Wednesday 18 April 2018

FA Women's Super Glue League

Elitism for the chosen few 

Following a report published on the BBC Sport website today, headlined, 'Man Utd women's team a 'massive opportunity', (full story https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/43794323), I make absolutely no apology for finding this hard to swallow. What's the point in Manchester United going through the process of applying at all when we all know that the FA are almost begging them to join? Election to the newly formed Championship will be a mere formality as we all suspect. Well of course it's good for the game. Only a fool would dispute that; but for whom?

Football is a working class game with working class ideals. It's no coincidence that all of the greatest talents on earth, have and always probably will be from what is affectionately labelled a working class background. That's because it's the people's sport. A sport that facilitates people from all manner of backgrounds no matter how rich, no matter how poor, to come together as one to compete, whether it be for a set number of minutes will rules and regulations, or just a simple kick-about. Football is an education within itself, and to adopt silver spoon policies at any level of the beautiful game, would be an absolute outrage, that goes against everything the game stands for to my mind.

Any Apprentice will display real craft and pride in what they have achieved once they complete their course through a sustained period. The same follows with any academic achievement you care to mention, or just being at a Company for many years, such that you will gain experience, trust and respect in consequence. So to just bob them in, thus dismissing all of the rules and principles of past generations, that must be obeyed by everyone else quite frankly smacks of nepotism at its finest. Do I really wish to be a part of a game as a fan, where elitism is thrust upon us, showing complete disregard for the years we have spent torturing ourselves at times, in the hope and belief that maybe, just maybe we can do it? Oh the excitement. It's the only thing better than your birthday!

So the question is: better for whom? Better for those that will inevitably always be buzzing around the top, winning all of that most coveted of silverware? Better for those who will close rank to plunder all of the riches in the game? Better for the 'elite' clubs who become stronger and wealthier, and set up their own elite prawn sandwich club to vote on what's best for the leagues and cup competitions that the poor clubs participate in? Well we know from experience how that pans out don't we? The revenues stay at the top and never seem to find their way to the lower end of the enforced 'man-managed' market place. Any other industry and the Monopolies and Mergers Commission would readily intervene to straighten matters out, but not in football. Football has a way of looking, quite legally, it would appear, after its own. That's because everything is a written contract, and contracts as we know can be manipulated by the strength of the person(s) with the whip-hand. All that would happen is that the rich get richer while the rest have to queue and beg for scraps.

There are principles and morals to heavily consider in this world, and this smacks of having neither. My message therefore is do your apprenticeship like everyone else and stop being so arrogant as to think that Manchester United are in some way better principally or morally than anyone else.

The FA let's face it, covertly wish to ensure that Arsenal, Chelsea, Tottenham Hotspur, West Ham United, Manchester United, Manchester City, Liverpool and Everton always remain at the top, with the also ran's hovering around to avoid relegation, and make up the convenient numbers of the league. So how does that benefit everyone else if your club is not one of the chosen few, riddle me that? Yeovil Town admitted only last season that the FA wanted the glamour clubs to make up Super League 1, and so it proves. What happened to saving up for something as we were taught as kids? "If you want something bad enough, you'll save hard enough and invest wisely", Dad always used to say. Great advice that. I must say though that I have come to learn the manner in which women's football, like men's, is rapidly revealing itself to be that 'let's say this to the public, even though we mean that. That way we stand to make this'. Sure Yeovil Town, Doncaster Rovers Belles et al, may not be the most glamorous clubs to some. The one thing they have in common though is their self sustainable ability to look after themselves very well, and for that I say bully for you and thoroughly well deserved. Nobody has the right to ride rough-shod over them, no not even, and many would argue least of all the 'mighty' Man United who don't even have a team at senior level yet.

Respect is to be shared equally, and only when it's earned. Clubs like Derby County have come from nothing 40 years ago since 1978, to get to where they are now. Thousands of people have spent their hard earned cash, in the belief that they will one day reach the promised land and glory in the success it all brings. It's all about growing from grass roots, and going on a journey of blood sweat and tears to fulfil our dreams. Yes journey. "We have been on one hell of a journey" as the proverbial speech goes. All based upon good upbringing through good principles and morals, as opposed to this 'let's buy our way to the top' mentality, forever played out by the 'because we can' brigade regardless of the snot that comes with it.

