Monday 27 February 2017

The Red Rose Football Blog (Number 19)


Number 19                                                                                         February 27 2017

Manchester City; Their finest hour

With scarcely an exception since 1946, United has ruled the City of Manchester. The trophy count tells it all; 37 to 11 in that period. The Blue Moon shone brightly from 1968 to 1977 when Joe Mercer’s wisdom and the flamboyance of Malcolm Allison produced a League Title, FA and Football League Trophies and a UEFA Cup Winners Cup.  Tony Book oversaw another League Cup triumph, but then it was a downward spiral to the 3rd Tier in 1999, the nadir of their history. They scrambled out after one year following a Wembley play-off win against Gillingham, on penalties after extra time. The sea change in their fortunes came in 2008. The club was bought by the Abu Dhabi United group who employed Roberto Mancini as manager. The combination of his experience gained in winning 3 Serie A titles at Inter plus their vast wealth saw the club begin to seriously challenge for honours. After a strong start to the 2011-12 season which saw a 6-1 victory at Old Trafford, they slipped off the pace in their battle royal with their closest neighbours. Unexpectedly United blew an 8 point advantage and it all came down to the final game. The two clubs were level on points but City had a superior goal difference. As the final whistle sounded signalling a 1-0 United win at Sunderland, City was losing 2-1 to QPR at the Etihad, playing time added on. In those last few moments, an Edin Dzeko header and a shot from Sergio Aguero turned the title race on its head. It was City’s 6th consecutive victory and Vincent Kompany was presented with the club’s first League Trophy for 44 years; undoubtedly their finest hour.

Roberto Mancini; complete with the Sky Blue scarf as always

Loyalty in Football; difficult to find in this day and age

The Claudio Ranieri case has provoked comments from every man and his dog in the football world, many extremely scathing of the Leicester City ownership. But let us make something clear from the offset. Unless we have been in the dressing room at the King Power Stadium or on their training ground, we have no clue as to the facts of the matter. So is the manager to blame for this stunning decline or is it the fault of the players? Even amongst those close to the action, it is probably down to opinion. What we do know is that the Italian brought a touch of magic to the lives of so many last season. Traditionally, Leicester is a “nearly” club, unsure of its standing in the football hierarchy. It specialises in yo-yoing, having been promoted on 9 occasions from Tier 2 in the 71 seasons since the Second World War and relegated 8 times. For it to have won the Premier League title and to potentially play in the quarter finals of the Champions League is the stuff of dreams. Ranieri leaves them in 17th place. Putting it another way; normal service has been resumed in the East Midlands. Trying to be fair to the Thai consortium which owns the club, they are desperate to stay in the Premier League and believe that continuing with Claudio would have hindered the cause. Arriving in 2010, they have known only progress from the lower reaches of the Championship to the summit of English football. In spite of this success, they have presented P45s to Paulo Sousa, Sven-Goran Eriksson and Nigel Pearson prior to Ranieri. Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, like so many other current owners, struggles to understand that even for the privileged few, the football journey is full of peaks and troughs. Without this knowledge, he has made a judgement, no doubt believing that the “bounce factor” will instantly right the ship. Of course it can work (e.g. Paul Clement at Swansea) but even Sam Allardyce, the “rescue-meister extraordinaire”, has so far bounced like an over ripe tomato at Crystal Palace. Even Jose Mourinho struggled for a while to get to grips with his latest club. A similar start for the yet unknown Ranieri replacement will surely send the Foxes down. Speaking of Jose, the Portuguese’s words really impressed me this week. He talked of selfishness amongst the playing staff at Leicester, all squabbling to double their wages in the summer rather than concentrating on the forthcoming challenges of the new season; loyalty to themselves rather than to the manager who changed their lives. It is a truism that it is easier to change the manager rather than the players, particularly post-January, so perhaps the game also needs a “transfer window” for managers. There is little loyalty amongst the owners. Gary Rowett was sacked on a whim after putting in a solid shift at Birmingham City, replaced by Gianfranco Zola (no bounce there as yet). But the managers themselves can be equally selfish. Lee Clark left an improving Kilmarnock last week, presumably because Bury offered him a huge salary hike. I remember Mark Hughes leaving a then decent Premier League Blackburn Rovers for the Arabian riches at Manchester City. Ambition is good and many of us have changed jobs for a wage increase, but these departures leave grieving supporters (the heart of the club) saddened to the core. Thankfully Wayne Rooney has so far stayed faithful, turning his back on millions of yens to help United chase trophies on four fronts. I would love to see him in the Championship after his Premier League days are over, remaining loyal to the English game, passing on wisdom to younger players on the way up. Let’s face it; he certainly does not need the money. It is a different world since I saw my first game and “us oldies” should not let nostalgia rule. But perhaps because there were no instant fortunes to be made, there was more loyalty in the game; a virtue now sadly disappearing down the plug hole.

