Showing posts with label Birtley St Josephs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Birtley St Josephs. Show all posts

Around The Alliance - part eleven

The latest in the series features clubs in the 1st Division as I took advantage of the Wednesday evening early season matches.

409.Wrekenton Blue Star
Birtley St Josephs 1v1 Cramlington Town
Northern Alliance 1st Division
Wednesday 13th August 2014

I visited Birtley St Joseph’s Welfare Ground at the end of last season and I declared that I would make a point of watching them again this year, as they are based just a ten minute drive away. Since then they’ve relocated to Eighton Banks at the home of Sunday League outfit Wrekenton Blue Star, so they moved even closer, just over a mile from door to door. The club will be renewing their lease in Birtley, but will be playing at Blue Star for a couple of seasons, although the newly formed development team are still using the facilities at the Welfare. The ground is found just off the Longbank in Back Lane, next to the village hall. The pitch is fully railed off with changing rooms & shower facilities and retractable dugouts.
After a goalless first half it was the visitors who took the lead on 57 minutes when good wing play by the Cramlington Town number 8 set up Kevin Brown at the far post who prodded the ball home at the second attempt. St Joe’s were soon level when a penalty was awarded after a handball, the referee having no doubt this time after failing to award a spot kick for a similar incident in the first half. Tony Smith made no mistake from 12 yards, which seemed to gave his team mates a lift, as minutes later Ryan Moore came close to giving Birtley the lead with a shot which rattled the crossbar. This was the closest either team came to grabbing a winner and overall both teams would have been satisfied with a draw.




Matchday Stats
BSJFC 1(Smith 60pen) CTFC 1(Brown 57)
Att.37(HC)
Top Bloke - Tony Smith(Birtley St Josephs)
Admission and programme:none


411. Biggs Main
Wallsend Boys Club 8v1 Blyth Isabella
Northern Alliance 1st Division
Wednesday 20th August 2014
 Wallsend Boys Club was founded in 1904 by the employees and directors of Swan Hunters Shipyard, providing recreational activities for the apprentices and young people in the area.The club is well renowned in the football world as being the breeding ground for the likes of Alan Shearer, Peter Beardsley, Michael Carrick and Steve Bruce, part of an endless list of 70 players who have gone on the play professionally.
The original club premises were a series of wooden huts on Station Road, erected by workers from the shipyard, which were destroyed by a fire and rebuilt in the mid-1960s.In 2008 the club was awarded the Freedom of the City of North Tyneside, in recognition of its community work, the deputy mayor describing the club as a "factory line of talent"
 The club opened its first football centre in June 2011, funded by grants of £850,000 from the Football Foundation, £150,000 from The FA and £301,000 from North Tyneside Council. The club also raised £114,000 towards the scheme, which is situated next to Wallsend Sports Centre at Bigges Main. The ground is found off Shields Road on the Walkerville and Wallsend border, along the end of Rheydt Avenue, having a spacious car park and club pavillion at the entrance. The complex has eight various sized football pitches, with the senior side using the pitch at the front which is fully railed apart from gaps left for the dugouts to be added at a later date. The original Station Road headquarters has now been demolished following high winds in January 2012  which damaged the main building.
 The senior team joined the Northern Alliance Division Two in 2007-08 and finished third last season behind champions Blyth Isabella, their opponents for this evening fixture. The match was action packed throughout. With just over a minute gone Jordan Robertson ran onto a through ball before lobbing the ‘keeper to give Wallsend the lead, before he outpaced the Blyth defence and picked out Nicky Whitelaw to double the advantage on 26 minutes. Robertson also grabbed this second three minutes later followed by a tidy finish by Alex Nisbet, which meant the game was over as a contest after only 36 minutes. 
Whitelaw took advantage of some more slack defending to grab his second before a rare foray into the Wallsend penalty area, saw a spot-kick awarded to the visitors after an off the ball push. Christen Priest dispatched the penalty to make it 5-1 at the break.
In the second half the Boys Club added three more to the tally, with impressive work rate and good finishes by substitutes Chrissy Brennan and Michael Starkie, sandwiched in between with Whitelaw completing his hat-trick with an easy tap in from a corner kick. Apart from bagging eight goals they also hit the crossbar four times in the second half so the final score could have been well into double figures.




