Category Archives: Media Coverage

Brighton face FA penalty after new pitch invasion

Here’s The Guardian’s Peter Nichols report on the events of Tuesday 1st October 1996:

pitchprotest1

Brighton face the threat of playing behind closed doors and having three points deducted, after supporters invaded the pitch during last night’s Third Division game against Lincoln at the Goldstone Ground. Play was halted for 12 minutes in the first half when Lincoln took the lead.

Shortly after play resumed Brighton equalised but two further goals for Lincoln consigned them to last but one in the league. The second goal prompted another invasion but this time the spectators did not reach the centre circle and they were booed off. Even the faithful had had enough.

The damage, though, may well have been done. Brighton have a Football Association sentence hanging over them after fans rioted and caused the abandonment of a Second Division relegation game against York City at the end of last season. That sentence could now come into effect after the referee Steve Bennett was forced to take the players off the pitch.

Trouble had been anticipated. Fans were angry at the breakdown of talks on Monday between the club chairman Bill Archer and the consortium headed by the advertising millionaire Dick Knight wanting to take over the club. But appeals to stay calm went unheeded. There was already a volatile atmosphere, with cries of “Archer out”. before matters spilled over in the 25th minute.

About 50 supporters from the North Stand invaded the pitch, and the referee immediately took the teams to the safety of the dressing-rooms.

Another 100 or so supporters from other sections of the ground then spilled on to the pitch, and the entire group congregated in the centre circle before leaving en bloc to return to the North Stand. The police adopted a “softly, softly” approach and, as invasions go, by Goldstone standards it was brief and bloodless. There were five public order arrests.

pitchprotest2

Archer, the object of the supporters’ disaffection, was not there to witness the protest. He had bought into Brighton and Hove Albion for £56.25 and, through dealings that might be described as Byzantine, sold the ground to Chartwell, a company connected to the Kingfisher Group and with which he is also involved. Chartwell paid £7.4 million, most of which went to pay off the club’s mounting debts.

The club now rent the ground back on a single-year lease which costs £480,000. At the end of the season, after 94 years at the Goldstone Ground, Brighton will be homeless. The ground will be dug up in June for a retail development.

Supporters might have been less alienated if Archer had employed a little PR during his tortuous dealings.

Talking to the supporters would have been a start. Nobody in this seaside town has the faintest idea of his plans.

Archer has attended only a handful of games and yesterday’s was not one of them. David Bellotti, the former Liberal MP, has been the front-man and, though he did visit the ground yesterday, he made his excuses and left before the game.

This particular crisis was precipitated by Monday’s meeting at the Park Court Hotel in London, where the FA attempted to arbitrate between Archer’s group and the Knight consortium.

Liz Costa, vice-chairman of the Brighton and Hove Albion Supporters’ Club, was one of many who predicted the worst for last night’s match.

“It will make York City look a like a Christmas party,” she forecast. “There’s going to be bedlam.” In that match almost 3,000 spectators spilled on to the pitch to demostrate against the board.

If those fears were unfounded, there was no disguising the despondency of the manager Jimmy Case. “Since I’ve been here there’s not been one ounce of good news, written or implemented,” he said. “When Liam Brady was here he said he couldn’t work in an unharmonious atmosphere, and it’s got worse.

“All we want as a manager and a football team, and especially the supporters, is a ground to play in. This situation affects everyone, down to the tea-ladies. I’ve never brought it up before but there comes a time. Any good news would be a breath of fresh air for me, the players and the tea-ladies.”

From ‘Build A Bonfire’:

Bill Swallow: I have to say, and maybe this puts me in a minority of one, I wasn’t terribly happy wit the Lincoln protest. I didn’t think it was wise. If they’d opened fire on David Bellotti I wouldn’t have had a problem with that, no difficulty at all. I thought the strategy went off the rails.

Tim Carder: Everyone supported it – I mean there were about two cries of ‘get off the pitch’ because we were under suspended sentence at that point. We knew that anyone going on the pitch and holding the game up was going to cost us points, but we were in such a desperate state at the time that the vast majority of the crowd applauded them. I clapped them. It was all very orderly and the crowd was in full support. We had to show that, even with the threat of losing points – and we were very near the bottom at this stage.

Significantly, after the Lincoln match, there was a marked change in emphasis in the protests that followed. Out went the kind that were liable to cost the club league points and made it easy to brand the loyal supporters as hooligans, and in came the imaginative kind such as the charm offensive at the village of Mellor, Bill Archer’s home in Lancashire.

