Seven questions about Stoke City for each decade back to the sixties, the answers will be posted on Saturday.
60s. Who is this?
“Born in a place that has a cake named after it, this jack of all trades crossed county borders to sign for Stoke and was soon in the first team. He would play in every outfield position for the Potters, but most of his appearances were in the back four – something which partially explains why he fell into the very, very occasional goalscorer category. He could not point to many trophies won from his time at the club – a Second Division winner’s medal being as good as it got for him as, having helped them get there, he missed what was, arguably, the greatest day in Stoke’s history. He stayed for another four years and when he moved on it was by crossing plenty of time zones, not counties, to a club that a current City player was turning out for until recently. He did not stay long – the call of Stoke was too strong and he ended his career playing a few games, and scoring a goal, for a club as close to his old stamping ground as you could get.
70s.A vegan who still runs marathons and attends heavy metal concerts, this defender started out by playing for the club he had supported as a kid and became a fixture in their team during this decade, winning Under 23 caps for his country. A run of over a hundred consecutive appearances was ended when a manager who City fans of a certain vintage remember with very little enthusiasm decided he was not physical enough for the Second Division following a relegation. He won the manager around eventually though and was a stalwart in a promotion team before he was sold to lupine rivals to the south. A brief return to Stoke did not go well and, after that, apart from loan spells with some bravehearts in white and in a city not far from where you might kiss a piece of rock, he spent the rest of his full time career in Scandinavia – can you name him?
80s. Confused mints donor is a one time Potter apparently.
90s. Not quite a case of nepotism rules because his father had left shortly before he made his three appearances for Stoke – who am I talking about?
00s. Is this what you do when you stain the character of a popular man? It sounds like!
10s. Two men appeared for Stoke at Cardiff City Stadium during this decade who have played first team football for Barcelona and won caps for Catalonia – who am I describing?
20s. Name two full internationals Stoke signed in the January transfer window.
Answers.
60s. Eccles born Eric Skeels made more appearances for Stoke
than anyone else in his seventeen years with them which began in 1959. He
played five hundred two times in all competitions, but not in Stoke’s 1972
League Cup Final win at Wembley. In 1976, he moved to Seattle Sounders, but it
was only a few months before he returned to England to play for Port Vale.
70s. Stoke born Alan Dodd played just over four hundred
games in all competitions for his local club, but requested a transfer after
Alan Durban left him out of the team in 1978. He got his place back though and
stayed with Stoke until 1982 when he joined Wolves. He returned home briefly before
playing for three different Swedish clubs that also saw him turning out for
Port Vale and Cork City on loan during the off season.
80s. Simon Stainrod.
90s. Lou Macari’s second spell as Stoke manager was “stripped
off his duties” at the end of the 96/97 season, his son Paul made his three first
team appearances for the club during the following season.
00s. Mark Goodfellow.
10s. Marc Muniesa and Bojan.
20s. Wales’ James Chester arrived from Villa on loan and Blackpool’s Northern Ireland international Jordan Thompson was signed on a permanent deal.
Throughout my City supporting life there have been many decades where you could count the number of home matches I’ve missed on the fingers of one hand. For example, I missed one in the noughties and two in the last decade – each time due to bad health.
Well, it looks like I’m going to struggle to keep that proud record up in the twenties because today’s match with Wigan was the second one I’ve missed already in this decade after not making it to the Reading cup match as well. Ill health was again the reason for me missing that game, but today it was a combination of more car problems and doubts about whether the train service from and to Treherbert would survive the horrendous weather that made me decide discretion was the better part of valour.
As it was, unlike the Reading match, I was able
to watch what has to be seen as a disappointing 2-2 draw with a side in the
relegation places via a stream – not quite as good as being there of course,
but not a bad substitute.
I say I saw the game, but that’s not wholly true. Virtually the first thing I saw was Wigan taking the lead in the fourth minute through Wales’ Keifer Moore which means that I missed the first of several contentious decisions by refèree John Brooks and one of his assistants.
The game was barely fifteen seconds old when Welshman Lee Evans went ploughing into Will Vaulks with a tackle which the BBC’s website describes as “dangerous” and Mr Brooks decided a yellow card for the former Newport player was sufficient punishment. As I say, I’ve not seen the incident yet so I cannot comment on the rights and wrongs of the decision, but Neil Harris talked after the match about four very big calls in the match that all went in favour of Wigan, this being the first of them.
The final one came right at the end of the added time after the ninety when former City goalkeeper David Marshall did not get much height or distance on his attempted clearance of a Marlon Pack corner delivered just under the crossbar into what former Sky summariser Andy Gray used to call a “crowd scene”. There was much contesting for the ball as it slowly dropped and Sean Morrison appeared to be the one who diverted it into the net only for the celebrations to be stifled almost before they had begun by Mr Brooks blowing for a foul on the keeper.
Now, Wigan manager Paul Cook has said that City “may have felt aggrieved” by the decision to disallow the goal and I take this as a sign that he had some sympathy for that view, but, from the moment Marshall mispunched the ball, I was expecting that City would be penalised because that’s what almost always happens when goalkeepers are the “injured party” in such incidents.
