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1934 - Our first season in existence was not a great one in terms of results. It was spent in the Warwick & District League Section A, and the final game of the campaign was a 5-1 defeat at home to Kineton Albion.

 

1945 - A Coventry & North Warwickshire League Division 2 game at home to Dunlop saw Brakes edge a 1-0 win.

 

1951 - Brakes go down to Hinckley Athletic at Middlefield Lane in the Birmingham Combination by three goals to two.

Team: Derek Spencer, George Palmer, Cedric Bennett, Ken Hawker, Les Latham, Fred Keeble, Jack Kirkaldie, Derek Bennett, Walter Soden, Hughie Morrow, Mickey French.

 

 

1964 - Three days after a 2-1 Midland Counties League win up in Lincolnshire at York Street, we faced Boston United again at the Windmill Gr - oops, sorry, no - the pitch was waterlogged, so the game took place on the Reserve pitch, and Brakes romped to a 7-0 win. 

 

Team: Peter Woodward, Geoff Coleman, Mick Lane, Colin Davis, Gordon Hancocks, Brian Jenkins, Ernie Ward, Cyril Parry, Ray Holmes, Peter Newbery, Barry Shorthose. 

 

 

1969 - Burton Albion were our visitors for a Midland Floodlit Cup tie at the Windmill Ground, the game ending in a 1-1 draw. Ray Holmes scored our goal on nine minutes. 

 

 

Also in this week’s edition of the Leamington Spa Courier, the club were forced to address rumours that they had been poaching local players…. 

 

1970 - A threadbare Brakes side goes down heavily at home to Ilkeston Town in the Midland Counties League. It was only our second home defeat of the season in the league. Local youngster Kevin Vale made his debut in this game. 

 

 

1979 - AP Leamington’s  unbeaten Southern League run of eight wins and three draws came to an end as they fell to defeat in their fourth league game in a week at Underhill against Barnet. 

 

Team: Alan Dulleston, Dennis Taylor, Frank Houston, Alan Jones, Tom Kilkelly, Roy Morton, Mick Keeley, Tommy Gorman, Duncan Gardner, Bobby Vincent, Steve Briscoe. Subs: Roger Bain. 

 

 

It had been a busy week at the club, with FA officials visiting the Windmill Ground to inspect it ahead of the formation of the new Alliance Premier League (Now the National League), of which Brakes would go on to become founder members after coming through an incredible run of 15 league and Birmingham Senior Cup games between the beginning of April and the middle of May. The club felt they were being hampered in their ambitions by the Birmingham County FA, who were insisting that the Senior Cup Final against Bedworth United be played at Walsall’s Fellows Park just 24 hours before Brakes had a vital Southern League fixture at Nuneaton Borough. 

 

 

1984 - AP Leamington were in midst of a mammoth run of 14 games in the final 32 days of what was a 67 game season, with the sheer number of games catching up with them as they battled to secure their Southern League Premier Division status. A home draw with Folkstone was played out on April 21st; Cliff Campbell scored our goal in the first half. There was more heartening news on the Youth Team, who made the final of the Midland Floodlit Youth League Cup. 

 

Team: Mick Lawrence, Terry Smith, Ian Britton, Clive Boxall, Malcolm Kavanagh, Phil Griffin, Graham McKenzie, Kim Casey , Nigel Shanahan, Cliff Campbell, Steve Rhodes (Kevin Kane). 

 

 

2001 - 

Leamington 2  Malvern Athletic 0

Midland Combination Division Two

Saturday 21st April 2001

 

By Roger Vincent

 

Morris Dancing and Rottweilers

A well-known wit once said that you should try everything in life at least once, except incest and Morris dancing. Maybe that short list should have included refereeing and could go part way to explaining an otherwise inexplicable taunt from a Brakes' fan: "the referee's a Morris-dancer".

 

This was a strangely, passion-less game, even the crowd (502) was quiet. In truth this was a gentle stroll in the sun. I noticed that Malvern had been the warmest place in Britain the day before; some of that had carried over to the NWG and players were actually taking drinks during stoppages. The pitch was dry and bumpy as the quagmire of recent weeks had dried to solid, clay peaks around boot marks. Consequently there was little good football with both teams humping long balls up the middle.

 

Brakes went ahead with 2 goals in quick succession just before half-time, Baz Shearsby after a Glen Webb free-kick and Josh Blake, both headers, both largely opportunist. Momentarily it looked like a cricket score was in the offing to go with the weather.

 

But whilst Malvern never remotely looked like getting past another solid, Brakes' defensive display and a second-half effort from Glen Webb was the only other time Brakes came close. The good-natured repartee between the North Bank and their goalie lightened an otherwise dour game.

 

The comedian, Paul Merton, once said that when you can't think of anything funny to say in an unscripted show you insult somebody and it always gets a laugh. Maybe that's why the North Bank tried to wind up Malvern's feisty, diminutive no. 5 to break the deadlock. "I've passed larger ..... than you" and as the Bank's rottweiler strained at his leash: "Watch it mate, he thinks you're a bone". It has to be said that the rottweiler showed a greater appetite for the ball than most of our players and once headed the ball quite brilliantly back into play from the goal-line.

 

And that was it, really. After the game their no. 5, a nice chap, totally unfazed by the insults, enthused on what it was like to play in front of a crowd. "It's great, it raises your game - it'll be a miracle if you go the whole season unbeaten because everybody wants to be the team that does it." But maybe a Morris side would have created more passion than we saw today.

 

Leamington: Paul O'Keeffe; Jon Burgess (Martin Beeston); Barry Shearsby; Will Payne; Stuart Hepburn ©; Adam Ball; Guy Rippon (Darren Timms); Simon Wickson; Josh Blake (Brian Agar); Glen Webb; Steve Thompson.

 

2007 - Brakes set a new points record in the Midland Alliance as they win away in Staffordshire…..

Rocester 0 Leamington 1

Saturday 21st April 2007

 

By David Hucker

 

Romans defeated by record Brakers

 

Brakes emerged victorious from his hard-fought game to set a new Polymac Services points record of 102, beating the mark achieved by Stourbridge in 2002/03.

The visiting fans who swelled the crowd to a season's best of 242 at Hillsfield saw an explosive start with Brakes taking the lead in the 2nd minute. An inswinging corner from the left by Jamie Towers cleared everyone crowded into the goalmouth and appeared to be going out of play. However, Nick Ward stuck out a hand and conceded a penalty which Towers put perfectly into the bottom left-hand corner.

Brakes nearly doubled the lead five minutes later when Josh Blake rounded two defenders only to see his shot well saved by young 'keeper Adam Alcock, who coped well under pressure throughout the afternoon. Rocester had a chance to equalise almost immediately, but Neil Bennett headed wide from captain Carl Allen's free-kick.

Towers was then fouled and took the free-kick himself, but the ball was cleared for a corner which came to nothing. Jon Adams had a long-range shot saved low down by Alcock and, on the stroke of half-time, Ben Mackey shot into the defensive wall after Brakes were awarded a free-kick in the penalty area when Alcock handled a back-pass.

With the wind getting stronger, play got more scrappy in the second half and neither side produced much in the way of flowing football. Brakes did try to pass the ball, whereas Rocester were content to hit long balls and try to run at the visitors' defence. The outstanding Andy Gregory, together with Adam Cooper and Martin Hier coped with just about everything that came their way and, when they were beaten, Jason Pearcey was equal to the task.

Towers put Mackey in with a good chance on 56 minutes, but the Brakes striker slipped in the penalty area at a crucial time. Then Towers ran into the area himself and set up Josh Blake who missed from close in. At the other end, substitute Lee Bagley shot straight at Pearcey when well-placed. Brakes final effort came In stoppage time, substitute Avun Jephcott's pass finding Jon Adams who shot over the bar.

Adam Cooper, Morton Titterton and Jon Adams were all booked but, unlike the match at Market Drayton on Tuesday, this was a disciplined performance and the reception that the referee received from the Brakes supporters coming off the field says more than I am allowed to put into words here. The returning Stuart Herlihy added strength in midfield and, in the absence of James Husband, former youth team player Tom James got his long-awaited chance to start on the left side.

After defeats at Oadby and Market Drayton Town, this was a welcome away victory for Brakes who now have a final league match at the New Windmill against Quorn to round off the season. Reflecting on the match, manager Jason Cadden said "I am well pleased to get the record number of points as it means that we win the league in style just as we did in the Midland Combination. We had to dig in today after getting the early goal and grind out a result under pressure. There were no injuries today and, hopefully, Adam Knight will have recovered from his hamstring injury and be available for selection on Tuesday. We are optimistic that James Husband will resume training on Thursday."

 

Brakes: Jason Pearcey, Jamie Towers, Martin Hier, Adam Cooper, Andy Gregory, Morton Titterton ©, Stuart Herlihy, Jon Adams, Ben Mackey (Martin Thompson 65), Josh Blake (Dave Pearson 74), Tom James (Avun Jephcott 68).

Subs Not Used: Craig Dutton; Richard Morris.

 

Rocester: Adam Alcock, Peter Johnson (Adam Soane 56), Carl Allen ©; Neil Bennett, Mark Ruddock, Richard Owen, Rory Maxwell, Nick Ward, Dave Shaw (Mark Hodson 56), Colin Fletcher (Lee Bagley 70), Martin Gadsby.

