Wednesday 21 August 2019

Seasiders Mount Pleasant Start To Campaign - Purple Pain !!

And so to Marske-by-the-Sea and the season's curtain raiser in the BetVictor Northern Premier League Division One North West. Last season we had Divisions One East and West but the league have changed this to Divisions One North West and South East, supposedly to reduce travelling distances. However today's clash at Mount Pleasant between Marske United and City of Liverpool can hardly be classed as regional football....

Marske United FC was established in 1956 by members of Marske Cricket Club, initially playing in the Cleveland League. The Seasiders then transferred to the South Bank League, before moving up to the Teesside League in 1976. The club won the Teesside League in 1980/81 and when this success was matched in 1984/85 United stepped up to the Wearside League.

They went on to win the Wearside League in 1996 and then finished runners up the following year, earning promotion to Division Two of the Northern League. In their first season the Seasiders finished third to move up to Division One.

Relegation followed in 2004, but the side was promoted again in third place in 2011, and were crowned Northern League champions in 2014/15; however they declined promotion to the Northern Premier League.

In 2017/18 the club reached the semi finals of the FA Vase, losing 3-2 on aggregate to Stockton Town. However Marske won the Division One title once more at the end of their campaign, earning promotion to Division One East of the Northern Premier League - where they finished 10th, out of 20, in their first season.

The first meeting that led to the formation of City of Liverpool FC was in October 2014, and the club was officially established in May 2015. The club chose to play in the colour purple, as it is the civic colour of the city....and a mix of Liverpool red and Everton blue - leading to their nickname 'The Purps'.

 

The Purps applied to join the NWCFL in early 2016 but their application was rejected by the FA and COL were instead placed in the Liverpool County Premier League. However they took up the option to appeal the decision, especially as vacancies arose due to Northwich Manchester Villa's resignation and Rochdale Town's expulsion from the league. At Wembley Stadium on 8 June 2016 the appeal was successful.

 

Groundsharing at Bootle's (then) Delta Taxis Stadium, it was an extraordinarily successful inaugural season. Leading the way for much of the campaign, the Purps eventually finished fourth and overcame Whitchurch Alport 1-0 to reach the play off final. Litherland REMYCA were beaten 3-0 on their own turf to secure promotion to the Premier Division.

 

Added to this, COL beat Sandbach United to lift the First Division Challenge Cup, their first ever piece of silverware. The Purps also won the League Challenge Cup Final at Highbury (Fleetwood rather than Arsenal) on penalties against Barnoldswick Town, in a match soured by crowd violence. No wonder City of Liverpool FC was awarded the title 'Non League Team of the Year' by sports bookmaker Coral.

 

In the 2017/18 season the club won the Champions Cup against Atherton Collieries and finished fourth, but last term the club finished as champions, pipping Bootle on the final day - Bootle having gone on a 20 game winning streak but only drawing on the final day. So promotion to the Northern Premier League Division One North West. Furthermore in their quest for a stadium of their own the Purps have been granted a period of exclusivity on a site at Fazakerley Playing Fields. However a Purps fan at today's game informed me that the land is contaminated 'and will never be built on'.


So on a warm summer afternoon it's past that execrable ELCTRICALS. TOILETORIES sign and onto the M60 and today's number plates UR 53CUR (a security company), SK11NKS and a reappearance of BUD61E.

To the M62 then onwards to Saddleworth Moor, Rakehead Viaduct and Windy Hill - The M62 Summit 'Highest Motorway in England 372 metres (1221 feet)'. Then Sammonden Reservoir, Rainbow Bridge and Stott Hall Farm, bisecting the two carriagewaysHere there's a serious accident involving multiple vehicles, including one that's landed in a field.... Several emergency vehicles are in attendance and the carriageway is closed - naturally our side stops to rubberneck, creating delays.

From there to the M1 North, A1(M), A168, A19 and the A174, passing Mount Grace Priory and signs for Mother Shipton's Cave, The World of James Herriot and Captain Cook Birthplace Museum, bypassing Wetherby, Thirsk and Northallerton. I am comfortably overtaken by a Lamborghini but pass three Up North Combine lorries sporting signs of 'Caution Racing Pigeons'.

Off at the Marske turn, the landscape one of steelworks and refineries, and onto The Wynd which hosts The Wynd Pantry and Ravanelli's takeaway - a nod to The White Feather at nearby Middlesbrough ?

Mount Pleasant is just off Southfield Road, the next right, and beyond the bowling club. Passing the Alan Prest Band Room it's £8 at the turnstile and a decent crowd of 304 with a Purps contingent of at least three figures for their first game at Step 4.

Inside there's the Jimmy Smith Suite and Neil's Kabin serving refreshments. To my right a small covered area in the corner and to my left the main stand and another covered area with, for this season, a new front row of 44 seats built on wood with a sign at the back 'Tin Shed Titans' although this is soon populated by Purple Partisans.... The rest of the ground is surrounded by a mix of old-style and modern housing.



The Seasiders are in yellow shirts and blue shorts, with the shotstopper in all orange and COL, naturally, are in all purple with orange trim and their keeper in sky blue.

The match itself is dominated by the high winds - winds strong enough for at least 15 footballs to be kicked out of the ground during the game and strong enough to lift a cap off a Purps' fan's head and blown out of the ground....

The first meaningful action in the fifth minute produces a sublime goal for the Seasiders. A well worked move on the left finds Curtis Round and his left foot directs the ball superbly across the keeper into the top right corner. Even the Purps fans are impressed.

Thereafter Andrew Stephenson's cutback is deflected onto the post for the home side and he and Matty Waters waste a whole host of chances - most deriving from Liam O'Sullivan's huge throws. The Purps hardly feature 'we've not turned up this half' and a free kick that drifts past the post is their only meaningful effort, although this is blamed on 'several missing players'. 

The second half sees more of the same as the wind swirls round, although the sunshine is still pleasantly warm. Round conjures up another chance and then thrashes the ball over post and crossbar from six yards, and a goalmouth melee sees the ball land on the top of COL's bar.

