Tuesday 30 May 2017

The Red Rose Football Blog (Number 32)



   


                             Number 32                                                               May 29 2017


                         

Rose County Footballing Legends (Number 5)

                                                 Neville Southall

My abiding memory of “Big Nev” was the size of his hands and the gigantic gloves that covered them. Born in North Wales, he was 22 before Bury signed him from non-league Winsford United. One season at Gigg Lane was sufficient for him to catch the eye of Howard Kendall who brought him to Everton. After an uncertain start, he became a vital cog in the Everton machine as they and Liverpool proceeded to dominate English football in the 80s. Southall was an outstanding shot stopper. At 6’1” tall and with a broad girth, he seemed to fill the goal, his exceptional athleticism enabling him to make saves he had no right to make. His greatest saves were in crucial games, instinctively keeping out a point blank range header from Mark Falco in their 2-1 victory at White Hart Lane in 1985; a win that secured their first title since 1970. In the 1995 FA Cup Final, having conceded just one penalty en route to Wembley, he made a memorable double save from a young Paul Scholes as his unfancied side lifted the trophy. In an Everton career which stretched to a club record 578 league games, he was responsible for a staggering 269 clean sheets. He is the club’s most decorated player with Division 1 titles in 1985 and 1987 and 2 FA Cup winners’ medals in 1984 and 1995. He also won a UEFA Cup Winner’s medal in 1985. For a number of seasons he was considered to be one of the world’s best goalkeepers, an automatic choice for Wales for 14 years, winning a record 92 caps for the Principality. He never achieved the distinction of keeping goal in major finals, coming closest to qualifying in 1986 when denied by a late penalty in a game forever remembered for the tragic death of legendary Scottish manager Jock Stein. Southall soldiered on, being released by the Toffees in 1998. He played 53 games at Torquay United down in Division 3 before bowing out at Bradford City when, as goalkeeping coach, he was forced to play in a Premier League fixture at the age of 41 due to injuries to other keepers. Not always the easiest to manage, he once sat against the post throughout the half-time interval rather than join his team mates in the dressing room after conceding 3 first half Leeds United goals. Nevertheless, the most iconic player at Goodison Park since Dixie Dean is a true Red Rose Footballing Legend.

Neville Southall; a giant of a keeper and a Goodison Park legend



Is there a managerial revolution about to start?


Sam Allardyce, Marco Silva, Garry Monk, David Moyes, Paul Lambert, Harry Rednapp and Tony Mowbray, what have they all in common? Four are ex-football managers who have left their clubs this month. Well nothing strange there. Football managers get sacked all the time, particularly at the end of a season. The difference however is that they have all resigned and Lambert will probably go very soon. Rednapp and Mowbray appear to be staying at their clubs, following talks about future investment on the playing side. Only Lambert of the aforementioned seven has been critical of his employer but it is when you start to dig below the surface that it becomes interesting. Allardyce says he wanted to retire, but I am not buying that. He told the media he was meeting with Steve Parish, the Crystal Palace chairman representing the American owners, to see what money is available for incoming players. Then he announced that he is retiring. I suspect that the shrewd operator who is “Big Sam” felt that the available money was insufficient for him to do anything other than scrap and scrape his way through another relegation battle and he has had enough of them. Easier to say he is retiring. Silva equally must have seen little prospect of Hull City bouncing back to the Premier League at the first time of asking with the scarcity of funds offered by the club’s Egyptian owner, although he was given much more than the unfortunate Mike Phelan earlier on in the season. The Portuguese has therefore moved on, this time to Watford where he will need all the luck in the world to survive a year. Moyes said he was staying and then he met with Sunderland’s American owner Ellis Short. That was enough to make him run away. Short wants to sell the club and Moyes had been given virtually nothing either last summer or in January to rebuild the team. Leaving was a no-brainer. Monk’s shock resignation at Leeds also followed talks with the new Italian owner about the forthcoming season and it appears obvious that this impressive young boss was also dissatisfied with what he heard. Rednapp was initially vague about the future following Birmingham’s narrow escape from relegation, saying he would talk to the Asian owners. He has obviously got what he wanted and the same applies to Mowbray who flew all the way to Mumbai to talk to the Blackburn owners before returning to proclaim that money is available. Lambert at Wolverhampton has been told that the agent Jorge Mendes will be in charge of recruitment (all incoming players being part of his empire no doubt) but the tough talking Scot has told the Chinese owners that if he is the manager, he wants the final say on new players; something Arsene Wenger has been repeating all season. So in a nut shell, we have at least 7 managers who are putting down their collective feet and saying “enough is enough. If I can’t do it my way, I am leaving”. Many would argue that the owners can do what they want with their business within reason, but so many of them have little or no understanding as to what a club means to a town or city. English managers in particular have that knowledge and it surely makes sense to give them every possible opportunity to use all their experience collected from at least 20 years in the industry to run the playing side of the club. So is this the beginning of a managerial fight back against predominantly foreign owners? Now that will be good news for the club, the area and the supporters.


