Scarborough FC was a football club representing the town
of the same name who were formed in 1879, originally as Scarborough Cricketers
FC as a way of staying fit for the cricket players during the winter months.
The team played their games at Scarborough Cricket Club on North Marine Road before moving to the
nearby Recreation Ground where Woodall Avenue now stands.
The team initially played in local football before being
accepted into the Northern League, after two failed attempts, and being placed
in Division Two for the 1898-99 season. At the same time the club moved across
town to play at the Athletic Ground on Seamer Road.
In the 1909-10 season the club competed in the FA Amateur
Cup. One of the club’s players had been ill and a fundraising game had assisted
him with his treatment. ‘Boro’ defeated Preston Winckley, but their opponents
were awarded the game as the FA had deemed the raising of money meant that the
club were professional.
The following season saw Scarborough join the Yorkshire
Combination; where they finished as runners-up in their debut season, before
reverting to the Northern League in 1914-15. The club joined the Yorkshire
League in 1926-27 for one season before turning professional and becoming
members of the Midland League. The reserve side joined the Yorkshire League in
1928.
After finishing as runners-up in the Midland League in
1927-28, Scarborough were crowned as champions in 1929-30. In the 1938-39
season Boro defeated North Shields, Darlington and Bromley in the FA Cup to set
up a third round tie with Luton Town. The game ended 1-1 at the Athletic Ground
in front of a crowd of 11,162 before the team bowed out 5-1 in the replay at
Kenilworth Road.
The club left the Midland League over the War years;
playing a comeback campaign in the Scarborough & District League, before
returning for the 1946-47 season with George Hall in charge of the team. Harold
Taylor, who took the side to the second round of the FA Cup, and then Frank
Taylor had short spells as manager before former Leicester City player Reg
Halton took over.
Throughout the 1950’s Scarborough regularly appeared in
the first round of the FA Cup where they were defeated on a couple of occasions
by Rhyl, as well as Mansfield Town, Wigan Athletic, York City and Bradford City
with George Higgins taking over as manager in 1957 before Andy Smailes replaced
him a couple of years later.
In 1960-61 ‘The Seasiders’ became founder members of
Northern Counties League before making the move to the re-formed North Eastern
League in 1962-63; becoming champions at the first attempt under popular
manager Eddy Brown.
The title persuaded the club to rejoin the Midland League
for the following season, where they ended as runners-up. Former players Albert
Franks and then Stuart Myers had spells as manager before the club directors
looked after team affairs as Scarborough became founder members of the Northern
Premier League in 1968-69.
That debut season saw Boro narrowly escape relegation,
which led the club to employ local lad Colin Appleton as player-manager after
his successful spells as skipper of Leicester City and Charlton Athletic as
well as a term as Barrow manager.
The 1960’s had seen Scarborough appear in the FA Cup
first round on several occasions with memorable ties with Bradford Park Avenue,
Crewe Alexandra and Altrincham. The 1964-65 season saw Boro defeat Bradford
City before being defeated by Doncaster Rovers in a replay.
Photo: with thanks to Bob Lilliman. |
The transformation under Appleton’s stewardship was
instant as the team never left the top four positions for the following four
seasons, coming close to lifting the title in 1968-69. However, it would be in
the cup competitions that Scarborough gave their fans so many memorable moments
throughout the 1970’s.
The team had reached the first round of the FA Cup going
out to Workington and then Hartlepool United before the 1972-73 run saw a win
against Oldham Athletic in a replay at the Athletic Ground before going out to
Doncaster Rovers.
The FA Trophy of that season would be etched forever more
in the clubs history. Wins against Macclesfield Town, Sandbach Ramblers,
Mexborough Town and Chelmsford City set up a semi-final against Ashford Town of
Kent at London Road, Peterborough in the final season of neutral grounds being
used.
Appleton fired Boro to Wembley with a second half penalty.
In the final against Wigan Athletic, Malcolm Leask put Scarborough ahead before
being pegged back in stoppage time. Malcolm Thompson’s extra time goal won the
match 2-1.
Appleton headed off at the end of the season to become
the assistant to Lawrie McMenemy at Grimsby Town with Kenny Boyes taking charge
of the team as Crewe Alexandra were put out of the FA Cup before the side were
defeated away to Port Vale.
Former Hull City player Ken Houghton came in as
player-manager in the summer of 1974 and made some wise signings. His side went
on another FA Trophy run defeating Gateshead United, Boston United, Enfield,
Wimbledon in front of over 8,000 fans at the Athletic Ground and then Bedford
Town to face Matlock Town at Wembley.
The match saw Boro lay siege on the Matlock goal but they
could not convert their chances, while the Derbyshire side scored from each of
their attempts on target to win 4-0.
