Friday, 31 December 2010
245 Mark Bailey
Position : Midfield
Played : 1996-97 to 1998-99
Appearances : 67
Goals : 1
Graham Barrow rarely signed young players and it's perhaps just as well given how this one turned out. Mark was signed from Stoke having come through their YTS scheme but failing to make the first team.
Mark taught me one useful lesson - that performances in the reserves are no guide to how a player will perform on the big stage. This was the time when reserve games were accessible- played at Spotland on a Wednesday night - and Mark caught the eye as an energetic midfuielder with a decent shot. It wasn't long before he got a first team outing away at Torquay in December 1996. He had two runs in the side that season making 15 appearances altogether and looked a no better than adequate substitute if Deary or Gouck were missing.
It was the following season that he attracted such opprobrium when Barrow started picking him ahead of Mark Stuart and playing him out wide. Firstly he had no skill to beat a man and even when he could take the full back for pace we were lucky if the subsequent "cross" stayed in play. I can't think of any other player in our history who was so obviously inadequate for the role he was being asked to play. I think for many fans it was the persistent selection of Bailey that turned them against a manager who was picking players for their "attitude" rather than ability. After a dismal performance away at Exeter a member of the Supporters club committee who had sponsored him for the season tried to defend him and had his unsavoury past announced to all who were leaving the ground. This had a knock-on effect on Mark's confidence so that even when he got back to a central role he seemed barely able to control the ball.
Defiantly Barrow continued to select him the following season having freed Gouck and we finally got a goal from him , a low header which won the home game against Shrewsbury in September 1998. The following month he got injured against Leyton Orient and never really got his place back, most of his subsequent games being late substitute appearances. It looked like Barrow now knew he couldn't afford to play him as his job came under threat. He was released straight after Barrow's sacking.
Mark started training with Northwich but had to drop down to Winsford Uinited and then Lancaster City to see some action. Northwich then recalled him in January 2000 and he got a regular place. In fact he did well enough to earn a return to League action when Alan Buckley signed him for Lincoln in August 2001. Playing as a wingback in a 5 man defence Mark did well and is fondly remembered at Sincil Bank. In April 2004 he scored a goal from inside his own half against Carlisle (who were trying the Jimmy Glass routine again ) See it here Bailey wonder goal . That was one of his last games for Lincoln as he moved on a Bosman to Macclesfield in the summer. He spent 2 seasons there but was hit by a series of injuries and only made 26 appearances. Leaving the club in April 2006 he signed a short deal with Peterborough but never played for them and signed for Stafford Rangers in September. His second game for them was a 6-0 defeat at Stevenage and that appears to have been his last match in football.
Thursday, 30 December 2010
244 Robbie Painter
Position : Forward
Played : 1996-97 (initially on loan from Darlington ) to 1998-99
Appearances : 112
Goals : 30
After the failure of Mickey Brown, Robbie was Graham Barrow's next attempt to inject some pace into the side bringing him in on loan from Darlington in October 1996. Robbie made his League debut as a 16-year old at Chester in November 1987 and made 84 appearances for them flitting between midfield and attack and scoring 8 goals. In August 1991 he and Neil Ellis went to Maidstone for £30,000 but he was rescued by Burnley in March 92. This was in time to score the last goal against us in the 4-1 defeat at Spotland which was the last goal ever scored in the Fourth Division before its re-branding. Robbie never managed to hold down a regular place at Turf Moor and left for Darlington in September 1993 for £25,000. At Feethams he settled into being a striker and scored 28 in 114 appearances for them.
Robbie was still playing regularly for Darlington right up to the week before he came to us but hadn't scored in the League that season. He promptly scored in each of his first three appearances for us; I seem to recall they were all fairly similar, a long ball (what else) over the top and Robbie outpacing the defence to slot it past the keeper. It was no surprise that we signed him up pretty quickly for £15,000 after that.
As Barrow had promised Robbie's pace did improve the side and we slowly started climbing the table although Robbie only managed another four that season. The following season (generally one to forget) he was tremendous. He scored in the opening three games (counting the League Cup) and only missed one game all season. He ended up with 16 League goals including three braces. One was against his old club Darlington in a 5-0 thrashing at Spotland in October 1997 that was probably the highlight of Barrow's time at Spotland. Another was in a 4-0 defeat of Scarborough in April 1998 which killed their play-off aspirations and as a club they never seemed to recover.
But that was only half the story. With Steve Whitehall gone, Mark Leonard past it , newbie Graham Lancashire in the treatment room and Mark Stuart criminally left out, Robbie was often the only attacker in the line up and you'd see him working like a trojan running into the channels after long balls. There's no doubt that he kept us afloat that season and deserves to be better remembered than he is.
It seemed to have an effect the following year. He played like he was shattered and though he had another three game scoring run in September he didn't score after January finishing the season on 6 and losing his striking role to Michael Holt though he still featured in most games.
