Pic of the Week Cup - Round 5

100FgC FB Stephen Carpenter - Crystal Palace

100FgC AF9 John McClure - Blaenau Amateur

100FgC Squad#155 James Little - Zell Am See

100FgC FB Tommy McMillan - Fethiyespor

100FgC Squad#138 Lee Stewart - Horden Colliery Welfare
Vote by leaving a comment below or on our Facebook group page at https://www.facebook.com/groups/100FgC/

My Matchday - 417 Park View Road

Welling United 1v1 Gateshead
Vanarama Conference
Saturday 20th September 2014
Whereabouts and Whatsabouts
Welling is a district south-east of the capital which forms part of the London Borough of Bexley, originating as a village on the main road between London and Kent. 
It was traditionally a staging post for coaches, with three inns along the main road, so its name is said to come from the era of horse-drawn vehicles. Expressions such as "well in" to Kent, or "well end" from the journey up and down Shooters Hill, which was steep road on route and notorious stomping ground for highwaymen. However, local historians have recently concluded that the true origin is most likely from 'Welwyn' meaning 'place of the spring’ due to the existence of an underground spring located at Welling corner.
Plantpot History
Welling United Football Club was founded in 1963, beginning as a youth team before gradually developing a senior side in the London Spartan League. They joined the Athenian League in 1978 and progressed to the Southern League three years later. In 1985–86 they were champions of the Southern League Premier Division, taking the title with 23 points to spare to win promotion to the Conference. 
The club spent 14 seasons in the division and during this era enjoyed FA Cup success reaching the first round proper six years on the bounce, including defeating Gillingham 1-0 in a replay front of a record attendance of 4,100. They also made a third round appearance in 1989, but lost to a narrow one goal defeat away to Blackburn Rovers.
The Wings were relegated from the Conference in 1999–2000 season and returned to the Southern League, before the reconstruction of the pyramid placed them in Conference South in 2004. 
Welling was served with a winding-up petition by HMRC in August 2010, given 14 weeks to pay off the outstanding debt. The club survived with almost the entirely £60,000 raised by the supporters to clear all monies owed, but were handed a transfer embargo and a 5 points deduction by the Football Conference. After a third place finish in 2011-12 they lost out in the play-offs to Dartford but were champions the following season, so returned to top non-league status after an absence of 13 years.
Ground no.416 Park View Road
Current Conference grounds 23/24
English Non-League grounds 204.

Welling United played on park pitches before moving to Butterfly Lane in Eltham. They were one of ten clubs interested in taking over the vacant former home of the defunct Bexley United at the Park View Road ground. In January 1977 they were granted a 15 year lease, with work commencing on the derelict ground in April and ready in time for the first game on the 26th August. Like the football club, the ground progressed as the team moved through the leagues up to the Conference. 
The ground is quite unique as it appears as two grounds in one, due to the share arrangement with Erith and Belvedere FC. The original Main Stand opened in 1950, runs two-thirds pitch length after it was extended in the 1960s. The stand is small but quite steep, with a peaked roof, supporting pillars and filled with 570 red and burgundy flip seats. There and red wooden dugouts at the front and behind the stand is the club reception, Wings Sports Bar, clubhouse and refreshment bar. There is terracing behind each goal with red crash barriers at the High Street end, but nothing to lean on at the Danson Park End, with both terracing coming around to meet the stands. 
The east side looks new in comparison with the rest of the ground as this is the Erith and Belvedere end as they’ve ground shared since 1999.This side is also known as the Cricket End and has a neat 600 capacity stand which was opened in 2002. The stand is decked out in blue and red flip seats next to the large clubhouse known as Deres Bar, which dominates this side of the ground.
The floodlights were replaced in 2007 after damage caused by severe storms and gale force winds in December 2006, with the lights on the Welling side of the ground replaced with corner pylons.
The Match
Welling and Gateshead settled for a point apiece in a proverbial game of two halves. The Wings entered the field to the band which(according to Alan Partridge) The Beatles could have become, as Paul Macca & Wings 'Live and Let Die' blasted from the PA. The hosts started the match faster than the 'Speed of Sound' racing into a fifth minute lead when Harry Beautyman picked up the ball on the edge of the box and fired in a low right foot shot which flew into the bottom left hand corner. Welling were the better side throughout the opening period and With a Little Luck could have increased their advantage as the Heed looked lacklustre and short of ideas.

The start of the second half reflected the first but it was the away team that came out of the dressing room like a Band on the Run to also score five minutes from the kick off. Recent signing Carl Finnigan headed in a peach of a cross from JJ O'Donnell to make a dream start to his Gateshead career having been introduced as a second half substitute. It seemed just a matter of time before the Tynesiders grabbed a winner but the hosts didn’t Let Em In and on Another Day would have took maximum points.
*Apologies for this match report but this week I got a Beatles themed tattoo and McCartney seems to have got under my skin.