Performances of the last week


It is difficult to place the Manchester United v Ajax Europa League Final into context. The North-West of England had been immune from major terrorist attack since the IRA bombings changed the face of Manchester’s city centre back in 1996. But on that occasion there were no fatalities, largely because the Provisional IRA had given a 90 minute warning. This time at least 22 pop music fans have died, a number of them teenage girls. Thus the Stockholm final was played in the shadow of this tragic back-drop but thankfully, UEFA allowed black arm bands and a minute’s silence, not banning them as part of an anti-political crusade. In the circumstance, both sides played with a passion but it was always a bridge too far for the Dutch youngsters. They needed to turn the United defence, make progress down the wings and cause damage by putting pressure on a back 4 which had been known to go walkabouts at times during the season. The kids showed off their tricks, their improvisation and at times quite staggering ball skills but with no end product. They never came close to threatening Romero in the Red’s goal. Mourinho, as ever, had prepared well and Pogba, Fellaini and Herrera were an impregnable shield in front of Smalling and Blind, being just too experienced, too strong and far too street-wise for the opposition. The English side was disappointing going forward and Pogba’s opener needed a huge slice of luck, his tame shot being deflected past the Ajax keeper. The second goal, a rather slow-motion scissors kick from Mkhitaryan came straight after the interval, ending the game as a contest and allowing United to comfortably see out the second half without the need to throw men forward. In the process they captured their second trophy of the season, qualified for the Champions’ League and have overtaken the arch enemy Liverpool as the English club with most major trophies (42-41); an amazing set of statistics for a side which, by common consent, has performed disappointingly in 2016-17. The game also showed the gulf between the level of professionalism, experience and commitment required by players performing week in and week out in the most physical top league in world football compared to the less than competitive Dutch Eredivisie League. The victory will always take second place of course to the dreadful events at the Manchester Arena, but sport once again proved that if only for a couple of hours, it can enable a city and a nation to come together in an act of unity against the most evil of adversary.  



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

                  Each question has a Red Rose County FA Cup connection


1                     On Saturday Arsenal defeated Chelsea 2-1 in the FA Cup Final, achieving their 13th victory and moving clear of which club in the all-time list of winners?

2                     Which ex-Bolton Wanderers player starred for Arsenal in this season’s FA Cup Final?

3                     More famous as a manager of Leeds United and England, Don Revie won an FA Cup winners medal with which Red Rose County club?



                              Don Revie; symbolic of football in the 50s


4                     Liverpool’s last FA Cup Final victory was in 2006. Who scored twice for them in open play and then scored from the spot in the penalty shoot-out?

5                     The owner of which Red Rose County Club broke his leg playing for Blackburn Rovers in the 1960 FA Cup Final, causing him to retire from the game?

6                     Which Red Rose County club was hammered 5-0 by Stoke City in the semi-final of the 2011 FA Cup?

7                     Dave Watson captained which Red Rose County club to an FA Cup Final victory in the 1990s?

8                     Malcolm McDonald (Supermac) scored twice in the 1974 Semi Final to prevent which Red Rose County club reaching the FA Cup Final?

9                     Who was the ex-Everton and Manchester City left back who scored for Oldham Athletic in both the 1994 Semi-Final 1-1 draw and Replay v Manchester United?

10                 Which Red Rose County club defeated Eagley 9-0 in their first ever FA Cup game in 1884 but lost this year by a 2-1 margin at home to the eventual winners in Round 3?


Post Weekend Musings



Ask anyone to name the Liverpool 2005 Champions’ League winning side and it is odds on that they will not remember a certain wide player. It was none other than Harry Kewell who predictably limped off during the first half in Istanbul as the Reds were initially overran by AC Milan. It is easy to think of the Aussie as a serial “sick note” but his career was seriously blighted by injury. In spite of this, he produced many magical moments and may have been the best ever Australian export to Europe. He started as a youngster at Elland Road in 1995 before crossing the Pennines to Liverpool in 2003. He also limped off in the 2006 FA Cup Final v West Ham and also came on as a substitute in the 2007 Champions’ League final when AC took revenge for their previous defeat. He later found success at Galatasaray before playing out his days back in Melbourne. I had forgotten about the Socceroo until it was announced this week that Crawley Town from League 2 had appointed him as manager. Kewell could certainly play and he built up a wealth of experience at the highest of levels, representing his native land on 56 occasions and participating in the World Cup Finals of 2006 and 2010. Will this stand him in good stead in the “dog eat dog” world of League 2 football? That remains to be seen but at least he will be protected from injury in the dugout.



Harry Kewell, so talented but ultimately too fragile for English football

We were debating Wayne Rooney prior to the Europa League Final and the view was put forward by a United fan that he had probably never quite fulfilled his true potential at Old Trafford and therefore could never be placed on the same pedestal as Sir Bobby in the pantheon of Manchester United greats. I felt that this was a little harsh as legends generally grow in the years following retirement, so this is probably not the right moment to compare like with like. It appears to be adios to Manchester but not goodbye to football, although it must have been a disappointing and difficult year for the club captain. One minute plus time added on is not the best moment to enter the fray at a European final and in a season of playing bit parts, this was the ultimate walk on role. The news that Gareth Southgate, quite rightly in my opinion, has left him out of the England squad on merit will give him a longer family holiday but will have done little to lift the cloud hanging over him. I do hope we see more of the Croxteth born boy who has grown into a responsible leader of a mighty club as well as his national side. He has almost always behaved with dignity whilst giving his all on the pitch. Is he the best English player of his generation? Arguably yes.