Gradually the Purps grow into the game and both Elliott Nevitt and Jason Jeffries go close, before Tom Peterson taps in at the far post with a quarter of an hour to play. Half the ground erupts before the other half does as the linesman flags for offside, debatably.

Then, with ten minutes to go, home debutant goalkeeper Jack Norton loses the ball in the wind and trying to recover pulls down Purps' Jack Hazlehurst for a penalty. He makes up for his error by pulling off a superb save, low to his left, from Karl Clair's spot-kick.

This sparks an altercation between the two dug outs, two bookings and the game turns increasingly spiteful - we end up with 9 yellows and one red; Jeffries for two cynical yellows. Round is put through one on one and shoots wide, but the Seasiders hang on amidst (un)bearable tension.

Wednesday 14 August 2019

Chad All Over - Pilks Under The Weather (But Cricket Carries On !!)

And so on a foul August Saturday, with summer appearing to have been and gone, it's over to the ArcOframe and Ruskin Sports Village for the North West Counties fixture between Pilkington and Chadderton.

Pilkington FC was officially founded in 1938 but the club has a history dating back many years before its official formation. The team's origins emanate from the Pilkington glass factory in St Helens which had numerous teams going back almost as far as the company starting to make glass in the 19th century.

Pilks initially played at Crossley Road with teams in the Liverpool Business Houses League and the St Helens Combination League. The club moved to Ruskin Drive at the start of the 1948/49 season and subsequently switched leagues to the Liverpool Combination.

An overseas Portuguese tour in 1970 advertised the club as Recs Pilkington de Liverpool but thousands of Portuguese spectators flocked to the ground expecting to see the Anfield team.

For the 1983/84 campaign Pilkington joined the Mid-Cheshire (now Cheshire) League and spent many years alternating between the first and second tiers. Their most recent relegation to Division One was in 2015, but in 2018 the club was promoted back to the Premier Division as runners up. Twelve months later Pilks won the Premier League, beating Altrincham Reserves on goal difference on the final day and finishing with 8 straight wins to confirm promotion to the North West Counties Football League Division One North.


Chadderton FC, 'Chaddy', was formed in 1947 as Millbrow FC, then became North Chadderton Amateurs and finally Chadderton in 1957. Initially competing in the Oldham Amateur League, the club then progressed through the Manchester Amateur League and on to the Manchester League in 1963.

A step up to the Lancashire Combination followed and, after finishing runners up in 1982, they became founder members of the North West Counties, created by the merger of the Lancashire Combination and Cheshire County League. Promotion in 1990 was swiftly met with relegation the season after, but the club lasted longer at the higher level after gaining promotion in 1993 - until being forcibly demoted in 1999 due to ground grading issues.

In 2007 Chaddy was taken over by Craig Halliwell and Tony Bhatti of HB Property Group, but within two years ties had been severed; the club becoming a members' club run by the people for the people. The play offs were reached in 2015, but the team remains best known for two of its ex-players - England international David Platt and Mark Owen from Take That. It was a disappointing performance of 16th (out of 20) last season.


So with strong winds and heavy rain it's over a freshly resurfaced Altrincham Bridge, past the Cheshire Retreat and glorious floral beds at Denzell Gardens before I reach Thelwall with speed restrictions for 'high winds'. Today's number plate is CA5 1 BAD, and there's also an Ultimate Lawns car whose bodywork is entirely (sodden) artificial grass...

A slight detour into Warrington, past Sub Imagination - with a strapline of 'Your dream and our hard work means mutual satisfaction' ; imaginative but clunky....

Finally onto the M62, past the Glass Horse pub and Catwalk Dogs, the 'Canine Grooming Lounge' and into the one way Denton's Green Lane which doubles back on itself; Ruskin Drive is a cul de sac on the left..

There's plenty of parking at Ruskin Drive Sports Ground, a 30 acre sports complex originally built in 1902 by Pilkington plc for use by its employees, and now run by St Helens Borough Council. There's also plenty going on - I walk past a rugby union pitch, home of Ruskin Park RFC, down some steps to a bowling green and this brings me to the cricket ground. Most spectators are in or around the Sticky Wicket Bar & Grub.

It's a dual entrance to get in - one side for the football (£3) and the other for the rugby league (£2) where Pilkington Recs, top of Conference Division One, are doing battle with Oulton Raiders, with Recs ultimately winning that one 30-8. The sports complex also features tennis courts and rounders pitches.

Inside it's a three sided ground with housing behind the goal at the top end. The left side is inaccessible with fencing and densely populated trees behind the dugouts, and the rugby union pitch behind them. The near end holds the changing rooms and bar, and the cricket pitch beyond. The popular side has a covered 200 seat AtCost stand and the rugby league match in the background.



The ArcOframe also hosts a series of ten information boards charting St Helens Town's journey to the FA Vase final in 1987, where they beat Warrington Town 3-2, and others covering Saints' football legends.

Pilkington are in all green, with keeper Patrick McLoughlin wearing a salmon number, and Chaddy are in change white with a red stripe and black flashing - stopper Jordan Hadlow in all yellow. A thin crowd of 72 - in stark contrast to last week's curtain raiser against Cleator Moor Celtic which drew 224 - gets thoroughly soaked as the wind blows the driving rain into the four rows of the covered stand.

Pilks are all at sea as Chaddy set the pace, McLoughlin tipping a shot onto the bar within the first two minutes. So it comes as no surprise when on 10 minutes Reece Lyndon is given time and space to square the ball and allow Liam Chambers to place the ball home.

Gradually Pilks come into the game following a mistake by Hadlow; home skipper Luke Sephton sidestepping him and hitting every part of the goalframe but crucially the ball fails to cross the line. Phil Marsh then evades his marker and goes round Hadlow before dreadfully scuffing his shot.

Half time with Chaddy 1-0 up and astonishingly I find a cricket match next door in progress in the pouring rain. In truth it's not much of a contest - Parkfield Liscard subsiding to 34 all out and St Helens Seconds comfortably reaching their target during the interval and then it's a mad sprint to the Sticky Wicket.

