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Tuesday, August 09, 2005

09 August 2005

Courtesy of my neighbour Martin I watched, Trainspotting at his place on Sunday, what a great film that is. Its inspired me to possibly start some wacky games, could do a version of the AIDs game. I wish I had gone to Pride Saturday, but had no money so could not go, it looked class reading it in the Argus. Anyway, I have added some of my fav movies to the left of the site, and added a Ipswich fans forum, Fully from Tractor-Boys.com. But seeing work aid who hope to get me some voulentry work that will turn into paid work, still waiting for Tescos work from Office Angels, so getting closer. I am hoping to pop down to the legendary coastal town of Eastbourne for the day tomorrow, if the weathers nice, for my annual mini holiday there. Huh meanwhile Albion have had a mixed start to the season a draw against Derby Satruday, and a bad loss to Reading tonight, but we are above our rivals from the other end of the A23 Palarse, which is good. Huh I look forward to being at Withers Saturday, hoping Albion can get something against their bogey team Crewe.

23:36 Posted in Diary | Permalink | Comments (0)

Saturday, August 06, 2005

Brighton VS Palace The A23 Derby

The seeds of this seemingly unlikely rivalry were sown in a pub at
West Street
, Brighton, on Christmas Eve, 1975. In response to Palace fans shouting ‘Eagles’ Albion supporter Lee Phillips started a chant of ‘Seagulls’.
It caught on when the teams met two months later, prompting
Albion
to change their nickname from the Dolphins.

The rivalry exploded in the 76/77 season, when the clubs met 5 times. Alan Mullery, then
Brighton
’s manager became public enemy number one with Eagles fans.
Four of those matches attracted crowds of 27000 and 30,000 – the exception being an FA Cup first round, second replay at neutral Stamford Bridge, which has gone down in Albion-Palace folklore for a referee branded ‘Challis of the Palace’ by both sets of fans.
Referee Ron Challis disallowed a
Brighton goal for an alleged handball by Peter Ward, although Palace defender Jim Cannon later admitted he had pushed the striker and the goal should have stood. Then Chris Cattlin was fouled in the box by Barry Silkman and Challis awarded Brighton
a penalty.
Brian Horton took it and scored, but the referee made him take it again because some of their players had encroached into the box. Alan Mullery said, ‘I’ve never seen that since – a penalty scored but re-taken because of encroachments by the defending team – and I still don’t understand it. He took it again, but the keeper (Paul Hammond) saved it. I was diabolical with rage. The penalty was the culmination of a lot of things and it was just one of those nights when the referee gave us nothing’
Palace held on to win 1-0 and, at the final whistle, a furious Mullery stormed onto the pitch to confront Challis.
‘He wouldn’t talk to me about it at the time and I never spoke to him about it,’ Mullery adds. ‘As I walked off, Palace fans were spitting and throwing tea at me so I reacted the same as any manager would have. I stuck my fingers up at them. It was instantaneous, spur of the moment.’
Although he cannot remember his exact words, it was reported Mullery yelled, ‘You’re not worth that, Palace!’ as he threw a handful of notes and coins into a puddle.
Mullery was led away by police and later fined £75 by the FA.

The rivalry became even fiercer as Eagles boss Terry Venables continued to pit his wits against Mullery, his former Tottenham team-mate.
Palace replaced
Portsmouth as Brighton’s biggest derby match during the late 70’s and the rivalry became enormous. Mullery explains,’ We were doing the same thing that Palace were doing – getting promotion with a manager in the limelight and big crowds. There were 33,000 at Brighton
every home match.’
Both clubs went up from div 3 in that season of cup controversy – the Seagulls as runners up and Palace in 3rd place.

Brighton
gained promotion from Div 3 as runners up & Palace in 3rd place.

Albion missed promotion on goal difference the following season as Spurs went up amid suggestions of a final day carve-up in a 0-0 draw with Southampton, who were also promoted. Palace finished 9th but scuppered Albion
’s chances by drawing both derbies.

Brighton eventually gained promotion to the old First division winning 3-1 at Newcastle on the final day of the 1978-79 season but even then there was a Palace related twist. The Eagles pipped Mullery’s men to the title by a point as a record crowd of 51,482 watched Venables’ side confirm their own promotion beating Burnley
.
Brighton
tore Palace apart in front of 28,000 at the Goldstone on Boxing Day 79, as Ward gave Cannon the run around & Horton exorcised the penalty demon by scoring to make it 3-0.
In 80/81
Brighton
did the double over Palace and enabled them to stay up, whereas Palace were left adrift at the bottom of the division by 13 points.