Appleton returned as manager in 1975 post season and set
about more heroics. By now Boro were given exemption to begin their FA Cup
campaign from the first round. Morecambe and Preston North End were defeated
before eventual semi-finalists Crystal Palace ended the run, in front of the
Match of the Day cameras.
However, any disappointment for Boro fans soon gave way
in the FA Trophy. Wins against Willington, Goole Town, Dagenham, Tooting &
Mitcham United and Enfield set up a final against rival Northern Premier League
side Stafford Rangers.
Once again Boro were taken to extra time before they
could claim a 3-2 victory with goals from John Woodall, Derek Abbey and a last
minute penalty from Sean Marshall.
The season also saw Boro play in the Anglo Italian Trophy
which ended in an aggregate defeat to US Lecce, while the also competed in the
Anglo Italian Cup in which Udinese were beaten. In the 1976-77 season Boro defeated
Parma before going on to retain the FA Trophy with victories over Frickley
Athletic, Walthamstow Avenue, Hitchin Town, Nuneaton Borough and an epic four
game semi-final against Altrincham setting up a Wembley final against Dagenham.
In the 1977 final Boro had to come back from a goal down
to win with two late goals from Abbey and a Harry ‘A’ Dunn penalty. The joy turned
to terrible sadness just a few days later when twenty-one year old winger Tony
Aveyard died as the result of a head collision.
The 1977-78 season saw another fine FA Cup run with wins
over Rochdale and Crewe Alexandra before a third round defeat away to Brighton
& Hove Albion. The following season Boro were beaten in round two at York
City. Throughout the stellar cup year, the side never finished outside the top
five in league action.
Scarborough were founder members of the Alliance Premier
League in 1979-80 while legendary manager Colin Appleton moved aside in 1981
with Jim McAnearney his replacement, whose spell lasted just a couple of years.
Stalwart skipper and record appearance holder Harry Dunn
had a short spell at the helm before he was replaced by John Cottam. Boro were
a struggling club at the time. Former chairman Don Robinson had taken charge at
Hull City where he appointed Colin Appleton as manager. His entrepreneurial
talents were missed. Gates and finances were both low.
Harry Dunn had a longer spell in charge between 1984 and
1986 as the league was renamed the Gola League and then the Football
Conference, before chairman of the day Barry Adamson made an appointment which
would change the club forever.
Neil Warnock was appointed from Burton Albion as the new
Scarborough manager as he signed on fifteen new players and despite starting
the season as 50/1 outsiders, they went on to win the Conference title to
become the first club to be automatically promoted into The Football League.
Boro also reached the last eight of the FA Trophy before going out to Fareham
Town.
Stars of the season were Kevin Blackwell, Ces Podd, Steve
Richards, Tommy Graham, Ray McHale, Mitch Cook and Stewart Mell.
The season was marred when chairman Adamson died of a
heart attack when trying to break up crowd trouble at the Trophy match against
Morecambe. Former player Terry Wood took his place until the end of the season
when Peter Gargett took over the chair.
The squad was strengthened for their first season in the
Football League. Improvements were made to the Athletic Ground but the first
few home games were marred with crowd trouble. Within a few months high fences
were fitted at the front of the terraced areas.
Boro completed a successful first season in a mid-table
position. The club was sold to Leeds based businessman Geoffrey Richmond in the
summer of 1988. The owner of Ronson lighters, Richmond authorised several big
money signings such as forward Steve Norris.
In a groundbreaking move the Athletic Ground became the
first football ground in the League to be renamed under a sponsorship deal as
it became the McCain Stadium. On New Years Eve Boro went top of Division Four
when the news broke that Warnock had resigned.
His replacement was veteran winger Colin Morris who took
the side to the play-offs, where Boro went out to Leyton Orient in the
semi-final. The League Cup brought national media attention to the club as
Halifax Town and Portsmouth were defeated before Boro went out to Southampton
in a replay at The Dell.
It was during the run that a TV voiceover rounding up the
goals on national TV mentioned in the Portsmouth game about the ‘Seadogs of
Scarborough’. From that time on, the fans and eventually the club took on that
nickname.
Richmond announced plans for the club to move to a new
stadium on the edge of town on the Dunslow Road Trading Estate.
Morris led the side to wins against Scunthorpe United and
Chelsea in the League Cup the following season with big money signing Martin
Russell starring. Boro went out in the next round 7-0 to Oldham Athletic on the
artificial pitch at Boundary Park.
Morris departed soon into 1989 with Ray McHale taking his
place. Russell and goalkeeper Ian Ironside were sold on during his tenure,
which was not helped when chairman Richmond put on unnecessary pressure by
promising free season tickets to those purchasing the previous season if Boro
failed to reach the play-offs.