Matchday Stats
WBC 8(Robertson 2,29 Whitelaw 26,39,70 Nisbet 36 Brennan 54 Starkie 80) BIFC 1(Priest 42pen)
Att.22(HC)
Top Bloke - Jordan Robertson(Wallsend BC)
Admission and programme:none






415. Newburn Leisure Centre
Heddon 4v1 Hexham
Northern Alliance 1st Division
Wednesday 27th August 2014


Heddon moved from Bullocksteads to Newburn Leisure Centre a few seasons back. I visited Heddon at their former ground back in 2008 which you can read here. Since then the club have been relegated and this is their fifth season in the First Division.
Newburn is a semi rural village on the north banks of the River Tyne, approximately 5 miles west of Newcastle city centre. The Newburn Leisure Centre is found at the far end of the village next to The Keelman, the home of the Big Lamp Brewery, one of my favourite local beer makers. The centre has several pitches with Heddon using the roped off bottom pitch with the changing facilities at the back of the leisure centre facing the ground.


 A five minute hat-trick from Paul Fradgley clinched a much needed win for Heddon against struggling Hexham. The visitors took the lead after half an hour with an overlapping run and shot from full back Steven Coates and looked well in control as the game reached the last quarter. I watched the match with Big Andy from Hexham, and I said to him that I fancied his local team to grab a late second to seal the win. Apologies to Hexham for giving them the kiss of death because a minute after my prediction, Fradgley ran onto a through ball and showed some great skill to tee himself up for a shot, firing in at the far post, then two minutes later he came up with an even better strike with a cracking finish from the edge of the box. 
Hexham responded immediately but Lewis Loughead’s penalty kick was saved and they were instantly punished, as Fradgley completed his hat trick running onto a threaded pass before another tidy finish. Between the 71st and 76th minutes there had been three goals and a missed penalty and Fradgley wasn’t done, as he bagged his fourth of the night in the last minute to round of a great individual performance.



Matchday Stats
HdFC 4(Fradgley 71,73,76,89) HxFC 1(Coates 31)
Att.15(HC)
Top Bloke - Paul Fradgley(Heddon)
Admission and programme:none 

Links - 
Heddon at Bulloksteads - Around The Alliance - part two

Birtley St Joes at the Welfare Ground - Around The Alliance - part ten

Around The Alliance - part ten

I dipped into Division One for the last ‘Around The Alliance’ feature of the current season at matches with effectual matters at both ends of the table, as I visited two lots of saints.

395. Rising Sun Sports Ground
Willington Quay Saints 1v3 Gosforth Bohemians
Northern Alliance Division One
Saturday 3rd May 2014
 Willington Quay is an area in the borough of North Tyneside, originally in the parish of Wallsend. The Rising Sun Sports Ground is not actually in Willington Quay, but found on the north side of the Coast Road at the top of Kings Road North, beside the Rising Sun Country Park. The ground is also known as the Barking Dog with the main pitch close to the entrance, opposite the car park. The clubhouse and changing room block is in the centre of the sports ground with another full size pitch and a floodlit five a side pitch at the back.
 Willington Quay Saints formed in 2000 out of the local social club known to its regular customers as “The Morgue” as it was frequently visited by the local undertakers.  The team began in the South East Northumberland league in the 2000-01 season and played there for two seasons, winning the League Challenge Cup in their debut year. When the league merged in 2002 to become the Tyneside Amateur League Division 2  they won the league and gained promotion. In 2007-08 the Saints stepped up to the Northern Alliance Division Two and after a 7th place finish in 2011-12 were granted promotion due to clubs leaving the Alliance set up. The team struggled in the higher division last season but avoided relegation due to a strong finish to the campaign and the demise of other club’s folding
 The Saints went into the last home game of the season against Gosforth Bohemians needing a point from their remaining two matches to condemn Heddon to the wooden spoon and avoid relegation to Division Two. The home team emerged from the changing rooms hand in hand, singing a chorus of ‘He’s Got The Whole World In His Hands’ I don’t know if this is their usual ritual or it was just a one off, so in retrospect, I regret not asking what the crack is.
 Both sides made an offensive start to the game but it was Bohs who were more clinical, with a three goal burst in a fifteen minute spell before half time. The home defense were constantly caught out by the long ball over the top, with Daniel Ure taking advantage in the 28th minute, finding himself with plenty of time and space to round the ‘keeper and tuck the ball into the empty net. Minutes later Gosforth doubled their lead through Andrew Renton, playing a neat one-two before producing a tidy finish. The visitors rounded off a fine first half display when left back Tavis Couling made an overlapping run and smashed an unstoppable drive into the top corner from the edge of the box.
 Willington improved in the second half in an effort to get back into the game but all they could muster was an injury time penalty, easily dispatched by Glen Johnson after a shove in the box. This result followed by a midweek defeat at Gateshead Redheugh 1957 means the club are relegated back to Division Two, although there’s enough spirit and some decent players in the side to hopefully see the lads in THE MORG green shirts bounce back next season.

