Dundee fans deserve better
Calum Melville talked a good game when he first cruised up to Dens Park in his Bentley.
The Aberdeen-supporting multi-millionaire talked the talk, but now he seems unwilling, or unable, to walk the walk.
Melville, who once phoned me to complain that he was worth £130m and not the mere £90m that I had reported, needs to provide just 0.35% of that fortune to meet the demands of the tax man, who some think is threatening the club with administration.
Do the sums. .
If you or I had ten grand in the bank, it would be like shelling out £350.
Not too much to ask surely after his brash promises about a three-to-five-year plan to restore Dundee's fortunes.
Melville answered a newspaper advertisement for an investor from the Dens Park board.
No one twisted his arm to join up, and for a long time he's enjoyed the kind of positive publicity that a PR firm would have charged him an arm and a leg for.
The players on the park may not have delivered, but now the major investor looks like he may not be keen to deliver either, and long before the game has ended.

They pay me to watch football and talk football. That’s some people's idea of Christmas every day. I can't deny it's mine too. I view the football world through a different lens from some journalists, because I live and work in Dundee. The Old Firm are interesting, but so was my breakfast this morning. There is a whole lot more on the Scottish football menu than the big two. From the SPL to the juniors, the game offers lots of dishes, and they all get my taste buds going.