havanatopia Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 (edited) I was going to paste up another fat bloke for this match but of course he has slithered across from South to West Yorkshire. The current manager who, I believe, is Mr. Neil Redfearn of course came rather recently from the opposite direction. Its a funny old game is football management. He is a local lad having been born in Dewsbury one of the few towns in the Yorkshire Lancashire cloth belt still manufacturing fabrics. Good on em I say. Redfearn played for a plethora of football clubs with his league career coming to an end in the mid naughties. His longest spell was with Barnsley and most of his teams, save for Watford, Palace and Charlton were 'northern' teams. Enough of that nonsense. Rotherham United, from memory, were elected to the Football league in 1925 when, in fact, two Rotherham teams were joined as one. I will always remember the day we beat them 3-1 to gain promotion to the Championship and they were already going in the opposite direction.. Many hundreds of their fans stayed behind afterwards and roundly applauded our boys. I thought it was a really nice gesture and one that was not lost on thousands of City fans on the day; showing our appreciation to them in turn. Rotherham, the town, sits on the River Don, as do Sheffield and Doncaster, and is close to the confluence with the river Rother from which the town derives its name. The people of Rotherham should be rightfully proud of the achievements of their forefathers:- From the Battle of Trafalgar to the bridges of London, and from St Paul's Cathedral to the Great Eastern steam ship, the influence of Rotherham's great industries has been felt far beyond the boundaries of Yorkshire. The great furnaces and mills made the cannon that armed Nelson's HMS Victory at Trafalgar, the castings that bridged rivers as far apart as London and Jamaica, the steel straps that were installed to stop the dome of St Paul's from falling apart, the valves used in the Mulberry harbours that made D-Day possible and the plates that clad Isambard Kingdom Brunel's Great Eastern. Rotherham-made pipes helped bring fresh water supplies to Hong Kong. The town's factories made everything from brakes for World War II bombers to fireplaces for great houses like Wentworth Woodhouse. Its a bit of a who's who alright. Rotherham has a population of 117,000 (2001 Census) with the borough as a whole a rather surprising 248,000, in total. Yet it today comes under the Sheffield 'urban contigious area' with the centres of both being a mere 5.6 miles apart. Back in the early days there had been Ironage and Roman settlements but it was not really established until the Middle ages by the Saxons. The name is an easy one to decipher; ham, meaning homestead of course that sits on the Rother. Here are a few odd, interesting and completely useless factoids about Rotherham:- 1. Joseph Foljambe made the first commercially successful iron plough in the town. 2. Milling grain flour was a traditional industry in Rotherham and was home for a long time to Rank Hovis MacDougal. (where have they gone then?). The Millers became a fairly obvious nickname for the football club possibly chosen ahead of Iron because S****horpe and at least one other club, who's name escapes me, use. 3. Rotherham has for decades been a Labour party stronghold, like much of industrial Yorkshire, but more so here perhaps partly due to the sheer number of jobs that were lost to coal mining a major mineral wealth under the town along, also, with iron. Labour control 74% of the council with 20% by UKIP.. nobody else gets a look in. That despite the fact that ex Rotherham MP Denis mcShane was jailed for expenses abuse. Lets hope that we get a decent referee of the Howard Webb standard then, he was born in Rotherham so it might be a good omen and we can be laughing like the Chuckle Brothers come 5pm and hopefully they, no doubt Millers fans, won't be. I went for a bizarre 0-3 .. seems quite a few others are banking on that scoreline also. We might just let rip, lets hope so. UTC Well done to all those going.. a fabulous effort... cheer the City on to victory. Kodjia, Smith, Agard. Edited November 28, 2015 by havanatopia 9 Quote Link to comment
Wanderingred Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 I hate to be that guy but I can see a scrappy 1-0 home win and an OTIB meltdown coming a mile off. Praying i'm wrong. COYR!!!!! 1 Quote Link to comment
archie andrews Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 5 hours ago, havanatopia said: I was going to paste up another fat bloke for this match but of course he has slithered across from South to West Yorkshire. The current manager who, I believe, is Mr. Neil Redfearn of course came rather recently from the opposite direction. Its a funny old game is football management. He is a local lad having been born in Dewsbury one of the few towns in the Yorkshire Lancashire cloth belt still manufacturing fabrics. Good on em I say. Redfearn played for a plethora of football clubs with his league career coming to an end in the mid naughties. His longest spell was with Barnsley and most of his teams, save for Watford, Palace and Charlton were 'northern' teams. Enough of that nonsense. Rotherham United, from memory, were elected to the Football league in 1925 when, in