Back to the football and Sephton shoots across the goal whilst Jack Cunliffe is denied superbly by Hadlow. Against the run of play on 55 minutes James Dwyer doubles the advantage with a free header from a corner.

Substitute Matty Taylor's perfect cross is met by Sephton's header to reduce the arrears shortly after. Thereafter Pilks pepper the Chaddy goal, despite rugged opposition which results in 5 yellow cards - two of which come from one bizarre incident where two players (including Arron Scholes - son of United legend Paul) are booked for kicking the ball away.

Despite intense pressure and goal-line clearances Pilks fall short and Chaddy take home the points.



Monday 5 August 2019

Not Heys' Day As United Victorious In Inaugural Fixture...

And so to the first Saturday in August and the new football season (we'll ignore the 2 Champions' League, 3 Norwegian and 2 Irish matches). And a new club and a new ground, the WMS Entrance Systems Park on Longfield Avenue, the home of Golcar United who play host to Prestwich Heys in the North West Counties Division One North this afternoon. 

Golcar United FC was established in 1904 and joined the West Riding County Amateur League in 1934 finishing as runners up. However, after finishing bottom in the 1937/38 season, United left the league but rejoined later.

Golcar won the West Riding County Challenge Cup in 2000–01, and were Premier Division runners up in 2003–04. The following season saw them win the league title. They were runners up in 2014–15, and champions in 2017–18. United retained the league and cup double last season with twenty wins and one draw from 22 matches in the league, and were promoted to Division One North of the NWCFL. United thereby became the last ever champions of the now defunct West Riding County Amateur League - a league that started last year with the bare minimum of 14 clubs but following the demise of AFC Bingley and DRAM Community finished with 12.



The Heys’ origins can be traced to February 9th 1938 when a meeting was called at the Music Room of the Heys Road Boys School with the idea of forming an Old Boys Association - the football arm becoming Heys Old Boys AFC. The Heys gradually progressed through the Bury Amateur League and South East Lancashire League, changing their name to Prestwich Heys AFC in 1964. The team joined the Lancashire Combination for the 1968/69 season.

Thousands flocked to see the Heys play in the FA Amateur Cup, with the victory over Sutton United in 1969 attracting nationwide coverage, coming a week before their opponents were due to meet Leeds United in the FA Cup. Truly the Heys' heyday !!

The club became a founder member of the North West Counties League in 1982 but were demoted to the Manchester League in 1986 due to ground grading issues. Under manager Adie Moran the Heys were champions for three successive seasons between 2005 and 2007. Tragically Moran was killed in a swimming accident in Sri Lanka at the age of 43 in June 2007 which left the club reeling.

After relegation battles, the club renamed the ground as Adie Moran Park in honour of their late manager and in 2016 won the Manchester League Premier Division - thereby returning to the North West Counties Football League after a 30 year absence. An 8th place finish on their return was followed by third the season after with play off elimination by Cammell Laird, and 5th last term.


So on a warm summer afternoon it's past Bake My Day, the execrable T & T Pound Plus ELCTRICALS. TOILETORIES. and still shut, and Garvey's offering traditional Irish music every Fri-yay !! Onto the M60 and this season's first number plate M45S RC - possibly a priest ? Past a van advertising Walks'n'All, a dog walking and pet sitting company, and over Barton Bridge.

To the M62 then onwards to Saddleworth Moor, Rakehead Viaduct and Windy Hill - The M62 Summit 'Highest Motorway in England 372 metres (1221 feet)'. Then Sammonden Reservoir, Rainbow Bridge and Stott Hall Farm, bisecting the two carriageways.

Off at junction 23 and into Huddersfield (Land of Milk and Money apparently !!), where I'm invited to join Huddersfield Petanque Club. Onto the ring road where I spot a Muslim Support Food Bank and then, after Easyfireplace, a sharp right onto Scar Lane and Golcar. Then right onto Taylor Avenue where I park as Longfield Avenue is already choked.

The WMS Park is slap bang in the middle of a housing estate, with work undertaken over the summer to erect fencing and railings to ensure it meets NWCFL criteria. It has the feel of a council recreation pitch split into two with the top half used for overflow parking. £4 at the gate and it soon becomes clear United have underestimated interest in their first ever game at Step 6.

Only 50 programmes have been printed, with the bloke in front of me snaffling the last one. The attendance is a truly magnificent 379 (nearly double the previous record and comfortably the best in the entire league today), bolstered by many groundhoppers, several disaffected Bury fans and the fact that Huddersfield Town don't play till Monday. Only one toilet between us all though......

Inside only two sides are operative; one behind the near goal where there is a refreshment bar and the changing rooms. The popular side supports the clubhouse and a small covered standing area - there are no seats or floodlights yet. The other two sides are cordoned off due to their proximity to housing. Indeed that's all you can see except for trees and, to the left, views of Scapegoat Hill and Slaithwaite rising above the roofs.


Golcar are in their famous green and black stripes, Heys in red shirts and white shorts - although their keeper also wears green. There is a slight hold up whilst one of the goal nets is fixed, and I spot a large 'Up The Heys' banner in the corner next to a rather smaller Golcar flag bearing the club badge.

The first ten minutes are fairly turgid, with the main topic of conversation being the length and thickness of the grass which prevents smooth passing. Indeed the only areas without long grass are a couple of heavily sanded strips covering those parts that were waterlogged until yesterday.

And then suddenly we have a goal. The ball is played in from Golcar's left and Ben Burnett scores in the corner with a wonderful cushioned left footed volley for United's first ever goal at Step 6.

Little has been seen of Prestwich until their equaliser on 24 minutes. Jacob Wood overlaps on the right wing and delivers a peach of a cross which is met with a gorgeous header by Will Shawcross to tie things up. That seems to wake Heys up - Rio Wilson-Heyes draws a flying save from Golcar's Harry Stead and then Shelton Payne scuffs a one on one wide.