Tagged , , ,

Cat makes the Seagulls soar

chriscattlin8

After Albion narrowly failed to clinch promotion to Division One in 1977/78, boss Alan Mullery promised at the end of the Blackpool match that Brighton would achieve the feat a year later. It seemed an unwise thing to pledge, especially when Brighton stood in mid-table position at the end of November 1978. However, the trusty and experienced full-back Chris Cattlin was recalled, in place of Ken Tiler, a decision that helped the team to find its mojo again:

Professional pride is an expression often misused, frequently abused and occasionally I misconstrued. It is, however: a phrase that is deservedly applied to the’ attitude” of certain players.

In these days Of commercialisation it is indeed pleasurable to see a seasoned professional who has seen both success and disappointment yet still has genuine enthusiasm for the game.

As Brighton push ahead towards the First Division, experienced defender, Chris Cattlin plays with as much, if not more, enthusiasm than many of his much younger colleagues.

For Chris it’s very much a case of ‘I’ve seen it all before’. Three caps for England at Under-23 level, chosen for the Football League against the Scota tish League, transferred from Huddersfield to Coventry nearly 13 years ago for £70,000 and over 250 appearances in the First Division.

When he moved to Brighton in May 1976, many thought the cheerful Lancastrian had come to the end of the road. The thought of a stay for a few years by the sea in the Third Division could be the ideal prelude to retirement.

But, for the big and enthusiastic son of a Rugby League international, that was not the aim. Twelve months after his arrival Brighton were in Division Two and a year later they missed promotion to the First by goal difference.

Last August it seemed Brighton manager, Alan Mullery had written off the one time Burnley Youth player. Ken Tiler and Gary Williams had settled in as a full-back pairing.

By the end of November The Seagulls had dropped to the bottom half of the table and Mullery seemed to be facing problems.

Chris Cattlin, was recalled and immediately fortunes changed.

A League Cup defeat at Nottingham Forest was hardly a disgrace and nor was a one-nil reverse on the ice-bound pitch at Preston in February. Apart from those two defeats the presence of “Cat”, as he’s known to his colleagues, has been more than just as a lucky mascot.

His skill, enthusiasm, experience and quite obvious enjoyment is infectious.

Looking back to his time at Coventry, Chris recalls nine years of fun and dozens of games that literally stirred the blood. When he left Highfield Road, The Sky Blues’ supporters protested and signed petitions to retain their favourite.

The move to Brighton, however, was finalised but Cattlin vowed his First Division days were far from finished.

And now he could be right. The heroics of Eric Steele, the foot perfect precision of Mark Lawrenson and the pulsating talent of Peter Ward may well grab the headlines but always there, in the number two shirt is the dependable true professional, Chris Cattlin – and when skipper Brian Horton was suspended he was made team captain.

For some footballers, careers are short but Chris has no thoughts of retirement. To play regularly again in the best League in the world – Division One – is his singular aim.

Alan Mullery is unstinting in his praise for the man who, as a teenager, was prevented by his parents from starting a professional career.

“Defeat never enters his head,'” says the Brighton manager. “Cat sets a fine example to my young players.

Chris is already a successful businessman but football will always be part of his life. The First Division is his immediate target but even that, one imagines, won’t completely satisfy him. Maybe to play in Europe would.

To talk the game with this now “neturalised” Brightonian is a pleasure and he gives the impression he’d be happy playing until he’s 50…

Yes, the man has “Professional Pride” with a capital “P” in the best and most genuine sense.

Cattlin was ever-present in the number two shirt for the second-half of the 1978/79 season. However, when Brighton entered the First Division, he was honest enough to Alan Mullery to admit that he wasn’t going to make it as a top flight player again. A heavy 4-0 defeat at Highbury in a League Cup replay in November proved his only appearance before retiring from the game to concentrate on his rock shop.

Tagged

Mellor 3 Ward 4

One of Brighton’s most memorable games of the 1976/77 season was the 7-0 slaughtering of Walsall. Here’s the match programme:

walsall

The sensational result was all the sweeter as the Saddlers had become bit of bogey side. In 1974/75, Brighton suffered a 6-0 drubbing at Fellows Park before Walsall did the league double over Peter Taylor’s men the following season.

Things did not look promising at the Goldstone on 5th October 1976 when the players left for the interval with the match scoreless. However, as Nigel Clarke of the Daily Mirror reported, lethal Brighton looked a different side after Alan Mullery’s half-time team talk:

The 'boy wonder' Ward

The ‘boy wonder’ Ward

Peter Ward grabbed four goals last night and lan Mellor three as Brighton blitzed their way back to the top of the Third Division.

All the goals came in a sensational second half as Brighton turned on their second seven-goaI romp in three weeks – York were their other victims.

Ward, 21, is rapidly emerging as a £250,000 transfer target. A professional, for just four months, he has now scored fifteen times in seventeen League games.

