Wednesday, 31 May 2023

THE SQUAD OF ENGLISH WOMEN 2023

England will face Haiti, Denmark and China in Group D of the 2023 Women’s World Cup held in Australia and New ZealandThe European champions’ first match will be in Brisbane on July 22, against Haiti, the Caribbean nation. which qualified for the finals for the first time with their success in February’s inter-continental play-offs. The Lionesses will then face Denmark in Sydney on July 28, before completing their group-stage fixtures with a meeting with China, in Adelaide on August 1.  China was the first team drawn alongside England and are the second highest-ranked country in the group, having featured in the last two editions of the tournament and reached the quarter-finals in 2015. They were also crowned Asian champions in 2022. 

Denmark was the highest ranked team in Pot 3 and make a return to the tournament having not qualified for the previous three editions.

The Republic of Ireland - making their World Cup debut - are drawn into Group B and will play hosts Australia on the opening day of the tournament in Sydney. Completing the Republic’s group are Canada and Nigeria. 

Lionesses head coach Sarina Wiegman named her 2023 Women's World Cup squad from THE COMMUNITY CLUB in Sutton Coldfield. The Lionesses are favourites to win the Trophy.and their clubs:

    Mary Earps                   Manchester United
    Hannah Hampton     Aston Villa
    Ellie Roebuck              Manchester City
    Millie Bright                 Chelsea
    Lucy Bronze                 Barcelona
    Jess Carter                   Chelsea
    Niamh Charles           Chelsea
    Rachel Daly                  Aston Villa
    Alex Greenwood        Manchester City
    Esme Morgan              Manchester City
    Lotte Wubben-Moy   Arsenal
Laura Coombs            Manchester City
Jordan Nobbs             Aston Villa
Georgia Stanway       Bayern Munich
Ella Toone                    Manchester United
Keira Walsh                 Barcelona
Katie Zelem                 Manchester United
Beth England             Tottenham Hotspur
Lauren Hemp             Manchester City
Lauren James            Chelsea
Chloe Kelly                  Manchester City
Katie Robinson          Brighton
Alessia Russo             Manchester United
Maya Le Tissier          Manchester United
Emily Ramsey            Manchester United





https://twitter.com/Lionesses/status/1663893093366792193?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Etweet








EXPECTED XI

A 4-3-3 system should be what Wiegman sets up this England team in. As for her first choice XI, it is unlikely to be massively different to the one she chose for every single game at last summer's Euros.

Earps will be between the sticks, with Bright and Greenwood the centre-back pairing in front of her.

At right-back will be Bronze, with the left-back spot certainly up for grabs. Wiegman may well go for Daly there, given it was the role she played during the Euros. Walsh and Stanway will feature in midfield, with Toone making up the trio.

It feels like James could secure the starting spot on the right wing, with Kelly, in slightly better form than Hemp at the moment, on the left and Russo through the middle. That could all change, though, yet.

England XI (4-3-3): Earps; Bronze, Bright, Greenwood, Daly; Walsh, Stanway, Toone; James, Russo, Kelly.


EXPECTED XI

A 4-3-3 system should be what Wiegman sets up this England team in. As for her first choice XI, it is unlikely to be massively different to the one she chose for every single game at last summer's Euros.

Earps will be between the sticks, with Bright and Greenwood the centre-back pairing in front of her.

At right-back will be Bronze, with the left-back spot certainly up for grabs. Wiegman may well go for Daly there, given it was the role she played during the Euros. Walsh and Stanway will feature in midfield, with Toone making up the trio.

It feels like James could secure the starting spot on the right wing, with Kelly, in slightly better form than Hemp at the moment, on the left and Russo through the middle. That could all change, though, yet.

England XI (4-3-3): Earps; Bronze, Bright, Greenwood, Daly; Walsh, Stanway, Toone; James, Russo, Kelly.

Tuesday, 30 May 2023

THEO WALCOTT

On 30th May 2006, Theo Walcott, aged 17 years and 75 days, became the youngest England international in the 3-1 victory over Hungary at Old Trafford. Another debut was given to the robotic dance celebration of Peter Crouch after he had scored England’s third goal.

Walcott's family made a cameo appearance in the 2007 film, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. The film was directed by David Yates, an uncle of Walcott. Walcott himself was due to appear as well, but his commitments to Arsenal forced him to drop out. 