Subs Not Used: Andrew Smith. Steve McCormick, Karl Parker.

Attendance: 242

 

Man of the Match: Andy Gregory

 

2012 - 

Banbury United 1 Leamington 1 

Evostik Southern League Premier Division

Spencer Stadium, Banbury

Saturday 21st April 2012

 

Brakes cemented their status alongside Frome Town as the draw specialists of the Premier Division, playing out a stalemate for the 15th time this season at Banbury United, for whom a point all but guaranteed safety from relegation. 

 

In truth it has been an inability to turn the draws into wins that has prevented Leamington from remaining in the play off places, and they will now play their final game at home to Chesham unable to finish higher or lower than 7th place. Given the successes of previous seasons there will obviously be disappointment from supporters, players and management alike, but at times the signs have been there that this team is capable of performing to the standard required to lift them into a promotion chasing position. 

 

This was in essence a typical end of season fixture, although Banbury required the points for altogether different reasons. The outside chance Brakes had of snatching fifth spot evaporated inside the first half an hour with Chesham having taken a two goal lead that they would not relinquish against Frome, but the players and management were not likely to be aware of this. 

 

Danny Edmond saw a shot pushed behind by Nathan Vaughan early on but it was Leamington who created what other chances there were in an uneventful first 45 minutes. Lee Steele found Alex Taylor on the edge of the box, but his shot lacked the power to trouble Andy Kemp in the Banbury goal. The keeper was tested when saving Lee Chilton’s drive, and Jacob Blyth headed straight him when well placed, but he was beaten on 38 minutes when his defence failed to deal with drifting left wing cross to the far post, where veteran goal poacher Lee Steele was lurking to stab the ball home.

 

It was the only clear sight of goal that either side had in the first half, and though Craig Owen went very close with a powerful drive just after the break, Banbury were level 8 minutes in when Ricky Johnson was left unmarked to head home a corner from Ben Polk. Owen went close again through a free kick, but the equaliser galvanised the home side, and with their supporters suddenly vocal under the cover of the Town End they looked the more threatening side. Josh Blake, one of three ex Leamington players on the field in the second half, broke through the middle and looked as though he was having his shirt pulled, but with no whistle forthcoming he slipped the ball through for strike partner Johnson, who shot past Vaughan and wide from a superb position. 

 

Chilton should have put Brakes back in front when he blasted just over the bar from inside the area as the heavens opened to shower all at the Spencer Stadium with hail, and Steele almost capitalised on hesitancy in the Banbury defence to turn and shoot, but Kemp pushed the ball behind for a corner. Another free kick saw Chilton drive wide from the right. The conditions were causing players on both sides to lose their footing on the now greasy surface, but Banbury pushed again for the win that would see them clear of the bottom four. Blake almost got a toe on a shot that was poked through from the edge of the area, before Kemp saved well from a low driven shot by substitute David Kolodynski. 

 

Seeing a Brakes legend score against his old club would have been a bitter pill for the travelling fans to follow, but Josh Blake had the opportunity to do just that when he looked to be clear through the middle again. However, he chose to try and slip a pass to his left for Josh Cole, and the shot was crowded out by the retreating Leamington defence. He had another chance before the end but his shot was deflected behind. 

 

Paul Holleran’s men rallied in the final moments, and Kolodynski almost won it with a wicked curling effort that was pushed around the post by Kemp to keep his side on level terms and keep the game level, which overall was probably the right result. 

Banbury United: Andy Kemp, Joe Coleman, Tommy Kinch, Liam Dolman ©, Ben Thackeray, Ryan Howell, Danny Edmond (12 Dior Angus, 46), Josh Cole, Ricky Johnson, Josh Blake, Ben Polk. 

 

Subs not used: 13 Nick Kingston, 14 Liam Richardson, 15 Joe Eyre, 16 Howard Forinton.

 

Leamington: Nathan Vaughan, James Mace, Asa Charlton, Neil Barnfield, Jamie Hood ©, Liam Daly, Alex Taylor, Craig Owen (15 Matt Dodd, 71), Jacob Blyth, Lee Steele (12 David Kolodynski, 71), Lee Chilton. 

 

Subs not used: 14 Michael Tuohy, 16 James Husband, 17 Ian King.

 

Attendance: 564

 

Referee: Stuart Eagland

 

Assistant Referees: Gareth Viccars & Karl Tribe

 

Man of the Match: Jamie Hood.

 

2014 - Brakes fans had a fantastic day in Cheltenham, and this ‘nothing to play for’ away game against Gloucester City turned out to be one of the most entertaining games of the season…. 

 

Gloucester City 3 Leamington 3

The Skrill North

Abbey Business Stadium, Cheltenham

Monday 21st April 2014

 

Leamington dished out some injury time heartache of their own in a Bank Holiday cracker at the Abbey Business Stadium.

 

Gloucester City had snatched all three points back in August with a 90th minute winner as Brakes learnt some harsh lessons in the early months of their debut season in Conference North. There is no doubt that the squad has improved since then, and while there was nothing riding on this clash with both teams safely away from the drop zone the game, while not always pleasing on the eye, was certainly full of incident.

 

The first half chance fell to Peter Till inside the opening couple of minutes, but his header from Ricky Johnson’s knock on was simple for Tigers keeper Conor Thompson, whose huge kick upfield was chested down by Will Morford on the edge of the area for strike partner Adam Mann, who lashed it first time into the bottom corner of the net. 

 

Three minutes later Gloucester left Leamington shell shocked as they added a second goal. Moving the ball swiftly out of defence out to the left wing, Matt Groves threaded a superb ball between the retreating Brakes defenders for Lewis Hogg to strike low towards goal. Tony Breeden got a leg to the shot but it rebounded straight to Morford, who slotted it straight back past him into the near corner. It certainly looked as though Stephan Morley could have easily cleared it off the line but he appeared to think the ball was going wide until it was too late. 

 

Paul Holleran had utilised his squad to the full making four changes from Saturday’s starting eleven, and despite the double early blow they set about trying to drag themselves back into the game. Johnson headed Till’s cross just wide, while Morley struck a free kick won by Matt Dodd straight at Thompson. 

 

The deficit was halved on 14 minutes however, Lee Moore’s flick on from Breeden’s kick forward saw Ricky Johnson easily shrug off Jack Harris and waiting for the ball to sit up for him, he thumped it past Thompson from 12 yards. 

 

A sharp turn and shot from the goal scorer was blocked as Brakes pushed for the leveller but it was Gloucester who came closest to adding to the scoreline, Morford’s initial effort being well blocked by Liam Daly but the ball was played back in to Mann, whose curling effort around Breeden struck the bar before being cleared away. Marcus Giglio then sent an acrobatic effort just wide as City looked capable of adding to their tally every time they attacked. 

 

James Mace saw his goalbound header from Reece Flanagan’s right wing corner cleared off the line by Mike Green. The home fans were up in arms shortly before half time when Breeden raced out of his area to clear the ball away but struck it against his arm in the process, Referee Neil Radford deciding that it had been accidental. 

 

Billy Jones lashed a free kick just wide in the second half as the two sides cancelled each other out a little. It wasn’t until the introduction of Lee Chilton and Danny Newton that Leamington began to really look capable of snatching another goal, Chilton driving a shot just wide, but their hopes were quickly dashed when a clever piece of play saw Gloucester substitute Nat Jarvis just beat the offside trap to dash in from the right and poke the ball across the goal line for Mann to tap in his second of the game with ten minutes to go. 

 

Four minutes later however, it was game on again. Newton had already come close with a shot across goal that had drifted just wide of the far post, but when Dodd ran at the Tigers defence and pushed the ball back into his path he took a touch and crashed it low past Thompson to bring Brakes back within a goal of their hosts. 

 

The travelling support had been in full voice throughout the afternoon, but seemed to crank up the volume higher still in the closing minutes in an attempt to drive their team on. Daly pushed up front, and he set up Newton for a volley that was off target and it looked as though it just wasn’t going to be Leamington’s day, but the newfound resilience in this team is impressive and they squeezed out one last chance in dramatic style in injury time. 

 

Another big clearance from Breeden was met by a cushioned header from Daly just outside the box that dropped perfectly into the path of Dodd, who then sent the ball into the box from the right, where Daly rose above two defenders to power a header towards goal. The ball was kept out by Conor Thompson, Jack Harris desperately blocked Newton on the line, Chilton couldn’t quite force it in but it was poked out as far as the inrushing Dodd, who slammed it into the roof of the net to the absolute joy of all inside the ground of a Leamington persuasion. Brakes had kept their unbeaten run intact right at the last, and go into the season's finale at home to Colwyn Bay on Saturday still in with a chance of breaking the 50 point barrier. 

 

 

 

 

 

Gloucester City: Conor Thompson, Mike Green, Billy Jones, Ruaridh Winters (16 Matt Coupe, 62), Jack Harris, Marcus Giglio (12 Tom Webb, 84), Lewis Hogg ©, Matt Groves, Adam Mann, Will Morford (15 Nat Jarvis, 73), Jake Gosling. 

 

Subs not used: 14 Joe Parker, 17 Ed Williams.

 

Leamington: Tony Breeden, Ryan Higgins, Stephan Morley ©, Nathan Hicks, Liam Daly, James Mace, Matt Dodd, Reece Flanagan, Ricky Johnson (15 Danny Newton, 70), Lee Moore (12 Lee Chilton, 70), Peter Till (14 Aron Wint, 75).