Steve Parkin wanted to keep him on but allegedly at the insistence of his wife* he moved on a Bosman to Halifax. He had a reasonable first season with them scoring 8 in 42 appearances but had a wretched time in 2000-01 failing to score in 15 appearances. Released in the summer he began a gradual descent down the non-league pyramid playing for Gateshead, Bradford Park Avenue, Ossett Town , Emley , Guiseley and Glasshoughton Welfare, his last known club in 2005.
* I've never heard a detailed account of this ( not being connected at the time I didn't want to appear ignorant ) so if anyone knows the full story please use the comments facility.
Wednesday, 29 December 2010
243 Mickey Brown
Position : Winger
Played : 1996-97 (on loan from Preston)
Appearances : 5
Goals : 0
Mickey was signed on loan in September 1996 to potentially fill a problem position on the right where Dave Thompson's powers were waning. Mickey's primary association is with Shrewsbury making his debut for them in their Second Division days in the late 80s. Remarkably for an attacking player he made 41 goalless appearances in 1988-89 and scored once in 43 games in both the subsequent seasons at Gay Meadow. This didn't stop Phil Neal spending £100,000 to take him to Bolton in August 1991. He spent 15 months there scoring 3 times in 33 games before Shrewsbury bought him back for £25,000. Mickey upped his quota to 7 as the Shrews won the Division Three championship in 1994 which prompted another move north to Preston for £75,000 the following November. His debut was delayed by injury till the following season which was disappointing with Mickey scoring once in 10 appearances.
Mickey's spell with us followed a common pattern for loan signings, making an excellent debut then getting progressively worse with each subsequent game. He was man of the match at home to Doncaster helping us to our first league win despite going down to 9 men (Mickey himself picked up a rare booking ). He looked to have both pace and skill and terrified the left back until he had to be subbed for the more defensive Andy Gouck (who then scored the winner !) . In the following matches he got worse and worse looking disinterested and barely able to control the ball. Whatever was going on he clearly wasn't the answer.
He returned to Preston, made a handful more appearances for them then went on loan to Shrewsbury. After 5 games they made the move permanent for £20,000 and he stayed with them to the end of his League career scoring the goal that kept them in the League in May 2000 which prompted a chant of "Mickey Brown sent Chester down" . During this spell he also became their record appearance maker. He was finally released in 2001 joining Boston and winning a Conference Championship medal with them. He didn't return to League action joining Chester for a season where he was mainly used as an impact substitute. He left Chester in 2003 and after a short spell at Nuneaton joined Newtown in the League of Wales where he played until 2007. In 2007 he went to Shawbury United in the West Midlands League before returning yet again to Shrewsbury as a fitness coach in 2009.
242 Andy Gouck
Position : Midfield
Played : 1996-97 to 1997-98
Appearances : 66
Goals : 8
Andy was signed on a free from Blackpool for whom he'd made 148 appearances since his debut in 1990.
Andy had loads of energy but no finesse. He was a typical Barrow midfield man who won the ball then ballooned it forwards. As a friend said to me "he's the sort you want when you're 1-0 up at Burnley". He was christened "Fat Bob" in reference to his resemblance to John Thompson. In his first season he was something of an understudy to John Deary making a lot of substitute appearances but after Deary's departure he had a regular place and started scoring more often including both goals in a 2-0 win over Cambridge in February 1998. Why he was released and Mark Bailey retained in May 1998 is unfathomable.
Andy's League career was over but he had a long stint in the Conference first with Southport then Morecambe and Accrington combining football with a new career as a social worker. He had a moment of glory in the FA Cup for Accrington in 2003 when he scored a late winner with a fabulous volley in a televised game against Huddersfield. This was soon followed by a driving ban for DU I. He left Accrington in 2004 and played for Fleetwood for a couple more seasons. He still plays for Bloomfield Veterans who are managed by his father.
Tuesday, 28 December 2010
241 Michele "Mike" Cecere
Mike is the guy in red
Position : Forward
Played : 1996-97
Appearances : 4
Goals : 1
Mike was signed on a free from Exeter in the summer of 1996. Despite the French name Mike was born in Chester and began his career at Oldham making his debut in 1986-87 and soon acquiring a reputation as one of those strikers who misses far more than he scores. Nevertheless 8 goals in 53 appearances got him a £100,000 move to Huddersfield in November 1988. He got 4 goals in the remainder of the season which helped them go up but lost his place in the higher division. He went on loan to Stockport in March 1990 but only made 1 substitute appearance then started the next season on loan at Walsall. They were impressed enough to buy him for £25,000 and he enjoyed his most productive spell there scoring 32 in 112 appearances. In January 1994 he signed for Exeter for £20,000 and had a good season in 1994-95 scoring 10 in 28 appearances but after that he was bedevilled by injuries.