Finally I would like to say this too. If Manchester United really do wish to form a senior level women's team for the right reasons, why did they close it down in 2005? They didn't appear to think much of the women's game back then did they? OK so they changed their minds. I'm fine with that, although I could deliberate about the motives for that, but will save that for another day. However if I leave the queue in a supermarket, I don't expect to go home and rejoin the queue again tomorrow at the place I left it do I? let alone 13 years just because i won the lottery! It's irritating when someone says "ooh I forgot the beans", and proceed to make you wait an extra minute while they shoot off to get them, flapping their hands in front of their face when they get back. It's darn right annoying when a new till opens, and those at the back suddenly rush off to become top dolly at the front, like a landslide has just occurred. It's even damn rude to walk into a place and march to the front claiming you'll miss your bus and you granny needs her bandage done. But this! You just can't make it up. It makes Juventus buying a small club, in order to acquire it's assets with the sole purpose of changing it's name and relocating look amateur.

Maybe it should be called the FA Women's Super Glue League!




Paul Topliff - Rams News and DCLFC Fans

Sunday 8 April 2018

Never Say Die Resilience Despite Defeat Against League Champions




Blackburn Rovers 6-2 Derby County

Paul Topliff | DCLFC FANS

FA Premier League Northern Division
08th April 2018 | Kick-off 2pm
Venue: Sir Tom Finney Stadium
Attendance: 103


Derby were emphatically defeated at the Sir Tom Finney Stadium by Blackburn in a 6-2 mauling. Rovers who are the current League Champions, Dallas Cup holders and coming National League Cup Finalists proved to be more than a match for the Ewes.


Rovers took an early 8th minute lead after Derby failed to close their player down, allowing Natasha Flint to cut in from the right and lash one home. Derby immediately tried to hit back with a great won ball by Sims on the right flank, to play the ball down to Andi Bell, who flashed it across to no avail as nobody could meet it. However the in-form Weston, who scored a great goal last week, then headed over at the near post, from a corner moments later by Bell which the Rovers Keeper Hill had covered.


No sooner had Derby shown promise, Rovers immediately charged forward, with the ball finding it's way into the Derby six-yard box. The Derby Right Back Sims then attempted to clear, only for the ball to unluckily bounce straight off the pressing Rovers forward Lagan Makin and into the goal for a 2-0 lead after 13 minutes.


Derby were finding it hard to settle after such a menacing opening, and Rovers won another corner, which was swung into the back post for Rovers Captain Lynda Shepherd to rise high and nod in for their third, leaving Derby shell-shocked after just 15 minutes: 3-0.


Three minutes later as Blackburn, now full in command, broke in numbers following that third goal, Natasha Flint, the scorer of the first goal, crossed a beauty that struck the near post. The resulting momentum then trickled agonisingly across the face of the goal only to go out for a goal-kick.

On 26 minutes Blackburn were pressing and trying to pile on the agony as Makin beat her marker and pull back to Holbrook, who lashed in a shot, only to see the ever present Derby keeper Sarah Morgan make a fine save. The Ewe Rams weren’t done yet though, and Shannon Weston ambitiously fired a 25 yarder that smashed the cross-bar to bounce down, hit the Rovers keeper Hill and feel its way across the line for Derby’s well deserved goal: 3-1.

Several minutes later Rovers midfielder Jordan bangs in yet another shot, which see’s the ball go wide. From the resulting goal kick, the ball finds its way to Blackburn’s dynamic midfielder Jess Holbrook, who won the Super League title with Liverpool, and was signed from Manchester City. Holbrook wasted no time in showing her class as she dribbled the ball past 3 Derby players, somewhat easier than expected, to drill the ball across goal and into the bottom left-hand corner to make it 4-1 to Blackburn Rovers.

Again the shots come. This time its Rovers defender Pearce who makes a lung bursting run to charge behind the Derby defence, only to hesitate and see her shot well covered by Morgan the Derby keeper.

You may be forgiven for thinking the play was all one way traffic, but you’d be wrong. Derby left winger Camilla Newton makes a good cross field ball to Bell who’s efforts won Derby a corner. Midfielder Lauren Cresswell, lobbed the ball in, only for it to fall to a Rovers player who cleared to force another counter attack. This time though Morgan quickly gathered. A final flurry for Blackburn, and Jordan see’s her shot easily collected by the Derby keeper.