Which colour of shirt will Wayne be wearing next season?


Manchester City have bought the Portuguese attacking mid-field player Bernardo Silva from Monaco for £43million. What is interesting is that the Sky Blues have now made 5 of the 10 most expensive purchases in the history of English football. £232.5million has been spent on Kevin de Bruyne, Raheem Sterling, John Stones, Sergio Aguero and now Silva. It will of course cause problems for commentators should City play him and David Silva together. Thank goodness the ex-Hull City boss Marco Silva has moved to Watford and not the Etihad.



Bernardo Silva

There is an argument which says that a side which finishes as low as 7th should not be promoted, but whatever the rights and the wrongs of the system, the supporters of Blackpool FC will not have cared two hoots as they returned up the M1 and M6, celebrating all the way. It has been a bizarre season for the Tangerines and one victory, as vital as it was, does not suddenly make everything right at the club. They only took 6,000 supporters to a final at Wembley Stadium on a Bank Holiday Sunday, a figure which shows just how low the football club has sunk in the estimation of the one-time regular supporters of what was once a fine and upstanding club. But this weekend is a time for positives and how overjoyed Gary Bowyer must feel after, having been sacked at one sinking Lancashire club 18 months ago, he was thrust into the manager’s chair at a club in an even worse predicament both on and off the field. Now with his old club’s relegation and Blackpool’s promotion, they can meet as equals in the season ahead. As for the game itself, this League 2 Play-Off was a cracking affair between two equally matched sides. Exeter City certainly gave it everything, but the Seasiders had Brad Potts and Mark Cullen to thank for their narrow 2-1 victory. Potts scored an early opening goal, latching on to a Cullen flick on and then the roles were reversed. An hour into the game, Potts crossed and the striker added to his impressive goal tally, notching what turned out to be the winner and Blackpool’s record breaking 5th Play-Off win.
                                               Blackpool's list of Play-Off final victories

Year
Opponent
Tier
League title at the time
1992
Scunthorpe United
4
Football League Division 4
2001
Leyton Orient
4
Football League Division 3
2007
Yeovil Town
3
Football League Division 1
2010
Cardiff City
2
The Championship
2017
Exeter City
4
EFL League 2


Red Rose County Player of the Week

Paul Pogba

It has been a difficult season for the French international, having to live up to the tag of the world’s most expensive footballer. In the Europa League final however he scored one of Manchester United’s goals, albeit with lady luck on his side. Even more importantly, his contribution to a strong defensive midfield created a wall which the youthful Ajax side found impossible to breach, hence his award as Red Rose County Player of the Week.


A Review of the Northern Premier League, 2016-17



Unfortunately the Red Rose County was merely making up the numbers in the Northern Premier League this season. With just 4 representatives in this 24 strong Tier 7 league, only Warrington Town gave any hint of making the Play-Offs. The club from Cantilever Park performed strongly as winter eased into spring, but they fell away at the season’s end to finish in 10th position, acceptable for their first year at this level. Their progressive chairman has made changes to the infrastructure and Blackpool legend Keith Southern has been brought in to oversee the development squad, a production line which will feed younger players into Lee Smith and Stuart Mellish’s first team squad. Ashton United occupied a mid- table position throughout, achieving a number of creditable victories, but could finish no higher than 11th. Marine, the Division’s longest resident, again flirted with relegation and the club brought in Tommy Lawson as manager in the latter part of the season. A veteran of many campaigns at this level, he showed his experience by steering the club to safety by a healthy 9 point margin. There was much to be concerned about at Skelmersdale United, the West Lancashire club ending a 4 year sojourn at this level by scoring less than a goal a game, conceding 118 and finishing rock bottom. Even more seriously, they are probably in need of a new ground from November onwards. Prescot Cables have generously offered them a loan arrangement at Valerie Park but Skelmersdale United are from “Skem” and a new ground within the town must be their first objective as they start next season in the Northern Premier League 1 North.



Quiz Answers

1 Manchester United, 2 Rob Holding, 3 Manchester City, 4 Steven Gerrard, 5 Wigan Athletic, 6 Bolton Wanderers, 7 Everton, 8 Burnley, 9 Neil Pointon 10 Preston North End   

Monday 22 May 2017

The Red Rose Football Blog (Number 31)



                     Number 31                                                                    May 22 2017


Who are the Champions?

Red Rose clubs play in 15 different leagues from Tier 1 to Tier 11. Here are the Champions of each of these leagues with the highest of our clubs indicated alongside them, our Champions being highlighted.