This was despite McHale putting together a fantastic side
featuring Tommy Mooney and Darren Foreman who played some lovely football as
Bradford City, Coventry City and Plymouth Argyle were knocked out of the League
Cup before Arsenal won at a fogbound McCain Stadium in round four.
McHale was replaced by his assistant Phil Chambers who
lasted just a few months before Steve Wicks came in. Richmond swapped his
chairman position with the chairman of Bradford City; Dave Simpson, who in turn
sold Scarborough FC to locally based businessman John Russell.
Wicks got the team playing some excellent football before
he was sacked in a dispute over budgets before the start of the 1994-95
campaign. The new boss was a former Boro hero; Billy Ayre, who played at centre
back in the final two Wembley triumphs.
Unfortunately, a mixture of poor form and a poor budget
meant that things didn’t work out for Ayre who was replaced by the returning
McHale. The season had seen Boro reach the third round of the FA Cup following
victories over Chesterfield and Port Vale, before the Seadogs went out in a
replay at Vicarage Road against Watford.
Both the 1994-95 and 1995-96 saw Boro hang on to their
League status by the skin of their teeth after finishing second from bottom of
the table, at a time when only the bottom side went down. Toward the end of the
latter season Mitch Cook had replaced McHale in an unsuccessful term.
The summer of 1996 saw Mick Wadsworth arrive as manager, as
Hull City were defeated in the League Cup before Boro went out to Leicester
City. Wadsworth build a fine side with Gareth Williams, Steve Brodie, Andy
Ritchie, Gary Bennett and Jason Rocket starring.
After a mid-table finish Boro reached the play-offs in
1997-98 as money was thrown at the squad. The experienced Ian Snodin and Paul
Atkins came in but injuries and the age of the side eventually did for Boro as
they went out in the semi-final to Torquay United.
The defeat was to prove costly for the club. It became
obvious that Russell had gambled the clubs finances on the win as the stadium
had been fitted with two new stands. Several players were forced to depart
because of budgetary constraints.
With the team struggling, Wadsworth departed in January
1999. Derek Mountfield and Ray McHale took charge of a couple of games with the
squad down to bare bones before the experienced Colin Addison arrived at the
club.
The new manager brought in a plethora of new and loan
signings including goalkeeper Tony Parks and full back Graeme Atkinson. In
heartbreaking fashion, Boro were relegated in stoppage time on the final day of
the season when Jimmy Glass; Carlisle United’s loan goalkeeper scored in their
game with Plymouth Argyle to leapfrog the Seadogs.
Back in the Conference Boro finished in third spot in the
1999-00 season. Wins against Ilkeston Town, Stocksbridge Park Steels and
Burnham saw the team reach the fifth round of the FA Trophy before going out
away to Bishop Auckland.
Addison resigned soon into the following campaign as Neil
Thompson was appointed. Russell was by now was losing popularity at quite a
rate. The club entered into a CVA and Russell sold the club to Darryl
Littlewood from Halifax who used the money from a friends lottery win to buy
the club.
Football philanthropist and future Gretna owner and
Northern League sponsor, Brooks Mileson got involved in October 2000 and
brought in Keith Agar; a man with a controversial football background, as
General Manager.
The club had spent a second spell in Administration and a
CVA failed when Mileson sold the club In November 2001 to Malcolm Reynolds, a
businessman with a financial background. He appointed the experienced Russell
Slade as manager with Boro ten points adrift at the bottom of the table.
The change with Slade in charge was remarkable as he
found hungry young players who reached the fourth round of the FA Trophy with
wins over Hednesford Town and Barnet before bowing out to Morecambe in a
replay. In the league the side finished in mid table.
Fans were expecting a challenge for the play-offs the
following season, but Boro finished in seventh place. The 2003-04 campaign saw
the team slip to a finish below half way but it was in the FA Cup that the
Seadogs got worldwide attention.
The run saw Hinckley United, Doncaster Rovers, Port Vale
and Southend United dispatched. This took Scarborough to the fourth round for
the first ever time where they were drawn at home to Chelsea in a game that saw
the Blues win 1-0 before a live audience on Sky TV.
The run was desperately required as the club continued to
struggle financially. Reynolds and his colleague on the board; Ian Scobbie
announced that the Cup money would secure the clubs future. Slade departed for
Grimsby Town at the end of the season.
Reynolds unveiled plans for a new stadium near to the
railway line off Dunslow Road near to where Richmond had intended to build his
new stadium back in 1989. Moneys were borrowed in advance to keep the club in
business.
He was replaced by midfielder Nick Henry who’s side
finished unbeaten at home during the 2004-05 campaign, but poor away form led
to a mid table finish. Henry’s budget was extremely tight and he moved aside
for the 200506 season by midfielder Neil Redfearn.