Half Time: Blackburn Rovers 4-1 Derby County

After an initial steadier start to the 2nd half, Derby again shoot themselves in the foot as Chloe Hutsby, Derby’s Centre Back, is adjudged to have taken down the lively Jordan, who had flicked the ball past her marker. Captain Lynda Shepherd, who scored the third goal, then made no mistake, as she takes the resulting penalty to drive the ball past Morgan and into the bottom corner of the net to make it 5-1 after 51 minutes ironically enough!

SUB: Capt. Hannah Ward replaces Camilla Newton

More shots rain in by Shepherd and Natasha Flint, who twists and turns to force a smart save by Sarah Morgan on 57 and 60 minutes respectively. Then on the 64th minute Makin is denied a tap-in in the centre by Morgan, who again makes a fine block at close range. Less than a minute later Makin again takes a shot to get the ball over the line, only for the ‘goal’ to be ruled offside.

Blackburn were relentless, and Taylor wins the ball high up who releases Cunliffe this time who dribbles her way past one to pile in with a shot, only to see it parried away by Morgan for yet another corner. Jess Holbrook then turns brilliantly to fir in another shot, but the ball zooms over the bar. Rovers though are not taking their foot off the gas, and Lagan Makin curled the ball home for a fine finish, after Natasha Flint played a fine ball between two Derby defenders on 73 minutes: 6-1.

It was by no means a dirty game, but on the 77th minute Natasha Fenton was Yellow Carded for a cynical tackle on Derby Left Wing/Back Molly Johnson that left her sprawling.  That prompted a substitution with Notts County ‘Lady Pies’ signing Kirsty Allen replacing Nikki Ledgister.

SUB: Kirsty Allen replaces Nicole Ledgister

That turned out to be a very inspired and timely substitution. No sooner Allen was on the pitch, she brought desire with her. As Blackburn tried to break out from goal, Allen seized the opportunity to slot her first senior goal for Derby County, having scored for the Development side a couple of weeks ago when the seniors had no match. If every cloud has a silver lining this surely was it.

Even the final embers of the game had something to offer the neutral, as Lagan Makin won the ball in the 91st minute from the Derby defence, only to rush her shot while on the run straight into keeper Sarah Morgan, forcing yet another good save. Then on a final assault by Derby Holding Midfielder Leanne De Silva, a great distributor of the ball, has her own shot cleared off the line which could easily have made the game 6-3.

Rovers First team Coach Scott Macneill felt that they had control of the first 25 minutes before braking down in the final third. He also felt that Rovers had control of the 2nd Half.


Full Time: Blackburn Rovers 6-2 Derby County


Blackburn Rovers
Hill, Taylor, Shepherd (C), Pearson, Holbrook, Makin, Fenton, Jordan, Flint, McDonald, Cook
SUBS: Walsh, Cunliffe, Gerrard, Clarkson

Derby County
Morgan, Sims, Kennaugh (C), Hutsby, Johnson, De Silva, Cresswell, Weston, Ledgister, Newton, Bell 
SUBS: Ward (Club Captain), Allen, Clarkson


The result means that Derby now have little chance of finishing higher than 7th (from 12), but no lower too, with 22 points from 17 games. Arch rivals Nottingham Forest appear to be the closest to now challenge for that 7th spot having 15 points from 15 games. The last 3 seasons have seen Derby finish 5th on each occasion. Seventh would actually be an achievement considering the players who left last summer, especially with Mel Johnson moving on to Sheffield FC of Super League 2. Couple that with being absolutely decimated by long term injuries to key essential players, many of which missed a large part of the season, and some of which are still out, and shows the resilience that Derby have shown this season, all things considered. What this match does show is a never say die attitude from Derby County, and full credit to this bunch for that!

The last time Derby County Ladies FC suffered a 6-2 defeat was away to Coventry United (then Coventry City) on the 05th April 2015. This is Derby’s 4th worst all time Premier League defeat, since gaining promotion for the 2009-2010 season. The previous worst were:

Fylde 7-1 Derby County – 31/01/2016

Manchester City 7-1 Derby County – 13/11/2011

Liverpool 7-2 Derby County – 27/09/2009


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