fact, two Rotherham teams were joined as one. I will always remember the day we beat them 3-1 to gain promotion to the Championship and they were already going in the opposite direction.. Many hundreds of their fans stayed behind afterwards and roundly applauded our boys. I thought it was a really nice gesture and one that was not lost on thousands of City fans on the day; showing our appreciation to them in turn. Rotherham, the town, sits on the River Don, as do Sheffield and Doncaster, and is close to the confluence with the river Rother from which the town derives its name. The people of Rotherham should be rightfully proud of the achievements of their forefathers:- From the Battle of Trafalgar to the bridges of London, and from St Paul's Cathedral to the Great Eastern steam ship, the influence of Rotherham's great industries has been felt far beyond the boundaries of Yorkshire. The great furnaces and mills made the cannon that armed Nelson's HMS Victory at Trafalgar, the castings that bridged rivers as far apart as London and Jamaica, the steel straps that were installed to stop the dome of St Paul's from falling apart, the valves used in the Mulberry harbours that made D-Day possible and the plates that clad Isambard Kingdom Brunel's Great Eastern. Rotherham-made pipes helped bring fresh water supplies to Hong Kong. The town's factories made everything from brakes for World War II bombers to fireplaces for great houses like Wentworth Woodhouse. Its a bit of a who's who alright. Rotherham has a population of 117,000 (2001 Census) with the borough as a whole a rather surprising 248,000, in total. Yet it today comes under the Sheffield 'urban contigious area' with the centres of both being a mere 5.6 miles apart. Back in the early days there had been Ironage and Roman settlements but it was not really established until the Middle ages by the Saxons. The name is an easy one to decipher; ham, meaning homestead of course that sits on the Rother. Here are a few odd, interesting and completely useless factoids about Rotherham:- 1. Joseph Foljambe made the first commercially successful iron plough in the town. 2. Milling grain flour was a traditional industry in Rotherham and was home for a long time to Rank Hovis MacDougal. (where have they gone then?). The Millers became a fairly obvious nickname for the football club possibly chosen ahead of Iron because S****horpe and at least one other club, who's name escapes me, use. 3. Rotherham has for decades been a Labour party stronghold, like much of industrial Yorkshire, but more so here perhaps partly due to the sheer number of jobs that were lost to coal mining a major mineral wealth under the town along, also, with iron. Labour control 74% of the council with 20% by UKIP.. nobody else gets a look in. That despite the fact that ex Rotherham MP Denis mcShane was jailed for expenses abuse. Lets hope that we get a decent referee of the Howard Webb standard then, he was born in Rotherham so it might be a good omen and we can be laughing like the Chuckle Brothers come 5pm and hopefully they, no doubt Millers fans, won't be. I went for a bizarre 0-3 .. seems quite a few others are banking on that scoreline also. We might just let rip, lets hope so. UTC Well done to all those going.. a fabulous effort... cheer the City on to victory. Kodjia, Smith, Agard. very thorough H very thorough 1 Quote Link to comment
HoldenBall Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 4 hours ago, Kim_il_sung said: I hate to be that guy but I can see a scrappy 1-0 home win and an OTIB meltdown coming a mile off. Praying i'm wrong. COYR!!!!! Have to agree, their win against Leeds last week will galvanize them. Quote Link to comment
BigTone Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 5 hours ago, havanatopia said: I was going to paste up another fat bloke for this match but of course he has slithered across from South to West Yorkshire. The current manager who, I believe, is Mr. Neil Redfearn of course came rather recently from the opposite direction. Its a funny old game is football management. He is a local lad having been born in Dewsbury one of the few towns in the Yorkshire Lancashire cloth belt still manufacturing fabrics. Good on em I say. Redfearn played for a plethora of football clubs with his league career coming to an end in the mid naughties. His longest spell was with Barnsley and most of his teams, save for Watford, Palace and Charlton were 'northern' teams. Enough of that nonsense. Rotherham United, from memory, were elected to the Football league in 1925 when, in fact, two Rotherham teams were joined as one. I will always remember the day we beat them 3-1 to gain promotion to the Championship and they were already going in the opposite direction.. Many hundreds of their fans stayed behind afterwards and roundly applauded our boys. I thought it was a really nice gesture and one that was not lost on thousands of City fans on the day; showing our appreciation to them in turn. Rotherham, the town, sits on the River Don, as do Sheffield and Doncaster, and is close to the confluence with the river Rother from which the town derives its name. The people of Rotherham should be rightfully proud of the achievements of their forefathers:- From the Battle of Trafalgar to the bridges of London, and from St Paul's Cathedral to the Great