Read All About It – Paper Review

THE REASON people dislike Gary Neville is, strangely, because he has all the qualities we ask for in a footballer. The Manchester United full-back who had announced his retirement – though he could never be called retiring – was a dedicated one-club man, his passion for United equals that of any supporter, his consistency was as good as it gets and his honesty could never be doubted.

Rarely the most willing or easy of players to interview, perhaps the only thing Neville and the press have in common is their opinion of each other but Fleet Street was still ready to praise the former England international who intriguingly may join the ranks of the media as a TV pundit.

Andy Dunn in the News of the World wrote: “You don’t get to play 600-odd times for Manchester United merely because you stay on the training ground until dusk. Isn’t it a shame though that outside Old Trafford most people will remember his magnificent career as essentially one long scowl?

“Maybe not. Maybe railing against the outside world is what made Neville the unique footballer he was.”

Martin Kelner, in his always entertaining Guardian column, placed the emphasis on Neville’s alleged moustache. He was impressed by Match Of The Day’s “very useful guide to the several ages of Neville’s moustache.”

Kelner wrote: “Ostensibly it was a tribute to Neville’s achievements, with shots of him lifting trophies at various stages in his Manchester United career, but the montage also acted like one of those speeded-up sequences of a flower blooming you used to see on nature programmes, giving one a snapshot of just what has been going on underneath the Neville nose through the Premier League era.”

In the Daily Mirror, Oliver Holt said Neville’s commitment and desire should be the blueprint for any young player. He wrote: “Neville stood for things that people wrongly say have been lost to the game. He was proof that there are still plenty of footballers we can point to as worthy of our children’s hero worship.

“He was proof that, amid all the stuff and nonsense, there are still plenty of players out there who are true to the traditions of the game.”

Dave Kidd’s take on Red Nev in the People made the point that the new wave of owners could signal the end of loyal servants like Neville.

Kidd was angry at the criticism by Newcastle owner Mike Ashley’s “henchman” Derek Llambias directed at Alan Shearer who questioned the sale of Andy Carroll to Liverpool.

‘The contempt and loathing Ashley and Llambias show towards their own supporters is unprecedented. And the more men like these hold sway at Premier League clubs, the less likely it is that we’ll ever see the like of Gary Neville again.’

Carroll missed Liverpool’s 1-0 win at Chelsea where the debut of Fernando Torres for the Blues gave football writers the opportunity to dip their metaphorical pens in vitriol.

Torres lasted 66 minutes before being substituted and Steve Howard of the Sun, never one to sit on any fence, was at his best. “The only surprise was the travelling Kop didn’t hit him with the biggest insult of all – are you Shevchenko in disguise?.

“As debuts go it was a stinker.”

Torres started the game alongside Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka which many think is one striker too many. Howard’s Sun colleague Shaun Custis made the point: “There is a strong belief [Carlo] Ancelotti had little to say in the Torres signing, that it was all down to Roman Abramovich. But it is Ancelotti who has to find a way of sorting it out.’

Outside of Merseyside the result was seen as a Chelsea defeat rather than a Liverpool victory but the Daily Mail’s Martin Samuel was gushing in his praise for Kenny Dalglish whose three at the back formation worked a treat. Samuel wrote: “He…gets the best out of players like Raul Meireles and Lucas who have struggled under previous managers. He has taken a system that is hopelessly unfashionable in the modern era and won with it at fortress Stamford Bridge.””

Oliver Kay penned a thoughtful column on a player who was absent from the action, Joe Cole. Quickly becoming a forgotten man at Anfield and with England, Cole has struggled with an early red card, niggling injuries and – not for the first time – consistency.

Kay wrote in the Times: “[Roy] Hodgson got an awful lot wrong at Liverpool but who can accuse him of being wrong…with respect to Cole? Claudio Ranieri, Jose Mourinho, Avram Grant, Guus Hiddink, Carlo Ancelotti…Hodgson was just the latest manager who felt unable to indulge Cole. Kenny Dalglish seems certain to be the next.”

Christopher Davies

Celebrate among yourselves and keep your shirt on

So did Peter Walton REALLY have to show West Ham’s Frederic Piquionne a second yellow card for his goal-celebrations against Everton? No…and yes. Welcome to the subjective land of the laws of football.

FIFA guidelines state: ‘Leaving the field of play to celebrate a goal is not a cautionable offence in itself but it is essential that players return to the field of play as soon as possible. Referees are expected to act in a preventative manner and to exercise common sense in dealing with the celebration of a goal.’