But it is Golcar who go into the break leading. Some rather shambolic Heys defending allows Jordan Townend to play in a totally unmarked Alex Hallam and he calmly sidefoots home.

The second period is distinctly underwhelming as Heys don't do enough pressing or testing Stead. Payne shoots across goal following a Stead error, and Wilson-Heyes fires into the side netting.

Hallam shoots across goal for the home side, but the game descends into a flurry of substitutions and bookings - you will not be surprised to learn that Payne is booked for simulation !! The referee chooses not to use the sin bin today however.

Then with ten minutes to go we have a bit of a melee, more handbags than anything else. This is also the trigger for the menacing black clouds, which have replaced the sun, to send out thick and heavy raindrops amidst rumbling thunder.

The groundhopper from Nottingham next to me really has had a nightmare today. He missed his train connection at Wakefield and had to shell out £26 for a taxi to get to the game (more than his return train ticket), and now finds that he hasn't brought a coat.... At least his neighbour from Sunbury on Thames has a cap....

Some pinball ricochet in the Golcar area in injury time but the ball is cleared and United take the spoils 2-1.


Wednesday 22 May 2019

Archers Hit The Bull's Eye - Lakesiders Pay The Penalty !!

And so to Maes Tegid, home of Bala Town FC - Clwb Pel Droed Y Bala Town - another area where Welsh speakers amount to nearly 80%. This for the final game of the Welsh domestic season, the Europa League play off final against the Archers of Cardiff Metropolitan University FC, and that guaranteed prize money of £200,000.

Bala Town FC was formed in 1880 but there is record of a football club in Bala playing in the 1877/78 Welsh Cup. Bala North End, Bala South End and Bala Thursdays merged to form the current Bala Town, with the first record being the 1921/22 campaign in the Welsh National League North Division 2 East.

In the early 1950s the Lakesiders (naturally enough !!) moved to Maes Tegid from the adjacent Castle Park. The team played in the Welsh National League Wrexham Area between 1950 and 1954, then rejoined the Cambrian Coast League in 1954, winning titles in 1959 and 1963. The club re-entered the Welsh National League Wrexham Area for the 1963/64 season.

For the 2003/04 term Colin Caton (cousin of the late Tommy) took over the managerial reins - he is still in charge - and Bala won promotion to the Cymru Alliance in his first season.

In 2009 the Lakesiders were crowned Huws Gray Cymru Alliance champions and promoted to the Welsh Premier League. In their first season Town finished 11th out of 18, but the Welsh Premier League committee decided to reduce the league to 12 clubs - relegation seemed inevitable but was avoided as no feeder league club was deemed able to reach the criteria to obtain a Domestic Licence.

The Lakesiders took their place in the 'Super 12' but again finished 11th in 2011, once more evading relegation due to Licensing issues.

Since then there has been no more flirting with relegation - Bala finished runners up in 2014/15 and 2015/16 (when the club was being bankrolled by local businesses keen to bring an end to The New Saints' monopoly on titles). The Welsh Cup was won in 2017 when Town fought back to beat TNS 2-1, and the club has qualified for the Europa League five times but is yet to win a tie on aggregate.

Last time the Lakesiders finished a disappointing sixth, but beat fifth placed Newtown 2-1 to earn a home final play off against Cardiff MU.

Last weekend's win at Caernarfon will live long in the memory but a swift resume of the visitors, 'The Archers' of Cardiff Metropolitan University FC, who were formed from a series of mergers and name changes.

It all started with Lake United renaming themselves AFC Cardiff in 1984. In 1990 the club was taken over by Sully FC to form Inter Cardiff FC, which became Inter CableTel AFC in 1996. This club represented Wales in the old UEFA Cup three times, including playing Celtic in the 1997/98 season.

In 2000 a merger with UWIC (University of Wales Institute, Cardiff) produced UWIC Inter Cardiff which became Cardiff Metropolitan University FC in 2012. The Archers, or unofficially known as The International, The Sheep (!) or The Div's (Car-DIFF), then won three promotions in four seasons to reach the Welsh Premier League.

Since then the club has qualified for the Europa League play offs every season, this time via finishing top of the relegation group, but without winning the final and moving on to play in Europe. Also this season The Archers won the Welsh League Cup for the first time, beating second tier Cambrian & Clydach Vale Boys & Girls Club 2-0 in the final, all under the managerial reign of ex Welsh international Dr Christian Edwards.

So on a cloudy, breezy afternoon I set off past the property that is now styled as the Brexit House, then the well appointed Denzell Gardens, The Stretton Fox and Daresbury Park. Not long before the ridiculous numberplates appear - today we have X 11ON X, H1 2OLD (too old for what ??), N1NJA, ADD 2 (add two what ??), GR03 VEG, CAR 123X (??) and D3KLN. A fool and his money are soon parted....

Then the wind turbine farm and belching fumes that is Stanlow before I join the A494, skirting Buckley and Mold. A wry smile at the We Three Loggerheads, in Loggerheads itself, the Druid Inn at Llanferres and some glorious Welsh countryside scenery on the winding road from the heights of Llanbedr Dyffryn Clwyd.

That takes me to Ruthin and its Gaol, a brief flirtation with the A5 and a left turn at The Druids, beyond Glassblobbery and into Bala. Time is on my side so I take in the magnificent views of Lake Bala - 3.7 miles long by 0.5miles wide. It was the largest natural body of water in Wales until its level was raised by Thomas Telford to help support the flow of the Ellesmere Canal, and the sight of it is utterly breathtaking.


Then I take the minor B road by the eastern side of Lake Bala down to Llanuwchllyn, a one track road with the odd passing place - I, uncomfortably, come head on to several classic cars, all sporting a 'Hills and Valleys Tour' blue badge.

At the foot of the hill Llanuwchllyn is the home of the Bala Lake Railway, a 4.5 mile ride taking 25 minutes (and £11.50 return !!) to Bala Penybont, along the side of Lake Bala. The locomotive shed and heritage centre reveal 6 engines and various wagons, plus Winifred, the steam engine operating today.