Matchday Stats
WUFC 1(Beautyman 5) GFC 1(Finnigan 50)
Att.536
Top Bloke - 

Programme £3 (pic)
(52 pages with 24 advertisements)
Best feature - 'Ale & Footy' by Mark Doig

Spondoolicks
Admission: press pass(otherwise £15)
Pin badge £3
Sausage sandwich £2.50
Coffee £1

Foetoes (32 pictures including match ticket from Park View Road)

My Matchday
I arrived at Kings Cross at quarter to eleven, so sufficient time for a couple of previous uncharted Wetherspoons pubs before the onward journey to today's destination. I took the Northern Line down to Elephant & Castle before heading back up to London Bridge station to visit the very nice Pommelers Rest, found just along from Tower Bridge. The train duration to Welling takes around 25 minutes, so I was there in good time for a browse in the local record shop and of course a couple of pints in the local JDW. I was surprised how big Welling is, as the main road which stretches down to the High Street and onto Park View Road had plenty of shops and places to eat and drink. As expected the Heed Army who left on the earlier 0630 train drank in the majority of the pubs on the main drag, so when I met everyone it was apparent that I was the soberest Tynesider in town. The return journey back to Kings Cross and onwards to Newcastle went without a hitch, so another successful long Heed Army trip, which leaves me just one step away from maybe finally completing the top 5 divisions for the first time.



Bevvy Almanac
Rockingham Arms(JDW) (Newington Causeway,Elephant & Castle) 
Woods ‘Wonderful‘ (4.8%)***+
The Pommelers Rest(JDW) (Tower Bridge Road) Adnams ‘Phat Sprat’ (3.8%)***
Newcross Turnpike (Bellegrove Road,Welling)
ELB Pale Ale (4%)***
Westerham  ‘Helles Belles’ (4%)****
Wings Sports Bar (WUFC) 
Portebello ‘Pale Ale’ (4%)****
Euston Flyer (Euston Road) 
Fullers ‘Wild River’ (4.5%)****

My Matchday - 416 Seel Park

Mossley 3v0 Lancaster City
Evostick League - Division One North
Saturday 6th September 2014

To mark this years ‘Non-League Day’ I picked out a northern ground off my “t’do list’ that I’ve been longing to visit for a while and at the top of the pile is Seel Park, the home of Mossley AFC. 

Whereabouts and Whatsabouts
Mossley is a small town and civil parish in the upper Tame Valley in the foothills of the Pennines, found 3 miles north-east of Ashton-under-Lyne and just under 9 miles east of Manchester.
Mossley was divided between three counties, before becoming a borough in 1885. Brookbottom (Top Mossley) and Bottoms (Bottom Mossley) were in Lancashire and historically part of the old parish of Ashton. Milton, Quickedge and Roughtown were part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, while Micklehurst and the east of the River Tame was in Cheshire. The borough was part of Lancashire before becoming the Metropolitan Borough of Tameside in 1974.
The town name originates from the words “moss” meaning a boggy area and “lea” meaning a clearing in a wood. The area was once densely forested with wild animals such as boars roaming, until the trees were mostly felled and the hillsides used to graze sheep.
Mossley has been populated since the stone-age.An ancient road runs high along the eastern side of the valley above Micklehurst, and this was improved by the Romans, who put their stamp on the area by improving the road to travel between forts at Melandra and Castleshaw. They also added more roman roads linking the town to Stalybridge and nearby villages. 

Plantpot History
Park Villa formed in 1903, after playing just one season in local competitions then changed their name to Mossley Juniors. They became Mossley AFC in 1909, playing in the Ashton & District League, which they won in 1914–15 to progress to the South East Lancashire League. During this era they also played in the Manchester Amateur League and the Lancashire Combination, before becoming founder members of the Cheshire County League in 1919.
Mossley never won the Cheshire League, their best season was in 1969–70 when they finished runners-up and also reached the 1st Round Proper of the FA Cup, narrowly losing in a replay to Stockport County. They also made it to the quarter finals of the inaugural FA Trophy going out to Southern League giants Barnet. 
The Lilywhites were elected to the Northern Premier League in 1972, becoming a formidable force in the late 1970s and early eighties, winning successive League titles and finishing runners-up three seasons running. They also reached the FA Trophy final in 1980, but unluckily lost the final 2-1 to Dagenham in front of a 26,000 crowd at Wembley.
The club’s run of 23 years in the Northern Premier League came to an end in 1995 when they were relegated to the North West Counties League. The Lillywhites played eight seasons in the division, finishing runners-up to Clitheroe in the 2003-04 season to return to NPL in the Unibond Division One. Mossley were Champions in 2005-06  finishing two points above Fleetwood Town but were relegated the following year and have played in Division One North since. 
Ground no.416 Seel Park 
English Non League no.203 
Current Evostick NPL Pyramid 23/68