 

Subs not used: 16 David McNamee, 17 Craig Owen. 

 

Attendance: 527

 

Referee: Mr Neil Radford

 

Assistant Referees: Mr Simon Gudger & Mr Stuart Jack

 

Brakes Man of the Match: The 12th man - the travelling support!!

 

2018 - Four years later, the returning Matty Dodd was the hero once more, bagging another late equaliser to earn Brakes the point at Bootham Crescent that kept them in the National League North on another memorable April 21st…. 

 

York City 2 Leamington 2

Vanarama National League North

Bootham Crescent 

Saturday 21st April 2018

 

A rollercoaster afternoon in the city of York ended with Leamington celebrating a tremendous achievement as they confirmed Vanarama National League North safety with a game to spare with a creditable draw at the Bootham Crescent home of York City. 

 

With score lines in the games affecting Brakes changing almost constantly throughout the afternoon it was difficult to keep track of the potential permutations, but in the end it didn’t matter as Paul Holleran’s men took control of their own destiny thanks to a superb last minute goal from substitute Matty Dodd. 

 

It was clear to see how much confidence the victory over Chorley had installed in the players in the early stages, as kitted out in a strange looking combination of Gold shirts and White shorts they went toe to toe with the play off chasing Minstermen. Callum Gittings drove a low strike straight at keeper Adam Bartlett, while Aidan Connolly cut in from the right and curled in a low drive that Tony Breeden was forced to push behind for a corner. 

 

York skipper Sean Newton backheaded well wide from a left wing corner as Brakes continued to frustrate their hosts, pushing them back into their own half from another attack with some fine pressing. The hosts came close when Breeden made a superb save from Simon Heslop’s powerful strike, James Mace well placed on the line to block the follow up from Newton.

 

Connolly blazed a rising shot out of the ground after working himself into a good position, while Jack Edwards cracked a half volley just wide, but Leamington would hit the front two minutes before half time. A free kick swung into the penalty area from the left by Gittings was put into his own net by the unfortunate Alex Kempster. 

 

At half time with Gainsborough and Tamworth both winning it was the perfect position to be in. 

York were still well in with a shout of finishing the season in the play off positions however, and began the second half with more intent. Connor Brown cut in from the right and fired a shot well wide, Josh Law curling another effort wide of the target, but York were level 11 minutes in, Newton slamming the loose ball home after Breeden had made a great save from Connolly. 

 

The Minstermen’s number 11 continued to cause problems for Leamington, firing in another effort that Breeden held onto before David Ferguson crashed a shot high over the bar. The Brakes skipper was called into action once more as he did well to hold onto a volley from City substitute Connor Smith.

 

Leamington were understandably starting to look a little leggy in their second game in less than 48 hours, and Breeden was forced into another save from Newton with the packed terrace behind the goal baying for a second goal, and they got their wish with 4 minutes remaining. Breeden made yet another fine save, this time from Adriano Moke, but was powerless to prevent Newton from heading in on the follow up. 

 

 

Brakes were flat on their backs now but they picked themselves up for one final push and were rewarded in spectacular fashion when Dodd rose with a defender to meet fellow substitute Liam Canavan’s left wing cross and glance a header into the top corner to the delight of the 107 travelling supporters behind the goal. Every single player ran to join Dodd as he wheeled off in celebration, and minutes later it was mission completed as the final whistle went. Leamington had picked up the point they needed to complete a remarkable season that really is up there with the club’s finest achievements in the last 18 years. To compete in such a strong league with clubs several times their size and with far more financial clout is no mean feat, and every single player who has pulled on the shirt this season deserves great credit, along with Paul Holleran and his staff. 

 

Next Saturday the party can really begin, as Brakes welcome newly crowned champions Salford City to the Phillips 66 Community Stadium.  

Attendance: 2,350 (107 Brakes)

 

York City: Adam Bartlett, Connor Brown (14 Jonny Burn, 82), David Ferguson, Hamza Bencherif, Daniel Parslow, Adriano Moke, Sean Newton ©, Simon Heslop, Alex Kempster (16 Connor Smith, 72), Josh Law, Aidan Connolly.

 

Subs not used: 12 James Gray, 18 Luke Simpson, 19 Clovis Kamdjo.

 

Leamington: Tony Breeden ©, Junior English, Connor Gudger, Joe Magunda (12 Matt Dodd, 57), Jamie Hood, James Mace, Kieran Dunbar, Callum Gittings, Daniel Udoh, Jack Edwards 15 Kurtis Revan, 88), Ahmed Obeng (16 Liam Canavan, 82).

 

Subs not used: 14 Richard Taundry, 17 Shay Nicholson. 

 

Referee: Mr Adam Herczeg

 

Assistant Referees: Mr Jonny Urwin & Mr Steven Lennon

 

Brakes Man of the Match: Callum Gittings.

 

 

Can Brakes make April 21st 2025 another day in our history to remember??? 

1947 - An away game in the Coventry & North Warwickshire League Division 2 saw Jaguar Cars given a 10-0 hiding! 

 

 

 

1952 - Bromsgrove Rovers were defeated by a Harold Hartley goal at the Windmill Ground in a Birmingham Combination fixture. 

 

Team: Bill Branston, Cedric Bennett, Dennis Tooze, Frank Grimwood, Ken Hawker, Alf Stubbs, Charlie Stubbs, Hughie Morrow, Harold Hartley, Mickey French, Jack Day. 

 

 

In the Birmingham & West Midland Alliance West Section, the Reserves went down 5-0 at nearby Saltisford Rovers, with goalkeeper Mick Brant making one of a number of appearances that season as an outfield player! 

 

Team: Thacker, Coope, Sneddon, Brant, D French, Baldwin, J Shaw, Hartley, Hughes, F Gardner, Keeble. 

 

1954 - Gresley Rovers were beaten 5-1 in a Tillotson Cup tie at the Windmill Ground. Norman Brison and Bill Rowstron bagged braces, with Bill Draper scoring the other. 

 

Team: Bill Branston, Norman Aldridge, Albert Sneddon, Alan Bury, Ken Hawker, Dennis Jennings, Dennis Roberts, Bill Draper, Bill Rowstron, Mickey French, Norman Brison. 

 

 

1958 - Burton Albion defeat Brakes in a Birmingham & District League fixture in Staffordshire. 

 



 

In the Warwickshire Combination the Reserves won 3-0 away at Ansley Hall Colliery. 

 

1961 - Bromsgrove Rovers were our opponents on this date for the second time in nine years, and the result was a win for Leamington again, this time by three goals to two in a Birmingham & District League game at the Windmill Ground. George Awde and a Barry Jepson brace sealed the win for Brakes. 

 

Team: Peter Woodward, Geoff Coleman, Mick Lane, Roy Bradley, Gordon Hancocks, Jack Evans, Ken Cornbill, George Awde, Barry Jepson, Ken Brown, Ernie Ward. 

 

In the Warwickshire Combination Western Division, the Reserves lost 1-0 at home to that well known Warwickshire outfit Hereford United….. 

 

1969 - Barton Town were our visitors for a Midland Counties League fixture at the Windmill Ground. 

 

Team: Bob Steane, David Pyle, Peter Lawton, Ralph Ramshaw, John Roberts, John Anthony, Jim Bryant, Alan Vest, Ray Holmes, Syd Hall (Terry Keen), Richard Gommersall.

 

 

1971 - Belper Town were the visitors for a Midland Counties League game at the Windmill Ground. 

 

 

1975 - Brakes won 2-0 away at Wellingborough Town in a Southern League Division One North game at the Dog & Duck 

 

Team: Dave Garratt, Dennis Taylor, John Brady, Doug Griffiths, Roger Brown, Mickey Boot, Neil Armstrong, Steve Lee, Dave Scriggens, Bobby Horne, Mick Keeley. Sub: Anthony Bowden.

1976 - Jimmy Knox’s side won 3-1 at Aggborough against Kidderminster Harriers in the Southern League Division One North in front of a crowd of 461.

Team: John Davis, Alan Jones, Gerry Kavanagh, Doug Griffiths, Roger Brown, Mickey Boot, Dennis Taylor, Steve Lee, Mick Keeley, Adrian Stewart, Ivor Talbot. Sub: John Brady. 

 

 

Also in the Courier that week there was news of squad departures, and the costs of promotion, with crowd figures bemoaned - not for the first time. 

 

 

1980 - A rare win on the road in the Alliance Premier League - at the Bucks Head of all places, against Telford United. A crowd of 1,006 saw Duncan Gardner’s early second half goal seal the points for Brakes. 

 

Team: Alan Dulleston, Paul Cooper, Paul Montgomery, Alan Jones, Gary Brown, Tom Kilkelly, Dennis Taylor, Mickey Taylor, Shaun McNulty, Duncan Gardner. Sub: Tommy Gorman. 

 

1982 - Two years on, and we are at the Bucks Head again. AP Leamington have already been relegated from the Alliance Premier League two games and four days earlier, but Graham Allner is already rebuilding the team. 

 

 

Team: Gordon Livsey, Paul Cooper, Paul Montgomery, Alan Jones, Steve Rigby, Malcolm Kavanagh, Mickey Taylor, Phil Griffin (Alan Ollis), Russell Ashenden, Cliff Campbell, Trevor Smith.