He began his League career last March and scored with his first kick in his first match.

Now with eleven goals already this season, Ward has the sprinkle of stardust all over him.

Watched by West Ham manager Ron Greenwood, he and Mellor were superb.

Said Brighton manager Alan Mullery: “I have never seen finishing quite like that. Both lads were tremendous. It was the most magnificent second half of football I’ve ever seen.”

In the fifty-first minute the flood of goals began. Ward cleverly juggled an opening for Peter O’Sullivan whose fierce shot was pushed out by keeper Mick Kearns. But there was Mellor to knock the rebound from close range.

Ian 'Spider' Mellor

Ian ‘Spider’ Mellor

Five minutes later Brian Horton robbed Alun Evans, ran 40 yards and slipped the ball to Ward, who scored with a fierce rising drive.

In the 61st minute it was Ward again, finishing brilliantly, and two minutes later Mellor headed home Harry Wilson’s cross.

In the 70th minute Gerry Fell set up Mellor for his hat-trick, and Ward completed the rout with two in two minutes.

First, he took a long clearance from Grummitt in his stride to get a superb solo goal, then he put home the rebound after Mellor’s shot had been blocked.

In Match Weekly many years later Peter Ward commented:

“I can’t remember in what order the goals came but I know it was 6-0 and both Ian and I had scored three when the ball came over and ian volleyed it against the Walsall post. I knocked it in from the rebound. As for the other goals, two came from through balls, I believe when I ran on and beat the keeper. And the other came after a mazy dribble where I beat a couple of defenders before slotting ball in.”

Tagged ,

The Peruvian connection

perustars

In early February 1979, Mike Bamber divulged plans to sign Peruvian World Cup stars Juan Carlos Oblitas and Percy Rojas. As John Vinicombe reported in the Evening Argus at the time:

In a sensational bid to improve their chances of reaching the First Division, Albion are bringing Oblitas to Brighton and he will play in a friendly match the club are trying to arrange at the Goldstone on Monday.

Accompanying Oblitas is striker Percy Rojas, who also played when Peru reached the World Cup quarter-finals last year in Argentina, and the president of the Sporting Crystal Club, Lima.

Albion have paid the Peruvians’ air fares and they are expected to arrive tomorrow.

Oblitas, “the many who catches pigeons” , was voted the best winger in the World Cup. I understand the fee would be around the £200,000 mark and Albion have plans to split the cost by arranging a deal that would take the Peruvian to San Diego Sockers in the summer.

This is the club Brighton are to play in June at the end of their Californian five-match tour.

If Oblitas joins Albion he will need a work permit, but chairman Mike Bamber foresees no difficulties. The San Diego side of the deal will be discussed when Bamber and manager Alan Mullery go to California early next week.

Reports linking the Peruvians with Nottingham Forest drew this comment with Bamber: “I have no idea if Oblitas is going to see Brian Clough. All I know is that we have been promised first choice.”

The skills of Oblitas were just one of the many exciting facets on TV from Argentina in the summer. He was particularly devastating when Peru beat Scotland 3-1.

Unfortunately, the Peruvian pair did not arrive on the Friday as expected as a misunderstanding caused them to believe they were expected to play in a friendly against Nottingham Forest on the forthcoming Monday. As Alan Mullery said:

“They haven’t trained for a couple of weeks and weren’t keen to play against Forest. But we were never going to play Forest on Monday.”

Eddie Buckley, the agent responsible for Ardiles and Villa at Spurs, flew to South America to try to clear up the confusion, as well as investigate reports that tax formalities were causing a hold-up. The delay caused the proposed practice game with Brentford to be called off.

peru2

However, Percy Rojas (above, left) and Juan Carlos Oblitas did eventually arrive in Brighton for a spot of training, both finding the weather and training conditions just a little difficult. Alan Mullery said:

“Neither of them looked very fit. But they haven’t played for nine weeks so we can make excuses for them.”

It was reported that both players would be at Craven Cottage on 24th February to watch their prospective new club play Fulham. The news coincided with the decision by the Football League to extend the 8th March transfer deadline by three weeks, which gave Brighton much needed breathing space in trying to gain work permits.

Incredibly, the two World Cup stars eventually played for Brighton in… wait for it!… Hove Greyhound Stadium. In a piece in the Daily Express:

Off the beaten track - Brighton give trials to the Peruvian pair

Off the beaten track – Brighton give trials to the Peruvian pair

Brighton staged a match behind closed doors at the local greyhound stadium yesterday to test Peruvian World Cup players Juan Carlos Oblitas and Percy Rojas.

An hour before kick-off club officials were still denying that any game was to be played.