Mike got off to a good start by scoring a late consolation goal coming off the bench in the opening game at Swansea but then we didn't see him again until the end of November. The truth was that, not for the first or last time, we had signed a crock who had latterly become a figure of fun at Exeter for his endless series of injuries. Barrow gave him a couple of starts in December but he barely touched the ball and was subbed in the first half in his last game at home to Hartlepool. At the end of the month he confirmed his retirement from the game.
240 Andy Farrell
Position : Midfield (also played at centre half and left back)
Played : 1996-97 to 1998-99
Appearances : 118
Goals : 6
Andy came over with the returning Mark Leonard on a free from Wigan. His career began at his home town club Colchester in the mid-80s making 105 appearances for them before a £13,000 move to Burnley in 1987. Andy is held in the highest regard at Turf Moor where he played in virtually every position and made 257 appearances scoring 19 goals. He was sold to Wigan for £20,000 when Burnley got promoted to the First Division making 54 appearances before following Graham Barrow to Spotland.
Andy is generally remembered as the ultimate "Barrow man" who appeared in nearly every match and followed the gaffer's instruction to play a long ball game religiously. He's possibly been over-maligned as a result. Mr P hated him beause he was keeping Alex Russsell out of a central midfield slot. I remember missing a game at Northampton in November 1996 to go to a wedding and in Mr P's match report he straight-faced told me "Farrell had a nightmare" ( you wouldn't have thought he'd scored both goals in a 2-2 draw ! ) . Although he did a job in the middle he was better when he filled in at centre half which he had to do often in his second season with Johnson and Pender out injured. Towards the end of that season he started looking a bit long in the tooth and should have been freed. However Barrow was reluctant to let him go and the following season he not only had a regular place at centre half but the team seemed to be structured around him with a 5-at-the back formation to compensate for the fact his legs had gone. To make things worse Andy now seemed jittery whenever the ball came to him and was more a liability than a help to the other defenders.
Steve Parkin wisely declined to keep him on and he went to Morecambe for a season. He then spent 4 years at Leigh Genesis playing until he was nearly 40. He is now back at Burnley working in their Centre of Excellence.
Monday, 27 December 2010
239 Keith Hill
Position : Centre half
Played : 1996-97 to 2000-01
Appearances : 176
Goals : 6
Hmmm, what more can you say about this guy ? Keith was signed by Graham Barrow ( despite Mick Docherty's recent claims to the contrary ) in the summer of 1996 on a free from Plymouth. He started out with Blackburn Rovers ; a Blackburn fan at work (who knows him) told me he was a bit of a rebel with long hair who thought he was better than he was. Nevertheless he had become a regular in the side by the time they won promotion to the Premiership in 1992. However once they were up Kenny Dalglish preferred David May and after only one game away at Wimbledon, Keith and winger Craig Skinner were swapped for Plymouth's Nicky Marker. Keith made 123 appearances for Plymouth over 4 seasons before deciding to return north.
Keith was probably the best footballing centre half we've had. He could read the game, take the ball forward and pass it intelligently and sometimes burst through the middle to score. That's not to say he was the best defender. He was often taken for pace and three of his four red cards (the other was a ridiculous handball decision in the first minute at Leyton Orient in September 1997) were for taking out someone who'd given him the slip. In later seasons Keith got round this by becoming the master of the petty foul, the sort you don't get booked for such as just stepping into the run before the striker got into the area. He was less of a regular in his final season , notoriously being dropped for the home game against Shrewsbury which we lost 1-7 because Parkin thought his mate Simon Coleman carried more of a goal threat (which he did but not in the way Parkin meant) . He was released in May 2001.
Unbelievably he was then offered a three year contract by Cheltenham. He had played well against them but for a 32-year old it was an amazing opportunity. Keith played just 5 games at the start of the 2001-02 season and though the results weren't disastrous (two narrow defeats), allegedly he and keeper Carl Muggleton didn't see eye to eye and Keith was the one to make way. He did get on with his housemate Julian Alsop who made the eye-opening quote "he was my wife basically before Kathryn". Just three weks later he went on loan to Wrexham for two months appearing in both the temporarily unsponsored Football League Trophy and the FA Cup (a televised game at Hereford in which he looked quite shaky) so it was clear boats had been burned at Whaddon Road. He had to return there with a hernia injury but in August 2002 Keith was paid off and returned north to Morecambe with a hefty wad in his back pocket. He played 20 games up to Christmas picking up 2 red cards on the way then didn't feature and retired at the end of the season. Two years later he was invited back to Spotland by Steve Parkin to coach the youngsters and if you need to know what happened after that, what exactly are you doing here ?
Played : 1996-97 to 2000-01
Appearances : 176
Goals : 6
Hmmm, what more can you say about this guy ? Keith was signed by Graham Barrow ( despite Mick Docherty's recent claims to the contrary ) in the summer of 1996 on a free from Plymouth. He started out with Blackburn Rovers ; a Blackburn fan at work (who knows him) told me he was a bit of a rebel with long hair who thought he was better than he was. Nevertheless he had become a regular in the side by the time they won promotion to the Premiership in 1992. However once they were up Kenny Dalglish preferred David May and after only one game away at Wimbledon, Keith and winger Craig Skinner were swapped for Plymouth's Nicky Marker. Keith made 123 appearances for Plymouth over 4 seasons before deciding to return north.