His cousin, Jacob Walcott, was a trainee at Reading and a member of the England U17s, appearing in the 2009 UEFA championships. His older sister, Hollie, is a bodybuilder, who came second in the British Natural Bodybuilding Federation Central Championships in July 2010.

Walcott has been involved with the UK charities "Build a School" and "Best Beginnings". He also has a pie named in his honour at the Arsenal pie shop in Holloway, which won a gold award at the British Pie Awards of 2015.

On 6 April 2008, Walcott was a torchbearer for the Olympic Games for Beijing 2008, as it was paraded around London. He handed ther torch over to Dame Kelly Holmes!

Walcott's statistics:

Youth career
1999–2000Newbury
2000Swindon Town
2000–2005Southampton
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
2005–2006Southampton21(4)
2006–2018Arsenal270(65)
2018–2021Everton77(10)
2020–2021→ Southampton (loan)19(3)
2021–Southampton29(2)
International career
2004–2005England U164(0)
2005–2006England U1714(5)
2006England U191(1)
2006–2010England U2121(6)
2006England B1(0)
2006–2016England47(8)
Walcott was born in Stanmore, London, but grew up in Compton, Berkshire, playing football for the local village team and later for Newbury. Theo scored more than 100 goals in his one and only season for Newbury, before leaving there for Swindon Town FC. He spent only six months there before leaving for Southampton after he rejected a chance to join Chelsea. Nike agreed to a sponsorship deal with Walcott when he was fourteen years old.
He underwent surgery to correct a hereditary weakness, and returned to action in March, but at the end of the season he still felt that it was hampering his performance.
On 28 May 2023, Walcott confirmed his exit from Southampton following the conclusion of the season, but expressed his desire to continue playing football.



Monday, 29 May 2023

SOUTH YORKSHIRE VITAL PLAY OFF DERBY

I have been glued to the telly this afternoon, hoping that my local FL club, Barnsley, might make some progress at the end of this season, by winning the League One Play Off Final against local South Yorkshire rivals, Sheffield Wednesday, at Wembley. 

Historically, Wednesday, The Owls, are more "powerful" than The Tykes, but there has been some levelling up, of course. By Wisdom and Courage........ The Owl is another story!


I have to admit I am "close" to Barnsley and I know one of the Barnsley ex-players and a coach, Martin Devaney, who shares the local Bannatynes Gym (and Spa) at Dodworth!

Below, the Barnsley FC badge, depicting a "glass blower" on the left (a local industry) and a miner on the right. The motto; Judge Us by Our Actions.

Josh Windass of Wednesday (yes his father's son!!) came on to score the winner, in a game that was 123 minutes "long". Barnsley were a man down after 49 minutes, following the sending off of Adam Phillips for a "violent" tackle and a crowd of 72,000 saw a nail biter. The Tykes, having been down to 10 men and seeing both goalkeepers carry out some heroics (see below), should have made the most of their chances but Wednesday scored the only goal, with not much time left on the clock.

Barnsley's Harry Isted made an extraordinary save to deny Sheffield Wednesday's Michael Smith in extra time during the League One play-off final.  

https://www.skysports.com/watch/video/12892681/absolutely-incredible-harry-isted-makes-unbelievable-stop-for-barnsley

“With six seconds of extra time to play, Josh Windass’s diving header spared Wednesday another penalty shootout and sent them into next season's Championship,” all this, 15 years and 5 days on from Dean Windass' Wembley heroics for Hull City, in another Play Off.

So, Sheffield Wednesday are heading back to the Championship following a two-year absence. Manager, Darren Moore, shared his love of the victory with the adoring public and the club's promotion to a higher level.


Sunday, 28 May 2023

THE HATTERS, MAD HATTERS AND THE CUMBRIANS

From one HAT town to another, Luton (known as The Hatters, famed for the local straw boater industry) FC, featured in yesterday's blog and steps aside, today, for Stockport County (Football Club) known as The Hatters after the town's milinery industry, that was set in the town, some making top hats. The club played today in a Football League Two Play Off Final and a fter extra time (1-1) and penalties (4-5) the Hatters lost to Carlisle United, to win promotion. 

During the industrial period of the 19th and early 20th century, Stockport was famous for hat production with over 100 hat factories in the area. The final "hatting" factory closed in 1997, marking the end of over four centuries of local production. However, Stockport is home to Hat Works – the only hatting museum in the UK. 

