Could you provide any further details of age of the rock, location and scale?
Assuming that they're African (going purely on your biography) there are reports of didactyl footprints from the Lower Jurassic of Morocco (Ishigaki & Lockley, 2010) that superficially match the print in question (perhaps the divarication angle is a narrow and the heel too long though?)
Typical didactyl dinosaur trackways are often accredited to Dromaeosauripus, however, the phalangeal pads are missing in this speciments so this identification is probably wrong.
yes... it will be helpfull to see any picture of the track... and you also need to remember that dinosaur tracks (and all tracks) are studied in the field of animal behavior rather than dinosaur taxonomy (parataxonomy). Dinosaur tracks can be surely related to a certain dinosaur lineage based on anatomy and known diversity of the formation, but allways are named following the inconolgic parataxonomy. Thus, reference to a certain lineage or species is only a hypothesis.