maybe they just got the main character wrong? (apopogies to those who have already read it) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - "Ok Keith, we're given you the job until the end of the season. We want you to keep Dale up, and if you can manage that, we'll sit down and we'll have a look......" And so began the most wonderful footballing story that we've ever had the pleasure to witness. It's hard to appreciate that their original remit was simply to keep Dale in the football league. For now, looking at relegation dogfights between Stockport or Lincoln or Barnet or Burton just brings out the voyeurism in us all, but that was exactly the hell hole that we wanted Hill to drag us away from. "We'll take 22nd now...." What we got was far different. With just the odd tweak here and there, what we got was this team of relegation favourites transformed into this wonderful attacking side that ripped sides to shreds at will. Footballed to death as it became so appreciatively known. And hopes of finishing 22nd even gave way to outside chances of reaching the play offs such was the turnaround in our fortunes, and the Dale fans certainly found their pride again. The stats showed at the end of that first season that under Hill's charge, we had performed at title winning levels with those sides eventually promoted despatched at will. We couldn't stop smiling. We had it all, no fear home and away and goals scored for fun. We had title parties spoiled, we had promotion favourites hammered and the record breaking tightest defence in the league were despatched for seven goals on their own pitch, and if that wasn't enough, we even had Hilly djing in Studds in celebration of that afternoon. I don’t recall Taggart ever doing that in the Birtles suite or whatever it’s called. So how do you follow up six months of champagne football? After all, this was Rochdale and we'd learned from years of bitter experience that just when we think we're on the precipice of something good, it comes back to bite us on our backside. We'd learned our place in football the hard way. But what we learned was the Rochdale rule book had been torn up at every chance Hill was given, and that primary six months was simply a taster of what was to come. The Champagne football continued, with the corks popping at Dale’s first ever visit to Wembley through the Play Offs. Coming within a whisker of automatic promotion, we recovered from a two goal defecit and an almost vengeful refereeing decision to beat Darlington on penalties to make it to the ground formerly known as the twin towers. Northampton was great, but it was always on the cards. Muirhead’s penalty remains the moment that has brought the most amount of joy from watching Dale. The final was a step too far, and with Perkins suspended and Doolan spherical, a patched up Dale saw Simon Ramsden make his debut as a central midfielder, with the forever unworkable Alfie and Dagnall up front, and despite these deficiencies we made a decent stab at it before coming away as 3-2 losers. Of course, hindsight has shown that Stockport victory was founded on the back of finances built on sand, with Stockport heading into administration just months after in what looked like footballing suicide to outsiders. Our sell to survive mentality had seen us sell Glenn Murray in the run up to Wembley and it’s been considered many a time what might have happened had we played the admin card and lived off unpaid debts. Around this time, we saw Keith Hill become something of a political beast. He had no time for teams who cheated in the way that Stockport did, and he had no issue letting people know exactly how he felt, and the burning effigies of him in Bournemouth, Rotherham, Nottingham etc did nothing but spur him on his just morale crusade against clubs that were operated on an unfair playing field. Even to this day, it’s almost impossible to log on to the Notts Mad forum and fail to see a thread without his name on it. Season three will no doubt be labelled as the disappointing season in years to come, as for the only time during Hill’s time at the club we failed to finish higher than we did in the previous season. Of course, that failure saw us finish comfortably in the Play Offs though we were always up against it after a goalless draw in the home leg against Gillingham. That failure was the sort of season that we’d have chewed off our arm for given most of our Dale supporting years, and done so on the back of the sale of our best player from the previous season. That defeat against Gillingham brought a weird feeling of realism to the Dale fanbase. Not longer were expectations getting the better of us after the meteoric rise under Hill, and the general consensus amongst the support was that a third consecutive visit to the Play Offs was beyond us, as Hill had failed to sort out the defence frailties of Stanton and McCardle, especially given that a pre-season injury to McArdle meant us starting the season with a lad who’s only venture onto the Spotland pitch had been as a supporter celebrating Muirhead’s goal. Confidence wasn’t boosted when not for the first time under Hill we were forced to sell our top scorer – this time to one of the sides we’d be competing against at the top end of the division. This was not the way to fight a promotion campaign, and the loan signing of a striker who had about 47 unsuccessful loan spells in the previous three seasons did nowt to send us Dale fans rushing to the bookies to lump on a promotion bid. What followed was the best year of my life. This Dale side, minus its top scorer and a stand in teenage defender drafted in from Radcliffe Borough, became the sort of side that we couldn’t even fantasise about. We were a League Two version of 70’s Holland and a modern day Barcelona rolled into one. We steamrollered sides with fantastic display after fantastic display, and fantasy football was no longer just a term for the throw in counting geeks any more. We were perfect, and we didn’t just beat teams, we butchered them leaving them as wrecks. A top of the table clash away at Bournemouth saw us return four goals to the good and what was deemed to be a promotion play off with Rotherham has arguably seen them still not recover from that fateful night at Spotland. Whilst the season ended without silverware, it did finish with one of the best nights of our lives as promotion parties all over town continued into the small hours as forty one years of hurt came to an end. And again in hindsight, the lack of a title was far from a fluffing it up as those loveable magpies deemed it to be. It was a declaration by Keith Hill, as we waved the players in from the pavilion. The League Two innings was over and it was time to start work ten games early on the League One campaign. The job was done and Dale were promoted for the first time in most fans’ lifetimes. In reality, that should have been it for the Keith Hill era. Having been the first man to lead Dale to promotion since man had walked on the moon, the jobs should have been queuing up and besides, what else could be achieved at Spotland? Surely Hill was always going to be on a hiding to nothing by staying at a club where finances dictated that signings were made from those clubs not good enough for League Two. Never right the man off. And if the previous season was the stuff of fairytales, they simply continued with aplomb as we stood face to face against teams we’d only previously seen on Match of the Day, and came away as worthy winners. A second successive promotion wasn’t even considered by a set of supporters who even sang about staying up in the second week of August. The League One campaign showed a new feather in Hill’s cap. Previously, it appeared the tactics were simply go out and scare them to death. Now, we were more mature adding a level of tactical genius to our armoury being able to frustrate the opposition whilst still retaining footballing principles. Demands for a return to 4-4-2 seemed desperately old fashioned as we came with three points of making the Play Offs. So there you go, a snap shot of four and a half of years of what has been without doubt the greatest time of our lives as Dale supporters. No arguably about it, we’ve been spoilt rotten to levels we could not even dream about, and to take any of what we have enjoyed for granted is a massive insult to the fantastic work done by Hill and Flicker during this time. To put it into any sort of perspective, we did a piece celebrating Hill's three years in charge at the club not so long back, and from memory one of the things that we asked you to do was to write down your top five moments from supporting Dale. By now, we could ask you to write down your top twenty five moments from supporting Dale, and if out of those you have less than twenty that have come from the Hillcroft era, then you're lying to yourself. The clichés are spot on when we say the history books have been rewritten, and any bitterness that we might have because we’ve lost a goalkeeping coach or that it took Barnsley ten days to offer Keith the tools he needs to do the job will do you no good at all. (Incidentally, do you think the Barnsley FC board of directors have realised yet that they now work for Keith rather than the other way round?). Do not judge a manager on your perceptions of day 1628 of his time in charge. When it comes to assessing Hill’s time, there are no “buts” surrounding his exit. Given the short term life of managerial careers these days, we've probably had at least eighteen months more out of Keith that we could ever have hoped for. We've seen Howe, Adams, Robins etc all poached during the time that Keith opted to stay with Dale and see the job through, and then some.