And so to the William Scholes Playing Fields, otherwise known as Scholes Park (named after a former Gatley resident and estate agent), for a Manchester League Division Two fixture between Cavaliers FC and Hindley Juniors FC.
Tuesday 30 November 2021
Hit For Six - A Cavalier Approach To Defending...!
Tuesday 23 November 2021
Wood You Believe It - Cavaliers Not Laughing... :-(
And so this afternoon to the Oasis Academy, Hollins Lane in Hollinwood for a Manchester League Division Two clash between Hollinwood and Cavaliers. The reverse fixture, earlier this season, saw Hollinwood triumph 8-0.
Hollinwood Football Club's history dates back to 1877, but the forebearer of the present football team started in the 1950s playing as a Sunday League side. However the club as it is known today moved to a Saturday team in 1962 in the Rochdale Alliance League.
In the mid 1960s the club transferred to the now defunct South East Lancashire League where Wood remained until it took a step up to the Manchester League in the early 1970s. The 2005/06 season saw Hollinwood gain promotion to the Manchester League Premier Division, and this was followed by winning the Manchester County FA Challenge Trophy the season after.
Relegated in 2011 after conceding 131 goals in 30 games, Wood were further demoted to Division Two in 2018, with a two point deduction seeing them one point short of safety. They have languished, largely at the bottom end, ever since but this time boast a mid table record of six wins and four losses.
The club's home originally was on School Road, but moved to Lime Lane in 1914, before decamping to Chapel Road Playing Fields on Grammar School Road nearly a century later. The club now play at Hollins Lane on the 3G surface at the Oasis Academy.
Cavaliers, from the Athletics Track at Scholes Park in Gatley, are a new club in their first season in Division Two of the Manchester League - and it's been a turbulent journey. Ten games, ten defeats, goals for 7, goals against 114 - including 14-1, 15-0, 16-0 and 26-0 defeats, the latter against Avenue FC, where the club fielded a side lacking a goalkeeper (clearly !!) and only one defender (also obviously !!) which attracted press coverage and prompted a plea for new players.
Tuesday 9 November 2021
Danns the Man - Levelling Up Comes With Penalties....
And so to November and the Moss Rose and a NWCFL Premier
Division match between Macclesfield FC and Runcorn Town.
Macclesfield FC was founded on 13 October 2020 by local businessman Robert Smethurst as a phoenix club of the former Macclesfield Town FC, which was wound up on 16 September 2020.
The new club began their first competitive match in the North West Counties Football League in August 2021, with local legend Danny Whitaker appointed as manager and Robbie Savage taking up a Director of Football role. The Silkmen currently top the table with 39 points (12 wins and 3 draws) from 17 games. Coincidentally (or not !) BBC screened 'Making Macclesfield FC' last night, Bonfire Night, as the phoenix club rose from the ashes (and being shown on BBC1 on 13 November 2021).
The original Macclesfield FC was formed in 1874, playing at Moss Rose from 1891. Initially winning the Manchester League twice Macc became an inaugural member of the Cheshire County League at the start of the 1919/20 season, ultimately winning the league six times.
Renamed Macclesfield Town FC in 1946, the club was a founder member of the Northern Premier League in 1968, winning the league in its first two campaigns, as well as the FA Trophy in 1970, defeating Telford United 2-0 at Wembley. Macc were promoted to the Conference after winning their third Northern Premier League title in 1987.
Under manager Sammy McIlroy the Silkmen were champions of the Conference in 1993/94, but were not promoted as Moss Rose did not meet Football League criteria. A second FA Trophy success followed in 1996 with a 3-1 final victory over Northwich Victoria.
A second Conference title in 1996/97 saw promotion to the Football League, and second place in their first season elevated Macc to the old Second Division (now League One). Immediately relegated the Silkmen retained fourth tier status from 1999 to 2012 before being relegated to the Conference. Against all odds John Askey led the Silkmen back into the Football League as National League champions in 2017/18.
However amidst ongoing financial issues, with players regularly not being paid, a points deduction was activated on 11 August 2020. This meant Macc Town was relegated back to non league, the National League, and shortly after expelled.
The away team was established in 1967 as a founder member of the
Runcorn Sunday League under the name of CKD, a works team from the 'D' Section
at the local Castner Kellner plant. The club changed its name to Mond FC in
1970, representing the Mond Division of ICI which ran the Castner Kellner
works.