Performances of the last week

Manchester City 5 Monaco 3 (Champions’ League Last 16, 1st leg)

Football needs strong defending but spectators love games where the defence manual is torn up and both sides attack, attack, attack. With a performance that drew parallels to the epic 1960 European Cup Final between Real Madrid and Eintracht Frankfurt at Hampden Park which ended 7-3 to the Spanish maestros, Manchester City and AS Monaco threw caution to the wind and produced a classic. Both Falcao and the returning Aguero gave master classes in the art of striking and we are left with a delicately poised return in the Principality. Game of the season thus far? Undoubtedly!!

Preston North End 2 Queen’s Park Rangers 1(EFL Championship)

Unbeaten in five and having lost just one in eleven, PNE remain in the chase for a play-off spot. A 25 yarder from Aiden McGeady (always a class performer) and a typical strikers’ effort from Jordan Hugill saw them to a hard-fought victory over QPR. The Preston Board has shown faith in manager Simon Grayson and promotion is not just a pipe dream at Deepdale.

Fleetwood Town 3 Northampton Town 0 (EFL Division 1)

Fleetwood Town continue to match the long unbeaten run of Chelsea (now standing at 17 games). After a shaky first 40 minutes, a virtuoso performance from David Ball saw the Cod Army imperiously crush Northampton Town. Devante Cole, Bobby Grant and Ball himself were on target and the club has now moved above Bolton Wanderers into 3rd place. They are level with second placed Scunthorpe United who have a game in hand, but the force is now with Fleetwood.

Morecambe 1 Grimsby Town 0 (EFL Division 2)

There are three Lancashire clubs in this Division and Morecambe are now leading that particular race. Lee Molyneux scored the early winner from yet another Michael Rose assist and with a game in hand, the Shrimps are a mere 5 points off the vital 7th place. It would appear that the town made famous by a comedian has now to be taken seriously on the football pitch.

The Non-League Scene.

All five of our National League North clubs won on Saturday. AFC Fylde stayed well clear at the top by beating Tamworth 3-1 and Salford City (2-1 winners over AFC Telford) and Chorley with an identical score line against Alfreton Town, remain 2nd and 4th. Both Curzon Ashton and FC United of Manchester won on the road to further allay fears of being drawn into the relegation scramble. Curzon had a narrow 1-0 win at Gainsborough Trinity and two Nathan Lowe strikes helped FCUM to come from 2 down to win 3-2 at Gloucester City. Warrington Town moved into the top half of the Northern Premier League with 2 late Reuben Jerome goals in a 2-1 home win over Coalville Town. Lancaster City is now 9 points clear of Farsley Celtic at the head of the Northern Premier League Division 1 North following an emphatic 3-1 win at Ossett Town, although Farsley has 3 games in hand. In the same league, lowly Prescot Cables shocked the highly placed Trafford 2-0 in mid-week. Finally in the North West Counties Premier Division, Atherton Collieries thumped Congleton Town 5-0; two Ben Hardcastle goals sending them top as their season goes from strength to strength.

Games to look forward to this week

Liverpool v Arsenal (Premier League) Saturday March 4, 17.30

It’s another weekly scramble for points to ensure a Champions’ League place/Top 4 finish. It could go all the way to the wire but these are games that none of the top 6 (excepting Chelsea) can afford to lose. A draw would open the door for Manchester United to squeeze ever closer so it is almost a win or bust situation. Assuming Liverpool beat Leicester on Monday evening, the Merseysiders may have the psychological edge going into this fixture and home advantage may just swing it their way.

Blackburn Rovers v Wigan Athletic (EFL Championship) Saturday March 4, 15.00

This is a shoot-out at Ewood Park. I cannot believe both of these North West clubs will escape relegation, so whoever wins will have the advantage. It’s a new manager (Warren Joyce) versus an even newer manager (Tony Mowbray) and the Latics have certainly improved under Joyce. The Rovers attack with gusto at Ewood so if Mowbray (as an ex-defender) can tighten up the back line, the Rovers could win it.

