Monday, 24 October 2016

Little Devilment From The Red Devils As Port Weather No Storm

 And so to the Angel Telecom Stadium, the sponsor's name sounding much better (for once !) than the original Keighley Road Stadium. It's the home of the Cobbydalers, Silsden AFC, and the venue for today's North West Counties fixture against Whitchurch Alport.

The first ever Silsden AFC was formed at a meeting at Silsden Liberal Club in September 1904, adopting the blue and white playing kit that had been used by the recently defunct village rugby club. A field adjacent to the original rugby field on Keighley Road was hired – and that same field is used to this day.

The Cobbydalers played in a variety of local competitions, bouncing round the Keighley & District, Bradford & District, West Riding County Amateur, South Craven, Airedale & Craven, Bradford Amateur and Wharfedale (Saturday) Leagues. When Keighley Cup holders Keighley Shamrocks withdrew from local football due to ground problems in the summer of (19)69, the club's players moved en masse to Silsden and a period of success was to follow. Seven Keighley Cups were won and the West Riding County Amateur League title was lifted at the end of the 1971/72 season.

But the club were expelled from the league at the end of the following term for failing to raise a team for a league cup final against Lower Hopton - citing injuries, which coincided with six players travelling to Wembley to watch the Leeds United/ Sunderland FA Cup Final....

The club joined the West Yorkshire League, which they won in the 1975/76 season. The Cobbydalers were then promptly expelled from this league following incidents between Silsden and Fryston players at the league's end of season presentation evening.

Having been readmitted to the West Riding County Amateur League at Division 1 level, promotion to the Premier followed two seasons later. Almost inevitably the club was again thrown out of the league 'for violent and abusive conduct by players and officials both on and off the field'.

As if a third expulsion in six years wasn't enough, the club saw their facilities taken from them by the trustees of the ground. Sunday team Silsden United were installed as tenants and became the new Silsden AFC. Having rejoined the Craven League in 1980, the Cobbydalers were swiftly promoted but resigned from the league at Christmas 1988.

For seven years Silsden was without a Saturday team. Then Silsden Juniors took up the mantle in 1996 and, five successive promotions later, reached the West Riding County Amateur League Premier Division.

The Premier Division was won twice in 2003/04 and 2004/05 and after the second title the club was elected to the North West Counties, initially groundsharing with Keighley Cougars RLFC at Cougar Park. Having been promoted immediately to the Premier, the Cobbydalers moved back to Keighley Road for the start of the 2010/11 after the ground was extensively refurbished, and a £1.2m Sports Club erected. They were relegated back to the First Division at the end of last season.

The visiting side from Yockings Park, Whitchurch Alport FC, 'The Reds', was formed in 1946 and joined the Shrewsbury & District League. The club was named after Alport Farm on Alport Road, the home of local footballer Coley Maddocks, who was killed in action in the Second World War. As 1947/48 champions of the Shrewsbury & District League, the club was elected to the Birmingham League - but news of the proposed Mid Cheshire League reached the ears of the committee and this led to them becoming founder members.

Affectionately known as the 'Allbran Allstars', Alport were champions of the Mid Cheshire League in 1970, and are ten time winners of the Shropshire Cup. The Commander Ethelston Cup has also been won on numerous occasions, and the Reds became the last English club to win the Welsh Amateur Cup in 1974.

The club took the decision to move down to the Mercian Regional Football League in 2012, and, after squad strengthening and ground improvements, applied to join the North West Counties for the 2015/16 season. Initially denied by the FA, they were admitted on appeal. A torrid inaugural season ensued, with just two league victories and finishing bottom of the table.


And so onto Manchester Road and immediately the scene of some kamikaze and atrocious driving - a car stopped in no man's land at the traffic lights causing chaos, another car hits bus, and bus wins as the road is strewn with wreckage. Further on Indian restaurant Exotica has proved, well, too exotic for Sale and closed, but WAGS Grooming Salon next door is still flourishing.

