Pic of the Week Cup 2016 - Round 1

100FgC AF14 Chris Bedford - Sporting Bengal United
100FgC Squad#83 Jamie McQueen - Whitehill Welfare
100FgC Squad#143 Joanne Sexton - Toulouse
100FgC Squad#155 James Little - Allianz Arena, Sydney
Stephen Carpenter - Kaliphea

Tom Jellis - Pegasus, Hong Kong

Please vote by leaving a comment or on our Facebook page


✔505 - Sandy Flatts

Whinney Banks YCC 4v2 Stockton West End
Mitre Prostar MacMillan Bowl Quarter-Final
Saturday 27th February 2016




Whinney Banks Youth & Community Centre are the current Teesside League 1st Division champions, having won their second consecutive league title last season. The club formed in 1964, previously winning the league title twice in 1969-70 and 1971-72, followed by lifting the Macmillan Bowl in 1973. During the 1990's the club focused on its youth set up, with a new senior side developed from its junior ranks competing in the Teesside League 2nd Division in 2002. Promotion to the 1st Division was achieved in 2005, as well as the first of two North Riding Challenge Cup honours. After relegation Whinney Banks made a quick return as they won the 2nd Division in 2010-11.
The successful junior section continues with between 8 and 11 teams competing over the various age groups and they've also fielded a senior reserve side.

Sandy Flatts
Outwood Academy #1
Hall Drive
Middlesbrough
TS5 7JX
46 miles door-to door (via A19)

The club use a roped off pitch at the far side of the Outwood Academy. The large recreation area has several full sized pitches.
English Non-League grounds visited 248 Current Teesside League grounds 3/16


Whinney Banks YCC v Stockton West End
Teesside League 6th v 2nd
MacMillan Bowl Quarter Final
1.30ko
Att.23hc
Weather:chilly

0-1 Ben Turner (10’)
Showed good strength to hold off the defender before turning and firing in from eight yards
1-1 Lee Mahon (31’)
Direct free-kick from the left side of the box crept in at the ‘keepers right hand post.
1-2 Jake Large (40’)
Long throw in was nodding behind to the back post where Large was on hand to head in.
2-2 Jack Campbell (78’)
Long ball picked out Campbell in the box, who finished well.
3-2 Jack Campbell (82’)
Long deep cross from Mahon escaped everyone, but fell nicely to Campbell at the back stick.
4-2 Jack Campbell (90’)
Cross fell nicely to the number 8 who fired in his hat-trick on the half volley.

Entertainment 8/10
Top Bloke - Jack Campbell(Whinney Banks)

✔504 - The Lane

Ollerton Town 12v0 Welbeck Welfare
Central Midlands League North Division
Tuesday 23rd February 2016


Ollerton is a small town found on the edge of Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire. The area is known as the Dukeries in the Newark and Sherwood District. 
The former home of Ollerton Colliery (1926-1994) One of the most left wing pits in Notts and the scene of heavy picketing during the 1984 strike.
Ollerton Watermill was built in the old village on the River Maun in 1713, producing flour until 1984 and later restored in 1993.




Ollerton & Bevercotes FC formed in 1988.
Notts Alliance Division Two champions 1992-93
Changed name to Ollerton Town in 1994
Notts Alliance Division One winners 1995-96, Senior League runners-up 1999-2000.
Joined Central Midlands League Premier League in 2000, won the title in 2007-08, winning promotion to Supreme League.
Placed in CML North Division in 2011 after re-organisation of the league. 
Notts Senior Cup runners-up 2008 (lost final 2-0 v Eastwood Town)
The club are nicknamed “The Squirrels” and wear red shirts with black shorts.
“The Lane”
Walesby Lane
New Ollerton
Newark
Nottinghamshire
NG22 9UT

English Non-League grounds visited 247
Current CML grounds 2/15

The ground is found at the bottom of a housing estate, fully floodlit with plenty of space for development. There is two covered standing enclosures, one behind the goal with some extra cover courtesy of two shopping trolley parking bays. The second stand is central at the near side, with the dugouts opposite.
Ollerton Town (5th) v Welbeck (15th)
Central Midlands League North Division Matchday 18/20
Kick off 7.45pm
Weather:Dry, settled.
Att.79hc
The reverse fixture just took place last Saturday (20th Feb) and Ollerton came away with a handsome 12-0 away win.

