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Everything posted by kushiro
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You beaut! I have never seen that.
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OK, I'll admit that this one's a bit personal. I've always had a thing for Goodison Park as my father played there for his school team in the Liverpool Schools' Cup Final in 1950. Here he is scoring at the Gwladys Street end: That's the magnificent old Main Stand in the background. I've never known what kind of goal that was. It looks like a simple tap in - but I like to imagine that it was the final touch to a mazy run through the whole defence, like John Barnes in Brazil. I'm going to really miss that place - so here's a run down of a few glorious Leicester moments from the past. 1) Shinji's Breakthrough. Shinji Okazaki was feeling frustrated in December 2015. He had lost his place in the starting line up to Leo Ulloa and couldn' t get it back. Then the players went on their Christmas outing to Copenhagen. He'd been with the team for five months but still felt a bit of an outsider. Then in the bars of Copenhagen he really let his hair down for the first time, totally relaxed and probably totally p***ed . He partied until the early hours without a care in the world. The following week Claudio Ranieri noticed something about him in training. He looked sharper and more confident. Ranieri decided to put him back in the starting XI and you know what happened next: That was the turning point for Shinji, and the final tweak to the team that took us all the way. 2) Top of the Pile That Okazaki goal took us eight points clear and we were all feeling a bit dizzy. The first time we'd ever hit the top of the League was back in September 1926 after a crazy game at Goodison. We were 3-0 down, then goals from Ernie Hine, Johnny Duncan and two from Channy put us 4-3 up. In the last minute Everton got a penalty. - but Billy Troup skied it and the two points took us to the summit. That was our first game at Goodison after the completion of The Bullens Road stand - the one the away fans are put in now. 3) You Sexy Thing Another confession. Matt Elliott used to have me questioning my sexuality. He was such a beautiful hunky beast (he still has that same figure, right?). We didn't realise at first that he wasn't only a rock at the back, he was also a skilful centre forward, as he proved when Martin O'Neill played him up front as an emergency striker. Great memories: 4) Nice one, Mr. Shipman Not such a great memory this one, but it is a key moment in the club's history. In December 1968, Leicester City's board of directors told Matt Gillies that they still had confidence in him but that his trusted sidekick Bert Johnson was being shown the door. Nice one, Len. Matt knew they were just playing games and that his glorious decade at the club was over. Two days later we were due at Goodison Park. What would Matt do? On the Friday, he told the board 'I'm resigning, but let's keep it secret until after the Everton game'. Bert Johnson didn't make the journey north. Matt must have felt very lonely. On Saturday morning, rumours started flying around that Gillies had quit. The Liverpool Echo photographer caught up with him at the Adelphi Hotel before the game: It wasn't the ideal preparation for a trip to face an Everton team that was just discovering how good it was, a year before they won the title. Gillies' last words before the game were 'Go out and enjoy it'. We lost 7-1 and Gillies broke down in tears in the dressing room aferwards as he told the team it was over. 5) Who Saves Penalties? Another personal memory. There must have been fewer than 100 Leicester fans in the away end at Goodison on a cold March evening in 1984 - one of them was me. Gary Lineker scored a classic 'race through the middle' goal and we took a point thanks to Mark Wallington's penalty save from Andy King: 6) No Words Necessary Well that's half a dozen. More to come later.
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FA Cup Round Two Saturday January 31st 1925 Newcastle United v Leicester City United were the Cup holders, beating Aston Villa 2-0 in the second Wembley final the previous April . When they paraded the trophy through the streets of the city two days later, 'a band played their'song of victory called 'Oh Me Lad'. It's on record that every time they play this tume at St. James', United always win'. That's surely a reference to Blaydon Races. It must have been around that time that it was first becoming a Geordie Anthem. No doubt the band played it before this game too. But we were in confident mood. No-one could have spent time in the company of the Leicester team lately without realising that they do not expect to be beaten on Saturday, said the Mercury. We traveled north on Thursday, spending two nights at Whitley Bay before the game. There was a 'vociferous band of Leicester followers' at St. James' Park - here's one Filbert Street regular who had made it to the game on crutches: Our reputation as the team of the moment had clearly reached the north-east. The crowd was officially recorded as 58, 713, the takings being a record for the ground. This is Johnny Duncan before kick-off with the Frank Hudspeth, the man who lifted the Cup at Wembley: Newcastle quickly realised that a lucky song wasn't going to be enough. Many of those reporting on the game were seeing us in action for the first time, and we made quite an impact. Leicester 'quickly made an impression on the huge Tyneside crowd with their forceful and stylish play' (Athletic News). In the first half we were 'by far the better side, dashing and constructive' (Football Post), Leicester were 'infinitely superior in pace and effective combination' (Sporting Life). 'They weren't playing typical "Cup-tie" football, it was sound, scientific play fed by splendid halves' (Sunday Express). The combination of Adcock and Duncan on the right 'repeatedly outwitted the Newcastle backs with their wonderful strategy', and the only surpirse was it took us thirty minutes to take the lead. Arthur Chandler, following his England trial, was 'the man all eyes were on', and after missing a couple of chances supplied by Adcock, his simple finish after yet another Adcock centre put us one up. Here's the build up to the goal, with Duncan challenging the keeper and Channy lurking in the background: This was a fraction of a second later: Adcock, 'audacious and artistic', continued to impress, and Newcastle could make no impression at all at the other end. 