Sampson6
The Real Deal - Wembley Manuscript
by Tommy Sampson
Chapter 6
“Crook Town away” babbled Roy Smith down my mobile phone.
Walking from the ninth green to the tenth tee at Barnham Brooms’ Golfing
complex near Norwich I learnt of our fate.
“Crook” I immediately thought was a bloody long way and the logistics of
watching them was my first concern.
It was early December and we had six weeks until the tie so we had plenty of
time to organise ourselves.
Christmas came and went and I had added two more players to an already strong
squad.
“Bazze” had played Football League for Leyton Orient before moving on to
Conference side Welling United where, after an excellent couple of years a
persistent ankle injury had curtailed his progress.
Jon Warden had arrived form Ashford Town, who were experiencing severe financial
difficulties and these two experienced lads would both be available for our long
trip to the north coast.
I first went to watch Crook play Easington Colliery on a cold January afternoon,
having stayed overnight in Bishop Auckland.
Crook Town had played at Wembley in the F.A. Amateur Cup during the
sixties and black and white photo’s adorned their quaint old bar documenting
that fact.
A 3-1 win for Crook saw me travelling home a bit nervous because they were big
and whilst not a particularly good footballing side the mere fact that we were
going to do all that travelling before actually playing the attitude had to be
spot on to get a result.
Keith Lissenden made the long journey the following week and at about 2.30 that
Saturday afternoon my assistant manager rang me in the dressing room at Slade
Green to say that his game had just been
postponed.
Whilst I was on the phone making sympathetic noises about his fruitless near 700
mile round trip, the lads in the dressing room were obviously getting wind of
Keith’s unfortunate predicament and taking the piss.
Undaunted by his misfortune Keith was determined to achieve something and
followed his opponents across the road form their ground to watch them train for
an hour.
The night before the game and the night of the tie which was indicative of his
commitment to the players.
The game itself was played in a gale force wind and winning the toss was
crucial. With the wind blowing
straight down the pitch we could defend it while we were strong and have it at
our backs later in the game.
I’d left Steve Lovell out for no other reason than I felt Phil Turner’s
younger legs would carry us through the game better.
Nil-nil at half time was an absolute dream, because in the second half Steve
Marshall, Monteith and Graham ran them ragged and on an utterly cold afternoon
we triumphed 3-0.
However, one incident eight minutes from the end caused me to see red.
To my consternation the fourth official did not have Liam’s name on his
pre-written card and would not let Liam onto the pitch. I berated the
official for his incompetence and asked to see my paperwork because I knew
Foxy’s name was there.
He told me that all that paperwork was locked in the dressing room
and I had to produce my carbon copy to prove my case.
Hanging on at 1-0 up with a few minutes to go plus stoppage time I felt it was
imperative to get Liam on the pitch. I shouted to Colin Adams, our fixture
secretary, who was sat up in the back of the main stand to come down with the
copy of my team sheet.
The wind was howling so strong that Colin could not hear me properly so I ran
along to the stand entrance to climb the stairs.
Meanwhile, Colin had decided to come down to meet me so whilst I was running up
the stand on one side Colin was coming down the other.
It was apparent that the fourth official, for some inexplicable reason had not
included Liam’s name on the list he had written.
I was not absolutely steaming thinking that if Crook had equalised whilst all
these shenanigans were going on someone was to “cop it”. As it turned
out before we could make the change Steve Marshall scored and all the panic was
over. “Foxy” got on with five minutes to go and saw “expectant”
father Roly add a third.
I went into the referee’s room not long after and the embarrassed fourth
official apologised at length. I
felt that with the result in the bag there was no point in making any more of it
and accepted the apology graciously.
TO BE CONTINUED...