Seel Park is the fourth highest altitude stadium in English football. The ground is approximately 850 feet above sea level, with only Buxton, Tow Law Town and Bacup Borough standing higher.
Mossley moved from a farmers field at Luzley to a disuse cricket ground in 1912, which was christened Seel Fold. The ground’s first structures of a 430 capacity timber grandstand and dressing rooms which were built in 1920. By the following decade the ground had been renamed Seel Park, then in 1948 the football club bought the ground outright from Stamford Estates for a total sum of £1,200. The most popular viewing point spectator of the ground was the grass bank behind what is now the School End, which was levelled and replaced with hard standing in the 1990s. 
The ground was sold to investors in 1988 to clear club debts and two years later it was purchased by Tameside MBC, who continue to lease it back to the football club. In late December 2009 two floodlight pylons collapsed and the other six were later condemned, so the club had to play home midweek fixtures at Ashton United's Hurst Cross ground. New floodlights were erected in time for the 2010–11 season. 
The main stand was erected in 1968, having a black frame and 220 matching flip seats, built up with the access stairs at the front. There is a section of terracing with crash barriers at the ground entrance side which stretches across to the corner. At the top of the terrace are the club offices, the Bob Murphy hospitality suite, refreshment bar and a very nice clubhouse bar. Opposite there’s terracing running full length with a covered section in the centre.   
The Park End is a classic looking covered terrace which can shelter 700 spectators and the opposite goal is open hard standing which runs around to meet the main stand.
The overall capacity is 4,000 people with total standing cover for 1,500. The record attendance is 7,000 for a derby match with Stalybridge Celtic in 1950.
The Match
After a scrappy opening period it was the Lilywhites who bossed the second half to run out comfortable winners. They took the lead five minutes after the restart when Mitchell Bryant received a through ball on the left flank before cutting inside and producing a neat finish into the far corner. Two goals from Thomas Pratt in a five minute spell clinched the three points. The top bloke of the match did well to anticipate the defender’s back pass to quickly nip in and side foot home, before winning a penalty and stepping up to make no mistake from 12 yards. Mossley created further chances and but for some poor finishing they could have won this game more handsomely.

Matchday Stats
MAFC 3(Bryant 50 Pratt 71,76pen) LCFC 0
Att.201
Top Bloke - Thomas Pratt(Mossley)

Spondoolicks
Admission £6 
Golden Goal ticket £1 
Steak and kidney pie £1.70 
Coffee £1 
Programme £2 (36 pages 20 adverts)

Foetoes(32 pictures from Seel Park)

My Matchday
I arrived in Manchester at 9.40am with a busy schedule planned. My regular dozen readers will know the usual gubbins I get up to, so apart from the obvious I also visited the National Football Museum. I saw the exhibition when it resided at Preston North End’s Deepdale, but this was my first attendance at its new home. If you still haven’t been there before I can highly recommended it, not just so you can admire the splendour of the relocated Michael Jackson statue, but also the fabulous football memorabilia on show, plus it’ll keep you out of the pub for an hour.
Overall the train journey to Mossley via Stalybridge takes 25 minutes, so before swapping trains I spent over an hour there so I could tick off another ‘Spoons and visit the highly recommended Station Buffet Bar on the platform. I caught the 1412 for the short trip to Mossley, having another refreshment stop before the long climb up the hill to the ground. 
A thoroughly enjoyable day, topped off with my visit to Seel Park, the classic non-league ground set within its picturesque backdrop was the perfect venue for this years Non-League Day.

Bevvy Almanac
Manchester
The Seven Stars(JDW) (Dantzic St) -
Weetwood ‘Oast-house Gold’ (5%)***+
Lower Turks Head(Shudehill) -
Moorehouse ‘First Cut’ (4.8%)***+
Stalybridge
The Society Rooms(JDW) (Grosvenor Sq) -
Brightside ‘Manchester Skyline’ (4.6%)****+
Stalybridge Station Buffet Bar -
All Gates ‘All Black’ (3.6%)***+
Magic Rock ‘Rapture’ (4.6%)****
Mossley
The Commercial(Manchester Road) -
Millstone ‘Tiger Rut’(4%)****+
Britannia Inn(Manchester Road) -
Wells ‘Bombardier Burning Gold’ (4.1%)***+