Joined: Jan 30 2004 Posts: 2100 Location: Walking in a Woodsy Wonderland
as the players were part time and low paid, and there was no freedom of contract, a lot of clubs had what was referred to as "loyal servants"; often quite classy players who preferred to stay with their local team.
eg Nigel Stephenson and Jeff Grayshon at Dewsbury, Arthur Keegan at Bramley (after leaving Hull), Mick Morgan at York, Arnie Walker at Whitehaven,
Teams seemed more settled in the 70s - there was nothing like the current off-season rebuilding, although you could buy players mid season in those days
Joined: Feb 12 2005 Posts: 13126 Location: East Staffordshire
TrevLovesJanice wrote: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 !
It does raise a few eyebrows.
"To play your best football you need players with enthusiasm and drive and energy." - Peter Sterling
Adam Pearson said not wrote:I know there are two franchises and two clubs (in Hull) and that will remain forever more
Joined: Feb 03 2004 Posts: 565 Location: no where near east hull
Great recollections from the above posters.Funny how these slip your memory but then come flooding back after being triggered like this. I too can remember "repent the end is nigh" people with their placards and leaflets on the car park down Airlie Street. One thing that stuck in my mind when ever I saw them was,you must have some b***s trying to convert some of the pished up supporters rushing to get in threpneeys. Talking of away ground supporters clubs,i can remember waiting on the car park to get in at H
Born Black and White
Die Black and White
Hull will give us a tough game but the key is to silence their fans in the Threepenny Stand.We have to do this because if we do'nt they will get behind their side and lift them in a way you've never seen,heard or witnessed before.
Frank Stanton. Coach to the 1982 "Untouchables" Aussie team. 1982 "
Joined: Feb 03 2004 Posts: 565 Location: no where near east hull
Great recollections from the above posters.Funny how these slip your memory but then come flooding back after being triggered like this. I too can remember "repent the end is nigh" people with their placards and leaflets on the car park down Airlie Street. One thing that stuck in my mind when ever I saw them was,you must have some b***s trying to convert some of the pished up supporters rushing to get in threpneeys. Talking of away ground supporters clubs TLJ,i can remember waiting on the car park to get in at Hunslets old ground and when the guy on the big double doors swung them open,dozens of Hull supporters came rushing out with bottles of ale in hand.How they got ,I don't know but it certainly was a cheap bar.
Born Black and White
Die Black and White
Hull will give us a tough game but the key is to silence their fans in the Threepenny Stand.We have to do this because if we do'nt they will get behind their side and lift them in a way you've never seen,heard or witnessed before.
Frank Stanton. Coach to the 1982 "Untouchables" Aussie team. 1982 "
Joined: Feb 03 2004 Posts: 565 Location: no where near east hull
OOPS ,sorry nearly a double post.
Born Black and White
Die Black and White
Hull will give us a tough game but the key is to silence their fans in the Threepenny Stand.We have to do this because if we do'nt they will get behind their side and lift them in a way you've never seen,heard or witnessed before.
Frank Stanton. Coach to the 1982 "Untouchables" Aussie team. 1982 "
Remember having to lay tarmac behind 3penny's that had been dumped in ground 3 days earlier,me and mate Brian tarring tin roof of same stand . painting metal silver ,while junior supporters from round about painted back of stand white .gave them my old Wembley programme's and tickets. Told to get dogs out ground for speedway [had 3 German Sheperds running loose then] same night sound system went wrong and Joe Longthorne brought his to help out
Joined: Jan 16 2003 Posts: 6734 Location: At the cider bus, Worthy Farm, Somerset
talking of changing games to sunday reminded me that my first game wasn't in 78/79 but will have been sometime in 1975 when hull played on saturday afternoon. my family often visited my gran who lived on etty grove which was just the other side of gordon street almost opposite the ground entrance - the grove has long gone now (demolished in the late 80s i think). anyway my dad used to sneak out of the house at halftime and see the second half, i seemed to recall you got in free at halftime (can anyone confirm?). anyway i went with him on a couple of occasions though i can't remember much about it except it was my first taste of live sport and obviously pretty exciting. think we got crowds of 4000 or so at the time according to dad.
on a different tack, the mid 70s - what did the younger folk of hull do for entertainment? hull as one poster has said attracted a mainly older audience, it is fair to assume rovers were similar and city weren't exactly packing them in. i suppose this was the age of the saturday afternoon cinema so maybe this is why sport was seen to be not as popular. it really took the rise of both rugby clubs to make the game 'sexy' at the end of the decade
Joined: Jan 16 2003 Posts: 6734 Location: At the cider bus, Worthy Farm, Somerset
The Dentist Wilf wrote: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!
could you expand on the program entry system, i'm intrigued. this raises loads of questions
was the programme really expensive? did it have a tear off voucher inside or did you hand the whole thing in? how did they know how many to print? was it a one off or a regular thing? could you sneak someone in by throwing your programme back over the wall?
Joined: Dec 09 2002 Posts: 566 Location: 13 floors up overlooking the kc
the artist wrote:could you expand on the program entry system, i'm intrigued. this raises loads of questions
was the programme really expensive? did it have a tear off voucher inside or did you hand the whole thing in? how did they know how many to print? was it a one off or a regular thing? could you sneak someone in by throwing your programme back over the wall?
Programme was purchased as you went through turnstile and was nothing more than a team sheet was just a means of getting around Sunday trading laws
If the wife said Hull FC or her. Would you miss her?
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