1983 - A trip to the north of Warwickshire sees Brakes draw 0-0 at The Oval against Bedworth United in the Southern League Premier Division. 

 



1986 - This game was what would be Leamington’s final win of their Southern League Midland Division - a 4-1 win over Hednesford Town in front of 201 people at the Windmill Ground. 

 

Team:  Shaun Hemming, Neil Peebles, Tony Upton, Rob Rennie, Steve Thomas, Ashley Alexander, Ian McConville (Tony Higgins), Mick Hartfield, Albert Johnson, Kenny Trickett, John McDonald.

 

 

2003 - Leamington beat Jim Scott’s West Midlands Police side 5-1 at the New Windmill Ground in the Midland Combination Premier Division. Dave Draper made his third debut for the club - 16 years after his second spell. 

 

Leamington 5 v West Midlands Police 1

Midland Combination Premier Division

Saturday 12th April 2003

 

By David Hucker

 

Drapes Brings Down Curtain on Police

 

Another fine Brakes performance was capped by an eighty-fifth minute goal from Director of Football Dave Draper, making his first appearance for the club in nearly twenty years. This win maintains Brakes challenge at the top of the ICIS MIdlands Combination Premier Division and, with five matches to go, they remain the team to catch.

 

Former West Brom player Jamie Ball, in only his second appearance, partnered the excellent Nick McFarlane in defence. Darren Timms took over the captaincy in the absence of Steve Thompson and Andy Ellis returned on the bench.

 

The visitors set out their stall early on, packing the defence and relying on two strikers in breakaways. It all looked plain sailing for Brakes after twelve minutes when Baz Shearsby's shot came back off the post into the path of the reliable Brian Agar who made no mistake. There were hopes for a penalty on nineteen minutes when Josh Blake tumbled in the area but, instead of increasing their lead, Brakes fell to a counter-punch from Mark Delaney who broke away to level the scores.

 

Leading scorer Paul Nicholls thought that he had restored the advantage in the twenty-fifth minute but his thunderbolt shot was brilliantly stopped by Police 'keeper Anthony Workman. Ten minutes later, Nick McFarlane met a corner from Nick Mort but Workman was on hand to save the Brakes defender's header. Then, Nicholls stole in on the blind side to head an Agar cross just wide. Just when it looked as if the teams would go into the interval all square, Mort was tripped in the penalty area and Nicholls stepped up to put the spot kick away and give Brakes a 2-1 lead.

 

The second half saw an improved performance by Brakes who had most of the play. When the Police did break out, James Gettings again looked assured in the home goal. On fifty eight minutes, the industrious Nicholls harried a defender into a mistake and took the ball through to score his second of the match. He followed this up with a fine glancing header from a cross by man-of-the-match Shearsby to secure a well-deserved hat-trick. Agar gave way to Draper who showed the crowd of 453 that he still has the ability to play at this level running onto a through ball from that man Shearsby again to slot home the fifth.

 

Co-manager Jason Cadden was understandably pleased with the result but added "we were slow to get going and were fortunate to go in at the break in front. We gave the team a rocket at half-time and they controlled the second period, getting the result that we deserved. Paul Nicholls' hat-trick was superb and Dave Draper took his goal well."

 

Leamington: James Gettings, Ben Adams (Jonny Burgess 66), Harj Dhesi, Nick McFarlane, Jamie Ball, Barry Shearsby, Nick Mort (Andy Ellis 70), Darren Timms ©, Brian Agar (Dave Draper 70), Paul Nicholls, Josh Blake

 

Team News: Steve Thompson and Chris Hanrahan rested.



2007 - Having already secured the Midland Alliance league title on the Monday against Racing Club Warwick, Brakes travelled into Leicestershire to take on Oadby Town, going down 2-0.

Oadby Town 2 Leamington 0

Midland Football Alliance

Thursday 12th April 2007

 

By David Hucker

 

Goal shy Brakes pay penalty at Topps Park

 

Oadby provided the opposition in the opening fixture at the New Windmill back in August when a late Josh Blake strike secured all three points. They went into this match having won five of their last six outings, a home defeat against Romulus being the only blemish, and duly turned the tables on Brakes who, at times, looked anything but the newly-crowned league champions.

It wasn't a lack of effort that let Brakes down, but a failure to take the many chances that came their way. On a hard and dusty pitch, controlling the ball at speed was never going to be easy but, even the usually razor-sharp Ben Mackey found hitting the post or missing the target altogether easier than scoring. When the woodwork didn't come to their rescue, Oadby had the excellent Laurie Pearson in goal to deny the Brakes forwards.

Those fans who had been waiting to see Jamie Towers in a midfield role got their wish as he exchanged places with Jon Adams who played at right wing-back. Craig Dutton came into the side in place of Morton Titterton, Martin Thompson took over from Avun Jephcott up front and Adam Cooper replaced Adam Knight in the other changes from Easter Monday.

Apart from an early Oadby attack which saw Ainsley Neckles shoot wide after good work by Joe Bishop and Andy May, it was all Brakes. Mackey and Towers hit the post and other chances went begging. Failure to convert at least one of the chances into goals was to prove expensive when, on 20 minutes, the defence played statues and Andy May rounded Richard Morris for the softest of goals.

James Husband got onto a Towers cross five minutes later, but somehow missed from right on the line, and then hit a good shot that Pearson saved well. For all their effort, Brakes went in a goal down and in need of an early strike after the interval.

However, as the second half got underway, it was Oadby that struck in the 49th minute when captain Tyrone Mintus headed home a corner from the right to make it 2-0. This seemed to give the home side belief and they pressed Brakes with both Andy Gregory and Cooper having to defend desperately at times. Martin Hier cleared off the line in the 66th and David Fisher's shot shortly after flashed across the face of the goal.

Just to prove a point, substitute Dave Pearson rattled the crossbar with a shot in injury time and it was one of those nights when the ball just wouldn't go in.

Thanks go to the Oadby officials for their warm welcome and for the players who applauded the Brakes team onto the field, a really sporting gesture. The match was played in a competitive, but fair way and it was a pity that Adam Cooper and Oadby's Ainsley Neckles were booked for a heated disagreement that was over almost as quickly as it started.

Manager Jason Cadden described himself as "disappointed" with the result. He added "we created a lot of chances in the first half and should have gone in at the interval in front, not behind. We just didn't fire in the second half and got what we deserved. We had a good talk in the dressing room afterwards and the players will put it right on Saturday."

 

Brakes: Richard Morris; Jon Adams; Martin Hier; Adam Cooper; Andy Gregory; Craig Dutton ©; Stuart Herlihy; Jamie Towers; Ben Mackey (Dave Pearson 77); Martin Thompson (Avun Jephcott 61); James Husband (Josh Blake 71).

Subs Not Used: Liam Reynolds; Tom James.

 

Oadby Town: Laurie Pearson; Danny Hodgkinson; Steve Fenton; Tyrone Mintus ©; Gene Carlton; Lee Miveld; Andy May; James Miller; Joe Bishop (Jorge Jiminez 77); David Fisher; Ainsley Neckles.

Subs Not Used: Adam Laywood; Keiron Heaney; Steve Jones.

 

Attendance: 215

 

Man of the Match: Adam Cooper



2008 - Another relatively local game in the Southern League Midland Division saw us travel into Northamptonshire to Woodford Halse to take on Woodford United. A crowd of 428 saw Jason Cadden’s men win 3-1. 

 

Brakes overcome shock goal to clinch points

 

Saturday 12th April 2008 @ Byfield Road. vs Woodford United (3-1)

British Gas Business Football League Midlands Division

 

By D Hucker

 

In front of the biggest crowd of the season at Byfield Road, Brakes made heavy weather of beating a young Woodford side, but ran out comfortable winners in the end.

 

Brakes could have taken the lead in only the third minute when Chris Jackson slipped and gave Ben Mackey a chance, but his shot came back off the post. A mix-up in the Brakes defence allowed Carl Standen a shot on goal, but Richard Morris easily gathered his intended lob.

 

Home 'keeper, David Thornton. denied Mackey a second scoring opportunity, getting down well to save his 15th minute free kick at the foot of the post. Then, Thornton almost conceded a sloppy goal when taking too long to clear upfield, only succeeding in kicking the ball against the advancing Martin Thompson but, much to his relief, it went wide of the net.

 

This was the closest that Brakes came in the opening half, despite all their possession, and they were made to pay within two minutes of the re-start as Standen gave Woodford a shock lead, rolling the ball into the corner of the net unchallenged with the normally reliable defence playing statues.

 

This seemed to be the spur that Brakes needed and they were back on level terms soon after thanks to a fine solo effort from Man-of-the-Match, Marcus Jackson, who cut in from the left and beat Thornton with a low shot. Then, Mackey was held when about to shoot and Brakes leading scorer took the resultant penalty to beat Thornton and put them ahead for the first time.

 

The points were wrapped up by former Aston Villa youngster, Shay Morgan, who had come on as substitute for Thompson and opened his account for the club, heading home a Jamie Towers free-kick from the left after Ryan Parisi had been brought down.

 

Coach Morton Tiitterton said "It was a difficult pitch to play on and they showed little ambition to win the game. In the first half, we weren't smart enough to find a way through their packed defence, but the goal woke us up and we went on to win well enough."