Eastern steam ship, the influence of Rotherham's great industries has been felt far beyond the boundaries of Yorkshire. The great furnaces and mills made the cannon that armed Nelson's HMS Victory at Trafalgar, the castings that bridged rivers as far apart as London and Jamaica, the steel straps that were installed to stop the dome of St Paul's from falling apart, the valves used in the Mulberry harbours that made D-Day possible and the plates that clad Isambard Kingdom Brunel's Great Eastern. Rotherham-made pipes helped bring fresh water supplies to Hong Kong. The town's factories made everything from brakes for World War II bombers to fireplaces for great houses like Wentworth Woodhouse. Its a bit of a who's who alright. Rotherham has a population of 117,000 (2001 Census) with the borough as a whole a rather surprising 248,000, in total. Yet it today comes under the Sheffield 'urban contigious area' with the centres of both being a mere 5.6 miles apart. Back in the early days there had been Ironage and Roman settlements but it was not really established until the Middle ages by the Saxons. The name is an easy one to decipher; ham, meaning homestead of course that sits on the Rother. Here are a few odd, interesting and completely useless factoids about Rotherham:- 1. Joseph Foljambe made the first commercially successful iron plough in the town. 2. Milling grain flour was a traditional industry in Rotherham and was home for a long time to Rank Hovis MacDougal. (where have they gone then?). The Millers became a fairly obvious nickname for the football club possibly chosen ahead of Iron because S****horpe and at least one other club, who's name escapes me, use. 3. Rotherham has for decades been a Labour party stronghold, like much of industrial Yorkshire, but more so here perhaps partly due to the sheer number of jobs that were lost to coal mining a major mineral wealth under the town along, also, with iron. Labour control 74% of the council with 20% by UKIP.. nobody else gets a look in. That despite the fact that ex Rotherham MP Denis mcShane was jailed for expenses abuse. Lets hope that we get a decent referee of the Howard Webb standard then, he was born in Rotherham so it might be a good omen and we can be laughing like the Chuckle Brothers come 5pm and hopefully they, no doubt Millers fans, won't be. I went for a bizarre 0-3 .. seems quite a few others are banking on that scoreline also. We might just let rip, lets hope so. UTC Well done to all those going.. a fabulous effort... cheer the City on to victory. Kodjia, Smith, Agard. Condensed Version Rotherham A shithole near Sheffield best forgotten for its most recent scandal. Mr Putin, please take aim with my blessing. 2-0 City 3 Quote Link to comment
daored Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 36 minutes ago, Iron Man said: Have to agree, their win against Leeds last week will galvanize them. Agree their win last week will be a boost for them , but I think there were other factors involved off the pitch. Still think we will nick this today Quote Link to comment
downendcity Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 33 minutes ago, BigTone said: Condensed Version Rotherham A shithole near Sheffield best forgotten for its most recent scandal. Mr Putin, please take aim with my blessing. 2-0 City Good thing your condensed versions aren't at all predictable Tone Quote Link to comment
chipdawg Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 Dewsbury 'local' to Rotherham?! Thas dint nah waat thas onabart lad 3-1 City Quote Link to comment
Offside Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 Really hope we win today but I've got a feeling it will be a draw. Quote Link to comment
One BCFC Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 1-1. Couldnt beat Bolton so gives me no confidence for us to convincingly beat these Quote Link to comment
exAtyeoMax Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 To me, to you, to me, to you… 1 Quote Link to comment
bcfctim Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 4 minutes ago, BA14 RED said: 1-1. Couldnt beat Bolton so gives me no confidence for us to convincingly beat these Bolton, poor side though they were, have been tough to beat at home - only lost once at the Reebok this season. Rotherham, on the other hand, have been shipping goals for fun. Ipswich put 5 past them the other week. We'll win. Easy Quote Link to comment
Nogbad the Bad Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 Well done Havana, sets the scene nicely. No mention of John Galley though? All being well the Chuckle Brothers will be the Blubber Brothers by 5pm. Quote Link to comment
Major Isewater Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 1 hour ago, Iron Man said: Have to agree, their win against Leeds last week will galvanize them. Into over confidence and fatal mistakes , all part of my evil plan . Quote Link to comment
RobArnold10 Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 If we keep a clean sheet today I think we win. They are weaker than us st the back and I see us taking advantage of that. COYR. Quote Link to comment
ashton_fan Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 We need to get off to a good start with all guns blazing, if we let them score first it could be a torrid afternoon. Weather conditions won't be conducive to passing football, will be a tricky fixture. Quote Link to comment