Keith was probably the best footballing centre half we've had. He could read the game, take the ball forward and pass it intelligently and sometimes burst through the middle to score. That's not to say he was the best defender. He was often taken for pace and three of his four red cards (the other was a ridiculous handball decision in the first minute at Leyton Orient in September 1997) were for taking out someone who'd given him the slip. In later seasons Keith got round this by becoming the master of the petty foul, the sort you don't get booked for such as just stepping into the run before the striker got into the area. He was less of a regular in his final season , notoriously being dropped for the home game against Shrewsbury which we lost 1-7 because Parkin thought his mate Simon Coleman carried more of a goal threat (which he did but not in the way Parkin meant) . He was released in May 2001.
Unbelievably he was then offered a three year contract by Cheltenham. He had played well against them but for a 32-year old it was an amazing opportunity. Keith played just 5 games at the start of the 2001-02 season and though the results weren't disastrous (two narrow defeats), allegedly he and keeper Carl Muggleton didn't see eye to eye and Keith was the one to make way. He did get on with his housemate Julian Alsop who made the eye-opening quote "he was my wife basically before Kathryn". Just three weks later he went on loan to Wrexham for two months appearing in both the temporarily unsponsored Football League Trophy and the FA Cup (a televised game at Hereford in which he looked quite shaky) so it was clear boats had been burned at Whaddon Road. He had to return there with a hernia injury but in August 2002 Keith was paid off and returned north to Morecambe with a hefty wad in his back pocket. He played 20 games up to Christmas picking up 2 red cards on the way then didn't feature and retired at the end of the season. Two years later he was invited back to Spotland by Steve Parkin to coach the youngsters and if you need to know what happened after that, what exactly are you doing here ?
Sunday, 26 December 2010
238 Alan Johnson
Position : Centre half
Played : 1996-97 to 1999-2000 (didn't appear in 1997-98)
Appearances : 62
Goals : 4
One of Barrow's most fondly-remembered signings, Alan was signed right on the eve of the new season after playing in Hong Kong during the summer. He came through the ranks at Wigan making his debut in 1989 and playing 180 games for them before a £60,000 move to Lincoln in February 1994. Despite the price tag Alan never played more than 25 games a season for the Imps and in 1995-96 went on loan to Preston before being released in the summer.
It was never clear why things had gone wrong at Lincoln as Alan settled in straightaway. Despite not being a six-footer Alan (imaginatively nicknamed "Psycho" ) looked very intimidating with his cropped hair and stocky build and soon became a crowd favourite with his fierce but well-timed tackling (he was rarely booked) and wholehearted commitment. Nevertheless I think there is a tendency to remember him as being better than he was. He was undoubtedly our best player in a boring mediocre season and deserved all the awards at the end of it but he's not up there with Alan Reeves and Craig Dawson. He had no pace and once he was turned he was out of the game. Alan's career was KO'd by a knee injury in pre-season 1997. He suffered a relapse in his comeback game in the reserves and missed the whole season. He recovered enough to play 16 games in 1998-99 but was clearly not the same player. He was kept on for 1999-2000 via an arrangement with the PFA subsidising his wages and made a handful of appearances for Steve Parkin but called it quits in April 2000.
Friday, 24 December 2010
237 Andy Fensome
Position : Right back
Played : 1996-97 to 1997-98
Appearances : 80
Goals : 0
And so we come to the Barrow years. This feels like a turning point and actually we are at the halfway mark of the story.
In many ways, the Barrow years seem like a portal into the modern world. Personally, when Graham Barrow came to the club I was a bachelor living in Littleborough with my parents and I had only just met my future wife. By the time he left my father had died and I was a married man living in Bolton. I watched his first home game from my usual spot at the back of the Sandy just to the left of the nets and his last from my current seat in the WMG. The squad he inherited included Dave Thompson who'd played in my first game at Spotland ; the one he bequeathed to Steve Parkin included Keith Hill and Gary Jones.
In a wider context, Princess Diana was alive and kicking in 1996 and John Major had another year to go as PM. The internet was still largely the plaything of geeks in May 1996; three years later we were all online.