League
Champions
Leading Red Rose Club
Premier League
Chelsea
Manchester City 3rd
Championship
Newcastle United
Preston North End 11th
EFL League 1
Sheffield United
Bolton Wanderers 2nd
EFL League 2
Portsmouth
Blackpool 7th
National League
Lincoln City
Barrow 7th
National League North
AFC Fylde

Northern Premier League
Blyth Spartans
Warrington 10th
Northern Premier League 1 North
Lancaster City

North West Counties Premier
Atherton Collieries

North West Counties League 1
Widnes

West Lancs League
Longridge Town

Manchester Premier League
Rochdale Sacred Heart

Liverpool County League
Aigburth People’s Hall

West Cheshire League
Newton
Mossley Hill 2nd
Cheshire League
Whaley Bridge Athletic
Denton Town 3rd



Red Rose County Footballing Legends (Number 4)

Mike Doyle

It has always been the case that casual followers of the game, the media and in more modern times the TV fans idolise forward players. They easily catch the eye and they dazzle with their skills. Inevitably they score most of the goals and make the headlines. The true fan on the Terraces, now of course seated in the Stands, sees it somewhat differently. Defenders like Mike Doyle are not easy to spot on “the box” but when you can see the full dimension of the pitch with one sweep of the eye, you notice the tacklers and those who put their heads on the chopping block; they are the “thou shalt not pass” merchants. “Doyley” was an Ashton-under-Lyme boy, born and raised deep in the Sky Blue heartlands; the type of area where you hated United. He was the son of a local policeman and the young Doyle was seen by the Mercer/Allison management team as an ideal candidate to man the thin blue line which was City’s defence in the mid-60s. A ferocious tackler, he was the ultimate hard man, the defensive wing half turned centre back. He was part of the magnificent City side which initially contained attacking eye-catchers such as Summerbee, Bell and Lee as well as Marsh, Tuart and Peter Barnes from the next generation. His remit was to make sure the back door was kept tightly closed. He played 5 times for England, captained City and in all played 448 league games for the Maine Road club. He won 6 medals in total; for the Championships of Division 2 and Division 1 as well as for winning the FA Cup, 2 Football League Cups and the UEFA Cup-Winners’ Cup. Tony Book was the manager who finally sold him; for £50,000 to Stoke City and he immediately helped them to gain promotion to Division 1. He completed 110 games at the old Victoria ground, then managed a season and a half at Bolton in Division 2 before finally bringing down the curtain on a 21 year career at Rochdale. In all he had notched up 627 league appearances, still as dependable at the end as when he first caught Joe Mercer’s eye. Like many footballers of his day, he drank too much and sadly this was one opponent that he could not kick. He died at the age of 64 from liver failure, but his name may well live on with the City faithful as his grandson Tommy has already captained the England Under/16 side. To some he may have operated beneath the radar as a player but to those who recognise the value of defenders in what of course is a team game, he will always be part of the City Hall of Fame; a Sky Blue legend from the Red Rose County. 
  



Performances of the last week

The Premier League petered out with barely a whimper on the last day, the only interest being in which 2 sides would finish third and fourth to clinch Champions’ League spots. Fortunately for the Red Rose County, both of our teams in contention won, thus holding off the challenge of Arsenal. Manchester City had already beaten West Brom 3-1 in mid-week and quickly found top gear to crush Watford at Vicarage Road by a 5-0 margin to finish in the top 4 for the 7th consecutive season. Sergio Aguero was outstanding in scoring twice and reaching 122 Premier League goals, 16th on the all-time list. Liverpool made heavy weather of beating Middlesbrough, but once Georginio Wijnaldum had given them the lead on the stroke of half-time, they coasted to a 3-0 victory and secured 4th position.  

If you had told Blackpool supporters last August that their season would conclude at Wembley, they would have looked to section you. However, football being a game of ups and downs with surprises around every corner, the Tangerine army will be walking down Wembley Way on May 28. Following their Division 2 Semi Final Play-Off victory over Luton on Thursday, promotion to Division 1 is a distinct possibility. And what a semi-final it was. Blackpool took a 3-2 lead down to Kenilworth Road and quickly added to it with a goal from Nathan Delfouneso, but it was a short lived success as the Hatters roared back with 2 goals before half-time. When Luton’s prolific scorer Danny Hilton converted a penalty early in the second half, the writing appeared to be on the wall but Armand Gnandhuillet headed an equaliser with 15 minutes to play and extra time seemed inevitable. With 5 minutes of added time already played, Blackpool threw men forward and Kelvin Mellor headed goal wards. A Luton defender hacked the ball off the line only for it to hit the goalkeeper in the back and ricochet into the net. It was a fluke of a winner but the Blackpool fans did not care. They were already preparing to book their Wembley tickets.
                            Kelvin Mellor; always in the thick of the action for the Tangerines

What a first season for City of Liverpool FC. Their achievements have been quite startling.  They have gained promotion from the North West Counties Division 1, won the Reusch Trophy for clubs in League 1 and, to top it all off, have now won the prestigious Macron Cup, a competition for clubs in both the Premier and Division 1 of the NWCFL.


Games to look forward to this week

There have been 47 Europa League Finals, but English clubs have only won it (and its predecessor the UEFA Cup) 7 times. Liverpool have led the way with 3 victories from Spurs with 2; Ipswich Town and Chelsea being our 2 other champions. So can Manchester United (playing in their first final) defeat Ajax in Stockholm on Wednesday? It has been a strange, somewhat uneasy season for the Reds. With a new manager, the world record signing and probably the best free transfer ever, much was promised, but the side has rarely totally gelled. There was the fantastic run of 25 unbeaten league games but 15 draws and 5 defeats constitute a total of 45 lost points. They scrambled their way to a League Cup Final victory over Southampton and they have reached the final of Europe’s second most prestigious competition, but this has not been the United of old, the side that could stir emotions, keep you on the edge of your seat and send you home buzzing. Having said that, the manager deserves praise for consistently setting up an eleven which is so difficult to beat and if his forwards had only shown a touch more accuracy when shooting, the league placing could have been much better than (for Manchester United) a mediocre 6th. The Ajax side is young, talented and adventurous, in fact a typical Ajax side, but I feel that United will know a little too much on the night and return to the north of England with the season’s second trophy.