Matchday Stats
WQSFC 1(Johnson 90+1pen) GBFC 3(Ure 28 Renton 32 Couling 43)
Att.16(HC)
Bloke of the Match - Andrew Renton(Gosforth Bohemians)
Admission and programme:none





396.Birtley Welfare Ground
Birtley St Josephs 7v2 Ponteland United
Northern Alliance Division One
Wednesday 7th May 2014
Birtley is a town situated south of the  Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead, on the county borderline of Tyne and Wear and County Durham. Birtley St Josephs FC play at the Welfare Ground which is situated just off Durham Road behind the fire station. The welfare is also home to a bowling green and playground with the football pitch at the top end. The pitch is fully railed off with a section of terracing at the side of the changing rooms. The ground has a bit of history, as it was once the home of the original Birtley FC who were founder members of the Northern League, who later went on to play in the Northern Alliance.
 Birtley St Josephs joined the Northern Alliance Division Two just last season, finishing runners-up to North Shields Athletic and amassing 119 goals in their 30 league fixtures.
This season they’ve continued to progress, finishing in fifth place just behind the promotion chasing pack. The club also run a ladies team and there are plans afoot to have a development side playing from next season, which will strengthening the squad and help develop youth players
 The hosts produced a fabulous display on a wet miserable night to finish off their home campaign in style against Ponteland United. St Josephs opened the scoring with a Tony Smith spot kick in the 11th minute and doubled their advantage ten minutes later, when a smart crossfield ball found Shaun Todhunter, who fired home from close range. It was soon three when Lee Cuthbertson took advantage on a defensive mix up, but Ponteland got back into the game when they were awarded a penalty five minutes before the break, which was converted by Andrew Davidson. However the unlikely comeback was soon dashed as a minute later Cuthbertson played a nice one-two before blasting the ball into the roof of the net to make it 4-1 at half-time
 Birtley continued where the onslaught in the second half, missing a host of chances each side of a lovely Arsenalesque interchange of passing in the 51st minute which was finished off by Dan Irving. Ponteland were awarded a second penalty in the 70th minute after a handball was spotted by the linesman. I have to admire the commitment to the cause by the Birtley players, as two players were shown yellow cards for disputing the decision, even though in terms of the scoreline, it didn’t really matter. Johnson converted the spot kick but another two goals from Cuthbertson put the gloss on the performance. With ten minutes remaining a clearance from the United ‘keeper found the number nine who hit a 20 yard chip shot straight into the net, before taking his goal tally to four producing a lovely curling effort from the edge of the box to make the final score 7-2.
As Birtley Welfare is only a ten minute drive away I’ll more than likely make the odd revisit, especially if they play as good as they did tonight, when even getting soaked through and a flatulent old bloke standing next to me won't put me off returning for a good game of Alliance football next season.


Matchday Stats
BSJFC 7(Smith 17pen Todhunter 27 Cuthbertson 29,42,79,84 Irving 51) PUFC 2 (Davison 41pen 70pen) 
Att.20(HC)
Bloke of the Match - James Bowman (Birtley St Josephs)
Admission and programme:none 

