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Rob’s Column – November Notes

I’m cheesed off. I probably shouldn’t write this column until I’ve calmed down. Then again why should I waste an opportunity to speak out about something.
The Imps gained a valuable point at Exeter last weekend and could – not should – have come away with all three. We had a makeshift back line after the break but were still the better side against opponents who would have gone above us if the’d nicked it. Any point in an away fixture in League One, in my view, is a good one. That result kept us in the play-off places.
But no, that’s not good enough for some fans. ‘That’s an hour and a half of my life I won’t get back’ one posted. There were others in a similar vein. Poor game, missed chances, should do better…blah blah blah.
I’m not sure what supporters expect and, in saying that,  I’m fully aware the ones offering criticism are a tiny but entitled minority. ‘I’m entitled (sic) to my opinion’ is the cry.
It is so hard to win games and hold a high position in the table at the level we’re competing at. It’s hard for the chairman, the directors, the staff, the coaches, and of course the playing staff.  One of them, Paudie O’Connor, gets battered every week winning headers and leading by example. He’s not the most robust looking guy when you look at him but he plays like he’s a man mountain. Very few strikers get the better of him. He’ll have travelled back from Devon – very uncomfortably no doubt – pleased we got something from the game and quite right too. 
Our Trust has thousands of members and we’re out there every week talking to supporters about the club. Thankfully just about all of them realise the challenges there are plying your business up in the third tier of English football. It’s such a shame one or two publicly dismiss the work that’s put in because a game isn’t a classic and we haven’t won easily.
In football as in life you don’t always get what you want. It’s no bad thing to remember that when the final whistle blows.

with thanks to the Lincolnshire Echo

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FPA Guests v Wycombe Wanderers

Thanks to Donald Nannestad

Our host for tomorrow’s game is Gavin Gordon and former player guests are Tony Cunningham, Phil Neale and Andy Mand. Our AGM is before the game and so it is possible we may have additional former players attending.
As well as our FPA members we have a special guest, the former Tottenham and Chelsea midfielder Micky Hazard who is an ambassador for the Legend on the Bench organisation which works to combat mental health issues and prevent suicides.

Tony Cunningham

Tony Cunningham was a powerful striker who was brought to Lincoln by Colin Murphy from non-league club Stourbridge in May 1979. He made an instant impact on his debut in a League Cup tie against Barnsley when he was up against the former England defender Norman Hunter. Tony had too much pace and power for the ex England man and marked his first City game with a goal. Tony remained a regular first team player during his three full seasons at Sincil Bank and finished as leading scorer with 15 league and cup goals in 1981-82 when the Imps narrowly missed out on promotion to second tier football. He was sold to Barnsley in September 1982 and and made 40 League appearances for the Reds scoring 11 goals before joining Sheffield Wednesday in November 1983. Tony later played for clubs including Manchester City and Newcastle United making a total of almost 500 senior appearances before ending his career with Wycombe Wanderers. One of his sons Karl later also played for the Imps.

Debut vs Barnsley, home (Football League Cup) 11 August 1979

Lincoln City Record:

Football League: 111 appearances plus 12 as substitute, 32 goals

FA Cup: 5 appearances plus 1 as substitute

Football League Cup: 13 appearances, 8 goals

Other Games: 6 appearances, 2 goals

Phil Neale

Phil Neale was a member of the Imps hugely successful 1975-76 team and went on to make over 350 first team appearances during his 11 seasons with the Imps. Phil was first signed as an amateur while he was studying at Leeds University making his first team debut in January 1975. He signed professional forms for City later the same year and from then onwards he was a regularly in the first team defence before leaving Sincil Bank in May 1985. Phil combined his football with a career as a cricketer. He briefly played for Lincolnshire in the Minor Counties Championship before joining Worcestershire. He made over 350 first class appearances scoring over 17,000 runs for Worcestershire and twice captained the team to the County Championship. He was team manager of Northamptonshire and then Warwickshire before being the England team operations manager for 21 years until his retirement. He was awarded the OBE in 2006 for services to cricket.

