✔798 Sir Tom Finney Stadium at Irongate

Bamber Bridge 2-4 Matlock Town
Northern Premier League Premier Division
Saturday 25th September 2021

Bamber Bridge is an urban village in Lancashire, 3 miles south-east of Preston in the borough of South Ribble. The name derives from the Old English "bēam" and "brycg", which presumably means "tree-trunk bridge" (population:approx’ 14,000) 

Football in the village was represented in the late 19th century, with a club established in 1952, joining the Preston & District League. In 1974 they merged with Walton-le-Dale, continuing in the same league.

Preston and District League 1974-1990: Premier Division champions 1980–81, 1985–86, 1986–87, 1989–90 

Guildhall Cup winners 1979, 1981, 1985, 1990

North West Counties League 1990-1995: Division Two champions 1991–92

Northern Premier League Pyramid 1995-present  Premier Division champions 1995–96

Challenge Cup winners 1994–94 President's Cup winners 2004–05


Sir Tom Finney Stadium at Irongate

Irongate

Bamber Bridge

Preston

PR5 6UU

Current Northern Premier League grounds visited: Premier (17/22) Pyramid (52/81)

Opened August 1987

Capacity 3,000 (554 seats)

Record attendance 2,300 friendly v Czech Republic 1996 Lost 1-9

(The Czechs used Irongate as their training ground during Euro 96)

Brig played at the King George's Playing Field, before obtaining a plot of derelict land in 1983 to build their own ground. The name Irongate is taken from the local area and it was officially renamed the Sir Tom Finney Stadium after the legend’s death in 2014. The ground has a smart main stand decked out in black seats, with full cover at the far goal which extends in the corner towards the stand. The ground entrance is within a standing enclosure, left of the goal with the clubhouse, refreshment bar and club shop alongside. The dugouts are opposite the main stand, which is open standing with large netting to stop the ball going into the neighbours gardens.

Bamber Bridge(5th) 2(Barge 25pen Sinclair-Smith 73)

Matlock Town(2nd) 4(Cook 11,62 Hughes 26 Byrne 90pen)

NPL - Premier Division matchday 10

3pm ko

Att.347

Admission £10

Pin badge £2.50

Coffee £1 chips £2

Programme available 


Matlock maintained their position in the top 2 with a good away performance at Irongate. The Gladiators took an eleventh minute lead when a long clearance from the 'keeper found Jamie Cook who fired in with the outside of his boot. Brig equalised with a Ewan Barge penalty, but the visitors instantly replied when Liam Hughes fired in from close range. 

Matlock extended their advantage just after the hour mark, when a lovely through ball from Wiles found Cook who went around the keeper to slot home his second. In the 73rd minute a free kick just outside the box was squared to Sinclair-Smith who side footed over the goalie to make it 2-3, but the away side sealed the win in the final minute, when Alex Bryne confidently fired home a penalty. 

#Heedhopper

0805 Northern Rail - Newcastle - Carlisle 

1008 Avanti West Coast - Carlisle - Preston arr.1116

1357 Northern Rail - Preston - Bamber Bridge

Reverse journey back home.


I took advantage of the Northern Rail £1 ticket sale to tick off another in my pursuit of completing some leagues. I spent most of the day in Preston, calling at six of the pubs which weren't in the Good Beer Guide on my last visit. When I arrived at Bamber Bridge I stopped at the Brig ‘n’ Barrel and the Beer Box, another two good pubs which are in the guide.

This was my first solo full day out on public transport since the return of some normality. It was great to have a bit of “me time” and during this long day of travelling I met some interesting and lovely folk along the way. 

✔797 Grosvenor Vale

Wealdstone 2-2 Aldershot Town
National League
Saturday 18th September 2021

Wealdstone FC was founded in 1899, now based in Ruislip in the London Borough of Hillingdon. The manor of Ruislip appears in the Domesday Book, with some of the earliest settlements still surviving and designated as local heritage sites. St Martin's parish church dates back to the 13th century and the northern end of Ruislip High Street has some original village square buildings, which are now Grade II listed.

The Stones started in the Willesden & District League, winning the league twice, then following the First World War played in the London League and Middlesex Senior League.

Spartan League 1922-1928

Athenian League 1928-1964: Champions 1951–52

Isthmian League 1964-1971 1995-2006 2007-2014:

Division Three champions 1996–97

Premier Division champions 2013–14

Southern League 1971-1979 1981-82 1988-1995 2006-07:

Division One South champions 1973–74 South Division champions 1981–82

Alliance Premier/Conference 1979-1981 (founder members) 1982-1988

Champions 1984–85

Conference/National South 2014-2020

The Stones returned to the top of the Non-League pyramid as National South champions in 2020.