Scunthorpe United v Fleetwood Town (EFL Division 1) Saturday March 4, 15.00

As a fan or a player, you wait for the big games with baited breath, the adrenalin starting to pump through the veins for days before. This is a big game, second v third. It also pits current manager Uwe Rosler against ex Cod Army manager, Graham Alexander. Both have had exceptional seasons taking unheralded sides to undreamed of heights. I suspect one of these two sides will achieve automatic promotion to the Championship. If it is Fleetwood, it will be a feat on a par with Leicester’s achievements last season.

Blackpool v Morecambe (EFL Division 2) Saturday March 4, 15.00

It’s the North West seaside derby and can Morecambe possibly be favourites? Blackpool respond well when behind but struggle to hold on to a lead, hence they are the Division’s draw specialists. Both sides will have to press hard to make up the points deficit to the play-off hopefuls but Saturday is all about seaside resort bragging rights.

Tom Aldred; the Blackpool rock returns from suspension to face Morecambe

Quiz of the Week (Answers at the foot of the Blog)

All of the questions have Red Rose County connections

1             AFC Wimbledon, Fleetwood Town and which other Red Rose County club are the only current EFL Division 1 clubs never to have played in the top 2 Tiers?

2             Which Premier League player conceded a penalty and scored an equalising goal on Saturday?

3             From which club did Liverpool buy Simon Mignolet in 2013 for £9million?


Simon Mignolet; reserve to Chelsea’s Courtois in the Belgian national side

4             Anders Lindegaard, ex Manchester United and now Preston North End goalkeeper has won 5 international caps for which country?

5             Tony Mowbray, newly appointed manager of Blackburn Rovers made 78 appearances for which Scottish club during his playing days?


Tony Mowbray in the colours of Middlesbrough, his own town club

6             Three of the current Everton squad have notched up over 200 Premier League appearances for the club, Baines, Coleman and which other player?

7             Manchester City waited until 2000 for its first Premier League hat-trick scored by which Costa Rican international?

8             Where did Manchester United’s Eric Bailly play last season?

9             Which Red Rose County club won the National Conference (Tier 5) in 2005-06 by 11 points from Hereford United?

10         Which North West Counties Premier Division club plays its matches at Silver Street within the City of Salford?

Post Weekend Musings

I thought (rather naively) that fortune was smiling on the Red Rose County. There had been no managerial sackings in this calendar year; just a couple of permanent appointments made. It took 51 days for the axe to swing and the unfortunate head that rolled was the one sitting on Owen Coyles’s shoulders. The Blackburn Rovers manager had never been the fans’ choice, possibly due to previous links with the arch enemy up the road in Burnley. A win ratio of 30% did not help his cause but neither did the parsimony of the Venkys. He will not be long mourned but there will be street parties when the Indian owners finally bid farewell. The experienced Tony Mowbray has replaced him; another lamb to the slaughter?

Sean Hessey has left his management post at Marine. He saved the club from relegation in 2015 but failed to build on that success subsequently. He leaves them close to the drop zone and is replaced by the 66 year old Tommy Lawson, the ex-Skelmersdale United boss.

The last Red Rose County club crashed out of the FA Trophy at the last eight stage when Tranmere Rovers dismantled Barrow 5-1 at Prenton Park.

Going all Jane Austen for a moment, “it is a truth universally acknowledged” that 40 points equals safety in the Premier League. It is 50 points in the Championship, Division 1 and National League. However, it has been as many as 51 in Division 2 even though only 2 are relegated. This means that of the 18 Red Rose County clubs in Tiers 1-5, both Manchester and Liverpool clubs, Preston, Fleetwood, Bolton and Barrow are totally safe from the drop. Looking from the opposite side of the spectrum, if the yardstick of “less current points than games played” generally equals relegation, Wigan, Blackburn and Southport are in serious trouble. Burnley, Rochdale, Morecambe and Blackpool appear to be fairly safe, but Oldham, Bury and Accrington need to keep their eyes on the rear view mirror.


              Aiden McGeady; the Everton loanee has helped to ensure Preston North End’s safety

The League Cup Final at Wembley on Sunday was no cagey affair full of fear. It was a match to remember and Southampton was so unlucky to lose out in the closing minutes. The ridiculously complex off side rule will be debated once more, the Saints having what appeared to be a perfectly legal goal (according to the current interpretation) scratched off. But 5 goals usually make for an exciting match and congratulations to Manchester United for keeping the trophy in the city. My only disappointment was that the Reds started with only 2 English players. Will we ever see the likes of the Busby Babes or the Class of 92 again?