397.John Spence Community Sports College 4G
North Shields Athletic 4v2 Birtley St Josephs
   Northern Alliance Division One
   Saturday 10th May 2014
 North Shields is a town on the north bank of the River Tyne in the metropolitan borough of North Tyneside, located eight miles east of Newcastle. The Shields name derives from Middle English schele meaning 'temporary sheds or huts’ which were used by fishermen. The area is historically renowned for fishing and still has associated trades with seafaring.
 North Shields Athletic formed in 1996 with initially three junior teams, but can now boasts over 40 mens and ladies teams at all age levels. The senior side began in the Northern Alliance Division Two in 2006-07 and won promotion to the First Division as champions last season. The club’s progression has rolled onto this campaign as they clinched the league title on Wednesday night with a 5-1 win at New Fordley. 
The club are based at John Spence Community Sports College, found just off Beach Road at the south side of the A192. The club use the football pitch within the complex but today I scored for a footy ground bonus, as they used the brand new 4G pitch for the first time. The pitch is only a few months old and is fully caged with floodlights and hard standing between the changing rooms and the pitch. Athletic usually use the field adjacent to the 4G and they'll be looking for grants and working with the sports college to get the ground up to the required standard for the Alliance Premier next season.
 I was anticipating an exciting match as title winners North Shields Athletic hosted Birtley St Josephs who I witnessed bagging seven goals earlier this week. The visitors continued where they left off from Wednesday night, taking a fourth minute lead, when James Bowman latched onto a through ball before firing in a right foot shot. The champs were soon level when Scott Jasper judged the bounce of the ball on the all weather pitch to nod the ball past the advancing keeper in the 11th minute. It was all square at the break but Athletic took command in the second half with a left foot drive from Sean Millington followed by Lee Crammond(whose faftha I stood and watched the match with) nodded in a left wing cross to make it 3-1 with a quarter of an hour remaining.
Just as the game looked over as a contest, Bowman added his second of the game in the 80th minute only for Shields to wrap up the victory in the dying minutes, when John Wyres rifled in a right foot shot to round of a successful season in style.
 I’ll be returning to the John Spence complex next season to see the club in the top league and play on their proper pitch, plus I’ll be interested to see what progress has been made to their ground.  The club will be a welcome addition to the Alliance Premier next season and any club that gives me a free pin badge is OK in my book.

Matchday Stats
NSAFC 4(Jasper 11  Millington 51  Crammond 75  Wyres 88) BSJFC 2(Bowman 4,80)
Att.48(HC)
Bloke of the Match - Lee Crammond (North Shields Athletic)
Admission and programme:none

Around The Alliance - part nine

I featured both Shankhouse and Killingworth in part five of Around the Alliance during the 2009-10 season, so Google searches may want to read up on this previous post for the historical background of both clubs. On the eve of this campaign both clubs switched grounds which was welcoming news for groundhoppers like myself, gaining a couple of new local ticks. To complete the trilogy of this latest episode I also made a long overdue visit to one of my local teams Gateshead Redheugh 1957.
Update - Cullercoats FC - Links Avenue added on 8th December


369. Action Park
Shankhouse 4v0 Willington Quay Saints
Archers of Blyth George Dobbins League Cup
Round 2
Saturday 12th October 2013
After spending the last few years based at the Northburn Complex in Cramlington, Shankhouse have returned to their previous home at Action Park, which is situated three and a half miles south in the Northumberland village of Dudley. The reason for their return is all down to finance and pitch problems at Northburn, where a lot of matches were postponed. During the summer the club held a fundraising day which raised sufficient funds to make future ground improvements to Action Park. The plans include hardstanding, mesh fencing, a new gate and the extension of the dugouts, which are the smallest I’ve ever seen, built back in the days when dugouts were occupied by the manager, trainer and just the one substitute. The ground is fully fenced off with a dugout at each side. The changing rooms are at the main entrance, which also has a refreshment bar where they sell you a proper cuppa in a mug.
There’s also been major club changes behind the scenes during the summer, with Chairman George Davison stepping down after 25 years,  replaced by local businessman and former player Chris Wall. Garry Kirkup has stood down as team manager after 15 years with Johnny Wilson taking over the reigns after eight years as his assistant. Both remain at the club in another capacity along with the recruitment of new members of the committee.
If I looked through my matchday records it will probably show that Shankhouse are the Northern Alliance club which I’ve seen more than any other and their opponents for this League Cup tie were a club I was viewing for the first time -  Willington Quay Saints.
The House comfortably booked their passage into the third round with a three goal burst in a 13 minute spell in the first half. Chris Rue broke the deadlock on 26 minutes, netting the rebound after the Quays keeper parried a long range effort. Ten minutes later Paul Dunn nodded home a left wing cross, before adding his second sliding in from close range in the 39th minute
The hosts struggled to add to their tally in the second half, wasting several golden opportunities, especially striker Dunn who should have easily completed his hat-trick. The fourth goal was finally added in the last minute through substitute Josh Walsh, firing a shot inside the far post to round off a routine victory against the lower ranked side. 