So despite the common belief that running to celebrate a goal with supporters is a mandatory yellow card, that is not necessarily the case but the guidelines add: ’While it is permissible for a player to demonstrate his joy when a goal has been scored, the celebration must not be excessive.’

Let’s not get into the law that says leaving the field of play without the referee’s permission. That would open up not so much a can of worms as a barrel-load.

Journalists, players, managers and fans want consistency from referees but that is impossible because what one referee might see as a cautionable offence, another might not. Most of the laws are based on the opinion of the referee and as in life, people have different views on the same situation. What one referee regards as excessive another will consider acceptable. The laws are not always black and white.

Personally, I go along with Gerard Houllier who said that the best way to celebrate a goal is for the scorer to run to the team-mate who has laid on the chance. Too many celebrations these days are negative – the cupped ear or finger over the mouth – rather that what should be a moment of absolute joy.

I have sympathy for Walton because no matter what most of my FWA colleagues apparently believe, celebrating with fans does present a potential danger. Jubilant supporters can be injured climbing over seats in an effort to share a hug or a high-five with the goalscorer. I remember being at the Valley when Manchester United scored and in the mayhem to celebrate with the scorer there was such a rush of bodies that a Charlton steward sustained a broken leg. Had the player stayed on the field this would not have happened.

Thankfully such acts are rare but they can happen so Walton can justifiably claim he was acting in a ‘preventative manner.’ Emotions run high after a goal and by sprinting to the crowd a player can, albeit unwittingly, present a potential danger. Remember, the laws apply to football around the world at every level and many stadiums are not as securely built as those in England.

Sadly, as we saw at Stevenage the other week when a player was struck by a supporter during a so-called good natured pitch invasion…it takes only one bad guy to spoil things.

The penny should have dropped by now that excessive celebrations can bring a yellow card but players still remove their jerseys after scoring, thus earning the most brainless of cautions which goes towards a potential suspension.

Servette midfielder Paulo Diogo scored against Schaffhausen, then jumped into the crowd to celebrate. On the way, he managed to catch his wedding ring on a fence and tore off the top half of his finger. To add to his pain, he was also cautioned for excessive celebration.

Those who believe a Half Monty celebration is part and parcel of football…the International Football Association Board made the removal of a shirt after goalscoring a mandatory yellow card for three reasons. Firstly, football is a world-wide sport and in some countries a bare male chest is considered offensive for religious reasons. Secondly, the undergarment players wear often bear the logo of the manufacturer, giving them free ‘advertising’ on television which does not go down well with those sponsors who have paid for the privilege. Thirdly, messages such as ‘happy birthday mum’ have become boring.

The lawmakers are either protecting the safety of supporters and players or killjoys, depending on your view. But if you know running to the crowd or taking off your jersey will bring a yellow card, whether you agree with it or not, why do it?

Celebrate among yourselves chaps and keep your shirts on.

Christopher Davies

Private Eyes Follow The Stars

TO THE best of my knowledge no English club have – yet – employed a private detective agency to study the nocturnal wanderings of their errant stars.

Barcelona seem to be the pioneers of this unusual practice, according to Interviu magazine who claimed Deco left the Nou Camp for Chelsea after private eyes concluded the midfielder’s night life was excessive.

The Catalan club are alleged to have paid agents to spy on Deco, Gerard Pique, Ronaldinho and Samuel Eto’o in 2007/8.

Pique was in his first season back at Barcelona after his spell with Manchester United. It is claimed representatives from the agency Metodo 3 followed the Spain international 24 hours a day for a week while the others were watched sporadically over a longer period of time.

The magazine claims the investigations were initiated by the Barcelona president at the time Joan Laporta and had ‘very positive results’ for Pique with ‘nothing objectionable’ discovered so there was no need to continue following the defender any longer.

However, the findings against former Chelsea midfielder Deco, Ronaldinho and Eto’o were less favourable. The reports concluded that over a period of several months the trio committed ‘constant acts of indiscipline’ against the club. The following summer Deco and Ronaldinho left Barcelona while Eto’o joined Inter Milan last year.

From what we hear about Ronaldinho’s love of the good life anyone trying to keep up with the Brazilian would have needed the energy of the Duracell bunny.

It adds a new dimension to how far a club will go to ensure players are living what they would deem as a lifestyle in keeping with that of a professional footballer.