The top hat was an essential part of a man’s wardrobe by the early part of the 19th century, replacing the fashionable three-cornered tricorne and two-cornered bicorne hats of the earlier century. The creation of the first silk top hat in England is credited to a hatter from Middlesex, called George Dunnage, in 1793. A top hat is simply a tall, flat-crowned hat traditionally made of black silk (although felted beaver fur was also used in the early part of the 19th century). 

The increased industrial output that took place in Britain during the 19th century meant that popular fashions, such as the top hat, were no longer the preserve of the upper classes and were now more accessible to the majority of the male population, including those lower down the social scale. The resemblance of the hat to the factory chimneys so evocative of the Industrial Revolution was remarked upon by pioneering fashion historian, James Laver, and the fact that many wealthy industrialists also wore top hats helped to turn them into a symbol of urban respectability. The top hat remained the dominant form of headwear in British society for the next hundred years.

The rise of the stylish headgear didn’t come without some risk to the manufacturers. Mercury had been used in the production of felt for hats from the 18th century. The colloquial English phrase, “Mad as a hatter”, is believed to originate from Denton and Stockport in Greater Manchester, where a large number of the male population men worked in the hattery business. 

Erethism, also known as mad hatter disease, is a neurological disorder which affects the central nervous system, and is derived from mercury poisoning. Historically, this illness was common among felt-hatmakers who had prolonged exposure to mercuric nitrate, that was used to process and stabilize fur in the manufacture of felt hats. Many people believe that the "Mad Hatter" in Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland is an example of someone suffering from erethism.

It was during the 1840s and the 1850s that the top hat reached its most extreme form, with styles having a high crown and narrow brim. Isambard Kingdom Brunel was regularly photographed wearing a stovepipe hat, a variety of top hat with mostly straight sides. President Abraham Lincoln was also a famous wearer of the stovepipe and helped to popularise the style in America during his presidency by adding the tall hat to his already 6ft 4” frame! In his locked diaries, Brunel described how he cared very much about his physical stature, writing in one diary entry, “As I pass some unknown person who perhaps does not even look at me I catch myself trying to look big on my little pony.” Standing just over 5ft (1.52m) tall, his trademark 8-inch (20cm) stovepipe hat would have gone some way in making him look more imposing to his clients and contractors.

It is very probable that Brunel wanted to project a certain image in order to be viewed as a successful engineer, and the stovepipe hat popular at the time certainly helped him do that and of course is now indelibly linked with his image as the foremost engineer of the Victorian period.

The town's football club  was formed in 1883 as Heaton Norris Rovers at McLaughlin's Cafe in local Heaton Norris, by a group of pupils from Stockport Sunday School. After playing home matches in different parks in the Stockport area for several years, Rovers moved to Green Lane in 1889. This is recognised as their first official ground. The club changed its name to Stockport County in 1890 after the local county. The team played in the Lancashire League and also local cup competitions until 1900, when they gained admission to the Football League Second Division. The cliub left Green Lane in 1902 and moved to Edgeley Park.

By 1902, County required a larger ground and moved to Edgeley Park, then home of the rugby league club. Green Lane was retained for use by the club's reserve side. The Green Lane site was later used for housing.

View from Edgeley Park's Cheadle End during pitch renovations.
View from Edgeley Park's Cheadle End stand

In 1995, a new 5,000 all-seated Cheadle End stand was built to replace the terrace. In late 2000, chairman Brendan Elwood considered moving Stockport to Maine Road, the home of rivals Manchester City. The potential move was unpopular with supporters, and protests were staged after it was suggested that the club would change its name to Man-Stock County!!  Maine Road was demolished in 2004 to make way for a housing estate, and Edgeley Park was then shared with Sale Rugby club, whose parent company, Cheshire Sports, owned the ground. In 2001, The Railway End, opposite the Cheadle End, was the last part of Edgeley Park to be converted to seating, and took the stadium's total capacity to 10,852.

There was another rumour that Stockport would leave its home ground in 2012. This was dismissed by chairman, Peter Snape, before Sale Sharks confirmed that they would be moving to Salford City Reds' new stadium. It left Stockport County as the only tenants at Edgeley Park. In May 2012, County renamed the Main Stand "The  Danny Bergara Stand" in honour of the club's former manager.