'So this is Leicester! That was the only comment Newcastle fans had the heart to make at half time' (Daily Chronicle). If you think 'heat maps' are a modern thing, look at this cartoon fom the Mercury: This was an era when you needed a knowledge of poetry to understand the references in the sports pages. Our keeper Bert Godderidge in the cartoon is quoting Tennyson's 'Maud': COME into the garden, Maud, For the black bat, Night, has flown, Come into the garden, Maud, I am here at the gate alone. This was how the same cartoonist portrayed Adcock, the outstanding performer of that first half: Shortly after the break came our second, this time from the left. Wadsworth and Carr 'made a perfect advance', and Carr's pass found Chandler, who had two defenders around him, 'but his ball control was such that he was able to take his shot at precisely the right second, and a swiftly placed ball high up in the corner had the custodian beaten' (Mercury). That finally woke Newcastle up, and they soon got one back from Tom Urwin. After that it was a different game. With twenty minutes to go, centre forward Neil Harris 'looked all over a scorer as a trio of defenders hurled themselves at him. I fancy it was Adam Black who administered that charge from behind which caused the referee to give a penalty'. Tommy McDonald made it 2-2. Were we disappointed at the end? Most reports said we should have won, and that United were fortunate to have another chance. 'You will be lucky if you find them so easy to beat a second time', a local said to the Leicester Evening Mail's 'Scrutator', who wrote, 'There was a nasty taste in that remark, for there was a very disagreeable truth in it'. The replay was set for Thursday afternoon, half-day closing in Leicester.
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City of Leicester & Leicestershire - The Good and Historical Stuff
kushiro replied to davieG's topic in General Chat
What an evocative picture. You're going to make me cry in a minute (haven't been 'home' in six years). -
The thing that led me to call this 'the second greatest season ever' is the two month period that begins with the FA Cup tie at Newcastle today. I've had the chance to look back in detail at all the exciting periods in the club's history, and this one wins the 'time machine prize' - the one I'd most like to go back and witness if I had the chance. It's the way the story develops over the next few weeks and the obvious excitement in the city as footy fever reaches completely uncharted levels. To keep up with that growing excitement the posts will be more frequent. It's been once a week so far, but it'll be a lot more than that from now on. Hope you enjoy it. Look out for the Newcastle report later today.
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League Match No. 26 Saturday January 24th 1925 Leicester City v Coventry City No-one knew quite what to expect. For the first time in more than 200 years, a total eclipse of the sun would be witnessed on British soil. And it would fall on Saturday afternoon, right in the middle of the Football League programme. Would it be too dark to play? This was the Daily Express on the Thursday: Totality would only be observed in the Outer Hebrides. In the south of England it would be like this: The Football League said matches could go ahead as scheduled, but at many grounds the half-time break would be skipped - players simply changing ends and carrying straight on with the second half so they could finish at around quarter past four (most games kicked off at 2.45). Our visitors Coventry City were three points adrift at the bottom of the table, but Leicester fans' confidence would have been slightly jolted when they heard the team news. For the first time in four months we had to make a change to our forward line. Johnny Duncan had a hand injury and it was decided not to risk him before next week's Cup tie. Buchanan Sharp came in at inside right for his debut, and Jack Bamber took over the captaincy. Sharp was a Scot who we'd just signed from Tottenham - and he made a dream debut. After just seven minutes 'George Carr beat two men and swung the ball over to Wadsowrth on the left. Without hesitation he rounded the full back and centred for Sharp to turn the ball past the keeper' (Football Post). After twenty minutes it was 2-0. 'Chandler and Carr combined to force a passage on their own, and Carr resisted the keeper's challenge to shoot into an empty net'. The players were showing that even without the artistic flair of their captain they could put on a show. In the 24th minute 'after another clever bout of passing between Chandler and Carr, Chandler took the ball in his stride splendidly and beat the keeper with a lovely drive'. Five minutes before the break it was four. 'Wadsworth put the ball into the middle and Chandler, challenged by the full back, swung round and volleyed the ball into the net with a hard drive'. Half time arrived at 3.30. The sky was cloudy, so the eclipse was not visible. Unlike at many grounds, the players took the normal ten minute break. Coventry were no doubt relieved to get off for a while. In the second half, 'the light was not as good as usual', but there was no danger of the game not finishing. We eased off a little, and it took until the 80th minute for us to score again. Centre half Pat Carrigan set up Chandler who scored 'with a terrrific drive that the keeper got his hands to but couldn't hold'. That was Channy's third hat-trick for the club - and Coventy were sick of the sight of him. The previous one had come a year earlier at HIghfield Road. Coventry got a late consolation and the game finished 5-1. There had been no astronomical show, just an onfield bonanza that meant we were now the top scorers in the whole Football League. The best news of the day was still to come. Derby and Manchester United, so long out on their own at the top, both suffered shock home defeats. Derby were beaten 1-0 by Wolves, and fans at the Baseball Ground got so wound up that there was a pitch invasion, with one fan attacking Wolves half back Jack Bradford. Oldham won by the same score at Old Trafford, the winner from Reg Watson. And there was more good news. Chelsea could only draw 1-1 at home to Clapton Orient, which meant we finally climbed to third, just two points off a promotion place: The eclipse gave the headline writers and cartoonists a lot of fun, but forecasts of early nightfall were wide of the mark. Unlike Leicester, many areas of the country had clear skies, with scenes like this at Elland Road: After the game, our goalscoring debutant Buchanan