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Showing posts with label Glenn Hoddle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glenn Hoddle. Show all posts

Saturday, 30 January 2016

Swindon Town's All-Time England Team

I work with many people who, although they may have been born in Swindon and are resident in the
Wiltshire town, for some inexplicable reason choose to support football teams from elsewhere in the country. Chelsea fans with West Country accents, Manchester United fans hailing from London and "plastic" Scousers from the Midlands, all these fans, supporting teams with which they have no cultural heritage, are Glory Hunters seeking the annual thrill of a trophy win like a drug addict seeking a quick fix; some support Tottenham Hotspur so not all are in it for the honours!

It rankles when these fans talk about the "we" and "us" when referring to the particular mega-rich club to whose pole they have struck their flag when there is a perfectly good professional football club to support in their home town, and it is even more irritating when they deride the lowlier ranking of Swindon Town. Many have never been to the home of their so-called team and would probably get lost on their way to the ground if they were to venture outside the boundaries of their home borough.

This is the background to many a discussion of the beautiful game I have with others whose passion
Banner from www.Swindon-Town-FC.co.uk
is Association Football. One night, the talk got around to who could produce the best all-time England team from the ranks of their team's players, both past and present. Immediately, the Premier League snobs snorted that Swindon Town would be hard-pressed to find anyone to fill such a roster. Rising to the challenge, I asked what the criteria would be for me to come up with a Swindon Town All-Time England team. The answer came back that the players could have represented their country at any level and at any time in their career, but good luck on finding anybody eligible from the Robins squads of yesteryear! A number of players immediately came to mind, but I had to delve a bit deeper to get a full squad of eleven and substitutes. For this, I have to thank Richard Banyard and his outstanding website, www.Swindon-Town-FC.co.uk (possibly the best "fan's" website on the internet); his site is chock full of all the facts and figures that any Swindon Town fan might need to satisfy any thirst for knowledge on their football club.  

Swindon Town All-Time England Team


Goalkeeper - Fraser Digby

Fraser Digby with English Schools Cap
There were two contenders for this spot - Tim Flowers and Fraser Digby.

Whilst at Southampton, Tim Flowers spent two loan periods with Swindon Town, once in the 1986 - 1987 season (2 appearances) and once the following season, 1987 - 1988, making 5 appearances. Flowers represented England at U-21 level (3 caps) and at full international level (11 caps) and won a Premier League Champions medal with Blackburn Rovers in 1993 - 1994. He also won a League Cup Winners medal with Leicester City in 2000.


However, my choice for Swindon's England goalkeeping spot is
Fraser Digby. With 504 (+1) appearances for the club, Fraser Digby can truly be called a Swindon Town "Legend". On his day, he was equal to any other English goalkeeper playing at the time he was with Swindon and it is a credit to him that he remained a stalwart at SN1 for as long as he did when so-called "bigger" clubs were given mention in the press as in the running to sign him. His qualification for inclusion into the Swindon Town All-Time England Team stems from Fraser gaining England U-15 Schoolboy honours Youth honours and 5 appearances at England U-21 level, these last ones whilst at the County Ground.

Right Back - David Kerslake

For simplicity's sake, for my Swindon Town All-Time England Team, I have gone with a 4-4-2 formation . Therefore, some players may be in a position in the England setup which is slightly different to that in which they were employed when playing for Swindon. This is the case for my choice of Right Back. When David Kerslake was on the ball, the crowd at the County Ground always sensed that an attacking opportunity was on the cards. His favoured position was as a right wing back and it is the memories of his forays forward that stand out more than his solid defensive work. He represented England at Schoolboy and Youth levels and had one international appearance at U-21 level whilst playing for Queens Park Rangers.