Once again another manager was hamstrung by financial
constraints. This allied to some terrible performances saw Boro relegated to
Conference North at the end of the season.
The finances got worse as Reynolds was barred for being a
company director as Boro were found to be trading illegally. Scobbie took over
as chairman while the team were deducted ten points because of their financial
position with the club being severely restricted in their signing of players.
Former midfield man Mark Patterson came in as manager to
work alongside Mitch Cook. Gates dropped as supporters lost faith in those
running the club. The team put in some remarkable performances under the
circumstances but the ten point penalty proved too much to drag back while the
signing embargo remained in place.
In April 2007 Scarborough FC were relegated from the Conference
North after a home draw against Leigh RMI. They should have played in the
Northern Premier League Premier Division in the 2007-08 season.
However, after several brushes with the courts and the
FA, Scarborough FC were would up by the High Court on the 20th June 2007 with
debts of £2.5M.
The supporters Seadogs Trust had been set up the previous
November; initially to try and obtain shares in the club and eventually run it
as a fans owned organisation. However, as it was becoming more obvious that the
club could fold, the trust made preparations to form a replacement club.
On the 25th June 2007, Scarborough Athletic FC
were successful in their application for membership to the Northern Counties
East League and the NRCFA. To read about Athletic, click here.
Unfortunately not all supporters agreed with the setting
up of the new club. A year later some of them formed Scarborough Town FC who
entered the Wearside League. Please click here to read about Town.
My visits/My views
The Athletic Ground, later the McCain Stadium was the
first place I watched football as a toddler. I have watched hundreds of games
there at all levels with hundreds of mates and nearly all my family. I even had
the pleasure of playing on the pitch in a local cup final.
I was always destined to spend a lot of time down Seamer
Road. My dad was brought up just a goal kick away in Edgehill Road and spent
much of his youth down there watching, training and helping with ground
maintenance in return for free tickets. He started taking me from a year old.
My brothers Paul and Nick also went to plenty of games up
to the end, sometimes with my grandads and even with my Mum on a couple of
occasions. She appeared there in 1970 as part of the half time entertainment at
the vital Northern Premier League decider against Macclesfield Town.
Over the years’ I watched regularly from every part of
the ground. When I was still at school, Boro were very much a non-league side
and it was customary to swap ends at half time to stand behind the goal we were
attacking. At this time the Seamer Road End was an open terrace with an area of
grass at the back where I got involved in some impromptu games as a youngster.
The Shed and the terracing either side remained pretty
much unaltered until the ground's closure. The Edgehill Road End was a mixture
of terracing and a grass slope with a small red corrugated cover at the rear,
which offered a poor view if anyone stood in front.
The bank continued round the corner to an area where
freeloaders would watch a game over the perimeter fence from the Hinderwell
School fields. The Main Stand was a raised wooden construction with facilities
underneath, which held about 500 bench seats. Alongside this stood the
clubhouse, with a thin terrace at the front.
These surroundings provided me with many happy memories
as a schoolkid, as Boro had a formidable cup side at the time. They could never
quite crack it in the league but the cup runs under the stewardship of Colin
Appleton; and Ken Houghton for one season, were another matter. The team were
composed of a sprinkling of locals with the rest of the side travelling from
the north east or the Hull area.
The club won the FA Trophy at Wembley three times as well
as putting together some real shocks in the FA Cup. Several Football League
sides left with nothing but a skip full of dirty kit, while eventual 1976
semi-finalists, Crystal Palace scraped through in front of the Match of the Day
cameras.
The club erected make shift high fencing from the local
Zoo and Marineland to keep the Palace fans in order! Gates of over 8,000 saw
the Palace game and an FA Trophy clash with that years FA Cup giant killers,
Wimbledon. They were one of many teams to suffer memorable defeats at the
Athletic Ground.
Teams from all over the country visited Scarborough.
Tooting and Mitcham United were defeated as Jeff Barmby nearly tore the net
from its rigging with a ferocious free kick to win the game. This led to the
Scarborough Evening News headline "It's toot toot Tooting and
goodbye!" Loads more teams left empty handed. I loved every minute of it.
The club were one of the richest in non-league at the
time and had even made an audacious bid to move Halifax Town, lock stock and
barrel to the coast, long before Milton Keynes had a similar notion. A new Main
Stand was erected in 1979.
It was considered the height of fashion at the time, but
in truth a lot of the seats offered a poor view. Players had to change at the
Rugby Club, two miles away and travel to and from the ground by mini bus for
the first few weeks of the season until the stand was fully fitted out. Crush
Barriers were also installed at the same time.