Then Smart Motorway, with '32 vehicles running out of fuel in September' - so 32 not so smart drivers.... The average speed cameras prove no impediment for an Impulse Plants 'lorry-train' hurtling past me, as I join the M66 where hills are bathed in sunlight and I am (unfortunately) reacquainted with the blot on the landscape that is wind turbines.

Then Baxenden, the home of Holland's Pies, before turning onto the M65 and ignoring signs for Shuttlewoof Hall (a dog day care centre - what else !!). The motorway is brought to an abrupt end by Boundary Mill, and the bottleneck that is Colne....

Through the sprawling Cowling and then into Glusburn and Cross Hills, or Cross Hills and Glusburn if you approach it from the opposite direction.... Progress is halted by a huge freight train and two ambulances at the railway crossing, before a left turn and over the River Aire to the outskirts of Silsden, the home of the Ecology Building Society.

This brings me to Silsden Sports Club, where parking remains difficult after last year's floods, so, bearing in mind the marooned BMW in the mud trap at Eccleshall last season, I park on the main road.

Inside one end houses the impressive Sports Club and the 1904 Suite - an upgraded Portacabin - plus, new for this season, outside toilets. Two flags flutter side by side - SY13 Alport On Tour and Silsden AFC Keep The Faith.

The near side supports the McNulty Stand, an abandoned refreshment bar and a small covered shelter; opposite are two stone built dugouts and an advertising hoarding announcing 'Good Luck Silsden AFC From The Lost In Barrow Family'. Behind them the village of Silsden looks down on the ground and, nearer, the Leeds Liverpool Canal with barges chugging along, comfortably outpaced by the cyclists on the tow path.

But all around is breathtaking scenery, and after the announcer has sympathised with Alport's traffic problems in Colne 'But we have that for every away game', he comments on the picturesque surroundings 'And yes those are real cows – and sheep'.....





Silsden are in red and black, in keeping with their alternate nickname 'The Red Devils', whilst Alport are in change all blue. There is to be no repeat of last week's 'The Curious Incident of the Dog on the Pitch' - Whitchurch having a goal disallowed due to a stray mutt on the field of play - as the only dog inside the ground is safely leashed.

Alport start brightly, playing with confidence as befitting a team currently second in the league, but the Cobbydalers create the first real chance - player manager James Gill shooting over from a training ground move at a corner.

Whitchurch have played some lovely possession football without looking like scoring. So it's a surprise when a hopeful hoof from the back finds captain Si Everall bisecting the two home centre halves, and he comfortably rounds home keeper Callum Jakovlevs to sweep the ball home.

The home side fail to learn their lesson and Everall is put through again, but this time is forced wide. Fellow strike partner Matt Ashbrook hits the side netting, whilst for Silsden Ross Wilson goes close twice and Kyle Hancock volleys over - but in truth away stopper Danny Read is barely troubled.

The second half sees the Red Devils press without really threatening, aside from one unorthodox Read save. Midway through, with Alport playing on the break, Ashbrook is tripped by left back Josh McNulty for a soft penalty. Mike Blundell calmly slots home to double Alport's advantage.

The Cobbydalers go to three at the back, which just leaves them even more horribly exposed. With ten minutes to play the game is put to bed; a two on one , and Everall superbly finds Blundell and his deft chip over Jakovlevs sneaks in, just. The Alport ultras go wild....

Silsden have one cleared off the line and Read makes a decent stop from a quickly taken free kick but that's it. 3-0 to Alport, a ninth successive away win and top of the league, a complete transformation from last year's shambles.

On the way out, the one man public information service that is the stadium announcer thanks us for our support. And then, ahead of next Saturday's Macron Cup tie at New Mills (an equally idyllic panorama) tells us, tongue in cheek, 'And if you fancy following us next weekend, we're in Derbyshire - that's near London'..........

 

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