Showing posts with label Sheffield FC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sheffield FC. Show all posts

Friday 10 January 2020

Shambles, Shambles and More Shambles - But The Ice Man Cometh......

And so to the Coach and Horses, and a trip entirely funded by Northern Fail's, err failure, to provide a train service, for the alternative Steel City Derby, bizarrely taking place in Dronfield, Derbyshire (!!). The derby is between Sheffield FC and Stocksbridge Park Steels in the Northern Premier League Division One South East.

Sheffield FC's nickname is 'The Club', and they are renowned for being 'The World's First Football Club'. The club was set up by Nathaniel Creswick and William Prest on 24 October 1857 at Parkfield House in the Sheffield suburb of Highgate, although the original headquarters was a greenhouse.....

Initially Sheffield FC games were played amongst club members - 'Married v Singles', or 'Professionals v The Rest'. Creswick and Prest drew up the club's rules of play, 'The Sheffield Rules' - and along with near neighbours Hallam FC, 'The Countrymen', formed in 1860, they take part in 'The Rules derby', the oldest still contested football derby in the world. FA rules were adopted in 1878. 2nd January 1865 saw the first fixture outside Sheffield - the club playing at Nottingham in an 18 a side game under Nottingham rules. The decision was then taken to play only teams from outside Sheffield, and on 31 March 1866 they played London losing by 2 goals and 4 touchdowns to nil.

The Club entered the FA Cup in 1873, but thereafter there was a decline from the top echelon with the advent of professionalism. Sheffield FC retained its amateur status and suggested to the FA the introduction of an FA Amateur Cup, which was inaugurated in 1893 and which Sheffield won in 1904. After one season in each of the Yorkshire and Midland Leagues, the club reverted back to local leagues, before rejoining the Yorkshire League in 1949. They then joined the Northern Counties East League in 1981, before promotion to the NPL Division 1 South in 2007 - their 150th anniversary. Sheffield FC remain in Step 4.

The Club have previously played at Strawberry Hall Lane Park, Newhall Athletic ground, Old Forge, Hunters Bar, Abbeydale Park, Hillsborough Park, Owlerton and the Don Valley Stadium. Current home is the Coach & Horses ground in Dronfield, which was bought in 2001, and formerly the home of Norton Woodseats FC.

In 2004 The Club were awarded the Centennial FIFA Order of Merit for services to football and maintenance of its values - Integrity, Respect and Community; the only other recipient was Real Madrid. And in 2007 The Club was inducted into the English football hall of fame on its 150th anniversary. Sheffield currently sit 10th in the Northern Premier League Division One South East, and crowdfunding plans to return to Olive Grove in Steel City are still ongoing.

The Steels were formed in 1986 from the merger between Stocksbridge Works FC, the works team of the local British Steel plant, and another local club, Oxley Sports FC. The team joined the Northern Counties East League Division 2, and were then placed in Division 1 after a league reorganisation in 1991. The following year Steels were promoted as champions to the Premier Division, but were denied promotion, having won the league, to the Northern Premier League in 1994 because of ground grading issues. Two years later, as runners up, the club gained admission to NPL Division 1.

After finishing in the top half for 5 seasons, relegation was only just avoided the following year and this saw the appointment of Wayne Biggins as manager. He oversaw the record 17-1 win over Oldham Town in the FA Cup Preliminary Round, with Paul Jackson scoring ten - still an FA Cup record. Biggins' departure saw a succession of managers before promotion via the play offs to the NPL Premier in 2009 was achieved - with Jamie Vardy leading the line. Five years of struggle ended with relegation in 2014, with mediocrity thereafter, and Steels currently lying 8th this season.

 

An early departure and limited road action but Navigation Road provides number plates YY0 5EXY (empty and parked - unfortunately) and WH11 NOT, and then the train leaves early but arrives late before I join fellow bleary eyed travellers on the Hope Valley Line - a shouty walking group and multiple piercings being my main recollections. On to Marple where there is a blue plaque in honour of Agatha Christie and Miss Marple, and then New Mills and the Torrs Millennium.

Thereafter Strines, Chinley, glorious Derbyshire countryside, murk at Edale, Hope, Bamford, Hathersage, Grindleford, Dore & Totley, The Hardy Pick pub and then Steel City - needless to say the train is late but so is my Northern connection to Dronfield, whose station celebrates its 150th anniversary on 1st February 2020, complete with pit tub on rail track memorial.

Dronfield is home to Fat Sams, Killer Byte, Mucky Pups, CafĂ© Tiere, The Forge Boutique Shopping at Dronfield and the William Lea Ladle opposite 'The Home of Football' . Not forgetting the pubs of the Dronfield Arms (home of Hopjacker Brewery), craft beers at The Underdog, The White Swan but sadly The Bridge is a bridge too far....