Nothing changed at the ground as Boro somehow managed to
squander their money as the team was dismantled and crowds stayed away. It was
the slow beginning of the maladministration that eventually would signal the
end twenty years later.
Promotion to the Football League signalled the need for
drastic ground improvements to satisfy the ground grading authorities.
Segregation and high fences were erected to accommodate away fans at the
Edgehill Road End along with new toilets. New press facilities and a police
control room were also fitted in the Main Stand.
I went down to the ground the evening before the opening
game against Wolverhampton Wanderers and it looked a picture with the new
modern goals and the pitch looking like a carpet. Twenty four hours later
showed a very different scene.
The Wolves fans tore town the perimeter fence and walked
in for free while throwing the vat holding the soup onto the pitch after
hi-jacking the refreshment kiosk. Because there were so many in the away end,
some clambered onto the corrugated roof and jumped up and down buckling all the
steelwork and thus forcing its demolition after the game.
One decided to take a better view and climbed onto The
Shed roof. It didn't take his weight and he fell through into the section of
Boro fans below who didn't give him the warmest welcome on landing where the
atmosphere was not for the faint hearted or indeed the sober.
The game was in danger of being abandoned until Wolves
manager, Graham Turner appealed to the fans to calm down. It eventually
finished 2-2 and was a great end to end game. Stewart Mell scored Boro's first
ever League goal while Ray McHale equalised later with a stunning volley. Steve
Bull scored for the visitors on his way to breaking the clubs goalscoring
record.
The game hit the headlines but for all the wrong reasons.
It cost some their liberty for a few months. The Athletic Ground had seen its
share of punch ups at cup games in the past but this time it really terrified
some of the locals and gave the anti football lobby a feeding frenzy.
The attendance that day was officially around 7,500
although the Wolves programme listed it as 11,500 for some months. I know which
figure I believed. Later that season, high fences were also installed in front
of the open terracing at the Seamer Road End and round the corner to The Shed
which was made a members only area.
Geoffrey Richmond became chairman putting standing prices
up with vowing that the extra income would be used to roof the Seamer Road End.
Devastatingly for football fans everywhere, and not least the bereaved
families, 96 people lost their lives at Hillsborough in April 1989.
Richmond looked at the situated with many people on the
periphery with little knowledge of the game screamed for all seater stadiums.
He approached Scarborough Borough Council (SBC) with plans for an all seater
stadium for 4,000 at Dunslow Road on the outskirts of town by the A64.
It never happened, nor did the roof. He ostracised local
businesses when Boro were to play the 2nd Leg of the League Cup tie against
Chelsea as the feature match on "Midweek Sports Special" by covering
all their advertisement around the pitch and replaced them with more lucrative
donors who he did a separate deal with.
Some of those affected sponsored the club for decades
previously. They severed their deals and some never returned. Richmond also had
the idea of corporate boxes. They were basically portacabins placed in front of
the clubhouse, thus alienating the regulars who stood there and had to change
their lifetime habits and move elsewhere.
I’m proud to say that I was one of many fans who
protested against Richmond. He got rid of the reserve and youth teams; thus
missing out on the talent and future transfer fees for Geoff Horsfield and
Jonathan Greening, to form the Scarborough Pirates Rugby League Club.
This was too much and some fans and they reacted to the
4-1 derby defeat at York City by breaking into the McStad to tear down the
rugby posts and scoreboard before the game the following day. The team lasted
just one season!
He sacked the Pirates boss Len Casey on New Years Night
which was ironic as it was the same date he sacked hero, Neil Warnock a few
years earlier.
Boro were 2-0 down from the first leg still trailed with
only fifteen minutes remaining. They somehow won 3-0 with a last minute Lee
Hirst goal sending the Seadogs delirious. Boro eventually bowed out to a rare
Nigel Winterburn goal against Arsenal on a fog bound night on the coast, thanks
to the assistance of mega biased referee Keith Hackett.
We also had the delight of a 4-2 win against York with
Darren Foreman bagging a first half hat trick while Tommy Mooney finished them
off with one of his specials. Sadly the form subsided, Razor paid with his job
and I had serious words with Richmond on the steps of the directors box before
I was ‘politely’ asked to leave.
By now the fences had come down, but the roof hadn't gone
up.
Richmond did a deal with Bradford City Chairman, Dave
Simpson, to basically swap clubs! Simpson wasn't much interested in us and
Richmond went to build a far too big a stadium at Valley Parade and take them
to The Premiership, before leaving them virtually bankrupt before getting
himself involved in the financial shambles at Elland Road, Leeds a few years
later.
I'd warned the Bantams fans as to what they were about to
receive in their "City Gent" fanzine. Richmond told them I was
talking rubbish and we gave him a lovely welcome back when the clubs played a
pre-season friendly.