One of the best jobs I have heard of is held by an ex-policeman friend who is employed to go into pubs to see if they are showing live football on Sky Sports and whether they have paid the appropriate fee.

“Goodbye darling…just off to work…yes, another pub crawl…”

But being a private eye paid to follow Barclays Premier League headliners such as – no, I don’t really need to name names – the usual suspects…

“Goodbye darling…don’t wait up for me…I may be home late, very late…”

It is said Sir Alex Ferguson has a lookout system in Manchester hotspots that makes radar seem obsolete. And these days, it is not so much the paparazzi as the punterazzi that photographs well-known footballers doing things tabloid editors drool over.

The era of mobile phones with their digital cameras means it is virtually impossible for anyone in the public eye to do things they would rather the public didn’t find out about.

Employing a private eye over a period of several months may be seen as madness, certainly it is one step beyond (sorry).

 

“IT IS with regret that I have decided not to speak to the paper for the foreseeable future. Over the past 18 months on four occasions my words have been taken out of context. I have not taken this decision lightly.”

A familiar moan…a Premier League manager?

No, it was, er…Hayes and Yeading manager Garry Haylock on the Uxbridge Gazette. A scenario far too common at all levels of the game.

IF I HAD one wish – okay, if I had 100 wishes this would be one – it is that any team with striped, hooped or quartered shirts must have their numbers on a patch. Covering West Bromwich Albion or Queens Park Rangers – I use them as examples – can be a nightmare for reporters. It is virtually impossible – and you can probably take out the ‘virtually’ – to see the red number printed over the blue and white stripes/hoops. Football writers, especially those covering the away team, need to see the number on the back of players’ jerseys for immediate identification. A 6 looks very much like an 8 from 70 yards and a familiar cry at press boxes where Neil Warnock’s impressive side play is: ‘Who passed the ball?’ Or ‘Was it 3 [Clint Hill] or 13 [Kaspars Gorkss]?’

UEFA’s regulations stipulate numbers on non-plain shirts must be on a patch to help TV and radio commentators, those in the press box plus fans. The Premier League and Football League should follow the lead of European football’s governing body.

IT IS difficult to have sympathy for clubs that sign African players and then moan about losing them for up to a month for the African Cup of Nations.

But sympathy must go to Everton’s David Moyes (and other managers in the same situation) who faces losing the influential Tim Cahill for five games when the Australia international is on Asia Cup duty in Qatar in January.

When Everton signed Cahill from Millwall, Australia were in Oceania but they subsequently switched to the Asia confederation. Others who could be involved include Mark Schwarzer (Fulham), Brett Emerton and Vince Grella (Blackburn), Brad Jones (Liverpool) and David Cairney (Blackpool).

A NUMBER of FWA members believe it is wrong that it is a mandatory caution for any player who removes his shirt after scoring a goal. That is subjective but the law was brought in mainly for two reasons. Firstly, football is a global game and in many countries, for religious reasons the sight of a bare male chest is deemed offensive.

Secondly, some players have contracts with sports manufacturers who supply undergarments which bear their logo. Sponsors who have paid huge sums to advertise during matches became annoyed a company can get 30 seconds free advertising if a player whips off his shirt in ‘spontaneous’ celebration. The authorities also felt messages scrawled on T-shirts saying ‘happy birthday’ or whatever to someone was becoming boring.

But whether you agree with the law or not, it is the most brainless of yellow cards to collect. Surely players should know by now not to do a half-Monty after scoring a goal?

UPDATE on the three remaining unbeaten teams in Europe. Manchester United (P22 W14 D8 L0), Real Madrid (P19 W15 D4 L0) and FC Porto (P20 W18 D2 L0) go into the weekend hoping to extend their records.

Sam Allardyce would probably disagree but United, who host Blackburn Rovers in the Barclays Premier League on Saturday, appear to have the easiest task. FC Porto visit Sporting Lisbon on Sunday while on Monday it’s el clasico between Barcelona and Real Madrid.

Christopher Davies

Villas Boas: The New Special One?

Manchester United, Real Madrid and FC Porto are the only unbeaten top division teams in Europe.

United are undefeated in 26 matches in all competitions. They are the fourth side in Barclays Premier League history to be unbeaten in their opening 13 games of a season. Of the other three, only Arsenal’s Invincibles of 2003/4 went on to win the title. The Reds are still in the Carling Cup, their Champions League win at Bursaspor left them on the verge of qualifying from Group C while they started the season by beating Chelsea in the Community Shield.