Debut vs Swindon Town, away (FA Cup), 4 January 1975 as substitute

Lincoln City Record:

Football League: 327 appearances plus 8 as substitute, 22 goals

FA Cup: 16 appearances plus 2 as substitute

Football League Cup: 11 appearances plus 1 as substitute

Other Games: 4 appearances

Trevor Swinburne 

Trevor Swinburne began his long goalkeeping career as an apprentice with Sunderland in the late 1960s and finished it with the Imps 20 years later. During his time at Sunderland he was understudy to Jim Montgomery and made several first team appearances before moving on to Carlisle United in the summer of 1977. Trevor made over 250 first team appearances for Carlisle during his six years with the club and was an ever-present in their team which won promotion to the old Second Division in 1981-82. He then played for Brentford and Leeds United before signing for City in February 1986 as a replacement for Stuart Naylor. Trevor made regular appearances for the Imps until retiring in the summer of 1987. He was the first chairman of the Lincoln City Former Players Association when it was formed in 2017 and was a key figure in developing the organisation.

Debut vs Blackpool, away 25 February 1986

Lincoln City Record

Football League: 34 appearances

Football League Cup: 3 appearances 

Football League Trophy: 3 appearances

Andy Mand

Andy Mand was a winger who played for City’s reserve team for three seasons in the North Midlands League in the late 1960s and early 1970s. He later played for Louth United in the Lincolnshire League as well as for the highly successful Lincoln Sunday League team Adelaide Park. Andy played for the Lincolnshire representative team and for the Lincoln Sunday League representative team.

Micky Hazard

Micky Hazard the former Tottenham and Chelsea midfielder is a special guest at today’s game. He started out with Spurs making his first team debut as a 20 year old.  At Tottenham he won the FA Cup in 1982 and the UEFA Cup in 1984 before being sold to Chelsea.  He was later at Swindon, helping the club win promotion to the Premier League before finishing his playing career back at Tottenham.He is an ambassador for the Legend-on-the Bench organisation which installs suicide prevention benches across the country. The latest bench is being installed at Ashby Avenue before the Wycombe game. The vision of Legend-on-the-Bench is to combat mental health issues and prevent suicides by providing accessible resources and support to individuals in need. We believe that there should be no stigma attached to mental health challenges, and we aim to create a safe environment where people can research and obtain vital contact information for themselves or someone they care about. To achieve this, the campaign are installing benches in public parks across the UK, each featuring a QR code that can be easily scanned with a smartphone. This QR code will direct users to a comprehensive reference list of professional support groups, complete with contact numbers, website links, and email addresses. The goal is to ensure that help is just a scan away, fostering a community of support and understanding for those facing mental health struggles.

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RICT Donate to Andy’s Man Club

RICT Community Engagement Team Leader Biff Bean, Chairman Rob Bradley and Committee Member Gavin Gordon were pleased to hand over a cheque for £650 to Sean Gill, area representative of suicide prevention charity Andy’s Man Club. A massive thank you to the RICT Community Team for making this possible. If you would like to support this charity, please use the pay-in details to donate below and see the work the club does via https://andysmanclub.co.uk/