The local Metropolitan Council purchased the stadium in 2015, to prevent it from being demolished and redeveloped.  After a plea from fans to safeguard the ground, an emergency council meeting was held, and the stadium was purchased for £2 million. It is currently leased back to the club. In February 2022, the club agreed a 250-year lease of Edgeley Park from Stockport council. All was safe.

Stockport County won nine league matches in succession without conceding a goal from January to March 2007 under manager Jim Gannon, a Football League record.





Saturday, 27 May 2023

HATTERS v SKY BLUES! lucrative

Luton Town Football Club is located in Bedfordshire and  competes in the Football Championship, the second tier of the EFL system. Founded in 1885, the club is nicknamed "The Hatters", associated with the local "hat" industry located in the town, which specialised in making "Boaters", or what are known as "straw-plaiters".


The team plays its home matches at Kenilworth Road, where it has been based since 1905, affiliated to the Bedfordshire County FA. The club was perhaps most prominent between 1982 and 1992, when it was a member of English football's top division, at that time, the First Division; the team won its first major honour, the Football League Cup in 1988. Luton Town have a rivalry with nearby club Watford.

The club was the first in southern England to turn professional, making payments to players as early as 1890 and turning fully professional a year later. It joined the Football League before the 1897-8 season but left in 1900 because of financial problems, and rejoined in 1920. Luton reached the First Division in 1955-6 and contested a major final for the first time when playing Nottingham Forest in the 1959 FA Cup Final. The team was then relegated from the top division in  1959-60, and demoted twice more in the following five years, playing in the Fourth Division from the 1965-6 season. However, it was promoted back to the top level by 1974-5.

Luton Town's most recent successful period began in 1981-2, when the club won the Second Division. Luton defeated Arsenal 3–2 in the 1988 Football League Cup Final and remained in the First Division until relegation at the end of the 1991-2. Between 2007 and 2009, financial difficulties caused the club to fall from the second tier of English football to the fifth in successive seasons. The last of these relegations came during the 2008-9 seaosn, when 30 points were docked from Luton's record for various financial irregularities. Luton thereafter spent five seasons in Non-League before winning the Conference League in  2013-14, securing promotion back into the Football League. More success soon followed, with Luton being promoted from League Two in 2017-18 and League One in 2018-19. Luton now play in the Championship.





Coventry City Football Club plays in the Football League Championship, the second tier of the EFL System. The club is nicknamed the Sky Blues because of the colour of their home strip. Interesting!!

Coventry City formed as Singers F.C. in 1883, following a meeting between William Stanley and seven colleagues from the Singer Cycle Company at the Lord Aylesford Inn in Hillfields. It was one of several 19th century clubs linked to Coventry's bicycle factories, and the company founder george Singer was its first president. Singers joined the Birmingham County FA in 1884 and played around forty games in their first four years at Dowell's Field in the Stoke area. In early seasons they lacked a regular playing staff and sometimes lacked equipment such as goal nets. In 1887, the club moved to the larger Stoke Road Ground, which had rudimentary stands, and they charged an entrance fee for the first time. The following five seasons were very successful, culminating in back-to-back Birmingham Junior Cup titles in 1891 and 1892.

Singers turned professional in 1892 and joined the Birmingham and District League in 1894, competing against strong reserve sides from established regional teams such as Aston Villa. Coventry residents not connected to the cycle company began supporting the club, and it was renamed Coventry City in 1898.

They adopted their current name in 1898 and joined the Southern League in 1908, before being elected into the Football League in 1919. Relegated in 1925, they returned to the Second Division as champions of the Third Division South and Third Division South Cup winners in 1935–36, doing "The Double". 

Relegated in 1952, they won promotion in the inaugural Fourth Division season in 1958–59. Coventry reached the First Division after winning the Third Division title in 1963–64 and the Second Division title in 1966– 67 under the management of Jimmy Hill. In the 1970–71 season, the team competed in the European Inter City Fairs Cup, reaching the second round. Despite beating 

Bayern Munich 2–1 in the home leg, they had lost 6–1 in the first leg in Germany, and thus were eliminated.

Coventry's only period in the top division to date lasted 34 consecutive years between 1967 and 2001, and they were inaugural members of the Premier League in 1992. They won the FA Cup in 1987, the club's only major trophy, when they beat Spurs 3–2. They experienced further relegations in 2012 and 2017, though did manage to win the EFL Trophy in 2017.

