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Worksop Town 1 v Maltby Main 0 - NCEL Prem

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Saturday 12th August 2017
Toolstation NCEL Premier Division
at the Windsor Foodservice Stadium
Worksop Town (1) 1
Mark Simpson 22
Maltby Main (0) 0
Attendance 375
Click HERE for Flickr photo gallery... if you dare!
Lock up yer daughters Worksop!
Worksop Town:
Jon Kennedy, Jordan Hodder, Steve Woolley (C), Matt Thompson, Michael Trench, Steve Wankiewicz, Liam Greenfield (Adam Scott), Mitch Husbands, Jake Currie(Kyle Jordan), Mark Simpson (Conor Chappell), Micah Bishop
Unused subs: Aaron Pickersgill, Michael Blythen
Maltby Main:
Paddy Kenny (Josh Lill 9), Liam Flint, Danny Swales, Danny Harrison (Callum Littlejohn 51), Joe Austin, Ollie Lawrence (Ryan Smyth 55), Danny Patterson (C), Sam Sweeney, Steve McDonnell, Sam Forster, Lee Hill
Unused subs - Josh Hemmingway, Ollie Perry, Jack Conley
Both clubs have gone through a vast number of personnel changes, both on and off the pitch, since they last met towards the back end of last season, when they played out an open and entertaining 3-3 draw.
Football, particularly non league football, and especially NCEL football, must have the biggest turnover of staff/players in any walk of life you care to mention.
I won't list the entire comings and goings that these two respective teams have made of late, mainly because the details will almost certainly have changed by the time that I get home from today's game and type these notes and observations up, given the speed that things have been happening over the last two weeks.
Last Saturday, Worksop and Maltby both fell at the first hurdle in the FA Cup Extra Preliminary Round, with the Tigers going down 2-1 at home against Hinckley, while a 'work in progress' Miners side lost 4-1 at Cammell Laird 1907.
Today's hosts didn't have a midweek game, but Maltby started their NCEL campaign with a very respectable draw at home against the highly fancied Pickering Town at Muglet Lane on Wednesday night, but it wouldn't be right of me to comment on that game, seeing as I wasn't even there. I had gone to watch the Ched Evans Story in Sheffield instead.
The signing of the former Premier League goalkeeper Paddy Kenny, has to be seen as a massive coup for Maltby Main, even taking into account the fact that they already have two perfectly capable goalkeepers in Jamie Bailey and Josh Lill.
Sadly for the Miners, Kenny tweaked his hamstring kicking the ball down the park and only lasted nine minutes before he was replaced by Lill.
Of course, it is worth remembering, that during his first stint at Worksop Town, their evergreen keeper Jon Kennedy was transferred to Sunderland AFC, who at the time, were also a Premier League club.
Given the telling contribution that 'Kendo' made late in the game, to preserve the Tigers narrow lead, it was a shame for all concerned with Worksop's South Yorkshire neighbours, that it wasn't the home keeper who had pinged himself.
For what it is worth, there is some really stiff competition out their for the accolade, but I reckon that Kennedy is still the best goalkeeper in this division. I was hoping he was going to have an off day, but just like orgasms for ladies of a certain vintage, Kennedy apparently just gets better with age.
Maltby's Ollie Lawrence has started this campaign with a confident spring in his step, having been given his chance to shine by the Miners new management team, after frequently playing a supporting role last term, when he was often on the bench, out of position or taken off to facilitate tactical changes.
But he has kept his head down, worked hard and forced his way into the reckoning and it is good to see him having such a big impact on games and already justifying his place in the starting line up this early in the new season.
It was Lawrence's persistence that created the first chance of the game, when Steve McDonnell forced Kennedy into making a save early doors and his cross for Sam Forster's knock back that saw Sam Sweeney go agonisingly close with his first touch of the ball.
The battling duel between Steve Wankiewicz and Lee Hill, was already turning into an intriguing sideshow all of it's own and in the tenth minute Hill got above Wankiewicz, no mean feat in itself, and flicked the ball on into the path of former Worksop player Steve McDonnell who went to ground in the home side's area after Steve Woolley had given him a crafty nudge in the back, but the referee, Stuart Richardson saw no wrong in the Tigers captain's challenge and waved play on.
To be fair to Mr Richardson, he was fully aware of what sort of game that would be forthcoming today and made allowances for the 'occasional' contact that would occur as players inevitably 'came together' from time to time and whatever those viewing the game from a position of bias towards either team might have thought, the officials actually did alright today.
Hill and Wankiewicz spent so much time clattering into each other all afternoon, there was a rumour sweeping the ground that they're entering Love Island together next year and are among the favourites to win.
And the ever popular with opposition supporters, Danny Patterson (the Worksop fans even dedicated a song to him), had obviously been warned about his conduct beforehand and told that he would be getting a good talking to after the sixth or possibly seventh time that he wrestled a Tigers player to the floor, twisted his victims arm up their back, and said: "Go on then, try to get out of that!"
Old Danny does enjoy a bit of rough and tumble, but he always plays  with a smile on his face. 
Other teams hate playing against him, while at Maltby, they worry intently about whether there are enough hair care products in their changing room cabinet to keep him happy.
The visitors had put down their marker, and had announced their arrival in pretty much the competitive and combative manner that Worksop had thoroughly expected, but it was the Tigers who scored what was to be the only goal of this physical game that saw both teams fighting fire with fire, when Michael Trench picked up the ball on the left hand side of his defence area and strode forward before playing the ball down the line to Mark Simpson, the former Garforth Town hit man, who was making his debut after arriving at Sandy Lane late in the week from Frickley Athletic. Simpson collected Trench's delivery in front of the visitors bench and cut inside, making a diagonal run towards the goal and having spotted that Maltby's defence were backing off and allowing him space to manoeuvre, unleashed a long range shot and put his new team ahead as the ball nestled into the bottom left hand corner of the goal.
Maltby regrouped and the frantic pace of the game slowed down towards half time, with Ryan Hindley's side knocking the ball around in the middle third, but finding that their visitors (having let their guard down momentarily) were now going toe to toe and squeezing the life out of any attacking notions that Worksop might be harbouring.
The Tigers almost doubled their lead, when Steve Woolley crashed the ball against the cross bar with a long range free kick and Lill did well to keep out Micah Bishops angled shot from the left hand side of the area just before the break.
While at the other end McDonnell's goal bound flick from Patterson's was plucked out of the air by Kennedy.
HT: Tigers 1 v Miners 0 
At Maltby we even duff our own players up to get a shot in
Patterson flattened Jake Currie when the Tigers striker crumbled under the full force of a hefty challenge near the halfway line, then accidentally stood on his opponent in his haste to make some room for the undertaker, whoops! I meant the Worksop physio to perform their task of patching Currie up.
Woolley fired a free kick straight into Maltby's defensive wall... maybe he was aiming his shot directly at Patterson, the big lad certainly seemed to be getting in the neck all round this afternoon.
I even heard a cruel spectator mocking him with a taunt of: "Oi Patto! Sideshow Bob wants his ****ing hair back!" 
I ask you people, was there really any need for that level of of personal abuse?
Worksop knew that this game was far from over and that the Miners weren't going to be even slightly shy about adopting a needs must aerial bombardment approach towards Kennedy's goal as the clock ticked down and they pushed forward looking to grasp a second goal that would give them a bit more of a safety margin, but Lill pulled off two great stops from Liam Greenfield and Currie to keep the Tigers at bay.
Jordan Hodder cleared a McDonnell effort off of the goal line and for the the closing twenty minutes or so, the home defence was put under the cosh as the Miners anticipated direct approach became fully operational and Maltby pummelled and threatened to put their hosts to the sword.
And they would have done had it not been for Jon Kennedy, who put in a match saving, nee match winning sublime display of top drawer goalkeeping.
Hodder and Trench pincered Ryan Smyth as he chased a long ball down the middle of the pitch and Kennedy kicked clear.
Hill, still having his one on one public display of male bonding (live and let live I say) with Wankiewicz, beat the towering centre half to the ball in the air, but his well directed header was blocked by Woolley.
Having absorbed a spell of pressure, Worksop countered and Lill slid to clear the ball at the feet of Kyle Jordan who was charging towards the goal at a fair old rate of knots and went to ground over the Miners keeper, but although the Tigers fans called for a penalty, the referee was unmoved. Phew!
Forster cut in from the left wing and spotted Hill making a run to the back stick, but so did Trench who did well to cut out the cross.
Ryan Smyth let fly with a stinging shot from twenty yards out that Kennedy held onto at full stretch.
The Tigers keeper then turned Flint's shot behind at the expense of a corner, from which Hill head McDonnell's delivery across the face of the goal, but Kennedy smothered the ball.
Hill stepped up a gear and powered past Trench, and Smyth was 'the width of a beer mat' away from converted a chance at the back post.
Forster advanced on the Tigers goal, seeing off two attempted challenges in his stride, but Hodder blocked his shot and when the ball fell to Callum Littlejohn he rattled a shot against the crossbar from twelve yards out.
The Tigers defence were being stretched to the limits, but still digging in the preserve their slender lead.
Josh Lill took a free kick from just inside the Maltby half, which dropped perfectly for Hill, who bounced off a challenge from Trench but still managed to get his shot away, despite landing on his arse, but Kennedy stretched and tipped the ball over from underneath his crossbar.
McDonnell took the resulting corner out on the right and Kennedy once again turned the ball over his bar from Hill's towering header.
Patterson took the flag kick from the opposite side and McDonnell almost put the ball into his former clubs net but couldn't quite keep his effort on target.
In stoppage time, the indefatigable Hill broke free down the right flank and as Kennedy approached him whipped the ball across the face of goal to Smyth, arriving on the scene at full tilt, who got a touch on the ball as it bounced up, but put it wide of the post.
And in spite of a mammoth effort from the visitors, that was that, Worksop had held on and Simpson's flash of improvisation mid way through the first half had proved to be the difference between the two sides. Well that and the agility of Jon Kennedy whose input during the closing stages of the game, bordered on showing off.
FT: Worksop Town 1 v Maltby Main 0
Both sides now face tricky games on Wednesday night, when Worksop entertain Bridlington Town at the Windsor Foodservice Stadium and Maltby make their way up to Farsley, where they take on Albion Sports.
Oh Danny boy!

Forthcoming Fixtures 2017/18

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Forthcoming Fixtures 2017/18
Tue 15 Aug: Frickley Athletic v Cleethorpes Town  - EvoStik NPL Div1 South - 7.45pm
Wed 16 Aug: Lincoln United v Peterborough Sports - EvoStik NPL Div 1 South -7.45pm
Sat 19 Aug: Dunbar United v Dalkeith Thistle - East of Scotland Premier League
Tue 22 Aug: Sheffield United v Leicester City - Carabao EFL Cup Round Two - 7.45pm
Wed 23 Aug: Bottesford Town  v Athersley Recreation - NCEL Prem - 7.45pm
Sat 26 Aug: AFC Mansfield v Handsworth Parramore - NCEL Prem - 3.00pm
Tue 29 Aug - Retford United v Nostell Miners Welfare - NCEL Div 1 - 7.45pm
Wed 30 Aug - Parkgate v Maltby Main - NCEL Prem - 7.45pm
Sat 2 Sep - Swallownest v Knaresborough Town - NCEL Div 1 - 3pm
Mon 4 Sep - England v Slovakia - World Cup Qualifier - 7.45pm

Frickley Athletic 1 v Cleethorpes Town 2 - NPL Div 1 South

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Tuesday 15th August 2017
EvoStik Northern Premier League Division 1 South
at Westfield Lane, South Elmsall
Frickley Athletic (0) 1
Steve Hopewell 47
Cleethorpes Town (0) 2
Danny North 71 Pen
Laurence McKay 81
Admission £10. Programme£2. Attendance 255
A game in which Spencer Fearn's Frickley side ran operations from inside the final third for long spells, without creating enough of a cutting edge in front of the Owls goal, or converting the few gilt edged chances that fell their way when they did manage to penetrate the visitors defence.
And ultimately they lost, because 'Clee' toughed it out until the final whistle and having got back into the game through Danny North's penalty, raised their game and almost inevitably stole the points through sheer persistence inside the last ten minutes, long after the Blues really ought to have put the game to bed.
One could say that Marcus Newell's side possibly staged a bit of a smash and grab raid tonight, with what I believe is called a 'typical away performance'.
But you can trace the visitors approach to the game back to two seasons ago, when their cavalier and gung-ho style won them many admirers and friends along the way, but ultimately didn't deliver the promotion to the Evo-Stik League that this ambitious club were aiming for, whereas a teak to the system and adopting a more measured approach last term, built on the foundations of a solid defence, saw them sweep all comers out of the way, en route to a 108 point haul, with goal difference of 99+, which proved that all out attack isn't always the best policy, but maximising application at key times and putting opponents to the sword in concerted short spells, obviously is. 
The stats don't lie.
Long term; hit and hope football will never overcome teams who use their nous as regards when and how to turn the screw and embrace a more considered, methodical and patient game plan.
Though I must stress, that analogy is my take on Cleethorpe's 2016-17 campaign, not tonight's finely balanced encounter.
The sides emerged from Frickley's new changing room facilities, which are in the far corner of the ground from their imposing main stand and don't yet have a the cage fitted that the old entrance to the pitch had, to protect the cheerfully disposed and enthusiastic locals, from the danger posed by unruly, misbehaving, voluble, loquacious hot headed Northern Premier League footballers. 
Or something like that.
The last time that I had watched Cleethorpes in action was at Wembley Stadium, so they'll be getting used to visiting some of the more glamorous arenas by now, after their visit to Westfield Lane tonight.
Steve Hopewell, who the Blues acquired from Maltby Main in the summer, put in the effort of two men up front for the home side tonight, who were without striker Gav Allott, after he'd picked up a knock at the weekend, in their opening game at Newcastle Town, where the prolific hit man scored the only goal of the game, on an afternoon when the Owls announced their arrival in the Northern Premier League (Division 1 South), with an eye catching 4-1 home win against Gresley.
It was Hopewell who almost opened the scoring inside the opening five minutes, when he latched onto a clearance on the edge of the visitors area and flicked the ball into the air with his first touch and hit it on the volley with his second as it dropped, but his effort cleared Liam Higton's crossbar, as the Owls keeper struggled to get a clear sight of things, with a cluster of players in front of him and the sun shining directly in his eyes as it went down for the night somewhere beyond Hemsworth.
'Clee' had there first attempt on goal when Jonathan Oglesby, one of their mainstays during last season's promotion campaign, connected with Laurence McKay's right wing corner, but was thwarted by Sebastian Malkowski who got down to smother the ball at the foot of his left hand post.
'The Pole in goal' had received a presentation prior to kick off to mark him having made 100 first team appearances for the Blues first team.
'Seb' took a knock while he was kicking the ball to safety around the fifteen minute mark and one of the sports science staff that the new Frickley manager champions so much, attended to the former Polish international's ailment, advising him to: "Get up! Man up and shut up! Or you'll get some fist from me!" And he didn't even get a plaster to show for his troubles or 'owt.
Tis indeed a man's game in this Northern Premier League.
Note, at this juncture, my lip reading skills aren't always 100% reliable from a distance.
I took a call asking me if the two lads Frickley Athletic have on work experience from Mansfield Town looked okay in their new surrounds and replied in the affirmative, because Kane Baldwin and Teddy Bloor looked very comfortable indeed alongside their new teammates... and those cushions in the home dug out appear to have been a sound investment to that end.
L to R - Kane Baldwin and Teddy Bloor
Hopewell and Tom Dugdale were both causing problems for the Owls, especially from Josh Nodder's supply of crosses from out on the right, as well as competing, along with Jacob Hazel, for the probing balls and long throw ins that were aimed into the Cleethorpes area by Nicholas Darker.
The visitors, while still looking dangerous on the counter attack, were seemingly happy to let Frickley come at them and wait for gaps to appear. Obviously they knew that throwing caution to the wind was a non-starter after what had happened the last time they had come up against a side managed by Spencer Fearn in March of last season, when Maltby Main had overcome the Owls by three goals to nil, at the aesthetically appealing and almost sexy football arena that is Muglet Lane.
You should pay a visit there soon, you won't be disappointed.
When he wasn't adding his clout to the Blues attack, Hopewell was laying deep and distributing a useful range of passes to bring Hazel and Ben Wiles into the game, which allowed Nodder and Dugdale the freedom to get forward out wide.
Hopewell chased a long knock from Nodder through the left channel and played the ball across the face of the visitors goal, but Wiles nodded it just wide at the back stick.
And from their next attack, Frickley were unlucky when Hazel shot over from Jason Yates sideways pass.
But while the home side were just missing that clinical touch that they needed to put away the array of chances they were fashioning at one end, Oglesby was a matter of inches away from giving the Owls the lead, when his shot from an improbable angle to the right hand side of the Blues area, fizzed (just) past the left hand post.
Hazel managed to flick the ball on, in spite of the close marking of Matt Coleman, that must have virtually bordered on sexual assault and it dropped over the shoulder of Hopewell who struck a thumping shot over the bar.
Somebody having a moan at half time; told me in no uncertain terms that Frickley hadn't created any chances in the opening forty five minutes. 
Aye pal! And the moon is made of cream cheese, Pierce Brosnam was the best ever James Bond, Rod Hull and Emu were funny... and up until now, I've been making everything that I've written on this match overview up. 
Shurrup... you vapid, miserable, whinging arsed and blinkered pillock!
Cleethorpes finished the first half with a flourish, Danny North and the impressive Oglesby were linking up to good effect and between them set up Jack Richardson who forced a save out of Malkowski. 
But right on the stroke of half time, Dugdale's short left wing corner to Wiles, led to a scrummage in the Owls goalmouth when the Blues number eleven rifled an angled shot from the return ball, that Higton just about managed to gather at the second, or possibly third attempt.
HT: Blues 0 v Owls 0
Going on the evidence displayed before me thus far, if I was a betting man and I had to pick out a goal scorer and a player most likely to weigh in with an assist, to break tonight's deadlock, I reckon the odds on a Hopewell goal from a Dugdale delivery would've been a fairly short odds bet and two minutes after the restart that is precisely what happened, when Hopewell met Dugdale's left wing corner with a textbook header. 
It had been coming.
Yates threaded a pass through the left channel to Hazel whose first time shot was turned round the post by Higton. Dugdale's corner was cleared back towards him and without hesitation he dropped a cross towards the back post, with Hazel threatening and Yates getting the final touch, Higton did well to get down and claim the ball, gathering it to his chest. At two-nil the game would've been slipping away from 'Clee', but their keeper, who had been outstanding at Wembley the last time we'd watched him in action too, had kept his side in the game.
Dugdale is excelling in his role at Frickley this season and he was soon in the thick of it again, getting yet another cross in that Darker turned over the bar. 
What was he doing that far forward!?
From the goal kick, the visitors looked to release Marc Cooper with a long ball forward, but Darker had returned from his stroll to the oppositions area and was well placed to head clear.
Liam Davis cut in from the right and aimed a cross towards Cooper, who was being closely watched tonight and this time it was Yates who intercepted.
Hazel forced his way into the 'Clee' area but was penalised for shoving McKay out of the way. For his part, McKay had been a stand out player for the visitors all night, popping up here, there and everywhere on the pitch, moving around off the ball undetected, in thye manner of an amphetamine fuelled mole. It speaks volumes that he is keeping Peter Winn out of the Owls side.
While all of this was going on, one piece at a time, Marcus Newell was rearranging his game plan and making changes from the bench.
Having been the provider of several decent goal scoring opportunities, when the time finally came for Dugdale to take centre stage, he didn't get a decent contact on Hazel's sideways knock and 'spooned' the ball into the nearby allotments from on the edge of the area.
The visitors were forcing their way more into the game now and Davis was unlucky to see his shot from twenty five yards go wide.
Davis was right in the thick  of it again in the seventy first minute, when he was tripped in the Blues area by who looked like Jameel Ible from up on my lofty perch, in t'back of the stand.
Danny North made no mistake from the spot kick and it was game on.
Ible turned the ball against the upright (and a defenders outstretched boot) from another of Darker's long throw ins and Wiles couldn't keep his shot on target after Dugdale and Hazel had linked up to unlock the Cleethorpes defence.
Davis, who played a big part in the Owls first goal, was even more involved for their second, when he spotted the run of McKay and fed the ball into him from out on the right and the visitors left back/all over the place utility player struck a well placed effort, low into the bottom right hand corner of the net, to put his side in front for the first time with nine minutes remaining.
In the dying moments, even Malkowski went up to battle for Dugdale's long free kick into the heart of the Cleethorpes defence, but the visitors closed ranks and held onto the three points, much to the delight of their supporters who had made the trip across from the east coast.
FT: Frickley Athletic 1 v Cleethorpes Town 2
Tactically, the visitors got it spot on and peaked at the right time, but Frickley will be gutted that they hadn't taken advantage when it was raining balls in the Cleethorpes goalmouth.
In closing, ta very much to Spencer Fearn for kindnesses received by the Blonde Beelzebub and myself, thanks to the ever lovely Penny for the team details, a big up to Maltby Main chairman Wilf Race who was also at the game for his generosity of spirit and continued honesty and support... and GOOD LUCK in abundance, to both of these always (and all ways) friendly clubs in their respective FA Cup games on Saturday.
And last but my no means least... get yersen' over to the @HipHoppingYorks Twitter feed to check out some great visuals and 'live' action that was very cleverly transposed into tonight's match programme.
See you all again soon hopefully!