Then into Bala, with its eclectic mix of pubs, galleries and cafes - including one called, naturally enough, Sospan Fach !! Not much to Bala away from the High Street, bearing in mind its population of less than 2,000 at the last census. However there is a striking clocktower in honour of John Jones of Tremynfa, and a statue of Thomas Edward Ellis, a prominent Welsh Liberal politician, emanating from the Bala area.

Left at The White Lion and then onto Castle Street brings me to Maes Tegid and Bala Town FC. No problem parking at the ground this week but it comes as no surprise, given the shambolic marshalling and sheer imbecility and selfishness of some drivers, that there is utter chaos and gridlock at the final whistle; fortunately I am away within ten minutes.

£6 at the gate and a crowd of 623 for the final, including a healthy number of away fans making the near 300 mile round trip and several groundhoppers.

Inside the main stand is to my left, a piecemeal affair made up of no less than 5 separate covered structures plus a press box - and with stunning views of  Snowdonia shrouded in mist in the background. At the top end is the house on the hill, whilst opposite are the dugouts and TV gantry with the near end providing the dressing rooms, snack bar and a small three step terrace behind the goal. It is here that the Bala Ultras congregate, their flags completely outnumbering the solitary 'The Roving Sheep On Tour' at the far end - a Merthyr Town supporter who is 'neutral'. Dial M for Merthyr....



The Lakesiders are in white with black sleeves and shorts, the Archers in claret and blue with yellow trim, and the officials in all yellow - so no colour clash this week. Bala start with 4 Welshmen and 7 English players - by the end it's 2 Welsh and 9 English - whilst Met have the complete reverse - 7 Welsh and 4 English.

Unlike last week the Archers start strongly with Adam Roscrow hitting the bar in the first minute and then heading against the inside of the post on 12 minutes. However Bala take the lead eight minutes later when Nathan Burke's cross is flicked on to Kieran Smith and glanced in by Henry Jones.

Four minutes later parity is restored - Will Evans given far too much space, drawing a save from Keighan Jones, but Eliot Evans pounces on the rebound to equalise. Smith hits the sidenetting for Bala as we approach half  time.

The second half is a cagey affair with few chances and solid defending. The Archers' keeper Will Fuller denies Henry Jones and Mike Hayes, whilst Met's Will Evans has a goal disallowed and is then booked for simulation in the penalty box.

Tension mounts as we move into extra time; in the first period Chris Baker heads against the post for Cardiff, whilst in the second Fuller makes a splendid save from Anthony Stephens but is then helpless as Hayes and Stuart Jones strike the bar within seconds - how the ball does not cross the line defies belief.....

Inevitably penalties and further unbearable tension which transmits itself to the players.... After 6 penalties the score is 1-0 to the Archers, with Keighan Jones saving two weak Cardiff penalties, and Bala skying one over the bar and having two saved, the second superbly by Will Fuller. The final three are scored, the last by Eliot Evans for a 3-1 win for the Met, and ecstasy on the pitch and the terraces as the students' team qualify for Europe !!

Wednesday 15 May 2019

Archers Arrow In On Play Off Final - Canaries Sick As A Parrot !!

And so to the Oval and a Welsh Premier League Europa League play off between the Canaries of Caernarfon Town and the Archers of Cardiff Metropolitan University FC. Or the home of Clwb Pel Droed Tref Caernarfon, befitting a town that boasts greater than 86% of the population being Welsh speakers - Caernarfon residents are colloquially known as Cofis, and Cofi is used to describe the local dialect incorporating many words not used in the Welsh language. The overall winners of the Europa League play offs secure a place in the cup draw and a guaranteed £200,000 prize money....

The first football club in Caernarfon was established in September 1876 and known as Carnarvon Athletic, playing at various grounds and moving to The Oval in 1888. Athletic folded in 1891 and what followed was a plethora of short lived clubs - Carnarvon Ironopolis, Celts, RWF (Royal Welsh Fusiliers), United and a reincarnation of Athletic which was liquidated in 1930 and then revived two years later before quitting over problems using The Oval.

In 1937 a group of local soccer enthusiasts began Caernarvon Town FC (now Caernarfon Town FC). The Canaries had a 39 year unbroken membership of the Welsh League (North), winning the championship twice, until internal problems caused the club to withdraw from the league in 1976. Within months Town was reborn and immediately won consecutive titles.

The Welsh FA then gave Caernarfon permission to join the Lancashire League, becoming a founder member of the North West Counties Football League in 1982.

In 1985 the Canaries were elected to the Northern Premier League and during the 1986/87 season, under the tutelage of John King and inspired by Austin Salmon (a missed car name if ever there was one !! ), embarked on a record FA Cup run. Fourth Division Stockport County were beaten 1-0, Third Division York City 2-1 in a replay at Bootham Crescent (a match I shall never forget) before losing 1-0 in a replay to Second Division Barnsley. Cofis finished third in the NPL and felt that, if not for the FA Cup run, they would probably have gained promotion to the Football Conference.

After King's departure, to Tranmere Rovers, and the disappointing tenure of Tommy Smith, Town were relegated to the first division of the NPL in 1990. Thereafter followed five seasons of indifferent performances prompting the board to make the decision to return to Welsh football. The Canaries were welcomed back into the League of Wales in August 1995.

In March 2009, with finances at an all time low and the club's entire future in doubt, the chairman and board of directors resigned and a band of volunteers managed to guide Town through to the end of the season. A year later Caernarfon sank to the third tier of Welsh football.

The team won the Welsh Alliance in 2013 and then the Huws Gray Cymru Alliance in 2016, but were deprived of promotion as the FAW denied the Canaries a domestic licence with Cefn Druids going up instead. Nonetheless two years later another championship was bagged and this time the licence was granted - Town finishing 4th in their first season back in the Welsh Premier League, and securing a home Europa League play off.

The visitors, 'The Archers' of Cardiff Metropolitan University FC, were formed from a series of mergers and name changes.

