Wednesday, March 31, 2021

MATCH 2: 1970-71 & A DIVISION 3 ENCOUNTER... (SHREWSBURY TOWN 2-2 HALIFAX TOWN, BUT FOR A STRANGE REASON...)

 1971: Through The Fence, Alongside The Tracks & Hope The Match Ends On Time:


Shrewsbury Town 2-2 Halifax Town…


Home from college for Easter during my second year studying PE at Bulmershe in Reading, I saw my mate John Higgins at a poor, goalless Division 3 match between Aston Villa and Barnsley on Monday 12th April 1971. He told me he was going to Gay Meadow on the Wednesday to see Shrewsbury’s Division 3 battle with the Shaymen from Halifax Town. I decided to accompany him although neither of us drove cars at that time and it meant public transport from John’s house in Handsworth Wood…


WEMBLEY 1971: THE HAIRY JOHN HIGGINS, THEN MY DAD, A SNIPPET OF BRIAN KENSIT, MYSELF, FRANK GRIFFITHS & HIS SON STEVE...

Villa were lying 5th in the league but weren’t to be promoted back to Division 2 at the first attempt, likely because of their League Cup exploits, reaching the Final and losing to a brace of Martin Chivers goals for Spurs at Wembley in March. Halifax were riding high though in third place, a point ahead of the fallen from grace Villa and with a game in hand. Shrewsbury were 16th, also with a game or two in hand and they would be looking to climb away from the depths. The reverse fixture had been a 2-0 win for Halifax…


DAVE ROBERTS, EX-VILLA...

In fact, Shrewsbury had beaten Villa 2-1 on the previous Saturday, a match I had also witnessed,  the winner being scored by ex-Villa winger Dave Roberts. The Shrews had won 0-1 at Port Vale on the Monday too, in a crowded Easter fixture list. Shrewsbury’s Manager Harry Gregg, the ex-Manchester United goalkeeper and a survivor of the infamous Munich air crash, was liking his team’s surge in form…




FRED TURNBULL NETTED VILLA'S GOAL AT GAY MEADOW, A RARE STRIKE FOR THE CENTRAL DEFENDER...


I lived on a Birmingham council estate in Shard End at that time, with my parents and so I had a two-bus journey to reach John’s house. First the 55, then the Outer Circle 11, which took me past Villa Park and towards Handsworth Wood. A mile of walking would get me to Bewlys Avenue…


John and I set out for Hamstead railway station, where we would catch a train into Birmingham’s New Street, then change to the Shrewsbury train, which would travel via Wolverhampton. There were no worries about this part of the trip, so much so that we drank a pint in the ‘Coal Hole’, a room in the Beaufort Arms pub before catching our first train. 


On arrival at Gay Meadow we purchased seats in the Wing Stand, at 8/- (8 shillings, or, er, 40p…) and we witnessed a 2-2 draw, so one point apiece, which was not too much of a drawback for either club when one considers that a win was only rewarded with two points in those days…


THE ORIGINAL TICKET STUB...



At the time, I hand-wrote a few notes about the encounter and I reckoned that it had been a reasonable game, although the home defence often struggled to contain a strong Halifax attack. However, home winger Alan Groves delivered several decent crosses and Ricky Moir wasted a 10 yard chance, following a run to the right byeline by Roberts.



ALAN GROVES HAD JOINED SHREWSBURY IN THE FEBRUARY OF 1971 & NETTED TWICE IN THIS MATCH... 



HALIFAX'S GOALSCORERS WERE BILL ATKINS, 3RD FROM LEFT ON THE BACK ROW & DAVE LENNARD, FAR RIGHT, BACK ROW...

Home ‘keeper Ken Mulhearn tipped one Halifax drive over his crossbar but much of the action took place in midfield, although Shrews’ striker George Andrews headed a smart goal which was disallowed because visiting goalie Alex Smith was adjudged to have been fouled.