But it was known that Brighton manager Alan Mullery had arranged for Alex Stock to bring Bournemouth for a work-out. Brighton played 28-year-old winger Oblitas, who was the more impressive, and striker Rojas throughout. Rojas and Peter Ward scored in a 2-2 draw, cancelling out two goals from Ted MacDougall.

The Peruvians have a £400,000 price range and Brighton may make a decision today to start negotiations.

An overly hasty report in the paper then stated:

Peruvian World Cup winger Juan Carlos Oblitas signed for Brighton last night in a two-way £190,00 deal with Tampa Bay Rowdies. But the 28-year-old who helped show Scotland the door in Argentina will first play in the United States before joining Brighton in the autumn ready for the new season. The other Peruvian, Percy Rojas, is unlikely to join Brighton though he still hopes to find an English club in time for next season.

Tampa Bay? What happened to San Diego Sockers?

However, the reality was that no deal had been done. Gordon Jago, manager of the Rowdies, had Oblitas on trial but withdrew interest once the North American League season started. There were already gathering snags for Brighton, such as establishing the true age of Oblitas, the lack of availability of either player for the current season, not to mention all the issues regarding obtaining work permits and the language barrier. Without a partner club to bid, though, the deal for either player was dead.

Update: Both Juan Carlos Oblitas and Percy Rojas have now been added as honorary Brighton players by Cult Zeros. Click on a player’s name to order a T-shirt or hoodie of your favourite Peruvian superstar.

peruvians

Tagged , , ,

Gerry guns down Arsenal

Gatting, ex-Arsenal midfielder, in conversation with Ryan

Gatting, ex-Arsenal midfielder, in conversation with Ryan

The Arsenal hoodoo was well and truly broken. Having been the Gunners’ whipping boys in the time that Brighton had been a First Division club, the Seagulls achieved a second successive victory over their more distinguished opponents. On Tuesday 7th September 1982, following away thrashings at West Brom (0-5) and Nottingham Forest (0-4), Mike Bailey’s men showed that Goldstone was still a fortress with a superb win.

Here is the match report from the Daily Express:

Arsenal’s £1 million ticket to ride to the League title is already being declared null and void by the rest of soccer.

They have invested heavily in strikers Tony Woodcock and Lee Chapman to provide the finishing touches to a team renowned for outstanding organisation and resilience.

But the Highbury horror story is that Arsenal have managed only one point from their opening four matches.

In fact, after tonight’ fixtures, the club which has never known the ignominy of relegation could be bottom of the First Division [not true. Arsenal were relegated from Division One in 1903-04].

Woodcock has begun his Highbury career with a little more style and panache than his unhappy partner, Lee Chapman.

leechapman

A goal for Chapman, signed from Stoke, would provide a massive boost for his flagging confidence and he was unlucky not to get one last night with a fine header in the 33rd minute that was hacked off the line by Tony Grealish.

On the hour Chapman tried again from a John Hollins corner but his firm header thudded into the chest of goalkeeper Perry Digweed.

Brighton emerged as victors with a display of guts and determination, following the crisis meeting of all the staff with chairman Mike Bamber on Monday morning.

Internationals Steve Foster and Mike Robinson, who have both been seeking to leave the club, were both left out of the team, along with midfield player Neil McNab.

Gerry Ryan, in for Robinson, scored the all-important goal in the 32nd minute – a firm, incisive finish from close range after clever creative work by Giles Stille and Gary Stevens.

The considerable influence of injured full-back Kenny Sansom and striker Alan Sunderland was missed by Arsenal who are surely capable of much better than this when those two are available for selection again.

The Gunners were hardly helped by the loss of midfield player Brian Talbot at half-time. He had spent most of the opening 45 minutes in obvious pain after a juddering collision with Jimmy Case.

This sweet victory calmed the nerves at the Goldstone, taking Albion out of the relegation zone into 16th position. As for Arsenal, they fell to 21st place by the time the following evening’s games were concluded.

mikebailey1982

Mike Bailey, who had made a brave team selection, was very happy with outcome:

‘Following our disappointing results at West Bromwich and Nottingham Forest I was delighted with the performance against Arsenal here at the Goldstone on Tuesday. After things went so very wrong at the City Ground we were looking, on Tuesday, for 100 per cent commitment from everyone, and I was very pleased that the lads gave just that against Arsenal.

What had gone wrong was that some of the players had allowed off the field problems, not associated with football, to go onto the field with them and affect their game. As a result some players weren’t able to produce their best form, this shouldn’t have happened, but as a result I had to make changes and it clearly had the desired effect.’