It all started with Lake United renaming themselves AFC Cardiff in 1984. In 1990 the club was taken over by Sully FC to form Inter Cardiff FC, which became Inter CableTel AFC in 1996. This club represented Wales in the old UEFA Cup three times, including playing Celtic in the 1997/98 season.

In 2000 a merger with UWIC (University of Wales Institute, Cardiff) produced UWIC Inter Cardiff which became Cardiff Metropolitan University FC in 2012. The Archers, or unofficially known as The International, The Sheep (!) or The Div's (Car-DIFF), then won three promotions in four seasons to reach the Welsh Premier League.

Since then the club has qualified for the Europa League play offs every season, this time via finishing top of the relegation group, but without winning the final and moving on to play in Europe. Also this season The Archers won the Welsh League Cup for the first time, beating second tier Cambrian & Clydach Vale Boys & Girls Club 2-0 in the final, all under the managerial reign of ex pro Dr Christian Edwards.


So onto Manchester Road, some drizzle, cloud then unbroken sunshine as I pass the carved wooden eagle before reaching the M56 and Stanlow with its belching fumes and overworked wind turbines. And immediately a competition for the worst personalised numberplate - today's contenders are SO 61DDY, SO0 6LAD, M3FLU, 4ODD (factually incorrect !!), T4KCE (yes a taxi !!), GH05T GC and ARK1D. No further comment required.....

Then to Queensferry, where the speed limit is reduced for emission reductions, and the A55, Bodelwyddan Castle, straddling the coast as I approach the abandoned pier at Colwyn Bay. Then panoramic views of Snowdonia and the Great Orme before the Conwy, Penmaenbach and Pen-y-Clip tunnels. Beyond Bangor and the Vales Fall Whisky Distillery and into the royal town of Caernarfon (Fort of Arfon) advertising next weekend's Rail Ale Festival. A sharp left onto Henwalia and right into Marcus Street where I find the car park full a good six hours before kick off, possibly because of the S4C Sgorio live coverage of the match later on.

Caernarfon itself is absolutely packed - today is the annual Food Festival with live entertainment, market stalls and the biggest queues at The Tipsy Giraffe cocktail bar. Slowly I wend my way past the walls of Caernarfon Castle, with its polygonal towers, the statue of David Lloyd George (Caernarfon's most famous son) to Victoria Dock and the Walled Town to a cacophony of Welsh language lilt.

My final stop is the harbour, the River Seiont and the Menai Strait with Anglesey glistening in the sun and then the Welsh Highland Railway, a 25 mile two and a quarter hour journey to Porthmadog - but at £41.50 return and bearing in mind last month's runaway locomotive incident it's probably an attraction I can resist......

To the football, £7 in and directly facing me is the Rondo Stand, 3 rows of covered yellow and green seats emphasising the steep gradient from left to right. The main grandstand is to my right with yellow CPTC seats set amidst green, and a curious covered standing area in the corner complete with window....The near end features a part covered terrace behind the goal together with a snackbar, whilst to the left is terracing, grass bank and gravel, the press box and dugouts. A bumper crowd of 1280 waits in anticipation....



With the sun still blazing the teams enter the fray - the Canaries in yellow and green as expected and goalkeeper Alex Ramsay in all black - the same as the referee and his two assistants. The Archers are in claret and blue with yellow trim, and shotstopper Will Fuller in orange but with a large amount of yellow on his top...

Cofis start well and the Archers sluggishly as in the first minute Darren Thomas is given too much space and Fuller saves his shot with an outstretched foot. Thomas has two other good chances, one crowded out, the other just wide before the inevitable happens. A free kick from captain Nathan Craig and a towering header from Thomas that loops over Fuller and the Canaries are chirping !! A surge at the Town End, a crush and the perimeter wall and advertising hoardings collapse...

There is a lengthy delay with one youngster suffering a minor arm injury and discussions as to whether the match should continue. Eventually play resumes with the Town End patrolled by three stewards, but not evacuated, and only cordoned off at half time when the home fans move to the Rondo Stand. Nine minutes of injury time are played at the end of the first period.


The delay appears to unsettle Caernarfon and Met start to come more into the game. On 36 minutes Chris Baker's deflected shot from a corner restores parity and three minutes later Eliot Evans, who has already come close, hits the post from another corner.

The second half mirrors the first with the Canaries starting strongly - Leo Smith has a shot cleared off the line and Thomas hits the post but crucially Caernarfon don't score. Midway through the half Cardiff's centre forward, the excellent Adam Roscrow, is found in space on the left wing and with sheer power and pace advances to beat his marker and smash the ball into the roof of the net. A quite magnificent individual goal...

Leo Smith then hits the bar in a goalmouth melee at a corner, and Eliot Evans is denied by a wonderful fingertip save from Ramsay, before with nine minutes remaining Kyle McCarthy arcs his run beautifully and produces a superb shot across Ramsay, low into the corner, for 3-1.

Into injury time a needless trip gives the Cofis a lifeline - Craig scores the penalty kick but there is insufficient time for an equaliser. The Archers now go to Maes Tegid and Bala Town next Sunday for the final Europa League spot and that £200,000...

Monday 29 April 2019

Tad All Over - Brewers Fare Well In Whites Fright Show

And so to the i2i Stadium and Ings Lane for the final Evostik Northern Premier Division One East league fixture of the season between Tadcaster Albion and Lincoln United.

Tadcaster Albion was formed in 1892 as John Smith's Football Club, with their stadium behind the John Smith's brewery - the club now play next to Samuel Smith's brewery store. The Brewers (unsurprisingly !!) played in the York League but the club ran into difficulties in the early 1920s, and came back in 1923 under the new name of Tadcaster Albion.

By 1926/27 they were back under the John Smith's name, with a second team using the Tadcaster Albion title founded in 1930. The clubs merged after World War II, keeping the Tadcaster Albion name.

Albion won the York League in the 1947/48 season, eventually moving upwards to the Yorkshire League for the 1973/74 campaign. The Brewers were a founder member of the Northern Counties East League in 1982 and won Division One in 2010.

