Showing posts with label Bradford City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bradford City. Show all posts

West Riding Double

Saturday 23rd November 2019

709. Rawdon Meadows
Bradford City U-18 0-3 Doncaster Rovers U-18
Youth Alliance - North-East Division
 Apperley Bridge is a village in the north-east of Bradford on the boundary of the City of Leeds. The village straddles the Leeds and Liverpool Canal and the River Aire. It takes its name from the old bridge over the river on Apperley Lane. and the section known as Rawdon Meadows provides the training ground and facilities for Bradford City FC.


Rawdon Meadows Playing Fields 
Harrogate Road, 
Apperley Bridge, 
Bradford. 
BD10 0NR

The ground is directly opposite Woodhouse Grove School, sharing the main entrance off Harrogate Road. The main pitch is at the entrance with dugouts and spectator standing on the thin road which leads to the changing rooms and offices. The pavilion was officially opened in April 2014 by former Leeds United goalkeeper Nigel Martyn. 

Bradford City U-18(5th) 0
Doncaster Rovers U-18(1st) 3(Smith 5 Watson 31 Skar-Conradi 63)
Youth Alliance North-East Division matchday 9v11
11am ko
Att.60hc

Doncaster Rovers strengthened their position at the top of the table with a comfortable win over a young Bantams team which included seven Under-16s in the side. 
The leaders took a fifth minute lead with a fine left foot finish from Martijn Smith, followed by an overhead flick by Jack Watson with half an hour gone. Donny wrapped up the win when substitute Marius Skar-Conradi scored just seconds after coming off the bench.
 

710. The Old Showground
Otley Town 1-3 Salts
West Yorkshire Amateur FL - Division 1

 Otley is a market town and civil parish at a bridging point on the River Wharfe in the City of Leeds metropolitan borough.( population over 13,000) The name is derived from Otto, Otho, Othe, or Otta, a Saxon personal name and leah, a woodland clearing in Old English. It was recorded as Ottanlege in 972 and Otelai or Othelia in the Domesday Book
It is the birthplace of cabinetmaker Thomas Chippendale, who was born in a cottage at the junction of Boroughgate and Wesley Street. His statue stands next to the old Grammar School that he once attended in Manor Square.
Otley regularly appears on TV as "Hotton" in the ITV soap Emmerdale. It has also appeared in Heartbeat where Otley Courthouse is the old Police Station.  DCI Banks and the drama series The Chase have also been regularly filmed in the town.

Otley Town joined the West Yorkshire League from West Riding County Amateur League in 2006. They won the Division 1 title in 2007-08 and their highest finish in the Premier Division came in 2010-11 when they finished fourth. The club also runs a Reserve side,  3rd team and a Vets side, as well as boys and girls teams at different age groups.


The Old Showground
Pool Road
Otley
West Yorkshire
LS21 1DY

Current WYAFL grounds visited - 8
The ground is on the Pool Road where there are three pitches. The main ground is fully railled with a pair of brick dugouts on one side. There is a second pitch which runs parallel where the 3rds were playing at the same time as the first team. 
The changing rooms are next to to the clubhouse in the car park, which is full of character with an array of football memorabilia. 
Otley Town(7th) 1(Unwin 77pen)
Salts(10th) 3(Cunnington,Erangey,Morgan #10 45pen #4 49 #11 59)
West Yorkshire Amateur League - Division 1 matchday 11
2pm ko
Att.43hc
Goalscorers to be confirmed

The pitch was in great condition considering the amount of rainfall. After a tight first half Salts took the lead on the stroke of halftime with #10 firing home the penalty after a foul by the home goalkeeper. The visitors extended their lead early in the second half, mainly thanks to a couple of Otley players being sin binned. #4 scored from close range, followed by #11 latching on to a long ball to fire home at the second attempt after the ‘keeper saved his initial shot. 
Otley pulled a goal back on 77 minutes when Jonny Unwin converted the penalty kick, after another goalkeeper foul in the box. Town finished the match strongly but were unable to grab the second goal which would have set up a grandstand finish. 
#Heedhopper
180 mile round trip drive door-to-door

For my monthly work free Saturday I couldn’t travel too far as I had a date night planned which included a Fat White Family gig at the Boiler Shop in Newcastle. I decided a West Yorkshire double would be the best option, under 2 hours driving time each way and two early kick offs. I picked Katie & Lee up at 8.50am and as we travelled on the A1 through the heavy rainfall, we wondered if we were going to see one match never mind two. We arrived at Rawdon Meadows just after 10.30, with the welcoming sight of both teams going through their pre-match warm up routines. 
We had Headingley lined up as our second game of the day, until we found out at around noon that the match was a wash out. After a quick fixture check, a phone call and a text message, we found out that the Otley Town match was on, one of just a few fixtures that survived in the area.  
The two grounds are just 8 miles apart, so we had time to call into Yeadon for lunch at The Clothier’s Arms, which was a new JDW tick for me, but a revisit for my friends.
After the match our departure from Otley was unfortunately delayed as my car Simon was stuck in the clarty field which acts as an overflow car park. Following a few goes in trying to budge the car forward we had no choice but to push Simon towards the pathway, which we managed to do, so after a smooth journey back north I was back at 100FgC HQ at 5.45pm. (then out on the lash at half-six!)