Worksop Town 3 v Bridlington Town 2 - NCEL Prem

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Wednesday 16th August 2017

Toolstation NCEL Premier Division
at the Windsor Foodservice Stadium
Worksop Town (1) 3
Mark Simpson 28 Pen
Jake Currie 75, 87
Bridlington Town (2) 2
Fraser Papprill 16
Brett Agnew 40
Admission £5. Programme £1.50. Attendance 390
Wednesday night is 'Currie Night' on Babbage way... and some like it hot!
A draw would've been a fair result on the balance of the whole ninety minutes of play, but neither of these sides had any intention of settling for a point and Jake Currie's thunderbolt of a strike in the 87th minute was worthy of deciding any game.
I could go into superlative meltdown, describing just what a great advertisement tonight'a feast of football was for the NCEL, but I am sure that everyone present would agree that the quality of this fixture between two of the fancied clubs in this division spoke for itself.
Curtis Woodhouse conducts his pre-match team talk
Mitch Husbands went close, as early as the second minute, when he crashed a shot wide from the edge of the 'Brid' area. And moments later Michael Trench tested James Hitchcock with a low angled shot.
Having put on an entertaining sideshow with his 90 minute scrap against Maltby's  Lee Hill on Saturday, it was obvious that Steve Wankiewicz was going to right in the thick of it again (and he wouldn't have it any other way), when Brett Agnew clattered into him, to lay down his gauntlet for the the night. A challenge that the solid centre half was only too happy to accept.
Fraser Papprill opened the scoring and drew first blood  for the visitors, when he squeezed Joel Sutton's header past Jon Kennedy, via a slight deflection in the sixteenth minute.
A respectful minutes silence in memory of Brian Hardy
Jake Day went close to doubling the Seasiders lead shortly afterwards, but Wankiewicz had tracked his run and cleared his lines with a no nonsense interception, while shooting the 'Brid' number ten a look that suggested he shouldn't try that sort of thing on in his vicinity.
A Tigers attack broke down and Hitchcock collected the ball, but the linesam had spotted an off the ball infringement and beckoned to the referee, who after consulting with his assistant, awarded a penalty and cautioned Jack Walters for pushing Jake Currie in the chest.
Mark Simpson kept up his goal per game ratio for the Tigers, with an emphatically struck spot kick.
"Didn't he use this photo on Saturday too!?"
Sutton lobbed the ball over the Worksop defence for Agnew to run onto, but he drilled his shot straight at Kennedy. But the same two players struck again five minutes before the break, when Sutton played Agnew in on goal with a defence splitting diagonal pass on the prolific striker shot across Kennedy and his low, precise strike,nestled just inside the right hand post. Sutton almost claimed a goal for himself when his long range free kick whizzed just past the top left stancheon of the Tigers goal and right on the stroke of half time, Jack Walters long free kick caught Kennedy off his line and he had to back pedal at speed to tip the ball away.
HT: Tigers 1 v Seasiders 2
Worksop came out for the second half looking as if they had all had a couple of cans of Lucozade Sport and three Shredded Wheat apiece as they raised the tempo and took the game to their visitors.
Agnew showed that he is just as adept at defending as he is terrorising opposition defences, when he headed Steve Woolley's right wing corner away, with the Tigers big guns moving in.
Wankiewicz found the back of the net from Woolley's right wing free kick, but the whistle had already sounded for a foul before 'Vank' had even reached the ball.
Kennedy did well to turn the ball away out of the top corner of his net from Agnew's header, while Day fired over on the half volley from Sutton's right wing delivery.
Trench took a return ball from Simpson and unleashed a twenty five yard shot towards the 'Brid' goal, but Tim Taylor put himself in the way and the visitors cleared.
Simpson made a mazy run into the Seasiders area, seeing off two challenges in his wake, but his shot was deflected past the right hand post.
But Simpson was on hand to set up the opportunity for Jake Currie to equalise from twelve yards, after the Tigers had broke forward swiftly from end to end to even the game up.
Wankiewicz headed narrowly wide from Jack Barnett's cross and it looked to all intents and purposes as if this lively and entertaining game was going to finish two apiece.
Bridlington closed their ranks and snubbed out a late Worksop attack, but the loose ball fell to Currie just outside the area and... CRASH! By heck lad, he banjoed that ****er and no mistake. The Tigers number nine had won the game with one hell of a strike. You don't stop them!
FT: Worksop Town 3 v Bridlington Town 2
A spider colony in the roof of the stand.Well, we found them interesting.
Both sides were roundly applauded off the pitch for the part they had played in a great game of football. 'Brid' will be disappointed not to have taken at least a point tonight, but Worksop's second half comeback and Currie's sublime winning goal was deserving of the result... albeit a very close run thing. 
I enjoyed that.

Dunbar United 1 v Dalkeith Thistle 0 - SJFA East Premier League

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Saturday 19th August 2017
Scottish Junior FA. McBookie.com East Premier League
at New Countess Park
Dunbar United (0) 1
Chris King 85 pen
Dalkeith Thistle (0) 0
Admission £6. Attendance 103
Thanks to Michael Addy for his help with the times/substitutions
Photo gallery: CLICK HERE
Dunbar United:
John Johnstone, Keith Tait (Steven Kean 82), Kenny Hall (Steven Tait 61), Darren Gillon, Kevin Smith, Scott Gibson, Kieran Ingram, Chris Hogg, Fraser McLaren (Chris King 68), Darren Handling, Dean Ballantyne.
Unused Subs - Zach Szemis,  James Harley
Dalkeith Thistle:
James McQueen, John Robertson (James Redpath 82), Shaun Murray (Chris Cairns 61), Ryan McQueenie, Dean Whitson, Tyron McLean, Lewis Cairns, James Laing, Paul Tansey, Jordan Bain (Ross Connell 88), Kenneth McMillan.
Unused Sub - Jack Findlay
If you should venture to Countess Park to peruse a game of association football... and once you have read my introduction pertaining to what an veritable hotbed of the beautiful game the Scottish Junior FA East Premier League is, I am sure that you will be sorely tempted to do just that... and your sat nav, or hand held device of choice (don't use it while you're driving, of course) suggests that you approach the football ground via Countess Road, I can almost guarantee that you will miss the access to the ground and go past it. I did. Twice in fact.
So here is an idiot proof guide to getting there, sans driving up and down the same road several times, like a pillock.
Opposite Countess Laundry, there is a pathway that runs alongside the fire station and leads through an opening underneath the East Coast Mainline. 
This is slightly obscured by overgrown vegetation, but it is there if you look closely enough, and this access will take you straight to the entrance of New Countess Park when you turn left, having reached the far side of the ECML.
Be aware, there are only four parking spaces next to the entrance, but you can abandon your vehicle anywhere you see fit on Countess Road, because going on today's evidence the double yellow lines are there purely for decorative purposes only, and nobody else seemed unduly concerned about them. The car parked directly outside the bijou library being a case in point.
If you approach the ground from the other end (AKA the west), you'll see an array of immaculately tended rugby and football pitches, and a find a very spacious car park there too. 
But you will have missed an important historic site by not passing the primary school on Countess Road, that stands behind a length of retaining wall, which is all that is left of Dunbar United's previous ground, that they played at before relocating to their current home seventeen years ago.
Thanks to DUFC committee member Gordon Maitland for this (and more) useful information to help me familiarise myself with the lay of the land at, and around, New Countess Park this afternoon.
Having enjoyed a productive pre-season, in which they won four and drew one of their half a dozen friendly matches; Dunbar were looking forward to their first ever season in the Premier Division, but since drawing 3-3 with Glenrothes, at home, in the opening game of the campaign, they have subsequently lost their last three games, shipping in fourteen goals while scoring seven, a run that includes a 6-0 loss when Musselburgh were the visitors to New Countess Park earlier this month.
The locals who I spoke to before the game were not anticipating a home win or a low scoring game.
Kevin Haynes 'Jags' side arrived at Dunbar, on the back of an impressive 2-0 win at Tranent Juniors (one of the favourites for the league title) on Wednesday night. 
But prior to that Dalkeith had suffered three defeats in a row too, including a 6-0 reversal at home against Haddington Athletic.
Today's result saw Dunbar leapfrog Dalkeith in the table, and claw their way up from the bottom place to 13th (in a 16 team league), level on points with Glenrothes who have conceded less and scored more goals than the Seasiders, while Thistle slid to fifteenth, where they are now above Downfield on goal difference alone, and also level on points with Arniston Rangers (the only Premier division team not to have won a game this season, yet) who have only conceded eight goals thus far in their opening five games.
The East Lothian coastal town of Dunbar is dubbed 'Sunny Dunny' round these parts and according to the Met Office, boasts the most daylight hours and sunshine, coupled with the lowest rainfall, in the whole of Scotland, but the weather today could best be described as 'subject to immediate change', with resplendent sunlight, giving way to dull and overcast skies, followed pissing rain (which made a right bleedin' mess of the team list board and produced a ghoulish kind of Halloween font) and then we were treated to glorious sunshine again. 
The only constant was the unrelenting stiff wind that howled across the park all afternoon, creating the surreal sight of seagulls flying backwards across the ground as they vaingloriously struggled to make any headway into the oncoming billowing gusts. 
There was an obvious solution to that conundrum mind you, but on today's evidence, the Herring Gull and Yellow Legged Gull (that latter is considered by many to be a species derivative of the former) are by far the stupidest of sea birds and both respective species, in and around Dunbar, will be extinct soon anyway, because the majority of their number will either have been decapitated by a stray goal kick, or electrocuted and decimated on the overhead lines, or smashed to bits by an Inter City train on the nearby East Coast Mainline... and then sold on as a delicacy to the £11.90 per head, all you can eat, Chinese buffet style restaurant; that I bravely, if rather foolishly, ventured into with my family last night. But, I was hungry and the 'bird' meat tasted alright, so Que Sera!
All hell broke loose when Right said Fred invaded the pitch
Dunbar got the game underway and before long both keepers were seeing plenty of the ball, as the wind dictated that these two evenly matched sides would have to overcome the elements, as well as each other.
Both teams tried to use the conditions to their advantage in the opening exchanges, but Chris Hogg's cross inside the first minute was cleared by the Thistle captain Dean Whitson, while at the other end, John Johnson punched away Paul Tansey's long knock into United's area.
James McQueen denied Dean Ballantyne twice in quick succession; smothering the ball by his post from the Dunbar forward's low shot in the first instance and plucking an attempt to chip him from under the crossbar in the second.
Tyron McLean played an inviting ball into the feet of Tansey but the striker's goal attempt crashed off of a Dunbar defender and Johnstone did well to get behind Jordan Bain's first time strike from Tansey's knock a few minutes later.
The pendulum swung Dunbar's way again, following a spell of pressure by their visitors and when Ballantyne was tripped by McLean, but McQueen turned Hogg's onto the woodwork at full stretch and Kev Smith headed Kiearn Ingram's corner kick just wide of the upright.
The host side were stubbornly standing up to Dalkeith's efforts to make ground in their own half, although McLean was proving to be a handful to keep an eye on, but they were having no luck at all in front of  the Dalkeith goal, with McQueen handling well when called upon, to keep Geoff Jones team at bay.
John Robertson (no, not the former Nottingham Forest and Scotland winger, but a far more youthful looking 'Robbo') advanced quickly through the right channel and unleashed a stinging shot, that Scott Gibson blocked.... or least-ways, couldn't get out of the way of.
Tansey was thwarted by a last ditch challenge from Darren Handling, and the ball bounced away at the expense of a corner to the visitors, but Johnstone calmly collected James Laing's flag kick.
Once again play switched ends and Ballantyne was unlucky to see his speculative attempt from outside the area, pushed around the left hand post by McQueen.
On the stroke of half time, Handling was flattened by Laing, just inside Thistle's half of the pitch.
Spotting McQueen had strayed off his line and using the wind to his advantage Hogg launched a long free kick, that had too much welly behind it for Gibson to connect with, but dropped narrowly wide of the upright with the Dalkeith keeper stranded out of position.
HT: Seasiders 0 v Jags 0

Fair play to both sides, who came out after the break, still trying to play some decent football, even though it must've been a bind at times, as the Saltire adorned with the Dunbar crest, was flapping like mad and threatening to blow off of it's pole and away into the distance at any moment.
Fraser McLaren, whose unselfish work and distribution all afternoon had allowed both Ballantyne and Handling to find the room to shine, held up the ball before threading it to the former, who had made a run to his left, but McQueen got across to his right at full stretch and turned the ball away at the expense of a corner.
Hogg's left wing corner caused chaos in the Thistle six yard box, but when the visitors second half clearance sat up in front of Ballantyne on the edge of the area, he whistled a shot inches past the right hand post.
Dalkeith brushed themselves down and picked up the pace of the game again, with Ken McMillan releasing the live-wire McLean down the left flank, who, in turn, delivered a well weighted pass into the path of Shawn Murray, but Darren Gillon had been tracking back and headed the incoming cross away to safety.
McLaren headed over the bar as Dunbar came back at their visitors.
Laing tried to deceive Johnstone with a long shot, but his effort lacked power and the United keeper was untroubled.
The weather almost caught Dunbar's shot stopper out from Thistle's next attack, but when Bain's left wing cross held up in the wind, the keeper managed to snatch the ball away from danger with Tansey homing in.
Handling went close again from Ballantyne's knock across the face of the Dalkeith goal.
The visitors were trying to get in behind the Dunbar defence by using wide runs from Tansey and McLean, but Gilllon was marshalling his well organised defence superbly and the visitors were being repelled in the final third as the game wore on.
However, Thistle substitute Chris Cairns was unlucky not to score with his first touch, forcing Johnstone into making a fine reflex save after connecting with Bains cross.
In the 68th minute, United introduced Chris King from the bench, a versatile all rounder, who for purposes of clarification at this juncture, I shall say, put in great effort in his position of 'game changer'.
Dunbar finished the game strongly in the final fifteen minutes or so, during which time, King's input was without a doubt, the main difference between the two sides that helped to nudge Dunbar over the finishing line with all three points, with a goal scored by King himself with just five minutes remaining.
Two corner kicks from King, both picked out Ingram, whose first header was turned away by McQueen, while his second skimmed over the crossbar after taking a deflection off Ryan McQueenie.
Ingram was denied again, twice, almost inevitably from a brace of deliveries from King, with both McQueenie and Cairns, putting themselves in the line of fire.
Handling turned and left Whitson in his wake and as he was odds on to score, the Dalkeith captain had little option but to trip the Dunbar number ten.
Likewise, the referee, Michael Addy, had no choice whatsoever but to blow up and point to the spot. McQueen guessed right, or left if you wish to be pedantic and went the correct way to meet King's spot kick, but the former Newtongrange Star (AKA Nitten Star) player had planted his shot just beyond the keeper's reach.
Right at the death, Tansey had an opportunity to snatch a late draw, but he got his angles all wrong from a free kick fifteen yards out and Johnstone was in no hurry whatsoever the take the resulting goal kick... and who can blame him for that!?
FT: Dunbar United 1 v Dalkeith Thistle 0
Next Saturday Dunbar United travel to Whitburn Juniors, while Dalkeith Thistle welcome Blackburn United to Kings Park. 
I'll be at St. Andrews myself... no, not the one on the east coast of Scotland, 86 miles north (by road) from Dunbar; but the home of Birmingham City, where Reading will be the visitors.
Good luck to Dunbar and Dalkeith for the remainder of their respective seasons, the people who I met from both towns, on my trip over the border, were friendly, knowledgeable and a credit to their clubs.
And the final word belongs to the referee Mr Addy, who did well to keep a competitive game, featuring two clubs who were 'very keen' to bag all three points today, flowing, in what must've been very trying conditions, which made light work of the Richter scale from the off.
Well played that man.

Sheffield United 1 v Leicester City 4 - Carabao Football League Cup R2

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Tuesday 22nd August 2017
Carabao Football League Cup First Round
Sheffield United (0) 1
Caolan Lavery 83
Leicester City (0) 4
Demarai Gray 52, Islam Slimani 63, 67,  Ahmed Musa 90+3
Admission £15. Programme £3. Attendance 11,280
Sheffield United:
Eastwood, O'Connell, Wright (Basham 68), Lafferty, Freeman, Baldock (Coutts 68), Lundstram, Carruthers, Brooks, Lavery, Evans (Sharp 61).
Unused subs - Stevens, Thomas, Duffy, Blackman.
Leicester City:
Hamer, Chilwell, Gray, King, Musa, Maguire (Knight 80), Amartey, Slimani, Ulloa, Ndidi (Mendy 76), Fuchs.
Unused subs - Vardy, Albrighton, Jakupovic, Okazaki, Mahrez.
"Like a night out in Sheffield,
Like a greasy chip butty!"
In fairness to both mangers, they had made it abundantly clear, well in advance of this Carabao League Cup second round tie, that they would be utilising numerous 'fringe' players and indulging in the ancient art of 'squad rotation', to the nth degree.
The Blades and the Foxes made exactly the same amount of personnel changes as each other from their respective starting line ups on Saturday, for this 'low priority' fixture, namely: eight apiece! 
So if 11,279 people (plus myself) chose to fork out fifteen quid apiece to watch what was effectively a reserve team fixture, then yours is not to reason why. 
We all knew exactly what kind of fare was going to be on offer the moment that the two sides were paired together.
Half and half scarves for a game like this!?
That Market Research CSE was wasted on you pal. 
But if anybody is waiting up until 4.30am on Thursday morning, to watch the draw for the third round, broadcast live from Beijing, then you are more than entitled to question their sanity.
Both of Sheffield's Championship sides crashed out of the League Cup tonight and though Wednesday eventually only lost to the odd goal in five at Bolton, while United were being put to the sword with a fourth goal in stoppage time at Bramall Lane, after clawing their way back into this game with a complete fluke of a goal inside the last ten minutes, they had both, simultaneously been 3-0 down at one point.
Evidently the steel city clubs reckon that they have got bigger fish to fry and masticate with their greasy chip butties.
But, tin hat on, I ask you in all seriousness... have they really?
One would've thought that the League Cup offers a better chance of silverware this season than any other competition, since the 'bigger clubs' have started taking the FA Cup seriously again.
And I reckon that analogy applies to tonight's visitors from the East Midlands too, unless lightning is going to strike again in the Premier League and the Foxes are planning on stunning the entire population of planet football, including themselves, again.
When Maltby Main's versatile defender, midfielder and striker, Lee Hill
isn't terrorising opposition players, he likes to take his lads to Bramall
Lane and have a perv at the attractive Chinese students sat nearby.
The Blades are aiming to consolidate their place in the second tier of English football this season.
And with Chris Wilder at the helm, I'm sure that aim will be fulfilled, with tread to spare. He'll know what is best for his Blades side and he's done a bloody good job thus far, but I wouldn't imagine that United's loyal fans would mind a decent cup run to spice up their understandably transitional year back at this level. Just saying.
When Sheffield United had seen off Walsall in the previous round, in a game that was subtitled: THE CHED EVANS SHOW, the Welsh striker had given the home crowd a glimpse of what he will bring to their game when he reaches his peak of fitness and a few flashes how how good a player he was at Bramall Lane before his career was put on hold, because of the way that the flawed legal system works in this country. But tonight, in all honesty, Evans found himself marked out of the game and demonstrated that he isn't yet close to the aforementioned peak fitness level.
The biggest cheer of the night from the home support, was for their popular former youth player Harry McQuire, who turned out for the Foxes tonight as his career sky rockets and there is even talk of of Gareth Southgate calling him up the forthcoming England, World Cup qualifying games.
South Yorkshire is turning out to be a fertile breeding ground for Leicester City/England players.
Unless you are that (very hairy) Japanese warrior, holed up in a remote woodland stockade, armed up to the teeth and ready for immediate combat at a moments noticee, who only discovered two weeks ago that World War 2 is actually over; you will of course know that I am referring to Jamie Vardy, who was an unused (and unneeded) bench warmer tonight. 
There wasn't really very much to write about of note in the first half, so let's fast forward to the second, after putting it on record, that tonight's game was going to be won and lost in midfield, where the Blades weren't shy about being physical, but weren't getting much change out of the basketball player sized Foxes brutes in the middle of the pitch, who could take a knock and evidently dish it out in return with interest too, while the match referee had very little sympathy for anybody who wasn't in the mood for a battle.
McQuire had been welcomed home with a hefty whack during the opening exchanges, but in response Leicester had seemingly adopted a: "Oh well, if you want to play rough, we're happy to oblige" policy.
After the break, Leicester cranked up the heat and twenty minutes or so later, were effectively through to the next round.
Demarai Gray, who is subject to a massive transfer bid from Premier League 'giants' AFC Bournemouth (that Birmingham City will get a healthy percentage of in the shape od a sell on fee, if the eal goes through), scored his last goal for Leicester back in February v Derby County in a FA Cup game, but opened the scoring tonight in the 52nd minute, when he cut in from the left, saw of three challenges and knocked the ball through the rookie Blades goalkeeper, Jake Eastwood's legs.
Wilder changed things upfront for United, with Billy Sharp replacing Evans just after the hour in a bid to freshen his attacking options up. Alas, his efforts were all in vain, because Islam Slimani, the visitors Algerian front man scored twice in the space of four minutes, with Gray setting up the second of his strikes.
With seven minutes to go, the Blades were thrown a lifetime when Caolan Lavery made a complete hash of delivering a cross towards Sharp, only to see his miscued cross beat Ben Hamer at the near post. And moment's later Sharp's shot was blocked by Josh Knight, a teenage debutant who Craig Shakespeare had thrown on for the last ten minutes to get a run out.
The Blades searching desperately for their League Cup mojo
Deep into stoppage time, with approximately half of the crowd now listening to the remainder of the game on their car radios, Ahmed Musa surged through the home side's defence and put the icing on Leicester's second half dominance with a neat finish.
FT: Sheffield United 1 v Leicester City 4
Footnote: Added Thursday 24th August at 4pm. Leicester got Liverpool away in the third round draw.