Left Back - Phil King

Phil King played for the Town during the Lou Macari era featuring in the 1987 League Division 3
Play Off Final. He made 141 (+4)  appearances during his first stint with Swindon between 1987 and 1989 scoring 4 goals. He was signed by Sheffield Wednesday and won a League Cup Winners Medal with them in 1991. He is also renowned in Aston Villa folklore as the player who scored the winning goal against Inter Milan in the UEFA Cup. A second term at Swindon Town came in 1997, but he only made 5 appearances before leaving for Brighton in 1999 having spent some time on loan at Blackpool. His England qualification comes with only the one appearance at 'B' International level, but his commitment to the cause when at the County Ground earns him the Left Back role in the Swindon Town All-Time England Team.

Centre Back - Terry Fenwick

Admittedly, the role for Centre Back has only one candidate - "Oo" Shaun Taylor (no true Swindon Town fan will mention Mr. Taylor without the preceding "Oo" - I wonder if that's his title in his passport rather then Mr.?). Unfortunately, not having represented his country at any level, Shaun Taylor cannot feature in the Swindon Town All-Time England Team. So, this honour must go to other players who have worn the red shirt of the Robins. In the twilight of his footballing career, Terry Fenwick was signed from Tottenham Hotspur in 1993 to help bolster the defence for the club's only appearance in the top-flight of the Football League. Renowned for hard tackles, Terry Fenwick's 30 (+3) appearances for Swindon Town saw him notably break the leg of Blackburn Rovers' player, Paul Warhurst. Fenwick represented England at Youth International, U-21 International (11 appearances) and Full International (20 appearances) levels.

Centre Back - Neil "Razor" Ruddock

More for his previous experience of top-flight football with Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool, Neil
"Razor" Ruddock is my second choice for a Centre Back role. Other than his free kick which saw him score the only goal in his debut against Colchester, his 14 (+2) appearances for Swindon Town pale into insignificance when measured against his legal dispute with the club over unpaid wages. In his day, "Razor" was a formidable defender for Spurs and Liverpool and his banter with opposing forwards could have an unsettling effect on their play. He represented England at Youth International, U-21 (4 appearances), 'B' International (1 appearance) and Full International (1 appearance) levels.

Right Wing - Nicky "Buzzer" Summerbee

Nicky Summerbee was one of the few Swindon Town players to emerge from the Premier League season (1993 - 1994) with their reputation enhanced and in demand by other Premier League teams. With a running style all his own, once on the ball, it took a strong defender to remove it from what seemed like a magnetic force keeping it at Nicky's feet. A legendary crosser of the ball, the right wing was his domain and he made 108 (+27) appearances for Swindon Town. His England credentials stem from his 1 'B' International and 3 U-21 appearances.



Left Wing - "Sir" Don Rogers 

The Ides of March 1969 will live long in the memory of those fortunate to be both old enough to
remember that day and to have had the chance to be at Wembley for the League Cup Final. I was just under 4 years old, so do not remember any pre-match excitement in the town for the Division 3 v Division 1 clash, nor any of the post-match celebrations. What I do remember is being told about the event by the older boys in our street and, in particular, the part played by the legend that is "Sir" Don Rogers (487 + 3 appearances). I've watched the match several times and apart from the heroic display from goalkeeper Peter Downsborough, the contribution by Swindon Town's left winger was the most memorable aspect of the game. The third, and last, Swindon Town goal scored by Don Rogers is, in my opinion, the best goal ever scored at Wembley, new or old. When one considers that the game was in extra time, the heavy pitch, the tired legs and Bob Wilson was in goal for Arsenal for that game, the speed with which Rogers sprinted up the field from within his own half, the ball glued to his feet, and the finish whereby he took the ball around the floundering Scottish international goalkeeper, laying in the mud like a landed carp, and slotted the ball home to end the game, winning the League Cup for Swindon, then the attacking left winger is a must for any team. When leaving the County Ground for then Division 1 Crystal Palace, Don Rogers must have seemed a dead cert for achieving full international honours for his country. Unfortunately, he was never to feature in any of the England Managers' plans, but he does qualify for the Swindon Town All-Time England Team by virtue of representing England at Youth International, League Representative and U-23 International (2 appearances) levels.  