In a less tangible sense I think Graham Barrow still influences the way a lot of Dale fans support the team today. He seems to have permanently invaded the psyche of certain fans in a way that no one before him did ( one of the symptoms is over-estimation of his successor). From a statistical point of view this might seem strange; his record is one of consistent mediocrity not disaster. It's better than Peter Madden's for instance who was at the helm for a similar length of time and is still regarded with a degree of affection. I think the main reason for this is sheeer disappointment. When a friend who, like me, worked in Manchester phoned me with the news Barrow was coming to replace Mick Docherty we went out for a celebratory drink that lunchtime (I guess we were asking for it). It seemed like a done deal. The Board had come to their senses and appointed the man who took Chester up on a shoestring and then saved Wigan from the Conference before being prematurely dismissed by an overambitious chairman. The reaction Barrow got when he walked into the room at the Fans' Forum that summer seemed to surprise and disconcert him ; you could feel the energy from long-suppressed optimism coming to the surface. What followed over the next three years was a painful reminder that a good track record counts for very little once the whistle blows at the start of your first game. One by one people realised that he wasn't going to lead us to the Promised Land (Mr P was a very early Cassandra). Because he was such a nice guy he retained a small band of defenders to the very end but most of us just despaired. I know I never allowed myself to get so excited again until the final whistle blew in the Northampton game this April.
The other main reason was the sheer perversity of his team selections and the obstinate refusal to change a losing formula. He inherited and signed good players then didn't use them properly ; who else would have played Gareth Stoker and Jason Lydiate in midfield with Gary Jones and Jason Peake in the squad ? The quality of the football was overwhelmingly dreadful, effective enough to keep us out of trouble but not good enough for anything else. I can't recall any other time when so many fans were convinced that they knew better than the manager; the programmes from the time must be unique with the manager justifying himself on page 3 and the Supporter's Club page tearing him to shreds (because Barrow genuinely believed they had a right to voice their opinion) further in.
Well, we must get on with the story of his first season. I still think he did a decent job in 1996-97. His hands were tied by having half a dozen players on contract from the previous season - the likes of Lancaster, Martin and Taylor - that he didn't want to play at all and one or two more like Deary and Thompson that were on their last legs. In that context a one place improvement on Docherty's final position wasn't too bad and the strong finish to the season - capped by pooping on Lincoln's play -off party in the final game - gave some cause for optimism. For me it was the following summer when he started to veer off course.
Andy looked to be a good signing on a free from Preston. The 26-year old had been at Norwich for three seasons but made his League debut for John Beck's Cambridge in 1989. He was a key player in the side which almost made the Premiership in 1992 taking many of the long throws onto Dion Dublin's head for which they became infamous. Beck took him to Preston in 1993 for £7,500 and he was their player of the year in 1994-95. The following season he had more competition for his place and only made 20 appearances.
Andy brought with him some tricks of the trade from Beck. He tended to hit balls first time into the box when going forward and took a good throw but he was rarely that effective as an attacking player. He was more solid defensively than Andy Thackeray though. His best moment came in a home game ( but someone will have to help me out with which one it was ) when he sent an early and inch-perfect cross into the box for Andy Farrell to score with a diving header at the Sandy Lane end , a rare and precious moment of quality in those times.
I think everyone was surprised that Andy was released in May 1998 and he was reported to be gutted. He signed for Barrow FC initially but left when they hit the financial skids and signed for Morecambe helping them win promotion to the Conference and being a regular there for 3 seasons. He wound up his career with Lancaster City after joining them in 2002. He has since been working as a coach for Preston's Centre of Excellence and a match summariser for Radio Lancashire. Earlier this year he had a short spell as assistant-manager of Hereford but was sacked along with Simon Davey in October.
236 Paul Lyons
Position : Winger (also played at left back)
Played : 1995-96 to 1996-97 (didn't appear in latter season)
Appearances : 3
Goals : 0
Paul made his debut in the Barnet debacle filling in at left back. He was the only one of this quartet of youngsters to feature in a game that didnt end in defeat coming on as sub in a 1-1 draw at home to Scunthorpe. He had been on Manchester United's YTS scheme but was rejected for being too small. You could see why as Paul was only 5'6 and skinny to boot. However he did show the odd bit of skill and the Supporters' Club objected when Docherty released him. The Board diplomatically arranged a compromise whereby Paul would be kept on for at least three months into the next season. Graham Barrow paid lip service to the arrangement then quietly let him go when no one was looking.
Paul moved on to Radcliffe Borough.
That concludes the 1995-96 season and the Sutton/Docherty era. Now for the Barrow years !
235 Neil Barlow
Position : Centre half
Played : 1995-96
Appearances : 2
Goals : 0
Neil's League career was only 13 minutes long but not uneventful. He came on at Cambridge for the last 8 minutes and looked quite assured at the back. As a result he got a start at home to Barnet on Easter Monday. Oh dear. The first time he was called into action he failed to cut out an unexceptional pass through to Lee Hodges who scored the first of his four goals. Moments later Neil , no doubt trying to make up for the error, went into a challenge recklessly and seriously injured himself. That was the last we saw of him ; it's not known whether Docherty or Barrow called time on him.
He now works as a sports development officer at Bradford MBC.
234 Francis Powell
Position : Forward
Played : 1995-96
Appearances : 2
Goals : 0
Francis also made his debut as a sub in the game at Colchester. He was a reject from Burnley's YTS scheme and had appeared in a pre-season game. He was a big ginger-haired lad and immediately caught the eye with his lack of mobility, touch and direction on his headers. He hadn't improved and after another substitute appearance in defeat at Cambridge his League career was over after just 39 minutes.