It’s not so much that I believe that the referee
got the decision right, more that he did what I firmly believe nine out of ten,
at least, officials would do in such a situation and so, on that decision at
least, I cannot join in with the criticism he has been attracting from City
fans tonight.
That said, I thought the decision to award a penalty against Curtis Nelson for handball right at the end of the first half was on the harsh side, but it seemed to me to be similar to the one Morrison gave away in the home game against Newcastle last season where he was hit on the arm as he went to ground attempting a block. Self evidently, penalties are going to be given in such situations, but I would argue that they are just as likely not to be, thereby suggesting that Nelson was unlucky today.
I would also argue that when you consider Mr Brooks’ decision not to award a penalty against Cedric Kipke when the ball hit his hand as he tried to block Albert Adomah’s shot, there was an element of inconsistency in the referee’s interpretation of what was and wasn’t handall.
Mind you, I attach hardly any blame to Mr Brooks for his decision not to award City an early penalty against Moore for a blatant tug on Morrison as they contested a Vaulks long throw just before our first equaliser. No, that was almost entirely down to the laughably poor linesman on the Grandstand side of ground who had a perfect view of the whole thing.
The linesman’s howler was not quite in the Eddie Smart against Chelsea class, but the sheer number of other dubious decisions he made (the worst being his failure to notice Lee Tomlin stood at least a yard offside in a City counter attack) put him on a par with Mr Smart, who is still, somehow, running the line in Premier League matches.
So, while I think City are entitled to feel hard
by when it comes to the match officials, there were other reasons why they
weren’t able to make it three wins from three against struggling teams this
week.
The first one of these is that I feel Wigan were better than what you’d expect from a bottom three team. They won at Leeds in their last away match and, although their away record doesn’t reflect it, they are very competitive on the road – they just have an unfortunate habit of letting late goals in and losing matches in which they were level going into the closing minutes.
In saying that, City really should have won this game and so much of the reason why they didn’t is that they were careless at the back and not incisive or good enough in front of goal.
An example of the carelessness I mention came when, having done well at the back at Luton and Huddersfield, they fell asleep defending a corner and allowed a short one to be played to unmarked captain Sam Morsy who crossed low to the near post where Moore casually flicked home to put his team 1-0 up.
To be caught out in such a manner was not
impressive in a defence which has been proven to be fallible from set pieces
this season. I thought we also had chances to get the ball away in the incident
which led to their half time deficit and there was something of an early season
reminder in how we were susceptible to counter attacks from our opponents
following our attacking set piece.
Up the other end of the pitch, there was again a
contrast between the nice, incisive, football we sometimes see in away matches
these days and the mainly set piece based attacking play we are still seeing in
home matches.
It’s good to have Will Vaulks’ long throws available to us because they have something to them that the ones hurled in by the likes of Callum Paterson, Morrison, Lee Peltier and one or two others in the last couple of seasons do not.
I’m not sure what that something is, but in the
last month or so, Vaulks long throws have resulted in more goals than the combined
total of those I just mentioned in the past two years.
Today, both of our goals came from throw ins by Vaulks. For the first, Morrison got a touch on to Murphy who hooked in a neat equaliser with the confidence of someone who was on something of a good run in front of goal himself, while it was Morrison again who contested for another Vaulks throw when the ball rolled free some fifteen yards or so from goal and found its way to Pack whose shot looked to be flying just wide until left back Kai Naismith diverted the ball past Marshall with his chest for a second equaliser.
When you have an attacking weapon that is working, like Vaulks’ long throw is at the moment, it seems daft not to use it on the grounds that “it’s not playing football the right way”, but it does rather tend to highlight our lack of creativity in home matches where visiting sides sit deeper knowing that we’re not great at opening up massed defences.
It’s ironic how often you see a team struggling in away matches these days who a few weeks later are suddenly racking the wins when they have to travel. It’s happened to us since we beat Nottingham Forest in November – we have won at Sheffield Wednesday, Huddersfield and Luton and yet while we have finally refound our away Mojo, we now can’t win a home game!
Our home record since we beat Barnsley in early December reads played six, won one and drawn five (add the two FA Cup ties and it’s only onehome win in eight). The Reading cup match apart, we’re creating very little in open play at home lately and, with a series of games at Cardiff City Stadium coming up now against teams that are above us in the table, we are going to need to rediscover how to win at home pretty quickly.
Today was a disappointment, but, say, a draw at Luton and then a win over Wigan would definitely have supporters thinking a play off spot is on – seven points from nine is a good return in what was an important week, but I’m afraid the fine win over league leaders West Brom is proving to be nothing more than a blip in a long run of home one pointers.
Hardly surprisingly, there were no games at all played in either the Welsh League South or the Highadmit South Wales Alliance, so nothing to report when it comes to Blaenrhondda or Ton Pentre, but there was another game played at Leckwith this morning which also finished 2-2 as City’s under 18s emerged with a creditable draw with highly placed Watford after they had gone a couple of goals down – Rubin Colwill and Ryan Pritchard got our goals.
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