The Stoke City Miscellany - David Clayton - E-Book

The Stoke City Miscellany E-Book

David Clayton

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Beschreibung

The Stoke City Miscellany - a book on the club like no other, packed with facts, stats, trivia, stories and legend. Now, with the club tasting previously uncharted highs, look back at what has made this club what it is today - the players and characters that have represented City over the years and the events that have shaped the club. If you want to know the record crowd for a home game, the record appearance holder or longest-serving manager, look no further - this is the book you've been waiting for. From record goal scorers to record defeats; from the Victoria Ground to Alan Ball and from Rory Delap to Gordon Banks - it's all in The Stoke City Miscellany - can you afford not to own a copy?

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2012

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For Mark Chamberlain and Peter Beagrie – two of the finest wingers I was lucky enough to see

CONTENTS

Title Page

Dedication

Acknowledgements

What Better Way to Start Than with the Lyrics to…

And While We’re Singing…

You Can’t Call Me Al

Bright Sparks

Berry Gaudy?

Berry Good Quotes

Rooney! Rooney! Rooney!

World Cup Potters

Put It in Neutral!

Potters v GaláCticos

Pulis Said It…

Sardine Anyone?

They Said It About Stanley Matthews…

Booked

Worst Kit?

(Un)Lucky Break

Wong Number

Rory Delap: Did You Know?

Quotes on Rory

Kit History

TJ!

Yankee Doodle Potters

More Stateside Stokies

Hip Or Miss Mascot?

Derby Day

Other Rivalries

The Mancs Are Coming!

Fanzine

City Fans

Celebrity City Fans

Is This Really How ‘Delilah’ Began?

Hancock’s Half Ours

Ladies First…

First in, First Out

You’re Gonna Win Four All!

Pulis Said What?

The Beast

Player of the Season

Statuesque Tributes

Young Player of the Season

Accrington Stanley – Who Are They?

The Best of the Best: Appearance Records

The Best of the Best: Goalscoring Records

The Best of the Best: International Records

SCFC Players’ Player of the Year Award

Youngest/Oldest

Transfer Records

Academy Player of the Season

Kits and Sponsors

FA Cup Complete History

Thanks Bury Much!

Put the Suits Back, Lads…

Third Place Play-Off

Record Breakers

Write on!

Banksy Said It … Quotes From a Living Legend

You Beauty!

A Pint to Prove

The Potters in the Play-Offs

League Cup: Complete Record

At Last!

Anglo-Italian Cup

Anglo-Scottish Cup

UEFA Cup – European Glory … Almost!

Staffordshire FA Senior Cup

United Counties League

City Gents

Outcasts!

The Associate Members’ Cup/ Football League Trophy

The Coronation Loving Cup

The Colombian Connection

The Gaffers

Making a Mark

Grounds

The Pioneers

Join the Q!

Pulis Said It…

FA Youth Cup

Fixed Penalty

Player Focus: Facts, Trivia and Stats on Some of City’s Greatest Players

A Potted History of, Er, the Potters

Wartime Football – League Records

Miscellaneous Trophies

Ricardo Fuller: Quotes by Him and About Him

Notable Transfer Landmarks

Stoke City FC Roll of Honour

Deano Said It…

City’s Complete League Record

Copyright

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

Thanks to all the Stoke City fans who helped me during the research of this book and thanks also to Michelle Tilling, my editor at The History Press, Will Unwin, Alexander Rowen, Luke McDowall and special thanks, as always, to my wife Sarah and our three beautiful young children, Harry, Jaime and Chrissie. That’s pretty much it – for facts and figures from elsewhere, thanks as well. You know who you are.

David Clayton, 2012

WHAT BETTER WAY TO START THAN WITH THE LYRICS TO…

Delilah

I saw the light on the night that I passed by her window

I saw the flickering shadows of love on her blind

She was my woman

As she deceived me I watched and went out of my mind

My, my, my, Delilah

Why, why, why, Delilah?

I could see that girl was no good for me

But I was lost like a slave that no man could free

At break of day when that man drove away, I was waiting

I crossed the street to her house and she opened the door

She stood there laughing

I felt the knife in my hand and she laughed no more

My, my, my Delilah

Why, why, why Delilah?

So before they come to break down the door

Forgive me Delilah, I just couldn’t take any more

She stood there laughing

I felt the knife in my hand and she laughed no more

My, my, my, Delilah

Why, why, why, Delilah?

So before they come to break down the door

Forgive me Delilah, I just couldn’t take any more

Forgive me Delilah, I just couldn’t take any more

AND WHILE WE’RE SINGING…

Here are some of City’s favourite chants and songs – at least the printable ones!

We are the Potters, the rip-roaring Potters, back in the Prem where Pulis got us, so come on everybody let’s keep Stoke up, keep Stoke up, keep Stoke up!

Who would have believed Slim Shady himself, Eminem, wrote that?

He dives like a tart,

he cries like a kid,

your boy Ronaldo,

loves Real Madrid.

Stoke fans serenade the Madrid-bound Manchester United midfielder during a trip to Old Trafford

Don’t you wish your striker was James Beattie?

Don’tcha? Don’tcha?

Don’t you wish your striker was James Beattie?

Don’tcha? Don’tcha?

The Potters’ fans again show their ability to turn the tune of the day (this time it was a Pussycat Dolls hit) into a terrace classic

Who needs Robinho?

We’ve got Delap’s throw.

An equally lethal weapon when all the assists are counted up

One F in Fuller,

There’s only one F in Fuller!

A clever way round the expletives?

City … City … tell the boys in red and white everything will be alright

City … City … you’re the pride and joy of us today

We’ll be with you, be with you, be with you every step along the way

We’ll be with you, be with you, be with you, be by your side we’ll always stay.