Simpson quickly sold the club to a locally based
‘businessman’, John Russell who’s first few months in charge were a disaster as
he replaced Steve Wicks with Billy Ayre. Billy was a hero to many of us but he
wasn’t given the proper resources.
Russell had told us after being torn apart in a Yorkshire
Cup game at Guiseley that he was signing two Czechs and things would change and
the fans were out of order for moaning. If only I'd realised he meant he'd be
signing two cheques and bouncing ones at that!
Ray McHale was brought back once again from Guiseley but
he couldn't recreate his previous glories. Mitch Cook took over. Mitch had been
a good servant as a player and a coach but he was horrendous in his spell in
charge. He took the team out for a ‘bonding’ session before the Plymouth away
game. We lost 5-1. We also lost at Chester City where it got so bad that
Russell joined him on the bench to offer advice.
Despite all this it was fun to be a Seadog, probably
because of our gallows humour. A group of us would travel to games on mini
buses and each Saturday Crusher would come round for me before we met Karl, Baz
and the rest of the lads in the Commercial in Falsgrave for re match ales. Boro
fans used the pubs in Falsgrave most of all and the lunchtime atmosphere was
always good.
Despite Russell's apparent inability to pick a manager he
was still relatively popular, partly because we thought he was crackers and
partly because he changed the appearance of the McCain Stadium forever.
In the space of sixteen months, virtually identical
structures called the East and West Stand were erected, each accommodating
around 1,400 seats. They were very impressive and Russell showed off plans for
a continuation to replace The Shed including new changing rooms and corporate
facilities.
He appointed Mick Wadsworth as manager and the team
played some great football. In his second season the manager signed some
quality players and Boro reached the play-offs before falling well short against
Torquay United. It was a great couple of years to watch Boro. However, the
money had obviously run out after Russell's gamble failed.
Players were released and replaced with some poor
substitutes. Top keeper Tony Elliott had to pack in with a bad back while his
understudy Kevin Martin had a bad knee. Boro tried to get by with rookie loan
keepers on the cheap but were found out. Russell tried to sell the club and
comically introduced Anton Johnson, who had a very shady past at best.
Money from admission fees was allegedly being taken away
in the boot of a car. Johnson disappeared after a while and Russell rode back
into town. He claimed at a fans forum that he couldn't even afford to put jam
on his toast.
He made director and local businessman, Ken Ferrie
Chairman. The majority of Boro fans were taken in and tried to raise money.
Colin Addison came in and battled hard and brought in some experienced pros
which nearly worked.
Sadly it proved to be too little, too late as Carlisle's
loanee keeper Jimmy Glass remarkably scored the goal which sent Boro through
the relegation trap door as Russell and his wife popped the champagne corks in
the Directors Box before news broke.
Boro started the 1999-00 season back in the Conference.
By now I was based in London so I only got back to the McStad three or four
times a season, although my away game count increased. The following season
news broke that the club was skint.
Boro had a shambolic spell under Russell, Darryl
Littlewood and Brooks Mileson before he managed to pass the club on to Malcolm
Reynolds. He was joined on the board by Ian Scobbie while Philip Webster was
appointed as Company Secretary.
He brought in Russell Slade to replace caretaker and
excellent youth coach Ian Kerr who left to join Hartlepool United who in turn
had replaced former hero Neil Thompson.
Slade’s players weren’t the most talented of Seadogs but
they battled for every minute on the pitch which was massively appreciated by
the loyal but suffering fans. The midfield duo of Gareth Stoker and Mark
Patterson were real dogs of war!
The record FA Cup run, saw the Chelsea game brought
forward to a 12.30 kick off. Tickets were like gold dust and Chairman Reynolds
told everyone that this would help build the new ground and keep the club for a
couple of years. Everyone rejoiced as it seemed all our troubles were over!
Boro lost the game 1-0 but put in a cracking performance.
I was actually gutted for us to lose. It was a great day as the whole run had
been, with the whole town going cup crazy. I had an amazing weekend doing an
interview for Radio 5 Live and TV while not in a very pristine condition!
A week later Boro defeated Forest Green Rovers at the
McCain Stadium in front of just 1,200 fans. No statistic summed up the lethargy
of the local support better.
Slade had gone by the end of the season to be replaced by
player Nick Henry who hung up his boots. It was obviously a cost cutting move
as rumours were doing the rounds that money was an issue again despite Reynolds
earlier announcement. There was still talks but nothing concrete concerning the
ground. Director and Insolvency Solicitor, Scobbie, was dealing with it!