He did get a decent move to Conference club Southport and lined up against us in a pre-season friendly. However he broke his leg in his first serious game and although the club stuck by him he only made two appearances the following season. He is currently with Kelbrook United.
Thursday, 23 December 2010
233 James Proctor
Position : Winger
Played : 1995-96
Appearances : 3
Goals : 0
Lance Key was Mick Docherty's last signing. The next four players were kids thrown into the side at the end of the season as the squad got depleted rather in the manner of Hitler throwing his Youth against the advancing Russians.
The first to make his debut (by four minutes) was James who came on for Jamie Taylor away at Colchester in April 1996. He had been discarded from Bradford's YTS scheme and showed up quite well in the reserves but he didn't make much impression against Division Three full backs.
He went to Chorley on his release in the summer but by 1998 he had emigrated to the USA and seems to have become an American citizen. He played for a number of teams over there before retiring in 2005. He is now Head Soccer Coach for Boys at Worcester Academy in Massachusetts.
232 Lance Key
Position : Goalkeeper
Played : 1995-96 (on loan from Sheffield Wednesday) ; 1997-98 to 1998-99
Appearances : (first spell) 14 ; (second spell) 19
Goals : 0
Lance probably holds the record amongst all the players here for having played for the most clubs - fifteen - and he hasn't retired yet. Mick Docherty took him on loan in March 1996 in preference to extending Kevin Pilkington's stay. He was originally signed by Wednesday from Histon in 1990 for £10,000. He made a substitute appearance in the FA Cup but as third choice keeper he seemed to be perpetually available for loan moves and so he had appeared for Oldham, Oxford, Lincoln and Hartlepool before arriving at Spotland.
Lance was handed a tough debut away to Preston and the omens didn't look good early in the first half when he pushed the ball out to Andy Saville who promptly lobbed him for the opening goal. I remember an old guy nearby saying "Where do we get these keepers from ?" . However Lance redeemed himself with some smart saves in the second half as we turned the match around to win 2-1 for our first win since December (a day made doubly sweet by a good session in a pub in Whalley beforehand where Mr P lost every game of pool he played) . We won 4 more of the games Lance played in which was enough to keep us out of trouble. Although he made a bad blunder at home to Wigan where he air-kicked at an innocuous back pass from Jason Peake which then rolled into the net his blushes were shared with Steve Whitehall who twice missed penalties in the game to consign us to a 2-0 defeat. Apart from that he looked pretty sound with good handling and lines of communication with the defence.
He was released by Wednesday at the end of the season but we had Ian Gray fit to resume so he went north to Dundee United making 3 appearances in the SPL before returning to England in March 1997 for a short spell at Sheffield United where he wasn't called upon to play. He was back on the market in the summer when Ian Gray moved on to Stockport and Barrow signed him, seemingly on the recommendation of others at the club.
Lance played the in the first 15 games and seemed to be doing OK with 4 clean sheets but after the 4-0 defeat at Chester, Barrow went out and bought a new keeper in Neil Edwards. If Barrow based the decision on the Chester game then the whole team should have been replaced; there's no way Lance in particular was to blame. Edwards killed any incipient controversy off by being unarguably the better keeper and Lance was just his understudy for the remainder of his League career. The odd game he did play in, Barrow seemed to be looking for reasons to knock him , making him a scapegoat for a 3-0 defeat at Mansfield in January 1998. The only appearance he made the following season was in an FA Cup game against Rotherham when Neil Edwards was caught up in traffic. Lance started the game but rather cruelly was taken off as soon as Edwards finished warming up.
That seemed to be the last straw as he went on loan to Northwich immediately afterwards and the move was made permanent in February 1999. Lance was at Northwich until 2001 making 51 appearances plus 15 on loan to Altrincham in 2000. He then moved south with Kingstonian making 136 appearances up to September 2004 when he rejoined Histon. His four years there saw two promotions so the later of his 124 games were back in the Conference. He joined Wivenhoe Town briefly then dropped out of the game before re-registering with Rushden & Diamonds this July when he became their goalkeeping coach.
231 Kevin Pilkington
Position : Goalkeeper
Played : 1995-96 (on loan from Manchester United)
Appearances : 6
Goals : 0
Kevin was sgned in February 1996 after it became clear that Chris Clarke no longer held the confidence of his defenders. Kevin had come through the ranks at United and made a handful of senior appearances but was now third choice after the signing of Tony Coton.
Although United subsidised his wages Kevin was still the highest paid player while he was here. He has gone down in our history as a dodgy keeper like Dickins but his record wasn't as bad. We drew four and lost two of the six games he played but he didn't keep a clean sheet in any of them. He was mediocre rather than atrocious and not commanding enough in the area. It was his misfortune that his worst mistake came against Bury where he dropped the ball at the feet of Mark Carter for their equaliser. After a poor display at home to Lincoln, Docherty decided he wasn't worth what we were paying for him and replaced him with the guy coming up next .