Stoke it up!

Feed the Beast and he will score,

Feed the Beast, Feed the Beast,

Feed the Beast and he will score,

Feed the Beast and he will score!

An ode to Jon ‘The Beast’ Parkin

YOU CAN’T CALL ME AL

Former Stoke City boss Alan A’Court had two nasty brushes with non-League sides during his career. The former Liverpool and England stalwart was playing for Liverpool when Worcester City caused one of the all-time biggest FA Cup shocks by winning 2–1 at Anfield in 1959, and he was in charge of the Potters in 1978 when Blyth Spartans visited the Victoria Ground and, despite being 2–1 down with a few minutes to go, the plucky non-Leaguers bounced back to win 3–2.

BRIGHT SPARKS

The Brightwell brothers Ian and David both played for Manchester City with some distinction but they arrived at the Victoria Ground at the wrong end of their careers. David arrived during the 1995/96 campaign on loan from the Blues and played just once before returning to Maine Road. Ian was signed from Walsall on a free transfer and played four times during the 2001/02 season before his career really nose-dived with a move to Port Vale. The lads are the sons of Olympic athletes Ann Packer and Robbie Brightwell.

BERRY GAUDY?

George Berry was the first City player to sport an afro that accounted for roughly one-third of his total height. Of Caribbean descent, cult figure Berry was born in Germany, raised in the Midlands and played for Wales during a career in which he spent eight years at the Victoria Ground. After a 1987 3–1 home defeat to Manchester City, Berry, who based his hairstyle on the Jackson Five, endeared himself to Stokies by claiming in an after-match interview that the result ‘Did me head in.’ He played for the club between 1982 and 1990 before moving on to Peterborough United.

BERRY GOOD QUOTES

‘My hair is now back to the bone. When I became follicly challenged in my mid-thirties I went through anger, denial and finally acceptance. It’s a shame I’m not still playing or I could have got Gillette to sponsor my haircut.’

GB rues the fact that he can’t join in with the recent re-emergence of afros

‘I always thought Stoke should be back in the Premier League, along with another of my old clubs, Wolves. This season, I don’t think they will finish massively higher than fourth from bottom, but I’d be happy with that.’

GB – happy to be proved wrong!

‘Mind you, he can throw it further than I could kick it.’

GB on Rory Delap

‘They wouldn’t bother if I was playing badly. If I could get them to call me ‘n****r’ I knew I was doing my job. I wasn’t upset by a few NF fans. I was upset if we lost 3–1.’

GB on the only way to respond to racists

ROONEY! ROONEY! ROONEY!

The Potters’ youngest scorer of a hat-trick is Adam Rooney, who collected the matchball after a 5–1 away win at Brighton on 30 April 2006. Rooney was aged 18 years and 9 days at the time.

WORLD CUP POTTERS

The first two Potters to represent their country at the World Cup finals were Gordon Banks in 1970 when he kept goal for England in Mexico, and Sammy McIlroy who represented Northern Ireland in 1982.

PUT IT IN NEUTRAL!

City have played on neutral venues, including Wembley Stadium and the Millennium Stadium, on 23 occasions. Impressively, City have won four of their five appearances at Wembley – an 80 per cent success rate most teams would be happy to swap. The first occasion was in 1899 when the Potters reached the semi-final of the FA Cup where they faced Derby County at Molineux. The Rams triumphed 3–1 on the day to progress to the final. City have met Arsenal four times on neutral venues, in two FA Cup semi-finals and their subsequent replays, while the most unusual reason for playing on somebody else’s patch was the FA Cup third place play-off in 1971 (don’t ask!) when Everton’s 3–2 win meant they could, after all, hire that open-top bus.

Here is the complete list:

FA Cup

Season/Versus

Score

Reason

Ground

1898/99 v Derby Co

1–3

S-F

Molineux

1906/07 v West Brom

0–2

R1 r

Villa Park

1907/08 v Gainsboro’

3–1

R2 r

City Ground

1909/10 v Exeter City

2–1

5RQ r

Craven Cottage

1926/27 v Rhyl

1–2

R1 r

Old Trafford

1930/31 v Man Utd

2–4

R3 2nd r

Anfield

1931/32 v Sunderland

2–1

R4 2nd r

Maine Road

1954/55 v Bury

3–3

R3 2nd r

Goodison Park

1954/55 v Bury

2–2

R3 3rd r

Anfield

1954/55 v Bury

3–2

R3 4th r

Old Trafford

1957/58 v Aston Villa

2–0

R3 2nd r

Molineux

1960/61 v Aldershot

3–0

R4 2nd r

Molineux

1970/71 v Huddersf’d T

1–0

R4 2nd r

Old Trafford

1970/71 v Arsenal

2–2

S-F

Hillsborough

1970/71 v Arsenal

0–2

S-F

Villa Park

1971/72 v Arsenal

1–1

S-F

Villa Park

1971/72 v Arsenal

1–2

S-F

Goodison Park

1971/72 v Everton

2–3

3/4 p/o

Selhurst Park

2010/11 v Bolton

5–0

S-F

Wembley

2010/11 v Man City

0–1

F

Wembley

League Cup

1963/64 v Scunth’pe Utd

1–0

R2 2nd r

Hillsborough

1971/72 v West Ham

0–0

S-F

Hillsborough

1971/72 v West Ham

3–2

S-F r

Old Trafford

1971/72 v Chelsea

2–1

Final

Wembley

League play-offs

2001/02 v Brentford

2–0

p/o Final

Millennium Stadium

Football League Trophy

1991/92 v Stockport Co

1–0

Final

Wembley

1999/2000 v Bristol C

2–1

Final

Wembley

Total record for neutral venues:

Pld 27

W 14

D 5

L 8

F 47

A 36