Tagged , ,

All is forgiven, by Rollo and Ramsey

A scratched photo of King Rollo

A scratched photo of King Rollo

You may be interested in reading an interview of Andy Rollings by me in the current Viva Brighton magazine (January / February 2014).

When I spoke to ‘Rollo’ last month, I was eager to ask him about his notorious clash with Justin Fashanu in October 1979 in Andy’s penultimate match for the Seagulls. You can see the no holds barred battle below:

In his match report at the time, John Vinicombe drew attention to something underhand that may have contributed to the injuries sustained:

Nobody in authority seemed to have a clear view. Suddenly, Rollings was lying on the ground and then taken off holding his nose. A clue was spotted by Albion’s club doctor, Herzl Sless. He later asked (referee) Daniels if he had spotted a large signet ring Fashanu was wearing.

In Sless’s opinion, the ring should have been taken off before the start or covered by a protective tape. Daniels said it had gone unnoticed and thanked Sless for his observation. The piece worn by Fashanu was likened to a knuckleduster and could easily have accounted for the injury to Rollings’ nose.

However, when I met Andy, he wasn’t able to confirm it either way:

“I couldnt tell you to this day. I always used wear a ring but always had it taped up. With Justin Fashanu it wasn’t a big nugget. It could have been an elbow. I didn’t have too many issues. Football then was that type of game, about winning your battle. Sometimes people will overstep the mark. That was their choice. It was a bit sad for that to be my last Goldstone game, but what a way to go!”

Rollings left for Swindon at the end of the 1979/80 season before turning out for Portsmouth, Torquay, Brentford and Maidstone.

justinfashanu4

Unexpectedly, Andy rejoined Brighton as a non-contract player under Alan Mullery in 1986/87. I wonder if he encountered Justin Fashanu again, who was in the process of retiring through injury from the game in July 1986. Awkward moments in the dressing room? Stand-offs in the canteen? Andy says no:

“The only time I did encounter him was when I was with Portsmouth. We won the Third Division Championship. and they took us all to Marbella with girlfriends and wives. Funnily enough, he was over there. We shook hands. We didn’t hold any grudges and both accepted that what happened was all part of the game.”

Very magnanimous.

chrisramsey

Likewise with Chris Ramsey, currently U21s coach at Tottenham Hotspur who helped in a caretaker team once Andre Villas-Boas was sacked. As you’ll recall, Whiteside’s awful foul on Ramsey in the 1983 FA Cup Final caused Brighton’s right-back to be substituted. Some say that it resulted in Manchester United’s equaliser. I certainly feel that Ramsey would not have been outmuscled by the waif-like Arnold Muhren, the way that Gerry Ryan was, before the Dutchman’s diagonal ball for Ray Wilkins’s goal to put united ahead. In Brighton’s matchday programme v Oldham on 24th October 2009, Ramsey said:

I saw Norman Whiteside about 12 years after (the Final) at a PFA do and we had a good laugh about it (Whiteside’s foul). We exchanged autographs and he wrote on my card ‘You went in high but I went in higher!’ To be fair he says in his book that he never intentionally went out to hurt anyone in his career, and that the only person he actually ended up hurting was me.

At the end of the day neither of us were angels, were we? I had my moments- I had a lot of moments come to think of it (Chris was sent off five times during his Albion career)! They were different times and the game was a lot more physical then, so those things used to happen unfortunately.

I suppose it’s not that surprising Ramsey was so relaxed about it. Off the field, he certainly knew how to chill out. Here he is listening to reggae music on his Sony Walkman!

Tagged ,

Rare Video: Brighton v Barnet (1981-82) FA Cup Replay

Having drawn at Underhill three days before, Brighton faced non-Leaguers Barnet in a Third Round Replay in the FA Cup at the Goldstone on 5th January 1982.

The match was originally going to play second fiddle on ITV’s Sports Special to the scheduled match between Middlesbrough and QPR. When that was called off in mid-afternoon, an extra two cameras were rushed to the Goldstone and installed at 7.15pm.

In this footage from the early part of the first half, note the playing of the Match of the Day theme tune over the tannoy during this broadcast for TVS!

It was TVS’s first ever visit to the Goldstone, after taking over the contract from Southern TV. In the match programme against Everton a month later, the news section stated:

A reasonable request has been received by your match announcer from ITV’s Brian Moore. Normally at the Goldstone such football favourites as ‘You’ll Never Walk Alone’ and the theme to BB’c “Match of the Day’ have been among the musical offerings on the PA system.

However, the playing of ‘Match of the Day’ has apparently caused some problems when ITV have been showing line-ups prior to kick-off.

When the ‘Beeb’ come to the Goldstone we also promise not to play the ‘Big Match’ theme, Jubilation.

