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DangerousSausage

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Everything posted by DangerousSausage

  1. Colchester are one of those teams I dread seeing in the prediction league as they're so inconsistent. They've won four, drawn one and lost five of their last ten (our own form is 6-2-2). If we keep doing what we're doing this is a winnable game. @notts-joe Adam Campbell has had plenty of chances to prove himself. From what I've seen he's hard working but one dimensional, but he is still young.
  2. I feel sorry for them too. I hope they can get rid of their owner and bounce back soon. Great choice of picture by the way!
  3. Good read. I'm not a fan of drinking beer with my breakfast, but I'm partial to a couple before the match should the opportunity arise. "Hooligan" is an overused word and can mean virtually anything. In Germany it still means something specific - those individuals who organise "meets" with other clubs' hooligans for a fight or who ambush away fans. That's not what you're describing. By all means enjoy yourselves and support local breweries!
  4. Winning with 10 men for nearly the whole match is fantastic! After the red card I revised my expectations down to be honest - to get anything at all out of that would have been a bonus. Overcoming the odds to win shows we're made of sterner stuff now. No way are Orient or Newport going to make up an 11-point gap in the last 8 games. They need to win half their remaining games just to catch up with us. Also nice that we've established a cushion over Cheltenham.
  5. We're going to win this and take another step towards safety. If we keep picking up points at home the rest will fall into place. COYP
  6. OK, I see that now. The first time I paused it and it does look like he's holding Hewitt, but it's very blurry. Well, if I had to watch it several times in slow-motion to work it out then I can see how the ref might have missed it. There's no guarantee we'd have got anything out of the game even if it had stood. It's a pity, but it's all about the next match now.
  7. Yep, I see it now. If you pause the video at 1.33 you can clearly see the keeper's arms around Hewitt's neck.
  8. Hard luck, especially having been ahead. That said I wasn't expecting us to take anything from there. It's encouraging that we were in it right until the end though. Over 700 is a decent following for a Tuesday night. Did anyone here go?
  9. The Hartlepool fans seemed to have us down as an easy win, "there for the taking", etc. If we were playing an opponent that had picked up 17 points in the previous 10 games I'd give them a bit more respect than that, regardless of league position.
  10. How classy was that finish from Ameobi? Haven't seen such an assured finish from a Notts striker since Hughes was at the club.
  11. Here's an exclusive picture of @Joe Jones when he discovered this article:
  12. Good to see a new name posting, and you're right too @ELL100T. If we carry on picking up points we could make quick progress. But that's a big "if". We can already see how big the win at Orient was, defeat there and we would have been in the relegation zone right now instead of enjoying a five-point cushion. Stevenage might be ordinary but they are fifth for a reason. They're effective and we've got to be effective too.
  13. I remember the stuff about "sweating the asset". That was all sound enough. The more money the club makes from executive boxes, the bigger a budget we ultimately have to play with. I remember his first press conference being reported quite negatively, but I suppose you have to see it in its right context: a few months before we thought we were on our way to the Champions League! Ultimately RT did put a lot of money into the club, but because of poor planning we saw little benefit from it. AH does fill me with optimism. No big promises, which is good. He also understands that you have to generate morale among staff and actively court your customers. Sounds pretty obvious but both were clearly missing before.
  14. Excellent piece. It does feel as though the baggage accumulated during the Trew era has been shed. One thing though - I'm pretty sure that Ray Trew didn't walk through the door promising the earth. In fact, at first he dampened expectations. The nonsense about Premiership strikers signing tomorrow started a bit later. I think he got too closely involved and carried away and many people are worried about Alan Hardy falling into the same trap a couple of years down the line. But hopefully he'll learn from the Trews' mistakes.
  15. The comments under that report are more interesting than the report itself! Plenty of sour grapes there It's a good sign when opposition fans are moaning about you instead of offering you sympathy.
  16. Excellent result, I would have been made up with a draw to be honest. We're still only 2 points off 22nd but the cushion to Orient is nice. Let's get out of the relegation scrap once and for all so we can start planning for next season.
  17. It will be out of the ordinary - our first away win since the beginning of time! He never says anything particularly illuminating but I can see what he's trying to do - take the pressure off his players.
  18. That happened purely because I backed them in the prediction league. Hope we stuff them!
  19. Good to hear Notts fans were in the Sirrel stand again - in the section nearest to the Kop? The atmosphere sounded superb on the radio, it must have given the players a massive lift.
  20. The whole team basically fell apart. Our whole midfield (Robinson, Baraclough, Finnan, Derry) had moved on by the end of the following season, Farrell got injured, Jones stopped scoring, Strodder and Hendon fell foul of Allardyce and left - there was a huge turnover of players so it's no surprise we struggled the following season. However, Allardyce completely reinvented the team and had us at the top end of League One when he left in 1999. Anyway, here's a video from that season:
  21. This season came off the back of a truly calamitous campaign in 1996-97 that saw Notts County embark on a record 20-match winless run and suffer relegation to the basement division for the first time since the 1960s. The manager was Sam Allardyce, who had inherited Colin Murphy's rudderless team part-way through that awful run. Allardyce made only modest changes to the previous season's squad in the summer. Dennis Pearce and Mark Robson arrived from Wolves and Charlton respectively, with the outgoings including Paul Rogers and Tony Agana. The season began with back-to-back wins over Rochdale and Hull before a controversial defeat at home to Lincoln in which Devon White took an early bath. This was followed by draws against Cardiff and Hartlepool as the Magpies started to look in danger of losing their early momentum. However, their position at the top end of the table was cemented by four straight wins including a 1-0 win over Mansfield featuring a possibly offside Gary Martindale goal. By this time Notts had a settled and confident team, something that eluded them in the previous campaign. Darren Ward held down the number one jersey, the talismanic and slightly caveman-like Gary Strodder was partnered at centre-half by Matt Redmile and Ian Richardson at different points of the season. Ian Baraclough, who in the previous season had played at left-back and had famously been voted the worst player in the club's history, was moved into midfield and did sufficiently well to attract the attention of QPR, who he joined in March. The Notts midfield also had its share of young talent in Steve Finnan and Shaun Derry, while Gary Jones partnered Sean Farrell up front. The team was captained by reliable right-back Ian Hendon, still probably the best taker of a penalty I have seen. While lacking the subtlety of the class of 2010, Allardyce's team offered just the right blend of guile and muscle to succeed in the fourth division. Notts rose to the top of the table with a 5-2 home win over a farcically bad (and relegation-bound) Doncaster Rovers team in December. Not on the score sheet that day was Doncaster native Gary Jones, who by that point had only netted five times. However, Jones would go on to score 23 goals in our final 23 games! The win over Doncaster was the second of what proved to be a club-record run of ten consecutive wins stretching from the beginning of December to the end of February. This record was clinched in a memorable 5-3 victory at Lincoln in which we raced into a 3-0 half-time lead. Early in the second half keeper Darren Ward missed the ball when attempting a clearance, leaving the Lincoln player with a tap-in, and 15 minutes later the hosts were level. However, Notts were determined. Seconds after the restart Jones charged down a clearance by the Imps' keeper and eventually a ninth straight win was secured in front of well over 2000 travelling fans. The tenth win was secured at Field Mill, with hundreds of Notts fans locked out. By the time the run ended, Notts were clear at the top of the division by a big margin and promotion was just a matter of time. Promotion and the title were clinched in a tight 1-0 win over Leyton Orient on 28 March, with six matches to spare. This made us the first team ever to win a championship before the end of March. The curtain came down on the season with a 5-2 home win against Rotherham in front of over 12,000 spectators, as well as the obligatory pitch invasion and an “interesting” rendition of "We Are The Champions" by Allardyce. The record-breaking team was broken up soon afterwards. We went into the following season with a raft of new signings to replace the likes of Phil Robinson, Shaun Derry and Ian Baraclough. And although both remained at the club, the Jones-Farrell partnership was also not to last. Sean Farrell suffered a long-term injury early in the following season, and Gary Jones never recaptured his form and eventually left the club for Hartlepool. By the end of 98-99, only five of the first 11 had featured in the championship-winning campaign. However, the 97-98 season remains a masterclass in turning a failing team around. Disappearing from view (sorry WSC) Devon White Following a stint at Lincoln City in the mid-80s, the physical, Nottingham-born striker drifted back into non-league until Gerry Francis took him to Bristol Rovers, where he scored 53 goals in 202 appearances. Francis then took him with him to QPR in 1993, where he scored nine goals in 26 Premier League appearances before joining Notts for the first time in 1994. White had rejoined Notts from Watford in early 1997 but left again in September after losing his first-team place. After a subsequent spell at Shrewsbury, he returned to non-league football and is now an electrician. Went on to greater things Steve Finnan Steve Finnan originally arrived as a young loanee from Birmingham City in the 1995-96 season and became a fixture in the team that reached the play-off final in what is now League One. He joined permanently the following season and was a key supplier of goals from the right wing in 97-98. Kevin Keegan then signed him for Fulham for £600,000 in November 1998. In the 2000s Finnan mainly played in the right-back position and became part of the Premier League furniture for Fulham and subsequently Liverpool, where he became a Champions League winner. Share your thoughts about this feature on Pride of Nottingham by signing up to the website, visiting the forum and joining the conversation.
  22. I don't we could expect an instant turnaround in terms of results. It'll take time for KN to work out his best team and get them doing what he wants them to do. I only hope we're not adrift before we finally start picking up points again. I'm not even going to dare to make a prediction. We would all take a lucky 1-0 with our goal going in off someone's backside. Anything that gets the ball rolling. I'll leave something lucky here:
  23. I'm very encouraged. You can't overstate the importance of tightening up at the back. Keep a clean sheet and you've got a point at least.
  24. Is anyone going to this? Making a weekend of it? Morecambe used to be one of the largest resorts in the country with a series of grand hotels and two grand piers. The piers are now gone and few of the hotels remain. This is a massively significant match for a number of reasons. Morecambe are also struggling, so three points on Saturday could be precious come the end of the season. On top of that, it will be an early indicator of how the team will react to John Sheridan's departure and is also the final match before Alan Hardy's takeover is formally completed.

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