Birmingham City 0 v Reading 2 - EFL Championship

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Saturday 28th August 2017
SkyBet EFLChampionship
at St. Andrews Stadium
Birmingham City (0) 0
Reading (0) 2
Jon Dadi Bodvarsson 60, George Evans 85
Admission £25. Programme £3.
Attendance 19,993 inc. 895 from Reading

Birmingham City:
Stockdale, Grounds (Davis, 78), Roberts, Kieftenbeld, Bramall, Ndoye (Jutkiewicz, h/t), Gallagher, Maghoma, Jenkinson (Nsue, 32), Morrison, Gleeson.
Unused subs - Kuszczak, Shotton, Gardner, Harding.
Reading:
Mannone, Gunter, Van den Berg (Evans, 69), McShane, Moore, Barrow (McCleary, 70), Bacuna, Llori, Bodvarsson (Smith, 87), Blackett, Kelly.
Unused subs - Jaakkola, Clement, Popa, Andresson.
A mixed bag of results in the Championship thus far for these two teams, saw Harry Redknapp's Blues start the day in 16th place, with Jaap Stam's Royals tucked in just behind in 18th; both on four points and having scored just three goals apiece, in their opening four games.
A low scoring draw looked like the most likely outcome before kick off, but by the 85th minute there was only going to be one winner here at St Andrew's... and they came from Berkshire.
Last night, Aston Villa leapfrogged City and Reading in the Championship table, when Steve Bruce's side picked up a point at Bristol City, courtesy of a Tottenham Hotspur loan player, Josh Onomah, scoring the equaliser from a deflected shot, after Jamie Paterson had put the Robins ahead.
Blues goalkeeping coach, Kevin Hitchcock (ex Mansfield Town)
warms up Blues keeper, David Stockdale (ex Worksop Town)
Last Friday night, after Birmingham had effectively surrendered a half time lead at Burton Albion and lost a televised match 2-1, Redknapp spared nobody with his post-match rant/analysis and made no bones about levelling criticism at a number of his under performing players and upped the ante in his search for new signings, as a matter of urgency.
I watched the game from a very precarious vantage point, astride a wobbly bar-stool, at a holiday (Stalag) camp in northernmost Northumberland, sans any commentary and surrounded by swarms of
marauding kids, charging around the place, completely out of control and bereft of even a modicum of parental control, psyched up to the max on a lethal combination of E numbers and fizzy pop, performing a modern day re-enactment of the 'Charge of the Light Brigade' in premises that was laughingly called a 'Family Fun Bar'.
I left when three kids from Peterlee, who had acquired a box of matches, wheeled a cannon in, and as a consequence, missed lip reading Redkanapp's post match press conference, which is reproduced here, in full, for your benefit and mine.
“We’re in a great position to win the game, no problems, we’re in control; they come out second half, change the system, they go 4-4-2 and we lost it”
“Suddenly four or five of them disappeared and I didn’t see them second half. We didn’t win any battles and it’s not good enough.
“I have to keep coming on and saying nice things. People say: ‘Don’t say anything bad’. Listen, what am I supposed to say? People are not stupid. People see the second half, it’s not good enough.
“You don’t go 25 games and win two of the 25 with virtually the same team.
“Nobody can say: ‘OK lads, I’ll sprinkle stardust on you, you’re a new lot of boys this year, forget that you ruined Zola last year, this year we’re going to be different’.
Hmm... he was making perfect sense as well, until that last sentence.
Dwelling on the past, even the recent past; especially when pontificating on the subject of Blues managers, spilled over the periphery of most people's boredom threshold ages ago.
And while I insist that nobody should try denying that City were crap at times, in fact many times,
over the course of last season.
But let's not ever lose sight of the fact, that the main culprit for Gianfranco Zola's downfall, was Gianfranco Zola himself.
And his undoing was down to him persisting, for far too long, with a game plan that clearly didn't work at Championship (or any other) level, whereas passing the ball to death is never going to achieve results when you play width ways across the pitch, instead of length ways up and down it. Nuff said and subject closed, forever as far as I am concerned.
In midweek, when Blues also lost 2-1 after being ahead at half time again, this time against Premier League side AFC Bournemouth in the League Cup, 'Our 'Arry' was far more enthusiastic about his team's performance, citing the opening 45 minutes as: "the best half we have played since I came here" and proclaiming that his side were excellent and unfortunate not to win.
After today's calamity for the home team at St. Andrews, in which they fielded six of their seven new signings from the off, an increasingly dejected looking Birmingham manager spoke of the line up he turned out against the Royals as being "nowhere near the side I'm trying to build" and lamented that: "the owners have made the cash available, but it's been difficult getting the deals done".
As the clock ticks down infuriating quickly towards the end of the transfer window, it's hard not to feel a certain amount of sympathy for Redknapp and his current plight,  and needs to be remembered
that when Jeff Fortang wrote the song:  "Some guys have all the luck", which has been recorded (and re-record many times over) by a plethora of different artists, his publishing company had told him to trim down the songs working title, from: "Some guys have all the luck, except Birmingham ****ing City!" to it's more commonly known truncated version.
But time stands still for no man, so, as the (self appointed) 'People's Poet' and 'Cockney Cowboy' Jimmy Pursey once said: "C'mon! C'Mon! Hurry up Harry come on!"
And, if it isn't the manager himself that is failing to squeeze the deals for several publicly named 'big' transfer targets over the line, then somebody connected to the worryingly anonymous 'powers that be' needs to get their finger out ASAP, or be held accountable for yet another season of frustration for a Blues manager, and sheer misery for their supporters.
Carl Jenkinson, who arrived from Arsenal in midweek, on a season long loan, looked to be a quite a large  step in the right direction, but he suffered a dislocated shoulder this afternoon, just twenty minutes into his Blues debut and will be out of action for a long time as a consequence.
It would seem, that in spite of former manager Barry Fry infamously ('pissing about') trying to remove an alleged Gypsy curse, that as hexed St Andrews for many a year (since 1906, to be precise), the bad vibes are still hanging around the place, to this very day.
"We're going down the pub!"
For the record, another former City manager, Ron Saunders had crucifixes attached to the floodlight pylons in a bid to rid the ground of it's aura of evil and foreboding; and as recently as last year, a local businessman and die-hard Bluenose, John Baines, an upholsterer by trade, re-covered the seats in the Birmingham dugout, with fabric that he claimed an Irish priest had sprinkled with holy water.
 In their very next game, Birmingham beat Sheffield Wednesday, which was apparently held forth as evidence that the ground had now been cleansed.
But let's not be taken in by such a folly...I mean, FFS, who hasn't ever beaten the Owls?
Such an occurrence is commonplace enough, throughout the national game, most weekends.
"We're going down the pub!"
To add some flesh to the bones of this most fascinating tale, that some of you may well be dismissing as space filling hocus pocus, conveniently appearing on this blog as a means of putting off, for as long as possible, relating just how poor today's game was...  and moreover, how crap Birmingham played; we need to dig up the past and examine the some of the history pertaining the club and, in particular, the timeline of the grounds and venues that Blues have played at, since their formation in 1875.
When Blues were still called Small Heath Alliance, they played at a ground at Muntz Street, just off Coventry Road, and less than a mile from their present home; in the opposite direction from where McDonald's now stands along with that nightmare of an urban roundabout, that is the absolute bane of motorists and pedestrian football fans alike.
Note* If you are crossing the road here, the
directions to the hospital are for your benefit
I've had some spectacularly close near misses there, both on foot and while behind the wheel of a car,
and one direct hit. But the constraints of time dictate that I should skip recounting the details of that particular 'joviality'. But if you're the silly Oldham Athletic fan who ended up across the bonnet of my car late one afternoon, I still laugh out loud recalling your obvious pain and distress... in fact, I'm laughing at you right now. Ha, ha!
If you leave the ground at the Tilton End and turn left up Cattell Road then right down Arsenal Street, which is named after a former munitions factory site, rather than the North London football team of the same name, you can probably reach Muntz Street more quickly, but you'll need Google maps to help you with that.
Besides, this is a football blog, not the bleedin' Geography Channel.
"We're (still) going down the (aptly named) pub (reprise"
As the club outgrew the modest sized enclosure on Muntz Street, it was decided to move to their present home in 1906, which was the site of a former Brickworks, surrounded by Cattell Road, Coventry Road, Tilton Road, Garrison Lane and the railway, standing close to St Andrew's church. By this time they were now called Birmingham FC, before finally adopting their current day moniker of Birmingham City FC in 1943.
As an aside, prior to playing at Muntz Street, Small Heath Alliance had also played at Arthur Street, in the Bordesley Green area of the city, that is next to Small Heath itself and Ladypool Road, Sparkbrook.
The building of St Andrews, would, as legend as it, necessitate the removal of a Romany community who were occupying the area, which is where the ill feeling towards the football club and subsequent curse originates from.
Certainly this up and coming team, suffered some kind of strange reversal of fortunes, as they were relegated to the Second Division, almost immediately after moving into their new ground and suffered the ignominy of having to reapply for their membership of the then two tiered Football League set up in 1908.
Moving swiftly on to 1941, Adolf Hitler obviously recognised that Birmingham City posed a big threat to the overall plan to make 'Dem Germans' a supremacist master race in both European and world Football, and St Andrew's suffered 20 direct hits from Luftwaffe bombing as a consequence,
destroying the Kop roof (on the very side of the ground that today's THE66POW pictures were taken from) and causing extensive damage to the Railway End, which is now called the Gil Merrick stand and is where the Reading fans were sitting today.
For the record, because I know you're all bristling with intrigue and want to know more about the footballer AKA 'Me Birmingham City':
Gil Merrick was a goalkeeper, who won 23 England caps and set a club record of 551 appearances in all senior competitions while playing for City, including the FA Cup Final of 1956, which Birmingham City lost against Manchester City.
Merrick began his international career in England's 2-0 win against Ireland at Villa Park in a Home International Championship tournament in 1951 and played his last game for his country three years later, when he represented England at the 1954 World Cup.
When England lost 3-6 and 1-7, in two very famous matches, against Ferenc Puskas and the 'Mighty Magyars' of Hungary, in 1953 and 1954, Merrick was in goal for both of those games.
After retiring from playing, he then went on to become the reserves manager at St Andrews and subsequently took charge of the first team, where he led Blues to their first major honour, when they lifted the League Cup in 1962-63, after a 3-1 two legged final win, on aggregate against, Aston Villa.
A year later however, at the end of the 1963-64 season, when Blues finished one place above the relegated teams in the (old) First Division, the club 'invited' him to, or rather 'requested' that he should resign.
Sadly the Sparkhill born Blues legend, passed away in 2010, aged 88.
His biography written by Keith Dixon, is well worth tracking down.
Mr Hitler (legend has it, he only had a single testicle) got many, many things wrong and was obviously a stark raving madman, but the seeds that he had set to harvest football dominance on a global scale eventually bore fruit.
In spite of Birmingham City having to play elsewhere for the remainder of the Second World War hostilities, the FA surprisingly chose St Andrew's as the venue for a wartime international match between England and Wales, after a British spy had intercepted a phone call from the Fuhrer himself to Hermann Göring (the commander-in-chief of the Luftwaffe), where he had (allegedly) said: "Listen here Hermann the German, these Blues frighten the pants off me, but the England team will never win a sausage, not unless the damn Ruskies are ever allowed to become match officials in World Cup finals. And as for those Welsh sheep fornicators! Don't even get me started. So we won't interfere with this trivial matter of an international match"
Apparently Göring went on to ask the crazy Austrian short-arse (he (Hitler) wasn't actually German, tall, blond haired, nor blue eyed), if his airborne Wehrmacht should switch their tactics in the second city and concentrate their efforts on Villa Park, the home of Aston Villa, on the outskirts of Birmingham instead.
To which Hitler was heard to laugh out loud and reply: "No, no, Jesus wept you big dumbkopf. They are unimportant, irrelevant even, and fall some way behind Blues, the Baggies, Wolves, Walsall and possibly even Paget Rangers and Solihull Moors, in the West Midlands pecking order of things. But out of sympathy to their lowly disposition, I will see to it that one of our future football stars shall be named after them... and we shall call him Stefan Kuntz!"
England won the game against the Welsh 2-1, on 25th October 1941, in front of an all ticket and strictly limited crowd of 25,000, but you probably knew that already.
However, in spite of the apparent Nazi seize fire, three months after the England v Wales game, the Main Stand at St Andrews, which was being used as a temporary National Fire Service station, was raised to the ground and burned down, completely destroying the club's records and all their other equipment, when a fireman mistook a bucket of petrol for water when attempting to damp down a brazier.
Obviously fire brigade training was far more rudimentary in those days.
As a quick aside, illustrating why 'Heil Hitler Klop' felt emasculated by the threat posed by BCFC on a world stage, take note:
When people talk about British, English and Scottish teams, and their pioneering exploits in European competition, they always go on (and on, and on) aggrandising Celtic's Lisbon Lions, or Manchester United beating Benfica at Wembley.
But the real trail blazers to this end, were in fact, Birmingham City, who were the first ever English club side to take part in European competition, over a decade before either of those aforementioned games apparently 'set the ball rolling for future generations'.
Blues played their first ever fixture in the inaugural Inter-Cities Fairs Cup as long ago as 1956, when they went on to lose to Barcelona (after a replay) in the semi-final.
And they were also the first UK side to reach a European final, when they lost against Barcelona in the 1960 Fairs Cup final, and a year later, they were also defeated by Roma in the next final (more evidence that the Roma-ny curse really does exist, some might say).
Recently commissioned research, has made claims that no travelling community was ever evicted from the St Andrews site, and says that no documented evidence exists.
However, it is improbable that anybody living a Gypsy type lifestyle one hundred and eleven years ago, would have a filing cabinet full of paperwork in their caravan, or even a website or blog, or digital camera to record important events and data on.
And FFS, the WiFi signal at the ground on match days is still a bit hit and miss in 2017, so imagine what it must have been like back in 1906, when they still only had dial up internet connection, which required a permanent address and fixed phone line socket to use. Not very many caravans had such luxuries in them there olden days.
And remember, the researcher conveniently forgot that all of the club paperwork had perished in the blaze back in 1941.
Personally, I reckon that there must have been a curse, because there is no way that any club with as much potential as Birmingham City, with a stadium that stands in such a densely populated city, have simply underachieved and been decidedly average,  for over 140 years, is there?
Although eventS (non events even) on the field of play this afternoon might suggest otherwise.
I have undertaken extensive and meticulously detailed studies, into the histories of quite a few clubs,
aligned with the most fascinating subject of current and former football grounds and their origins, often finding that sometimes you can dig too deeply through vast piles of old newspaper footage and spend too long trawling through library resources, when the real clues were right underneath your nose all along.
So, Ladies and Gentlemen, I feel duty bound to end all of the preponderance and speculation and hereby present to you, the actual, factual, definitive proof, that there had been a travellers camp on Cattell Road:
On June 16th 1906, a Mr Seamus O'Toole, of nofixed abode, whose location app was displaying 'Toys R Us car park, near Cattell Road, B9', while using his Twitter handle of @CaravanMan06,
with a hashtag of #Romanylivesmatter, posted the following:
"Sad time tonight to be sure, to be sure. We are heading off towards Dover, to invade some unspoilt green belt land in Kent, because the council have asked us to feck off so they can build a football ground and possibly a Morrison's supermarket as well, sometime in the future. Please leave all your white goods, old bicycles, radiators and metal bedsteads out for us to collect en route. Thx"
Now before any of you pedantic swines tell me that I just made that up, because you can only use a maximum of 140 characters on Twitter; that restriction didn't come in until 1947, in a vainglorious attempt to prolong mobile phone battery lifewhen post World war Two rationing was still in effect.
And might I just add, if you are ever experiencing a bad connection problem near the ground, go over the road to the Toys R Us car park and experience for yourself just how good the 4G signal is there... you can apologise and thank me for providing you with this very useful tip later.
So anyway folks, you can look the other way now if you don't want to know the score, because
having run out of a myriad of circuitous tangents to zoom away off topic into the distance on, and having exhausted the abundance of historical anecdotes and fascinating tales of yore and times gone by, that I have provided this evening, to both enlighten you and feed your curiosity, and having circumnavigated a whole solar system's worth of diverse routes to manoeuvre (the long way) around,
to vaingloriously avoid touching upon the subject of how painfully bad this game actually was to watch; sadly the moment has arrived to spill the beans.
What an ugly approximation of the game of football this was.
And when I say ugly, I don't just mean rough looking, I mean hideous!
Don't tell me that aesthetics are subjective, you all know the truth when you see it.
Did I actually dream that Mr Zola had phucked off and there was going to be the dawning of a new era at St Andrews? 
Because what I sat through today was just as bad, if not worse, than anything that I saw at a Blues game at any time last season.
Having seen a lot of speculative reportage about incoming players at City, experienced lads of the calibre of John Terry, Ashley Cole and Robbie Keane; you will have to excuse me, for stating the bloody obvious here; but aren't they all getting on a bit? 
Would any of them still have the legs to compete for a whole league campaign, especially when the pitches start to get heavy,  as the onset of winter takes hold?
What kind of salary would such players expect to be picking up... and does anybody actually believe that such an outlay genuinely represents good value for money, in the long run?
Would any of them actually be joining the club because they really wanted to play for Blues, or am I right in suspecting that all they would be doing is pulling the shirt on for one last crack at topping up
their own, or even their pet dogs, offshore tax avoidance bank accounts.
You couldn't blame any of them for having such motives, because; face facts: footballers aren't loyal to clubs and vice versa, and lets not even try to kid ourselves that such a statement isn't exactly 100% accurate and true.
But investing in the future, should surely be the way forward, shouldn't it?
Of course all teams need to strike a balance and wily old pros passing on a few tricks of the trade, won't ever harm any up and coming players, who can play alongside the 'elders',  who have been around a bit, as part of their own learning curve.
But my worst fear, as regards Birmingham City, was that Mr Redknapp was all but on the verge of assembling a very close approximation, of what could be called: "Harry's Celebrity All Stars XI"
But Redknapp, the oldest manager in the top four divisions, at 70 years of age, has a far more vast knowledge of the workings of the game than I ever will have, so let's show the guy the level of respect his longevity and survival rate warrants and a large portion of benefit of the doubt, that he is going to pull a rabbit (or two), out of the hat any time soon.
I genuinely hope he succeeds where many others have tried, only to be thwarted by frustration, misfortune and the burden of a history book on the shelf, that keeps on repeating itself.
Hey look! I just waffled on and deviated away from today's match report again.
Right, before it starts to look as though I had forgotten that there were two teams here today: Introducing: Reading!
A well organised and hard working side, drilled in the ancient art of defending, by one of the best foreign players ever to grace these shores, Jaap Stam.
Masters at running down the clock, whenever they're given even the slightest and minuscule opportunity to do so. Though I wouldn't go as far as to say that they cheated to this end, but by heck, they certainly utilised each and every precious moment of time they could.
The Royals, or Biscuitmen if you prefer, arrived in the West Midlands with a game plan, soaked up most of Blues had in their locker, even though that didn't actually amount to very much, frustrated and suffocated (not literally you understand) their opposition, by closing down any room to create passing and movement in the last third, they won just about every 50/50 challenge by being quicker than City to attack the ball and always looking more focused and alert. And they won the game by virtue of two well taken goals.
408 issues and still telling it like it is.
I won't win any friends in Birmingham for saying this, but Reading looked far more clued up, streetwise and appeared to want it more. Far, far more.
Blues for their part, had chosen to play at a trot, rather than a gallop or even a canter and though it pains me to say it, showed a complete lack of urgency, until it was too late to salvage anything out of this game of strategy.
You have to wonder about the psyche of some of the home side's players, here they were playing in front of large, loyal, vocal, partisan, but ultimately very patient crowd and they look to be suffering from some sort of psychological lock, that is scrambling the necessary communication channels, between their brains and their feet. 
A lack of confidence and self belief was evident in a few cases... and if you go out onto the field in that frame of mind, you're already halfway beat and of virtually no use or help to the rest of your teammates. Any chain is only as strong as it's weakest link and will fall to bits fairly quickly if two or three of it's components lose their shape and open themselves up to being worked on.
The forthcoming international break as come exactly at the right time for Redknapp, because he can now concentrate his energies on widening his search for new players and interacting with his players on the training pitch, to get inside their heads and point them in the right direction.
Opposition sides, like let's say for example: Reading, will pick up on clues like:  crestfallen body language, dropped heads and frustrated niggling between teammates and punish the apparent disunity that this kind of behaviour displays. And, in a nutshell that is what they did.
After the game, on the walk back to New Street, a frustrated Blues fan asked of me: "Go on then, you can usually find something upbeat and constructive to say, what do you make of that pile of crap today!?" 
It took me a while to provide an answer (of sorts) and I doubt if it cheered him up any, when I feebly offered: "Well, you've got to take heart from the fact, that although they were very poor today, it is highly unlikely that they could actually play that badly again... isn't it?"
It was a rhetorical question on my part. Of course they can!
BTW, here is the detailed match report that you have all been waiting so patiently for, from the official Birmingham City website... Blues match report
And here is the Reading website version... Reading match report
I have been asked if I would like to go to Birmingham City's next match, at Elland Road, against
Leeds United, on Tuesday 12th September.
Tickets are priced at £37.00... each! 
So, err, thanks but no thanks.