Coventry returned to Wembley in 2018, beating EXETER CITY in the League Two play-off final. Manager Mark Robins built on this success guiding the Sky Blues to 8th in League One the next season and then led the club to promotion back to the EFL Championship as League One champions in 2020. In their first season back in the Championship, Robins guided the Sky Blues to a 16th-placed finish, 12 points clear of relegation. After occupying the play-off places for a large amount of the 2021-22 season, Coventry achieved a 12th-placed finish in its second season back in the Championship. In the 2022-3 season Coventry secured a play-off place in the Championship, after 1–1 draw against Middlesbrough on the final day of the season. This was the club's highest league finish in 17 years.

For 106 years, from 1899 to 2005, Coventry City played at Highfield Road. Their new 32,609 capacity Stadium was opened in August 2005 to replace Highfield Road, but the club has struggled with the new stadium lease since moving.




Friday, 26 May 2023

LOADS OF FUN FOR THE EASTER WEEKEND-COMEBACKS

 Football On This Day – 26th May 1982

Goalkeeper Nigel Spink joined Aston Villa in 1977 and made his League debut on Boxing Day 1979 in the defeat at Nottingham Forest. He had to wait until 26th May 1982 for his second appearance in the first team.....playing for Aston Villa in the European Cup Final! He came on as a sub in the 10th minute when injury forced first choice goalkeeper, Jimmy Rimmer, to leave the action against favourites Bayern Munich in the final played in Rotterdam. The goalkeeper played a blinder, keeping a clean sheet while Peter Withe scored the only goal to see Villa crowned as European champions - the sixth season in a row that an English team had won Europe's top club competition.


The most amazing League match ever?  At half time in the Second Division match between Charlton Athletic and Huddersfield Town on Saturday 21st December 1957, things looked bleak for the home side. 
Charlton were down to 10 men with centre-half Derek Ufton suffering a dislocated shoulder after 17 minutes - no substitutes in those days - and were behind with goals by Les Massie and Alex Bain for the visitors. Johnny Summers pulled one back for Charlton two minutes after the re-start but in the 49th minute Alex Bain scored again for the visitors as did Bill McGarry from the penalty spot after 51 minutes and Bob Ledger added a fifth 11 minutes later.

So with Charlton 1-5 down and one man down with less than half an hour remaining many Charlton fans in the 12,535 crowd took the opportunity for some last-minute Christmas shopping. They missed a Christmas miracle. Two minutes after Huddersfield's fifth goal it was back to 3-5 with goals from Buck Ryan and Johnny Summers. Summers then added three more in eight minutes to put Charlton 6-5 ahead. With four minutes remaining Stan Howard equalised for the Yorkshiremen before Buck Ryan hit the winner for the home side with seconds remaining. An amazing 7-6 victory for Charlton - the only time that scoreline has been recorded in the Football League.

https://www.11v11.com/teams/lincoln-city/tab/matches/season/1958/  WORTH A LOOK!

Sunderland were 1-5 down at home to Liverpool at half-time in a First Division fixture on Saturday January 19th 1907 but fought back to draw 5-5.  

Two years later on Saturday 4th December 1909 it was Liverpool who were on a hiding, losing 2-5 at half-time at home to Newcastle United. But at the full-time whistle they had turned it round to a 6-5 victory.

A few other older notable fight-backs in the League....Syd Reid had scored 4 goals to help Luton Town to a 5-1 half-time lead in the Third Division (South) match at the County Ground against Northampton Town on Boxing Day 1927. But at the final whistle Northampton were the victors 6-5.

Another late fight-back in the Second Division in the 1957/58 season. With six matches of the League season left Lincoln City looked certs for relegation - they were bottom of the table, five points adrift of the club above them (with only 2 points for a win) and had only won five league matches all season. In fact they had lost their last nine matches and it it was 18 league matches since they last won but remarkably they won their last six matches of the season to escape the drop by a single point.

Charlton were no strangers to remarkable scorelines around in those days. On Saturday October 22nd 1960 they drew 6-6 with Middlesbrough at the Valley - only the second time that scoreline has been recorded in the Football League. Three weeks previous to that Johnny Summers hit another five goals in the 7-4 home victory over Portsmouth. In November 1959 they suffered their worst-ever League defeat - 1-11 at Aston Villa - while six weeks before that they had lost 4-6 at Plymouth. Amazingly the following season two more 6-4 results against Plymouth - winning the home match on Boxing Day 1960 6-4 but losing the return match played a day later at Home Park 4-6. Those were the days!