Sharp went back to London to sort out a few loose ends at home. Then somehow a rumour started in Leicester that he had been involved in a serious traffic accident. Then word came that he'd actually died. The rumour spread all over the city, and the 'tragedy' was even mentioned at a church service on Sunday afternoon. But none of it was true. Sharp had arrived safely in London. There had been no accident. On Monday, the Leicester Mercury had a front page report confirming it: Who had started the rumour, and why, were questions that were never answered. If we were the form team in Division Two, in the top flight the team on a hot streak was Newcastle - our opponents in the Cup in seven days' time. They moved up to 4th with a 2-0 win over Manchester City at St James' Park. This was their current form: Before that tie, there was big news in the city. You may remember the very first post in this thread with the map of the centre of the city, showing how the key places in Harold Lineker's universe were all very close together, but 'A few years later, Charles Street would blast through those buildings on Humberstone Gate and the character of the area would be changed forever'. On January 28th, over 20,000 people took part in a citizens' referendum on the Charles Street proposals. That evening at 10pm at the Corn Exchange the results were announced. 13,002 were in favour, 9,724 against. So the city centre that Harold Lineker knew so well would soon be changing. His big Cup tie was also approaching. A week after the Newcastle game, the Leicester Boys team would be heading for Great Yarmouth, having made it through to the First Round Proper of the English Schools Trophy for the first time.
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Look at the company he's keeping: (For the other one you mention, 1932, the board took over from Willie Orr midway through the run of defeats).
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Euphemisms to describe our current plight.
kushiro replied to Free Falling Foxes's topic in Leicester City Forum
All the parts should be connected but they somehow seem totally random. (Both this thread and the team). -
This was the cartoon in the Footbal Post today: The Post was based in Nottingham and covered all the East Midlands clubs. You can see them all here on the masthead: Our Leicester gent is behind the Magpie (Notts County) and the Forest figure (a Robin Hood link?). The guy at the front with his dog plays some kind of master of ceremonies role and is not representing a particular club. After much fruitless endeavour I have failed to discover why we are represented by the gent in a top hat (it goes back to the Fosse era as you can see here:)
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League Match No. 25 Saturday January 17th 1925 Stoke v Leicester City Seven days after we beat them in the FA Cup we faced Stoke again - this time in the League at the Victoria Ground. This aerial shot shows how the place looked in the 1920s. It's not great quality but it's value lies in the rare view of the old oval shape with a running track, which you can just about make out. That was the track on which Stanley Matthews won all those handicap races mentioned above. It was removed in 1930, just before Stanley joined Stoke, and the ground took on its standard rectangular shape. The star of this week's show is a woman called Daisy Bates. She too had run on that track, with great distinction. She was also the best female footballer in England. She played for Stoke, who had won the Ladiies FA Cup in 1922, then won a European tournament in Barcelona. Here's that Cup winning team, with Daisy sitting to the left of the guy with the trophy: Five days before Leicester turned up at the Victoria Ground, Daisy got married - to Stoke goalkeeper Bob Dixon. Where, or whether they spent a honeymoon is unclear, but Dixon reported for work as normal on Saturday - and he would be the game's central character. We started the game in confident style, and took the lead after twenty minutes. Johnny Duncan moved out to the wing and played a pass to Hugh Adcock, who had moved inside. His shot was partially saved by Dixon but Adcock followed up to shoot home. Dixon then made a 'phenomenal' save from Chandler's shot, which was 'traveling low with great pace, away from the keeper and inside the post. It looked a matter of physical impossibility to keep it out but Dixon flung himself full length. It was a save of the spectacular variety which delights the crowd'. And no doubt Daisy too. Like last week, we led 1-0 at the break. In the second half we were completely on top, but Dixon made a string of saves to keep Stoke in the contest. Chandler was through on goal twice but shot wide with the first chance and then hit a tame effort straight at the keeper. Then with just three minutes to go, we paid for all those missed chances, Frank Watkin heading in 'after a goalmouth scrimmage'. 1-1 it finished, and for just the third time in the last twenty games, Chandler failed to find the net. 'Leicester threw their chances away' was the headline in the Sentinel. 'They were an exceptionally good side, but were thwarted by two factors - the hopeless finishing by the forwards and a marvelous display of goalkeeping by Dixon. The Athletic News had this verdict: Stoke were just a hard-kicking, dashing set of individual rushers, whereas the visitors moved in precise, polished fashion, their swift, thrustful attacks always boding danger, with Adcock outstanding on the right wing. Elsewhere, Derby had a comfortable 2-0 home win over Fulham, but Chelsea lost 2-1 at The Wednesday and the big shock of the day came at Highfield Road. Coventry had gone three months without a win and were four points adrift at the bottom, but they beat leaders Manchester United 1-0. All that meant Derby leapfrogged United again, and we were still in fourth place: On Monday came Arthur Chandler's England trial, playing for 'The North' against 'The South' at Stamford Bridge. His side lost 3-1, but he did score. The description of the goal brings to mind a Leicester legend of the 21st century: He slipped down in the goalmouth, sat on the ball in doing so, then got up and scooped the ball into the net. A 'stupid goal', one reporter called it, and his overall performance didn't impress the critics. 'He failed completely to hold the line together' was the verdict of the Daily Herald. The teams for the final trial were due to be announced two weeks later. We had two big games to face before that - Coventry in the League, and Newcastle in the Cup.