Their best ever FA Vase run in 2015 resulted in a 6th Round replay at home to Highworth Town, which sparked ugly scenes featuring a pitch invasion, coin throwing and Town's chairman and goalkeeper injured in the melee. Highworth eventually won the tie 1-0.

The following year, after significant investment, The Brewers were crowned as NCEL Premier Division champions and promoted to the Northern Premier League Division One North (now East) with a play off push mounted this season. And the equation is simple - Taddy must win this afternoon and Sheffield have to lose at Brighouse Town (almost an El Classicoal !!). Two goals in the final 15 minutes against Gresley to overturn the away side's lead and an injury time equaliser at the Pikes of Pickering Town on Easter Monday leave the Brewers three points behind 'The Club' but with a better goal difference.....

The away side, 'The Whites' from Ashby Avenue, was established as Lincoln Amateurs FC in 1938 but only joined the Lincolnshire League in 1945 because of World War II. The following season the club transferred to the Lincoln League and in 1954 was renamed as Lincoln United, after taking on a paid player, Ray Bean, at 5 shillings a week (!).

United rejoined the Lincolnshire League in 1960, winning the title in 1964 before moving to the Yorkshire League in 1967, where they were twice champions of Division One.

The Whites were a founder member of the Northern Counties East League when the Yorkshire League merged with the Midland League in 1982, but joined the Supreme Division (!!) of the Central Midlands League in 1986. United won the Supreme championship in 1991, in a season where they became the only Central Midlands League team to play in the First Round proper of the FA Cup (losing 7-0 to Huddersfield Town) before reverting back to the NCEL.

The Premier Division was won in 1994/95 moving United up to the Northern Premier League Division One. Promotion to the Premier Division followed in 2004, but the club was relegated to Division One South (now East) in 2008 where they still reside - currently 13th out of 20 this campaign, but with only three wins this calendar year.

And so as Storm Hannah batters the UK it's a very wet and windy start to my journey. Past the Interior Curtain Centre which has already given us registration plates B11NDS and C11RTN - it has a new one T13 BAC today. Other car registration numbers that feature on this trip are FU55 ADO and O B11GSY.

Beyond that ELCTRICAL. TOILETORIES. sign it's onto the M60 and then onwards to Saddleworth Moor, Rakehead Viaduct and Windy Hill - The M62 Summit 'Highest Motorway in England 372 metres (1221 feet).

Then Sammonden Reservoir, Rainbow Bridge and Stott Hall Farm, bisecting the two carriageways. After Hartshead Moor there is a flurry of Sonic Direct hoardings in the surrounding fields, but these are preferable to the abandoned trailers and wind turbines elsewhere on the route.....

I join the M1 which becomes the A1(M), and exit at junction 44. Then into Tadcaster, dominated by the breweries, but also boasting local shops 'Simply A Party' and Vanilla Interiors (rather plain !!) and the impressive St Mary's Church.

The town itself is quiet, almost closed, possibly due to the weather. This is epitomised by the sign for Hardwick Smith & Dewar 'Open 10-4 Thursdays' - and that's it....

The i2i stadium on Ings Lane is at the end of the road housing John Smith's Brewery, and there is ample parking. £8 gets me in, with the clubhouse immediately to my right and then a short covered terrace. To my left is the all seater Loxley Homes Stand, and in the far right corner a smaller version, the Ken Gilbertson Stand. Trees line all four sides with the River Wharfe behind them on the opposite side.

The river burst its banks during Storm Desmond in the 2015/16 season, resulting in the Brewers being unable to play home fixtures for over ten weeks. There was further flooding last month and the pitch was under several feet of water; however crowd funding enabled a full clean up and no matches were postponed.  



The Brewers are in yellow and blue and their keeper in all white, forcing The Whites to play in change green and white. The match kicks off in driving rain and strong winds.

Unsurprisingly Albion force the pace early on, and United's custodian, Michael Emery, makes a fine save from Casey Stewart's shot. Within a minute, out of nothing and completely against the run of play, Lincoln's Matt Cotton arrows in a shot that hits the inside of the post and rolls into the net - United lead on 13 minutes.

That lead lasts all of six minutes with the Brewers' centre back Paddy Miller, made skipper for the day ahead of his retirement after this match, heading in from a corner. Four minutes later a superb Harry Coates pass sets Stewart free down the right and he squares for Aiden Savory to sidefoot home.

The third home goal in eight minutes is caused by a suicidal pass by Emery to Callum Dye. Luke Porritt intercepts and is then tripped by Dye; the penalty kick is confidently dispatched by Miller.

On 36 minutes the referee awards the Brewers a second penalty, a rather soft decision for holding on Savory. Miller scores in the opposite corner for his first ever hat trick, and 4-1 to Taddy.

Then in first half injury time Jason Mycoe shoots from 35 yards, the ball hits a divot and loops high over Emery's flailing arms and into the net. 5-1 to the Brewers at the break, with word reaching us that Brighouse and Sheffield are drawing 1-1.

There is no let up in the second period. Nine minutes in Aaron Hardy's beautifully weighted cross is headed powerfully home by Pete Davidson, to chants of 'Yorkshire Pirlo' and Albion go 6-1 up.

On 65 minutes Porritt plays in Stewart who scores comfortably, and he repeats the feat a minute later to make it 8-1 to the Brewers. More chances are spurned and then Taddy declare.

In fact some sloppiness slips into their game. With eight minutes to go Albion mess up a corner, allowing Lincoln's Ben Davison to race up the field and send the keeper the wrong way. A minute later his precision finish into the corner makes it 8-3, and the fightback is on....well maybe not !!

News reaches us of an injury time winner for Sheffield, who return to Brighouse on Tuesday for the play offs. The Brewers' season and Paddy Miller's career are over - but what an astonishing match and as for Miller scoring a hat trick in his last game - you couldn't make it up !!  

Wednesday 17 April 2019

A Bonny Day For The Blues After Seahorses' Lame Performance.......