Right Midfield - Mike Summerbee

If persons of a certain age were to asked the question "For which team did Mike Summerbee play?" most would answer Manchester City. However, his first professional club was Swindon Town and in 244 appearances, he scored 40 goals. His natural position was as an outside right, but, for the Swindon Town All-Time England Team, I've moved him further into midfield. I remember seeing him on television playing for Manchester City and England and was impressed when my Dad told me that he used to play for Swindon Town. It would be interesting to see how he would have paired up with his son on the right wing. He played at League Representative level (1 appearance) and U-23 level (1 appearance), and won 8 Full International caps.


Left Midfield - Glenn Hoddle

Up to the 1991 -1992 season, I had seen some good players wearing the Swindon Town shirt, but,
when Glenn Hoddle wore the red of the Robins, his play was a class above. As Player-Manager, he controlled the field from the sweeper's position, but he was renowned as a midfield maestro before taking over the reins at the County Ground. Pinpoint accuracy was his forte, whether a cross-field pass or direct free kick, Hoddle could pass the ball to feet or hit the top corner of the goal all the time, every time. He played 73 (+2) games for Swindon Town scoring just 3 goals, but he was finally able to lay the ghost of 1990 when the club was denied its rightful place in the top tier of the English Football League, by leading them to a 4 - 3 win over Leicester City in the 1993 Division 1 Play Off final at Wembley. He didn't stay to manage the team in the Premier League, deciding that Chelsea was where his future lay, but he will always be remembered as the man who took Swindon Town to the Premier League. He represented his country at many levels - Youth International, U-21 International (12 appearances), 'B' International and Full International (53 appearances) - and is a must for the Swindon Town All-Time England Team.

Forward - Paul Rideout

Paul Rideout is a "local boy done good". Playing 109 (+5) times for Swindon Town, his home town club, Rideout scored 42 goals and was transferred to Aston Villa in 1983. A spell with Italian club Bari saw him return to English football at Southampton. He was loaned out to Swindon Town before moving to Notts County (then in the top flight Division 1) and then plied his trade north of the border for Rangers. In England, he will always be remembered for playing for Everton, the club he moved to after Rangers. The 1995 FA Cup Final saw Everton take on Manchester United and Rideout played in the striker's role for the Toffees. A counter attack by Everton saw the ball come back off the bar and Rideout was able to head home from just six yards out. At Schoolboy level Paul Rideout notably scored a hat trick against Scotland, a game that England lost 4 - 5 and which was actually televised live. He also represented his country at Youth International and U-21 International level (5 appearances), but never found favour with the England setup to achieve a Full International cap.  

Forward - Harold Fleming

Harold Fleming is the only Swindon Town player to represent England at Full International level
whilst playing for the club; he played eleven times for his country, scoring 9 times, a strike rate of 0.82 goals per game. Part of the successful Southern League Championship winning sides in 1911 and 1914 - the Southern League was the rival league to the northern Football League, so Swindon Town were the best of all the top southern clubs - he made 336 appearances for Swindon scoring 204 goals, a strike rate of 0.61 goals per game.

Substitutes

Tim Flowers
James Milner
Michael Carrick
Mark Walters
Paul Ince
Steve McMahon
Ryan Mason     

So, there you have it, my Swindon Town All-Time England Team. What's yours?

Sunday, 18 October 2015

Swindon Town's New Manager

I wrote to the Swindon Advertiser detailing who should be the next Swindon Town Manager, but, if they fail to print my email, here it is in full. I think you may be surprised as to who I think would be the ideal replacement for Mark Cooper (who did an excellent job for the club, by the way):


Dear Sir,

The Ides of March 1969 saw me three months short of my fourth birthday, so I never went to Wembley that auspicious day nor do I remember watching the match on the television. However, playing football on Buckhurst Field some years later with boys old enough to have been there and listened to their stories of the glorious League Cup victors, I dreamed of seeing my hometown club play on the hallowed turf at least once in my lifetime. I didn’t make it for the Millwall game, nor last season for the capitulation against Preston North End, but I was there when Swindon Town FC were worthy victors over Sunderland AFC, when Chalky White “won” the penalty that saw the Robins eventually see off Leicester City and the loss to Chesterfield in the Johnstones Paint Trophy Final. My three visits to the National Stadium convinced me that the much maligned Wiltshire town that is the place of my birth and the town I have returned to more than once, and call home, deserves better than League 1 football.