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Comparing this season to 2014/15 Great Escape
kushiro replied to tickler28's topic in Leicester City Forum
F*** Me! York finished bottom? I never knew that. Makes it even more freaky. -
Comparing this season to 2014/15 Great Escape
kushiro replied to tickler28's topic in Leicester City Forum
King Richard wants a word with you. To be fair, I was thinking along these lines while watching the game. 'We've dominated Palace like we did Man City. We only lost narrowly at Villa.Could it be a bit 2015?' Then the second half happened and I realised I was just blowing bubbles. -
Ah - Don Revie's first game, preceded by the famous 85 man get together in Manchester. ‘I stood in the lobby of the hotel from 6pm to 11,45 to greet the players’. He tells them they’re not there to enjoy Manchester’s nightlife – ‘I told them if they did go out they would not be with us again’. Frank escaped out of a back entrance at 9.30. Several players ended up at Slack Alice’s. The following day Frank wore dark glasses to hide his ‘disco eyes’.
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Not a crazy stat, just a small detail. Lots of talk last night about how a win for Forest would have equaled their all time record of consecutve victories. That was in 1921/22 when they won seven in a row. Then they came to Filbert Street looking to make it eight but we stopped the run - the game finished 2-2. That's the small detail. Here's a bigger one. Forest hated playing us at that time. Those two games came in the middle of an amazing run of fourteen games in which we won 10, drew 4 and lost none at all:
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Great piece on that Burton game here: https://www.theguardian.com/football/that-1980s-sports-blog/2017/jan/06/fa-cup-third-round-leicester-city-burton-albion-block-wood
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We've scored more than six a few times too. All of these were against non-League sides in the Qualifying Rounds, apart from the Crook Town match - they were a non-League side too but made it through to the Third Round. Crook Town were originally drawn at home, but accepted Leicester's offer to switch it to Filbert Street, a move that so infuriated their fans that gates at their home matches were down by several hundred for the rest of the season.
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A simple idea. We've now scored six in the FA Cup on six occasions. Want to know the details? Of course you do. 1) Leicester Fosse 6 Hucknall Portland 1. FA Cup 5th Qualifying Round, December 9th 1899. We used to play some real minnows back then. There were a huge number of clubs in Nottinghamshire that used to enter the competition, and we always seemed to be drawn to face one of them in the Qualifying Rounds. A couple of years before this we'd been drawn away at a club called Kimberley, where: '50 or 60 Leicester supporters had to stand on an exposed field, with not a vestige of a stand or even a shelter from the cutting north-east blast, and did their best to make believe that they liked it'. We won that 3-1. I wish I'd been there. We also faced a club called Notts Olympic. They played in the Nottingham League, and that season they finished 13th - out of 13. And the result at Filbert Street? Leicester Fosse 13 Notts Olympic 0 (still our record score). So this year we were given a home tie against Hucknall Portland. It was a similar day to yesterday - the game was in doubt because of fog. But it got underway, and we strolled to a 6-1 victory, the game's dominant figure being our wonderfully-named centre half Bert Dainty. That win took us into the First Round proper, where things got a bit more difficult. We were drawn away to Sheffield United, who were still unbeaten and sat five points clear at the top of Division One. We put on a fine show at Bramall Lane but United won 1-0. 2) Leicester Fosse 6 Croydon Common 1. FA Cup Round One Replay, January 22nd 1912 There are so many stories attached to this tie that you'd need a seperate Joy of Six to do it justice. I'll try and cover it in simplified form here. A week before this game we were shaken by the resignation of George Johnson, our secretary / manager. Who could possibly replace the man who'd steered us so ably through the last 14 years? Our trip to South London for this Cup tie gave us an idea. Our opponents were in the Southern League. The first game was played at their ground The Nest, from where the you could catch a glimpse of the nearby Crystal Palace on top of Sydenham Hill and dream of being there for the final three months later. It was a busy time for Moss Everitt, secretary of the Croydon supporters' club. Perhaps that's why he tried to take a short cut across the railway line on his way home the day before the game. He was hit by a train and died. The following day players of both sides wore black arm bands and the game finished 2-2. The replay at Filbert Street was initially postponed because of heavy snowfall and was rescheduled for the following Monday. Our 6-1 win included the last ever Fosse goals for Percy Humphreys. He was the man whose prolific scoring took us to our first ever promotion four years earlier. In the next round we lost at Barnsley, which meant we could concentrate on the battle to stay out of the bottom two (and avoid a re-election vote). We were OK in the end because our season was turned round by a man we signed from Croydon Common just after the Cup tie - a forward called Harry Sparrow. He wasn't the only person quitting The Nest and heading for Filbert Street. Shortly after we signed Sparrow, we set our sights on their secretary Jack Bartlett, and he arrived in March to fill the seat George Johnson had vacated. 3) Millwall 3 Leicester City 6. FA Cup Fourth Round, January 27th 1934. Here's Channy hammering in one of our goals at The Den that afternoon: Amazing day that one, on our way to our first semi-final. I've written a lot about this game before. See this if you missed it a year ago: https://www.foxestalk.co.uk/topic/133561-the-worlds-oldest-and-greatest-cup-competition/ 4) Leicester City 6 Watford 3. FA Cup Round Four, January 26th 1936 Another solemn occasion, but this time it wasn't a supporters' club secretary who had just died - it was the King of England, George V. Here's the Popular Side during the minute's silence, all caps off: Danny Liddle got a hat-trick for us that day, but Sep Smith was the star of this show (in the season he won his only England cap). 5) Burton Albion 1 Leicester City 6. FA Cup Round Three. January 5th 1985. Gary Lineker got three in this one, but thanks to Burton's keeper being felled by an object thrown from behind the goal, the FA ordered a replay. It was restaged at Highfield Road - behind closed doors, which was probably a good thing, as earlier that season at the same venue Leicester fans had invaded the pitch in such numbers that Coventry decided to reintroduce perimeter fencing, which had been removed when they made the ground all seater in 1981. We beat Burton 1-0 with Paul Ramsey's early goal. Here though is the first match: 6) Leicester City 6 QPR 2. 28,000 crowd! This competition has still got some life in it.