1-0 10 Lewis Bingham (15’)
Cross from the left knocked in from six yards out.
2-0 9 Kyle Ludlow (26’)
Left wing corner kick headed home from ten yards.
3-0 11 Jamie Charlton (37’)
Ball from the left found Charlton unmarked in the inside right position, shot into far corner.

2nd half
4-0 9 Kyle Ludlow (47’)
Left wing cross fired in from close range.
5-0 9 Kyle Ludlow (59’)
Ball played in from centre midfield, stayed onside before firing in from the edge of the box.
6-0 7 Kyle Clarkson (62’) penalty
Clarkson fouled just inside the box and he despatched penalty, sending the ‘keeper the wrong way.
7-0 9 Kyle Ludlow  (69’)
Diving header from close range from a left wing ball.
8-0 9 Kyle Ludlow (71’)
Free kick from the right headed home 
9-0 9 Kyle Ludlow (77’)
Shot from Bingham was well saved by the ‘keeper but Ludlow was on hand to net the rebound.
10-0 4 Sam Stretton (80’)
Shot from the right on the edge of the box deflected over the ‘keeper.
11-0 4 Sam Stretton (86’)
Found unmarked inside the box with time to finish with a shot inside the ‘keepers right hand post.
12-0 8 Sam Dockwray (88’)
Good build up play wrapped up by Dockwray for an easy finish.

Ollerton also hit the post 3 times, hit the crossbar and credit the Welbeck goalie for making some fine saves.

Entertainment 10/10
Top Bloke - Kyle Ludlow
Six goals is the most I've seen from one player in a game. After the match I told him he had beating Alan Shearer’s 5 goal record. (which he seemed quite pleased about)

Spondoolicks
Admission £3
Programme £1
Pin badge £3
Mug of tea 60p
The Gadabout
134 miles door-to-door via A1,A614

There was plenty of debate on the whereabouts of last night's ground bagging destination. I got up in the morning expecting to go to Dronfield, but by the time I got down to Houghton-le-Spring, that had changed to Irlam in the NWCL. After getting picked up at 3pm by Katie & Lee we discussed it further and decided to go for the pending goal fest at Ollerton Town instead. It turned out to be an ace decision and topped off a great night which was preceded by a ‘Spoons tea at the Red Lion in Doncaster. 
Also at the game was Squad#4 Jack Warner and also Filly member A30 Chris Berezai, who took a picture of the four of us sporting our splendid 100FgC hats. I was back home at twenty minutes past midnight, tired, but happy to have witnessed two of my personal match stats smashed!


Matchday Web Album (24 pictures from The Lane)

My Matchday - 503 Queen's Terrace

Ossett Albion 1v0 Scarborough Athletic 
EvoStick League Division 1 North
Saturday 20th February 2016
Ossett is a market town within the metropolitan district of the City of Wakefield in the West Riding of Yorkshire. Ossett appears in the 1086 Domesday Book as "Osleset”  its name deriving from the Anglo Saxon as either "the fold of a man named Osla" or "a fold frequented by blackbirds” Coal-mining was the major source of employment, with a large number of pits around the town during the 19th and 20th centuries, and was once a thriving industrial centre with a number of small mills with a good reputation of producing high-quality products.
Novelist Stan Barstow, the author of A Kind Of Loving lived most of his live in the town, as well as crime writer and The Damned United author David Peace who set the first six of his books in the West Riding. Ossett is also the birthplace of annoying 80s pop combo Black Lace, plus veteran Coronation Street actress Helen Worth who plays Gail McIntyre in the soap(Its a Camel !...Eddy)
Ossett Albion formed as a junior club in 1944, eventually playing at a senior level and winning honours in the West Riding County Amateur and West Yorkshire leagues. In 1957 they joined the Yorkshire League Division Two, winning promotion in their second season, before finishing runner up to League champions Farsley Celtic in 1960. The club played within the two divisions of the Yorkshire League until it merged with the Midland League in 1982, winning the First Division title once in 1974-75.
Albion were placed in Northern Counties East League Division 1, winning the League Cup in 1984 before going on to win promotion to the Premier Division in 1987.The club were League champions in 1999, but were denied promotion to the Northern Premier League Division One, due to the size of one of their changing rooms, however they gained admission two years later after finishing runners-up to Brigg Town. The club were relegated but won the NCEL title in 2003-04 and have played in the Northern Premier League Division One ever since. Albion have also gained honours in the West Riding County Cup, winning the trophy three times during the sixties and more recently in 1999, as well as the West Yorkshire League Cup in 1976 and 1977.