And so to Carleton Road and Frenchfield Park for my first ever Northern League fixture between Penrith and Whitley Bay in Division One.

Penrith AFC was founded in 1894, playing in local leagues before joining the Carlisle & District League which they won several times. The club moved to the North Eastern League for the 1907/08 season.

Before the start of the 1948/49 season 'The Bonny Blues' were elected to the Northern League where they remained until 1982 - their best finish being runners up in 1962.

The team became a founder member of the North West Counties Football League and finished second to Stalybridge Celtic in 1984. Promotion in 1987 to the Northern Premier League Division One saw a three year stay and then relegation back to the NWCFL.

The club rejoined the Northern League for the 1997/98 campaign and fortunes have fluctuated ever since, with four seasons in the Second Division and then promotion back to the top tier.

The Bonny Blues changed name to Penrith Town in 2007, and moved from Southend Road to Frenchfield Park. Thereafter there was a reunion with breakaway Penrith United with the club becoming Penrith AFC once more in 2008.

17th out of 22 last time, the club currently lie 18th and last in the league following Team Northumbria's close season resignation and disbandment, and Blyth FC's demise four games into the season. The Bonny Blues remain the only Northern League top flight side situated on the west side of the country.



The visitors, Whitley Bay FC, play at Hillheads Park adjacent to Whitley Bay ice rink; there has been a football club in Whitley Bay since 1896 when it was founded by Liam Patrick Mattimore, an ex Brazilian captain (!!). The club was known as Whitley and Monkseaton FC, before changing name to Monkseaton FC and then Whitley Bay Athletic.

After many years in the minor leagues, Whitley Bay Athletic joined the Northern Alliance League in 1950, claiming the title once. The Bay then opted to play in the powerful North Eastern League between 1955 and 1958, but the team struggled - subsequently successfully applying to the Northern League and dropping Athletic from the club name.

The Northern League championship was won in 1964/65 and 1965/66 along with several local cups over the intervening years.

The Seahorses took up their position in the Northern Premier League Division One in 1988 and won promotion to the Premier Division, as league winners, in 1991. However two relegations in 1995 and 2000 took the Bay back down to the Northern League.

Whilst there has been the occasional flirtation with the league title, the Seahorses have enjoyed considerable FA Vase success - four time winners in 2002 (beating Tiptree), 2009 (Glossop North End), 2010 (Wroxham) and 2011 (Coalville Town).

The current campaign has been another disappointing season, with the Bay lying 12th, a position they cannot improve upon before the season's end.

So on a glorious spring morning, with the sun beating down, there's some familiar sights. T & T Pound Plus no longer selling ELCTRICAL. TOILETORIES, queues on Barton Bridge due to a 'stranded vehicle' and then on the M61 'Incontinence Supplies at Internet Prices' before I pass a forlorn looking Botany Bay. A couple of car registration plates too - M3 CRY and the excellent WH05 BAD !!

Then onto the M6, inevitable barrier repairs and delays between junctions 32 and 33, motorway graffiti 'Democracy is fracked' and some glorious views of the Cumbrian countryside. Past the pretty multi-coloured painted terrace houses in Tebay, Shap Summit at 1036 feet, Katy Cropper Sheepdogs and then off at junction 40 with the sign for Ullswater Steamers.

A quick stroll round Penrith with its artisan shops and impressive clocktower, and JR Arnison & Sons, drapers, costumiers and milliners since 1742, before I head out to Carleton village, turning at the Cross Keys pub, passing Hunter Hall school and the cul de sac finishes at Frenchfield Sports Centre.

A vast complex of football and rugby pitches - and vicious speed bumps !! - with Penrith AFC's modern stadium at the end. £6 on the gate and the all seater grandstand and clubhouse and bar are immediately to my left, Blues CafĂ© to my right. Opposite is the three step Walter Brogden Stand, terraced but with six plastic chairs.... The rest of the ground is tarmacked flat standing with some wonderful views of snow capped hills and Beacon Edge, with the A66 passing behind the goal to my right.


The Bonny Blues are naturally in blue with white trim, the Seahorses in change yellow and black as the match kicks off under blue sky and sunshine but with a chill wind. The latter explains the high number of balls that sail over the perimeter fence, epitomised early on when after one match ball flies out of the ground, the replacement is shanked to Bay keeper Daniel Lister who manages to punt that straight over the fence too !!

On ten minutes the referee awards a throw in to the Seahorses - a truly appalling decision. Bay lose possession and Penrith's captain Grant Davidson sets a swift counterattack going. The ball is played out to Matty Clarke on the left side and he speeds down the wing before crossing for Martyn Coleman to sidefoot home and the Bonny Blues lead. A dubious assist for the referee ?? !!

The Seahorses come more into the game as the half progresses, Olly Martin's header just over the bar from a corner their best effort but the half ends 1-0 to Penrith, despite Stu Dixon's flapping in the home goal.

The second period sees the Seahorses start brightly, Jonathan Wright given far too much time and space to turn and shoot - wildly as it happens. Davidson has a shot deflected just wide for the home team.

Then on 70 minutes Bay's offside trap is breached and Davidson plays in Coleman, who takes the ball past Lister but the angle is too tight and his shot trickles agonisingly onto the post and into Lister's hands. No matter as within a minute the trap is broken again with Shaun Gardner releasing Adam Main and he deftly finishes past Lister.

Lister makes a superb tip over save from sub Max Brown to keep the score at 2-0, with the Seahorses struggling to create a chance worthy of the name, and the Bonny Blues see the game out at 2-0 to take their recent run to one defeat in eight in front of the crowd of 157. Three vital points with relegation issues yet to be confirmed by the FA, but Penrith know that 4 points from their final two games will see them avoid bottom spot - remarkable given that their first league victory was only achieved in January.

Doubles All Round - Community United As Spoils Are Shared....

And so to Bank Holiday Monday and Pride Park in Great Wyrley for a North West Counties Division One South encounter between Wolverhampton Sp...