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Steve Walsh would probably agree with that choice:
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....and having finally made it out of Division Three, QPR's first home game in the Second Division was against Leicester City - so Channy would have gone home (he was still a member of our backroom staff). Rangers beat us 4-1, then a week later they won 3-2 at Filbert Street and were top of the League, threatening to make it two promotions in a row. They couldn't maintain that early form though. Channy finally had a trip to Wembley that season - for our Cup Final against Wolves. Preparing for the game at the North Shore Golf Club in Skegness, he was the referee of a light-hearted game between English and Scottish members of our squad. When Channy disallowed a goal, two of the Scottish players 'picked him up, carried him from the fairway then, despite protests, hoisted and lowered into a thorn bush of many spikes'. I have a feeling @Channy'sboots photo was taken that week.
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I wonder what it was like pre-radio. Anxious wait for the evening paper, probably. Seems the first time the draw was broadcast was 1928, judging from this cartoon:
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In the three seasons Channy was at Loftus Road, Rangers did well in the Cup but they couldn't get out of Division Three South, always on the fringes of the promotion race. It stayed that way after he moved to Filbert Street - Rangers were stuck in the third tier until just after World War 2. They finally made it in 1948, a draw against Swansea giving them the point they needed to clinch the title. At Loftus Road that day was a 14 year old boy who would always remember running on to the pitch to celebrate. Like Channy, he grew up as a Rangers fan and later moved to Filbert Street. His name was Jimmy Bloomfield.
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FA Cup First Round Saturday January 10th 1925 Leicester City v Stoke City There was no doubt about it. From the end of World War 1 until the mid-1960s, the FA Cup was the most coveted prize in English football - perhaps the whole of English sport. The Wembley final was the climax of course, but there was something extra special about this stage, when not just two but 64 teams were involved, all kicking off at the same time on a Saturday afternoon, with Cup fever spreading to every corner of the country. Cynics in Leicester would have said it's a good job the First Round was such fun, because we'd never made it much beyond that. This was the sorry tale of Leicester's FA Cup progress compared to our East Midlands rivals: A home tie with Stoke - a team lying ten places below us in Division Two - seemed like a chance to start a run. Our visitors wouldn't be lacking confidence though - they were the only side who'd beaten us at Filbert Street this season. There were no second string line-ups for cup games in those days, of course. Quite the opposite. Clubs would often leave a player out of a League game to make sure he was fit for the Cup. So the Leicester Chronicle knew when they published this picture of our strongest XI that these would be the players turning out: (That's the photo you can see reproduced in high quality further up the page). The pitch was 'under the influence of both frost and sun, with a precarious foothold', and in the first half, Stoke adapted better to the conditions. Contemporary match reports suggest that had xG existed back then, it would have been somthing like Leicester 0.1, Stoke 1.5 at half time. Twice they had one-on-ones with Bert Godderidge, but Harry Sellars and Frank Watkin both contrived to put their efforts wide of the post. They had two other good chances that our keeper had to be at his best to keep out. At the other end, we were struggling to break through - apart from one moment of genius when Johnny Duncan made something out or nothing: From a clearance by Adam Black, he picked up the ball and zig-zagged his way down the field, going past full backs Milne and McGrory, before sending a drive past Bob Dixon. That was the Daily News, and this was the Mercury describing the same moment: Duncan lunging forward, ball at his feet, getting past opponents in his own shuffling way - not too fast, but very sure - makes a rare pictire for the football crowd. When finally he shuffled past McGrory he was not to be hurried in his shooting, and Dixon seemed the more puzzled the longer Duncan dallied. He was just making sure in his own way. That's Duncan's goal, with the rays of the setting sun coming over the old Spion Kop roof and lighting up the Popular Side. This was the scene beneath that roof a moment later: Amazing, isn't it, to see those faces from 100 years ago. Some of our grandfathers and great-grandfathers in there perhaps. With Duncan's goal we were 1-0 up at the break, despite having played our least convincing 45 minutes for several weeks. After that it was a completely different game. We rediscovered our fluency and were on the attack for most of the second half. Here's how Kernel in the Football Post described the key moments: On 68 minutes, A long pass up the centre saw Chandler get on the move, and when Milne miskicked, the centre forward dashed through on his own and although challenged by Dixon, Chandler recovered possession and placed the ball into an empty net. So Channy's incredible run continued. He had now scored in seventeen of our last nineteen games. After 83 minutes the Royal Blues put the issue beyond doubt. Chandler robbed McClure and swung the ball over to Adcock who after taking it in his stride middled it with excellent judgment for Duncan to head through. 