Last season should have seen the team achieve promotion, but all concerned froze when it mattered most. That isn’t to say that I believe Mark Cooper to be a bad manager -  far from it. Working within a limited budget, he cobbled together a team worthy of treading onto the Wembley pitch and the day should have seen glory returned down the M4 to Swindon. Real life doesn’t always go with the script and all the hard work of the previous two years put in by the whole Swindon Town team, backroom staff included, unravelled at the feet of one Jermaine Beckford. An exodus followed and Mark Cooper was faced again with building a team from scratch. The previous two seasons gave a false sense of security and more of the same was expected on Saturday 8th August 2015 once the first ball was kicked against Bradford City at the County Ground to see in the new Football League season. The 4 – 1 win seemed to indicate that all was well, but, only three months into the season, the club is facing the prospect of a relegation battle, the manager has gone and the injury list is expanding daily.

The ideal replacement is out there in the wider world, waiting to be recruited, but the one person I do not want to see at the helm is Steve Evans. Why? Because he has never come across as being an affable person and would probably only use the club as a stepping stone to get somewhere “higher”.  However, the qualities needed by the next incumbent of the Swindon Town hot seat have been shown by some of his/her predecessors. The person given the managerial role at the County Ground should exhibit the following:

1.       The PASSION of Paolo Di Canio
2.       The SKILLS of Glenn Hoddle
3.       The TACTICAL nous of Osvaldo Ardiles
4.       The TENACITY of Lou Macari
5.       The CHARM of Danny Williams
6.       The STAYING POWER of Sam Allen

I hinted above that the next manager could come from any sphere of the football community so I am going to propose someone who has international  managerial experience at the top level, but is not featured in any of the bookies lists.

How about Hope Powell?

She has played at international level and she has taken the women’s England team to the quarter finals of the Women’s World Cup, and finished her England role with an overall international win record of over 52%. I believe that the time for her to venture into Football League management is right and Swindon Town would be the team to allow her to show the footballing world her credentials. We’ve given the opportunity before to inexperienced players to make their mark in football management, so why not allow an experienced person in the women’s game the chance to show what she can do in the men’s one?

Thank you for taking the time to read this email and I hope you will print it in full.

Yours faithfully,

Stuart Rivers

There you go. As the Yanks would say, "totally out of left field".

Your views...

Friday, 14 December 2012

Is it Back Me or Sack Me at Swindon Town?

Like most Football League managers, Paolo Di Canio holds a pre-match press conference on the Thursday before Saturday's game. This usually allows him time to convey his thoughts in an English vernacular that he has obviously picked up during his time as a footballer, plying his trade both in England and Scotland, rather than as a student in a classroom learning how to conjugate verbs. The resulting transcript may sometimes have to be read two or three times before the gist of what was said comes through. Other times, the diatribe that the Roman produces as he fulminates on the latest issue that has got his goat needs no explanation; whether his statement needs translating or not, an annoyed Paolo Di Canio is a spectacle worth watching and listening to!
New Swindon Town Chairman,
Sir William Patey
"Oh, b******s!"
This was fine and dandy when all was right in the world of SN1 and Jeremy Wray was the Chairman of Swindon Town. Supporters of the club could listen to the Thursday rant and know that Mr. Wray was there to take Paolo to one side after his meeting with the hacks and calm him down with a soothing word or two in the fiery Italian's ear. Now in Sir William Patey there is a new Chairman at the foremost club in Wiltshire and a stricter regime in the boardroom. This is what makes this week's railing at the internal politics within the County Ground a little more disconcerting. Not since Glen Hoddle's tenure as manager has Swindon Town had someone whose own ambition has been the catalyst for success, dragging the team kicking and screaming along with him. League One consolidation may be the official aim of the club for this season, but for someone like Paolo Di Canio, a student of Bushido, continuing the momentum from the success of his first season as manager of Swindon Town and achieving back to back promotions is the one and only goal for this year.