Under Jose Mourinho, Real Madrid have played 17 games, winning 13 with four draws. In the Primera Liga leaders Real have won nine and drawn two while they have already qualified for the knockout stages of the Champions League after three wins and a draw.

Standing alongside Sir Alex Ferguson and the Special One is Andre Villas-Boas, the rising star of European coaching who has had a sensational start to his first season in charge at FC Porto. With 10 wins and a draw they lead the Portuguese League by 10 points from Benfica and Guimaraes. Like Real, Porto have also secured their place in the next stage of the Champions League.

Villas-Boas, 33, is nicknamed Mourinho II. He was still a teenager when he started working in Porto’s scouting department in the mid-Nineties when Sir Bobby Robson was in charge. The club were impressed by the youngster’s tactical knowledge and his ability to produce scouting reports players could easily digest.

Aged 21, he was appointed as the technical director of the British Virgin Islands FA in 1999, taking charge of the national team for some World Cup qualifiers. After 18 months in the Caribbean he returned to Portugal to coach Porto’s Under-19’s.

In 2002 Mourinho moved to Porto and made Villas-Boas an integral part of his staff, not just at Porto where he won two league titles, the Champions League and the UEFA Cup but later during his successful spells at Chelsea and Inter Milan. By the time he had moved to Stamford Bridge, Villas-Boas’ pre-match scouting reports included personalised DVDs for each player, outlining their next direct opponent’s strengths and weaknesses. It earned him the unofficial title of ‘director of opposition intelligence.’

He ended a seven-year working relationship with Mourinho in the summer of 2009 to become coach of Academica Coimbra in October. Academica were bottom of the league and winless when Villas-Boas took over from Rogerio Goncalves. One local paper described the club as ‘dead.’ By the time the 2009/10 season was over Villas-Boas had breathed life into Academica, leading them to 11th place in the 16-team league and the semi-finals of the Portuguese League Cup, losing to Porto in the Estadio do Dragao. Impressed by his achievements in Coimbra, Porto sacked Jesualso Ferreira despite winning three league titles in four seasons and appointed Villas-Boas in June.

Unsurprisingly Villas-Boas is keen to distance himself from the inevitable comparisons with Mourinho though he concedes the Special One has been “very important” to him. “I am not a clone of anyone,” he said. “I want to leave my mark on this club.”

He could hardly have had a better start. Benfica, the reigning champions, were beaten in the Portuguese Super Cup as Villas-Boas begin his Porto coaching era with a 2-0 victory.

It is only a matter of time before an FWA member links Villas-Boas with a job in the Barclays Premier League.

NEXT GAMES
Nov 20
Manchester United v Wigan Athletic (Barclays Premier League)
Real Madrid v Athletic Bilbao (Primera Liga)
Nov 21
Moreirense v FC Porto (Portuguese Cup fourth round).

Christopher Davies

Becoming a Football Writer

by Gerry Cox, Former Chairman of the FWA and Chief Executive, Hayters Teamwork Sports Agency

The life of a football writer is not always as exciting as it may appear. It is not all about flying around the world being paid to watch football and write about it – there are plenty of hours spent hanging around cold, wet training grounds waiting for an interview that may never happen.

If you are determined to get into sportswriting, however, be aware that it is a very competitive world.

National newspapers, local papers, magazines, websites, television and radio stations and press agencies are all hungry for football-related stories. But while there are more media outlets than ever before, never has there been so much competition for jobs in the business.

Everyone, it seems, has an opinion on football and most people think they can write a match report, but only the most determined, talented or lucky few get to write about the sport for a living.

Read Full Article…

FWA Book Club: Forgive Us Our Press Passes

From Forgive Us Our Press Passes (Know The Score Books – Amazon £13.99).

Never before have so many leading football writers been united in one publication. Newspaper rivalries are set aside as the Football Writers’ Association present a unique collection of more than 60 original essays on every aspect of modern football. Know The Score Books are giving 10 per cent of the retail price of the book to Great Ormond Street Hospital Children’s Charity. The best writers have come together for the best of causes.