WhistleHappy Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 45 minutes ago, exAtyeoMax said: To me, to you, to me, to you… ...good enough omen for me -its gonna be a two all draw then.. Two to them Two to us ..Two all 2-2 draw... 1 Quote Link to comment
Son of Fred Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 The players will need to be prepared for a battle today,Rotherham will be at us out of the blocks,big physical side,plus heavy rain all afternoon..shoot on sight!!..clever use of sub's could be critical today in the conditions.. Quote Link to comment
ZiderEyed Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 26 minutes ago, Robert the bruce said: The players will need to be prepared for a battle today,Rotherham will be at us out of the blocks,big physical side,plus heavy rain all afternoon..shoot on sight!!..clever use of sub's could be critical today in the conditions.. Well we are ****** aren't we then 2 Quote Link to comment
reddogkev Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 Lovely job Hava, I really need to revise my knowledge of English rivers - I never knew there was a River Don. The criminal mastermind of all rivers. For my sins, I've never heard of the Rother either. I feel like this new-found knowledge of English rivers is going to serve me very well indeed. City to win 2 - 1 today. Hopefully we can scout for any more strikers that we can nick off of them - just like Shaun Goater and Kieran Agard.... Quote Link to comment
Aizoon Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 25 minutes ago, reddogkev said: Lovely job Hava, I really need to revise my knowledge of English rivers - I never knew there was a River Don. The criminal mastermind of all rivers. For my sins, I've never heard of the Rother either. I feel like this new-found knowledge of English rivers is going to serve me very well indeed. City to win 2 - 1 today. Hopefully we can scout for any more strikers that we can nick off of them - just like Shaun Goater and Kieran Agard.... And we sold them Bobby "Shadow" Williams Quote Link to comment
pongo88 Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 (edited) Football's a funny old game. I think it's going to be a game of two halves. In the first Rotherham will set out their stall and aim to grind out a 1-0 win. Early doors they'll get a goal which will put City on the back foot. City are a better team, but the pitch will be a great leveller, so still 1-0 down at half time, with the City supporters sick as parrots. Second half, City will come out fighting, and give 110%. The boy Pack will surprise a few with 2 goals, both from 30 yards. City on top, but as it's a relegation dogfight, the last few minutes will be squeaky bum time. Not an entertaining match, but at the end of the day it's a relegation dog fight and a real six pointer. Final score City win 2-1 and supporters over the moon. (Sorry if I've missed any cliches) Edited November 28, 2015 by pongo88 1 Quote Link to comment
reddogkev Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 12 minutes ago, Aizoon said: And we sold them Bobby "Shadow" Williams We once had a player called Bobby "Shadow" Williams? Why was he known as the Shadow? Quote Link to comment
Aizoon Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 2 minutes ago, reddogkev said: We once had a player called Bobby "Shadow" Williams? Why was he known as the Shadow? His fans would say it was because he slipped through opposing defences. His detractors because he disappeared from the game for long periods. I thought he was serious class, but that's not a universal opinion. Think Martin Peters... Quote Link to comment
RED4LIFE Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 We also signed the excellent Martin Scott from Rotherham if memory serves me correctly. 1 Quote Link to comment
downendcity Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 7 minutes ago, reddogkev said: We once had a player called Bobby "Shadow" Williams? Why was he known as the Shadow? Because of the eye make up he wore Quote Link to comment
EstoniaTallinnRed Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 26 minutes ago, Aizoon said: And we sold them Bobby "Shadow" Williams Have played football with him in Vicky Park. Is he still alive? Quote Link to comment
pongo88 Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 14 minutes ago, reddogkev said: We once had a player called Bobby "Shadow" Williams? Why was he known as the Shadow? When he was at school he always tried to join in with the older boys playing football. He was like a shadow that wouldn't go away, hence the nickname. 1 Quote Link to comment
Kid in the Riot Posted November 28, 2015 Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 First meeting between City and Rotherham in the top two divisions since 1968. STATTO, STATTO. Quote Link to comment
havanatopia Posted November 28, 2015 Author Report Share Posted November 28, 2015 2 hours ago, Nogbad the Bad said: Well done Havana, sets the scene nicely. No mention of John Galley though? All being well the Chuckle Brothers will be the Blubber Brothers by 5pm. Cheers me dears. That's because I knew your veritable wealth of knowledge would do so. Quote Link to comment
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