SHREWSBURY MANAGER HARRY GREGG WEARS A SUIT & WINGER DAVE ROBERTS IS SEATED ON THE LEFT END OF THE SAME ROW...

Bill Atkins (an ex-Villa youngster) opened the scoring for the guests when he drifted onto a long through-pass on the left and ran on to clip a low left footer past Mulhearn and into the net off the far upright for a well taken goal…


Groves scored the first of his brace to regain parity for the Shrews, moving forward on the right flank, exchanging passes with Gerry Bridgewood and then beating Smith at the near post with a crashing, low left-booted goal. 



Halifax regained the lead when Dave Lennard chased a long, bouncing ball, Mulhearn hesitated and the forward beat the goalie aerially to nod the ball into an empty net.


Shrewsbury claimed a point when the visitors’ offside trap was breached and Groves stayed onside to receive a pass out on the left, as the Halifax defenders rushed out to spring their trap. Groves ran on, rounded Smith and shoved a low left foot shot which rolled into goal off the inside of the far stick.   


THE OLD GAY MEADOW...

However, this match wasn’t memorable for what happened on the pitch…


A RACE WAS TO START HERE TO REACH THE RAILWAY STATION...

It was the journey home which was quite unforgettable. Most games kicked off in midweek at 7.30pm in those days, with a 10 minute half-time break and in fact, it was rare that games finished much beyond 9.10. Only one substitute was allowed then, so added time was minimal and at the discretion of the referee. 


On the Saturday, I had travelled to Shrewsbury and back on a coach from Villa Park but this time, the journey was to prove somewhat different… 


The problem was that the most amenable train back to Birmingham left Shrewsbury at 9.12, leaving us just 2 minutes to get to the platform. John however had the timing of this return trip very much in hand from his experience of previous visits and we were ready to run as the official raised his whistle to his mouth to end the match. We had to rush across the car-park, through a hole in a fence and then across some railway tracks to reach the end of a platform. This was illegal of course…


As we exited the ground though, there was a police presence and we had to dash rather sneakily and stealthily onto the railway property. It was warm, we sprinted, we made it to the platform and somehow boarded the train…


I can see John now, perspiring and wiping the sweat from his brow in a railway carriage with a handkerchief as we attempted to catch our breaths. We exited at New Street, John caught his train home and I walked across Birmingham’s town centre to find a late 55 bus home…


This happened almost exactly 50 years ago.


Memorable though…




   




 



Monday, March 29, 2021

MATCH 1: 1970-71 & THE LEAGUE CUP ROUND 5 TIE: BRISTOL ROVERS 1-1 ASTON VILLA..

 An Eastville Drenching…

(Bristol Rovers 1-1 Aston Villa, League Cup 5th Round, Tuesday 17th November 1970)



It was November 17th, 1970 and Aston Villa were due to travel to Eastville for a League Cup 5th Round tie against Bristol Rovers. Both teams were in the top four of the old 3rd Division and the Pirates had pleasingly beaten Small Heath (Birmingham City) 3-0 in the previous round. Ex-Blues striker Robin Stubbs had scored in that match and City’s Roger Hynd, an agricultural defender on occasions, had netted an own-goal. Good stuff then... The only team to win at Eastville up until that evening was Bury and Rovers were above Villa in the league. Stubbs, Harold Jarman and Ray Graydon, who would go on to play for Villa of course and score the winner in the 1975 Final against Norwich, had amassed 28 goals between them. Goalkeeper Dick Sheppard had appeared in the 1967 League Cup Final for West Brom’s Baggies.





VILLA BEAT CARLISLE IN ROUND 4, COURTESY OF A RARE BRIAN TILER GOAL...
SADLY, BRIAN WAS KILLED IN THE CAR CRASH WHICH INJURED HARRY REDKNAPP, OF COURSE.