As for Michael Robinson, his knee injury meant he missed the next six matches, eventually returning as substitute in the 1-0 home defeat to Nottingham Forest in February. Remember the goalscorer? Yes, Peter Ward.

How Albion could have done with a Peter Ward in this first-half. As it was, their main chances came from mix-ups between the Bees defenders and keeper Gary Phillips. Interesting to see the clash between Graham Pearce and Jimmy Case. A year later, Case commented on how difficult Pearce made it for him during this game. He probably won his respect here:

With the 0-0 scoreline at half-time, Barnet must have fancied their chances, but a sloppy clearance gave Mickey Thomas one of his few happy moments in his time at Brighton:

As the match reached its finale, Albion increased their lead:

Unlike the commentator here, Albion’s match announcer Tony Millard harshly called the second goal as an own goal. As Millard later wrote:

Your match announcer received some friendly ribbing concerning the announcement of Albion’s second goal against Barnet. At the time, the announcement was… ‘Albion’s second goal on 67 minutes, a Jimmy Case shot deflected into his own net by Kevin Millet.’

Well, Jimmy was keen that the goal should count as his and it is now accepted in football that a goal is only ‘credited’ to a defender if the original shot would not have gone in if the defender had not been there.

Well, Jimmy’s shot would almost have broken the net if Millet hadn’t been there, so the goal quite definitely goes to Jimmy Case, his fourth of the season.

Best goal of the match, was undoubtedly Gary Sargent’s dribble and sizzling finish that made Foster and Moseley look like fools.

After the match, Barnet boss Barry Fry said: ‘We defended very well but Brighton were different class.’ Mike Bailey was a relieved man, stating: ‘The penalty came just at the right time for us.’

An upshot of the game was that the Bees full-back Graham Pearce, transfer-listed at the time, signed for Brighton. Accompanied by Fry to the Goldstone, he took a little while before deciding to take the plunge into League football. As the programme for the Oxford match in the fourth round put it:

With an income from his full-time job as sprinter and also from part-time football, it needed a little thought for the 21 year old to enter the comparative insecurity of the professional game. Graham couldn’t join our staff immediately as he had to serve out a full week’s notice with his employers first and they couldn’t afford to release him early.

Pearce playing left-back for England? Has a nice ring to it.

Pearce playing left-back for England? Has a nice ring to it.

Tagged , ,

Rare FA Cup Video: Barnet v Brighton (1981/82)

grahampearce

On 2nd January 1982, 4,800 came to see a very tricky FA Cup tie for the Seagulls, on a sloping muddy pitch. It was a match that offered good potential for an explosive giant-killing.

John Motson had started his career in sports journalism with a local newspaper in Barnet, so he must have relished getting behind the mike before this FA Cup Third Round cup tie that pitted the non-Leaguers against First Division Brighton.

After the humiliation at the hands of Walton and Hersham and Leatherhead not so many years before, I doubt many of Brighton’s fans thought it was going to be an easy afternoon.

Barnet were in the Alliance Premier League at the time. In goal was Gary Phillips who was rejected by Brighton when Alan Mullery was in charge. Left-back Graham Pearce (left), aged 22, was keen to make a good impression, especially as the highlights would be on Match of the Day. Maybe a league manager would be interest in his services. Up front was the very skilful Gary Sargent. And, of course, in the dug-out was manager Barry Fry who was taking the Bees to the furthest they had ever been in this cup competition:

After the match, John Vincombe wrote in the Evening Argus:

Instead of a clean, quick and easy kill, Albion found themselves sucked into a war of attrition in the mud. Conditions were the ultimate leveller, but Barnet’s spirit was unquenchable.

They refused to be over-awed at playing hosts to a First Division club and this will go down as possibly the most heroic performance in their history.

Albion simply could not adjust, often making it difficult for themselves bv over elaboration and not paying heed to the classic axiom; ‘Make it simple, make it quick.’

Instead Barnet showed rather more enterprise and Robinson, on his return, could not have wished for a more redoubtable opponent than Campbell who blocked the path to goal quite superbly.

Meanwhile, Barnet manager Barry Fry fumed at the lowly crowd figure, which was half of Underhill’s capacity:

‘It’s a ioke, I’m very disappointed. If anyone let us down it was the Barnet public.’

Even so, Fry was delighted with the result. He said:

‘It would have been an injustice had we lost. We battled, played a bit of football at times and had possibly the two best chances in the match’.

Amazing to think that a season later, Pearce would be appearing for Brighton at the FA Cup Final at Wembley.

Tagged

Happy New Year …with Albion Calendar 1980!

Short of Peter O’Sullivan, Teddy Maybank and Gary Williams turning up at your door tipsily singing ‘Auld Lang Syne’, what finer retro Albion way to see in the New Year than an invitation for you to feast your eyes on a Brighton football calendar from 1980?