Antonio Valencia who has developed into an outstanding right back at Old Trafford

Mention Blackpool and Wembley Stadium in the same sentence and the TV companies will automatically show a grey, grainy black and white image of “the wizard of the dribble” bemusing the Bolton defence before rolling the ball for Bill Perry to score Blackpool’s 4th and winning  goal of the legendary Matthews final. There have however been 6 other occasions when the Tangerines have successfully graced Wembley’s hallowed turf or the equally impressive Millennium Stadium in Cardiff during the re-building of the North London ground. There were Play-off victories from Tier 4 in 1992 and 2001, Tier 3 in 2007 and Tier 2 in 2010. They also twice won the Football League trophy in Cardiff in 2002 and 2004. So if experience has any part to play in the League 2 Play-Off Final at Wembley on Sunday, the ‘Pool are home and dry because their rivals Exeter City have never before played on the ground. Unfortunately history shows that form, experience and sometimes even ability play little part in deciding the winners of one-off games. It is qualities such as fight, determination and luck which often win the day. This is a 50-50 game and I so hope that Gary Bowyer’s side can win through, but I am certain that the result will be a lottery.


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


                  Each question has a Red Rose County connection


Managers and Transfers


1                     Which Manchester United manager bought Juan Mata from Chelsea for £37million?

2                     Kenny Dalglish spent £35million on a striker in 2011 who only scored 6 league goals in 44 appearances before being sold on. Who was he?

3                     Bolton Wanderers’ most expensive buy was John Elmander from Toulouse in 2008. Which Wanderers’ manager paid £8.2million for the Swedish international?

4                     Scottish International David Weir played 235 league games for Everton but which Scottish manager signed him in 1999?


David Weir; now making his name as a coach


5                     Who was manager at Burnley when Ben Mee started to play there, initially on loan from Manchester City?

6                     Which Blackburn Rovers manager signed Jordan Rhodes for £8million from Huddersfield Town?

7                     Which Manchester City manager paid Atletico Madrid £38million for Sergio Aguero?

8                     David Nugent has been Preston North End’s only Player capped by England since Tom Finney, in 2007. That summer, which manager sold him to Portsmouth for £6 million?

               David Nugent; something of a journeyman but can always be relied upon to score


9                     Which Wigan Athletic manager paid £4million to Bolton Wanderers for “penalty kick saver extraordinaire” Ali Al-Habsi in 2011?

10                  Which Blackpool manager sold Charlie Adam to Liverpool for £7million, Blackpool’s record sale?


Post Weekend Musings


How do you set the criteria for a successful season? Is it having achieved a higher league position than last year or does your club have to bring home a trophy? One thing for sure is that if you achieve the best ever year in the history of the club, you really have something to shout about. Of the 117 clubs from the Red Rose County from Tier 1 to Tier 11, 29 achieved their highest or joint highest ever finish in the 2016-17 season and they are listed below. Sadly only one of our 16 Premier/Football League clubs feature but it is always good to find clubs trying to push their way up from lower down the pyramid and we certainly have our share of this type of club.

Team
Tier
Pos
League
Comments
Fleetwood Town
3
4
EFL League 1

AFC Fylde
6
1
National League North

Salford City
6
4
National League North
1st year at this level
FC United of Manchester
6
13 =
National League North

Warrington Town
7
10
Northern Premier League
1st year at this level
Colne
8
5
Northern Premier League 1 North
1st year at this level
Atherton Collieries
9
1
North West Counties Premier

Bootle
9
2
North West Counties Premier

Irlam
9
8
North West Counties Premier
1st year at this level
AFC Darwen
9
18 =
North West Counties Premier
Since reforming in 2009
Widnes
10
1
North West Counties League 1

Charnock Richard
10
2
North West Counties League 1
1st year at this level
Litherland REMYCA
10
3
North West Counties League 1

City of Liverpool FC
10
4
North West Counties League 1
1st year at this level
Rochdale Sacred Heart
11
1
Manchester Premier League

Mossley Hill Athletic
11
2
West Cheshire League

Rainhill Town
11
4
West Cheshire League

Redgate Rovers
11
6
West Cheshire League
1st year at this level
Richmond Raith Rovers
11
7
West Cheshire League
1st year at this level
Longridge Town
11
1
West Lancs League

Tempest United
11
6
West Lancs League

Hesketh Bank
11
7=
West Lancs League

Denton Town
11
3
Cheshire League

Lower Breck
11
2
Liverpool County League

Liverpool Nalgo
11
4=
Liverpool County League

Byrom
11
8
Liverpool County League

Waterloo G S O B
11
6
Liverpool County League

Alumni
11
12
Liverpool County League
1st year at this level
MSB Woolton
11
13
Liverpool County League
1st year at this level




Red Rose County Player of the Week

Sergio Aguero


Two consummate finishes on Sunday at Watford precisely summed up the skills of the Manchester City striker. On his day he makes goal scoring appear easy. He has now hit the 20 goal target in 3 consecutive Premier League seasons, joining the elite group of Alan Shearer, Thierry Henry, Ruud van Nistelrooy and Harry Kane.


