Showing posts with label Horden CW. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Horden CW. Show all posts

Sunday, February 17, 2008

My Matchday - 161 Stokesley Sports Club

Stokesley SC 1v1 Horden CW
Arngrove Northern League 2nd Division
16th February 2008
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My final Northern League trip down the A19 and my first ever visit to the small market town of Stokesley, which lies in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, ten miles south of Middlesbrough.
Football in the town dates back to 1920, playing locally in and around Teesside on a variety of different grounds, the club actually played on the cricket pitch at the current site until being evicted to make way for a by-pass in 1963 and finally returned some 29 years later. They left the South Bank League in 1994 joining the Teesside League for five years before progressing to the Wearside League. A successful period including success in the various Wearside League cup competitions culminated in promotion to the Northern League after finishing runners-up in 2005-06.
Last season they finished a respectable 8th, with the club hoping to make more progress with a higher placing this season, they also reached the semi-final of the Ernest Armstrong Trophy.
Stokesley Sports Club can be found on the outskirts of the town, in 2004 the Club and the North Riding Football Association won a lottery grant of £849.000 enabling the building of a new clubhouse and to make the necessary ground improvements to meet Northern League standards. As well as the football club, there’s also facilities catering for cricket, bowling, tennis and a lot more football pitches within the complex.
Stokesley is the home of
Quorn, who sponsor the main stand, this is similar in style to those found at Team Northumbria and Darlo RA, with four rows of red and black seats, running from the paying entrance to the half way line, with the tea bar squeezed in between. Behind the nearside goal there’s hard standing with partial cover each side of the goal, the rest of the ground is open, which is the main attraction as it gives splendid views of the North Yorkshire Moors, so a clear bright day like today, gave ample opportunity for good pictures. The dugouts are on the far side with the changing facilities within the Sports Club, which means the players have to walk across the car park to the club, but use a separate exit which is cordoned of from the supporters.
The game was a closely ran contest, but Horden will feel the more upset at not taking all three points after missing a first half penalty and some gild edged sitters in the closing stages. It was Stokesley who took a one goal lead into half time courtesy of a goal from Andrews, latching onto the end of a long cross, alas punishing the missed spot kick three minutes earlier, Stokesley’s keeper Johnson making a great double save from Shekoni on 36 minutes. The same player made amends just past the hour mark, converting another penalty, why the pen was awarded was a bit of a mystery to the majority of the crowd, the first penalty was a clear shirt pull inside the box, but no on had a clue what the offence was this time, as there was no apparent infringement, but full marks to Shekoni who had the bottle to try again, making no mistake, blasting the ball into the keepers right-hand corner. The game could have gone either way with both teams going all out for a winner, but a draw was maybe a fair result, even though the chances that fell Horden’s way should have been converted. (I would have scored them, nee bother!)
If your still to visit Stokesley SC, I can thoroughly recommend it, I regret not having more time to take a look around the town and also visit nearby Great Ayton; the birthplace of Captain Cook, the club staff give a friendly welcome, plus there’s the added bonus of the surrounding view of the moors, which must make Stokesley one of the most picturesque football grounds in the north of England.

Ground no.161 Stokesley Sports Club - Matchday web album(15 pictures)

Saturday, August 25, 2007

My Matchday - 143 Welfare Park

Horden Colliery Welfare 1v1 Team Northumbria
Arngrove Northern League Division 2
August 25th 2007
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Horden is a mining village in County Durham, the colliery was constructed in 1900 and was one of the biggest in the country, at its peak the mine employed over 4000 men and producing 1.5 million tons of coal a year, hundreds of workers in the colliery helped fund the local football club by deducting money each week from their wages.
Formed in 1908 as Horden Athletic and playing in the Wearside League, the club became Horden CW in 1928 and after four league titles moved on to the North-Eastern League in 1935, apart from a brief spell in the Midland League in the late 1950’s the club stayed in the NE League until the league folded in 1964, having been champions on two occasions in 1937-38 and 1963-64.
The club then returned to the Wearside League where they added an additional six titles as well as further success in cup competitions including the treble in 1973 (League, Shipowners and Monkwearmouth Cups) until they joined the Northern League in 1975, since then they’ve twice finished runners-up in 1980 and ’83 and won another pot with a League Cup final win against Blyth Spartans in 1984.
In 1985 the Colliers were relegated, on top of this the club lost its main sponsor and Horden colliery closed, the club managed to survive and keep its Northern League status, they again won promotion in 2002-03, but sadly were relegated last season narrowly losing out by one point to Bedlington Terriers.
Thanks to a Football Stadium Improvements grant, Welfare Park looks in great nick after key improvements and upgrading, in particular the HCWFC Grandstand, which dominates the ground with its red external appearance and white roof, the raised seating area is divided into three sections of red seats, in the middle is the Stan Anderson Enclosure, to the left the Bobby ”Punchy” Naisbett Enclosure and to the right the Sylvia & Bob Wood Enclosure, underneath is the refreshment bar and toilets, with the new changing rooms to the side.
The clubhouse is in the corner of the ground with a white covered seating area outside, which on closer inspection I realised is a smoker’s area for clubhouse patrons, behind the bottom goal is the turnstile with a hard standing area with the Workingmens club and the Horden Social Welfare Centre looking into the ground (guests at the wedding reception were glued to the window) the other two sides of the ground have good views with steps leading up to a grass verge.
The game finished in a creditable draw which on reflection was a fair result, Horden CW won the ‘Performance of the Week Award’ after knocking Sunderland Nissan out of the FA Cup last week, while Team Northumbria crashed, banged and were truly walloped out of the cup with a 0-11(eleven) home defeat to Consett, so I suppose they’ve been working on their defending in training this week. The clean sheet looked on the cards until a goal from Ross Galley just before half time gave the Colliers the advantage at the interval, this looked the decisive moment until a late equaliser from centre half Mark Tye with a powerful header from a corner gave TN a share of the spoils.
The local cricket pitch as well as the park is behind the Grandstand, today there was a cricket match being played at the same time as the football, when I sat in the stand at the beginning of the second half there was an almighty thud, as if a bomb had landed in Horden, I then realised that a batsman ‘hit a six’ against the back of the stand, there was also many cries of “Howzat” with the only shouting coming from the football ground being from the players moaning at the officials, but also the canny little lady who sold the programmes with her constant screams of “whorre…den!” which if you didn’t know where you were, sounds more like some sort of bordello than the local football team.

Links-
Match Report - http://www.hordencw.com/1stteam/fixtures_table.pl?action=report&id=241448


Ground no.143 Welfare Park – Matchday Web album (17 pictures)