And so to Hollyhedge Park in Wythenshawe for today’s North West Counties Division One South clash between Wythenshawe Amateurs and St Martins.
The home team was
founded in 1946 as Wythenshawe Lads’ Club by a local window cleaner and was
based in Daine Avenue, Rack House. In 1949 as the lads grew to maturity Henry
Dalton developed them into ‘The Ammies’ to provide football for all ages.
(Dalton was a Sheffield Wednesday fan hence the Ammies’ royal blue and white
striped kit)
They became members
of the South Manchester and Wythenshawe League, racing through the divisions,
and securing the 1st division championship in 1953. After a year in
the Altrincham & District League they climbed the pyramid to join the
Lancashire and Cheshire League, winning the First Division in 1962.
The Ammies
established themselves in the Manchester League in the 1972/3 season, going on
to win the Premier Division three times and finishing runners up 10 times,
including the last two seasons. They were also three time winners of the Lancashire
Amateur Cup and record winners (7) of the Gilgryst Cup.
The club led a
somewhat nomadic existence playing at Cleveland playing fields, Wythenshawe
Park, The Christie playing fields, Federation of Lads’ Club Ground at Chorlton,
and then in 1983 they became tenants of Wythenshawe Cricket Club at Longley
Lane. However after 32 years the relationship became strained and the Ammies
were evicted by the cricket club in May 2015, necessitating short term stays at
Flixton FC and St Paul’s High School.
However the club
struck gold in 2013 when they won a £50,000 grant from the Budweiser Club
Futures Programme in the North West, followed by a further £100,000 in a public
Facebook the following year in the national awards. In July 2016 the club
secured further funding from the Premier League, the FA and the National
Lottery.
The visitors from the
village of St Martins in the North West of Shropshire with the Welsh border
just a few hundred yards away, St Martins FC, need no introduction having
featured last week.
The club was
established in 1897, competing in the Oswestry & District League, before
changing name to St Martins United in the early 1930s and then Greyhound
Rangers in 1935, with matches played in the field next to the Greyhound Inn. A
successful venture across the border into the Cefn & District League,
winning the League Cup in 1936/37 was met with indifference and no further
organised football was played until the side was reformed in 1945 after World
War II.
The revived club
joined the North Shropshire League and were champions three times, following
the last of which in 1955 the team joined the Whitchurch League. That league
folded in 1972 so Saints transferred to Division 3 of the West Shropshire
League, rising up the divisions and winning various cups – the Syd Roberts, Reg
Lawrence and Graham Edwards Memorial Trophies and the Tyre Cup (!!)
The Saints then moved
up to the Shropshire County League and won the Premier Division in 2009/10 to
be promoted to the West Midlands (Regional) League Division 2. In their first
season the side won the Second Division, earning promotion to Division 1 where
they stayed until this summer – 4th place last time earning St
Martins promotion to the North West Counties League Division One South.
And so the
4.9 mile journey begins with a carved brown wooden bear at The Rowans, Sugar
Couture and an advertising hoarding concerning gentlemen's barber Kevin Junior
who is 'proffesional' - maybe not !! Then past Marvel Guitars, Cheshire Clocks
and the Frank Sidebottom statue. This week's car registration plate is W33NDY
matching the grey, mild and very breezy weather conditions.
Beyond
Wythenshawe Town FC, then Wythenshawe Park, The Open University to Altrincham
Road, The Pines Hospital and to Sharston 'One of Manchester's greenest places'.
The football ground is opposite the Hellermann Tyton factory on the Sharston
Green Business Park, and it's immediately obvious that what little parking the
club have has already been taken. We park on a side street and pay £3 at the
gate, the lowest price in the league - the gate is an encouraging 134.
Immediately
before us is an impressive clubhouse and busy bar, with photographs of the
club's historic moments. To the right is a mini kids soccer pitch next to the
small covered standing area. At the top end is the main Hollyhedge Park, a
council park that both teams use for their warm up. The area behind the goal
banks steeply upward, and all four sides are tree lined. The other side has a
walkway with housing behind the trees. In the background is a constant thrum
from the nearby airport added to by the odd firework.
A minute's
silence is impeccably observed, with Ammies in their blue and white stripes and
Saints in those yellow and black chequerboards. Their vertically challenged
goalkeeper, George Austin, is in all orange.
The match
takes a while to find its feet and it is 17 minutes before Ammies' left back
Alan Dolan has a fierce drive in the box beaten away by Austin. Four minutes
later Jordan Burton cuts in from the left and rifles his shot into the bottom
left corner and Wythenshawe lead.
Jimmy Green
sees his shot just whistle wide but, as last week, Saints improve. Brendon
Price has a dangerous free kick flash across the penalty area and then Tawanda
Melusi's persistence beats three challenges before being denied by a brave
block from Martin Blain. Again Melusi is wearing gloves and as last week he
dispenses with them at the interval. There is a pitch invasion at half time -
by a dog…..
The second
period is again All Saints (sorry, sorry !) as they dominate the park. Some
last ditch defending from the Ammies, well marshalled by Richard Gresty, limits
Saints to half chances but Wythenshawe drop deeper and deeper, and cannot
retain possession.
There is a
brief respite as David Wright has his shot fingertipped to safety by Austin,
but it's soon back down the other end. Sub Jordan Davies sees his effort
heroically cleared off the line by Chris Howard in their best opportunity.
In the last
ten minutes Saints continue to press but it's not until the final minute of
injury time that they threaten. A real kerfuffle in the home area sees Karl
Bailey and Dave Easthope have shots kicked off the line, just, and Ammies cling
on to win 1-0 and go second.