Matchday Stats
SFC 4(Rue 26 Dunn 35,39 Walsh 89) WQSFC 0
Att.23(HC)
Admission £1
Programme:none



371.West Moor Community Centre
Killingworth Station 4v1 Shankhouse
Northern Alliance Premier Division
Saturday 9th November 2013
During the summer Killingworth Sporting Club became Killingworth Station after a sponsorship agreement with one of the local boozers - The Station on Killingworth Drive. Also during the pre-season the club upped sticks to the West Moor Community Centre on Benton Lane. The ground is found on the edge of Killy over the roundabout as your head north from Newcastle via the A189 on Salters’ Lane.


The reason for the change of venue is to give the senior side more independence from the junior set up. The main pitch at West Moor is only used by one other side, a women’s Sunday League team, so there’s less chance of games being postponed due to an overused pitch.

The ground is enclosed on three sides with dugouts at the far side and is roped off from a second football pitch on the near side, so at the moment the pitch doesn’t have perimeter fencing. The changing rooms are within the Community Centre block and there’s a refreshment room where you get your free half-time drink. This is part of your £1.50 admission which includes an 8 page programme, so great value which will attract the groundhopping paper chasers.
On arrival I was pleased to see celebrity groundhopping couple Lee and Katie from the 100FgC and along with the other forty-odd in attendance, we saw a decent game with some terrific goals. Killy were up against, yes you guessed it, my regular Alliance guests....Shankhouse! A goalless first half looked on the cards, with a Hamilton header which rattled the crossbar on 29 minutes, the game’s best effort, but two minutes into first half stoppage time the home team broke the deadlock when Martin Roper latched onto a through ball, before producing a neat chip over the advancing ‘keeper.
Shankhouse responded positively in search of a quick equaliser after the break but fell further behind on 52 minutes, with a goal which the media nowadays would annoyingly describe as “A worldy” Lee Hamilton received the ball 40 yards from goal and looked up to see goalkeeper Joyce off his line, before firing an unstoppable shot which sailed high into the net.
The Killy number nine followed up that wonder strike with another good finish, running onto a through ball in the inside right channel and smashing his shot in off the far post on 64 minutes to make it 3-0.
Shankhouse striker Paul Dunn, who grabbed a brace in my previous Alliance game pulled a goal back, lurking at the far post to tap home a right wing cross, but the three goal advantage was restored in injury time when substitute Michael Bowman curled in a lovely effort to cap off a handsome victory for Killy.

Matchday Stats
KSFC 4(Roper 45+2 Hamilton 52,64 Bowman 90+2) SFC 1(Dunn 84)
Att.43(HC)
Admission, programme and hot drink: £1.50




372. Eslington Park
Gateshead Redheugh 1957 3v1 Birtley St Josephs
Archers of Blyth George Dobbins League Cup
Round 3
Saturday 16th November 2013
Redheugh Boys Club formed in 1957 and have always had the reputation of being one of the best junior football clubs in the region. Back in my own schoolboy playing days I remember if your opponents had a couple of Redheugh players in their side you knew you were in for a tough game, with the likes of Paul Gascoigne, Don Hutchinson and Andy Carroll prove of the quality of players they’ve had through the years..  The club currently run 17 teams from under-7s to under-16s playing in the Gateshead Appollo League and the Russell Foster League. 
The senior team were formed just a few years back taking over the reigns of Whickham Lang Jacks in the Northern Alliance. Lang Jacks finished 5th in Division Two in their only season in the league, with Redheugh finishing 7th in Division One last term.
 In 2006 the club moved from their former base on Rose Street across to the other side of the Teams to Eslington Park. The facilities football pitches are known as “The Shuttles” and I’ve played many times on these grounds, but only have one lasting memory, that was for Glynwood in an away game against Kelvin Grove, when I sadly missed a last minute penalty which would have giving my side a valuable point in the race for the Gateshead Schools Central League title.
 The new pavilion incorporating a clubhouse and state of the art six team changing facility was officially opened by Newcastle United manager Alan Pardew on the 26th January 2012. The £716,000 project was managed by the club in association with Four Housing Group. The club secured a £102,000 grant from the Durham FA and the sports pavillion forms part of a £2.7m community scheme which will develop the overall site, providing residential support and training for young homeless people. The facilities were giving an added boost yesterday(Friday) giving the keys to a fully enclosed new 3G pitch.