In 1979/80, a company called Print For Sport Ltd launched some lavish A2-sized Soccer Action Calendars for each First Division club, some ‘top’ Second Division clubs (West Ham, Leicester, Sunderland, Newcastle and Burnley, Luton and QPR) and the England team. For just £2.49 each, you received one for your favourite team with twelve colour action shots of first-team players.

The item, advertised heavily in the likes of Shoot! Magazine and Match Weekly, also included red ‘You-Fix’ stickers allowing fans to mark match dates and opponents on the calendar itself. I suppose they could have pre-printed the fixtures directly onto the relevant dates themselves but this was what counted as ‘fun’ and ‘interactive’ in those days!

Here is the Brighton & Hove Albion calendar, lovingly scanned by yours truly:

calendarcover1

In a clever, eye-catching design, Malcolm Poskett, Chris Cattlin and Peter Ward are the cover stars.

calendar-1jan

Then into January is… ermm, Brian Horton with a full head of hair in the perm? Well, it’s definitely Nobby’s signature on the bottom right but, as Alan Wares (Albion Roar) from North Stand Chat has identified, it’s Andy Rollings blocking the shot from Orient’s Alan Whittle in a memorable 3-3 draw. Peter O’Sullivan and Mark Lawrenson are in the background, along with Clark’s hair!

calendar-2feb

Next up is Malcolm Poskett, also in action against Orient, out to prove Alan Mullery was right to prefer him to Wardy in the number eight shirt for this match.

calendar-3mar

When Peter Ward does show up in March, it’s on a bad hair day.

calendar-4apr

Steve Foster had signed for the Seagulls in pre-season in the summer of 1979. Without a genuine match appearance for Brighton to his name yet, he strikes a pose for the camera instead.

calendar-5may

In the same Blackburn game where he scored a goal in the midst of a smoke bomb going off, here’s Teddy Maybank challenging for the ball.

calendar-6jun

Eric Steele shows a safe pair of hands for the camera.

calendar-7jul

‘Viking’ Paul Clark on the ball, possibly against Luton in April 1979.

calendar-8aug

New signing John Gregory juggles the ball.

calendar-9sep

Veteran Chris Cattlin is star of the month for September 1980 even though his Albion playing were over by then.

calendar-10oct

Gary Williams carries the ball out against Blackburn.

calendar-11nov

Proving his acting skills are no better than his punditry skills, Mark Lawrenson fakes celebrating a goal!

calendar-12dec

And finally, Gerry Ryan goes for a dribble.

As you can see, 1st January 1980 fell on a Tuesday, whereas 1st January 2014 is a Wednesday, so you’ll be disappointed if you were hoping to print this out and use it, unamended, as your calendar for the New Year. Significantly, 1980 was also a leap year so you’ll have to wait all the way until 2036 before this calendar fits the bill again. Never mind! I hope that you are patient. In the meantime, Happy New Year!

Tagged , , , , , , , , , , ,

Goodbye to the 1970s! Super Albion smash City

mancity2v2

They were heady at the Albion in December 1979. When the decade had started, the side was in the Third Division and now it had rocketed up to the giddy heights of the top flight. When the then current campaign had started, the Seagulls looked like relegation fodder. However, in the Christmas season, a resurgent Brighton played like nothing short of champions. Having trounced Wolves and Crystal Palace, two top-half sides, they proceeded to wipe the floor with Manchester City.

Here is a piece from the Daily Express that perfectly captures the delight in Sussex at the magnificent turnaround at the club:

As the decade draws to a close it is fitting to reflect on the fortunes of Sussex’s only League club whose First Division lifeline has grown progresslvely stronger over Christmas.

When the seventies were new Albion enjoyed a brief flirtation with the Second Division.

Once again they resumed an all too familiar Division Three tag, but as the influence of the incoming chairman, Mike Bamber, began to be felt a fresh picture took shape.• The management team of Clough and Taylor halted a headlong plunge towards the Fourth Division and achieved vital breathing space with a crash programme and Taylor, alone, had a near miss in 1975-76.

Success
The Alan Mullery touchstone brought unprecedented success with two promotion seasons out of three and then, inevitably, came the slump.
•
Anything less on merely a nodding acquaintance with the best company in the country would be expecting too much.

As Mullery said during the •darkest moments: “Our mistake is in treating famous clubs on reputations, and not as 11 players.”

Albion are no longer overawed in their present suroundings. It has taken them half the season to acclimatise and pick up very much in the same fashion as last Christmas – maximum points from three games, and ten goals.