Red Rose County Player of the Week

It was all planned to be awarded to Leroy Sane after the youngster’s thrilling performance against Monaco or possibly Everton’s Seamus Coleman for yet another stirring performance against Sunderland, but you simply cannot ignore two goals in a Cup Final. Therefore for the second consecutive week, the award goes to Zlatan Ibrahimovic, a superstar who cannot stop scoring. It is the 7th double in League Cup Finals this millennium, with Ibrahimovic and Gabbiadini adding to the numbers on Sunday. Didier Drogba, Wayne Rooney, the Swansea pairing of Dyer and de Guzman plus Leicester’s Matt Elliott complete the list.

Tier 10 Club of the Week
                          AFC Blackpool; the 5th best club on the Fylde Coast

The triangle of land close to the South Shore in Blackpool and adjacent to the Airport is a veritable oasis containing 3 enclosed football grounds belonging to Blackpool Wren Rovers, AFC Blackpool and Squires Gate. Originally known as Blackpool Mechanics, AFC were a successful amateur side from their foundation in 1947, quickly moving through the leagues to the Lancashire Combination and then the North West Counties League. They briefly played in the top Division in 1992-93 but were generally long time inhabitants of the second level. After a couple of amalgamations they changed their name to AFC Blackpool in 2008 and three seasons later were Division 1 Champions. After a 5 year stay in the Premier Division, they finished rock bottom and were relegated. This is their first season back and they have found the going tough under the managership of Stuart Parker, an ex-pro centre forward from the 70s and 80s. He has been in charge for 10 seasons and they currently sit in an uncomfortable 19th place, but their massive junior section is of benefit to the community. 

                                               “The Mechanics”; home to AFC Blackpool

Quiz Answers 

1 Rochdale, 2 Michael Keane, 3 Sunderland, 4 Denmark, 5 Celtic,

6 Phil Jagielka, 7 Paulo Wanchope, 8 Villarreal, 9 Accrington Stanley, 10 Irlam FC.


Number 19                                                                                         February 27 2017

Manchester City; Their finest hour

With scarcely an exception since 1946, United has ruled the City of Manchester. The trophy count tells it all; 37 to 11 in that period. The Blue Moon shone brightly from 1968 to 1977 when Joe Mercer’s wisdom and the flamboyance of Malcolm Allison produced a League Title, FA and Football League Trophies and a UEFA Cup Winners Cup.  Tony Book oversaw another League Cup triumph, but then it was a downward spiral to the 3rd Tier in 1999, the nadir of their history. They scrambled out after one year following a Wembley play-off win against Gillingham, on penalties after extra time. The sea change in their fortunes came in 2008. The club was bought by the Abu Dhabi United group who employed Roberto Mancini as manager. The combination of his experience gained in winning 3 Serie A titles at Inter plus their vast wealth saw the club begin to seriously challenge for honours. After a strong start to the 2011-12 season which saw a 6-1 victory at Old Trafford, they slipped off the pace in their battle royal with their closest neighbours. Unexpectedly United blew an 8 point advantage and it all came down to the final game. The two clubs were level on points but City had a superior goal difference. As the final whistle sounded signalling a 1-0 United win at Sunderland, City was losing 2-1 to QPR at the Etihad, playing time added on. In those last few moments, an Edin Dzeko header and a shot from Sergio Aguero turned the title race on its head. It was City’s 6th consecutive victory and Vincent Kompany was presented with the club’s first League Trophy for 44 years; undoubtedly their finest hour.