From the delight and downfall of Diego Maradona to the highs and lows of supporting Brighton and Hove Albion and Barnet, from the achievements of Sir
Alex Ferguson to those of Hartlepool United, from goal celebrations to refereeing, the rise of African football to David Ginola’s hair and Bob Paisley’s slippers, from Sir Stanley Matthews and Ferenc Puskas through Roy Keane and Steven Gerrard, from the craziness of and Vinnie Jones to the life of a TV commentator and that of a former pro-turned-journalist, every angle of the Beautiful Game, across England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales and all other points of the compass, is covered in Forgive Us Our Press Passes.

You can buy the book here…

By Mike Collett

There was nowhere quite like the Collette Restaurant and Snack Bar on FA Cup Final day at Wembley Stadium in the 1960s. Nowhere. It is the kind of place
people no longer eat in. Actually, even when it existed there weren’t too many places like it that people ate in, but on Cup Final day it was absolutely magical.

It stood less than half a mile away from the Twin Towers, opposite the entrance to Wembley Stadium mainline station and for me, for a time, it was even more
magical and exciting than actually being in the stadium itself.

Well that’s not quite true, because all I longed for was the chance to find a ticket.

I used to imagine, as I poured out another Kia-Ora orange from the huge dispenser or prised open the top of another bottle of Coke or Seven-Up that I would find one carelessly discarded amongst the empty cups or plates, or that someone would just walk in, and offer me, a gawky teenager, a ticket for the final.

You think like that when you are 15.

Without realising it at the time, the Collette gave me a privileged position among football fans, because I went to Wembley for the Cup Final every season.

The Cup finalists often stayed not far from where I lived, either at the Brent Bridge Hotel off the North Circular or at the Hendon Hall Hotel and I learnt very early exactly what the magic of the Cup meant, both to the players and the fans.

We used to go to the hotels to get the players autographs. Then on Cup Final day I’d find myself among the fans, listening to their conversations about their heroes I’d been with the day before.

The optimism of fans never changes before a Cup Final. No matter what colours, or rosettes then, they happened to be wearing, it was always thrilling. No-one ever admitted they were going to lose, ever.

The desolation of the losers never changed either. Losing fans don’t stick around for cups of tea afterwards. Winning fans would come back and order steak and chips.

Forty years on, and no matter what else the big clubs may be aiming to win today, there is still nowhere quite like Wembley on FA Cup Final day and those
days at the Collette helped me fall in love with the world’s greatest cup competition.

My Uncle Jack ran the place and added the final ‘e’ to the Collett name on the tiled shop-front sign to give it an air of refined European sophistication.
But you cannot imagine a place less likely to attract refined European sophisticates.

“What’s that last ‘e’ for, Uncle Jack?” I asked him once as I carried a huge pile of empty plates back to the kitchen where the amazing El Greco, the one-armed washer-up, worked on match days. In fact, he was about the nearest thing the Collette Restaurant & Snack Bar ever got to the European game. And despite his nickname, he was Italian and told me he used to play for Inter Milan.

“But you’ve only got one arm,” I would tease him.

“I was not the goalkeeper … and I’ve got two feet,” he’d reply, and there was no arguing with that.

I never asked him how he lost the arm, but he was certainly the most effective one-armed professional dish washer I’ve ever seen.

While El Greco stayed year after year and did the washing up, cooks came and went, but none could match Vi. She was formidable with a mane of jet black hair
and a personality that could fill a room, or even Wembley itself. There were often so many people in the tiny kitchen you had to walk sideways to get anywhere.

“We need more plates, Greco,” she would scream at the one-armed dishwasher. “So hurry up.” Another arm wouldn’t have gone amiss.

Uncle Jack had thought about the final ‘e’ on the end of the name and as I walked out of the kitchen, through a little corridor where he had his ‘office’ and used to type up things like ‘1965 FA Cup Final Menu Special’, he was waiting with his answer.

“People will think it’s Italian. Then it should have an ‘i’ on the end then and be Colletti,” replied his precocious nephew.

“They’ll think it’s French then,” he explained, as if that made a blind bit of difference.

All they wanted was a steak and kidney pie and chips, or steak and chips or beans on toast or egg and chips. I don’t think they’d heard of pasta at Wembley in 1965.

But you had to hand it to him, Uncle Jack was certainly a showman with an engaging style. Small, balding and with a fine moustache and a wonderful sense
of humour, he would also usually wear a long white coat while on duty on Cup Final day. It made him look like a cross between a doctor and a butcher, which
perhaps wasn’t a bad thing.

