Joined: Jan 16 2003 Posts: 6734 Location: At the cider bus, Worthy Farm, Somerset
This period was just before i started watching (my first game was the last game of the 78/79 season v new hunslet when we won to go 26 from 26 in division 2). i have heard relatively little about the rest of this decade over the years - i know we reached the jp trophy final against the odds one year but shamefully, i don't know much else about this period in the club's history.
to tie in with the 150 year anniversary, it would be really useful if anyone with a better knowledge of what can probably be termed one of the less successful periods of the clubs history could post some details - same could apply to the mid to late 60s to i guess
Joined: Jan 30 2004 Posts: 2100 Location: Walking in a Woodsy Wonderland
Less fans than 78/89 but increasingly passionate after the "low" of 74/75
My first game watching regularly was away at batley in September '76. We won to go top and I just couldn't believe the singing coming out of the taverners bar after the match as we walked past. The excitement seemed to grow during that season, and despite a poor 77/78 (relegated straight away) the signings of Farrar and Norton seemed to bring hope.
77/78 saw a couple of bad incidents when fans came out of threepennies to have a go at the referee (physically as well as verbally) and we got in a lot of trouble with the league. I think that was when the "little wooden whistle" song really became popular too (which got us in to more trouble). The real low points of that season where losing at home to New Hunslet on Boxing Day, after which DDD resigned, then going away to New Hunslet for the next game and losing that too. After Bunting's changes won us a few games losing at Wakefield (to 3 drop goals) and Bramley (appalling) were hard to take, but we took loads of fans to both. In those days there weren't many replica shirts on sale (or maybe there was no demand), so it was all scarves and hats. Loads of lads had scarves round wrists ! There were lots of knitted scarves and bobble hats too - all a bit amateur (yet more homely) than these days. One other thing I remember is seeing the wave of fans going over the railway bridge at the end of walliker street, on the way to threepennies. I think those days of restricted opening hours meant that people got more tanked up before matches, and also then took advantage of the away ground's clubhouse after the games. You used to see a lot more fans staggering in those days !
Joined: Jan 30 2004 Posts: 2100 Location: Walking in a Woodsy Wonderland
other things I remember was there were a lot more "older" fans in those days. Probably because watching an unsuccessful team wasn't vey attractive if you were younger, so we were more down to the hard core. Cigarette smoke everywhere too. and those single-seater pal blue invalid carriages parked on the speedway track at both ends
Sunday rugby was relatively new (although Leeds had stuck to Saturdays, and Cas and Salford played Friday nights), and at a lot of Lancashire grounds you used to get old men holding placards up declaring some kind of religious retribution for playing on sundays. They used to preach out loud and get loads of stick back ! never saw any in Yorkshire, but deffo at Oldham, swinton, leigh etc
Not 70's but just to note there were two outside the Boulevard on 20th Sept 1968 for our first Sunday game they were folks from the 'Lords Day Preservation Society' With banners saying 'Keep the Lords Day Sacred' and another bizarrely announcing 'Repent the end is nigh' to which one bloke stated 'yours f*ckin will be if you don't get out of the way!' 8600 attended we beat Huddersfield 28-14 and admission was by programme only!
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Joined: Feb 12 2005 Posts: 13126 Location: East Staffordshire
I started going in 1972 as a five year old so my memories are somewhat sketchy in the early period I too remember disabled cars parked around the speedway track and also the terraces covered in shale from the track. I sat on a cushion stuffed in a carrier bag on the terrace in the best stand towards Gordon Street end usually clutching a bar of chocolate that my Nanna had got me from Ivor's shop (Ivor Watts' newsagents on corner of Westbourne Av/Woodcock St). My memories of that era are mud bath games, tons of sand on the pitch, missing floodlights and alike. As things (and therefore crowds) improved towards the end of the decade I remember we had to move down the stand to stand up against the wall and my Dad built me a wooden stand so I could see over the top. I remember the crowd banter with the likes of Alf Macklin and my favourite player was Keith Boxhall - I used to practice kicking goals opposite my house using the 'toe-end' method that Box used.
Got me thinking how much different my lad will remember his early days watching Hull. Like tonight he's out of school in Uttoxeter at 3:40 - in the car then a slog along the A50/A38/M1/M18/M62 up to Hull wondering if the next motorway delay will make us miss kick off. Different times.
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Joined: Jan 30 2004 Posts: 2100 Location: Walking in a Woodsy Wonderland
Staffs FC wrote:........out of school in Uttoxeter at 3:40 - in the car then a slog along the A50/A38/M1/M18/M62 up to Hull wondering if the next motorway delay will make us miss kick off.
What I horrible journey - lightened onto by the massive bulls knackers on that statue as you come out of uttoxeter ! I am always surprised at how they have positioned it - so that you look at it's ars_ and balls as you arrive in the town !
Joined: Jan 30 2004 Posts: 2100 Location: Walking in a Woodsy Wonderland
The other thing about the 70's was the lack of floodlights.
From memory, they didn't exist at Blackpool, Bradford, Doncaster, Featherstone, Huyton or York, so you would get 2pm or 2.30pm kick offs on a sunday and finish the game in near-darkness
For the same reason, the Yorkshire cup (largely played midweek apart from the final) had to be played in August/September before the clocks changed !
Joined: Jan 30 2004 Posts: 2100 Location: Walking in a Woodsy Wonderland
The other thing about the 70's was the lack of floodlights.
From memory, they didn't exist at Blackpool, Bradford, Doncaster, Featherstone, Huyton or York, so you would get 2pm or 2.30pm kick offs on a sunday and finish the game in near-darkness
For the same reason, the Yorkshire cup (largely played midweek apart from the final) had to be played in August/September before the clocks changed !
Joined: Jan 30 2004 Posts: 2100 Location: Walking in a Woodsy Wonderland
on a roll now....
half time entertainment - a marching band. Quite often a kids band, like boy's brigade or air cadets, and usually involving xylophones and kazoos. Occasionally there would be majorettes too, little kids frozen to death wading through the mud. God knows what happened to this kind of "entertainment" but I don't miss it.
Also a half time there would often be a collection - usually for the afore-mentioned band. This was done by 4 people holding a big grey blanket and walking around the pitch s that people could chuck money in. I never saw any of em get injured either !
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