Roberto Mancini; complete with the Sky Blue scarf as always

Loyalty in Football; difficult to find in this day and age

The Claudio Ranieri case has provoked comments from every man and his dog in the football world, many extremely scathing of the Leicester City ownership. But let us make something clear from the offset. Unless we have been in the dressing room at the King Power Stadium or on their training ground, we have no clue as to the facts of the matter. So is the manager to blame for this stunning decline or is it the fault of the players? Even amongst those close to the action, it is probably down to opinion. What we do know is that the Italian brought a touch of magic to the lives of so many last season. Traditionally, Leicester is a “nearly” club, unsure of its standing in the football hierarchy. It specialises in yo-yoing, having been promoted on 9 occasions from Tier 2 in the 71 seasons since the Second World War and relegated 8 times. For it to have won the Premier League title and to potentially play in the quarter finals of the Champions League is the stuff of dreams. Ranieri leaves them in 17th place. Putting it another way; normal service has been resumed in the East Midlands. Trying to be fair to the Thai consortium which owns the club, they are desperate to stay in the Premier League and believe that continuing with Claudio would have hindered the cause. Arriving in 2010, they have known only progress from the lower reaches of the Championship to the summit of English football. In spite of this success, they have presented P45s to Paulo Sousa, Sven-Goran Eriksson and Nigel Pearson prior to Ranieri. Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha, like so many other current owners, struggles to understand that even for the privileged few, the football journey is full of peaks and troughs. Without this knowledge, he has made a judgement, no doubt believing that the “bounce factor” will instantly right the ship. Of course it can work (e.g. Paul Clement at Swansea) but even Sam Allardyce, the “rescue-meister extraordinaire”, has so far bounced like an over ripe tomato at Crystal Palace. Even Jose Mourinho struggled for a while to get to grips with his latest club. A similar start for the yet unknown Ranieri replacement will surely send the Foxes down. Speaking of Jose, the Portuguese’s words really impressed me this week. He talked of selfishness amongst the playing staff at Leicester, all squabbling to double their wages in the summer rather than concentrating on the forthcoming challenges of the new season; loyalty to themselves rather than to the manager who changed their lives. It is a truism that it is easier to change the manager rather than the players, particularly post-January, so perhaps the game also needs a “transfer window” for managers. There is little loyalty amongst the owners. Gary Rowett was sacked on a whim after putting in a solid shift at Birmingham City, replaced by Gianfranco Zola (no bounce there as yet). But the managers themselves can be equally selfish. Lee Clark left an improving Kilmarnock last week, presumably because Bury offered him a huge salary hike. I remember Mark Hughes leaving a then decent Premier League Blackburn Rovers for the Arabian riches at Manchester City. Ambition is good and many of us have changed jobs for a wage increase, but these departures leave grieving supporters (the heart of the club) saddened to the core. Thankfully Wayne Rooney has so far stayed faithful, turning his back on millions of yens to help United chase trophies on four fronts. I would love to see him in the Championship after his Premier League days are over, remaining loyal to the English game, passing on wisdom to younger players on the way up. Let’s face it; he certainly does not need the money. It is a different world since I saw my first game and “us oldies” should not let nostalgia rule. But perhaps because there were no instant fortunes to be made, there was more loyalty in the game; a virtue now sadly disappearing down the plug hole.

Performances of the last week

Manchester City 5 Monaco 3 (Champions’ League Last 16, 1st leg)

Football needs strong defending but spectators love games where the defence manual is torn up and both sides attack, attack, attack. With a performance that drew parallels to the epic 1960 European Cup Final between Real Madrid and Eintracht Frankfurt at Hampden Park which ended 7-3 to the Spanish maestros, Manchester City and AS Monaco threw caution to the wind and produced a classic. Both Falcao and the returning Aguero gave master classes in the art of striking and we are left with a delicately poised return in the Principality. Game of the season thus far? Undoubtedly!!

Preston North End 2 Queen’s Park Rangers 1(EFL Championship)

Unbeaten in five and having lost just one in eleven, PNE remain in the chase for a play-off spot. A 25 yarder from Aiden McGeady (always a class performer) and a typical strikers’ effort from Jordan Hugill saw them to a hard-fought victory over QPR. The Preston Board has shown faith in manager Simon Grayson and promotion is not just a pipe dream at Deepdale.

Fleetwood Town 3 Northampton Town 0 (EFL Division 1)

Fleetwood Town continue to match the long unbeaten run of Chelsea (now standing at 17 games). After a shaky first 40 minutes, a virtuoso performance from David Ball saw the Cod Army imperiously crush Northampton Town. Devante Cole, Bobby Grant and Ball himself were on target and the club has now moved above Bolton Wanderers into 3rd place. They are level with second placed Scunthorpe United who have a game in hand, but the force is now with Fleetwood.

Morecambe 1 Grimsby Town 0 (EFL Division 2)

There are three Lancashire clubs in this Division and Morecambe are now leading that particular race. Lee Molyneux scored the early winner from yet another Michael Rose assist and with a game in hand, the Shrimps are a mere 5 points off the vital 7th place. It would appear that the town made famous by a comedian has now to be taken seriously on the football pitch.