Hull fans were streaming out of Boothferry Park on Boxing Day 1970 when the Tigers were 1-4 down to Sheffield Wednesday with just 8 minutes to play of a Division 2 fixture. Hull fought back to draw 4-4 - and they hit the woodwork in the last minute.

Another League Cup tie with an unexpected ending was the Second Round tie between Second Division Watford and First Division Southampton in the 1980/81 season. After Southampton had won the first leg 4-0 at The Dell the odds were heavily against Watford in the second leg despite Kevin Keegan being absent from the Saints' side due to injury. But Watford had other ideas! The Hornets were 2-0 up at half time and 5-1 in the lead at the end of 90 minutes with even the one Southampton goal being scored by an og by a Watford player! Extra time followed with Watford scoring two more to win 7-1 on the night and 7-5 on aggregate.

On QPR's artificial pitch at Loftus Road visitors Newcastle United were 4-0 at half-time in a First Division fixture on Saturday September 22nd 1984. By the time of the final whistle it was 5-5.

At Fratton Park on New Year's Day 1985, Portsmouth took a 4-0 half-time lead over Fulham before the Londoners fought back to draw 4-4. Hangover cure?

In an amazing match at Elland Road on Saturday April 13th 1991, Liverpool had a 4-0 half-time lead over Leeds but the final score was Leeds 4 Liverpool 5. Lee Chapman scored a hat-trick for Leeds and had another disallowed for a foul on the keeper.

At St Andrews on Easter Monday (April 12th) 1993, Birmingham City led Swindon Town 4-1 in a First Division fixture with just 30 minutes remaining - but Swindon were 6-4 winners at the final whistle. Collapse or what?

At Villa Park on Wednesday February 22nd 1995, Aston Villa led Leicester City 4-1 with just 13 minutes remaining of the Premiership match but THE FOXES fought back to draw 4-4.

In a First Division on Saturday March 9th 1996, Barnsley were leading Ipswich Town 3-0 with just 6 minutes of the match remaining. At Oakwell, the visitors fought back to draw 3-3. The maggot farm behind the far stand stunk as badly as ever. (maggots were for fishing I believe).

Same day but in 1999
Manchester United's attempt to win the Champions League for the first time looked doomed to failure at the Nou Camp, Barcelona. They went behind against Bayern Munich after just six minutes and that was still the score as the final whistle approached. Then amazingly came goals from subs Teddy Sherringham in the first minute of injury time and Ole Gunnar Solskjær a minute later and the Champions League trophy joined the Premier League trophy and FA Cup in the Old Trafford trophy cupboard.
An historic game...BUT.....

On Saturday September 29th 2001, Spurs were 3-0 up half time against Manchester United at White Hart Lane in a Premier League fixture. At the full-time whistle it was Tottenham 3 Manchester United 5. SPURSY or what?!

Some 2500 Peterborough United fans headed home at half time when the home side ended the half 0-4 down to Cardiff City on Boxing Day 2009 in a Championship match. Yep, you've guessed it - at the final whistle it was 4-4.

Arsenal visited Newcastle for a Premier League match on Saturday 5th February 2011 and were set for a cricket score. One-nil up in the first minute and four-nil to the good in 26 minutes, how many more could they score? In the second half, Arsenal had a player dismissed and then conceded two penalties. At full time it was 4-4 ALSO.

24th January 2015, in the Championship, bottom club Blackpool were set to record a surprising first away win of the season at promotion-chasing Watford when they were 2-0 up at the break. By the time the full-time whistle had blown normal service was resumed - Watford had won 7-2 with Odion Ighalo grabbing four.



Thursday, 25 May 2023

LOST THE BLOG: FOUND THE KIT

I WROTE A BLOG EARLIER ABOUT SOMETHING REALLY INTERESTING THAT HAPPENED ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY...BUT LOST IT...NO IDEA WHERE IT WENT! SO WHY NOT HAVE A LOOK AT SOME INTERESTING KIT....GO ON IT'S WORTH A DABBLE!

https://www.footballkitarchive.com/ 

https://www.footballkitarchive.com/logos/

https://www.footballkitarchive.com/international-2023-kits/ AND THERE'S MORE. Just get on the website and have a play around.