That takes me to the Coach & Horses, the pub ten minutes from the station, next to the football ground and owned by The Club with Thornbridge ales on tap; I sample pints of Brother Rabbit and Shambles, whilst fellow supporters are entirely dismissive of 'Dry January' and 'Veguanary'..... 




£9 in, a decent crowd of 416, and inside reveals to my left The Barrett Steel Community Stand, an all seater affair behind the goal; that end also supports the clubhouse, club shop, bar, hot food and the changing rooms. On the right is a covered 3 step terrace leading to a massive pile of leaves and another cordoned off area. Opposite is a walkway, plastic sheeting highlighting 'The Home of Football' and behind which is the railway line and the busy A61.

 The teams are piped on, appropriately, by The Human League with a guard of honour for Club legend Matt Roney who recently made his 500th appearance for Sheffield FC. The Club are in red and black, Steels in yellow and blue.




Within 30 seconds Jonathan Hedge is palming over Steels' Scott Ruthven's rasping drive, and less than a minute later the Club win a corner from which an unmarked Rob Darkin heads in for 1-0.

Thereafter it's all Sheffield; Lee Cooksey's header at another corner causes pandemonium, Jacob Carney, in the away goal, just keeps out Marc Newsham's shot, debutant Sheldon Jordan goes close three times and Rieves Boocock wreaks havoc on the wing. At the other end Nenad Smiljanic volleys wide.

The second period sees The Club become a shambles, creating little, coughing up possession and sitting deeper and deeper; Steels' injury ravaged side sense they can get something out of this derby.

'Sir Jonathan' Hedge somehow manages to save from Ruthven, and then produces an extraordinary tip aside - the away supporters already celebrating an equaliser. But it's been coming and with 9 minutes left, a corner breaks for ' Ice Man' Danny Frost six yards out and he draws the sides level.

In the final minute of injury time the Club fashion one final chance but, disappointingly, Newsham's free header from close in drifts wide and it finishes 1-1. Needless to say the Northern experience going home is another shambles....

Monday 25 April 2016

A Day At The Beeches - Uphill And Down Dale !!

And so to Packwood Road in the Black Country, and The Beeches, the home of Tividale FC. Today's visitors drawing the veil on the regular season are Sheffield FC in the Evostik Northern Premier League Division One South.

The Dale was formed in 1954 as the senior branch of Tividale Hall Youth Club FC, originally competing in the Handsworth & District League before moving on to the Warwickshire & West Midlands Alliance. In 1966 the club joined the newly formed West Midlands (Regional) League Division One, and was promoted to the Premier Division in 1973.

The club moved to its current ground in 1974 but were demoted to Division One in 1991 after falling foul of a new league ruling that required all Premier Division clubs to have floodlights, which they could not afford to erect. Two years later the floodlights were put up, the team finished second and were promoted back, but in the same year the Midland Football Alliance was created so the club was back to where it started.

The 2010/11 season saw The Dale run away with the Premier Division and with that came promotion to the Midland Football Alliance. In 2013/14 on a platform of a record breaking start of 13 consecutive wins the club swept all aside to storm to the title and earn promotion to the Evostik Northern Premier League Division One South. A respectable 8th place was earned in their inaugural season but the club had to win an off field Ground Grading appeal hearing at Wembley to retain their position in the league. Sadly it has only been a stay of execution as Tivi will finish bottom of the pile this time. 

Sheffield FC's nickname is 'The Club', and they are renowned for being 'The World's First Football Club'. The club was set up by Nathaniel Creswick and William Prest on 24 October 1857 at Parkfield House in the Sheffield suburb of Highgate, although the original headquarters was a greenhouse.....


Initially Sheffield FC games were played among club members - 'Married v Singles', or 'Professionals v The Rest'. Creswick and Prest drew up the club's rules of play, 'The Sheffield Rules' - and along with near neighbours Hallam FC, 'The Countrymen', formed in 1860, they take part in 'The Rules derby', the oldest still contested football derby in the world. FA rules were only adopted in 1878. 2nd January 1865 saw the first fixture outside Sheffield - the club playing at Nottingham in an 18 a side game under Nottingham rules. The decision was then taken to play only teams from outside Sheffield, and on 31 March 1866 they played London losing by 2 goals and 4 touchdowns to nil.


The Club entered the FA Cup in 1873, but thereafter there was a decline from the top echelon with the advent of professionalism. Sheffield FC retained its amateur status and suggested to the FA the introduction of an FA Amateur Cup, which was inaugurated in 1893 and which Sheffield won in 1904. After one season in each of the Yorkshire and Midland Leagues, the club reverted back to local leagues, before rejoining the Yorkshire League in 1949. They then joined the Northern Counties East League in 1981, before promotion to the NPL Division 1 South in 2007 - their 150th anniversary.