The Non-League Scene.

All five of our National League North clubs won on Saturday. AFC Fylde stayed well clear at the top by beating Tamworth 3-1 and Salford City (2-1 winners over AFC Telford) and Chorley with an identical score line against Alfreton Town, remain 2nd and 4th. Both Curzon Ashton and FC United of Manchester won on the road to further allay fears of being drawn into the relegation scramble. Curzon had a narrow 1-0 win at Gainsborough Trinity and two Nathan Lowe strikes helped FCUM to come from 2 down to win 3-2 at Gloucester City. Warrington Town moved into the top half of the Northern Premier League with 2 late Reuben Jerome goals in a 2-1 home win over Coalville Town. Lancaster City is now 9 points clear of Farsley Celtic at the head of the Northern Premier League Division 1 North following an emphatic 3-1 win at Ossett Town, although Farsley has 3 games in hand. In the same league, lowly Prescot Cables shocked the highly placed Trafford 2-0 in mid-week. Finally in the North West Counties Premier Division, Atherton Collieries thumped Congleton Town 5-0; two Ben Hardcastle goals sending them top as their season goes from strength to strength.

Games to look forward to this week

Liverpool v Arsenal (Premier League) Saturday March 4, 17.30

It’s another weekly scramble for points to ensure a Champions’ League place/Top 4 finish. It could go all the way to the wire but these are games that none of the top 6 (excepting Chelsea) can afford to lose. A draw would open the door for Manchester United to squeeze ever closer so it is almost a win or bust situation. Assuming Liverpool beat Leicester on Monday evening, the Merseysiders may have the psychological edge going into this fixture and home advantage may just swing it their way.

Blackburn Rovers v Wigan Athletic (EFL Championship) Saturday March 4, 15.00

This is a shoot-out at Ewood Park. I cannot believe both of these North West clubs will escape relegation, so whoever wins will have the advantage. It’s a new manager (Warren Joyce) versus an even newer manager (Tony Mowbray) and the Latics have certainly improved under Joyce. The Rovers attack with gusto at Ewood so if Mowbray (as an ex-defender) can tighten up the back line, the Rovers could win it.

Scunthorpe United v Fleetwood Town (EFL Division 1) Saturday March 4, 15.00

As a fan or a player, you wait for the big games with baited breath, the adrenalin starting to pump through the veins for days before. This is a big game, second v third. It also pits current manager Uwe Rosler against ex Cod Army manager, Graham Alexander. Both have had exceptional seasons taking unheralded sides to undreamed of heights. I suspect one of these two sides will achieve automatic promotion to the Championship. If it is Fleetwood, it will be a feat on a par with Leicester’s achievements last season.

Blackpool v Morecambe (EFL Division 2) Saturday March 4, 15.00

It’s the North West seaside derby and can Morecambe possibly be favourites? Blackpool respond well when behind but struggle to hold on to a lead, hence they are the Division’s draw specialists. Both sides will have to press hard to make up the points deficit to the play-off hopefuls but Saturday is all about seaside resort bragging rights.


Tom Aldred; the Blackpool rock returns from suspension to face Morecambe

Quiz of the Week (Answers at the foot of the Blog)

All of the questions have Red Rose County connections

1             AFC Wimbledon, Fleetwood Town and which other Red Rose County club are the only current EFL Division 1 clubs never to have played in the top 2 Tiers?

2             Which Premier League player conceded a penalty and scored an equalising goal on Saturday?

3             From which club did Liverpool buy Simon Mignolet in 2013 for £9million?




Simon Mignolet; reserve to Chelsea’s Courtois in the Belgian national side

4             Anders Lindegaard, ex Manchester United and now Preston North End goalkeeper has won 5 international caps for which country?

5             Tony Mowbray, newly appointed manager of Blackburn Rovers made 78 appearances for which Scottish club during his playing days?




Tony Mowbray in the colours of Middlesbrough, his own town club

6             Three of the current Everton squad have notched up over 200 Premier League appearances for the club, Baines, Coleman and which other player?

7             Manchester City waited until 2000 for its first Premier League hat-trick scored by which Costa Rican international?

8             Where did Manchester United’s Eric Bailly play last season?

9             Which Red Rose County club won the National Conference (Tier 5) in 2005-06 by 11 points from Hereford United?