 

Woodford travel to leaders Evesham United on Saturday and Brakes take on Aylesbury United at the New Windmill. Whilst the gap at the top is now down to four points, there are only two matches left and a win for Evesham, which seems likely on this evidence, will clinch the championship.

 

Woodford United: David Thornton, Craig Hyde, Anthony Powell, Ross Harris {Capt,}, Gerry Moss, Chris Jackson, Stuart Haynes, Luke Cole (Mickell Wood 81), Chris Davies, Carl Standen, Tom Lorraine

 

Subs Not Used: Lee Worrell, Ross Atkins, Kai Ridley, Lynton Dindale.

 

Brakes: Richard Morris, Jamie Towers, Arron Parkinson [Capt.], Guy Sanders, Martin Hier, Marcus Jackson, Scott Hadland, Ben Mackey, Jusitn Marsden (Glen Webb 87), Martin Thompson (Shay Morgan 65)

 

Subs Not Used: Adam Cooper, Craig Dutton, Liam Reynolds.

 

Attendance 428 MotM Marcus Jackson.

 

2014 - A 1-1 draw at Harrogate Town in the Conference North. 

 

Harrogate Town 1 Leamington 1 

The Skrill North

CNG Stadium

Saturday 12th April 2014

 

Brakes returned from a long haul to Yorkshire with a creditable point from a Harrogate Town side who required all three to still have a realistic chance of gatecrashing the play off places, but this result has probably limited their chances of doing so. 

 

Leamington were full value for their half time advantage as they had looked the brighter of the two sides in the opening 45 minutes but the hosts made changes at half time and looked far more purposeful after the break, levelling things up just past the hour mark after Brakes had lost possession in their own half. 

 

The game got off to a scrappy start with neither goalkeeper threatened by the half chances created. Town saw the ball cleared off the Leamington goal line as they forced a couple of corners but it was the visitors who took the lead with the first clear chance of the game on 27 minutes, the goal coming from an unlikely source in James Mace, the defender crashing in his first of the season from six yards as the ball dropped nicely for him from a corner. 

 

Reece Flanagan was busy again in central midfield, benefitting from a couple of ricochets to win possession and drive a low shot just past the post. 

 

Simon Weaver shuffled his pack at half time, replacing Steve Mallory and Liam Hardy with Adam Bolder and Cleveland Taylor, and this seemed to have an effect as Harrogate began to look more threatening. 

 

For an awful moment it looked as though Mace and Tony Breeden might be about to suffer a repeat of their collision at Vauxhall Motors which led to a goal, as the goal scorer was forced to play the ball back towards his keeper. Fortunately Breeden read the danger and hurdled his team mate before clearing. 

 

Danny Newton’s driving run saw him shoot low but straight at Craig MacGillivray, while Craig Nelthorpe fired across goal and just wide as Harrogate began to apply some pressure in search of the equaliser. Brakes remained resolute however, but contributed somewhat to their own downfall on 66 minutes when they lost the ball from their own throw-in. It was eventually played in low from the left and Ashley Worsfold swivelled well and fired low into the net.

 

Leamington tried to respond, Newton looping a header over the bar from a free kick, but Harrogate continued to create, Worsfold sending a header flashing over the bar from a corner, while substitute Michael Woods’ rising drive was held by Breeden. 

 

Paul Holleran introduced Peter Till and Matt Dodd late on, and the pair combined after some strong play from Joe Magunda, Till driving towards the penalty area to set up Dodd, only for his shot to lack the power to trouble MacGillivray. 

 

While Holleran was satisfied with the point, feeling that his side had had the better of the first half while the hosts were on top in the second, his assistant Liam O’Neill believed that it was a marker of how the team had progressed over the season that they were disappointed to come away from such an established club as Harrogate with only a point. 

 

Harrogate Town: Craig MacGillivray, Dwayne Samuels, Dave Merris, Anton Brown, Matt Heath ©, Matthew Bloomer, Steve Mallory (15 Cleveland Taylor, 46), Craig Nelthorpe, Ashley Worsfold, Liam Hardy (12 Adam Bolder, 46), Dan Clayton.

 

Subs not used: 14 Michael Woods, 16 Jahmal Smith, 17 Peter Crook.

 

Leamington: Tony Breeden, Ryan Higgins, Stephan Morley ©, Joe Magunda, Liam Daly, James Mace, Aron Wint (14 Matt Dodd, 77), Reece Flanagan (16 Lee Moore, 89) Danny Newton, Nathan Hicks, Lee Chilton (17 Peter Till, 86). 

 

Subs not used: 12 Ricky Johnson, 15 David McNamee. 

 

Attendance: 545

 

Referee: Mr Paul Blyth

 

Assistant Referees: My Paul Keogh & Mr Anthony Murphy

 

Brakes Man of the Match: James Mace.

 

Team: Tony Breeden, Ryan Higgins, Stephan Morley, Joe Magunda, Liam Daly, James Mace, Aron Wint (Matt Dodd), Reece Flanagan (Lee Moore), Danny Newton, Nathan Hicks, Lee Chilton (Peter Till). Subs: Ricky Johnson, David McNamee.

 

2016 - Brakes draw 1-1 at Latimer Park against Kettering Town in the Southern League Premier Division. 

 

Kettering Town 1 Leamington 1

Evostik Southern League Premier Division

Latimer Park

Tuesday 12th April 2016



Poole Town may almost have the title wrapped up but the play off picture below them remains no clearer after Brakes ground out a battling draw at Latimer Park.

 

Hungerford’s 98th minute winner at Kings Lynn was not particularly helpful to the Brakes cause, and while both they and Kettering have games in hand on Leamington the possibility still remains that all five clubs vying for those four precious positions will have to play right to the final whistle on the last day of the season to confirm one. 

 

Unfortunately the injury problems continue to pile up, with Joe Magunda leaving Latimer Park with his arm in a sling after dislocating his shoulder, and Connor Gudger also having to be substituted at half time after turning his ankle, the player himself saying after the game that he was hopeful it wouldn’t turn out to be too serious. On the plus side Jamie Hood was at the game and may be involved at Cirencester on Saturday. 

 

Losing this clash would have made things far more difficult for Paul Holleran’s side as they chase that top five finish, and they began fully on the front foot in front of a raucous crowd, taking the game to Marcus Law’s in form side. Jack Edwards was right in the thick of things, seeing a shot blocked before blazing a good chance over the bar first time from close range. 

 

Sam Austin fired well over the bar from a loose defensive header, but his dangerous left wing cross saw Liam Bateman almost put through his own net as he headed it inches past the post for a Leamington corner. 

 

Kettering then took the lead with their first serious attack, Liam Canavan forcing the ball home at the third attempt after Tony Breeden had produced two fine saves to deny him. The goal came completely against the run of play, and knocked Leamington back for a period as the Poppies looked to build on their advantage. Canavan found the side netting from a similar position to the one he scored his goal from as both sides traded blows without really threatening, until moments before half time when Courtney Baker-Richardson was brought down by Chris Carruthers right on the edge of the penalty area, the Poppies players vehemently protesting that the offence took place just outside the box but the Referee, having immediately signalled a penalty, stuck with his original decision after consulting his assistant on that side, and up stepped Sam Austin to net his second spot kick of the week, sending Craig Hill the wrong way as he found the bottom right hand corner of the net. 

 

This was the perfect pick me up for Brakes, having lost their momentum after the Kettering goal, along with the injuries to Magunda and Gudger, but with Ben George and Rob Elvins proving more than able deputies, they set about repelling the Kettering onslaught in the second half. James Brighton’s rising drive was beaten away by Breeden as the Poppies began to build up a head of steam. The Leamington keeper was the subject of constant abuse from the home crowd behind his goal throughout, but it did not affect his game in the slightest as he denied Canavan again, beating away a powerful shot before being fouled as he scrambled to collect the ball. 

 

Brakes looked to threaten on the counter attack but their final balls were letting them down a little at times. Joe Halsall’s shot looked to have struck an arm inside the box but there was nothing doing. Wilson Carvalho’s free kick whistled inches over the Leamington bar, while Callum Gittings shot was well blocked by Poppies skipper Brett Solkhon as Leamington tried to snatch a late winner. A shot blazed over the bar by Herve Pepe-Ngoma was the final chance for either side as it finished honours even, the nail biting for both sets of supporters will continue for at least another week or so yet. 



Attendance: 696

 

Kettering Town: Craig Hill, Liam Bateman, Dominic Langdon, Brett Solkhon ©, Chris Carruthers, Herve Pepe-Ngoma, Wilson Carvalho, Liam Canavan (16 Silvano Obeng 82), Rene Howe (17 Ben Stephens 86), David Popa (15 Will Grocutt, 70), James Brighton. 

 

Subs not used: 12 Ben Baker, 14 Perry Cotton.

 

Leamington: Tony Breeden, Richard Taundry, Connor Gudger (17 Rob Elvins, 46), Joe Halsall, Jamie Tank ©, Joe Magunda (12 Ben George,  22), Lee Moore, Callum Gittings, Courtney Baker-Richardson (14 Ben Mackey, 74), Jack Edwards, Sam Austin. 

 

Subs not used: 15 Rob Ogleby, 16 Ross Oulton.

 

Referee: Mr Wayne Porter

 

Assistant Referees: Mr Vincenzo Byatt & Mr Nicolae Manolescu

 

Brakes Man of the Match: Tony Breeden. 