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Rob’s Column – November 2

with thanks to the Lincolnshire Echo

Without being complacent our Trust, like the club, seems to be enjoying a reasonably successful time at the moment. Our position in the club is solid with us now holding the important Fans’ Share, our membership amounting to around 6000, and with two of our board sitting on the club board of directors. 
In terms of the latter, Phil Scrafton is now fully registered as a club director and has impressed in the way he’s approaching this important role.
We looked to ‘future plan’ as the Fan Led Review moved towards the more formal Football Governance Bill, and as a result we’ve got some new people on board keeping us old Trust stalwarts on our toes.
Emma Crellin is a well-known Imps fan and has had a successful career in marketing. She’s now our joint Fan Engagement Lead where we look to serve our members well, at the same time as enhance the club’s award-winning work in making our supporters genuinely feel part of the club they so avidly follow. 
It must be an interesting time in the Crellin household. Emma’s husband is a keen Carlisle United fan and their fortunes are in stark contrast to those at the LNER stadium. Next to bottom in League Two their Trust chair recently put out a statement refuting claims made against him and his colleagues. He says they’ve been accused of being a closed shop, they don’t communicate, they’re too close to the club, they make bad decisions, and are in it for the perks. Phew.
From what I can see Carlisle United Supporters Trust do stuff pretty much exactly like we do – honorably, openly, and properly. It just goes to show that anger over bad footballing times can cloud the judgement of those who lash out.
So future planning is important. The good times are great but we have to be ready for if and where they’re not. It’s what the club does, and it’s what your Trust does too. If you want to know a bit more on this or any other Trust matter, then seek us out in the Fan Village. This column tries to keep you up to speed but you can’t beat a face to face natter to get our messages out.

News

No 6 wins Trust POTM for September

Trust board member Julian Buttery and new junior member Charlie Grimshaw present Ethan Erhahon with the Trust Player of the Month for September trophy voted by our fans.

Photograph courtesy Chris Vaughan and Lincoln City Football Club

News

Press Statement: Announcing Trust’s new Fan Elected Director

The Red Imps Community Trust is delighted to announce that Phil Scrafton is our new Fan Elected Director (FED) and starts work straight away to represent you – the fans – on the club board.

Phil joined the Trust Board at the beginning of the 2024/25 season after being elected as the Supporter Elected Director, one of two Directors representing the Club’s fan base on the Club board.

Previous FED Rob Bradley is seen “passing the baton” to Phil at the game against Stockport County

Phil is local to Lincoln having spent his very earliest years in Hartsholme, followed by ‘school’ years living just off Doddington Road. Like many, Phil became an Imps fan after an early introduction as a young boy attending matches with his dad and older brother, before being allowed to attend games with his mates in his early teens.

His career has been in town planning and development, commencing at the City Council in 1981. Over 20 years later Phil decided to seek new challenges in the private sector planning consultancy world, joining Lichfield Planning, whose main office was in London.

As Equity Partner when the recession took hold after 2008, it was clear that changes were needed and Phil jointly led the formation of Globe Consultants – a joint town planning and economic development business – based in Lincoln in 2010. He led that business as Managing Director until deciding to step away into semi-retirement in 2022. 

Business interests are now mainly limited to providing part-time support to the delivery of a major mixed housing and leisure development on a riverside site east of Lincoln. This is a project he’s led with the landowner for around 15 years and is keen to see through to completion, delivering huge benefits for a very supportive local community.

Fortunately, Phil now has time to follow his longstanding desire to travel and to spend more time with family. Phil is married to Jane, has two grown up children, two young grandsons and is looking forward to the latest generation’s first match experience being at Sincil Bank.   

News

FPA Guests v Stockport County

With thanks to Donald Nannestad

The FPA guests for tomorrow’s game against Stockport County are Simon Yeo and Paul Smith – note this is Paul M Smith who played 1987 to 1995 . The host is Matt Carmichael. Details below:

Matt Carmichael

Today’s host is Matt Carmichael who is vice chairman of the Former Players Association.

Debut vs Scunthorpe, home 19 August 1989

Lincoln City Record

Football League: 113 appearances plus 20 as substitute, 18 goals

FA Cup: 4 appearances plus 1 as substitute

Football League Cup: 9 appearances plus 1 as substitute, 1 goal

Other: 7 appearances plus 1 as substitute, 2 goals

Paul Smith

Paul Smith was an attacking player who was signed by Colin Murphy from Port Vale in September 1987 at the start of City’s Vauxhall Conference campaign following relegation out of the Football League. Paul cost a record non-league transfer fee and made his debut in a 4-1 win at Stafford Rangers. He played regularly over the remainder of the season helping the Imps to the title and a return back to the League at the first attempt. He went on to make over 250 first team appearances for City before departing in the summer of 1995. He began his career at Sheffield United and had a spell on loan with Stockport where he scored five goals in seven League appearances. Paul moved on to Port Vale in 1986 and then arrived at Sincil Bank.