Tuesday, 23 May 2023

GAZZA IN "THE GUARDIAN"


Published in The Guardian Newspaper is coverage of The World of Gazza Exhibition in the OOF Gallery. Details below......

To see Rosie McGinn’s 2019 artwork ‘Gazza’ and the rest of the exhibition head to Warmington House, 744 High Road, London, N17 and access via The Tottenham Experience – Spurs Shop. Entry is free.

https://www.theguardian.com/football/gallery/2023/may/18/the-world-of-gazza-exhibition-the-life-and-times-of-paul-gascoigne-held in the in-pictures 

Paul Gascoigne’s life story is one of glory, pain, sadness and bad decisions. This exhibition explores his past triumphs and falls from grace, without shying away from the darker sides of his character. It can be seen at the OOF Gallery in London N17 until 17 September.



Monday, 22 May 2023

THREE HAT TRICKS AGAINST DIFFERENT KEEPERS

YES  I KNOW, this is not an exact anniversary historic moment, but why not be reminded of another moment in footballing history? It's good for your local pub quiz preparation! and tonight there's something happening at Newcastle Utd.

On 21 April 1986Alvin Martin (below), the West Ham defender, below, scored an historic treble against an injury-ravaged Newcastle Utd, in a Hammers' 8-1 win at Upton Park. Playing in front of a 25,000 crowd, Alvin remains the only player to score a hat-trick against three different goal keepers in a single match. The defender's first goal came against Martin Thomas, who was the oppo's actual keeper, but who was soon forced off the pitch with a recurring shoulder injury.  Alvin then scored against "defender come keeper", Chris Hedworth, who then also injured himself. This meant the diminutive, Peter Beardsley was next in goal. Alvin scored a third penalty against the Newcastle forward, helping The Hammers to a 8-1 win.

In the first ever all English Champions League, on May 21st 2008, the Chelsea and Manchester United fans had to tavel to Moscow. "Jobs for the UEFA boys eh?. The kick off was at 7.45pm for the British TV viewer, which meant a 10.45 pm ko for the chaps....who counts here? Extra time and penalties took the match well into the next day so it was that ........

Man Utd woke up everyone with a 6-5 pen win after a 1-1 draw in proper time. In real time, Ronaldo netted after 26' and then Lampard 45' equalised. 

AND BELOW, ANOTHER ANNIVERSARY!

https://www.uefa.com/uefachampionsleague/history/video/0252-0d044f612857-c741a94fdb8e-1000--2008-final-highlights-manchester-united-1-1-chelsea-6-5-pens/

Five teams have won the English Football League* title three seasons in a row: Huddersfield Town (1923–1926), Arsenal (1932–1935), Liverpool (1981–1984), Manchester United twice (1996–1999 & 2006–2009) and Manchester City (2020–2023).

* means the English TOP division champions-once the First Division and now The Premier League.

Friday, 19 May 2023

PLYMOUTH, PILGRIMS, JACK, WEMBLEY; GREAT HISTORY

Plymouth Argyle Football Club is based in the city in Devon.. As of the 2022-2023 season, the team competes in League One, the third tier of English football, playing at Home Park, known as the "Theatre of Greens", since 1901. Argyle is one of two Devon clubs competing in the Football League, the other being local rivals, Exeter City FC.

Plymouth's nickname, "The Pilgrims", comes from an English Religious group, that left Plymouth for the "New World"  in 1620. The club crest features the Mayflower, the ship that carried the pilgrims to Massachusetts. The club has predominantly played in green and white throughout their history, with a few exceptions in the late 1960s and early 1970s when white was the colour of choice. A darker shade of green, described, by some, as Argyle green, was adopted in the 2001–02 season, and has been used ever since. The city of Plymouth is the largest in England fielding a League club to never to have hosted top-flight football. They are the most southerly and westerly League club in England and the only professional club named Argyle.

Originally founded simply as Argyle in 1886, the club turned professional and entered both the Southern League and Western league as Plymouth Argyle in 1903. 