In 1973 there was a move to Saturday football in the form of Division 5 of the Warrington & District League. At the end of their first season Mond amalgamated with struggling Division 1 side ICI Weston, becoming Mond Rangers FC and 'securing' a four division promotion.
1984 saw a move to the West Cheshire League and there was another change to the club's name in 2005/06 - this time to Runcorn Town FC. After winning Division 2 a year later 'Town' was elevated to the North West Counties at the start of the 2010/11 campaign following a third place finish.
Promotion to the Premier League was achieved at the first attempt, and Town finished runners up in their first season at the higher level. However after 4th and 5th place finishes there followed two disappointing seasons and 2016/17 began with a new manager and squad, with not one player being retained. Thereafter Town finished third twice, the 2017/18 season beginning with 11 straight victories. Seventh in 2019, then two abandoned Covid ventures and Town now sit 19th (of 21) with 15 points from 18 games this time.
A short jaunt to Navigation Road past Healthy Mutts Premium
Treats then the Stubborn Mule Brewery at Radium Works, and the first
numberplate for today - 1ORD, subsequently followed by W3NDY and Y3 O YE and
then Vanoffee - a mobile coffee van. Onto the train, alongside a girl sporting
that many tattoos it's practically a gallery, and then via Skelton Junction
it's past the grounds of Wythenshawe Town, Wythenshawe Amateurs, Cheadle Heath
Nomads and Stockport County.
A change then the stopper to Macclesfield, with the signal box at Cheadle Hulme sponsored by MyHo Inspired Coworking. Then at Poynton a railway wagon transformed into a flowerbox with signage Poynton Collieries Lord Vernon.
That brings us to Macclesfield and the iconic Arighi Bianchi store; eschewing the Old Millstone and The Treacle Tap we head for the A523 Leek Road. Appropriately the rain starts as we come across 2 chippies side by side, Phil Morton Sewing Machines shop, Swindells Fireplaces and fingerposts to Sutton Langley and Wincle.
Then the Moss Rose, aka leasing.com stadium, and the ticket office where the gentleman ahead of us is returning an unused ticket - we gratefully take advantage (it has been paid forward !) so admission is halved to £5. We are directed beyond a rainswept open terrace and the artificial pitch to bar twenty seven, opened specially today for all spectators, and pre match entertainment is the Manchester derby and a pint of Camden Hells.
The bar stands above a new all seater covered stand spanning the whole of the touchline, opposite the old main stand - which only borders the half way line. Minimal terracing and 2 of the 3 exterior catering outlets make up the rest of that side, and behind is the Leek Road, countryside and hills. In front plenty of advertising hoardings, the most notable being Savages Mussels and Explore Macedonia, and to my right a packed covered terrace with flags featuring 'SK11 Silks On Tour' and 'Why Does A Love Kiss Stay In My Memory' (the Buddy Holly reference is lost on me - sorry !)
Macc are in blue and white, Runcorn in change pink and black,
with The Last Post respectfully honoured by a huge crowd of 3,420. An early
chance sees Town's keeper Adam Reid fumble a straightforward shot but Aaron
Dwyer's shot from a tight angle is just beyond the far post.
Thereafter Macc's veteran Neil Danns has two decent opportunities and Max Bardsley-Rowe passes up a good effort; at the opposite end Runcorn captain Richie Foulkes has their best attempt deflected away. The half, characterised by the Silkmen's lack of ambition (frequently two attackers surrounded by six defenders), ends goallless with a smart stop by Reid from Keilan Adams.
The second period begins messily, frustratingly and soporifically - after one dreadful offside decision, a Macc touch to a Runcorn forward, my neighbour exclaims 'No one knows what the hell they are doing !' In fact the only constant is the weather as the rain comes sheeting down, obliterating the hills and communication tower.
Then, in keeping with the game, a wayward Silkmen cross beyond the goal is nodded back and Danns heads home to give Macc the lead on 59 minutes. The expectation now is the floodgates will open and the Silkmen will ease home, but Danns skies their next chance before Luis Morrison-Derbyshire hits the side netting eight minutes on.
From the goal kick the ball is inadvertently flicked on by a Macc defender, and, amidst screams for offside, Craig Cairns nonchalantly chips Liam Lovell to equalise. A stunned crowd then sees Lovell superbly save a Tony Davies' header from a corner two minutes later.
With ten minutes to go Runcorn win a corner and the delivery sees a hand raised and deflecting the ball - impossible to see who or which side is the offendant, but from the players' body language it seems to be a Runcorn arm. The referee deems otherwise and awards a penalty, which Foulkes scores to leave Runcorn 2-1 up.