Debut vs Stafford Rangers, away 5 September 1987
Lincoln City Record
Football League: 219 appearances + 13 as substitute, 27 goals
FA Cup: 7 appearances plus 2 as substitute, 1 goal
Football League Cup: 10+2 appearances
Vauxhall Conference: 33 appearances, 8 goals
Other: 20 appearances, 4 goals

Simon Yeo

Simon Yeo signed from non-league Hyde United in August 2002 scoring on his home debut against Rochdale and continued to be a prolific scorer throughout his time at Sincil Bank. The highlights of his career included scoring against Torquay on the final day of the 2002-03 season to secure City a place in the play-offs where he came off the bench in both semi-final legs against Scunthorpe United with dramatic effect – scoring twice in the last 20 minutes to earn the Imps a 5-3 win at Sincil Bank and then netting the winner in the second leg at Scunthorpe. He was the Supporters Player of the Year and leading scorer in 2004-05 but left in the summer to play in New Zealand. He returned in January of the following year only to depart again in the summer of 2006. Simon later played for Peterborough United,  Chester City and Macclesfield Town. 

Debut vs. Kidderminster Harriers away 10 August 2002
Lincoln City Record
Football League: 85 appearances plus 50 as substitute, 42 goals
FA Cup: 4 appearances, 1 goal
Football League Cup: 2 appearances plus 1 as substitute 2 goals  
Other: 9 appearances plus 7 as substitute, 6 goals

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FPA Guests v Birmingham

Thanks to Donald Nannestad

Gavin Gordon

Gavin Gordon was a striker who made his senior debut for Hull City just two months after his 16th birthday and went on to make regular first team appearances for the Tigers before he was sold to the Imps in November 1997 when he was still just 18 years old. In his first season he helped City win promotion and was a first team regular. In 2000-01 he scored 10 goals by early December and was the sold to Cardiff City for a six-figure fee. He later played for Notts County. Gavin is chairman of the Former Players Association and covers Imps games as a match summariser for BBC Radio Lincolnshire.

Debut vs Swansea City, away 8 November 1997

Lincoln City Record

Football League: 87 appearances plus 12 as substitute, 28 goals

FA Cup: 9 appearances, 2 goals

Football League Cup: 2 appearances, 1 goal

Other: 4 appearances plus 1 as substitute

Terry Fleming

Terry Fleming was a midfield player who made over 200 first team appearances for City during his five years with the club. Terry was signed by manager John Beck from Preston North End in December 1995 and was a key player for the Imps during his time at the club. He missed only a handful of games in 1997-98 when City clinched promotion on the final day of the season defeating Brighton 2-1 with Terry scoring the opening goal. He moved on in the summer of 2000 when he signed for Plymouth Argyle. He later played for Cambridge and Grimsby Town before appearing for several non-league clubs including Lincoln United.

Debut vs Plymouth Argyle, home 16 December 1995

Lincoln City Record

Football League: 175 appearances plus 8 as substitute, 8 goals

FA Cup: 11 appearances, 2 goalsFootball League Cup: 11 appearances plus 1 as substitute 2 goals

Darren Horrigan

Darren Horrigan was a young goalkeeper who joined the Imps as a trainee from Birmingham City. He appeared regularly in the youth and reserve teams and was regularly on the first team bench as sub keeper. His only Football League experience was in March 2002 when he come on for the second half against Southend United following an injury to Alan Marriott. Darren moved on in the summer of 2004 and later played for several north-east clubs including Spennymoor, Bishop Auckland and Tow Law

Debut vs Southend United, home 16 March 2002 as substitute

Lincoln City Record

Football League: 1 appearance as substitute

Other: 4 appearances