Matlock Town 2 v Grantham Town 3 - NPL Prem

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Monday 28th August 2017
EvoStik, Northern Premier League, Premier Disision
at the DCJ Group Insurance Arena, Causeway Lane
Matlock Town (1) 2
Marc Newsham 45  
Shaun Harrad 90
Grantham Town (3) 3
Jordan Hempenstall 15
Curtis Burrows 24
Lee Shaw 34
Admission £10. Programme £2. Attendance 529
Matlock Town
Phil Barnes, Nico Degirolamo, Jake Green, Joe Doyle-Charles, Adam Yates, Dwayne Wiley, Darnelle Bailey-King (Luis Rose 60), Ryan Wilson, Shaun Harrad, Marc Newsham (Zayn Hakeem 60) Ted Cribley 
Unused subs - Callum Lloyd , Rhys Sharpe, Tyler Blake
Grantham Town
Kieran Preston, Tom Potts, Riley Thompson, Matt Baker, Luke Shaw, Michael Hollingsworth, Danny Meadows. Andy Wright (Kegan Everington), Jordan Hempenstall (Jack McMenemy), Lee Shaw, Curtis Burrows (Tom Curtis 89) 
Unused subs - Jeremiah Desaolu, Kevin Rastos de Silva
Arriving in sun drenched Matlock around a hour before kick off, the town was absolutely gridlocked with Bank Holiday tourists, and people were being forced to abandon their vehicles in even the smallest and most unlikely of spaces... well, I suppose Ringo wasn't going to get ticketed sticking his yellow submarine up there.
Obviously with Mansfield Town not having a game today, the Stags first team manager had a great opportunity to travel over to Causeway Lane, to run the rule over Tyler Blake and Zayn Hakeem, two members of the Stags U18's back to back championship winning side over the past couple of years, who have gone to the Derbyshire club get some valuable game time and work experience under their belts. But he was nowhere to be seen.
Maybe he got caught up in the traffic jams around the town, possibly he couldn't find anywhere to park and had to abandon his trip to this Evo-Stik League game... and there is always the chance that I might have missed him and he was in attendance wearing one of his low key and incognito blending in outfits (or my gran's old anorak like he usually does).
But, I personally have this (incessantly) nagging doubt that a leopard doesn't ever change it's spots... and Steve Evans has never been one for introducing young talent into his teams in the past, or for promoting lads through the ranks, at his previous clubs and to that end, though I  obviously want to see Mansfield Town competing for honours at the highest level possible, one must never lose sight of the fact, that Mansfield Town is a club, that operates on many levels, not just one side that plays in the EFL League 2. 
So you need to ask, if riding rough shod over the academy is actually undermining the integrity and ultimately the purpose of the of the youth/academy/U18/U19/U21 set up. Because if that isn't what is happening, then somebody please tell me, what is!?
Sure, Mr Evans (and Paul Raynor) is employed by Mansfield Town to mount a big promotion push with the first team this season, and ultimately that (and possibly that alone) is what he will be judged on by the majority of people at Field Mill. 
But the infrastructure of Mansfield Town, should never be sacrificed or neglected by or for any one person. That, and that alone, must remain a constant, and the following edict applies at any football club: You are only as strong as your weakest link and as fragile and near to bursting point as your most over inflated ego. Football is a team game, that team encompasses everybody who does their bit, not just Saturday's starting eleven. 
All managers, even dead famous (infamous?) ones, come and go eventually, it is important that the successful youth development programme that is in place, remains intact as the thriving underbelly of any club, regardless of who is in the hot seat and what direction they have chosen to take.
At Rotherham United, the cult manager (thank the lord I updated my spellchecker) signed somewhere in the region of 978.6 players, which somewhat congested the career pathway for the Millers youngsters hoping to find a space to break into the first team. 
At Mansfield hardly a day goes by without there been yet another announcement of an incoming signing or loan player. 
I shall just leave this most stimulating topic here, for you to discuss amongst yourselves.
It was a cracking afternoon to be out and about enjoying a game of football, and there can be fewer venues that can match the aesthetics of Causeway Lane on a day like today, with the majesty of Ryber Castle perched high in the skyline overlooking the town, the unspoilt surroundings, the handsome hilly town that cascades at some seemingly impossible geometrical angles, providing a really pleasant backdrop to the days sporting endeavours and the quirkiness of the three sided enclosure, with a most splendidly appointed bar and function area... and decent food too.
I once described the old buildings at the ground that were replaced as props from that were left over from the Japanese Prisoner of War television series 'Tenko', but I'd be hard pushed to ame you a smarter or friendlier facility as the one that stands to the side of the Twigg Stand.
Of course the downside to driving to Matlock on a regular basis, aside from all of those clutch burning hills en route and the fact that it is a complete bastard to get around, when the Summer weather is replaced by the inevitable onslaught of ice and snow. 
It looks nice enough, but take a shovel, a flask, a hot water bottle and a pile of blankets in Winter, just to be on the safe side. 
You can never be too prepared or careful round these parts.
Over the course of a couple of weeks, the Gladiators have plummeted like a bloody great big earthbound meteorite, from the business and of the table down to sixteenth place, while Grantham negotiated their Bank Holiday double shift comfortably and moved up to second in the table in cruise control with wins against Whitby Town and today's opponents Matlock.
The Gingerbreads ran, ran as fast as they could, right from the off, and Luke Shaw cut in from the left and crossed towards the back stick, but the home sides captain Adam Yates adopted a safety first policy, and headed the ball out of play inside the opening thirty seconds.
And almost immediately afterwards Luke Shaw picked up the ball again from a similar position, but skimmed his shot narrowly over the Matlock bar.
Grantham had fired a couple of warning shots across the home sides bows inside the first minute and things were already starting to look a bit shaky in defence for the hosts.
Gladiators! Are you ready!? Err... not yet! 
Luke Shaw slipped a good pass through the static home defence for Lee Shaw to run onto, but with Phil Barnes tearing off of his line to cover the angles, the visitors number 10 had to rush his shot and couldn't keep the ball on target. Matt Baker headed the ball towards the Matlock area, but when it sat up in front of Jordan Hempenstall and he got his head to it, the Grantham centre forward could only divert his effort onto the roof of the net.
But on fifteen minutes Hempenstall took a sideways pass from Lee Shaw on the edge of the area and rifled a precision strike into the bottom corner of Barnes net, finding the combination to open the floodgates at the Cricket Field End of the ground in the process.
Darnelle Bailey-King was looking fast and lively on the right for Matlock, but the visitors were obviously aware of the threat he he posed and deployed two players to marshal him whenever he looked like getting forward, but it was at the other end of the pitch that the goal action was occurring, and the Gingerbreads doubled their lead after Joe-Doyle Charles had headed Lee Shaw's cross behind for a corner, that the home side half cleared, but the ball fell to Craig Burrows twenty yards out and he cracked it into the bottom corner on the half volley. Credit where it is due here, Grantham obviously don't apply a 'hit and hope' approach to their shots on goal, because both finishes thus far had been placed strategically into the bottom corner, just inside the post and beyond the reach of Barnes.
Marc Newsham ought to have done better from ten yards, when he was sent clear from a long knock forward, but Kieran Preston spread himself well, to turn the ball round the post.
But once again, when Grantham put the home defence under the cosh from a right wing corner, they buckled and left the ball for Lee Shaw who had the simple task of slotting the ball past Barnes to give the Gingerbreads a three goal cushion with just thirty four minutes on the clock.
Once more Grantham had scored from a slide rule finish that had virtually been passed into the net, just inches inside the upright, while the home side displayed impeccable manners, doffing their top hats and proclaiming: "No, after you, I insist!"
Ryan Wilson saw his shot on goal and two subsequent rebounds all blocked by a rugged Grantham rearguard and though Bailey-King had wriggled like an eel out on the right wing to make himself the time and space to put two decent deliveries into the visitors area, Newsham displayed a similar kind of responses to crosses that you would have expected from Count Dracula.
For the record, Christopher Lee's portrayal of the blood thirsty Count was far better than any other actors inferior efforts, but I digress. 
Hempenstall tried to catch Barnes out with two outrageously long shots as half time approached, showing just how high Grantham's confidence was following their nineteen minute goal onslaught.
But, in a spirited attempt to chuck my vampire comparison straight back at me, in first half stoppage time, Newsham rose to meet a Ted Cribley free kick from out on the left flank and glanced a header into the top right hand corner of Preston's goal and celebrated by showing me his fangs, turning himself into a bat and dive bombing me in the stand.
HT: Gladiators 1 v Gingerbreads 3
Right at the start of the second half Lee Shaw found himself through, one against one with Barnes, but although he lofted the ball beyond the keepers reach, he also put it the wrong side of the post.
With a scrum of players jostling for position in the Grantham area, awaiting a long range free kick delivery from Shaun Harrad, the Matlock striker caught everyone off guard when he went directly for goal, but his shot flew inches wide of the left hand upright.
Matlock were in the hunt for a comeback now, but Grantham were proving to be just as stubborn in defence as they were prolific in attack, making light work of clearing two corners in quick succession. Harrad broke through into the visitors area and unselfishly squared a pass to the well placed Newsham, who took aim, leant back to strike the ball on the volley, but fell unceremoniously on his bum instead.
On the hour, the Matlock management team, Craig Hopkins and Glenn Kirkwood, made a double switch to freshen up their attacking options, with Bailey-King and Newsham making way for Luis Rose and Zayn Hakeem.
The substitutions almost had an instant impact on the game, as Rose got on the end of Cribley's left wing cross, but couldn't quite keep his header on target.
Lee Shaw picked up a booking for an unnecessary challenge in his own half, which would cost him dearly in the long run.
Hakeem chased down a lost cause of a ball and motored towards the Grantham area, but had to go it alone because his speed of thought and action meant he had no support in place yet and his shot was charged down.
With Matlock's fresh legs causing the visitors an increasing amount of new problems to deal with, the result suddenly began to look much less of a formality, especially when Lee Shaw picked up a second yellow card and was sent off. He responded to the taunts from the stand by holding up three fingers in one hand and one on the other, to indicate the score, which provoked a tongue in cheek response of: "Three fingers, you can tell he's from bloomin' Grantham!"
Hakeem once again looked hungry for the ball as he took it away from a defender out on the right and put an inviting cross right across the face of the visitors goal, but Wilson couldn't quite reach the ball at full stretch and the chance went begging. Tyler Blake would've known exactly where to run to finish that chance, but he was still on the bench (cough).
Wilson took a left wing corner that was headed away back in the direction it had come from, sohe struckhis second delivery low and hard and Preston was lucky to keep the ball out of the net as Harrad turned it towards the goal from close range.
Cribley sent a defence splitting ball to Rose, but his textbook downward header was cleared off the line.
Harrad picked up the ball thirty yards from the Gingerbreads goal, nudged it forward and let fly with a shot that thumped heavily against a car parked on the boundary of the adjacent cricket field.
Deep into added time, Harrad finally got the goal his efforts had deserved, when he headed the ball past Preston from Gibley's knock.
FT: Matlock Town 2 v Grantham Town 3
Ultimately, although they picked up the tempo as the second half went on, the visitors three goal cushion had given Matlock far too much to do, as they tried to salvage something out of the game.
On the balance of play over the whole ninety minutes, a fair result all told.
Jake Green looked comfortable in the number 3 shirt for Matlock today, I will be watching his brother Matt in  action tomorrow night, when he returns to Mansfield Town in the colours of Lincoln City.

Mansfield Town 1 v Lincoln City 3 - EFL Trophy

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Tuesday 29th August 2017
'Chuckletrade' EFL Trophy Group G
at the One Call Stadium/Field Mill
Mansfield Town (1) 1
Alfie Potter 6
Lincoln City (1) 3
Elliott Whitehouse 40
Ollie Palmer 79
Matt Green 90+5
Admission £10. Programme £1.50. 
Attendance 2,495 inc. 898 away fans
Mansfield Town:
Olejnik, White, Pearce, Taft, Hunt, Thomas (Atkinson 72), Digby, MacDonald (Hamilton 82), Potter, Sterling-James, Spencer (Rose 82)
Unused subs - Logan, Bennett, Benning, Byrom
Lincoln City:
Farham, Long, Waterfall, Dickie, Habergham (Eardley 65), Anderson, Whitehouse, Woodyard (Bostwick 65), Maguire-Drew (Green 77), Knott, Palmer
Unused subs - Vickers, Rhead, Arnold, Raggett
In his programme notes, the Stags manager stated: "I've made no secret of the fact that tonight's competition is not in our top ten priorities this season"
And to that end, Steve Evans was 100% correct and wholly justified in making ten changes to the team that started Saturday's game against Luton Town.
There are those who are boycotting the Checkatrade Trophy, but it is a competition that has traditionally attracted below average attendances under it's various guises and formats over the years anyway and tonight's attendance, which included a bigger away support than a lot of teams will take to 'proper' league and cup games this season, suggests that regardless of how elevated some people believe their moral high ground to be (and I wouldn't knock anyone for holding such an opinion), there are a good number of fans who will support their club through thick and thin (and even thinner) in all competitions.
It is mandatory for Mansfield Town (and Lincoln City) to enter this competition, regardless of it's format, neither of them have any choice in that... and they still incur costs on a match night and have wages to pay, so even at the reduced admission prices clubs are offering to spectators who attend these games, by not attending, you may well be making a point to the event organisers that you don't agree with the structure of the competition, but the only people who are taking a hit in the pocket as a consequence of people stating away are the clubs themselves.
Besides the Stags and the Imps, Group G also contains Notts County and Everton U23, the local derby tie at Meadow Lane will be played on Tuesday October 24th and the Everton side visit Mansfield on Tuesday 31st October... spooky!
So, having taken my good lady (my bad one was otherwise indisposed tonight) for a slap up feast in a nearby health food restaurant, we took our seats in the upper tier of the Ian Greaves West Stand and eagerly awaited the forthcoming mouthwatering prospect of a game that was about to unfold before us.
As things go on the trophy scale: the FA Cup is the grand old lady of the piece, a bit like Shirley Bassey in her prime, while the League Cup is slightly less glamorous, but glamorous all the same, akin to lets say the 'Pop Princess' that is Kylie Minogue, while the EFL Trophy is right down there with a twerking Miley Cyrus and the Cheeky Girls, i.e. a bit tacky by comparison, but not with a certain charm in an 'any port in a storm' sort of way.
Post match, Mr Evans said that the Stags had dominated for spells and for the first twenty minutes or so, they certainly did just that and were all over Lincoln like a stingy nettle rash, he also said that Jimmy Spencer was man of the match, but I thought that particular accolade belonged to Alex MacDonald, who put in a great shift on his return from injury... and my sidekick for the night, 'er indoors, the Blonde Beelzebub herself, also commented that: "He's having a good game, that number seven is"
The oracle has spoken and invalidated any other claims to that particular honour, even Alfie Potter, who couldn't have been far behind on points.
The game was just six minutes old, when Spencer fed the ball right through the middle of the non existent Imps defence, to Potter on the edge of the area, who curled a delightful shot around Paul Farman in the Lincoln goal, after Potter had been involved in the build up, flicking the ball on to Spencer from Bobby Ojenik's long punt before tearing off down the pitch to meet the return ball.
A good number of the Stags players were looking to make a good impression on their management team tonight, with places up for grabs against Carlisle United (managed by former Stags boss Keith Curle) at Brunton Park on Saturday.
Some will have staked their claim, while others may well be on their way elsewhere before the transfer window for business between Football League closes on Thursday night.
Am I alone in thinking it is time that transfer windows were dispensed with?
I'm all for having a cut off point after which clubs can no longer sign players, say eight weeks prior to the end of the season for arguments sake, but no doubt some of this weeks deadline day dealing will stretch the credibility of the transfer system to breaking point and clubs will be held to ransom, with far too many of them adopting a live now pay later policy, while fees go up like prices at Xmas.
I once paid over the odds so my lad could have a Buzz Lightyear to open on Christmas morning, I saw one (still boxed and in mint condition) going for £4 in 'Help the Aged' last week, but I only had enough cash on me for the Tracey Island and ultra rare 'Squirtle' Pokemon card.  Mark my word, they'll be worth a small fortune in years to come, I watch Cash in the Attic and all that stuff with that mahogany coloured Dave on it, so I know my stuff!
Any road, the home side were playing some eye catching and attractive stuff from the outset, but as the game wore on, Lincoln began to find their feet and picked up the pace towards half time and this culminated in them drawing level, five minutes before the break, from a rare excursion into the Stags half. when Jordan Maguire-Drew managed to shield the ball under pressure and rolled a pass to Sean Long, who dropped a well weighted cross right onto the head of Elliott Whitehouse who planted the ball past Olejnik.
Two minutes before half time, the Imps manager was sent to the stands by David Webb the match referee. Tsk! These managers should moderate their Effing and Geoffing from within their technical area. Take a leaf out of Steve Evans and Paul Raynor's book you foul mouthed oaf!
Right on  the stroke of half time,Potter was unlucky not to double his goal tally when his goa bound effort from Omari Sterling-James cross, was deflected over the bar.
HT: Stags 1 v Imps 1
All square at the break in a game that had, in the main, been played out thus far in the visitors half. But hey ho! At least none of the ex Mansfield players in the visitors ranks had scored their 'against the run of play' goal.
Two minutes after the restart Spencer tore forward into the Imps goalmouth but was pulled back by Luke Waterfall as he shaped up to shoot. But the referee waved Mansfield's appeals away and the former Gainsborough Trinity player, who had made five appearances for the Stags on loan when he was at Scunthorpe United, got away with his misdemeanour completely unpunished.

