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Football: Wherever it may be

~ Laurence's football travels

Football: Wherever it may be

Tag Archives: AFC Sudbury

Holland (on sea)

26 Wednesday Feb 2025

Posted by laurencereade in H

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

AFC Sudbury, Dulwich Road, Eastcliff Recreation Ground., Eastern Counties League, Football, groundhopping, Holland FC, Holland on sea, Jaywick, Non League, oxford united., soccer

Saturday 22nd February 2025 ko 15:00

Eastern Counties League Division One North

HOLLAND FC 2 (Blackwell 22 Sargent 26)

AFC SUDBURY RESERVES 0

Att c50

Entry £7

No Programme (“Editor on holiday”)

Now I know Robyn and I are known for our cavalier attitude towards geography and distance but this may have taken the biscuit! We’d left Oxford towards on a game on the England/Wales border but that got called off, thankfully early. So it was a good excuse to revive an old project, “Operation Eastern Counties League” Yes it does take a certain level of adaptability to aim for one side of the country but end up at another!

Continue reading →

Chances

29 Thursday Dec 2011

Posted by laurencereade in S, Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

AFC Sudbury, Dan Cotton, Danny Gay, Division One North, isthmian league, Julius Martin Lane, Soham Town Rangers

Monday 26th December 2011 ko 3.00pm

Isthmian League Division One North

SOHAM TOWN RANGERS 3 (Cotton 7p 21 Carter 53)

AFC SUDBURY 1 (Henshaw 64)

Att 221

Entry £7

Programme £1.50

Tea 70p

Cheeseburger £2.50

Chips £1.10

The small Cambridgeshire town of Soham seems to have been touched by tragedy more than most. As if the 2002 murders of Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman were not bad enough, in 1944 the town narrowly escaped destruction. A fire developed on the lead wagon of a heavy ammunition train travelling slowly through the town. The town was saved by the bravery of four  staff, Benjamin Gimbert (Driver), James Nightall (Fireman), Frank Bridges (Signalman) and Herbert Clarke (Guard), who uncoupled the rest of the train and drove the engine and lead wagon clear of the town, where it exploded, killing Jim Nightall and Frank Bridges but causing no further deaths. Ben Gimbert survived and spent seven weeks in hospital. Although small in comparison to what would have happened if the entire train had blown up, the explosion caused substantial property damage. Gimbert and Nightall were both awarded the George Cross (Nightall posthumously).

Despite all this Soham is a thriving market town and its club has done well to graduate from the Eastern Counties League. Julius Martin Lane now reflects that elevation, with covered terracing on the 3 accessible sides, the fourth a victim of the ground graders. It appears to be just too open! All this cover has slightly restricted the view from the main stand, a bench-seated affair, with doors at the side for access at the side. All very welcome on a cold, windy day.

The part of the ground the club are probably most proud of is the clubhouse. Both large and comfortable, it easily coped with a bumper Boxing Day crowd. I found it handy to buy my food from the burger bar nearby and quietly sit and read my programme.

The club was established in 1947 by a merger of Soham Town and Soham Rangers.Town were formed in 1920, won the Cambridgeshire Junior Cup in 1932–33, and played in the Cambridgeshire League during the 1930s, earning promotion to the Premier Division in 1938. Rangers were formed in 1919 and reached the top division of the Cambridgeshire League in 1926, the same year in which they won the Junior Cup. The merged club entered the Eastern Counties League in 1963,  won the 2007-2008 title and were promoted to the Southern League, Midland Division. For this season they were switched sideways to the Isthmian part of the pyramid.

As befits a local derby the action was fairly frantic. Soham took the lead from the penalty spot, after Andy Furnell ran strongly into the Sudbury penalty area. He seemed bound to score but Sudbury keeper Danny Gay managed to block his shot, but  a further block by defender Steve Adams was adjudged to have been handball. He was booked and Daniel Cotton stepped forward to fire the spot-kick low into the bottom left hand corner.

Soham doubled their lead on 21 minutes, and again Cotton’s hard work paid off. His neat one-two put him clean through and he beat former Southend keeper Gay easily. All quite surprising given the relative League positions of the clubs. You expected the visitors to make a better fist of things in the second half, but on 51 minutes the game was put out of reach when Gay spilled a Cotton free-kick and Scott Carter was on hand to force the ball home through a melee of players.

Sudbury gained some consolation when Michael Shinn’s 64th minute free-kick defeated the Soham Town Rangers defence and Ryan Henshaw was on hand to reduce the deficit. However despite all Sudbury’s huffing and puffing the final score was a fair reflection on the game.





Deco

16 Wednesday Nov 2011

Posted by laurencereade in E

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

AFC Sudbury, Alan Boon Cup, Enfield Town, Football, goals, groundhopping, isthmian league, Queen Elizabeth stadium

Monday 14th November 2011 ko 7.45pm

Isthmian League Alan Boon Cup 3rd Round

ENFIELD TOWN 0

AFC SUDBURY 2 (Docker 19 Dare 73)

Att 152

Entry £8

Programme £1

Pint of Coffee £1

This new ground is in fact an old ground! Its fame until now is that it’s the athletics stadium where Sebastian Coe trained en route to Olympic gold. And yes, folks I’m well aware that athletics and football are uneasy bedfellows!

The short history of Enfield Town is a troubled one. Continue reading →

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