They have the honour of appearing in the first ever football match to be televised in the UK, when the BBC showed part of their league match against Barnet in October 1946, and the first club to win the Alliance Premier/FA Trophy double in 1984-85. Wembley success was also achieved in 1966 when they beat Hendon to lift the old FA Amateur Cup.

In the early 20th century the club played at the College Farm Ground in Locket Road, before moving to Belmont Road, both in Wealdstone. At the start of the 1922-23 season they relocated to the Lower Mead ground in central Harrow, which was home until 1991 when financial problems caused by boardroom misconduct saw the ground sold for commercial development.

In January 2008 after 17 years of various groundshares, they obtained the Ruislip Sports and Social Club, plus the associated lease at the Grosvenor Vale ground from Ruislip Manor FC starting from the 2008–09 season.

Grosvenor Vale

Ruislip,

HA4 6JQ

Opened 1947

Capacity 4,085 (Seats 709)

Record Attendance 2,469 v Colchester United, FA Cup 1st Rd, 7th November 2015

Current National League grounds visited 21/23

The entrance to the ground is in the corner, where there's a small covered terrace, the 1966 Stand (which backs onto the social club), team dugouts and sections of open terraces running along this side. On the opposite side is the original main stand, flanked by open hard standing. Behind the goal nearest the entrance, is the changing rooms with the Bulla Stand covered terrace, added in 2013. At the top end is the Crouch Corner terrace next to the remains of a concrete gun turret, used to protect nearby Northolt Aerodrome from German bombing during World War II. Also behind this goal is a six row covered seated stand, the latest addition to the Vale added in 2017.

Wealdstone 2 (Jackson JR 28 Umerah 62)

Aldershot Town 2 (Andrews 49 69)

Vanarama National League matchday 7

3pm ko

Att.1,106

Admission £15

Pin badge £3

Coffee £1

Programme available £3

It was honours even at the Vale, as the Shots twice hit back to grab a point. The Stones took the lead when Dennon Lewis teed up Ira Jackson to fire in the 28th minute opener, before a good finish from Corie Andrews early in a lively second half. Josh Umerah put Wealdstone back in front, heading in from a long throw-in by Jack Cawley, but yet again, they couldn't hold onto their lead. A lovely through ball from Toby Edser set up Andrews for his second, then both teams continued to create decent chances, but overall the draw seemed the fairest result. 


#Heedhopper

This was my first visit to London since the breadknife and I got caught in the capital, when the first lockdown of pubs and restaurants was announced in March 2020. We had a big list of pubs we wanted to visit over those few days, so we had some unfinished business to take care of. For my Saturday footy fix it was the Metropolitan Line from Kings Cross to Ruislip for a long overdue visit to Wealdstone.  I arrived in Ruislip Manor at 2pm, making time to call at the JJ Moons and the GBG listed Hop & Vine before kick off. Overall we ticked off 25 Good Beer Guide pubs in London, so a canny weekend and a great end to our holiday fortnight.

✔796 Jenner Park

Barry Town United 1-0 Connah's Quay Nomads 
Cymru Premier League
Saturday 11th September 2021

Barry (Welsh - Y Barri) is a town in the Vale of Glamorgan, on the north coast of the Bristol Channel, 9 miles south-southwest of Cardiff, whose name derives from Welsh bar, meaning "hill, summit" (population:52,000)

The area grew significantly from the 1880s with the development of Barry Docks, which in 1913 was the largest coal port in the world. The once small village has absorbed its larger neighbouring villages of Cadoxton and Barry Island, and this seaside resort has several beaches plus the restored Barry Island Pleasure Park.

The town has been the location for several episodes of Dr Who, the brilliant BBC series Being Human, the excellent coming-of-age comedy drama film Submarine , and of course, Gavin & Stacey. 

Football in Barry dates back to 1892 with the formation of Barry and Cadoxton District, who during their early years lived a nomadic existence playing on five different grounds under various names, including Barry Unionist Athletic, Barry United Athletic and Barry District. During a meeting in November 1912 at The Windsor public house in Holton Road, it was decided Barry AFC would pursue membership of the thriving Southern League.

