And so to the Vestacare Stadium, the former Whitebank Stadium, in Limeside Village, Oldham for an FA Vase tie between Avro and Barnton. History in the making today as Avro enter the FA Vase for the first time ever as North West Counties Division One North meets North West Counties Division One South.
The
origins of Avro FC go back to the years just before the start of World War II.
A V Roe established an aircraft factory at Chadderton, which became the home of
the famous ‘Dambusters’ aircraft – the Avro Lancaster, as well as the Cold War
‘V’ bomber – the Avro Vulcan.
A
V Roe had previously purchased a smaller factory in Failsworth, where the
Failsworth Lodge was also located. 1936 saw the Lodge purchased by the Avro
works manager and the birth of works team Avro FC.
In
1950 the Lodge was opened up to all personnel of Avro and took on the Lancaster
Club name. The Grade II listed Lancaster Club then became the club’s
headquarters for the next 67 years.
Avro
joined the Manchester League in the 1954/55 season but only had two brief
stints of 3 seasons apiece in the Premier Division. They returned permanently
for the 2008/09 campaign, winning the Premier League in 2009/10 and retaining
it the following year, although the latter title was stripped after a points deduction.
Oldham
Council had bought the Lancaster Club land in 2012 and announced plans to build
houses on the site. This led to the move to the Vestacare Stadium, also home to
Oldham Roughyeds RLFC and previously to the now defunct Oldham Borough FC
(formerly Oldham Dew and Oldham Town), at the start of last season.
The
visitors, Barnton FC, from Townfield, was established in 1946 and became
founder members of the Mid Cheshire League two years later. The Villagers won
the league 11 times in total, including seven in a row from 1997 to 2003.
The
league was renamed the Cheshire League in 2007 and Barnton were relegated to
Division Two in 2009. Having been promoted as champions in 2013, the Villagers
then finished 5th in the top tier in 2014 which was sufficient to gain election
to the North West Counties Football League - their first ever season at Step 6;
they had however previously represented England in the UEFA Regions League in
2004 playing Slovenian and Bosnian opposition.
In 2015/16 the club finished third and won
the play off final 2-0 against Bacup Borough after extra time in front of a
record crowd of 554 (yup I was there !). 17th in their first season at the
higher level but four wins, 19 points and 171 goals conceded in the 23 team
league made relegation inevitable last time.
And so with
the sun trying to break through thick grey cloud it's on to Manchester Road and
immediate number plate spotting. 5 AVR and MW66 AVR might not be significant
but are they portents of things to come ? But this week's winner is YE11 OWN
belonging to a yellow Nissan Micra, which suggests a certain lack of
imagination and a need to get out a bit more (the same could be levelled at the
writer !!)
All this
before Cinders Fireplaces and the shutters that are ELCTRICAL. TOILETORIES.....
The M60, mayhem and gridlock at the A34 junction, the Co op pyramid and its
crystal Methodist, then Red Rock which this week won the 'award' for the UK's
worst new building.
More traffic
chaos at Denton Rock due to an accident, a car smashed into the barrier with a
sheared off tyre. Taking the Hollinwood turning and, with an odd Bug Hotel
piece of street furniture in the middle of a roundabout, this brings me to
Hollins Lane.
Past The
Hideout, a barber's shop extolling 'Do It For The Love, Not For The Likes' and
then Inspect A Gadget, it's right onto Oak Road, beyond Limeside Park and the
Vestacare Stadium is in sight. Not much parking at the ground so I park on a
side street in the housing estate, a curious mix of older, slightly down at
heel terraceds and semis, and new builds on Stag Pasture Road.
A fiver at
the turnstile takes me into a three and a half sided ground this week. To the
right a short covered area in the corner, the roof barely six feet above the
ground. A walkway takes me to the top end and this extends to behind the goal
before it comes to an abrupt halt - the inaccessible half side. More
substantial netting this week compared to Cleator Moor, but there again this is
a rugby league stadium....
A strange
press box level with the pitch is behind the near goal and then steps lead to
the main stand on the far side. Three rows of seats, originally taken from
Wilderspool (Warrington RLFC), and several already 'Reserved For Bradford Bulls
Director' ahead of tomorrow's Roughyeds encounter with the Bulls. One suspects
that today's crowd of 74 will be eclipsed at least tenfold by tomorrow's !
Avro are in
blue and black stripes, Barnton in change orange with sky blue trim. The
announcer insists on calling the visitors Barton and informs us this is, in
fact, an FA Cup match - get a grip man !!!
A perfect 4G
AstroTurf pitch, so much better than the 3G one at Lower Breck, and the match
is underway as the sun comes out after a brief rain shower. Two bookings in the
first three minutes and then on 7 minutes the Villagers' Steve Warburton is
played through and tugged back. As last man a straight red card follows for
Daniel Grimshaw and Avro will have to play 83 minutes a man down.
However they
do take the lead on the quarter hour. Barnton stopper Aaron Lyons fumbles a
corner and Sam Rathbone scores easily; the announcer gets his name wrong and
has to issue a correction at half time.
The
Villagers fail to come to terms with the surface or the man advantage,
fashioning only one real chance in the first period with Josh Crofts' effort
tipped over. Indeed Avro look the more likely, particularly from corners which
Barnton seem unable to defend.
Within two
minutes of the restart Barnton concede a wretched goal. Playing out from the
back, Louis Potts intercepts a sloppy ball and instinctively shoots from 35
yards. A daydreaming Lyons is hopelessly out of position and scrambles
embarrassingly; the ball hits the back of the net despite his flailing dive.
The tone is
set for the rest of the game: Avro hungrier, a magnificent rearguard action,
lovely pass and movement and bombing forward in numbers. Barnton cannot cope
and their best chance is a deflected cross cleared off the line by Mike Norton.
Michael
Stockdale wastes two clear chances for the home side, Joe Bevan has a goal
chalked off slightly harshly for a tug, and The Villagers' Callum Richards is
lucky to stay in the pitch, pulling back sub Phil Armstrong when through on
goal.
Armstrong
has the last laugh though, teed up beautifully by Norton for a sumptuous volley
with twelve minutes to play to put Avro three up. It is a lead they comfortably
protect to the end, despite the man disadvantage.
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