3-0 it finished. Unconnected to the Cup, a small piece of football history was made that day. The FA had recently sanctioned trials of changes to the offside law, and at Elland Road in a game between West Riding and Staffordshire, the first experiment was undertaken. Lines were drawn across the pitch 40 yards from each goal, and players could only be offside within those areas. To avoid confusion, the halfway line was marked only inside the centre circle. Feedback was mixed, and there would soon be another experiment, with a different tweak of the rules. This one would be more successful. On Monday, two other pieces of news emerged from FA headquarters in Russell Square. For Leicester, there was both good news and bad. First, Arthur Chandler was chosen for an England trial game. No outfield Leicester player had ever been capped, but the selectors couldn't ignore Channy's form. He would be playing centre forward for 'The North' against 'The South' in the trial at Stamford Bridge on January 19th. The other news was the draw for the Second Round of the Cup, and we could hardly have been given a tougher tie - away to Newcastle United. They were the holders, and were currently on a great run in the League, challenging for the title. The only time we had ever made the Quarter-Finals, in 1910, our run had ended in a 3-0 defeat at St James Park. What was notable about the rest of the draw was that none of our promotion rivals were in the hat. They had all been knocked out on Saturday: Derby County 0 Bradford City 1 The Wednesday 2 Manchester United 0 Birmingham 2 Chelsea 0 The result at the Baseball Ground was a real upset, but as the Football Post argued: It was perhaps the best for Derby bearing in mind the club's chances of securing promotion to the First Division, where on form they rightly belong. There are few teams capable of securing two objects together, and no-one has more reason to know that than Derby, who would have been Second Division champions last season if they hadn't had seventy-five percent of the stamina knocked out of them at the crucial period by having to meet Newcastle United four times in the Second Round of the Cup. This was a cartoon from the same paper: The caption reads: "Keep the other hoss up and you're alright". (Derby County's attempt to drive two steeds early met with disaster. But they hope to keep going all right with one). Many Leicester fans would've been thinking along similar lines. 'We're fourth in the table, and the three above us are all out. What's the point in ruining our chances with a cup run?' (If Foxestalk had existed back then there would've been a thread 20 pages long). Would those thoughts enter the minds of the players? We would soon have a conclusive answer to that question, and in fact, the way we dealt with the attempt to 'drive two steeds' would be the most extraordinary feature of this whole season.
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What is it about Leicester City and players over 30? The player who's scored most Premier League goals after his 30th birthday is Jamie Vardy, with 108 (and counting). The player who's scored most goals in the top flight after his 30th birthday is Arthur Chander, with 189 (all of them for Leicester City). The player who's scored most goals in any of the four divisions after his 30th birthday is Arthur Rowley, with 216 (for Leicester City and Shrewsbury Town). The story of each of those legends contains several pre-Leicester chapters. Of the three, it was Chandler who joined us latest. Rowley was 24, Vardy 25 and Chandler 27. The tale of Channy's early career has never been told in any detail, but with QPR here at the weekend, it's a good time to put that right. Especially as the highlights of his early years came in the FA Cup. Rangers Fan This is where the teenage Arthur spent his Saturday afternoons: The ground, designed by Archibald Leitch, opened in 1907 when Arthur was 11. Rangers were in the Southern League at the time, and this was their first real home, after years of nomadic existence. The ground's accessibility was its great advantage, as you can see here: For Arthur it would have been especially convenient. He lived near Paddington Station, the terminus you'd reach if you traveled a couple of miles down that track. Several decades before the famous bear from Peru turned up, you would regularly find the young Arthur on the station . His first job was at Wyman and Son's, the bookselllers who'd taken over the stalls at London's main stations when WH Smith fell out with the railway companies in 1906. His father was a sportsman - a racing cyclist. But Arthur loved football. He was playing for local sides in his late teens, and you can imagine his excitement when Rangers spotted him and invited him for a trial. But then the war intevened, and he would have to wait for his chance. Arthur was 18 when hostilities began, and he spent much of the war in France, where he would turn out for the British Army XI. In 1919 he was back home in Paddington and playing for one of London's top amateur sides Handley Page, the Middlesex League club attached to the aircraft manufacturing company. They were nicknamed 'the aeroplanists', and for games in the FA Amateur Cup several thousand would turn out to watch them at their ground in Cricklewood. Arthur was soon getting noticed. This is from the Globe newspaper: Arthur's form earned him a call-up for the Middlesex League against the Athenian Legaue at Highbury in April 1920, and the match report gives an early indication of his power. The game was played on a pitch that was more puddle than grass, and Arthur 'sent in a terrific shot that rushed forward and stopped dead a yard in front of the keeper, drenching him'. QPR scouts were at that game, and after the match he was invited for another trial, six years after his first one at the club. A week later he was turning out for their reserve side at Chelsea in a 1-1 draw. He started the following season, 1920/21, in terrific form for the reserves, but he couldn't dislodge regular centre forward Jack Smith from the first team. This was Rangers' first season in the Football League, in the new Division Three South, and they were playing at a new ground called