The ground is in the shadows of Eslington & Redheugh Court’s - two twenty-story-buildings which have survived the period of when the planners dream went wrong.
The Alliance side play on Pitch 2 of the four available grass pitches, which faces the side of the pavillion. The ground is fully fenced off but currently without dugouts, which will obviously be added if, or when, the seniors win promotion to the Alliance Premier Division.
Redheugh were up against Birtley St Josephs in the 3rd Round of the League Cup - booking their place in the next stage with a 6 minute three goal flurry in the second half.
The home side had the better of the first half and should have gone ahead after 35 minutes when Dewhurst was dragged back in the penalty area, but from the resulting spot-kick the goalkeeper got down well to parry away Alan Pegram’s effort.

They took the lead in the 62nd minute when Kevin Hay ran onto a Scott Robson through ball before taking it under control and firing home under the ‘keepers body. Pegram made up for his first half miss minutes later, running onto a pass and although the ‘keeper got a hand on it, the ball crept in at the far post and within a minute John Dewhurst was on hand to fire from 10 yards.
St Josephs made substitutions and tactical changes to try and claw their way back into the tie and managed a consolation on 75 minutes with a simple tap-in from Lee Cuthbertson, but the match was over in that six-minute burst and hopefully Redheugh can progress much further in the competition.

Matchday Stats
GR1957FC 3(Hay 62 Pegram 66 Dewhurst 67) BSJFC 1(Cuthbertson 75)
Att.32(HC)
Admission and Programme:none




377. Links Avenue
Cullercoats 3v1 Rothbury
Northumberland Minor Cup 3rd Round
Saturday 7th December 2013
Cullercoats is an urban area on the North Tyneside coast sandwiched(egg and tomato...Eddy) between Tynemouth and Whitley Bay. The area has a semi circle sandy bay, which is historically a fishing village and a popular coastal destination for day-trippers. 
The football club was founded in 1915 originally known as Culver Cotes, as the village was once a breeding place for doves, hence ‘culver’ - another name for doves and ‘cote’ a shelter for birds.
A large part of the club's history was in the South East Northumberland League which they won for the first time in 1936-37. They joined the Northern Alliance set up in 1997, winning promotion from Division Two in their second season. The club run a junior section with ages ranging from 8 years to seniors. They were renamed Percy Main Tyne but reverted back to Cullercoats F.C. for the 2006/2007 season, rejoining the Northern Alliance having left the league in 2004. Cullercoats won promotion to the First Division in 2007-08 where they've played ever since.
The Links Avenue ground is found just off Broadway, the main road which runs between Tynemouth from Whitley Bay. At one side of the pitch is the main entrance where the changing rooms, club office and a portacabin canteen are situated. The pitch has a perimeter fence with a pair of conservatory type dugouts. At the bottom end of the ground is a second park pitch with the Metro line and views of St Georges Parish church and the North Sea.

Cullercoats faced Rothbury in the third round of the Northumberland Minor Cup, a competition which brings together Northern Alliance clubs with teams from lower leagues. Rothbury play in the North Northumberland League and gave their hosts a decent game in front of half a dozen watchers which swelled up to seven when I was joined by Squad no.123 Ian Cusack for the second half. 
Cullercoats took the lead after 13 minutes when an inswinging corner kick was touched in at the near post by Richard May but they failed to build on their early lead. The visitors equalised on 37 minutes when Richard Hooks missed a good chance to score but when the ball was recycled, he made no mistake with his second effort. On the stroke of half time Cullercoats regained the lead when a long ball from Johnny Ranson picked out May to head home at the far post.

The second half was a bit of a non event football wise, the highlight was seeing the big referee accidentally elbowing the little Cullercoats midfielder Andrew McClay in the face, which he just laughed off as the player nursed his sore head. Both sets of players seemed more concerned with events at Old Trafford after learning that Newcastle had taking the lead, which they managed to maintain, alas winning for the first time in the city of Salford since February 1972. 
The cup tie was sealed with five minutes remaining when May produced a neat finish to complete his hat trick which rounded off a straightforward victory and a place in the last 16 of the Minor Cup.

Matchday Stats
CFC 3(May 13,45,85) RFC 1(Hooks 37)
Att.7(HC)
Admission & programme:none