Despite studying PE at Bulmershe College in Reading, by mid-November, I hadn’t missed a Villa game home or away. I had also met a Villa supporter who attended Bristol University and so when Villa were drawn to play at Eastville, it was arranged that I could stay at his digs in Bristol overnight and return to Reading the following day. I had obtained my ticket for the away-end terrace from Villa Park and my plan was to hitch-hike along the A4 from Reading towards Bristol, in the days before the M4 improved such travelling. Maybe…



It rained. And it rained some more. I guess I didn’t resemble the usual hitch-hiker however, for I carried an umbrella and I wore my bilious college scarf: purple, green and dark yellow (you should have seen the rugby jerseys…) Usually I picked up lifts fairly easily, often from women drivers with dogs. I had warily stroked many breeds in my hitch-hiking days and I suppose they were the 1970s equivalents of today’s personal alarms… Typically but mercifully, I was offered regular lifts on this day of miserable weather and I barely ever had to wait long for a ride, with my trusty umbrella keeping me dry.


I reached the outskirts of Bristol during the early afternoon and I knew I would have to walk the final three miles or so to the city’s bus station, where I had been instructed to catch a double-decker to my mate’s lodgings. And it had stopped raining. I began to feel more cheery as I approached a bridge with a fairly wide span, noting the deep mud below the steep banks of the river at low tide. 


After all the rain, I hoped that the Eastville pitch would be more playable than what I could see under the bridge… I was just beginning to appreciate how fortunate I had been to have stayed so dry after such a long and difficult journey, when I noticed a truck heading my way, rumbling along on my side of the road as I faced the oncoming traffic, safe on a pavement. I then made a sudden and evasive movement to the inside of the pathway, for there were considerable puddles in the gutter, which stretched several feet into the road and I assessed them as threatening. Unfortunately however, the driver of the truck must have assessed them as a means of firing a water cannon at a gullible pedestrian, for I am convinced even now that the evil bastard swerved towards the water in a vicious attempt to soak me. It worked too, as a tidal wave of rainwater rose above me as I, startled, threw my hands upwards like a shepherd warding off an angel near Bethlehem.  It was all in total vain though, as the shower engulfed me and drenched my coat with cold and muddy water. My scowl was in direct contrast to the truck driver’s mirth. I began to shiver, as I attempted to wipe my face and hair with dry parts of a sleeve; the walk was no longer a pleasure, I couldn’t get to the bus station quickly enough and my hopes for the game had been severely dampened. 


THE PIRATES...


I felt a good deal more comfortable at my mate’s lodgings, for his landlady dried my coat and scarf, as well as feeding me well but the rain had begun again and obviously there was doubt about the fitness of the Eastville pitch. The landlord was going to drive us to the game but he was rather laid-back about setting out and seemed quite unfazed about getting started at all, as the time began to press on towards kick-off. He was going to be standing with the Rovers fans but my ticket was for the Stapleton Road/Muller Road entrances. Still the rain fell and the terrace was crowded with noisy Villa fans, already settled in their places and I knew that my 5 feet 7 inches would prove a handicap for a decent view of the game, which was obviously going ahead. I threaded my way to the top of the terrace and decided to scramble up onto the surrounding wall and I was suddenly in a prime position to see the match, sitting, with quite a drop behind me, one hand resting on a guy’s shoulder, in case I should overbalance.


THE VILLA SQUAD...



This advantageous viewing place would be a health and safety chap’s dream today but then it was totally ignored by any stewards daft enough to want to make it an issue. The view of the oval stadium was excellent from there but the pitch itself was a puddled pudding and the surrounding dog-track was like the River Nile running red. Substitutes Neil Rioch for Villa, brother of Bruce, who was recovering from a cartilage operation, and Bobby Jones for Rovers could have warmed up with umbrellas in true Gene Kelly ‘Singin’ In the Rain’ style, for the water was perfect for the splashing dance from the film. 28,780 spectators conjured up an exciting atmosphere and the conditions would worsen to become a bath of mud, but what a start… 


THE WALL I SAT UPON CAN BE SEEN ON THE RIGHT OF THE OVAL STADIUM...