Mansfield Town Under 18 side watch on.
One day all of this could be yours.
It is a shame that Mr Webb wasn't sat upstairs with us, because he would clearly have seen what happened then... and it would also have meant somebody else would have been officiating.
Billy Knott forced a good save out of Olejnik as Lincoln got more into the game. 
The Stags broke forward after clearing the resulting corner, but when Potter laid the ball out wide to Jack Thomas ("He's one of our own!") and continued his run to get on the end of the return ball, but couldn't see of the attentions of the Imps defence or get his shot away.
Farman made two saves in quick succession from Macdonald, after good work between Thomas and Sterling James to create the first opening and a cheeky knock back from Spencer for the second, which the Lincoln keeper nearly spilled over his line.
Ollie Palmer, the ever so popular former Stags player (that's sarcasm, not irony) ought to have done better when he had a clear run at and sigh of goal, but Olejnik advanced quickly and spread himself to save at the Imps striker's feet. Ha, ha, ha, as if Ollie 'bloody' Palmer ever scores at Mansfield.
Paul Digby headed against the Imps bar from another testing delivery from MacDonald.
MacDonald was involved at the other end moments later when he was pushed off the ball inside the Stags area, but the referee missed it (seriously, there are loads of empty seats up here Mr Webb!) and Sean Long drilled the ball towards the Stags goal and it went in off of Palmer's boot, while he was standing in the way of Long's shot, a yard from the line.
By heck! I'll go to the foot of our stairs... Ollie 'bloody' Palmer has just scored in front of the Quarry Lane End. 
Keep a lookout in the skies for Halley's Comet tonight, keep your camera lens focused on Loch Ness and say "Hi!" from me, to Lord Lucan when he walks into your local later on.
Will Atkinson almost equalised inside the final five scheduled minutes, when he latched onto a headed clearance from Johnny Hunt's long throw into the Imps area and struck a peach of a shot just the wrong side of the upright.
Mansfield were huffing and puffing and battering away at the Lincoln defence, but were getting no joy whatsoever. 
In the fifth minute of added time Oleknik was beckoned from  the Mansfield bench to get forward with the rest of his team for a last ditch corner kick. 
But the Imps cleared the danger and a punt forward found the Stags legendary striker Matt Green. Alas he no longer plays for Mansfield Town does he? Will Atkinson, gave chase but with Olenik struggling to get back, Green only had to keep his twenty five yard knock on target and it was game over.
FT: Mansfield Town 1 v Lincoln City 3
With hindsight Olenik should've stayed in his own half for the corner kick, if only to preserve the Stags EFL Trophy league table goal differential. 
But, as always, it is easy to be wise after the event and if he'd scored a late equaliser and the gamble had paid off then nobody would have been questioning anyone's judgement.

Swallownest 1 v Knaresborough Town 2 - NCEL Div 1

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Saturday 2nd September 2017
Toolstation NCEL Division 1
at 'The Swall Siro', Rotherham Road, Aston cum Aughton
Swallownest (1) 1
Ash Burbeary 17
Knaresborough Town (0) 2
Tom Hesketh 77pen
Stephen Bromley 84
Admission £5. Programme £1.50. Attendance 150
Photo gallery from today's game: Click HERE
Swallownest:
James Pollard, Lloyd Gelsthorpe, Ash Cooper, Joel Evans, Dan White, Scott Mullooly (C), Leon Loftus, Jordan Stocks, Aaron Nicolson, Ash Burbeary, Alex Nightingale
Subs - Jamie Hopkins, Aaron Partlett, Mitch Ward, Josh Hobson, Darryl Johnson
Knaresborough Town:
Jack Rushworth; Matt Donnelly, Sam Cook, Greg Kidd; Conor Donoghue, Ben Parkes, Tom Hesketh (C), Harry Brown, Paul Atkinson (Ben Cohen), Brad Walker (Steve Bromley), Blaine Hobson (Colin Heath).
Subs - Ben Cohen,Colin Heath, Steve Bromley
Pitchside conversation with twenty minutes of the game still remaining:
"What's this ref called Rob?"
"Ah, just let me check on the team sheet... it's Rob Woodburn. Why do you ask?"
"Well, I thought his name was 'Fuck Off!' Because that is all everyone on the pitch has been shouting at him all afternoon!"
A good point, well made. 
Yet Mr Woodburn did eventually brandish a yellow card for a 'foul and abusive language' offence, in the eighty sixth minute. 
Might I suggest that by then, the horse had already bolted into the distance, dragging the whole effing stable and it's door behind him.
Boys will be boys... and I'm afraid that you have to nip any early signs of dissent and naughtiness in the bud, because; if you treat footballers ( breed apart who have impaired a large percentage of their common sense and brain cells, by heading far too many balls over the years) the same as normal people, you're in danger of stirring up a recipe for anarchy, chaos and destruction percolating to boiling point in no time whatsoever.
Of course, that is easy to say with the benefit of hindsight, but generally, ninety nine point nine times out of a hundred, if you give testosterone charged alpha males, competing on the field of play against others of a similar bent ,a single inch, then in applying the laws of human nature, they are going to try and take a mile; instead of respecting the fact that you are treating them like grown ups and allowing the game to flow, in the vainglorious hope that they will behave in an appropriate manner. 
Sometimes they will, but more often than not, you'll end up regretting implementing a Laissez-faire approach.
We are all guilty of indulging in this kind of edict from time to time, aren't we?
You know the sort of thing: the boss is away this week, so let's sneak off home early, in fact let's sneak off even earlier every day because we keep getting away with it. 
Those roadside signs say 50, but you know that there aren't any speed cameras around, so get that right foot down.
Everybody is one the make and looking for a bigger slice.
But, back on topic, what the referee ought to have done, the very first time somebody swore at him, was brandish a yellow card and leave the perpetrator walking on a tight rope for the next eighty seven minutes, then call the captain's together and insist: "These shower of bastards had better start respecting my authority and moderating their fucking language a bit, or my book is going to be full of names before very long".... that would've avoided a few problems later on in the game.
Bespoke advertising in Swallownest's superb programme.
I'm not particularly aiming any of the above at the players, match officials, club officials or the respective benches, of either (or both) of the clubs who were involved in this very tight game, because it is all pretty much of a muchness and commonplace at most levels of football anyway.
But... if the cap fits, then the reason that it is up there as a prelude to today's match reportage, isn't entirely by way of what you might call a coincidence.
Any road, moving very swiftly on... just before kick off, I was enthusing about Leon Loftus, Swallownest's young recent signing from Worksop Town and when my pal enquired of me which one Leon was I replied: "Y'know him! Played for the Worksop Under 19 team last season. He had a row with Danny Patterson when Maltby played the Worksop first team at the the back of of last season (to be fair that could probably have been just about any Tigers player on that particular afternoon, given the way that they responded to Mr Patterson's approach to the game)"
Still I needed to provide more clues as to the identity of the player in question: "You must remember him, good touch, excellent passer, hair like Sideshow Bob off the Simpsons!"
That did the trick and as the teams took to the field of play I cleared off on my own to take a few photos, but not until after I was accosted by two ladies: "Excuse me. Just for the record, I'm Sideshow Bob's grandma and this is his auntie!"
Phew! Thank goodness I had been complimentary about the player... and for the record, you don't look anywhere near old enough to be anyone's grandparent.
For what it's worth, Loftus is a great capture for 'Swall' and I'm sure that anybody who has seen him playing for the Under 19 (and first) team at Sandy Lane, will be surprised that he has had to move on to get regular football.
Knaresborough arrived in South Yorkshire on the back of a great start to the season, having won all seven of the games that they have played thus far, and as a consequence the home side adjusted their line up accordingly, playing what appeared to be a 4-5-1 formation, which effectively nullified the attacking intentions of North Yorkshire side and prevented them from asserting themselves on the game and making the kind of dominant impression that the 150 people who had turned up to watch this NCEL Division 1 game might have been anticipating.
The tactics worked a treat and though some were of the opinion that the visitors looked very ordinary and 'nowt special at times, credit must be given to 'Swall' for not allowing the league leaders to take the game by the scruff of it's neck and strut their stuff. But by the same token, Paul Stansfield and Paul Clayton can be proud of they way that their side dug in and finally ground out the result that kept their winning start to the season intact.
The away side looked full of beans, whatever that means, during the opening exchanges of the game and Blaine Hobson spanked the first shot of the game wide of the target from twelve yards out.
Swallownest were on the attack a few minutes later, but when Alex Nightingale showed a good turn of pace to power through the left hand side of the 'Borough' area, he was crowded out by a gnat's chuff-piecesque tightly packed defence, and also looked to be muscled off of the ball from my vantage point. However the referee saw things differently and awarded a free kick against the home side's number eleven. 
Mr Woodburn was nearer to the action than me, so being of a generous disposition, I will have to give him the benefit of my doubt regarding the matter.
When a referee seems to be favouring the host side, he is called a 'homer', so I pondered if one who is seemingly giving the bulk of 50/50 decisions to the visitors is, by the same token, called an 'awayer'?
I am generalising of course and should make it clear that I am not referring in any way, shape or form to this afternoon's man in the middle. Who right on cue awarded the away side a free kick ten yards from James Pollards goal, that Matt Donnelly delivered to Ben Parkes, who flicked the ball over the bar when he probably didn't realise that he had more time to do better from a free header.
Captain Haddock,,, whoops! I meant Lloyd Gelsthorpe, sorry I couldn't read my own writing there for a second, was getting forward to good effect on the right flank from full back berth, combining well with Jordan Stocks and the home side forced a couple of corners, which the league leaders fielded well, but they rode their luck a bit when Gelsthorpre let fly with a low shot from twenty yards out, that bounced fractionally wide of the right hand upright. "Billions of bilious blue blistering barnacles", that was close!
Ash Burbeary, a mainstay of the local non league circuit in recent seasons, can be considered a bit of coup signing for Swallownest, and he justified that star billing on seventeen minutes, when  he attacked the visitors goal from the left flank, skipped past three challenges and picked his spot, beating Jack Rushworth with a well paced shot.
Bear with me one moment while I do a quick sum in the margin. Wow! That is the first time in six hundred and forty seven minutes (plus stoppages) of play, that Knaresborough have been behind in a game all season. So now you know why they are top of the league (but not quite runaway leaders because Yorkshire Amateur are still tucked in just behind them in the table).
Did anyone see where did I dropped my pipe?
The home side weren't about to give up their one goal advantage in a hurry and Parkes and Hobson were both denied by last ditch blocks, before Pollard gathered an angled drive from Hobson. 
The South Yorkshire side's keeper looked unfazed and focused throughout the game and was reading the game well whenever the opposition mounted any sort of attack, dealing well with set piece crosses and confidently handling any sort of ball that was delivered into his domain. 
Stocks and Nightingale were providing a steady supply of crosses into the visitors area, but it was apparent that although it is ultimately goals that win games, Knaresborough's current run of form is built on thee foundations of a solid defence.
Loftus stroked a pass forward to Burbeary whose sideways knock gave Gelsthorpe the opportunity to test Rushworth with a dipping shot.
On the stroke of half time, 'Swall' cleared a Tom Hesketh free kick away at the expense of a corner, which Hesketh took himself, but Pollard had no problem in claiming.
HT: Swallownest 1 v Knaresborough Town 0
The home side were probably expecting to have to defend a lot of pressure after the restart, but although Town had definitely upped their ante after the break, it was more akin to a series of frequent heavy downpours than an actual storm, or even an eventful episode of Bonanza when everyone was anticipating a re-enactment of the Alamo.
Pollard saved well from Hobson who had timed his run well to meet Hesketh's forward knock.
Swallownest rallied and Stocks cross from the right only needed the slightest of touches as it flew across the face of the visitors goal and eventually went out for a throw in on the far touchline and moments later Nightingale nearly made it two nil, but he was denied by a great reflex save by Rushworth... effectively, that could have been game over and the visitors can thank their keeper for keeping them in the game later.
Burbeary picked out Scott Mullooly with a weighted pass but Donnelly whacked the ball out of harm's way with a timely interception.
Thus far, Swallownest had done a great job of containing and frustrating their visitors and when Brown and Brad Walker both put chances wide of Pollard's goal, a home win began to look increasingly on the cards.
Colin Heath, along with Brown, were both crowded out as they tried to put the finishing touches onto the end of a spell of pressure and Hesketh launched a free kick from just outside the goal area over the bar, but with an unlucky thirteen minutes left to hold on, the wheels came off for the home side, in a quite spectacular manner.
Pollard dropped to gather the ball in front of Parkes, who was jostling for space with Ash Cooper, in a six of one and half a dozen of the other wrestle, that saw the Knaresborough number eight hit the deck as the 'Swall' left back pushed him. 
The referee blew up and pointed to the spot.
It was a foul, but it wasn't the only offence being committed by both teams in the area at that time. 
However, if you take the risk of putting your hands on an opponent inside the penalty area, you have to live with the consequences.
Pollard dived to his left but Hesketh drove the spot kick straight down the middle to level the game up.
The home side had worked bloody hard to hold onto their lead for so long and their disappointment was clear for all to see and as Heath grabbed the ball from the back of the net to get the game back in progress as quickly as possible, while Swallownest were obviously rattled, at a time when they really needed to be keeping their composure and remain focused. 
Greg Kidd headed over Pollard's bar from Hesketh's free kick and in the ensuing bickering that developed on the edge of the Swallownest area, the referee spotted Dan White raising his arm to to Heath and showed the home side's centre half a red card.
It was understandable that a certain amount of frustration was spilling over as the three points were slipping away from the home side's grasp after such a concerted effort, but with the greatest of respect to my good pals at Rotherham Road, after a cooling off period and some time for reflection, you would have to surmise, that the NCEL newcomers gave the league leaders a bloody big scare today and aren't too far away from accomplishing themselves as a really useful side at this level, after a couple of seasons of banging on the entrance door; but if I could be so bold as to make a polite suggestion at this point... when the home side next train, they should do so with their players arms strapped to their sides. 
That, by the way, is not a criticism of anybody (or everybody), but a tongue in cheek (but 100% serious and honest) observation as to where the game was lost today.
Martin from the WE ALL STAND TOGETHER blog shows his
Tommy Cooper impersonation to an unimpressed audience.
With the home side still in disarray from the blow of Hesketh's equaliser and White's untimely dismissal, Hesketh delivered a left wing free kick into the Swallownest area, that Heath flicked on for Steve Bromley to score with a diving header with just five minutes left to play.
The relieved visiting club officials stood to our left loudly celebrated turning over a 'Get out of Jail' free card late in the day, but magnanimously alluded to the fact that their opponents deserved something out of the game and that they had just performed a late smash and grab raid.
A win is a win, innit!? And over the course of a season, most team's at the business end of the table will snatch all three points at the end of a games, that they were possibly made to look ordinary in by well organised and spirited opponents.
Swallownest will have learned some very valuable lessons from this defeat and will be pleased to have the opportunity to dust themselves down and get straight back in the saddle on Tuesday night when Dronfield Town visit the 'Swall-Siro'
There was still a sting in this tale to compound Swallownest's misery still further.
Right in front of the Knaresborough dug out, a stand off developed between the two sides following a clumsy challenge by Hesketh, and amidst all the pushing, shoving, squaring up and angry gesticulating, the home side were reduced to nine men, when Mitch Ward was red carded as Ben Cohen appeared to be knocked to the ground.
Just thirteen minutes earlier, the home side had been on the cusp of a very satisfying, hard won victory over their illustrious visitors, in front of a decent crowd on a glorious afternoon in the people's republic of South Yorkshire.
But the roof caved in and Knaresborough pounced to salvage the winning pieces from the wreckage.
FT: Swallownest 1 v Knaresborough Town 2
Swallownest did very well today, to a point, taking the best team in the division (the league table and eight wins out of eight games statistic doesn't lie) right to the wire.
But sadly, upon reaching said wire, they effectively tripped over it. Hopefully 'Swall' will take a few things on board today and can turn this reversal into a valuable part of the steep learning curve that they are now on, having taken the big step up from County Senior League football to the NCEL.

A lack of THE66POW updates, forthcoming Games 2017/18 etc.

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THE66POW BACKLOG
My laptop has been poorly, but now that I have got it back, the queue of recently completed and half written blog entries from over the past week or so, will be slow trickling onto THE66POW in due course. 
'Watch this space' as proper websites and media people would say, thankfully neither myself nor this blog belong to either of those catergories.
Today's posts are already done and dusted (Sat 9.9.17) but I wanted to keep the blog in some sort of chronological order. 
Of course, the immediacy of the content and it's context will suffer as a consequence, along with the viewing figures, but needs must and it's never been about number crunching and tailoring the content to reach a wider audience anyway. The stats are increasingly encouraging, but if they were ever to become a motivating factor, this blog would exist for all the wrong reasons.
In fact if you were to ask me what the raison d'être of this here cathartic diary of my football travels actually is, I would have to answer, in all honesty, that it's just a continuation of of my previous blog: A MAN  FOR ALL SEASON that went to internet heaven over a decade ago.
I still wake up in the middle of the night sobbing about all the material (both football and music stuff) that was lost when the host server went down and never, ever returned, one grim and frustrating night in 2005 (yes kids, the interweb had been invented all those years ago) when, inevitably, I hadn't backed up any of it... and if I thought too much about why I actually still write a blog, I probably wouldn't do it any more. But like it or lump it, THE66POW will be around for a while longer yet.
And no, I still don't back up the content... ride bareback, take a few risks, life is for living n' all that jazz. 
Coming soon, to a blog near you...
Sun 10 Sep - Hallam v Abbey Hey - FA Vase 1QR - 3pm
Mon 11 Sep - Basford United v Chasetown - EvoStik NPL Div 1 South - 7.45pm
Tue 12 Sep - Mansfield Town v Wycombe Wanderers - EFL L2 - 7.45pm
Wed 13 Sep - Campion v East Yorkshire Carnegie - NCEL Div 1 - 7.45pm
Thu 14 Sep - Worksop Town v Gainsborough Trinity - NMU19L - 7.45pm
Sat 16 Sep - Skegness Town v Ruston Sports - Lincolnshire League - 3pm
Tue 19 Sep - Frickley Athletic v Spalding United - EvoStik NPL Div 1 South - 7.45pm
Wed 20 Sep - Arsenal v Doncaster Rovers - Carabao EFL League Cup R3 -7.45pm
Thu 21 Sep - Retford United v Worksop Town - NMU19L - 7.45pm
Sat 23 Sep - Derby County v Birmingham City - EFL Championship -3pm
Tue 26 Sep - Handsworth Parramore v Hall Road Rangers - NCEL Prem - 7.45pm
Wed 27 Sep -  Lincoln United v Stocksbridge Park Steels - EvoStik NPL Div 1 South- 7.45pm
Sat 30 Sep Squires Gate v Runcorn Linnets - NWCL Prem - 3pm
Sun 29 Oct - Birmingham City v Aston Villa - Championship - Noon
To be continued...