A Review of the Northern Premier League 1 North, 2016-17


Exactly half of the clubs in the Northern Premier League Division 1 North were from the Red Rose County and in terms of symmetry; we provided one of the 2 promoted clubs and one of the 2 that were relegated. Lancaster City were the Champions after a Titanic struggle with Farsley Celtic from the Leeds/Bradford area of West Yorkshire. The Dolly Blues from the traditional Red Rose capital only secured the title on the last day of the season at Glossop North End and had Jordan Connerton to thank, his 28 goals placing him 2nd in the Golden Boot chart. Colne FC also had a magnificent season, rising up the league as the season progressed. They reached the Play-Offs in their 1st season at this level following promotion from the North West Counties League, but sadly lost heavily to Farsley Celtic. Trafford had been up there all season, just missing out at the death in finishing 6th and Clitheroe were the 4th Red Rose club in the top 7, missing the Play-Offs by just 2 points. We will be looking for one of these 3 clubs to take on Lancaster’s mantle and seriously challenge for the title in 2017-18. Bamber Bridge, Droylsden and Ramsbottom United will all have been disappointed with their season, finishing 11th, 13th and 14th respectively. None of the 3 ever came close to challenging the leading group but each one showed late season improvement which hopefully will bode well for next year. Prescott Cables, Mossley and Radcliffe Borough all finished in lowly positions at 16th 17th and 20th, but none of them ever looked like serious relegation candidates. Unfortunately Burscough were the least successful of all, finishing at the bottom of the pile. There were too many rumours about losing their ground to builders which made it difficult for the club to concentrate on football and they are relegated along with Goole AFC.    



Quiz Answers

1 David Moyes, 2 Andy Carroll, 3 Gary Megson, 4 Walter Smith, 5 Eddie Howe, 

6 Steve Kean, 7 Roberto Mancini, 8 Paul Simpson, 9 Roberto Martinez, 10 Ian Holloway.


 


 


 


 


              Number 31                                                                    May 22 2017


Who are the Champions?

Red Rose clubs play in 15 different leagues from Tier 1 to Tier 11. Here are the Champions of each of these leagues with the highest of our clubs indicated alongside them, our Champions being highlighted.

League
Champions
Leading Red Rose Club
Premier League
Chelsea
Manchester City 3rd
Championship
Newcastle United
Preston North End 11th
EFL League 1
Sheffield United
Bolton Wanderers 2nd
EFL League 2
Portsmouth
Blackpool 7th
National League
Lincoln City
Barrow 7th
National League North
AFC Fylde

Northern Premier League
Blyth Spartans
Warrington 10th
Northern Premier League 1 North
Lancaster City

North West Counties Premier
Atherton Collieries

North West Counties League 1
Widnes

West Lancs League
Longridge Town

Manchester Premier League
Rochdale Sacred Heart

Liverpool County League
Aigburth People’s Hall

West Cheshire League
Newton
Mossley Hill 2nd
Cheshire League
Whaley Bridge Athletic
Denton Town 3rd

Red Rose County Footballing Legends (Number 4)

Mike Doyle

It has always been the case that casual followers of the game, the media and in more modern times the TV fans idolise forward players. They easily catch the eye and they dazzle with their skills. Inevitably they score most of the goals and make the headlines. The true fan on the Terraces, now of course seated in the Stands, sees it somewhat differently. Defenders like Mike Doyle are not easy to spot on “the box” but when you can see the full dimension of the pitch with one sweep of the eye, you notice the tacklers and those who put their heads on the chopping block; they are the “thou shalt not pass” merchants. “Doyley” was an Ashton-under-Lyme boy, born and raised deep in the Sky Blue heartlands; the type of area where you hated United. He was the son of a local policeman and the young Doyle was seen by the Mercer/Allison management team as an ideal candidate to man the thin blue line which was City’s defence in the mid-60s. A ferocious tackler, he was the ultimate hard man, the defensive wing half turned centre back. He was part of the magnificent City side which initially contained attacking eye-catchers such as Summerbee, Bell and Lee as well as Marsh, Tuart and Peter Barnes from the next generation. His remit was to make sure the back door was kept tightly closed. He played 5 times for England, captained City and in all played 448 league games for the Maine Road club. He won 6 medals in total; for the Championships of Division 2 and Division 1 as well as for winning the FA Cup, 2 Football League Cups and the UEFA Cup-Winners’ Cup. Tony Book was the manager who finally sold him; for £50,000 to Stoke City and he immediately helped them to gain promotion to Division 1. He completed 110 games at the old Victoria ground, then managed a season and a half at Bolton in Division 2 before finally bringing down the curtain on a 21 year career at Rochdale. In all he had notched up 627 league appearances, still as dependable at the end as when he first caught Joe Mercer’s eye. Like many footballers of his day, he drank too much and sadly this was one opponent that he could not kick. He died at the age of 64 from liver failure, but his name may well live on with the City faithful as his grandson Tommy has already captained the England Under/16 side. To some he may have operated beneath the radar as a player but to those who recognise the value of defenders in what of course is a team game, he will always be part of the City Hall of Fame; a Sky Blue legend from the Red Rose County.   