June 81 Mullery resigned after a boardroom row and a year later Ron Noades appointed him Palace manager. Many Eagles fans boycotted the club in protest.

Following the Seagulls 1983 FA Cup final appearance and relegation from the top flight, battle resumed in Div 2 with Brighton winning the next 3 matches but it was a 1-1 draw at Selhurst in April 1985 that added most to the ill feeling between the two sides, when Palace’s Henry Hughton’s leg breaking tackle ended Gerry Ryan’s career.

Brighton’s relegation in 1987 put a brief stop to the fun and games but back in div 2 88/89 Albion
won a 3-1 dingdong on Boxing Day at the Goldstone. Palace got revenge at Easter with a 2-1 win but they missed a golden opportunity to humiliate their rivals. They were awarded 4 penalties but they missed 3.

Kerry Mayo says even at youth and reserve level there is no love lost between the clubs. A youth match in 96 resulted in 3 Palace players, 2
Brighton players, the Palace coach and a spectator were all sent off in a match that Brighton
won 2-0.

Many of the meetings in the 70’s & 80’s had serious crowd trouble. Ref Ron Challis threatened to abandon a League game in Feb 76 if the Palace fans continued to throw smoke bombs.

The next meeting waited 13 years until Oct 2002.
Brighton had escaped from the brink of the Conference to win consecutive Championships back to division 1. Steve Coppell had taken over as Brighton manager after Brighton
fans had been serenading him since 1984 with his own song as a Palace manager
Agent Coppell said the Palace fans. The Seagulls did wonder as they watched their team give an inept, spineless performance which extended their losing streak to 12 league games. The score was 5-0 to Palace but the
Brighton
fans were still singing 6-5 we’re gonna win 6-5.

It took the dreadful events of 9/11 to extend the olive branch between the clubs. Robert Eaton a Seagull supporter was killed in the attack on the World Trade centre.
Brighton fans set up a memorial fund in aid of a youth soccer team in a deprived area of New York
. Around £40,000 was raised by matches between the clubs supporters, the first of which inevitably went to penalties. The website for this is www.remf.net


The story so far:-

League
Crystal Palace wins 29
Draws 20
Brighton wins 33

FA Cup
Crystal Palace win 1
Draws 2
Brighton wins 2





First match Brighton 0-2 Palace Dec25th 1920 Div3
Latest match Brighton 0-0 Palace Mar 25th Div 1
Biggest Palace win 6-0 Feb 11th 1950 Div 3 south
Biggest Brighton win 5-0 Jan 14th 1956 Div 3 south


This has been reproduced from an article in 442 magazine.

 

Friday, August 05, 2005

5 August 2005

Well one day away from the footy season and I am looking forward to it. Tomorrow the mighty Brighton and Hove Albion will be playing Derby at PRIDE park on the same day as pride in Brighton, it was the reason why Derbys ground got the name in tribute to the event. I will be at my parents house when it kicks off listening on SCR. I am so excited about the season even my nails have been painted blue and white. Anyway some job oppertunitys have opened up with two office junior jobs available at First Recruitment Crawley, and Brook Street Crawley, thanks to a legendary Albion supporting girl I am applying for both jobs and eagerly await responses. Apart from that not much exciting happening in the world of Charles Ball, anyway my first appearance at Withdean this season will be at the Crewe game, where I hope we can end the number of losses we have suffered to the Alex in recent years. Finally here is a list of some all time Dance tunes I have liked I could go on for hours, but I have cut the list down to 15 and here is my all time dance tunes.

Strike - U Sure Do (My nickname stems from this band)
Livin Joy - Dreamer
Underworld - Pearls Girl
FSOL-Papua New Guinea
Prodigy - Out of space
Inner City - Big Fun
Soul II Soul - Back To Life
Faithless - Immsomnia
Beats International - Dub Be good to me
Primal Scream - Loaded
Jaydee - Plastic Dreams
Mighty Dub Katz - Magic Carpet Ride
Everything But The Girl - Missing (Todd Terry Remix)
Todd Terry - Weekend
Fatboy Slim - Yamama

Find these tunes and enjoy.

19:40 Posted in Diary | Permalink | Comments (0)