Dimple Wells is The Unicorns fourth home, originally played at the Church Street Recreation Ground, followed by both Beck Lane and Kingsway grounds.The club made an agreement with the local cricket club  to use a stretch of land which was previously an old tip on Queens Terrace. Albion ground shared with Ossett Town at Fern House for five years until gaining possession of the ground in 1955, where a grandstand was built on one side, changing rooms next to the pavillion and terracing alongside the cricket field. The ground didn’t change much until the club became founder members of the Northern Counties League, which saw a revamp throughout the 1980s .Improvements included a perimeter wall, dug-outs, turnstiles and floodlights erected in 1986, used for the first time against Leeds United which produced the ground’s record attendance of 1,200. The following year new changing rooms were built with closer access to the pitch and the ground was completed with hard standing on all sides and cover behind both goals.
During the 1990s the grandstand was refurbished which sits at the far side of the slope, decked out with three rows of flip seats and painted in the club colours. The ground is now known as the Our Physio Stadium and has a capacity of 3,000.

Ossett Albion(5th) v Scarborough Athletic(18th)
EvoStick League Division 1 North Matchday 30/29
Weather:spitting
Att.257

A bad tempered affair played within a hostile atmosphere from the visiting supporters, was settled on 66 minutes, when a corner from the right was met by a powerful header from skipper Danny South. The Boro’s task wasn’t helped when the referee(who seemed to wind up the Scarborough supporters throughout) harshly sent off ‘keeper Nick Draper on 79 minutes when he collided with Rob Bordman on the edge of the box.
There was an unsavoury incident on the half time whistle when someone within the visitors section racially abused Adam Jones. There was an announcement at half time that the match could be abandoned if there was a repeat of this behaviour, but thankfully there was no intolerable conduct during the second half.

Spondoolicks
Admission £7
Programme £2(Sold out)
Team Sheet 25p
Pin badge £3
Tea £1
The Gadabout.
103 miles to ground door-to-door
Me and the breadknife left our house in the trusted hands of our daughter Laura for her 20th birthday party to head off for a night out and stopover in Wakefield. On route we called into Dewsbury, for lunch and another ‘Spoons tick before the short drive onto Ossett. After parking the car at the ground we called into the Ossett Tap for a drink, where Debra stayed there for the rest of the afternoon while I was at the game. We arrived at out hotel at 5.20 and enjoyed a good night out in Wakey. My favourite pub of the half a dozen I supped in was The Hop, where they had a good selection of ales, a good choice of music and a live band. So all in all a cracking Saturday in West Yorkshire.


Matchday Web Album (28 pictures from Queen's Terrace)

✔502 - Academy of Light

Sunderland U-18 1v0 Newcastle United u-18
Barclays U-18 Premier League (North Group)
Tuesday 16th February 2016
The Academy of Light is the UEFA five star certified training facilities and youth academy for Sunderland A.F.C. The ground was built at a cost of £10m and officially opened in March 2003.  The Academy of Light is located in 220 acres of land, but not in Sunderland, found just over the other side of the boundary border in Cleadon, South Tyneside.  

The main pitch used by the Academy side is one of four full size pitches, railed off with both dugouts on one side. The Academy building has the changing and medical rooms, administration and education facilities, plus a family lounge, although be prepared to wear plastic bags over your shoes, as they don't appreciate a clarty carpet. 
Sunderland U-18(5th) v Newcastle United U-18(9th)
Barclays U-18 Premier League (North Group) Matchday 20/22
1pm kick off
Att.195hc
Weather:cold & windy

Having just shaded the first half, Sunderland stepped up the pace after the interval. Toon ‘keeper Ben Smith denied the mackems with a string off impressive saved, but was finally beaten on 79 minutes, when a right wing corner was met with a firm header from Andrew Nelson from 12 yards.

Top Lad - Ben Smith(Newcastle United)
Entertainment 7/10