The Club have played at Strawberry Hall Lane Park, Newhall Athletic ground, Old Forge, Hunters Bar, Abbeydale Park, Hillsborough Park, Owlerton and the Don Valley Stadium. Current home is the Coach & Horses ground, including the adjoining pub, in Dronfield, which was bought in 2001, and previously the home of Norton Woodseats FC.


In 2004 The Club were awarded the Centennial FIFA Order of Merit for services to football and maintenance of its values - Integrity, Respect and Community; the only other recipient was Real Madrid. And in 2007 The Club was inducted into the English football Hall of Fame on its 150th anniversary. This season has seen The Club launch a £6m crowd funding appeal to finance a new stadium in the Olive Grove area of Sheffield. Meanwhile an undistinguished campaign in the league results in a 17th place finish, just five places above today's hosts.




Past a reopened Barmy Sarnie, then Code to Exit (a gaming shop rather than Altrincham's version of Dignitas !) I find the roadworks have moved up to the Navigation - more Saturday lunchtime chaos. Thankfully the rest of the journey to the motorway is event free. The M6, smart motorway and yes last week's sighting of a workman was an isolated incident.... Just a flashing van, and a cretin doing 30 on the hard shoulder which he then tries to replicate in the middle lane - definitely not smart !!

PIES graffiti, a taxi simultaneously under and overtaken, pleasingly on one side by a Whinfell Whippets van, and then two cars swapping motorways at the M5/M6 interchange - madness !! Two junctions down and it's off onto the A4123, a Sandwell tropical traffic island, a foreign articulated lorry mounting the pavement and follow the signs for Merry Hill, Black Country Museum and Dudley Zoo. On the right is something called the Black Country Urban Forest before a left up the steep hill that is Trafalgar Road leads to Packwood Road and The Beeches.



Tividale FC renamed the ground The Beeches in honour of the British Waterways official who had granted the site's lease to the club. The ground is situated in a (then) newly developed residential street on the Tividale Hall Estate, on land previously inaccessible to motor vehicles. There is sufficient car parking inside despite the Wilfreda Beehive minibus traversing several spaces. As a special incentive it's back to 2013/14 prices so a fiver in :)

Inside the near end supports the Social Club and in the corner a Quarantine Area - no I've no idea why !! At the side is a concrete standing area with the banking side fenced off and behind is the residential estate from which a cat and two men, one in his garden and the other from a shabby tree house, watch proceedings - tellingly all have given up by half time....

The far end is out of bounds, supposedly, and holds a mini artificial pitch and several abandoned yellow seats. A pensioner in a high vis vest is posted behind the goal and in front of the hedging to retrieve the ball. The near side is all covered, with terracing, two 12 seater directors boxes and then two rows of benched seating from the halfway line to the corner flag - the A4123 runs directly behind. The pitch has a distinct slope from right to left.




There is a minute's applause before the match for a recently deceased ex committee member; Tividale are in yellow and blue, The Club in red with a black diagonal stripe. The bright Spring sunshine has given way to a duvet of cloud and the first period has a distinctly end of season feel to it, despite Sheffield FC's barmy army and their bizarre 'Shoes Off' and 'We're All Going On A European Tour' songs.

The Club's Brian Cusworth and Mo Hamid blaze over, and Dale produce little other than one dangerous cross; their 25 goal top scorer Chris Sterling is largely anonymous. Then Tivi's captain and keeper, Tom Turner, makes a superb triple save from The Club's Alex Pursehouse before Hamid's deflected shot finds Cusworth unmarked and he heads home to give the visitors an interval lead.

Half time sees my neighbour regale us with the tragic story of the recent death of one of his mates from a drug overdose - 'He was only 44/45 - funeral's on Wednesday'. Talk about oversharing......

The start of the second period sees Dale's best chance as Shaquille Leachman-Whittingham is played in but his shot hits the post and Shane Grainger's follow up is blocked on the line. The Club respond by hitting the side netting twice and then Alex Denton is given acres of space to slot home number two.

The season meanders to a close with Sheffield sub Jordan Turner hitting the post then having a goal disallowed leaving it 2-0 to the Club at the end and the Dale down, barring ground grading failures or resignations from the league. The Purple Army of Daventry Town had resigned from the league, but dutifully filled the second relegation spot anyway - and Loughborough Dynamo live to fight another day, just !! :)






Grand Finale - Lions Fail To Get Over The Bridge !!

And so to Nethermoor Park in Guiseley, Leeds, for what was to be a Big Cat Derby Northern Premier League Premier Division match between Guis...