My Matchday - 265 Sixfields Stadium

Northampton Town 2v0 Bradford City
League Two
Saturday 25th September 2010

I made use of a weekend break, visiting relations in Lincolnshire to travel down to the large market town of Northampton in the East Midlands.
Northamptonshire’s county town lies on the River Nene and is well known as a major centre of shoemaking and leather industries. Many of the town’s old shoe factories remain, most of which have been converted into office space or accommodation, with some still surrounded by terraced houses which were built for the factory workers.

Northampton Town were founded in 1897. The county’s schools were keen on schoolboy football so meetings between schoolteachers and local solicitor A.J. Darnell took place with plans to form a town team instead of playing inter-school friendlies.
The club officially formed on 6th March 1897, at the Princess Royal Inn on Wellingborough Road, with the club agreeing to ground share with Northamptonshire County Cricket Club.
Before a ball was kicked the town’s rugby club objected to the club’s name of Northampton FC, so the Town suffix was added to their name and they began playing competitive football in the Northants League, becoming league champions in their second season.
The Cobblers played home matches at the County Ground for the next 97 years, joining the Midlands League in their third season and the Southern League in 1901-02 season, before becoming a Football League club after World War II.
The Cobblers football statto claim to fame is their record for the shortest time taken to be promoted from the bottom tier to the top tier and back down again in the space of nine years.
They played their only season in the top division in 1965-66, having been promoted from the Fourth Divison in the space of five seasons but were then relegated back to the Fourth Division by 1969–70.

Sixfields Stadium was built and designed by Dutch contractors Bellast Nedham, with the aid of Tyneside based architects Taylor, Tulip and Hunter (I’m their postman..Morning!) and structural engineers Hutter Jennings and Titchmarsh.
After the 65 acre site was cleared, building work on the council owned facility started in January 1994. The 7,653 capacity all seated stadium on the outskirts of town was built at a cost of £5.25 million, made up from a £4.25m contribution from the council and a further £1m from the Football Trust.
The stadium had been scheduled to open for the start of the 1994-95 season, but due to delays the first game took place on 15th October. Barnet provided the opposition for a Division Three clash with the honour of the first goal going to Martin Aldridge in a 1-1 draw in front a near full house of 7,461.


The stadium is made up of four separate stands. Behind each goal are The David Bowen Stand which is named after the ex-Northampton Town player and manager, and opposite is the South Stand for away supporters which both have a capacity of approximately 900 seats.
The Alwyn Hargrave East Stand is of a similar height, but with a large gangway at the rear for disabled supporters. The stand runs pitch length and is also used as the Family Enclosure with a capacity of 1,800.
The West Stand is twice the size of the other stands with a capacity of 4,000. The stand also has the club offices and main reception, ticket office, changing rooms and supporters bar, as well as a club shop on the south west corner.
The stadium is decked out in claret seats with NTFC picked out in white lettering on the East Stand, there’s also a small scoreboard on the back of the building in the south-west corner.
The best feature of the ground is the view from the large hill which overlooks the stadium, which meant I could get some good pictures of the ground before I had even set foot in the place. During the first half there were a couple of passers by who stopped and watched the game for nowt through the opening in the north-west corner, but they weren’t lucky enough to see any goal action.
The atmosphere around Sixfields Stadium was buzzing after the midweek victory at Anfield in the League Cup. Their reward for knocking out Liverpool was a 4th round draw away to Ipswich Town, which was met with a shade of disappointment although I heard the phrase “We’ll DO them as well” mentioned by a few of the Town fans.
Because of this fantastic result, coupled with Newcastle’s equally astonishing win at Chelsea, meant I headed off from Lincolnshire to Northampton, not sure whether or not my final destination was Sixfields, just in case both clubs met in the next round.
The odds of Northampton drawing Newcastle were pretty remote, but I still got my mate Zippy to text me the outcome of the draw, as I’d rather tick off Northampton while watching United play there, than go as a neutral. I also had a Plan B lined up (Stewarts & Lloyds Corby in the FA Cup) just in case, but obviously the draw panned out as we all expected, the reward for beating Chelsea is - Arsenal. (and people wonder why NUFC haven’t won anything for a long time…Eddy)
Northampton showed no cup hangover as they overcame a stubborn Bradford defence with two goals in the second half.
The opening period was a scrappy affair, the hosts best efforts coming directly from free-kicks from Kevin Thornton, while City came closest to scoring when a Moult effort produced a fine save from Dunn.
The Cobblers improved as the game progressed and were patient enough to break down Bradford’s resistance with a goal just after the hour. A Tozer free kick from the half way line was nodding over by Holt into the path of McKay, who turned the ball in from ten yards.
The win was guaranteed with just under ten minutes remaining, a deep cross was headed back into the centre by McKay for Newcastle loanee Ben Tozer to open his account on his Northampton league debut.
This win rounded off a fantastic week in the history of Northampton Town. I had this fixture picked out early in the season so it’s pleasing that my visit coincided with a great atmosphere around the club after such a fine achievement. The Cobblers could well reach the League Cup quarter-finals if they can DO! Ipswich that is, which will be better than my own (looks likely..Eddy) as well as a few other big Premier League clubs have managed to do this season.




Matchday stats
NTFC 2(McKay 61 Tozer 81) BCFC 0
Att.4,646
Admission £18
Programme £3






Ground n0.265 Sixfields - Matchday Web album (21 pictures)