Henry was replaced by a player manager, Neil Redfearn
with experienced coach Eric Winstanley as his assistant. To be honest they were
a disaster. Boro finished in the relegation places but were given a reprieve as
Canvey Island resigned from the league and Altrincham were given an 18 point
dedeuction for fielding an ineligible player.
However, the Conference were not convinced of the club's
financial stability, and Scarborough ended up suffering the same fate as
Northwich Victoria had the previous year by being relegated to the Conference
North.
The club claimed that they had been treated unfairly and
that Conference chief, John Moules, had a grudge against us because we'd
successfully challenged a points deduction when Reynolds first took over. I
previously liaised with Mr Moules and he had nothing but sympathy for the fans
of the club so I consider the claims unfounded.
Reynolds had now stood aside for Scobbie to step in
because of a health scare which coincidentally materialised at the same time he
was being disqualified from holding a position as a Company Director because of
his malmanagement of Boro's financial position. The cracks were starting to
appear.
Redfearn and Winstanley were offered much reduced roles
which more or less forced them to resign in the summer. They demanded
compensation but the club refused after offering them other roles. The club was
absolutely skint.
It was claimed that all the Chelsea money went because
the club once again entered Administration and the money was eaten up by it? The
team started on minus 10 points because of this as well as an embargo being
placed which prevented the club from signing any new players after the start of
the season because of football debts, which in effect was unpaid wages and
expenses.
Rumours were abound that players had been unpaid on many
occasions since relegation and this confirmed it. Some supporters had had
enough and formed a supporters trust "Seadogs Trust" to try and
eventually buy shares in the club so that supporters had an elected voice on
the board to try and assist in finances and to keep an eye on what was going on
as all was obviously not right.
The Supporters Club manfully carried on fundraising and
doing a remarkable job despite quickly dwindling support. For many relegation and
another financial crisis was one step too far. The Conference refused to hand
over £15K that it owed the club because of the debts. Scobbie said he'd take
them to court to get the cash but we never heard any more about it.
Patterson did his best with his threadbare squad and they
played some lovely football. He must have been at his wits end as sometimes he
was down to two instead of five subs, such was the embargo. He even came out of
retirement with dodgy knees at the age of 41. The FA eventually agreed to lift
the embargo in January 2007 but the Conference refused.
They were taking a severely hard line on clubs and were
obviously getting fed up with Boro's antics. Mel Stein was on the league's
lawyer who checked over footballing debts and it just so happened that Redfearn
and Winstanley paid him as their agent!
SBC came to a conditional agreement to transfer the
covenant when a new ground was ready on the McStad which secured that the land
could only be used for sporting purposes. Rumours were flying around and it was
obvious not everything was not right. Scobbie, who was not a popular man told
fans everything was well and lambasted us for doubting him.
The board then asked for the unconditional lifting of the
covenant according to the SEN. At one point the gas was turned off at the
ground because of an unpaid bill.
For a good account of the time, click here:
The team played Leigh RMI at the McCain Stadium on the
21st April 2007 in their last home game of the season, needing a win in both
that game and away to Hucknall the following week to avoid relegation. They
drew 1-1, were relegated and it proved to be the last ever game at the stadium.
Jimmy Beadle was the scorer of the final Boro goal at
Seamer Road. It was a sad end to a venue that staged football, rugby league,
floodlit cricket, greyhound racing, union meetings and boxing among other
things.
Meanwhile in Devon, former Boro and Exeter City Chairman John
Russell was jailed for twenty one months for fraudulent trading while at City.
He obviously wasn't satisfied with becoming the first Chairman to relegate two
different clubs from the League.
He had to trade illegally as well. I didn't trust the man
for the majority of his time at Boro. The attendance figures were dubious at
best. He told us his great grandfather played for the club although nobody ever
found any proof to back it up. He changed the clubs kit from all red to
incorporate large measures of green and white as he said they were the clubs
original colours, when in fact we started in white and navy.
To read and remember the acts of John Russell, click here:
The club failed to convince the SBC that its proposals
would raise enough money to both to pay off the debts and build a new ground.
On Friday 8 June, the FA in London said that it was a very strong possibility
that by June 12th Scarborough F.C. may well go out of business. On Tuesday 12th
June, the club was given an eight day 'stay of execution' following a 'change
of heart' by their local Borough Council.
Chairman Scobbie had produced a plan for a new ground on
land occupied by the George Pindar Community Sports College but SBC wanted
business plans which he didn't have. On Wednesday 20th June Scarborough
Football Club was wound up in the High Court, ending its 128-year run as a club
with debts of £2.5 million.
Scarborough Athletic were given a mandate to proceed by
fans at a public meeting at the town's St Nicholas Hotel. They gained admission
into the Northern Counties East League at the AGM on 25th June.