Amidst widespread anger and disgust the Silkmen fail to weave any magic, and with Runcorn using tactical injuries and time wasting, the crowd starts to drift away before the 90 (and six minutes of stoppage time) are up. Then two of my predictions come true - the referee will use any opportunity to level things up and the early leavers will miss a final goal. But even I could not predict that the lashing rain would cease with five minutes left.....
And so it proves - 95 minutes and sub Scott McGowan overruns the ball in the penalty box and is 'felled' for another dubious penalty. Danns scores with aplomb and it finishes 2-2.
Tuesday 2 November 2021
Seadogs Tipped Over The Sedge.... !!
And so to the Clayborn Ground on Quaker Lane in Cleckheaton, on the border with Hightown in Liversedge - this afternoon an FA Trophy Third Round Qualifying clash between Liversedge FC and Scarborough Athletic.
Liversedge Football Club was founded in 1910 following the demise
of the old Liversedge Rugby Club, starting in the Bradford League for three
seasons and winning it in 1920/21. The Sedge was a founder member of the West
Riding County Amateur League in 1922/23 and went on to be the most successful
club in the league’s infancy, taking the league title three times in its first
five seasons (1924, 1926 and 1927) and, later, again in 1965 and 1966.
The club was accepted into the
Yorkshire League for 1972/73, and promotion to Yorkshire League
Division One was achieved prior to the amalgamation of the Midland and
Yorkshire Leagues to form the Northern Counties East League in 1982.
Second in 2005/06 and League Cup
winners, but promotion to the Northern Premier League was denied due to
insufficient facilities - apparently no separate changing rooms for female
referees !! Never relegated, Quaker Lane was flooded in October 2015
resulting in no home games for 4 months.
Following the last two seasons being curtailed dramatically by the coronavirus pandemic, Liversedge FC was promoted to the Northern Premier League Division One East due to finishing both the 2019/2020 and 2020/21 seasons in the top three of the table (based on a table using a Points Per Games calculation). They currently sit top with 11 wins and a draw from 12 league fixtures.
Scarborough
Athletic FC was set up on 25 June 2007 by the Seadog Trust. This was five days
after the liquidation of Scarborough FC - £2.5 million in debt and unable to
sell the McCain Stadium to a housing developer due to a covenant restricting it
to sporting activities (it is now a Lidl supermarket....)
The
Seadogs joined the Northern Counties East League Division One, groundsharing at
Bridlington Town's Queensgate stadium. Two seasons in they were crowned as
champions and promoted to the Premier Division, with Brian France as manager.
In their second season in the top flight France was struck in the face by a
ball at, strangely, Liversedge and suffered a brain haemorrhage - he never
managed the club again.
In
2012/13 'Boro clinched the NCEL title and were promoted to the Northern Premier
Division One South (bizarrely !!) under their magnificently named Romanian
manager Rudy Funk. The Seadogs were moved laterally to Division One North after
one season.
In
July 2017 the club, after ten years at Bridlington, finally returned to the
town at the new Flamingo Land Stadium at Weaponness. After play off defeat in
2017 the Seadogs were promoted to the Premier Division as runners up the
following year but, despite attendances having nearly trebled, have flattered
to deceive ever since - this season six wins, three draws and six defeats.
As
an extension of their youth team a nursery club Scarborough Town was
established in 2008, initially competing in the Teesside League. The team moved
up to the Wearside League and were champions in 2010 before folding in June
2013.
The
original Scarborough FC was founded in 1879, moving to the Athletic Ground on
Seamer Road in 1898 and staying there until dissolution. From the Midland
League Scarborough became a founder member of the Northern Premier League in
1968, crowned as FA Trophy winners three times in 1973, 1976 and 1977 (beating
Wigan Athletic, Stafford Rangers and Dagenham respectively) and runners up in
1975.
The
Seadogs joined the Alliance Premier League on inception and were champions in
1987, becoming the first ever automatically promoted club to the Football
League. 8 May 1999 saw the club relegated back to the Conference after
goalkeeper Jimmy Glass scored for Carlisle deep into injury time to preserve
their league status, and rendering the Seadogs' 1-1 home draw with
Peterborough, already celebrated as survival, irrelevant. Thereafter in 2006
Scarborough were demoted due to 'financial instability'. The end was nigh....