Performances of the last week

The Premier League petered out with barely a whimper on the last day, the only interest being in which 2 sides would finish third and fourth to clinch Champions’ League spots. Fortunately for the Red Rose County, both of our teams in contention won, thus holding off the challenge of Arsenal. Manchester City had already beaten West Brom 3-1 in mid-week and quickly found top gear to crush Watford at Vicarage Road by a 5-0 margin to finish in the top 4 for the 7th consecutive season. Sergio Aguero was outstanding in scoring twice and reaching 122 Premier League goals, 16th on the all-time list. Liverpool made heavy weather of beating Middlesbrough, but once Georginio Wijnaldum had given them the lead on the stroke of half-time, they coasted to a 3-0 victory and secured 4th position.  

If you had told Blackpool supporters last August that their season would conclude at Wembley, they would have looked to section you. However, football being a game of ups and downs with surprises around every corner, the Tangerine army will be walking down Wembley Way on May 28. Following their Division 2 Semi Final Play-Off victory over Luton on Thursday, promotion to Division 1 is a distinct possibility. And what a semi-final it was. Blackpool took a 3-2 lead down to Kenilworth Road and quickly added to it with a goal from Nathan Delfouneso, but it was a short lived success as the Hatters roared back with 2 goals before half-time. When Luton’s prolific scorer Danny Hilton converted a penalty early in the second half, the writing appeared to be on the wall but Armand Gnandhuillet headed an equaliser with 15 minutes to play and extra time seemed inevitable. With 5 minutes of added time already played, Blackpool threw men forward and Kelvin Mellor headed goal wards. A Luton defender hacked the ball off the line only for it to hit the goalkeeper in the back and ricochet into the net. It was a fluke of a winner but the Blackpool fans did not care. They were already preparing to book their Wembley tickets.


Kelvin Mellor; always in the thick of the action for the Tangerines

What a first season for City of Liverpool FC. Their achievements have been quite startling.  They have gained promotion from the North West Counties Division 1, won the Reusch Trophy for clubs in League 1 and, to top it off, have now won the prestigious Macron Cup, a competition for clubs in both the Premier and Division 1 of the NWCFL.

Games to look forward to this week

There have been 47 Europa League Finals, but English clubs have only won it (and its predecessor the UEFA Cup) 7 times. Liverpool have led the way with 3 victories from Spurs with 2; Ipswich Town and Chelsea being our 2 other champions. So can Manchester United (playing in their first final) defeat Ajax in Stockholm on Wednesday? It has been a strange, somewhat uneasy season for the Reds. With a new manager, the world record signing and probably the best free transfer ever, much was promised, but the side has rarely totally gelled. There was the fantastic run of 25 unbeaten league games but 15 draws and 5 defeats constitute a total of 45 lost points. They scrambled their way to a League Cup Final victory over Southampton and they have reached the final of Europe’s second most prestigious competition, but this has not been the United of old, the side that could stir emotions, keep you on the edge of your seat and send you home buzzing. Having said that, the manager deserves praise for consistently setting up an eleven which is so difficult to beat and if his forwards had only shown a touch more accuracy when shooting, the league placing could have been much better than (for Manchester United) a mediocre 6th. The Ajax side is young, talented and adventurous, in fact a typical Ajax side, but I feel that United will know a little too much on the night and return to the north of England with the season’s second trophy.


Antonio Valencia who has developed into an outstanding right back at Old Trafford

Mention Blackpool and Wembley Stadium in the same sentence and the TV companies will automatically show a grey, grainy black and white image of “the wizard of the dribble” bemusing the Bolton defence before rolling the ball for Bill Perry to score Blackpool’s 4th and winning  goal of the legendary Matthews final. There have however been 6 other occasions when the Tangerines have successfully graced Wembley’s hallowed turf or the equally impressive Millennium Stadium in Cardiff during the re-building of the North London ground. There were Play-off victories from Tier 4 in 1992 and 2001, Tier 3 in 2007 and Tier 2 in 2010. They also twice won the Football League trophy in Cardiff in 2002 and 2004. So if experience has any part to play in the League 2 Play-Off Final at Wembley on Sunday, the ‘Pool are home and dry because their rivals Exeter City have never before played on the ground. Unfortunately history shows that form, experience and sometimes even ability play little part in deciding the winners of one-off games. It is qualities such as fight, determination and luck which often win the day. This is a 50-50 game and I so hope that Gary Bowyer’s side can win through, but I am certain that the result will be a lottery.

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


                  Each question has a Red Rose County connection


Managers and Transfers


1                     Which Manchester United manager bought Juan Mata from Chelsea for £37million?

2                     Kenny Dalglish spent £35million on a striker in 2011 who only scored 6 league goals in 44 appearances before being sold on. Who was he?

3                     Bolton Wanderers’ most expensive buy was John Elmander from Toulouse in 2008. Which Wanderers’ manager paid £8.2million for the Swedish international?

4                     Scottish International David Weir played 235 league games for Everton but which Scottish manager signed him in 1999?