He was a cross between Arthur Lowe of Dad’s Army fame and the great Spurs fan and actor Warren Mitchell and had been something in the City before a career
swerve occurred. He ended up running this madhouse.

There were in fact three very distinct sections to it. The Snack Bar part, where I began working on match days as a 13 year-old, was at street level. The restaurant was up a winding staircase where about 25 tables occupied the whole floor.

There was a Juke Box in the corner and every time I hear Otis Redding’s Dock of the Bay I can picture the sounds and smells of that restaurant as if it was
yesterday. In 1968 an Everton fan put in about £2 – a fortune at the time – and keyed in Dock of the Bay which played non-stop about 25 times for more than an hour. It must have been the high point of his day. West Bromwich beat them 1-0 with Jeff Astle’s extra-time winner.

One floor above the restaurant were the mysterious rooms which were let out to all kinds of equally mysterious people. I found out later that El Greco lived up there where he had a box with a wooden, gloved arm in it.

I rarely ventured to the rooms, but in 1965 Uncle Jack had a brilliant idea. Years before Sky TV came along, Jack, although he didn’t know it, I reckon,
invented Pay per View TV. There was no satellite technology involved here however. He just put a TV in an empty room and charged all those without
tickets still in the restaurant at kick-off time five shillings to watch the match. He made a killing.

There wasn’t a lot to do while the game was actually on, and once I had cleared up the empties, he let me sit in with the world’s first Pay Per View TV audience.

There might have been 100,000 actually in Wembley across the road to see Liverpool beat Leeds, but it seemed to me there were almost as many in that
bedroom, all of them Liverpool fans as I recall, all of them in suits and all of them delighted to be seeing the match on a tiny black-and-white Rediffusion TV set.

However ‘seeing the match’ might be something of an exaggeration. After a while the room became so full of smoke, wild language and Liverpool fans going crazy, it was amazing anyone could breathe, let alone work out what was being beamed live from 200 yards away.

My lasting memory of the 1965 Cup final is actually ‘seeing’ Ian St John’s winning header through a dense fug of Woodbine cloud and an ecstatic Scouser
hugging me half-to-death celebrating Liverpool’s first ever FA Cup win.

The following year, 1966, saw the Collette decked out in World Cup Willie paraphernalia and the place moved into overdrive with so many matches at
Wembley. Everton and Sheffield Wednesday came to town for the Cup Final and the Snack Bar was doing a roaring trade.

The tea urn was being drained in record time, the sandwiches were selling like hot cakes, which of course, we didn’t sell, bottles of coke were going by the
crateload. A Sheffield Wednesday fan came up to the bar.

“How much is a ham sandwich ?”

“Two and six,” I replied

“How much is cheese sandwich ?”

“Two and three.”

“And how much for teas?”

“Six pence.”

He thought for a moment or two. I didn’t know whether he was gonna hug me like that Scouser had or belt me.

“I’ll have two teas. I’m not paying your thieving London prices.”

I served him two teas. He drank one after the other and walked out. Strange people football folk. Wonderful people too.

It was April 11, 1970, about half past two and the Cup final between Chelsea and Leeds was less than half an hour away. As was usual, the Collette was emptying as fans went across to the stadium.

I was cleaning up the Snack Bar when I heard the words I’d dreamed of for years. “Oi, mate, you don’t know anyone who fancies a ticket do ya? Face value.”
“What? I do. Wait there one second.”

I bounded upstairs and found Uncle Jack to tell him of this stupendous, earthshattering opportunity.

“You can go if you find someone to stand in for while you’ve gone,” came his less than encouraging reply.

Half an hour before kick-off and Where on earth was I going to find ANYONE to do that?

“But it’s the FA Cup final and some bloke is offering me a ticket.”

“Ok, go on, I’ll do it. Off you go, but be back here five minutes after the game ends or else you’re sacked.”

Twenty minutes later I was IN Wembley.

I’d been there before but never on Cup Final day, and yes I had to admit it. It was JUST a bit better than seeing the match on the black and white telly upstairs at the Collette.

The old place was pulled down many years ago and replaced by a bland office building. I’ve been a journalist covering matches at Wembley for over 35 years
now and often wish I could just pop in there for a cup of tea and a bacon sandwich.

And put Dock of the Bay on the jukebox. Over and over again.

Mike Collett, a member of the Football Writers’ Association national committee, is the author of the Complete Record of the FA Cup and the soccer editor of
Reuters.