Kevin spent two more seasons at Old Trafford but only made two more appearances for them in between loan spells at Rotherham and Celtic (for whom he never actually appeared). He was released in May 1998 and joined Port Vale but never really established himself there making 23 appearances over two seasons. Released again in 2000 a strange series of events saw him sign for Aberystwyth Town, play one game, get rescued by Wigan then sign for Mansfield six days later. There he was first choice for 5 seasons making 167 appearances although there was the odd mishap like conceding a goal to his opposite number in a League Cup tie against Notts County. That's who he signed for next in July 2005 and was there until the end of 2009-10 making 141 appearances though latterly he was out in the cold behind Schmeichel and Hoult and went on loan to Luton in November 2009. He signed permanently for Luton in the summer but is currently on loan to Mansfield after losing his place in the side.
Wednesday, 22 December 2010
230 James Price
Position : Left back
Played : 1995-96 to 1996-97 (didn't appear in latter season)
Appearances : 3
Goals : 0
James was a YTS lad drafted into the side for an away game at Scarborough in February 1996, the fourth different left back in successive games as we struggled to cover an injury to Kevin Formby. James did OK on a bitterly cold night where we got our first point in 9 games so he kept his place for the next 2 games though he was substituted both times. After that Jason Peake played there and we didn't see James again even on the bench that season .
He survived a few months into the Barrow era making the bench on a couple of occasions but he was soon playing for Chorley. In 2009 he came out of retirement to help out Charnock Richard FC.
Soccerbase has him confused with a James Price who played for Doncaster and York but it's not the same guy.
229 Neil Mitchell
Position : Midfield
Played : 1995-96 (on loan from Blackpool)
Appearances : 4
Goals : 0
Neil was signed on loan from Blackpool in December 1995 to try and supply some creativity in Mark Stuart's absence. He was a local lad from Lytham who made his debut in 1992 and gradually got more first team opportunities till he made 30 appearances in 1994-95 but he hadn't played at all in 1995-96 before coming to us.
The diminutive midfielder was played out wide and failed to make much of an impact coming in the middle of an 8- match losing streak. He didn't play a full 90 minutes in any of his games. I remember in one of them (I think it may have been the Leyton Orient game) he made an impressive run which suggested he might be worth a longer look but it didn't happen.
He returned to Blackpool, was loaned out to Southport later in the season and then released in the summer. He joined Macclesfield and was part of their Conference-winning team in 1997. He made 5 League appearances the following season but didn't play again after appearing in the side trashed 7-0 by Walsall in the FA Cup. He joined Morecambe in February 1998 then Chorley 18 months later. He retired as a semi-pro in 2004 but still plays in the Blackpool Sunday League for Bloomfield Veterans FC alongside another Blackpool and Dale man, Andy Gouck. He now works for the YMCA as a football coach in Fylde schools.
Tuesday, 21 December 2010
228 Jason Hardy
Position : Left Back
Played : 1995-96
Appearances : 7
Goals : 0
Jason was another former Halifax player who turned up at the club in the summer following a spell with lowly Prestwich Heys. He knew Docherty from Burnley for whom he made his debut in 1987.He was at Turf Moor for 5 seasons but only made 43 apperarances filling in at left back or in midfield; in two of those seasons he didn't appear at all and played very little part in their Fourth Division title-winning side going on loan to Halifax in January 1992. Halifax signed him on his release that summer and he played 22 games scoring twice in the side that was relegated to the Conference. At some point after that he moved on to Prestwich.
He was only signed as squad ballast but got his chance early on when Kevin Formby was sent off at Torquay and suspended for three games. That was plenty long enough to expose Jason's inadequacies ; he was slow, couldn't really tackle, often out of position and offered nothing going forward. Thereafter when Formby was missing Jason Peake dropped back. This Jason made a couple more appearances at the end of the season when we were really short including the last game at Hereford.
The next season he was playing at Salford City and was last heard of in 1998 when he had a brief spell with Hyde.