David Weir; now making his name as a coach

5                     Who was manager at Burnley when Ben Mee started to play there, initially on loan from Manchester City?

6                     Which Blackburn Rovers manager signed Jordan Rhodes for £8million from Huddersfield Town?

7                     Which Manchester City manager paid Atletico Madrid £38million for Sergio Aguero?

8                     David Nugent has been Preston North End’s only Player capped by England since Tom Finney, in 2007. That summer, which manager sold him to Portsmouth for £6 million?


David Nugent; something of a journeyman but can always be relied upon to score

9                     Which Wigan Athletic manager paid £4million to Bolton Wanderers for “penalty kick saver extraordinaire” Ali Al-Habsi in 2011?

10                  Which Blackpool manager sold Charlie Adam to Liverpool for £7million, Blackpool’s record sale?

Post Weekend Musings


How do you set the criteria for a successful season? Is it having achieved a higher league position than last year or does your club have to bring home a trophy? One thing for sure is that if you achieve the best ever year in the history of the club, you really have something to shout about. Of the 117 clubs from the Red Rose County from Tier 1 to Tier 11, 29 achieved their highest or joint highest ever finish in the 2016-17 season and they are listed below. Sadly only one of our 16 Premier/Football League clubs feature but it is always good to find clubs trying to push their way up from lower down the pyramid and we certainly have our share of this type of club.

Team
Tier
Pos
League
Comments
Fleetwood Town
3
4
EFL League 1

AFC Fylde
6
1
National League North

Salford City
6
4
National League North
1st year at this level
FC United of Manchester
6
13 =
National League North

Warrington Town
7
10
Northern Premier League
1st year at this level
Colne
8
5
Northern Premier League 1 North
1st year at this level
Atherton Collieries
9
1
North West Counties Premier

Bootle
9
2
North West Counties Premier

Irlam
9
8
North West Counties Premier
1st year at this level
AFC Darwen
9
18 =
North West Counties Premier
Since reforming in 2009
Widnes
10
1
North West Counties League 1

Charnock Richard
10
2
North West Counties League 1
1st year at this level
Litherland REMYCA
10
3
North West Counties League 1

City of Liverpool FC
10
4
North West Counties League 1
1st year at this level
Rochdale Sacred Heart
11
1
Manchester Premier League

Mossley Hill Athletic
11
2
West Cheshire League

Rainhill Town
11
4
West Cheshire League

Redgate Rovers
11
6
West Cheshire League
1st year at this level
Richmond Raith Rovers
11
7
West Cheshire League
1st year at this level
Longridge Town
11
1
West Lancs League

Tempest United
11
6
West Lancs League

Hesketh Bank
11
7=
West Lancs League

Denton Town
11
3
Cheshire League

Lower Breck
11
2
Liverpool County League

Liverpool Nalgo
11
4=
Liverpool County League

Byrom
11
8
Liverpool County League

Waterloo G S O B
11
6
Liverpool County League

Alumni
11
12
Liverpool County League
1st year at this level
MSB Woolton
11
13
Liverpool County League
1st year at this level



Red Rose County Player of the Week

Sergio Aguero


Two consummate finishes on Sunday at Watford precisely summed up the skills of the Manchester City striker. On his day he makes goal scoring appear easy and he has now hit the 20 goal target in 3 consecutive Premier League seasons, joining the elite group of Alan Shearer, Thierry Henry, Ruud van Nistelrooy and Harry Kane.

A Review of the Northern Premier League 1 North, 2016-17


Exactly half of the clubs in the Northern Premier League Division 1 North were from the Red Rose County and in terms of symmetry; we provided one of the 2 promoted clubs and one of the 2 that were relegated. Lancaster City were the Champions after a Titanic struggle with Farsley Celtic from the Leeds/Bradford area of West Yorkshire. The Dolly Blues from the traditional Red Rose capital only secured the title on the last day of the season at Glossop North End and had Jordan Connerton to thank, his 28 goals placing him 2nd in the Golden Boot chart. Colne FC also had a magnificent season, rising up the league as the season progressed. They reached the Play-Offs in their 1st season at this level following promotion from the North West Counties League. Trafford had been up there all season, just missing out at the death in finishing 6th and Clitheroe were the 4th Red Rose club in the top 7, missing the Play-Offs by just 2 points. We will be looking for one of these 3 clubs to take on Lancaster’s mantle and seriously challenge for the title in 2017-18. Bamber Bridge, Droylsden and Ramsbottom United will all have been disappointed with their season, finishing 11th, 13th and 14th respectively. None of the 3 ever came close to challenging the leading group but all 3 showed a late season improvement which hopefully will bode well for next year. Prescott Cables, Mossley and Radcliffe Borough all finished in lowly positions at 16th 17th and 20th, but none of them ever looked like serious relegation candidates. Unfortunately Burscough were the least successful of all, finishing at the bottom of the pile. There were too many rumours about losing their ground to the builders which made it difficult for the club to concentrate on football and they are relegated along with Goole AFC.    


Quiz Answers

1 David Moyes, 2 Andy Carroll, 3 Gary Megson, 4 Walter Smith, 5 Eddie Howe, 

6 Steve Kean, 7 Roberto Mancini, 8 Paul Simpson, 9 Roberto Martinez, 10 Oldham Athletic.