 

2018 - Our THIRD game in Telford on this date - this time at the redeveloped New Bucks Head against AFC Telford United, in the National League North. 

 

AFC Telford United 3 Leamington 2

Vanarama National League North

New Bucks Head

Thursday 12th April 2018

 

It is becoming increasingly clear that Leamington are not going to cement their National League North status the easy way as they came out on the wrong end of a five goal scoreline at the New Bucks Head. 

 

AFC Telford United must wish they could play at home every Thursday as they battled back from behind after taking an early lead for the second week running, lifting themselves out of the bottom three in the process and giving their own survival hopes a massive shot in the arm. 

 

Once again Brakes found themselves chasing the game early on, this time with six minutes on the clock as Kane Richards pounced on a weak defensive header to nudge the ball into space for Bucks top scorer Marcus Dinanga to crash an unstoppable shot across Tony Breeden into the net. 

 

The difference this time was how Paul Holleran’s men responded and they were level inside three minutes as Kieran Dunbar’s right wing corner was cleared only as far as Junior English, who controlled and thumped a close range shot into the net. 

 

The playing surface still bore heavy scars from the recent wet weather despite the best efforts of the ground staff, and the pitch was very heavy in certain areas, hindering and helping both sides at times. 

 

Leamington benefited greatly from dragging themselves level so quickly, and things improved further with 23 minutes played when they added a second goal, the first time in 10 matches they had scored more than once in a game. Daniel Udoh chased a ball down the left channel into the penalty area, beating Connor Johnson to the ball before advancing and firing through the legs of keeper Ben Wilson into the net. 

 

It probably should have been three soon afterwards. A free kick into the Telford penalty area was picked up by Udoh, whose shot was blocked behind for another corner from which Jack Edwards placed a close range header over the bar when he should at least have hit the target.

 

This gave Telford fresh hope, and after Richards had blazed a shot over the bar the hosts levelled things up once more on 34 minutes, skipper Shane Sutton looping what looked a hopeful looking header towards goal as the ball was played back in following a corner, but the Bucks skipper had judged it just right, the ball dropping down into the net out of reach of Breeden. 

 

Former Telford man Dunbar chested down and threaded a good pass forward for Udoh to chase, Wilson haring off his line to get to the ball inches ahead of the striker. Sutton then saw two efforts blocked on the edge of the box before the ball was cleared by Joe Clarke, a volley coming back in from way out that Breeden had to watch all the way before it landed in his arms. 

 

Richards felt he had a claim for a penalty as he went to ground just inside the box with English challenging, however Referee Sam Mulhall was unmoved. 

 

The sticky pitch almost aided Brakes in their search for a third goal early in the second half as Udoh darted on to a back pass that held up in the mud, beating the chasing defenders for pace only to be denied by a good block from Wilson as he attempted to steer the ball past the goalkeeper. It would turn out to be Leamington’s only real chance of the half as they found themselves behind for the second time in the game six minutes in, Breeden appearing to punch the ball straight to Dominic Smith as he attempted to punch clear from a corner kick, the Telford defender bundling the ball home to put his side back in front.  

 

Sutton almost added a fourth, left inexplicably unmarked at the far post to power a header back across goal from a right wing corner, the ball dropping just wide. 

 

The giant bearded centre back threatened once more following two blocked shots as he was left unmarked once more, this time heading against the bar. Johnson followed up and saw his shot cleared away from the goal line. 

 

A superb sliding challenge from Jamie Hood denied the lively Wolves loanee Ryan Giles as he looked to skip towards goal in the penalty area on the left with Telford looking to make the game safe, and in all honesty the home side looked the more likely to add to their tally in the closing stages with Brakes defending resolutely whilst pushing plenty of men forward when attacking, but their efforts counted for nothing, and they will now go into Saturday’s home game with a Curzon Ashton side level on points with them in the table, knowing that a win could almost see them safe. Telford meanwhile, have leapfrogged both Tamworth and Alfreton and now sit level on points with Leamington with a game in hand. 



Attendance: 977

 

AFC Telford United: Ben Wilson, Ross White, Connor Johnson, Dominic Smith, Shane Sutton ©, Ellis Deeney, Jordan Lussey, Henry Cowans, Kane Richards (14 Amari Morgan-Smith, 57), Marcus Dinanga (15 John Marsden, 67), Ryan Giles (12 Paul Bignot, 90). 

 

Subs not used: 13 Jasbir Singh, Elliot Newby. 

 

Leamington: Tony Breeden ©, Junior English, Connor Gudger, Joe Clarke, Jamie Hood, James Mace, Matt Dodd (15 Ahmed Obeng, 65), Callum Gittings (12 Liam Canavan, 87), Daniel Udoh, Jack Edwards, Kieran Dunbar (17 Kurtis Revan, 78). 

 

Subs not used: 14 Joe Magunda, 16 Richard Taundry. 

 

Referee: Mr Sam Mulhall

 

Assistant Referees: Mr Richard Cattell & Mr James King

 

Brakes Man of the Match: James Mace. 



2022 - 

 

Southport 1 Leamington 1

Vanarama National League North

The Pure Stadium

Tuesday 12th April 2022



This game was a tale of two injury time goals, as a ninety third minute penalty from top scorer Dan Turner ended a wretched four game losing streak for Brakes as they put a dent in Southport’s play off ambitions at Haig Avenue.

 

The late second half substitute was calmness personified as he stepped up to slot home the pressure kick after combining with fellow sub Devon Kelly-Evans, who was tripped as he shaped to shoot. The Southport players were crestfallen but there were no complaints, and Turner sent Cam Mason the wrong way to spark joyous celebrations between the players and the two man media team behind the goal. 

 

Previous trips to this corner of the North West have yielded nothing other than heavy defeats, so to leave with a point in this manner felt like a victory. 

 

With a paper thin squad due to injuries and with the final run of fixtures being close together, Paul Holleran rotated his squad to full effect, making six changes to his starting eleven following Saturday’s long winded journey to Spennymoor, bringing in Jake Weaver, Melis Bushaj, Connor Taylor, Callum Gittings, Junior English and Charlie Williams. 

 

This was a meeting of two out of form sides, with Southport having won only one of their last eight games, with Brakes winning two of theirs, so perhaps understandably the first half was largely an edgy affair with neither giving much away. 

 

English put himself about in typical bustling fashion, and almost got through on goal with 11 minutes played, only for a defenders boot to poke the ball out of play for a corner. 

 

A menacing black cloud hovered ever closer to the stadium in the opening quarter, and when the heavens opened they did so with full force. Weaver was forced to push Southport’s first corner of the evening behind.

 

Leamington registered the first serious effort on goal of the evening when Jack Lane’s fierce effort was deflected behind, while a contentious free kick awarded to the hosts to the right of the penalty area sailed over everyone and out of play. 

 

The two number sixes exchanged yellow cards, with the Referee perhaps not fully taking into account the sudden change in conditions. The booking for Lane resulted in a free kick which Josh Hmami directed straight at Jake Weaver. 

 

Good work on the right from the tireless Dan Meredith saw him earn two strikes at goal, the second of which appeared to be blocked by keeper Mason. Southport were unable to fully clear their lines, and Jack Bainbridge gave away a free kick in a decent position with which Williams was narrowly off target.

 

Bushaj sent a first time drive into the Jack Carr Stand behind the goal from a loose defensive clearance, while the ball was driven into the back of the Sandgroudners net by Joe Parker following a slow, deliberate build up down the left as Brakes picked their moment to find an opening, but Parker was adjudged to be offside from Williams’ cross. 

 

As the first half entered its final throes the Southport pressure began to build, and from the second of successive corners struck the inside of the far post before clipping the crossbar as the follow up was driven in. 

 

It was from another flag kick that Tharme powered in a header almost on the stroke of half time to give the hosts the lead - a punch in the guts for Leamington as they had arguably been the better side until the closing minutes. 

 

The opening twenty minutes or so of the second half passed without any real incident. Niall Watson’s dangerous low ball across goal was nudged behind by Weaver, who gave a confident display between the posts. 

 

With time beginning to trickle away Devon Kelly Evans was introduced, and he floated an inviting free kick into the box which was begging to be finished off, but nobody got close enough to make the connection. 

 

Williams saw a left wing corner headed off the line as Leamington pushed forward once more, but the home side came close through Chris Doyle’s shot which needed to be cleared off the Leamington goal line. 

 

Jack Edwards and Dan Turner were brought on to beef up the Brakes forward line as the game entered its final stages, and Kelly Evans almost immediately played Turner in on goal - a timely intervention from Dylan Vassallo denying him the chance to shoot. 

 

Meredith’s half volley was deflected behind as it looked for all the world that Leamington were about to suffer a fifth straight one goal defeat. Southport had the chance to seal the points as they countered in injury time. Substitute Jack McGowan was involved, with Hmami squaring for Bainbridge, who fired horribly high and wide. 

 

He was left to rue that miss as Leamington finally won themselves a break, and Turner stepped up to bag his fifteenth goal of the season. 

 

‘I thought it was a really good game - really open,’ said Holleran afterwards. ‘Southport and Leamington have had a fairly similar pattern to our season; albeit they have a few more points on the board. We’ve both got young squads; both have lost players; both have suffered with injuries.