England 2 v Slovakia 1 - World Cup 2018 Qualifier

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Our Robert
Monday 4th September 2017
World Cup 2018 Qualifier
at Wembley Stadium
England (1) 2
Eric Dier 37, Marcus Rashford 59
Slovakia (1) 1
Stanislav Lobotka 3
Attendance 67,823
England:
Hart, Walker, Cahill, Jones, Bertrand, Dier, Henderson, Oxlade-Chamberlain, Alli, Rashford, Kane
Subs - Butland, Smalling, Cresswell, Keane, Stones, Chalobah, Livermore, Sturridge, Welbeck, Vardy, Sterling, Heaton
Slovakia:
Dubravka, Pekarik, Skrtel, Durica, Hubocan, Skriniar, Lobotka, Weiss, Hamsik, Mak, Nemec
Subs - Novota, Gyomber, Gregus, Duda, Mihalik, Rusnak, Hrosovsky, Mazan, Sabo, Kucka, Duris, Polacek
The area surrounding the stadium, illustrates pretty much, that austerity is an outer London first world problem; with the ever expanding Wembley Designer Shopping Outlet, multiple newly built high rise swanky homesteads, desirable residencies and new business premises, demonstrating a level of prevalent opulence within the capital city metropolis, that borders on disgustingly obscene.
Amidst all the unaffordable monuments to greed, avarice, acquisitiveness and materialistic neglect of the rest of the country, there is also a Sainsbury's Extra, that knocks meal deals for three quid... and on the occasion of international football matches, they have to employ an army of security staff to deal with the queues, at what is quite possibly the only eatery/provisions store, within a mile of 'the home of football' that you don't need to take out a second mortgage to be able to afford to shop at.
As I made my way towards tonight's entertainment, clutching onto the 5p carrier bag containing my poor mans feast of a BLT sandwich (containing more gunky and overly salty mayonnaise than any B, L or T), a grab sized bag packet of Balsamic Vinegar and Sea Salt crinkle cut wedges (FFS, even the crisps in London are pretentious) and a 500ml can of 'Restorative' carbonated energy drink (containing a most healthy 48% of sugars and other artery clogging chemicals), as I turned the corner, down in the High Street, somebody careered out of Boots without due care or attention. I suggest that they learn some pedestrian etiquette; i.e sidle out of the store gingerly. Embrace the margin.
I decided to devour my 'healthy option' dinner on the Wembley concourse, figuring it was wise to have mounted the stairs on the stadium approach before converting my heart into a ticking time bomb.
Upon approaching the automated turnstiles I was searched twice, you can't be too careful in this day and age, so hey ho! And I inserted my ticket into the appointed slot, but was denied entry three times. So I summoned the attention of a steward, who after insidiously enquiring if it was a 'proper ticket purchased from the FA and not from a tout near the station', suggested that I must be doing something wrong and should try the next turnstile if all else fails... which it did.
So I queued up again, was subjected to two further body searches and once again, my ticket was rejected.
I 'politely' called over another steward who suggested that I should try the next turnstile along, 'just in case there are problems with that one', thus abdicating the responsibilities, that he was being paid for, elsewhere.
Two more searches ensued, but this time I finally got through the gate and into the stadium, where I was confronted by a surly lady steward, who told me that I would need to be searched again 'properly' before going any further, but said she said that she could only search female supporters or it could constutute sexual harrasment... and I was directed to the male stewards who were stood just inside the original turnstile that I had queued up to use seemingly ages ago.
But nobody was entering the ground there now at all, because the ticket scanning equipment was malfunctioning and with just thirty minutes to go until kick off, a lot of people couldn't actually gain access to the stadium. And with no contingency plan in place for such an occurrence, they could only use their allocated entrances and were probably going to miss the kick off through no fault of their own.
The game kicked off at 7.45pm and some supporters were still trying to locate their seats at 8.20pm, which was proving problematic for all concerned, including those of us who were already in place when the game started.
I hope refunds will be made available and there is some sort of redress for those who were affected and involved, but I doubt it very much.
Those that missed the opening thirty minutes of the game, won't have seen that they were, by and large, dominated by the visiting side.
And why shouldn't they have been? All the pre match talk of this being an easy home game that England should've won by three or four goals with Harry Kane 'inevitably' chipping in against "a team like Slovakia".
A team like Slovakia!?
This isn't a pub team team, or a third world nation side thrown together to expand the global brand of football. This is the same Slovakian team that England struggled to beat in Trnava exactly twelve months ago to the day, when a ninety fifth minute Adam Lallana strike, saw a Sam Allardyce led team scrape a single goal win against a home side who had played with ten men foe the last thirty three minutes. It was to be Allardyce's only game in charge of the national team, before he was shown the door with a 100% win record.
In the grand scheme of things, England are 'a team like Slovakia'.
Except that tonight the Slovak's had a more experienced team out, who had won more international caps in total between them than the host side.
To illustrate my point, after taking tonight's result into account, England are currently 13th in the FIFA world rankings, Slovakia are 19th. They're no mugs and we're 'nowt special.
Some people understand the concept of England games, know the strengths and limitations of the national team, have a decent grasp of the reality of the onerous task that Gareth Southgate has on his hands.
Others head for social media, salivating and possibly even having a wank, over their own smart arsed comments about the shortcomings of the England team.
These 'enemy within' keyboard warrior dickheads are on a par with fifth columnists in my book.
The England team is a work in progress and probably will be nothing more than that, for a long time to come.
At the top end of the game, there are seldom any really entertaining fixtures any more, in what is purely a results based industry, where an 'underwhelming' win is worth just as many points as any all out attacking and dominant victory.
It is seldom pretty to watch, but a win, any kind of win, is a win.
England are now unbeaten in 37 consecutive qualifying games. Italy lost against Spain on Saturday when their qualifying game run ended at an impressive 56 game. 
So, splitting hairs.... England's unbeaten sequence is the current longest such run in Europe. 
So there!
As clutching goes, that may well constitute two whopping great handfuls of straws, but they must be getting something right. At the foreplay stage least-ways, even though their is no magic wand or blue tablets to enhance their performances when they reach the tournament stage.
Friendly games aside, England have lost only once in their last twenty three competitive matches, against Aldi, whoops! I meant Iceland, at the Euro 2016 tournament in France. 
They drew 0-0 against Slovakia in the game prior to that. 
'Tis my blog, therefore I can edit the photos to suit ;-)
Which eventually brings us on to tonight's game.
Stanislav Lobotka was gifted a goal by England's sloppy defending after just three minutes, after Marcus Radford had given the ball away to him. just outside the England area in the build up, meaning that by the end of the night, he could probably claim he had a hand in all three goals, but he probably won't be doing!
Lobotka quickly played the ball to Adam Nemec and continued his run, meeting Nemec's lob over the hosts defence in a one against one shoot out with Joe Hart, who seemed to be caught in two minds as the Slovakia number twenty two placed the ball past him.
Thirty year old Hart, is currently on loan at West Ham United from Manchester City. More than any other England keeper I can ever remember, Hart's performances come under circumspect criticism to the nth degree and given that kind of microscopic evaluation, any player in the world would give their haters a certain amount of ammunition to use against them.

You lot can pipe dow, you've 'nowt to come.
In recent living memory, England have never had a dearth of goalkeeping talent challenging for the number one shirt and snapping at the heels of the mainstays in that particular position. So there are and always have been other options too. 
Without wanting to appear to be overly critical of Hart, who I have seen put in some great shifts, both for club and country, the current stats pertaining to Premier League goalkeeper's are fairly damning; click HERE for further details.
On and off the pitch, the first half was frustrating for the home support. 
The inevitable disruption caused by people getting into Wembley late, meant that you needed to be up and down, in and out of your seat, letting people past and standing to see over the rows of people in front who were 'enjoying' the same experience.
With both teams setting out to play exactly the same formation, 4-4-1-1, it was proving to be a frustrating and lacklustre affair at times (most of the time) with two good, but nothing like brilliant teams cancelling each other our all over the park. But, that said, the Slovakians were making better use of the ball and were making England look second best... and their supporters seemed to be enjoying it too.
If you like it then you better put a bra on it!
But, in spite of their poor showing thus far, England were on level terms eight minutes before half time, when Rashford's near post corner was turned past Martin Dubravka by Eric Dier.
To be honest, if people were rubbishing Hart and even Rashford at this point, I hadn't even noticed that Dier was on the pitch until he scored.
Rashford is only nineteen for crying out loud, he was at fault in the opening couple of minutes, but beyond that he was England's man of the match by a considerable margin.
Traditionally a section of the Wembley crowd, like to get on the back of Manchester United players, in fact I have even heard booing when Paul Scholes name was announced at the national stadium... how cretinous is that?
Anybody who is doing their best for their country and representing the 'Three Lions' deserves exactly the same level of support as those who represent your own club, regardless of who they play for.
This is why there are certain sections of the ground that I prefer to use for England games, which are in the main, reularly populated by fans from teams like Cambridge United, Coventry City, Doncaster Rovers, Luton Town, Mansfield Town and a few non league sides.
There are no club issues, politics, biases or prejudices here... just England fans!
Rashford had plenty of further decisions to make in the game and didn't seem unduly fazed as he kept his focus along with the rest of his teammates, to firstly dig themselves out of a hole and salvage the game before working hard to ultimately clinch the win.
What England lack in guile and a bit of flair and ingenuity, they make up for in shed loads of heart, guts and application.
There are no outstanding world class individuals in this England side, no, not even your Dele Alli's and Harry Kane's, but they all are playing to their strengths, together, as a team... and if you're looking to England to give the world the next Pele, Cruyff, Ronaldo, Messi or even Charlton, Moore or Ormonroyd, then you are sadly misguided and need to take a little more water with your favourite tipple or get yourself off the crystal meth and crack rocks as a matter of some urgency.
England top group F by five points and need just a point from their next two games to guarantee qualification for the World Cup in Russia, because they are a set of grafters who don't fanny about doing things that are outwith the scope of their capabilities.
"Hey! Hey! Hey! Hey! It was the D.N.A!"
For the record those two remaining games are: Thursday 5th October v Slovenia at Wembley (7.45pm) and Sunday 8th October v Lithuania at the LFF Stadium in Vilnius (5pm).
Will England win the World Cup in Russia?
Well, they haven't qualified yet, but the answer to that question is: No!
Categorically no!
Today's pretty much like the rest of their, thus far, unbeaten campaign trail was pretty much a case of 'job done', without any frills or thrills... and it even did Scotland a favour, so potentially, England won't be the worst team at the World Cup, if (two letters but a bloody great big word), both teams  qualify. Northern Ireland and Wales are in with a shout too.
Vladimir Weiss almost undid England again just before half time but Kyle Walker clattered into him and flattened him. I winced and pondered if that would only be a yellow card for the England right back or was the French referee, Clement Turpin, actually going to produce a red. Curiously he just waved play on.
I wonder how many 'Turpin and robbery' one liners there were on social media tonight at that precise moment.
Punny ha, ha!
HT: 1-1
It was fitting that Rashford scored the winning goal. He'd made a big, if not immense impact on the game and when Jordan Hendrson played the ball into his path after Alli and Dier and combined to win the ball in midfield, you could have put your whole Peaky Blinders DVD box set on him finishing with aplomb.
Not that England didn't have plenty of other shots on/at/towards the visitors goal over the night, but they seemed to be operating a shoot on sight from anywhere policy, as a series of goal attempts crashed off of Slovakian defenders, when perhaps, England had players who were better placed to provide the finishing touches that would have given this hard won result a more flattering look.
But, 2-1 will do me... and the group table makes for very healthy reading tonight.
Back at King's Cross station, some real chaos was brewing for later on, with train delays and even cancellations by the score, but the lady on the information desk advised me that I could jump on any train heading towards my destination under the circumstances, and as one was waiting to go at that very moment, I bagged a double table seat in a near empty carriage and was home a wrinkle in time after midnight. Another satisfactory result.
FT: England 2 v Slovakia 1
On my way home, I deleted and blocked five people on Twitter for posting shit about the game I had just watched.
If they want to hate their own national team and it's supporters so much (although I am well aware myself of the England side's shortcomings), I have no interest whatsoever in clogging up my timeline with their anti-English 'hate speak' and bile.
Well done to both Northern Ireland and even (at a very big push) Scotland tonight. 
I have friends who follow both of these national teams and I have more respect for them and their opinions than the arseholes who get off on their own nation's international side not being anything special. Among the online bullshit, there was a very salient point made: "To say you don't care about the England team, you go on about it a lot!" Good call, that man.

Retford United 2 v Armthorpe Welfare 3 - NCEL Prem

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Tuesday 5th September 2017
Toolstation NCEL Division 1
at Cannon Park
Retford United (1) 2
Jake Ashton 13
Gragjan Klimczak 81
Armthorpe Welfare (1) 3
Liam Radford 31, 61
Darren Mansaram 68
Admission £5. Programme £2. Attendance 109
When these two sides were relegated together from the NCEL Premier Division at the end of last season, the noises emitting from Cannon Park were that the club would be striving to get out of Division 1, ASAP.
Well, I'm sorry for pointing out the obvious, but that is going to plan, but not in the manner that United were anticipating.
You'd have to say that if Mark Wilson's side play in the manner that they did tonight more often, then they'll be clawing their way up the table any time soon, but even though it is far too early to be talking about the R word for a while yet, the players pulling on the Badgers stripes need to knuckle down and turn the corner sooner rather than later.
Wilson, a vastly experienced and popular manager, might not be around at the club much longer if I was interpreting what the club chairman Simon Brammer was alluding to in tonight's match programme correctly.
'Willy' has a list of players and contacts as long as any normal octopuses arms, he is exactly the sort of guy you'd want on board when the 'ship' is going down and having spoken to a good number of his players, I can vouch for he fact, that the staunch loyalty they have for the man speaks volumes for him. It would be all too easy for a few of them to bail out now the going's got (really) tough, but they are standing by their man... and will continue to do so.
Injuries, like the one that Reece Wesley is recovering from and the knock that Mickey Davies picked up tonight, aren't helping the Badgers plight, but although they are still three or four wise old heads away from being a top half side and they are currently having to piss with the cock they've got, they showed tonight that they have the fire in their belly for a scrap.
Although things might have to get worse before they get better, don't write Retford United off all together just yet... or Mark Wilson! No pain, no gain innit!?
Thankfully, the Cannon Park hardcore are a pragmatic, patient and supportive lot and they are not the sort who will destroy a team's confidence by getting on their backs when things aren't going well and confidence already appears to be low among a number of players, while others, out of necessity, are doing their level best while playing out of position, frustrated by the fact that they know that they could be having a greater influence elsewhere on the pitch, while demonstrating their willingness to adapt for the sake of their teammates.
Football is a team game when all is said and done and if there was anybody out on the field of play who hasn't embraced the 'all for one' mindset and was just putting it on for himself, then he would stand out like a sore thumb and wouldn't be of much use to this side at the current time.
For the record, if the above appears to be the rallying cry of a rabidly soap-boxing Retfordian, it is actually a neutral point of view, written by somebody who was just as gutted that Armthorpe dropped down a division last season too.
In fact, in Liam Radford and Darren Mansaram, 'Wellie' have two of the players I enjoy watching play the most in the NCEL on my regular visits to Church Street. Though I wish that the pair of them had settled for just a goal apiece tonight, to ease the pressure on one of the two non league clubs in Retford that I would like to see doing well.
Jake Ashton operating as a wide attacker, with the former boxer Mickey Davies employed as a battering ram straight through the middle of the visitors defence, were proving to be a real handful for the South Yorkshire side from the off, while Lee Betts was showing the kind of range of passes that'll undo the meanest of NCEL defences. It's shame that Liam Bennett who does a similar sort of job for the Badgers U19 side, was having to fill in at left back, because the two of them linking up in the middle of the pitch would probably have offered the Badgers even more options going forward, but needs must.
Prior to Jake Ashton's thirteenth minute goal, Retford had already gone agonisingly close twice, firstly when Josh Gibbons scooped Ashton's cross over his own head and forced his keeper Danny Montgomery into clawing the ball over the bar,and from the resulting corner, Lee Betts delivered a great ball to Ashton, who saw his strike cleared off the goal line by Danny Taylor.
Mansaram reminded the host side that although they were enjoying a good spell of pressure, this game was never likely to be one way traffic and James Gamble did well to push the prolific strijer'sshot on the turn around the post.
Davies collected the ball just inside the visitors area and unselfishly knocked it sideways to Ashton instead of milking the glory for himself and the Badgers number eleven drilled a shot across the face of the Armthorpe goal, that nestled just inside the far post, beyond the reach of Montgomery.
"One nil we're winning!" exclaimed a joyful Badgers fan as he rose to his feet with his arms in the air: "It's been so bleedin' long since this happened I can't remember what to do now!"
Betts threaded another quality pass forward for Davies to run onto,but as he powered forward, Montgomery advanced bravely from his line to nick the ball away at the last moment. The old edict that all goalkeepers are bonkers is obviously true... if I saw Davies charging towards me at full tilt, I'd turn on my heels and put on a right turn of pace to get to my car and away from the ground ASAP, never mind throwing myself at his feet... it looked like a borderline attempt at committing suicide from where I was sitting.
Betts came forward again, keeping his powder dry until he spotted that Davies had made an overlapping run to his right and rolled a slide rule pass into his path that the former Rossington player lashed inches wide of the right hand post and into the side netting with Montgomery clutching at fresh air.
But in spite of the home side's sustained pressure as they looked to build on their one goal cushion, Armthorpe pulled level on thirty one minutes, when Radford netted from an improbable, almost outrageously tight angle on the dead ball line, squeaking the ball through the eye of a needle just inside the right hand post.
Both sides were certainly treating the 109 spectators who had turned out at the Leverton Road ground tonight, to some quality finishing and well taken goals.
Hands up! I must confess that I was only here because I had nodded off on my sofa while watching 'Tipping Point' after getting home from this afternoon's Central League, Rotherham United v Mansfield Town Reserves game at Parkgate... and, having woken up at around 7.35pm, not knowing whether Elsie from Bury St. Edmunds had won today's jackpot or not, I was relieved that Cannon Park is just over the railway and canal bridges from my homestead. 
And although I missed the game I was originally intending to watch, I couldn't complain about the quality of the entertainment on offer at the football ground that stands on the outskirts oof Little Gringley tonight. 
And don't even think about questioning the geographical accuracy of that last sentence.
Before anybody tries to point out that the Stags have an Under 21 team in the Central League, not a reserve side, just let me say... shut up! 
It's been a moot point with me for some time, that Mansfield should have a reserve and an Under 21 side, not a predominantly first team over-spill players stiffs side, that is merely called the Under 21's, while the youngsters at the club continue their development elsewhere, outside the auspices of the Stags development team set up and away from the discerning eye of their own coaching staff. 
The 'work experience/loan' system works wonders for some (Hi Teddy Bloor, it's great to see the progress you're making at Frickley Athletic pal), while others run the very real risk of vanishing into obscurity... or even Solihull Moors! However, this is neither the time or the place for that particular rant (even though the subject isn't a closed matter in my book and probably won't be for a considerable time), so manoeuvring swiftly back on topic.
Mansaran and Radford were both proving to be problematic for the Badgers, but it was the North Notts side who finished the first half strongly and must've been wondering how they weren't in front again before the break.
Having found his range with a couple of good knocks along the flank from his unfamiliar role at left back (though I suspect he's going to have to get used to that position a lot more any time soon), Bennett advanced down the left wing and hooked a cross to Ashton, he in turn laid it off to Davies who appeared to have regained the lead for the Badgers, but his strike was blocked on the line.
Brad Kilner's cross reached Nathan Joynes whose downward knock was saved by Montgomery, with his feet... when things aren't going your way, at times, it is almost as if the fates are conspiring to gang up against you.
HT: Badgers 1 v Wellie 1
Straight from the restart, Josh Gibbons drilled the ball narrowly wide of the right hand post as Armthorpe came flying out of the blocks.
Mansaram tried turning Kilner on the edge of United's area, but the Badgers captain recovered and nipped a goal scoring opportunity in the bud.
Chris Gowen launched a long punt towards Garry Collier and the home side could consider themselves fortunate, when the ball sat abruptly as the Welfare number seven had plenty of space and time to make good of his half chance.
Just after the hour, Gamble had little choice but to run from his area in a vainglorious attempt to thwart Radford, but the Armthorpe attacker, claimed a second strike, when he nudged the ball past the Retford keeper, who obviously couldn't use his hands or he would've been shown a red card... and finished well from twelve yards out.
Davies picked up possession, forty yards from the visitors area and battled his way through a crowd of bodies before laying the ball off to Ashton, who couldn't keep his shot on target.
But within moments Mansaram drilled the ball past Gambles, after picking it up on the left hand side of the field, motoring forward five paces and unleashing a powerful effort.
Both sides were still going at it hammer and tongues with a string of chances going begging at both ends and with nine minutes still left to go, Gragjan Klimczak threw the Badgers a lifeline, when he took a pass from Jack Carter and swept a long range dipping shot into the top right hand corner of Montgomery's net. 
Game on? You bet!
Sam Kay's long free kick was headed wide by Davies while at the other end of the pitch Collier went close to netting a fourth when he nudged the ball past Gamble, who recovered in time to clear the danger with a saving tackle.
Both teams hit the woodwork in the closing stages,with Collier going close at one end and Klimczak repeating the trick at the other and right at the death Gamble made last ditch saves to deny both Collier and James Handley.
FT: Retford United 2 v Armthorpe Welfare 3
Well played both sides.
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Retford United 1 v Sheffield United 1 - NMU19L