1903–04 Argyle squad

The club was founded in 1886 as Argyle Football Club, the first match taking place on 16 October 1886 against Caxton, a team from Cornwall and saw the Pilgrims lose 2–0. Later that week Argyle won for the first time–beating Dunheved College (now Launceston College) in Launceston (where many of the club's first members had been educated) 2–1. They played several friendlies against Plymouth United, but poor performances on the pitch led to the club going out of existence in 1894 before being resurrected in 1897 as one part of a general sports club, the Argyle Athletic Club. In 1898, Argyle F.C. produced its first rulebook. The club's ground was given as Marsh Mills, an area on the edge of the city of Plymouth.

Much speculation surrounds the origin of the name Argyle. One explanation is that the club was named after the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, an army regiment with a strong football side of its own. Another theory is given by the local geography–suggesting the name comes either from the nearby public tavern, The Argyle Tavern, where the founder members may have met, or from a local street Argyle Terrace.

The club adopted its current name when it became fully professional in 1903 joining the Southern League, under the management of Bob Jack,  Robert Jack (4 April 1876 – 6 May 1943) was a Scottish international and manager. Born in Alloa, Jack also played for Bolton Wanderers, Preston North End and Glossop, and in the Southern League for Plymouth Argyle and Southend United. A winger, Jack is Argyle's most successful and longest-serving manager. During his 29 years in charge, the club won two league championships and established itself in the Second Division of the Football League. Jack also managed Southend for four years. 

Argyle's first professional game was on 1 September 1903, against West Ham Utd resulting in a 2–0 win for Argyle with the first goal being scored by Jack Peddie. Their first home game as a fully professional club was on 5 September 1903 when they beat Northampton Town 2–0 in front of a crowd of 4,438. Argyle won the Southern League in 1913, then in 1920 entered the Football League Third Division, as a founder member, where they finished 11th in their first season.

In the summer of 1924, a Plymouth Argyle team visited South America to play some exhibition football in Argentina (won 1-0) and Uruguay (won 4-0); Uruguay went on to win the first ever World Cup in 1930. They also beat an Argentinian national side 1–0. They then held Argentine club giants Boca Juniors to a credible 1–1 draw. Moses Russell captained the side and played in all nine matches. Russell's style of play caught the attention of the Argentine press; at the end of the tour 'The Standard of Buenos Aires' commented:

"The visit of Plymouth Argyle will be best remembered by the outstanding personality and genius of Moses Russell. His effective style, precise judgement, accurate and timely clearances, powerful kicking and no less useful work with his head...one of the most wonderful backs and one of the brainiest players ever seen on the football field."

A Plymouth Argyle team during the tour on South America, 1924

In the match against Boca Juniors on 9 July 1924, the Boca Juniors supporters invaded the pitch after their team had scored the opening goal and carried all eleven home players shoulder high around the stadium. After a half-hour delay, the referee restarted the match, but a further invasion was sparked when the referee awarded a penalty against the home side. When the match was again restarted, the Argyle players had agreed that Patsy Corcoran would take the spot-kick and miss, to prevent another pitch invasion. However, the ultra-competitive Russell was not prepared to accept this, and just before Corcoran was about to take the penalty he was pushed aside by Russell who took it himself and scored. This prompted a further pitch invasion by the Boca fans and this time the match was abandoned.

Argyle vs Argentina in 1924

Back in England, uniquely, between 1921–22 and 1926–27, Argyle finished second in the Third Division South, six  seasons in a row, thereby missing promotion. Argyle eventually won promotion to Football League Division Two in 1929–30, when they topped the Third Division South, with attendances that season regularly reaching 20,000. Manager Bob Jack resigned in 1937, having spent a grand total of 27 years in charge of the Pilgrims. 

His son, David Jack, who began his career with Argyle in 1919, left the club in 1920 and joined Arsenal FC from Bolton Wanderers for a fee of £10,890 – which made him the most expensive player in the world at the time. David scored the first goal at Wembley Stadium in the first ever FA Cup Final goal at the new stadium in 1923, when his club, Bolton Wanderers, played out a 2-0 win against West Ham. Jack scored 3 minutes into the game. A crowd of over 126,000 crammed into the brand new stadium, resulting in gross receipts of £27,776. David's career:

Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1919–1920Plymouth Argyle45(10)
1920–1928Bolton Wanderers295(144)
1928–1934Arsenal181(113)
Total521(267)
International career
1924–1932England9(3)
Managerial career
1934–1940Southend United
1944–1952Middlesbrough
1953–1955Shelbourne