 

‘Their deliveries from set plays were tremendous and they probably could have put us to bed with one or two other chances they had, but we kept playing, we kept probing. ‘We’ve made a few changes tonight to try and utilise the squad and give those players coming back from injury a little bit of a breather, because playing Saturday-Tuesday-Friday is difficult at this stage of the season. 

 

‘I kept harping on after the last few games how well the boys have done, and just when you think they’re down and beaten they come back. They did fantastic tonight. The boys coming in did really well - the two young boys, Melis and Charlie - you’ve got Junior up there on a high line who was fantastic; and Connor coming in on the right. Jake Weaver gave a good accomplished performance in goal. The boys coming on off the bench gave us a different dimension. I think Southport will be disappointed that they didn’t win the game, but there’s an argument that our performance probably deserved something as well. 

 

‘There’s going to be a lot of tired legs and tired minds going into the last few weeks and we’ve just got to keep going, but I think the most pleasing thing tonight is how well the lads who haven’t been playing regularly for us have done. You have to trust them, and it shows character from us to make those changes after our recent run. I’m looking forward to the game (against Brackley) on Good Friday - it will be a great occasion. 

 

‘Our problems on the road have been well documented. I could give a number of excuses, but I don’t look for them. You just keep working hard, keep trying to do the right things. I’m a big believer in hard work rewards. There were some big performances tonight and I'm really really pleased. We’re looking forward to the next few weeks, putting in a big effort, and trying to get a few more points on the board.’ 



Attendance: 779 (23 Brakes)

 

Southport: 1 Cam Mason, 6 Doug Tharme, 14 Chris Doyle, 5 Adam Anson ©, 2 Charlie Oliver, 16 Dylan Vassallo, 18 Jack Bainbridge, 15 Josh Hmami, 11 Tyler Walton, 9 Jordan Archer, 17 Niall Watson (21 Jack McGowan, 68).  

 

Subs not used: 4 Russell Benjamin, 13 Tony McMillan-Snelson, 19 Michael Carberry, 20 Ryan Corrigan. 

 

Leamington: Jake Weaver, Dan  Meredith, Melis Bushaj, Joe Clarke ©, James Mace, Jack Lane, Connor Taylor (12 Devon Kelly-Evans, 65), Callum Gittings, Junior English (15 Dan Turner, 84), Joe Parker (14 Jack Edwards, 78), Charlie Williams. 

 

Subs not used: GK Callum Hawkins, 16 Stephan Morley. 

 

Referee: Mr Kristian Silcock

 

Assistant Referees: Mr Michael Johnson & Mr Shaun Taylor

 

Brakes Man of the Match: Junior English.

We take a look back at Brakes games played on March 29………..

1937 - We faced Cubbington Albion in the Final of the Whitnash Charity Cup, the game ended in a draw, to be replayed almost a month later. 

 

 

1947 - A Harry Olliver Cup Semi Final at Bedworth saw Brakes ahead at half time, as per the report below from the Coventry Evening Telegraph. Apparently the final score was 7-2 to Brakes! 

 

 

1948 - Lockheed-Leamington defeat close neighbours Saltisford Rovers 3-2 in the Final of the Whitnash Charity Cup in front of a crowd of 2,000. It was their second trophy win in two days, having won the Foleshill Nursing Cup against Standard Athletic at Courthouse Green, Coventry, on the Saturday. 

 

Team: Len Isaacson, Charlie Stradling, Joe Murphy, Jerry Underhill, Roy Greenwood, Joe Watson, Samuel Henn, Tommy Drummond, David Montgomery, Frank Gardner, Ted Eden. 

 

 

1952 - One to forget, as Hednesford visited for a Birmingham Combination fixture and won 4-0 in front of a crowd of 500. This would turn out to be Leslie Latham’s last game as Player-Manager, as he transferred to nearby Banbury Spencer the following Monday. 

 

Team: Jack Thacker, Les Latham, Dennis Tooze, Alf Stubbs, Ken Hawker, Fred Keeble, Micky French, Charlie Stubbs, Frank Grimwood, Hughie Morrow, Jack Day. 

 

 

Meanwhile, in the Birmingham & West Midland Alliance West Section, our Reserve side won 2-1 away from home at Rubery T.A.S.C.O.S, which is the abbreviation for Ten Acres & Stirchley Co-operative Society, if anyone is interested! 

 

Team: Poole, Coope, Griffiths, Brant, D French, Allwood, J Shaw, Atkins, Hughes, F Gardner, Cox. 

 

1958 - Gresley Rovers were beaten 4-0 in a Birmingham & District League game at the Windmill Ground.

 

Team: Anthony Lines, Ken Jones, Mick Lane, Gordon Dougall, Gordon Hancocks, Ken Hawker, Frank Hawkins, George Dean, Jack  Evans, John Clark, George Burrows. 

 

1962 - Brakes saw their 30 game unbeaten run in league matches come to an end at nearby Stratford Town as they went down 3-2 to their Warwickshire rivals after being two goals ahead at half time thanks to a brace from Barry Jepson.   

 

Team: Peter Woodward, Geoff Coleman, Mick Lane, Barry Shorthose, Roy Bradley, Brian Bradley, Ernie Ward, Ken Cornbill, Barry Jepson, Colin Holder, Syd Hall. 

 

1965 - Ernie Ward’s brace sees Brakes to a win away at Heanor Town in the Midland Counties League. 

 

Team: Johnny Crosby, Roy Lockton, Gordon Hancocks, Colin Davis, John Connolley, Jimmy Knox, Ernie Ward, Cyril Parry, Ray Holmes, Barry Shorthose Syd Hall.

 

1966 - Defeat for Lockheed in Derbyshire at Long Eaton United in the Midland Counties League. Ernie Ward and Ray Holmes scored in each half for Leamington. 

 

Team: Johnny Crosby, Roy Lockton, Gordon Hancocks, Jimmy Knox, Keith Haines, Bernard Jones, Ernie Ward, Cyril Parry, Ray Holmes, Brian Wilson. Sub: Syd Hall. 

 

1969 - A day to forget at the Windmill Ground as Matlock Town romp to a 6-0 win in the Midland Counties League. 

 

Team: Bob Steane, David Pyle, Peter Lawton, Bill Salmon, Bill Tedds, Richard Gretton, Geoff Skellington, Jim Bryant, Richard Gommersall, Alan Vest, Syd Hall. Sub: Terry Keen. 

1974 - Ivor Talbot’s 25 yard strike saw AP Leamington take the points at Corby Town in the Southern League Division One North. 

 

Team: Dave Jones, Anthony Bowden, John Brady, Doug Griffiths, Roger Brown, Mickey Boot, Dennis Taylor, Steve Lee, Adrian Stewart, Ivor Talbot, Mick Keeley. Sub: Neil Armstrong. 

1980 - AP Leamington fall to defeat at York Street in the Alliance Premier League…..

Team: Alan Dulleston, Paul Cooper, Mickey Taylor, Alan Jones, Gary Brown, Tom Kilkelly, Dennis Taylor, Tom Gorman, Lenny Derby, Duncan Gardner, Roger Bain. Sub: Shaun McNulty.  

 

1983 - Graham Allner’s Brakes side return from Dartford with the points in the Southern League Premier Division….

 

 

 

1986 - Jimmy Knox and his VS Rugby side won a tight game by a single goal in front of a crowd of 360 in the Southern League Midland Division. 

 

Team:  Shaun Hemming, Tony Belcher, Tony Upton, Stuart Hall, Rob Rennie, Ashley Alexander, Tony Higgins, Mick Hartfield, Albert Johnson, Kenny Trickett, Ian McConville. Sub: Andy Taylor. 

 

1988 - Leamington suffer a 5-0 defeat on the road at Walsall Wood in the Midland Combination Premier Division. 

2003 - Handrahan Timbers 0 Leamington 1

Midland Combination Premier Division
Saturday 29th March 2003

 

By David Hucker

 

Brakes Cut Through Timbers to Maintain Challenge

 

This was a comfortable enough win in the end for Brakes as they chase the ICIS MIdland Combination Premier title, but the home side put up some stiff resistance succumbing to a first-half strike from a rejuvenated Josh Blake.

 

The rock hard pitch and windy conditions were against Brakes' flowing style of football and combined with the long ball tactics of the home side meant that the match never quite lived up to expectations. Boosted by their draw at Rugby Town the week before, Timbers were certainly fired up for this one and the opening ten minutes were a testing time for Leamington. The visitors' first real goal attempt didn't come until the fifteenth minute when a shot from Chris Hanrahan, who excelled for the second week running in midfield, went over the bar. Nick Mort, Brian Agar and Josh Blake were all involved in a good move a minute later but the opportunity went begging. However, all was well on eighteen minutes when Blake converted a cross from the left from skipper Steve Thompson to score his fifteenth goal of the season.

 

Timbers struck back and Jonny Burgess was forced to clear off the line. This seemed to spur Brakes into action as they entered their best period of the half with shots from Mort and Thompson that could have brought a second. On thirty-three minutes the improving James Gettings saved at full stretch to keep Brakes in the match and, with play ebbing and flowing, Harj Dhesi sent a free-kick just the wrong side of the post as half-time approached.