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Thursday September 7th 2017
at CannonPark
WVH North  Midland U19L
Retford United U19 (1) 1
Liam Bennett 22
Sheffield United (0) 1
Tiwashe Bnute
Admission £2. Programme 20p
 An excellent game, well officiated by referee Chris ward and his assistants.
I have several pages of notes pertaining to this game, but none of them would be of any interest to you, because this was a two man fact finding mission for a club that ply their trade in the green and pleasant county Nottinghamshire, with me at one side of the pitch and my cohort, on the opposite touch line. I was offered expenses tonight of a reimbursement of admission price plus 40p per mile fuel expenses. You can  just about make out what my missus  was watching on TV by peering over the 'Dave Wathall Stand' fence towards my house, so I generously declined the generosity of our employer for the night. For the record this is the third time that I have watched Del Geary's Sheffield United youngsters this season and we weren't monitoring anybody connected to Retford United. So draw your own conclusions.
Knights of the round tables
Retford United opened the scoring in the 22nd minute, when he cracked the ball into the top left hand corner of the net from a distance that I'm am reliably informed was all of thirty six yards.
The Blades equalised in the second half with a not quite so spectacular goal, netted by Tiwashe Bnute from a mere thirty three yards.
Retford United's first team manager was present to watch the game... not all NCEL 'gaffers' make that kind of effort, except for a few cameo appearances here and there, so fair play to him.
It was nice to have a chat with 'Willy' and to catch up with Mr Geary again. No doubt we'll be assigned to beat a game where Del isrunning things from the bench again, in the near future too. If the onset of a forecasted wet and windy Autumn and Winter doesn't tempt me to stay indoors more often with the heating cranked up.
I'm getting far too old to want to be out shivering my bits off and getting soaked to the skin these days.
FT: Badgers U19 1 v Retford United 1
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A great advert for the North Midland U19/U21 Development League, all told.

Bilborough Town 2 v Basford United Community 3 - Notts Senior League Cup

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Friday 8th September 2017
Notts Senior League Cup
Harvey Hadden Stadium, Bilborough
BilboroughTown (0) 2
Connor Croft 51, 79
Basford United Community (1) 3
Anthony Graham 27, 57, 62
Admission £2.00
I've seen a few charity football matches at the Harvey Hadden Stadium before and covered some Rugby League action here (and here) quite often, back in the day before the Outlaws moved to the University ground at which point my interest in them dwindled because I wasn't that keen on the spectator facioities there, even though I still travel up to Castleford, Featherstone and Wakefield (and occasionally further afield) on quite a regular basis to take in 'the second greatest game in the world'.
And of course there was that day when I was massively proud of the fact that Retford Athletic Club's finest ever fifteen year old long distance runner, AKA my daughter, came second at this very stadium, which was the finishing arena for a national cross country event.
She was competing against other young ladies who were three years older than herself.
Previously Nottinghamshire had never had a runner finish inside the top six in this prestigious event, so this was a big deal... and when her games teacher (who was never involved in our young un's training and was merely a day tripping glory hunter on this occasion) said "Never mind, second place isn't that bad, you might even win next year if you keep working hard", it was the first and only time that I ever had to turn a blind eye while she called a teacher a rude word.
She's just like her mum is our 'effing Jess!'
But tonight marked the first ever 'competitive' game of football I had ever seen the here.
The home side started well and had the bulk of the play for the first fifteen minutes or so until Basford found their rhythm, after which the only thing that separated these two well matched sides was a splendidly struck twenty five yard shot by Anthony Graham.
Half time came and I had an uncontrollable urge to get out on the running track that circumnavigates the Harvey Hadden pitch and recreate the slow motion race climax scene from the movie 'Chariots of Fire', surely this sort of thing must happen to everybody from time to time?
It's just a shame that the hurdles weren't set up, because they would've come in handy on my second lap.  I couldn't remember how the theme, recorded by Vangelis went, so I hummed Denis King's Black Beauty 'Galloping Home' 1972 musical score instead, to heighten the dramatic effect of my public display of athleticism... but I think that I got away with it and besides, all most people could here was somebody up in the back of the stand exclaiming: "What the merry hell is that fat nutcase doing down there!?"
There was a cheerful turn out of familiar faces up in the stand, among an overall attendance of 55 and if your ears were burning, then that would've been us lot slagging you off... and you know what? 
You freakin' well deserved it too.
It was nice to catch up with Kieran Harrison, a mainstay of the Mansfield Town U18's back to back league championship winning team and hear how he was getting on, out on a work experience loan at Romulus FC, who I really need to get along to watch any time soon, as well as Corby Town which is where a couple of the other lads, Sam Wilson and Mohammed Crease are getting some valuable game time in, playing against adults. 
I feel like an old sheep dog running around keeping tabs on a straying flock these days, but the copious notes, updates and ticked boxes all look really grand in my FA portfolio. And keep my mandatory requirements well up to date, while I am out and about in the company of some of my best pals in football (and real life too). All at my own pace and when I feel inclined to put the effort in too.
However, I shall bite my tongue upon that particular subject matter for the time being, lest anyone else should decide to accuse me of  having a dig at the first team management at Field Mill, because in essence I'm not guilty! 
But if telling the truth, noting my first hand observations and relating the vibe I am picking up on, from an insiders perspective, is, in anyone's opinion an anti club stance, then click on this LINK and discover just how you can remove your blinkers, whilst taking on board the old adage: that eggy trumps are just like the differing opinions of those who are passionate about their football, inasmuch as, people can only put up with the whiff of their own.
Kieran was here to give his mate Raequoun Noon-Brandy some moral support and the Basford number 16 probably needed it, and a shoulder to cry on, when late in the game he got caught in two minds and couldn't decide whether to indulge in a improvised game of 'rush goalie' or try lobbing Nick Ivanov who had strayed off his line from thirty five yards, so in the heat of a moment indecision, he decided upon a hybrid of the two options and toe punted a gentle pass right into the opposition goalkeeper's arms instead. 
Whoops!
The second half was an improvement on the first and the home side were on level terms in the fifty first minute, when the Basford keeper decided to play a game of "No, after you, I insist" with one of his defenders, when it came to clearing the ball away from an under-hit back pass... and while the pair of them faffed about, Connor Croft nipped into the void in between them and 'dinked' it over the visitors keeper to level things up.
But having chased the ball as an over hit right wing cross bounced away from the Bilborough goalmouth, Graham crashed a thumping shot on the turn into the roof of the net from around ten yards out. Evidently Graham doesn't score ordinary tap ins.
Five minutes later Ivanov hesitated when the ball bounced just outside his area and as it dropped Graham nudged a looping header over him to put the visitors in a comfortable position, sitting on a two goal cushion, in a cup match against a team who were now going to have to commit men forward and leave gaps to exploit.
As the sage and learned ground-hopping guru from the Hucknall parish pointed out, by virtue of a right foot strike, a left foot finish and a header, Mr Graham had just completed a textbook hat trick.
Bilborough were back in the game with thirteen minutes left to play however, when Croft diverted a header into the back of the Basford net from a right wing free kick, meaning that he too now had the chance to complete the second textbook hat trick of the night and set up an after show party punch up over who was keeping the match ball.
Could he find the finishing touch that would set up such a grandstand finish? 
Err... no!
But admit it, the narrative was heading towards such a gripping finale, that some of you just leaked a bit of sex wee in your knickers.
Luckily for Noon-Brandy, Basford already had the game won when he wasted a good chance to either score of put the visitors on the attack again late on... and that folks, was that!
FT: Bilborough Town 2 v Basford United Community 3
If you would like to learn more about Mr Harvey Hadden, his family history and the origins and development timeline of the stadium itself, then click on this here link: THE HISTORY OF HARVEY HADDEN. You can thank me later. 
A decent night out in good company with some great banter, it really is a massive shame that most of it is unrepeatable here.

Mansfield Town 0 v Doncaster Rovers 0 - EFL U18 Youth Alliance

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Saturday 9th September 2017
EFL U18 Youth Alliance
at Kirklington Road, Rainworth Miners Welfare FC
Mansfield Town U18 (0) 0
Doncaster Rovers U18 (0) 0
Photo gallery: Click HERE
Mansfield Town:
Xavier Sundby,  Cameron Weston, Henri Wilder (C), Jack Cornell, Lewis Gibbens, Aiden Walker, Nyle Blake, Harry Bircumshaw, Rhys Sarson (Iywrah Gooden 46), Keaton Ward, Riley O'Sullivan (Kieran Darby 69)
Unused subs - Keaton Mars, Andrew Briggs, Steve Johnson
Doncaster Rovers:
James Leverton, Cameron Foulkes, Brandon Horton (Cameron Barnett 61), James Morgan (C), Kane Bingley, Cameron Baldock-Smith, Rilwan Olaosun, Anthony Greaves, Myron Gibbons (Lewis Scattergood 61), Matt Overton (James Morris 61), Cody Prior
Unused subs - Declan Ogley, Danny Amos
A point apiece was a just result, as the young Stags took their unbeaten run this season to five games on the bounce, but the draw combined with results elsewhere meant that Mansfield slipped to third in the table, while Lincoln City took over at the top with a 3-2 home win over Hartlepool United and Rotherham United edged into second place after winning 5-4 away from home against Chesterfield.
Lincoln City host Rotherham United on Saturday 23rd September (11am), while John Dempster's side don't play again until 30th September, when they also face the Millers, at Rainworth Miners Welafre (11AM).
Keaton Ward delivered two free kicks into the 'Donny' area during the opening exchanges, but that Retford lad in goal for Rovers wan't unduly troubled as none of the Stags team attacked the ball either time. I have heard talk that Ward junior only gets in the side because his dad is one of the Mansfield Town - Brooksby College coaches, but that is a load of bollocks... Keaton is in this team on merit and out of the current crop is one of the nailed on certs to move up through the Stags ranks.
If there is even a hint of nepotism about this father/son connection at the club, then it is more likely that Simon is being kept on the coaching staff to discourage his son from ever moving on elsewhere.Just saying ;-)
Cameron Weston looked solid at the back for the home side and Lewis Gibbins and Aiden Walker seem to forging a formidable pairing at the back too, which will no doubt please the manager John Dempster and his assistant Mark 'Rhino' Peters no end seeing as they were both central defenders themselves.
Aiden Walker was harshly booked for challenging for the ball after Leverton had let it slip from his grasp
The Mansfield captain Henri Wilder should've scored after Ward's delivery found it's way through to him, but with a open goal at his mercy, Wilder miscued his attempted shot so wide of the target that Rovers won a throw in.
That is exactly why you are a defender and wide player Henri! A very good one I'll grant you, who is on that 'most likely to succeed' list too. But you need to stop watching how your beloved Aston Villa fanny about in front of the goal and avoid picking up any bad habits from them.
Myron Gibbons charged towards the Stags goal, but with several options at his disposal, whacked his shot into orbit. I heard a rumour that the company who have erected wind turbines all around Rainworth, will be billing Rovers as a consequence of the damage that that Gibbons stray shot caused to their equipment.
Rhys Sarson and Keaton Ward both had chances to break the deadlock, but it will have given the visitors keeper no end of a confidence boost, after only having played a couple of times recently because he's been injured, to have comfortably saved both efforts.
Ward slipped a neat through ball into the path of Riley O'Sullivan, but Leverton denied the lively attacker and prserbed his clean sheet and as play switched from end to end Lewis Gibbins headed clear from Myron Gibbons right wing cross.
Right on the stroke of half time O'Sullivan had a great chance to open the scoring but Leverton moved off his line to narrow the angles and saved with his leg. Unorthodox it may have been but effective nonetheless.
HT: 0-0
Gibbons showed a burst of pace to get past Wilder but Weston move in quickly to cover his captain's back and snuffed out the Rovers attack.
The Stags half time substitute Iywrah Gooden had a shot blocked and as the ball ran free Ward got his short on target but Leverton was out to impress and claim his regular place in the Doncaster starting line up back.
The visitors conceded a corner when O'Sullivan's shot from inside the area took a deflection. Harry Bircumshaw's cross was aimed in towards Gooden and Nyle Lake, but though the former adopted the posture of a young Alan Shearer as he went to strike the ball on the volley, he missed it completely and Ladbrokes immediately suspended all betting on a nil- nil draw.
Rovers made a triple substitution on sixty one minutes and almost immediately Cameron Baldock-Smith had to come off after a collision with O'Sullivan,l the impact of which saw both players requiring treatment as the game was held up for five minutes.
Jack Connell was halted in his tracks en route to the visitors goal, and Scattergood received a yellow card for his demonstration of martial arts and was subsequently walking a tightrope and really ought to been dismissed for a similar challenge on Wilder a few minutes later, but the referee called Scattergood over along with his captain James Morgan and gave him a lengthy talking to instead.
Ward set up an opportunity for Gooden but his finish was erratic and the ball went behind for a goal kick as the umpire signalled a 'wide'.
The game fizzled out during the closing stages, but Rovers could've snatched a late win when James Morris shot wide.
FT: Nil 0-0

Retford United 0 v Swallownest 3 - NCEL Div 1

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Saturday 9th September 2017
Toolstation NCEL Division 1
at Cannon Park
Retford United (0) 0
Swallownest (1) 3
Alex Nightingale 45
Adam Daughtrey 80
Jamie Hopkins 90
Admission £5. Programme £2. Attendance 132
Flickr picture gallery click HERE
Pardon the double entendre out the out set of this piece, but:Willy's last stand today, do you think?
In spite of Retford United's spirited performance in their defeat against Armthorpe Welfare in midweek, the change of personnel in the Cannon Park hot seat is seemingly now inevitable anytime soon, as the Badgers now prepare for a Tuesday night date with destiny at high flying and high scoring Yorkshire Amateur.
This afternoon it was a case of will the real Retford United please stand up to be counted, because far too many of Mark Wilson's charges, with some notable exceptions, were way off the pace, both physically and mentally and actually looked nervous at times.
The rumour mill is in full swing pertaining to who will be Wilson's replacement anytime soon.
Yet though the pressure of working under such a big black cloud of scrutiny and uncertainty must be quite unbearable,Wilson has maintained his dignity throughout this difficult spell at the club and has remained open, frank and approachable.
Yet, although everybody who has ever dealt with 'Willy' Wilson within the game, must be rooting for him to turn things around, football is, in essence, a business, a results business, and when the big decisions have to be taken, you have to remove all emotion out of the equation and be ruthless sometimes, even if your actions make you unpopular... and to that end I don't envy the position of the Badgers chairman Simon Brammer one little bit, particularly when the recent run of form and league position are all but forcing his hand and he has reached a position where he is damned if he does take swift action and damned if he doesn't and the situation gets even worse.
Good luck to all of the people affected directly by this ever worsening situation, I wouldn't want to be the guy with his finger on thee trigger in this particular scenario, because I couldn't personally pull it while-soever the sights were trained on Mark Wilson, regardless of what the consequences of my own lack of bottle might be. 
 
The Badgers have lurched from crisis to crisis for far too long now, with many a good man (and woman) falling by the wayside over the past few years. The self destruct button was installed long before either Brammer or Wilson were involved at the club... and this being Retford United, nobody will have checked to see if it was even wired up correctly, because it's been so long since anybody was ever held accountable for anything at Cannon Park, or able to provide a receipt, proof or paperwork of such work ever being undertaken by person's unknown in the first place.
But it's actions and answers that the club needs right now, not even more questions, nor fiddling while Retford burns. Mark Wilson is my friend and I could never personally sanction any action that would effectively see him ousted from his management position and I would have given him a while longer to get the season on track. 
But, that said, I wouldn't be able to remove the sentiment from such a big, and decisive make or break action.
But, that said, I think anybody, 'Willy' included, could wholly appreciate that facts are facts and unless their is a fairly immediate upturn in fortunes, then something has to change, and soon.
I have heard said on my last two most recent visits to Cannon Park that living virtually on the doorstep to this football club, that I ought to consider getting involved. 
Believe me, my head turns to putty trying to fathom the situation at Retford United out from a distance, so I wouldn't be of any use to anybody under the circumstances and I if I was daft enough to consider such a position, then I would always be AWOL from my post, at the doctor's surgery, getting the splinters removed out of my big bum from spending so much time sitting on the fence.
And at this point, I think that it's time to change the subject, before we all end up in a stupor of incurable anxiety and extreme depression.
The game might have had an altogether different complexion to it, if Lewis Francis' crashing angled shot into the side netting, inside the first few minutes, had found it's way into the goal just inside the right hand upright, instead of merely exposing the fact that somebody hadn't secured the netting properly prior to kick off.
Cue a short delay, while Alan Scott the Badgers Matchday Secretary and man of man talents, making some running repairs. Just what you need when there is a ground inspector making an unannounced visit to Cannon Park this afternoon.
Liam Bennett won the ball in midfield and played a well weighted pass out to Jack Carter, but is dipping cross was held by James Pollard.
After the final whistle I rang the Guinness Book of records, to ask them if I had any claims to a being a record breaker, because I had watched two games today where a ginger goalkeepers called James had both kept a clean sheet, namely James Leverton of Doncaster Rovers U18 and James Pollard of Swallownest.
But was shocked to discover that a) The publication hadn't been called that since 1998, and b) They get fed up of time wasting idiots like me and were blocking my number with immediate effect, before I even had the opportunity to enquire if this blog strayed off on more tangents than any other football orientated website in the known universe.
Mike Staley cleared Francis' through ball, before Swallownest made their first attempt on goal, when James Gamble punched away Jordan Stocks' long free kick from out on the left flank.
The visitors captain Jack Watts picked out Joel Evans with a tempting cross that the 'Swall' number four scooped over Gamble but hit the crossbar.
Stocks thumped another free kick straight into the Badgers wall while Pollard was nearly wrong footed at the other end as Joseph Hitch's cross almost dropped over the goal line.
Jason Short flicked on a knock from the clean shaven Lloyd Gelsthorpe's knock forward and the ball hit Kyle Wesley on his arm, but the ever reliable referee Waqar Ahmed ruled that it had been an unintentional case of 'ball to hand', either that, or he was also feeling sympathetic towards Mark Wilson's plight.
Right on the stroke of half time, Stocks picked out Gelsthorpe with a well delivered long free kick and the he diverted a header against the cross bar and as the home side struggled to clear the ball away from the rebound Alex Nightingale took aim and drilled the it past Gamble, to give the visitors an interval lead.
It wasn't so long ago that a half time score of Retford United 0 v Swallownest 1, would've raised a few eyebrows and been considered something of a surprise, but today, giventhe respective plights of both teams, it was almost inevitable.
Retford United's Richard Williams, fit, fast and lean
Three minutes after the restart, Dan Mullodley fizzed a shot fractionally wide of the Retford goal and moments later Gamble had to come out of his area to clear the ball, which fell to Gelsthorpe, whose long range first time knock from out on the right to try taking advantage of the stranded keeper went 'slightly' off course and bounced out for a throw in.
Ash Cooper linked up with Watts as Swallownest pushed forward to double their advantage but the Badger captain Brad Kilner cleared the danger.
Watts advanced down the left flank but Hitch got a tackle in at the expense of a corner, which Watts took quickly, finding Stocks with an in-swinging delivery, but the 'Swall' number eight headed wide of Gamble's goal.
Swallownest's Richard Williams, having a pie
Gambles came off his line to collect a Watts corner, but didn't reach the ball amid a crowd of bodies in his area, but Retford got lucky when Adam Daughtrey hooked the ball back across the face of their goal but Aaron Nicolson couldn't quite make a contact with it.
The home side survived another scare, when Hitch lobbed the ball over his own prostrate keeper and it dropped just past the right hand post... "Somebody tell that chap that we changed ends at half time!"
Kilner was booked for an unnecessary but quite deliberate handball in front of the 'Care in the Community Stand' near the half way line. Not really the kind of example that a captain should be setting, but that is easy for me to say, sat with the intellects and deep thinkers in 'Compost Corner' putting the world to rights, while the frustration starts to kick in to the nth degree among the United players out on the pitch.
But there's still over ten minutes to go, there is a game of football to salvage a managers job to save and it is still only 1-0 to the visitors. 
But hang on a second... what's happening here!?
Daughtrey saw off the attentions of Wesley, nudged the ball forward and sprinted after it, before planting a shot past Gamble.
Not since Johan Cruyff as the bright orange number 14 shirt been worn with so much style and aplomb.
There was no way back for Rertford United now and though I am highly delighted that my good friends from Swallownest finding their feet in the NCEL after finally reaching the dizzy heights of step 6 football, you couldn't help but ponder over the significance of the storm clouds brewing over Cannon Park.
As I strolled round to the entrance to make a quick getaway at full time, the Badgers defence, probably realising what another home defeat was likely to mean for a few people at the club, took their eye off the ball and while they all stood about moping about the inevitable consequences, Jamie Hopkins took advantage of their lack of focus and belted Swallownest's third goal into the roof of the net to seal an emphatic win.
Both teams had got exactly what they deserved today... and though I promised myself many years ago never to get involved with the home club, having realised the significance of it's geographical location a short distance away from Rampton Hospital, I allowed myself a small moment of emotional attachment when I saw a defender lambasting the United keeper and called out: "Take no notice of the **** James! He abandoned you today, he was a ****ing impostor and you can't be expected to play against them on your own!"
FT: Retford United 0 v Swallownest 2
Well played Swallownest, see you all again soon!
And good luck to everybody at Retford United who's going to be involved in the inevitable fall out from what is happening at the club any time soon.
Anybody who thought that things couldn't get any worse when the Badgers were relegated at the end of last season, doesn't fully comprehend how spiteful and vengeful a mistress football can be at times.
Hold on tight folks, because the ride just got bumpier.
I'm genuinely gutted for my pal Mark Wilson, but sad to say, this can't (and probably won't) go on.
Not guilty!

