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Date: Thursday
21s Feb 2002, 7.30pm
Venue:
Kingsway. £5 adults, £1 proggie.
Conditions: Constant light rain in first half.
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13 mins First blood in the
rain to Michael Chopra, who had started in a wide role to allow
Cort and Ameobi to play up front. He
ran on to a Bradley Orr pass and smashed the ball in off the bar from 15
yards 1-0
18 mins The visitors doubled their advantage when
Carl Cort played a short pass to Mark Boyd just outside the box.
'Skip' then rattled in a 20 yarder high past the goalkeeper's right into
the top corner of the net 2-0
Half time: Bishops 0 Newcastle Reserves 2
52 mins kicking towards the "cricket field" end,
half-time sub Andy Ferrell
took a Chopra pass on the left before driving home in off the keeper from
12 yards 3-0
58 mins Midfielder Bradley
Orr found the net after Colin McMenamin pulled the ball back from the
right 4-0
71 mins Now reinstated to a forward role, Chopra made headway down the
right and turned provider for his strike partner Colin McMenamin,
who had an easy finish 5-0
73 mins The goal of the night, as Mark Boyd belied
his bulky appearance with some nimble footwork to dance through four
defenders and the keeper before slotting home 6-0
77 mins With the goals now coming thick and fast and the superior
skill and fitness of the toon team starting to kick in, Andy Ferrell received
the ball in space before taking a step forward and blasting it home from
20 yards into the top corner 7-0
81 mins A close-range effort from Ferrell completed his
hat trick, and within a couple of minutes the referee decided he'd seen
enough, and blew for time 8-0
Full time:
Bishops 0 Newcastle Reserves 8
The briefest of quotes from Tommy
Craig who said:
"Carl's looking pretty much near to the point where the gaffer will
be able to give him the nod.
"His attitude,
and that of the other first team players involved, was first class last
night."
A rainy night at
Kingsway didn't deter a crowd over twice that for any league game this
season turning out and putting some valuable cash in the Bishop's kitty.
Preparations are well under way for the final ever game at this eccentric
old ground, when Bradford PA are the visitors in mid-April for a Unibond
fixture, but this was the night that a professional side made one final
visit.
The attractive urban location of this ground, together with the unique
redevelopment problems (the far end of the pitch becomes the cricket club)
meant that Kingsway was long ago under threat from the bulldozers, and
with plans to relocate two miles down the road to a site at Tindale
Crescent, the end is nigh.
However, the new ground is still at the planning stage, meaning that
Bishops face having to play next season on a borrowed pitch. A survey has
recently been carried out by Unibond officials as to the suitability of
other venues, with West Auckland, Crook, Shildon under consideration, plus
the possibility of a groundshare at Spennymoor's Brewery Field.
The latter would see two traditional rivals reunited, but as things stand
at present it's the Bishops who would be in the lower of the two Unibond
divisions. Their bad run has been matched by a resurgence in Spenny
fortunes in recent months, with the Brewers now dreaming of promotion.
This turnaround in fortunes can be attributed to new Spenny boss Tony Lee.
Unfortunately he left Kingway to take up the post, a decision that did
nothing for inter-club relations.
If Lee's departure did have one advantage though, it was that it allowed
Newcastle old boy Alan Shoulder to take up the reins at Bishops, and he
called up his old mate Tommy Craig, who was only too happy to bring down a
side to help out the non-league strugglers.
As to the match itself, it was a familiar tale in this sort of game, with
plenty of endeavour from the home team in the early stages and one or two
good chances, but an ever-increasing tide of goals conceded to the
professional side as the game progressed. However, the occasion and the
funds raised were of course far more important than the score.
Biffa
Reports
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