s great that fans not just from Rochdale but other clubs think he is worthy of this recognition. The world would be a much better place if there were more David Cloughs. We miss him dearly. He would have been 79 on Thursday.” His voice cracks a little as he says it.
To donate visit www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/davidclough
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Comments
Wonderful story, thank you.
Hats off to David Clough.
Proper football man.
Donated - good luck.
A remarkable story. What a guy David must have been, and so wonderfully supported by his wife Dorothy who sounds as though she had a huge part to play. Hopefully she is in robust health.
Rochdale have gone through some really challenging times. For a superb account see The Overcoat Men by Mark Hodkinson. Through it all David seemingly just kept going about his great work.
Very best wishes for the statue project. I will be donating. And give Dorothy a big hug!
A legend in Rochdale and a legend here in his Cornish home village.
Sadly Reg passed away a few years ago. But he's fondly remembered.
Our football ground has been re-named Jenkins Park in his honour.
Great post, @Rochdale_Supporter
How long ago was it now? ...... ah, yeah, 45 years ago ........ I went out with a bird from Rochdale for a couple of months.
Used to go to Spotland with her old man. There would only be about a 1,000 or so in the ground, but it was down to earth and friendly - plenty of dry old banter. Everybody seemed to know each other. Proper club.
Even now I still look out for their results.
Surely that's disrespectful, which is the opposite of what's trying to be achieved.
The money should be used as he wanted: to the benefit of the fans.
Quote:
"An initial target of £2,500 to build a statue was quickly passed — a decent version will cost several times that — and the total is climbing towards £6,000, helped by donations from fans of other clubs who have been touched by Clough’s story."
It's other Rochdale fans having a whip round and fund raising amongst themselves; plus donations from other club's fans.
I get your point about the statue ...... but it's not going to be an in your face statue in a prominent place outside the main entrance.
It'll be a discreet figure of David Clough sitting in his regular seat in the stand ...... like he's still watching the game.
Why don't the fans use the money they raise to buy a season ticket for the seat for as many years as possible, and for every match give the seat for free to a different schoolkid? This would help grow support and be exactly what the guy would have wanted.
I was merely saying what the Rochdale supporters' plan was.
And what they wanted to do with their own fund raising.
David Clough's money will be spent on supporter improvements and benefits.
As he intended.
I just think that any money they raise in honour of David Clough should ALSO be used in a manner that he would have wanted.
Of course, we can't asked him now but if the people who knew him are sure that he would have been embarrassed by a statue, don't even consider it.
Football fans have raised over £10,000 to erect a statue of a "superfan" who left his estate to Rochdale FC.
David Clough, 78, who died in 2020, raised an estimated £500,000 for the club selling Goldbond lottery tickets.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-manchester-58560855