Monday, 20 December 2010
227 Paul Moulden
Position : Forward
Played : 1996-97
Appearances : 16
Goals : 1
Paul was signed after a trial period having been released by Huddersfield in the summer. He is of course famous for his record haul of goals (340) in a season as a schoolboy with Bolton Lads Club in the early 80s. That got him on Manchester City's books and in the England Youth team. He made his first team debut in 1986. In 1986-7 he was drafted into the side in he latter part of the season in the hope that he would score them out of trouble. It didn't quite work; Paul got 5 but City were relegated. What's more Chelsea's Paul Elliott had exposed his lack of pace in a game, getting back to tackle when he should have been left for dead. It was a handicap that stayed with him for the rest of his career. Paul sat out most of the following season with a broken leg but was a regular with 13 goals in 1988-89 as City went back up amid a sea of plastic bananas. However manager Mel Machin felt he wouldn't hack it in the top division and offloaded him to Bournemouth as part of the fee for Ian Bishop. Paul got 13 in 32 games in 1989-90 but returned to the north west with Oldham for £225,000 in March 1990. Paul's time there was marked by no less than three broken legs but he managed a Premier League goal in 1991-92. At the start of the following season he went on loan to Brighton and scored 5 in 11 games there. That earned him a recall but after failing to score in 4 games he went to Birmingham for £150,000 in March 1993 repaying his fee almost immediately with a last minute winner that saved them from relegation in the final game. That was his last goal for the club as Barry Fry arrived and started signing strikers like they were going out of fashion. Finding himself something like sixth choice, Paul let his fitness go and he was allowed to join Huddersfield on a free in March 1995. He failed to impress in two substitute appearances and arrived at Spotland as a free agent.
Paul was restricted to brief substitute appearances at first while Docherty tried to gauge whether he still had an appetite for the game but a hat trick in an Auto-Windscreen game at home to Darlington in November appeared to answer the question and he was signed to the end of the season. He got his first League start in the following game at home to Cambridge and scored after only 4 minutes. He didn't score in the midweek mauling at home by Chester (where the only pleasure to be had was ogling a girl in the Sandy with a very nice rack) then scored two in the rout of Rotherham in the FA Cup. Then there was nothing. He was dropped to the bench for the next game at Scunthorpe and Shaw of all people was brought on ahead of him. He was in and out of the team for the next dozen or so games without scoring then dropped to the reserves. Something had gone on behind the scenes. Paul was very approachable to fans and said the training was a joke and later claimed that Docherty wanted him to play a more physical game (at 5'8 he was hardly equipped for that). Docherty was terse when asked about him at a fan's forum just barking "he's not good enough". In the reserves he still looked quite useful receiving the ball and playing others in but it was a lost cause. Paul made his last League appearance as a sub on Easter Monday 1996 in the 0-4 debacle at home to Barnet.
He joined Accrington Stanley for a year while opening up a chip shop near Burnden Park. As his business expanded Paul dropped down to Bacup Borough then packed up playing altogether in 1999. He now owns a string of chip shops and also coaches at City's Academy.
Sunday, 19 December 2010
226 Ian Thompstone
Position : Midfield (also played at centre half and forward)
Played : 1995-96
Appearances : 25
Goals : 1
Now we're into the 1995-96 season, Mick Docherty's only full season in charge and his tenure ended a few days after its close. We've actually already covered all the key men ; what follows is , without being too mean, the motley-est run of players in the whole blog as Docherty struggled to attract anyone to the club. It was a season of two halves, the first was promising with Whitehall and Stuart in great form, the second , after the mauling at Anfield, was absolutely dire and in my opinion the Board saved us from certain relegation in 1996-97 when they gave Docherty his cards. This was also the season covered by the book Kicking In The Wind which has been a very useful aide memoire.
Apart from the return of Ian Gray, this Ian was the only new signing (on a free from Scunthorpe) in the side that kicked off at home to Cardiff. I had been following his career with interest since working with his cousin (a nice lad). He started out at Manchester City making his debut at 17 in April 1988 and scoring but that was his only appearance and he moved on to Oldham in 1990. He never made a first team appearance in 18 months there and moved on to Exeter in January 1992 where he finally made his second League appearance nearly 4 years after his first. He scored 3 in 15 games there but didn't settle in the south west and they allowed him to sign for Halifax in the summer. In a side which ended up losing its League status Ian did quite well scoring 9 in 31 games before Scunthorpe rescued him with a £15,000 bid in March. Ian played upfront less often for the Irons moving to midfield and right back (a position he never took up for us) . He was a regular up to Christmas 1993 but suffered from stomach problems and afterwards struggled to get his place back . He was released in May 1995.
Ian was another player of questionable fitness and the reference to his "strong running" on Scunthorpe's website supports that as he always looked overweight and immobile in his games for us. Ian had one or two decent games at centre half (such as Scunthorpe away) as he was big enough to win the headers but he was too slow to be any threat upfront and just embarrassing in midfield where his distribution was awful. He did inspire my most praised bit of heckling. For a couple of seasons reserve games were at Spotland on a Wednesday night and he was playing in one game with a bandage for a head wound (which Docherty laughably claimed was life-threatening). After witnessing the umpteenth long pass sailing into touch I advised him to put the bandage over his eyes and trust the law of averages to improve his accuracy.
As has already been described in the Derek Hall post , the intention to offer he and Ian new contracts precipitated Docherty's sacking but unlike Derek, Ian found another League club and signed for Scarborough until March 1997. He made 18 appearances for them scoring twice, his last League game being a home draw with Brighton in December 1996. Released in March he joined Bury to the end of the season but they never gave him a game. He moved on to Atherton LR and was last heard in 2002 playing in the Bury Amateur League for Walshaw Sports.
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