Last year the spurt sent them towards promotion; this time they have taken a further important step away from the rock bottom strugglers.

The yawning chasm of relegation has receded, but Mullery knows that the fight must continue, and any relaxation at this stage could be fatal.

Nevertheless, these last three games have seen Albion play more like a team better suited among championship contenders than down among the no-hopers.

In nine days they have demolished Wolves, Crystal Palace and now Manchester City, all clubs in the top half of the table.

Once might have been a fluke, but we have seen enough lately to measure Albion’s growing stature. On current form they are in a grossly false position, and while the prevailing mood is with them, they need fear no side.

In a splendid match, particutarly a memorable first half, Albion outclassed City who may yet feel the chill breath of relegation waft through the plush carpeted corridors of Maine Road.

For Mullery, at Albion’s helm, could well come the accolade of Manager of the Month.

He has motivated his players to work out their own salvation and instilled that priceless asset – self-confidence.

Fluency
Even bearing in mind some of those high scoring Second and Third Division days, I cannot recall seeing Albion play so well as a team-as that opening 45 minutes against City.

Malcolm Allison, declined to grant interviews and preferred to keep his own counsel. Just as well.

There was nothing he could fairly say after his team succumbed to Albion’s fluency. In fact, they could have gone down by a good siX goals such was their lack of method and application.

The impetus of a goal inside half a minute leaves its mark and once Ray Clarke had profited by terribly slack marking to convert Mark Lawrenson’s centre, the crowd and team became as one.

For the first time this season the Goldstone really got behind Albion.

They had been wound-up by the Palace defeat, and suddenly here, was a killing thrust before many had time to settle.

City went to pieces after Clarke’s first goal. Eager to drive forward Sully missed from Brian Horton, and Joe Corrigan saved point blank from Peter Ward.

Then he got down well to the irrepressible Ward on two occasions. Next it was Gerry Ryan opening the way for Ward again, but his finishing let City off the hook.

Thirst
A player with such a thirst Ward now has for goals eouldn’t keep missing, and at 27 minutes he scored his fifth in three straight outings.

The build-ups were coming from all points of the compass, especially a series of penetrating long passes and centres by John Gregory.

Just past the half hour, Clarke whipped in a third when Ryan, Ward and Sully were involved, and the North Stand chorussed: “You’re worse than Palace.”

There haven’t been many occasions when the fans have been able to rub it in, and they made the most of it this time.

They were momentarily silenced by Stuart Lee pulling one back for City, and just before the break, Graham Moseley made a daring save that prevented the lead being whittled to one.

A rare miscue by the normally composed Steve Foster let Gary Power in, and Moseley raced from his line to make a brave stop on the edge of the box.

Fears that Tommy Caton’s tackle on Lawrenson in the dying seconds of the half would prevent his reappearance were assuaged.

mancity

Early in the restart, Ward laid on delightful pass for Lawrenson to surge through the cloying mud and hit Corrigan’s bar.

There were still enough City heads still held high to make a game of it, but the result was put beyond doubt by the best goal of the match.

It was scored by Ryan who ran half the length of the pitch after gathering a throw from Moseley.

Had a Liverpool player scored it, I’ve no doubt it would be hailed as the goal of the century or some such exaggeration.

This was a masterly effort from a player who contributed much by strong running and intelligent passing.

He collected nine in 34 outings as a winger last term, but hasn’t had much luck so far.

When one player, in this case, Ward, starts to buzz, it rubs off.

The positions he reached prompted Sully to spray a series of fan-tailed passes from midfield, and Clarke, after nine games with Ward, now has settled to becoming an intuitive partner.

Ward kept turning the defence at will long after Ryan’s goal had passed Corrigan.

He was after another hat-trick, but I reckon he has done enough to prod England manager Ron Greenwood.

The Hortons of football, don’t gain international honours, but he’s as good a pro as you’ll find anywhere, and better than most.

Albion: Moseley; Gregory, Wiiliams. Horton. Foster Stevens. Ryan, Ward, Clarke, Lawrenson, O’Sullivan. ‘ Sub: Stille for Horton (injured), 76 minutes.
Manchester City: Corrigan; Ranson, Donachie, Bennett, Caton, Booth, Henry, Daley, Power. Reid, Lee. Sub: MacKenzie.

Attendance: 28.093.

Here is the first and last goal from the match:

I hope to get full highlights of this game soon. When I do, I’ll share here!

One accolade that came out of the glorious form was that Peter Ward ended up receiving the Evening Standard player award for December 1979. Here he is with chairman Mike Bamber and two bottles of bubbly:

wardaward

Well done, Wardy!

In the meantime, I’d like to wish you all a Happy New Year. Roll on the 1980s!

Tagged , , ,