So, the report in the Swindon Advertiser today makes for unnerving reading. (Adver Report - Di Canio's 20 Minute Rant). The team are in a healthy position in the league going into the Christmas fixtures and it is imperative that Paolo Di Canio is in place to steer them through what can be a difficult time in the season. However, reading the news item, it would seem that the Swindon Town manager could be having a crisis of conscience, his own ambitions seemingly at odds with the directions he is being given by the board. Hopefully, all will be resolved as soon as possible at SN1, but, unfortunately, there is no longer the sage advice of Jeremy Wray to counter the emotional outburst from the already managerial legend that is Paolo Di Canio.    
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Sunday, 9 December 2012

Where has Swindon's Monkey Gone?

Victory parade of Swindon Town F.C. celebratin...
The 1993/94 Premier League season evokes mixed emotions in the hearts of Swindon Town fans. Following the outrageous demotion from the then Division 1 in 1990 after beating Sunderland fairly and squarely at Wembley, the club and supporters finally got the reward of being allowed to be part of the top division of English football by beating Leicester City 4 -3 in the play-off final for 1992-93 (Division 1 = the Premier League when all was equal in the world of football and before Murdoch had ruined the chances of the national team ever winning anything by diluting the top division with foreign imports...ask your Dad). The excitement was palpable, until Glenn Hoddle left to manage Chelsea and Colin Calderwood, the talismanic captain, signed for Spurs. Suddenly, the forthcoming season seemed a little more daunting as the club's leadership was decimated and John Gorman was asked to pick up the reins and manage the team. Although fair reward for the dour Scot for his help in getting STFC to the promised land, his relative inexperience at such a high level was to be part of the club's downfall during the 1993/94 football season. It was 15 games into the season when Swindon Town finally registered their first win at the top level. That match was at home to Queens Park Rangers on Wednesday 24th November 1993 and the Town did the double over them by beating the West London club 1 - 3 on Saturday 30th April 1994 at Loftus Road. That record, 15 games without a win from the start of the Premier League season, has been an ignominious blight in the club's copybook for over 19 years...until yesterday!

The monkey on Swindon's back packed his bags and was seen heading off down the M4 in the direction of The Smoke, a copy of the London A to Z clutched securely in his hands. He has now taken up residence in London W12 and will be seen clinging to Harry Redknapp as, ironically, it is Queens Park Rangers who now have the dubious honour of being the team with the worst starting record in the history of the Premier League. Yesterday saw QPR draw with Wigan Athletic and achieve the dizzy heights (or should that be nauseating depths?) of playing 16 games from the start of the season without a win.  

As a supporter of Swindon Town, I would like to say thank you to QPR for taking this record off us. Derby County have the lowest points tally for any Premier League season, but we just need to lose the goals against record (100 for 42 games) and the therapy will be finished...any takers?
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Monday, 19 November 2012

King of Kidology

Paolo Di Canio at West Ham's Upton Park, Septe...
Paolo Di Canio is the King of Kidology. Whilst bemoaning the fact that Swindon Town Football Club were the subject of a transfer embargo, preventing him from making any additions to his team, he is masterminding an inexorable assault of the summit of League One. The 4 - 1 win over Yeovil Town on Saturday sees the club third in the division, 5 points off the top spot; if the results go the right way tomorrow when Swindon host Brentford, then Paolo Di Canio could see himself and the club second. Who wouldn't bet that a win over Tranmere Rovers, the current leaders of League One, on 21st December won't see Swindon Town top of the league at Christmas?
Glenn Hoddle

Don't get me wrong, this is a tough division from which to escape, but back-to-back promotions are on their way. With his ambition, I can see Paolo Di Canio taking "his" team all the way to the Premier League in 3 straight years nearly twenty years since Glenn Hoddle's triumph in 1993.

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