After brinner, it's past Seven Heaven Kitchen, with numberplates
today featuring B16 HOT, A B10WER and BR04DEN. Washway Road takes me to the M60
beyond the Bodhi Tree Buddhas at Utopia, Thai Massage at Po Thong and a Chinese
takeaway at Panda Mama. Not forgetting the haunted Eyebrow Cottage....
Beyond Beyond (aka Chill Factore) on the M60 then the M62 and
Saddleworth Moor, Scammonden and the M62 Summit - the highest motorway point in
England. More lorry trailer advertising hoardings, predominantly Radiator
Outlet but, yes, another CBD one. The weather changes from sunny spells to
heavy rain, the thermometer ticks down from 14C to 9C and the motorway is
closed on the opposite carriageway at Junction 23 due to a severe multivehicle
accident.
Past Outlane Cricket Club next to the hard shoulder and off at
J25 Hartshead Moor where the motorway closure has caused local gridlock so a
hastily revised route is improvised. Coal Pit Lane, then left at the Gray
Ox to Windy Bank Lane onto the A649 and left at Casa Luli into Hightown Road.
The ground is well hidden at the foot of Quaker Lane on the right, an
inadequate unadopted alley with one car's width.
The return journey takes me back via Cleckheaton, past the local
Wetherspoons - The Obediah Brooke, a 19th century local farmer - to rejoin at
J26. Needless to say the car park is insufficient for a bumper crowd of
571 so I park on the adjoining housing estate, and it's £6 on the gate.
Clayborn features a clubhouse to the top West corner of the
ground with a drinks terrace, covered seating at the North (The Stuart
Silverwood Stand) and another bar - The Huntsman - and a small covered
terracing stand to the West behind the goal - The Cowshed. The historic slope
has now long since gone, but the North and West sides are elevated above the
pitch, with the ground framed by new detached houses, trees and, to the South,
a picturesque view of fields looking onto the outskirts of Mirfield.
Sedge
are in white and blue stripes, Seadogs in red with white trim and it's a quiet
start. That is until the 11th minute when the rhythm is fractured as a home
free kick is only half cleared and Jack Stockdill shoots from the edge of the
box; his shot hits the post and rolls in, and Liversedge lead 1-0.
For a brief period Sedge are dominant, incisive and threatening with Athletic spoiling the home attack with a series of fouls. However the Seadogs start to take advantage of Sedge's open defending, and on 20 minutes Nathan Cartman breaks through resulting in Michael Coulson's shot being cleared off the line.
Brilliant sunshine gives way to a brief flurry of drizzle and a rainbow as Scarborough start to dominate. Luca Colville's fizzer is going in but Kieran Weledji adds a final touch into the net and is deemed offside, and then home stopper Jon Stewart comes up with two super saves from Coulson and Ryan Watson, one with his hands and the other with his feet.
At the other end Nicky Walker cuts in from the right and strikes the near post, before teeing up Stockdill whose effort is blocked. A breathless first half ends with Sedge a goal to the good.
Five minutes after the break a challenge in the Liversedge box sees Coulson, not for the first time, tumble to the turf (with an alacrity suggesting 'a weed and feed addiction') and he is booked for simulation. Three minutes on and a Sedge cross sees capless, hapless Seadogs' keeper Michael Ingham blinded by the sun and in the ensuing shenanigans an attempted defensive clearance is struck straight at Paul Walker and into the net.
Paul Walker should have made it 3-0 shortly after but his air shot produces a defensive deflection that casually loops just wide. At the other end Stewart performs more heroics in keeping out efforts from Colville and Bradley Plant.
End to end now with Liversedge sitting off and soaking up Seadogs' pressure - the home side fashion a chance for Ben Atkinson, who creates space and shoots across Ingham but just beyond the far post. However their next opportunity on 74 minutes sees Joe Walton bully his opponent off the ball and in a two on one he squares for Atkinson, who composes himself and then fires into the corner for 3-0.
Then the piece de resistance: with 9 minutes to play the ball finds Nicky Walker's feet, he bamboozles the full back and shoots left footed from outside the box and the ball hits the inside of the opposite post before going in. Not so much a peach as a full tropical fruit salad....
Aside from a wholly unnecessary melee at the death that's it - a 4-0 'giantkilling' with the man of the match being the underdogs' goalkeeper. The 100+ disgruntled Scarborough fans, 'you're all just walking' are met with home cries of 'See you next season'... and on this showing that's highly likely !
Grand Finale - Lions Fail To Get Over The Bridge !!
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