Potted History

Southern League 1913-1920

Southern League Welsh Section 1920-1940 Champions 1920-21

West Wales Senior Cup winners 1927–28

Changed their name to Barry Town and rejoined the Southern League 1945-1982

Welsh League 1982-1989 League champions 6 times and runners-up once in 7 seasons.

Southern League Midland Division 1989-1992

The creation of the League of Wales in 1992 meant the club could no longer compete in the English pyramid while based on Welsh soil. As part of a group of clubs known as the Irate Eight, alongside Colwyn Bay, Newport, Merthyr, Bangor, Caernarfon, Newtown and Rhyl, the Town were forced into exile, playing under the guise of Barri AFC with ‘home’ matches staged at Worcester City, while the reserves played league game at Jenner Park.  However, this arrangement would only last one season, returning home and eventually accepted into Welsh League Division One.

Welsh League Division One 1993-94 champions (7th title)

League of Wales/Cymru Premier 1994-2004

Champions 1995–96, 1996–97, 1997–98, 1998–99, 2000–01, 2001–02, 2002–03 League Cup winners 1996–97, 1997–98, 1998–99, 1999–2000

FAW Trophy 1993–94 FAW Premier Cup 1998–99

Welsh League Division One 2004-2013 (one season in Division Two 2007-08)

On the 7th May 2013 their problematic club owner withdrew the senior team from the Welsh Football League with just two league fixtures remaining.  Those running the club outlined their intentions to continue as they were, adopting the Barry Town United name to emphasise their continuing unity, aspirations and rejecting this act of  sabotage. The FAW Council announced that the Barry team would have to play "recreational football" before eventually, a High Court judge in Cardiff ruled in Barry's favour, stating that the FAW Council had acted unlawfully in denying them their licence to play Welsh League football. As a result, the fan based club was entered back into the structure.


Welsh League Division Three Champions 2013–14

Welsh League Division Two Champions 2014–15

Welsh League Division One 2016–17

Barry also lifted the South Wales Senior Cup times, the Welsh League Cup on six occasions and the big one - the Welsh Cup in 1955, 1994, 1997, 2001, 2001 and 2003.

Jenner Park

2 Devon Ave, 

Barry 

CF63 1BJ


Capacity 3,500 

 

The land was donated by the Jenner family with the ground being built following the club’s formation and ready for the opening fixture of the 1913–14.season. The ground initially had two wooden stands, terracing and floodlights added in the 1940s, so it had the honour of hosting the first ever floodlit football match in Wales, between Barry and Newport in 1949–50.

It has been redeveloped twice, firstly in the 1980s, when the local council installed a synthetic running track, a new all-seated stand and upgraded the floodlights. The second revamp came during the mid-1990s, with a second covered stand which took the seating capacity to 2,500 and brought Jenner Park up to UEFA standards, which saw them host European ties against the likes of FC Porto, Dynamo Kiev and Aberdeen. 

In October 2015 work was completed on a state-of-the-art 3G pitch, which was officially opened by then Wales manager Chris Coleman.



Barry Town United 1(Kavanagh 25)

Connah’s Quay Nomads 0 (Red card: John Disney 55’)

Cymru Premier matchday 5

Att.1,248

Admission:Free

Programme:Free

Coffee & hot dog £3.50




Barry celebrated manager Gavin Chesterfield’s club record 491st match in charge with victory over champions Connah’s Quay Nomads. They survived an early scare when Mike Lewis saved Callum Morris’s penalty kick, then took the lead when Rhys Kavanagh swept the ball in with his right foot following a long throw-in. Any chance of the visitors drawing level was damaged ten minutes into the second half, when John Disney was shown a red card after denying Kavanagh when he was clean through on goal.  The home team were comfortable winners, cheered on by a big crowd on the day of the ‘Barry Town Bonanza’ which was a special family day to mark Gavin Chesterfield’s achievement, with pre-match entertainment and free entry.

#Heedhopper

1138 GWR train from Cardiff Central to Barry.


The visit to this resort was the final day of our holidays, which saw a mega pub crawl of Bristol, Weston-super-Mare, Bath, Cardiff and finally Barry.(Final total:69 boozers) On arrival we called for drinks in the Barry West End Club, the local ‘Spoons and the GBG listed ‘The Butterfly Collector’.  I had wondered if this micro-pub was named after The Jam song and this was certainly confirmed on arrival, with an array of band memorabilia on show. I left the breadknife in the pub and headed along the road to the match, which was very enjoyable and the large attendance made for a great atmosphere.