Loftus Road, their old home at Park Royal having been taken over by the army during the war. Just after Christmas, winger Bert Middlemiss broke his leg and Arthur was called up to a reshaped forward line, playing inside left at promotion rivals Crystal Palace. That finished 0-0, but just a week later came an ever bigger fixture - an FA Cup tie at home to Arsenal. This was the golden age of the competition, and fans from all over the capital headed for Shepherd's Bush:: Arsenal were two divisions higher than Rangers. but it didn't look like it. The breakthrough came when Chandler and Smith switched positions, and Arthur was back in his favourtite central striking role. He put Rangers ahead, then Smith added another and the biggest giant-killing of the day was complete. Here he is in action that day (on the right of the picture): When the draw for the next round was made, Rangers couldn't have got a tougher opponent. Burnley were then in the middle of a record breaking unbeaten top flight run of 30 games (which stood until Don Revie's Leeds broke it in the late 60s). They were out of sight at the top of the League, and in the previous round they'd been at Filbert Street, handing Leicester an historic 7-3 trouncing that City fans would still recall with awe decades later. There wasn't much chance of an upset at Turf Moor, but Rangers fans were out to enjoy it, and 'their mascot, a monkey, entertained the crowd with its antics on the goalposts'. Burnley won 4-2 and everyone thought they'd win the double (but they lost 3-0 at Hull in the next round, one of the all-time great FA Cup shocks). The following season, Arsenal must have shuddered when at the first stage of the FA Cup they were drawn against - QPR. This one was at Highbury, but again the top flight side couldn't break down the Third Division defence. It finished 0-0 and once more the crowds flocked to Loftus Road for the replay. Arsenal finally won through that day, though if Chandler's late effort had gone in instead of hitting the post it would have gone to extra time. In his third season, the FA Cup once again provided the highlights. Rangers beat Crystal Palace 1-0, then faced a trip to Division Three North side Wigan Borough. The home side were 2-1 up when Channy scored a freak goal - 'a yard from the touchline his low cross seemed to roll right up the keeper's body and over his head'. Rangers went on to win 4-2. Next they hosted Division Two side South Shields, and their comfortable 3-0 win took them into the quarter finals, just two games away from appearing in the first ever Wembley Final. March 10th 1923 was an historic day in the FA Cup. Four London sides had made it to the last eight, and two were from the Third Division. While QPR had had a fairly easy route so far, Charlton Athletic had beaten three top flight sides and now hosted another - Bolton Wanderers. Rangers were also at home to First Division opposition - Sheffield United. Here's great footage of those two games, starting at Loftus Road. He was playing inside left, but it's a bit difficult to pinpoint him definitively. There were no more giant-killing acts that day, and Arthur's Wembley dream was over. Bolton, victors at the Valley, went on to lift the Cup in front of an estimated crowd of 200,000. Three months later, Leicester manager Peter Hodge decided to bring Chandler to Filbert Street, and in 1925 he would star in another memorable Cup run (which is about to unfold over on the 100 year anniversary thread). When he arrived at Leicester, Channy was 27. In that era, most players knew that at that age they only had three or four years left at their peak. But Arthur would enjoy a full decade of top level football at Filbert Street, with that astonishing haul of goals after he turned 30. When he retired, he would stay at the club in a variety of roles for another 35 years, seeing us reach four FA Cup Finals, and only retiring in 1969 at the age of 73 when the club finally had to tell him that nobody can go on forever. Looking sharp: Channy at Rangers in the early 20s: Still sharp. Channy with his retirement gift in 1969:
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What is it about Leicester City and players over 30? The player who's scored most Premier League goals after his 30th birthday is Jamie Vardy, with 108 (and counting). The player who's scored most goals in the top flight after his 30th birthday is Arthur Chander, with 189 (all of them for Leicester City). The player who's scored most goals in any of the four divisions after his 30th birthday is Arthur Rowley, with 216 (for Leicester City and Shrewsbury Town). The story of each of those legends contains several pre-Leicester chapters. Of the three, it was Chandler who joined us latest. Rowley was 24, Vardy 25 and Chandler 27. The tale of Channy's early career has never been told in any detail, but with QPR here at the weekend, it's a good time to put that right. Especially as the highlights of his early years came in the FA Cup. Rangers Fan This is where the teenage Arthur spent his Saturday afternoons: The ground, designed by Archibald Leitch, opened in 1907 when Arthur was 11. Rangers were in the Southern League at the time, and this was their first real home, after years of nomadic existence. The ground's accessibility was its great advantage, as you can see here: For Arthur it would have been especially convenient. He lived near Paddington Station, the terminus you'd reach if you traveled a couple of miles down that track. Several decades before the famous bear from Peru turned up, you would regularly find the young Arthur on the station . His first job was at Wyman and Son's, the bookselllers who'd taken over the stalls at London's main stations when WH Smith fell out with the railway companies in 1906. His father was a sportsman - a racing cyclist. But Arthur loved football. He was playing for local sides in his late teens, and you can imagine his excitement when Rangers spotted him and invited him