THE66POW COMEBACK TOUR DATES.

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RETURN OF THE66POW
Owing to circumstances outwith my control, which included the lingering death of a previously reliable laptop, this here blog has gone into backlog.
However, having shelled out for a new one, and also having purchased copious amounts of elbow grease and midnight oil, a few cans of fortitude and a several packets of Jacobs TUC cheese sandwich biscuits for sustenance, I hereby confidently predict that a seamless and full recovery of this long winded, self indulgent, bullshit blog, with added football content, will have occurred by the time that you awake from your slumber on Monday morning, possibly Tuesday at a push (as long as you have a decent lay in).
Coming soon, to a blog near you:
Mon 18 Sep - Basford United v Cleethorpes Town - EvoStik NPL Div 1 South - 7.45pm
Tue 19 Sep - Frickley Athletic v Spalding United - EvoStik NPL Div 1 South - 7.45pm
Wed 20 Sep - Arsenal v Doncaster Rovers - Carabao EFL League Cup R3 -7.45pm
Thu 21 Sep - Bottesford Town v Worksop Town - FA Youth Cup - 7.30pm
Sat 23 Sep - Derby County v Birmingham City - EFL Championship -3pm
Tue 26 Sep - Handsworth Parramore v Hall Road Rangers - NCEL Prem - 7.45pm
Wed 27 Sep -  Worksop Town v AFC Mansfield - NCEL Prem - 7.45pm
Sat 30 Sep - Squires Gate v Runcorn  Linnets - NWCL Prem -3pm
Tue 3 Oct - AFC Mansfield v Maltby Main - NCEL Prem - 7.45pm
Wed 4 Oct - Ollerton Town v Retford United - NCEL LC1 - 7.45pm
Sat 7 Oct - Colchester United v Mansfield Town - EFL L2 - 3pm
Some gaps to fill in October, but still plenty of time/options... watch this space!
Tue 24 Oct - Notts County v Mansfield Town - EFL Trophy - 7.45pm
Sat 28 Oct - Mansfield Town v York City - EFL U18 Youth Alliance - 11 AM venue TBC
Sat 28 Oct - TBC
Sun 29 Oct - Birmingham City v Aston Villa - EFL Championship - 12 noon
Wed 1 Nov - Birmingham City v Brentford - EFL Championship - 7.45pm
To be continued...

Hallam 1 v Abbey Hey 1 - FA Vase 1QR

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Sunday 10th September 2017
FA Vase First Qualifying Round
At Sandygate (the world's oldest football ground)
Hallam FC (0) 1
Jack McCarthy 84
Abbey Hey (1) 1
Adam Farrand  4
Admission £5. Programme £1.50. Attendance 180
Photo gallery, click HERE
These two sides have it all to do again at the 'Abbey Stadium' in the Gorton quarter of Manchester on Tuesday night, after neither of them could force the issue this afternoon, over the course of two hours.
This being the FA Vase, it is at the mutually agreed discretion of the two teams, how the outcome of games will be determined if the score remains level after ninety minutes.
They could've gone straight to a replay without extra time, or had an immediate penalty shoot out to settle things, or play an extra thirty minutes followed by penalties, if they still couldn't be separated, but in the event they chose to go to a replay after extra time, sans penalties.
And it wasn't for a lack of trying on either sides part, especially in added thirty minutes, that the score remained 1-1 until the natch referee, Scott Mason, sounded his whistle to bring this First Qualifying Round tie to it's indecisive conclusion.
The 'Red Rebels', who were formed as Abbey Hey Working Mens Club in 1902, are mere babes in comparison to their hosts today, who are the second oldest football team in the entire world with origins stretching back to 1860 and play at the oldest ground... but if you didn't already know about that stuff, then you are more than likely reading the wrong blog.
Hallam attacked first, but having raced into the visitors area inside the opening two minutes, Mitch Dunne found himself surrounded by red shirts and he was so heavily outnumbered that he found himself being crowded off the ball.
So did this safety in numbers approach indicate that the visitors thought that adopting a bus parking defensive game plan, was the best bet for getting through this game on level terms before finishing the job off at the Abbey Stadium on Tuesday?
Apparently not!
Because in the fourth minute, the Mancunians were ahead.
Jack Tinning launched a long throw in, into the Hallam area, that was half cleared but only as far as Benito Lowe, whose goal bound shot from just outside the box was block by Gaz Griifiths, but Adam Farrand got to the loose ball first and buried it emphatically into the back of the net.
The 'Countrymen' dusted themselves down and tried to get straight back into the game, but when Harry Bamforth knocked the ball towards Chris wood, it became apparent that Rob Swallow had dropped back into some kind of improvised sweeper role in front of the visitors already tightly knit back four.
Bamforth's ball into the Abbey Hey goalmouth was cleared by Andrew Smith and when Alex Brown, Sam Fewkes and Danny State combined to get forward down the left, Jack Tinning move across quickly to avert the threat they posed.
I had a quick scan around the ground to see who else was here today and spotted Uriah Rennie (Hallam FC club president), the Worksop Town manager and most handsome man in the NCEL: Ryan Hindley, most of the Handsworth Parramore committee (there were ten ex Ambers players in the Hallam squad today) and who I thought was Jas Colliver, the Handsworth manager, but unless he's had his favourite player: Pat Lindley, surgically removed from his right hand side it must just've been someone who looked like Jas.
Quite by accident, I found myself getting caught pointing my thing at; that is to say inadvertently aiming my zoom lens towards; Hallam's 'Twitter feeder' Sharon Fudge once too often. But I have apologised for what must've inadvertently appeared to be stalker like behaviour on my part.
Away from my snooping and perving, Lee Wilshaw was putting in a great shift at the back for the visitors, whilst Hallam's centre forward Chris Wood must've thought that he adopted a shadow that kicked him, whenever he got the notion to do something creative with the ball.
Bamforth was fouled around forty yards out from the visitors goal, by Lowe, who as well as showing that he was a great competitor and a well above average footballer, had the tendency to display a few volatile traits. It came as no surprise when he found his way into the referee's notebook later in the game nor that he was substituted shortly afterwards, for what were either tactical reasons, or a precaution against him getting a second booking.
Wood and State were banging on the visitors back doors but Abbey Hey were strung rigidly across the edge of their area like a row of Japanese Terracotta Warriors, but as they cleared the ball away for the umpteenth time, it fell to Brown out on the left and he let fly from long range. Elliott Wynne gathered the ball as it skidded towards him in a manner that Barnes Wallace would've been proud of, but it was worth having a go on such a wet and slippery wicket.
Dunne got free of his marker's attentions and crossed towards State at the back stick, who towered above the visitors defence but his header cannoned off of the visitors captain Smith, who kept his footing and hooked the ball away as Wood homed in to take advantage of any slip.
Although the 'Red Rebels' back line were very well drilled and organised, State, along with Dunne, had begun to find their way through the defensive maze.
But still that elusive equalising goal wouldn't come, no matter how much the home side kept plugging away.
Matt Cook made a last ditch clearance from Dunne, and Wilshaw nicked the ball away from Griffiths as he challenged for James Reed's free kick as the visitors defence began to creak under a spell of pressure from the second oldest club in the world.
Bamforth dispossessed Sam Freakes (what an awesome surname he's got) and knocked the ball wide for Dunne to break forward, but the live-wire number seven was flagged offside as Tinning, the Abbey Hey number three, managed to make himself completely invisible to the linesman on the cricket field side of the ground, which is quite an achievement when you are wearing a bright red shirt.
Oh well, these things even themselves out over the course of a game... and when all is said and done, he was only three yards goal side of Dunne and playing him on.
You can't realistically expect the assistants to see everything, especially when they're struggling to stay upright, galloping down a hilly touchline in a torrential downpour.
Wynne turned Dunne's dipping shot away from Reed's corner kick as the clock ticked down towards half time. Lowe flattened Brown out on the left wing, once again letting his red mists take precedence over his common football sense. 
From Reed's free kick, it became evident that Smith must be going to 'Magic circle' meetings with Tinning, as he held State in a bear hug that apparently went unseen, but the Hallam number eleven still manged to lay the ball off the Brown, despite being wrestled, quite literally to a standstill and the resulting cross picked out Griffith's whose powerful header was tipped over the bar by Wynne.
The inevitable yellow card for Lowe, when he 'came together' with Bamforth in the centre circle, was swiftly followed by one for his opponent, who un-tucked the Abbey Hey number ten's shirt while he was being reprimanded, to check out his washboard stomach and abs.
"Don't bite Benito! You can see what they're up to!" shouted the visitors manager, but the mind games had reached an advanced stage by now. 
Besides, I must ask... should it actually constutute a bookable offence, to be caught checking out another players physique? 
Gamesmanship and psychology is an underrated science if you ask me and for what it is worth, I thought Bamforth Junior's navel gazing episode was bloody hilarious.
Two minutes before the break James McCarthy put his header narrowly wide of the upright from Reed's pinpoint delivery, but as the half came to a close, Hallam had to defend a frantic spell of action around their own goal.
HT: Countrymen 0 v Red Rebels 1
From the restart Wood and State attacked down the right flank but Tinning bought his defence some time to close their ranks again by dispatching the ball out of touch. Brown launched another long throw in, which caused the visitors a few problems, but when the ball reached Wood, Wilshaw was still tracking the Hallam attacker's every move and blocked his resulting shot. 
It was getting personal by now.
Ashford Blake, who had also moved back to adopt a defensive mantle after the break, as the visitors were anticipating Hallam chucking everything but the kitchen sink at them (in the event, I could swear blind that the sink was also evident inside the Abbey Hey area on at least three occasions), but although the visitors were shaken the longer the bombardment went on, they certainly weren't stirred and Dave Darwent had to be alert to the threat posed by a quick counter attack as the home side had to commit more and more players forward.
Blake missed his clearing header from Brown's throw, the ball bounced in front of Fewkes, who steadied himself in front of Wynne's goal, but as the home crowd started to rise from their seats in celebration, the shot skimmed off of the top of the crossbar.
Freakes picked up the ball and motored forward for the visitors, it was apparent that a one goal lead was never going to be enough, but the visitors number eight, almost provided the killer pass that would've put the game out of Hallam's reach, when he nudged the ball into the feet of George Noon, whose first time shot cleared the crossbar... and the perimeter fencing.
Farrand was probably a bit lucky to only gt a yellow card when he wiped brown out with a crude challenge after Reed had sprayed the ball out wide, Pick on  someone your own size!
Reed's long free kick was cleared behind at the expense of a corner from Wilshaw and McCarthy was only a few inches away from scoring when he met Brown's flag kick with a firm header.
Brown was causing Abbey Hey a few problems with several different kinds of deliveries into their goalmouth and as Bamforth flicked on a long throw from his diminutive left back, Wynne had to bravely throw himself into a throng of bodies to claim the ball.  
Hallam were giving it their all, but the NWCFL side were just about repelling the 'Countrymen' with a backs to the wall performance.
Time after time Hallam were repelled and the headline writers probably had some punny nonsense penned in readiness, along the lines of: Hey! If it's a saving you want to make, get the Abbey habit!
But thankfully, Hallam equalised with just over five minutes to go, so I can spare the blushes of the comedian who constructed that feeble title.
Reed delivered a cross into the visitors area from out on the right, but the ball was cleared back towards him and he instantly launched it back from where it had come from and McCarthy got a vital touch and bundled the ball past Wynne.
The road to Wembley was reopened and the home side celebrated as if they had just scored the goal that had out them in the final.
In the ninetieth minute, Wynne collected the ball cleanly from Reeds's corner after Hallam had been denied by a last gasp clearance from Wilshaw.
90 minutes: Hallam 1 v Abbey Hey 1
As the teams prepared for extra time, I put my notebook and camera down on the ledge behind the back row of seats, to free up my hands so that I could make a call home to advise the blonde Beelzebub that the game was over running and I was going to be late. 
Having spoken to the world's most tolerant spouse, I picked up my notes and commenced scribbling whilst having an highly amusing conflab with John Stainrod from Handsworth Parramore, who is a veritable hive of funny quips, information and anecdotes, but take note, I haven't mentioned picking my camera up, because I didn't. And it wasn't until approximately a whole hour later, when I was back home in East Retford upon Idle, that I remembered where it was. 
Thanks, thanks and thrice thanks to Glenn Poulton, who was still at the ground and recovered my Canon Power Shot for me and to Steve Basford, the Hallam chairman for arranging to meet me tomorrow to get the camera back to me. Top club, top people, silly arsed blogger!
David Darwent tipped a dipping effort from Swallow away from beneath his bar and Blake missed an absolute sitter from Tinning's left wing cross.
Nathan Edwards combined with Freakes who laid the ball back to him, but his adventurous shot end up in a front garden next door but one to the Plough on Sandygate Road.
Meanwhile, Matt Morton spanked the ball over from ten yards out after the eternally lively Reed had created the chance for him.
ET HT: 1-1
Reed chested the ball down into the path of Dunne but he couldn't keep his shot down and the chance went begging.
There were some tired limbs out on the park now and so many people blowing out of their backsides, that the met office issued a warning about a dark smog cloud gathering over a sports field in the Crosspool area of Sheffield S10.
In spite of the obvious fatigue some players were showing, they were getting by on pure adrenaline now and both sides were still creating chances aplenty.
Reed and Morton, both had chances to claim the spoils that flew narrowly wide
In the closing moments of the extra thirty minutes, Darwent was involved with a couple of vital interjections.
In extra time stoppage time Hallam's State and Abbey Hey's Adam Hampshire, both had shots saved, just moments after Wilshaw had crashed a free header against the Hallam bar form Freakes left wing corner.
FT: 1-1
The two teams will see each other again in 48 hours, to settle the game at the Abbey Stadium.
FOOTNOTE: Added Tuesday 12th September at 22:07,,,
Hallam won the replay 1-0 courtesy of a Danny State penalty in the 72nd minute, I hope the sixty people who managed to get to the replay enjoyed it as much as I did this afternoon's dramatic and entertaining game.

Mansfield Town 0 v Wycombe Wanderers 0 - EFL L2

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Tuesday 12th September 2017
SkyBet EFL League 2
at Field Mill (One Call Stadium)
Mansfield Town (0) 0
Wycombe Wanderers 0 (0) 0
Attendance 2,938
Last night I treated my missus to a night out in Swallownest, which is on a hillside in the people's republic of South Yorkshire (don't knock it until you've tried it) and tonight she joined me at Field Mill, to watch a goalless draw in the strong winds and the horizontally attacking bucketing rain. It's no wonder she is always smiling, she gets spoiled something rotten. 
I even took her the scenic way home, so we could listen to Steve Evans after match interview on BBC Radio Nottingham, once they had eventually finished rattling on about Notts C*unty and Notts Forest.
And to be fair to the Stags first team manager; his thoughts on the game and the 100% honest and factually accurate overview of what we had just watched, had us both nodding in agreement... and that speaks absolute volumes about his analysis, because the pair of us seldom agree about anything whatsoever.
The 'Stags' actually dominated the opening fifteen minutes or so and the 'Chairboys' were lucky that Scott Brown's reflexes and limbs were supple and sufficiently warmed up from the off, when he was forced into pulling off a great save from Lee Angol's header early on, after a decent ball from CalumButcher.
But once the away side got to grips with the conditions, they were,in truth, the better team for the remainder of the first half and Mansfield only went in at the break on level terms, because their goalkeeper Conrad Logan set about proving that Stretch Armstrong was his dad, when he somehow managed to reach Dan Scarr's thumping goal-bound header, minutes before pulling of a double save from Marcus Bean and then Luke O'Nien from the rebound.
The first half had been bereft of clear cut chances, but it was a veritable thrill-fest compared to how the second forty five minutes turned out.
Neither side or any flair minded individual was likely to provide a flash of inspiration that was going to break this deadlock tonight and the weather was winning this one hands, stifling both teams intentions, dampening their efforts and rendering inert the possibility of anything in the way of entertainment.
All that either set of fans could hope for, was that when the inevitable slips and mistakes came in such dreadful conditions, they would prove costly to the opposition.
But, in the event, we were even denied such an element of slapstick comedy, because what we had out on the field of play tonight, were twenty two grafters who weren't about to let the tail end of Hurricane Irma break their concentration or conjure up any unforced errors.
Sure, it was bloody awful to watch for long spells, bur credit where it's due to all concerned for battling on regardless.
As full time arrived, Wycombe had now avoided a defeat at Mansfield for the seventh game in a row between the two sides.
Craig Mackail-Smith fired narrowly over from the right hand side of the area after controlling Anthony Stewart's flick on, encapsulating in just a few moments in time why this game was destined to finish goalless and the closest that Mansfield came to forcing the issue was inside the last ten minutes, when Dominic  Gape blocked Paul Anderson's  shot on the turn from Alfie Potters low drilled cross. All told a point is a point... especially when the opposition are a bit of a bogey side who had more shots on target tonight.
I did hear a few moans and groans on the way back to the car after the game, but 'kinnel! What do some people want!?
The application and effort was there, along with lorry loads of resilience and fight. Given the conditions that was all anybody could realistically ask for.
FT: Stags 0 v Chairboys 0
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