10         Which North West Counties Premier Division club plays its matches at Silver Street within the City of Salford?



Post Weekend Musings

I thought (rather naively) that fortune was smiling on the Red Rose County. There had been no managerial sackings in this calendar year; just a couple of permanent appointments made. It took 51 days for the axe to swing and the unfortunate head that rolled was the one sitting on Owen Coyles’s shoulders. The Blackburn Rovers manager had never been the fans’ choice, possibly due to previous links with the arch enemy up the road in Burnley. A win ratio of 30% did not help his cause but neither did the parsimony of the Venkys. He will not be long mourned but there will be street parties when the Indian owners finally bid farewell. The experienced Tony Mowbray has replaced him; another lamb to the slaughter?

Sean Hessey has left his management post at Marine. He saved the club from relegation in 2015 but failed to build on that success subsequently. He leaves them close to the drop zone and is replaced by the 66 year old Tommy Lawson, the ex-Skelmersdale United boss.

The last Red Rose County club crashed out of the FA Trophy at the last eight stage when Tranmere Rovers dismantled Barrow 5-1 at Prenton Park.

Going all Jane Austen for a moment, “it is a truth universally acknowledged” that 40 points equals safety in the Premier League. It is 50 points in the Championship, Division 1 and National League. However, it has been as many as 51 in Division 2 even though only 2 are relegated. This means that of the 18 Red Rose County clubs in Tiers 1-5, both Manchester and Liverpool clubs, Preston, Fleetwood, Bolton and Barrow are totally safe from the drop. Looking from the opposite side of the spectrum, if the yardstick of “less current points than games played” generally equals relegation, Wigan, Blackburn and Southport are in serious trouble. Burnley, Rochdale, Morecambe and Blackpool appear to be fairly safe, but Oldham, Bury and Accrington need to keep their eyes on the rear view mirror.


Aiden McGeady; the Everton loanee has helped to ensure Preston North End’s safety

The League Cup Final at Wembley on Sunday was no cagey affair full of fear. It was a match to remember and Southampton was so unlucky to lose out in the closing minutes. The ridiculously complex off side rule will be debated once more, the Saints having what appeared to be a perfectly legal goal (according to the current interpretation) scratched off. But 5 goals usually make for an exciting match and congratulations to Manchester United for keeping the trophy in the city. My only disappointment was that the Reds started with only 2 English players. Will we ever see the likes of the Busby Babes or the Class of 92 again?

Red Rose County Player of the Week

It was all planned to be awarded to Leroy Sane after the youngster’s thrilling performance against Monaco or possibly Everton’s Seamus Coleman for yet another stirring performance against Sunderland, but you simply cannot ignore two goals in a Cup Final. Therefore for the second consecutive week, the award goes to Zlatan Ibrahimovic, a superstar who cannot stop scoring. It is the 7th double in League Cup Finals this millennium, with Ibrahimovic and Gabbiadini adding to the numbers on Sunday. Didier Drogba, Wayne Rooney, the Swansea pairing of Dyer and de Guzman plus Leicester’s Matt Elliott complete the list.

Tier 10 Club of the Week

AFC Blackpool; the 5th best club on the Fylde Coast

The triangle of land close to the South Shore in Blackpool and adjacent to the Airport is a veritable oasis containing 3 enclosed football grounds belonging to Blackpool Wren Rovers, AFC Blackpool and Squires Gate. Originally known as Blackpool Mechanics, AFC were a successful amateur side from their foundation in 1947, quickly moving through the leagues to the Lancashire Combination and then the North West Counties League. They briefly played in the top Division in 1992-93 but were generally long time inhabitants of the second level. After a couple of amalgamations they changed their name to AFC Blackpool in 2008 and three seasons later were Division 1 Champions. After a 5 year stay in the Premier Division, they finished rock bottom and were relegated. This is their first season back and they have found the going tough under the managership of Stuart Parker, an ex-pro centre forward from the 70s and 80s. He has been in charge for 10 seasons and they currently sit in an uncomfortable 19th place, but their massive junior section is of benefit to the community. 


“The Mechanics”; home to AFC Blackpool

Quiz Answers 

1 Rochdale, 2 Michael Keane, 3 Sunderland, 4 Denmark, 5 Celtic,

6 Phil Jagielka, 7 Paulo Wanchope, 8 Villarreal, 9 Accrington Stanley, 10 Irlam FC.

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