for a trial. But then the war intevened, and he would have to wait for his chance. Arthur was 18 when hostilities began, and he spent much of the war in France, where he would turn out for the British Army XI. In 1919 he was back home in Paddington and playing for one of London's top amateur sides Handley Page, the Middlesex League club attached to the aircraft manufacturing company. They were nicknamed 'the aeroplanists', and for games in the FA Amateur Cup several thousand would turn out to watch them at their ground in Cricklewood. Arthur was soon getting noticed. This is from the Globe newspaper: Arthur's form earned him a call-up for the Middlesex League against the Athenian Legaue at Highbury in April 1920, and the match report gives an early indication of his power. The game was played on a pitch that was more puddle than grass, and Arthur 'sent in a terrific shot that rushed forward and stopped dead a yard in front of the keeper, drenching him'. QPR scouts were at that game, and after the match he was invited for another trial, six years after his first one at the club. A week later he was turning out for their reserve side at Chelsea in a 1-1 draw. He started the following season, 1920/21, in terrific form for the reserves, but he couldn't dislodge regular centre forward Jack Smith from the first team. This was Rangers' first season in the Football League, in the new Division Three South, and they were playing at a new ground called Loftus Road, their old home at Park Royal having been taken over by the army during the war. Just after Christmas, winger Bert Middlemiss broke his leg and Arthur was called up to a reshaped forward line, playing inside left at promotion rivals Crystal Palace. That finished 0-0, but just a week later came an ever bigger fixture - an FA Cup tie at home to Arsenal. This was the golden age of the competition, and fans from all over the capital headed for Shepherd's Bush:: Arsenal were two divisions higher than Rangers. but it didn't look like it. The breakthrough came when Chandler and Smith switched positions, and Arthur was back in his favourtite central striking role. He put Rangers ahead, then Smith added another and the biggest giant-killing of the day was complete. Here he is in action that day (on the right of the picture): When the draw for the next round was made, Rangers couldn't have got a tougher opponent. Burnley were then in the middle of a record breaking unbeaten top flight run of 30 games (which stood until Don Revie's Leeds broke it in the late 60s). They were out of sight at the top of the League, and in the previous round they'd been at Filbert Street, handing Leicester an historic 7-3 trouncing that City fans would still recall with awe decades later. There wasn't much chance of an upset at Turf Moor, but Rangers fans were out to enjoy it, and 'their mascot, a monkey, entertained the crowd with its antics on the goalposts'. Burnley won 4-2 and everyone thought they'd win the double (but they lost 3-0 at Hull in the next round, one of the all-time great FA Cup shocks). The following season, Arsenal must have shuddered when at the first stage of the FA Cup they were drawn against - QPR. This one was at Highbury, but again the top flight side couldn't break down the Third Division defence. It finished 0-0 and once more the crowds flocked to Loftus Road for the replay. Arsenal finally won through that day, though if Chandler's late effort had gone in instead of hitting the post it would have gone to extra time. In his third season, the FA Cup once again provided the highlights. Rangers beat Crystal Palace 1-0, then faced a trip to Division Three North side Wigan Borough. The home side were 2-1 up when Channy scored a freak goal - 'a yard from the touchline his low cross seemed to roll right up the keeper's body and over his head'. Rangers went on to win 4-2. Next they hosted Division Two side South Shields, and their comfortable 3-0 win took them into the quarter finals, just two games away from appearing in the first ever Wembley Final. March 10th 1923 was an historic day in the FA Cup. Four London sides had made it to the last eight, and two were from the Third Division. While QPR had had a fairly easy route so far, Charlton Athletic had beaten three top flight sides and now hosted another - Bolton Wanderers. Rangers were also at home to First Division opposition - Sheffield United. Here's great footage of those two games, starting at Loftus Road. He was playing inside left, but it's a bit difficult to pinpoint him definitively. There were no more giant-killing acts that day, and Arthur's Wembley dream was over. Bolton, victors at the Valley, went on to lift the Cup in front of an estimated crowd of 200,000. Three months later, Leicester manager Peter Hodge decided to bring Chandler to Filbert Street, and in 1925 he would star in another memorable Cup run (which is about to unfold over on the 100 year anniversary thread). When he arrived at Leicester, Channy was 27. In that era, most players knew that at that age they only had three or four years left at their peak. But Arthur would enjoy a full decade of top level football at Filbert Street, with that astonishing haul of goals after he turned 30. When he retired, he would stay at the club in a variety of roles for another 35 years, seeing us reach four FA Cup Finals, and only retiring in 1969 at the age of 73 when the club finally had to tell him that nobody can go on forever. Looking sharp: Channy at Rangers in the early 20s: Still sharp. Channy with his retirement gift in 1969:
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Rivalries Put Aside for ‘Stop Exploiting Loyalty’ Campaign
kushiro replied to Foxes_Trust's topic in Leicester City Forum
Good to see this getting a lot of coverage. If Liverpool and Man U fans can get together anyone can: https://www.theguardian.com/football/2025/jan/06/prices-have-risen-800-since-1992-the-premier-league-fans-unions-campaigning-for-affordable-tickets