Sampson2
The Real Deal - Wembley Manuscript
by Tommy Sampson
Chapter 2
Chippenham Town had completed their visit and it was now our turn. We
pulled up outside what looked like two oak doors to an old mansion. I caught
sight of a friendly face as I got off the coach.
Mick Gadmore was part of the security set up at Wembley Stadium.
I knew Mick because he had been a well known local non-league goalkeeper playing
for the likes of Ashford Town and Whitstable Town and his warm handshake and
friendly smile made me feel immediately at ease.
Having posed for the obligatory photographs outside the doors we were finally
allowed into the tunnel area and shown the dressing room area that Chippenham
were to use the following day.
The other dressing room was being shown to tourists on the Wembley Tour and it
was then that it hit alot of the players..
This wasn’t a tour with no end product, this was the overture to an
opera to be played out in just over 24 hours on the World’s most famous
football stage with ourselves as the stars.
The dressing rooms were old and the smell of plaster and concrete was prevalent.
This was no state of the art, sanitised impersonal changing area, this was
history.
To me this was, Matthews, Finney, Charlton, Moore , Greaves, Ramsey, to others
it must have meant something similar.
I tended to stay in the company of the more senior players and in particular,
Terry Martin and Steve Lovell.
Terry had played for me since 1992 covering Sheppey United, Herne Bay and now
Deal Town. Steve was a Welsh international and his clubs had included Cyrstal
Palace, Stockport County, Millwall and Gillingham.
When the time came to walk out onto the pitch the three of us held back a little
to allow the rest to move to the front. I suppose we just wanted to savour
the moment for as long as possible.
Moving up the slope towards the end of the tunnel you come to the
concertinered canopy which narrows your walkway.
Steve, Terry and I were almost the last ones to reach the canopy and from there
you have another 20 or so paces to go before entering into the daylight.
Terry and I were always very close and whilst not so obviously caught up in the
emotion Steve was feeling, we still struggled to stay dry-eyed. As the
daylight hits you and you adjust your eyes, you can see the word W.E.M.B.L.E.Y
displayed in the seating area at the opposite end.
The scoreboard said “Wembley welcome Deal Town” ........ just fantastic I
thought.
Would it go well? Would we get
hammered? Would I enjoy it?
How would I feel if we lost?
A couple of weeks earlier, Roly Graham, had scored his 100th goal under my
management and, as a tribute, I had presented him with an engraved trophy on the
pitch in front of the players and had said to him “I hope your 101st is here
tomorrow”.
Before we left Steve Lovell and I were interviewed by Gerald Sindstadt for
BBC’s Football Focus and I remember our Interviewer getting really annoyed
because as he was trying to speak to me the groundsman kept driving past on this
huge mower cutting the grass. Mr
Singstadt was not best pleased and one or two expletives were drowned out by the
mower’s engine!!
After an hour or so the players boarded the coach for the hotel and the excited
chatter you could hear was similar to a party of nursery school children who had
just made their first trip to a zoo.
Who could deny them their wanderlust about Wembley?
Later that evening I drove Roly and Paul Ribbens back to Wembley for a live TV
broadcast with Meridian Tonight.
Iain McBride, the presenter, had been brilliant in covering Deal’s path to
Wembley and it was good to see him at around 6.0pm behind the goal opposite the
tunnel.
The three of us had decided to see how many song titles we could get into our
answers (a game the England players had played during Euro 96).
Roly dried as soon as the first question hit him, I managed “Help”, “Here
There and Everywhere” and “People” before Ribbo chattered on about
“we’re gonna win big time!!” forgetting
the challenge.
When we got back to the hotel we all ate together and after dinner I had to tell
players their fates regarding selection for tomorrow’s game.
Phil turner had run into some great form scoring a hat-trick in the Player Kent
Senior Trophy Final two weeks before.
These four would be the subs at the start of the game.
My big problem was who would be the substitute goalkeeper?
I knew this would be impractical the nearer we got to the final and had to
own up to my own sentimental stupidity and select one or the other.
“Are you prepared to site on the bench?” and to their credit both said yes
Craig had played in the 5th, 6th and Semi-Final rounds whilst Jamie had played
in all other games including the first Senior Trophy Final. They were
both excellent keepers and whichever I chose I knew I couldn’t go far wrong.
However, being the type of game it was, I decided during the course of that week
to seek the opinions of the senior members of the side and my management.
Colin Ford (coach) and Keith Lissenden (assistant
manager) both gave their opinions as did, Terry Martin, Steve Lovell, Roly
Graham, David Monteith,. Jason Ash and Paul Roberts.
I sought out Jamie Turner first in his bedroom at about 10.30pm and gave him the
bad news.
So finally it was all done, Barry Lakin and Liam Fox were the unlucky ones not
to get in the 16 but they would get the opportunity to change and warm up on the
turf before the game.
I finally went to bed at around midnight wondering if it was possible to sleep
but as it was my exertions of the day had left me exhausted and I drifted off
like a baby for a full night’s rest.
TO BE CONTINUED...