I WAS MORE IN THE CENTRE OF THE TERRACED AREA BUT THIS WAS BASICALLY THE VIEW I HAD, ALTHOUGH IN DARKNESS & WITH MUDDY PITCH CONDITIONS...

A Willie Anderson run on the left which surprisingly didn’t end with the ex-Manchester United winger falling over as usual, despite the slippery surface, ended with a cross, which was flicked on by ex-Chelsea youngster Chico Hamilton’s long fair hair towards the far upright, where ex-Celtic gazelle Pat McMahon leapt to head back across Sheppard and into the home net. Villa looked comfortable at 0-1 with Andy Lochhead, surely looking like a fifty year-old with those wisps of hair revealing a balding pate, pulling the Rovers defenders about. Hamilton, McMahon and Anderson were skipping across the slick pudding too easily, then Lochhead dribbled a shot into goal for Villa but McMahon was adjudged to have been just offside.


LOCHHEAD CELEBRATES McMAHON'S GOAL AT EASTVILLE...

VILLA'S CENTRE-FORWARD ANDY LOCHHEAD WAS USUALLY DESCRIBED AS 'CRAGGY' & 'BALDING'...



Hamilton’s headed feed allowed Anderson a headed chance but the ball flew too high and McMahon saw an effort hacked clear by Don Megson, yet Rovers battled back into contention and forced an equaliser on the half-hour. Centre-half Stuart Taylor received Stubbs’ head-on of Megson’s free-kick and Villa’s right-back Mick Wright had a brilliant view of Taylor’s superb 7 yard volley high into the roof of the net. Wright cleared a Stubbs header away before the break and Jarman rounded the Villa ‘keeper but looked forlorn as he became stuck in the mud, yet the excitement was palpable. The conditions worsened and Rovers fought hard after the interval, causing Villa some difficulties, although visiting ‘keeper John Dunn excelled himself, not really as a shot-stopper, but as if he was a council worker pouncing on wind-blown litter in a crowded shopping mall. 


DEFENDER TAYLOR'S LASHED EQUALISER FOR ROVERS...

I once saw Dunn appear on Halifax Town’s Shay pitch after the team had arrived there and he was smoking a cigarette, whilst lamenting the ash on the pitch, which had presumably been thrown up by speedway bikes at a meeting a few days before. I had never really taken to him as a goalie and he had never impressed me until that second period at Eastville and he would never impress me again… He was excellent on the day. He scrambled, slithered and sprawled in his goalmouth, often diving in his inimitable fashion: forwards, like a shoebill stork flopping into a pool onto an unsuspecting lungfish. He did his job. There was a late flurry by Rovers and a scramble in Villa’s goalmouth of epic proportions in the dying moments of the game, until, after shots had smacked against Villa defenders, Dunn dropped onto the muddy ball in the mire. 


JOHN DUNN: A FINE GAME AT EASTVILLE...

Only Chico Hamilton kept his balance jauntily in the conditions and Villa earned their replay, which they won 1-0, with an 88th minute winner from, er, Pat McMahon again. They then went on to beat 1st Division Manchester United 3-2 over two legs in the semi-final, before bowing out to two Martin Chivers goals for fortunate Spurs in the Wembley Final.



PAT McMAHON: A GAZELLE OF A MIDFIELDER FROM CELTIC, WHO SCORED IMPORTANT GOALS FOR VILLA...

I slept in a spacious bed that night, warmed by an electric blanket, something new to me and I was dry… I hitch-hiked back to Reading on the Wednesday and went home for the weekend so I could travel to Torquay for Villa’s FA Cup tie, which they lost badly, 3-1 at Plainmoor, with ex-Villa defender and guitar player Dick Edwards netting one of the goals. I would thus not see Villa battle against either Crawley or Chelmsford in the thirst-quenching next round. 


I was sad about that. Maybe… 


THIS GAME WILL FEATURE IN ANOTHER POST... 

A PROUD DAY FOR SUFFERING VILLA FANS...



           


  






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