 

The second half started just as the first had with Timbers pressing, but the first real chance fell to Brakes when the evergreen Brian Agar put his fifty-first minute shot into the side-netting. Then Blake set off on a fine solo run before passing to Agar whose shot was cleared off the line. Further efforts by Thompson and Hanrahan failed to prise open the Timbers' defence in which 'keeper James Trevalen had a cracking match and Brakes had to settle for a narrow but important winning margin.

 

In the absence through injury of Tom Sidwell, the central pairing of Andy Gregory and the impressive Neil McFarlane looked solid at the back and Baz Shearsby worked hard with Hanrahan and Mort to give the midfield some bite and creativity. It is getting tough at the top but co-manager Jason Cadden couldn't have been more pleased with his side saying "it was a good performance and we thoroughly deserved to win. Chris Hanrahan won everything in midfield and the back four were immaculate. I couldn't have asked for more."

 

Leamington: James Gettings, Jonny Burgess (Ben Adams 70), Harj Dhesi, Nick McFarlane, Andy Gregory, Chris Hanrahan, Nick Mort, Barry Shearsby, Josh Blake, Brian Agar (Paul Nicholls 87), Steve Thompson ©. 

 

Subs Not Used: Darren Timms

 

Team News: Tom Sidwell dislocated shoulder, could miss rest of season. Two "new boys" are signed just ahead of the transfer deadline of 31 March: Jamie Ball (brother of Adam and a midfielder) and Leamington's Director of Football, Dave Draper (striker extraordinaire) - the term "boys" is used loosely, very loosely in at least one instance.

 

2008 - Brakes consolidate second place

Saturday, 29th March 2008 @ The New Windmill Ground. vs Bishops Cleeve (2-0). British Gas Business Football League Midlands Division.

 

By David Hucker.

 

With Ben Mackey and Robbie Beard still unavailable and Josh Blake, Stuart Herlihy and Liam Reynolds all injured, manager Jason Cadden was forced into rethinking his line-up.

 

Despite the conditions, which were probably the worst of the season so far, both sides put on an exciting end-to-end encounter to keep the crowd of 533 on their toes, with Leamington's James Husband controlling the midfield and the lively Marcus Jackson weighing in with some good passes and an all-action display.

 

There was little incident of note in the opening 15 minutes, with the wind taking the ball in all directions and one kick from visiting 'keeper, Sam Gilder, sailed past the Brakes goal with just one bounce. Things livened up three minutes later when Brakes took the lead with Justin Marsden, on loan form AFC Telford United, crossing from the right and Husband stealing in at the far post to slide the ball past Gilder (18 mins).

 

The post denied Marsden two minutes later but with half-time approaching, the striker was to find the back of the net, meeting a Jamie Towers cross to beat Gilder to the ball (45 mins).

 

The visitors could have pulled one back in injury time at the end of the half, but a long-range shot from Nick Williams came back off the Brakes crossbar.

 

In the second half, Brakes thought that they should have had a penalty when Towers was brought down after a good move involving Martin Thompson, Marsden and Husband, but the referee waived play on. Marsden whipped in a cross from the left which Gilder dropped, but Richard Mansell was on hand to hook clear.

 

The Leamington back three of captain Arron Parkinson, Adam Cooper and Guy Sanders showed all their experience, putting up a solid display to hold the Bishops Cleeve attack, although the dangerous Michael Davis did hit the post in the 68th minute.

 

David Care, who last played for Brakes at the Bescot Stadium in May 2006, came on for Towers and Shay Morgan made his debut for the club, replacing Thompson. However, it was the third substitute, Glen Webb, who could have added to the scoring, being clean through with just seconds to go, but he put his shot wide of the far post.

 

Thompson deserved a goal for his endeavours and he was twice denied in the first half, initially by a good tackle from Nick Williams and then, after rounding Lydon Tomkins, by the legs of Gilder who was at full stretch.

 

In the end, this was a comfortable victory for Brakes that kept them in second place and just two more wins from their last five matches will guarantee a play-off place in their first season back in the Southern League.

 

Husband and Jackson were both strong candidates for the Man-of-the-Match accolade and Husband just got the vote for his influence on the outcome and again slotting well into a midfield role, rather than his normal wing-back position.

 

Manager Cadden said, "It was good to get back to winning form after Monday and we were good value for our win. We were pleased with the three points but there are still five matches to go and we will be looking to win them all."

 

Brakes: Richard Morris, Jamie Towers (Dave Care 83), Arron Parkinson ©, Adam Cooper, Guy Sanders, Marcus Jackson, Scott Hadland, James Husband, Justin Marsden (Glen Webb 73), Martin Thompson (Shay Morgan 84), Ryan Parisi

 

Subs Not Used: Martin Hier, Neil Stacey

 

Bishops Cleeve: Sam Gilder, Sam Avery, Richard Mansell, Nick Williams, Lydon Tomkins, Allton Axton, Matt Collins (Tim Haddock 53), John Meadows (Keith Knight 88), Lee Davis (Kacey Johnstone 78), Luke Corbett, Michael Davis.

 

Subs Not Used: Mike Rhodes, Fred Ward.

 

Attendance: 533 -

Man of the Match: James Husband.

 

2014 - Brakes held Champions to be AFC Telford United at the New Windmill Ground, meaning that they had taken four points from the best team in the league that season… 

 

First half goals from Danny Newton and Nathan Hicks (penalty) earned Leamington their point. 

 

Team: Tony Breeden, Ryan Higgins, Stephan Morley, Joe Magunda, Liam Daly, James Mace, Aron Wint (Matt Dodd), Reece Flanagan, Danny Newton (Ricky Johnson), Nathan Hicks, Lee Chilton (Peter Till)

Subs not used: Lee Moore, David McNamee.

After six years, Leamington FC Head of Media Max Passantino will say goodbye to his hometown club in search of pastures new, writes Kian Claydon. 

Initially joining the Warwickshire outfit as a 14-year-old, Passantino soon took over the club’s social media channels – boosting their following five-fold over the six year period.

The period has seen a transformation in the Brakes’ social output, launching on different social media such as Instagram and TikTok – sites that the club previously didn’t utilise prior to 2018 – in addition to huge growth the usual sites of X and Facebook and most recently launching a club app with Element16Media.

MaxPWeb

Harbury Lane has been my home since I was five,” said Passantino. “I’m just happy to say I’ve been able to give something back to the club that’s given me so much.

Jim (Scott, Chairman), Kevin (Watson, Director), Paul (Edwards, Press Officer) and Nick (Leek, videographer) took a huge gamble back in 2018 in taking me on – and I’d like to think they’re happy with the progress we’ve made.

The proof is in the pudding - with over 120,000 followers across social media now all familiar with the brand built over that period, the hashtag #BackingTheBrakes - penned by Passantino - now synonymous with the club. 

That brand has been constructed over time, with Leamington having a common typography and colour scheme across all social media and print media output, and with Passantino sharing programme editing duties with partner-in-crime and Press Officer Paul Edwards, the club are now setting their sights high and aiming for the Programme of the Year award in their division, given by the National League at the end of the campaign.

LFCProgWeb

Max joked “I look back to what I was doing in 2018 and think ‘How did I get away with that in this league!’. It’s been a long journey with everything being self-taught from graphics and post style all the way to stream producing in the Covid curtailed season. 

Comparing it all now, from when I started to what we produce across social media and in the programme – it feels a bit unreal! We’ve been able to build a clear brand, and maintain the high standards even with producing our 60 page programme, the longest in the league, which fits perfectly alongside our social media.

I’ve had a great team to work with. Paul’s been my right hand man through it all, Nick (Leek) and Scott (Hanna) produce the best non-league highlights and were brilliant to me especially during the Covid season with streaming. Matt (Delaney), Shaun (Cashmore) and Craig (Barnes) have all equally chipped in so much help, as well as our two additions this season in Ethan (Gardiner) and Rachel (Gore) have done.”

BSCWeb

His journey at the club, however, has taught him a lot more than just basic media principles.

He added “While at Leam, I’ve grown as a person. Not just the thick skin I need for some comments and the ability to bite my lip and not say something, but the people skills – communicating with everyone at our club as well as at other clubs and the external media. It’s been brilliant to build relationships with the local press, no more so than rebuilding a connection with the Warwick University paper – The Boar.

I feel like I’ve matured at the club, which I guess is natural given how old I was when I joined, but spending time with everyone in some tough situations as well as joyous moments has taught me how to react to problems well and the ability to improvise and deal with challenging circumstances calmly.

While Passantino will be leaving the club at the end of this season, his legacy will no doubt live on in the core principles of Leamington’s social media which now have an incredibly strong base.

Brakes chairman, Jim Scott, added “As the club has developed, we have tried to increase pathway opportunities for young people both on and off the pitch. These include coaches and volunteers working within our community schemes; volunteers on match day roles; volunteer roles behind the scenes that help drive the club. The aim is to develop their life skills and experience making them an asset to employers in the wider world.

MaxJimWeb

Max has been a striking success for us, developing our social media and wider media platforms to a level where we are the envy of many a club. He finishes at university at the end of the educational year and will enter full time employment with a fantastic resume to flash in front of prospective employers. 

We thank him massively for his efforts and wish him every success, but true to his commitment to the club, it will not be the last we will see of him as he has made the commitment of training up and advising his replacements.”

The club will be releasing more information on www.leamingtonfc.co.uk regarding media positions for next season in due course.

(Cover Photo: David Airey)

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