Ian Scobbie
threatened to derail the bid to gain a place in the league by threatening to
apply to enter his own club despite knowing that the NCEL stating that if they
received more than one application, then no Scarborough side would be admitted.
Scobbie didn't deliver his application.
Many thanks
To all the players and fans who gave me so many memories,
both good and bad. Special mention to the following players who gave me special
memories, in no particular order, except Jeff Barmby who was the greatest in my opinion!
Jeff Barmby, Gerry Coyne, Ted Smethurst, Harry Dunn, Bert
Garrow, Colin Appleton, Gerry Donaghue, Bernie Fagan, Jimmy Shoulder, Mally
Thompson, Sean Marshall, John Woodall, Tony Aveyard, Billy Ayre, Harry
"A" Dunn, Derek Abbey, Dave Hilley, Steve Deere, Dave Chapman, Bryan
Magee, Ian Smith, Neil Thompson, Neil Sellers, Kenny Dennis, John Hanson, Ces
Podd, Steve Richards, Ian Bennyworth, Paul Kendall, Ray McHale, Kevin
Blackwell, Stewart Mell, Phil Walker, Stuart Hamill, Steve Adams, Dave Bowman,
Steve Brodie, Mark Calvert, Mitch Cook, David D'Auria, Richard Dixey, Sean
Dunphy (for comedy value), Darren Davis, Tony Elliott, Darren Foreman, Tommy
Graham, Mark Hotte, Ken Houghton, Ian Ironside, Alan Kamara, Gary Himsworth,
Jimmy Kelly, Scott Kerr, Darren Knowles, Ashley Lyth, John MacDonald, Alex
Marinkov, Mick Matthews, Stewart Mell, Adie Meyer, Stuart Hicks, Jamie
Mitchell, Tommy Mooney, Kevin Nicholson, George Oghani, Pat Olney, Martin
Harris, Mark Patterson, Brendan Phillips, David Pounder, Sean Rennison, Andy
Ritchie, Darren Roberts, Jason Rockett, Martin Russell, Matty Russell (you
can't choose your parents), Chris Senior, Paul Sheppard, Dene Shields, Chris
Short, Craig Short, Mo Sillah, Dave Smith, Ian Snodin, Dean Spink, Colin
Sutherland, Simon Thompson, Tyrone Thompson, Leigh Walker, Gareth Stoker, John
Watson, Mark Wells, Pete Walters, Jason White, Trenton Wiggan, Gareth Williams,
Colin Williams, Andy Woods and Super Ben Worrall.
Thanks to all the fans I stood with at games both home
and away. Special greetings and thanks to everyone I travelled on the mini
buses with over the years and drank with before and after games.
What I really miss
Pre-match drinks in the Commercial, Falsgrave in its
prime.
Arranging the mini bus for the following week when we ran
them.
Just walking down to the ground knowing that generations
of my family and friends had given so much to the club, only to have it taken
away by incompetent, and in some cases devious people, who were only looking
after their own welfare who then had the temerity to blame us fans.
Standing in The Shed at the match. On its day, an
atmosphere to match anywhere.
Being young!
RIP Scarborough Football Club and The Athletic Ground
4 comments:
top quality rob m8, loved the away trips, the home games, and the boys who travelled, but reading what ya said....richmond was atwat, others were worse...but john russell was a total CUNT, excuse my language those ov you reading this. my best memories were with this great club, and 1 thing will always stay with me....BORO TILL I DIE.xx
Thanks for the memories rob,lots of sadness but I like to remember the lafs,funniest moment ever was when neil trebble scored (funny in it's self)and frogga hurdeled the hordings waiting for his hero arms outstreched only for neil to flattern the hapless frogga god we did laf i don't need to put date and team cos no doubt rob yo'll know. lyn was just saying your knowledge is phenomenal you should have been a journalist......gone but not forgotten see u at weaponess in 3 years. all the best 4 2011. baz
Like the blog mate, found it originally googling for pictures of dog racing for our blog of greyhound racing pictures, specifically of Clapton Dogs.
Sadly couldn't find any of Clapton, but on google your picture of Bristol Rover's old Gasworks dog track popped up
Visited the Stadium of Chips with Barnet in the early 2000's, was 2-2 if memory serves me correctly, and there was a motor bike race going on around the hill behind the stadium. Sad to see the club fold, ditto to Halifax (also happy away days at the Shay).
Chris
Happy days Rob. Remember when we did a days work, drove to Southampton for a cup tie and drove back just in time to go back to work.
Hartlepool police treating the lads on the mini bus as potential hooligans...age range from 11 to 60. Just to make sure we didn't stop in Guisborough we had a police escort from Hartlepool to Whitby boundary.
Great days with the bar my army. I'd have them back tomorrow. Scarborough til I die.
RC
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