Notts County Mad match report (1 Viewer)

Otis

Well-Known Member
Notts move to fourteen not out away from home as Boucaud and Arquin hit beauties near a roundabout and a Tesco somewhere in Warwickshire.
COVENTRY CITY 1-2 NOTTS COUNTY
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Even in just two and a bit seasons, we've seen our fair share of 'fallen giants' stumble into League One, punch-drunk and dazed by the whole indignity of having to realise Stevenage have a football team, let alone that they have to go there. Generally though, they've sorted themselves out - Southampton got over it and haven't looked back, Sheffield Wednesday and Charlton found their way out last year and Sheffield United are in the process of doing so - whilst we were still in League Two, you can add Leicester City, Leeds United, Norwich City and Nottingham Forest to the ever-lengthening list of clubs who have come out well after the League One reality shock. Just call it the Broadhall Way Effect.



Coventry, however, seem to be different. They're a club having an identity crisis, in a steeper decline than Bradford, Andrew Mitchell or the popularity of vintage recordings of Jim'll Fix It. It may seem a little bit perverse to blame this solely on a football stadium, and years of mis-management of at boardroom level have certainly had a huge role, but when building the Ricoh Arena they managed to completely miss the point.


We all know that stat about the Sky Blues having not finished in the top six of any division since dinosaurs roamed on the land where Coventry would once sit - so it's a surprise that anyone even supports them at all. That they do is certainly not down to any lingering hope of success, any of that would've been extinguished years ago. The thing is, and people will dispute this, supporting teams like Coventry can actually be quite cool. The appeal of growing up in a town or a city and going to support your local side every week remains massive to kids growing up - those same feelings of belonging that we get every single week when heading down to Meadow Lane. However, one sure fire why to end any of that is to go and put your ground near a motorway and a Tesco - in Coventry's case, half way to Nuneaton. It's not something isolated to this corner of Warwickshire, but i'm yet to see a club who are suffering so much from the fact that those put in charge of planning new grounds can't see that where a ground is matters so much more than what it is.

Football grounds should, like Meadow Lane, be lingering on the edge of the city centre - hemmed in by crumbling warehouses and council estates, within an overhit clearance of every kind of pub, greasy spoon café and newsagents selling cans of Red Stripe for a quid.



Clubs like Coventry seem bemused that they can't attract crowds when they've pitched up and relocated to suburbia and become little more than a capitalist consideration, seamlessly being held up alongside Tesco, a massive Marks & Spencer and Decathlon (which apparently offers equipment for SEVEN HUNDRED sports).



When I was sixteen I could've thought of nothing less appealing than having to jump on an overcrowded bus to the place where mum does the big weekly shop and my little sister goes to buy clothes to go and watch football - nothing could make attending football games seem more sanitised, less appealing and, most importantly, less fun. Even losing all the time.


Anyway, the location might have been all wrong, but there was actually a game of football going on somewhere behind Pizza Hut, with Notts looking to defend their thirteen game unbeaten run on the road against a Coventry side who are trying to come to terms with the third tier being added to a never ending list of levels at which they're useless.



Andy Thorn, a man who always looked to be overwhelmed by it all, with his face slowly eating itself so he no longer had to see, was sacked just four league games in - to be replaced by Mark Robins, reasonably successful at Rotherham and Barnsley and with as many new manager clichés to spout as times he's been credited with saving Sir Alex Ferguson's job.



He's inherited a disjointed looking side, with some talented young players who may need longer to adapt to this level than they're allowed and some, like Carl Baker and Cody McDonald, who are yet to really be contributing what they should. For Notts, there was a defensive reshuffle, with Gary Liddle moving to right back and Ashley Eastham making his first start in the centre. Alan Judge wasn't fit enough to feature after limping off at Carlisle, so Keith Curle continued with a 4-3-3 system that saw Yoann Arquin, Jamal Campbell-Ryce and Francois Zoko all start.


Notts started brightest and created the first opening when Campbell-Ryce managed to keep the ball in down the right and got away from Jamie Reckord, eventually forcing the ball back to Neal Bishop who saw his shot from six yards blocked.



The hosts hit back as André Boucaud dallied on the ball in midfield, allowing John Fleck to play a clever one-two with half-arsed former Notts man David McGoldrick and hit a low shot that Bialkowski beat away. The pace was unrelenting and Notts came close again quickly when Jordan Stewart was freed by the tricky Zoko, but his low cross was inexplicably missed by Arquin when he seemed to have the simple task of poking it home from six yards. Jeff Hughes was also guilty of making no connection soon after, when Campbell-Ryce had teased the defence down the left flank.



Callum Ball tested Bialkowski from the edge of the box, with the rebound sliced wide by Fleck under fine pressure from Eastham, whilst McGoldrick failed to make contact with a short free kick. Coventry then managed to miss an almost identical chance as Arquin's earlier one for Notts when Callum Ball failed to make contact with a firmly struck low cross. Ball then tested Bialkowski from the edge of the box, with the rebound sliced wide by Fleck under fine pressure from Eastham.


Jeff Hughes had a fine to chance to put Notts infront when he wriggled away from the defence only to find the angle narrowed by Joe Murphy, before Notts took the lead with a fantastic strike from Boucaud. Francois Zoko, who had given young full back Jordan Clarke a torrid time down the Coventry right, cut inside and laid it off for the man on loan from Luton who took a couple of touches before smashing the ball into the bottom corner from thirty yards. It was almost identical to Neal Bishop's goal at Milton Keynes earlier in the season and gave Notts a lead that had taken a long time to come in a game of numerous chances.


Fittingly, the hosts attacked straight from the kick off, with Franck Moussa testing Bialkowski with a viciously swerving effort. Notts started to take more control after the break though, with Zoko twice coming close with efforts from the edge of the box within five minutes of the restart - the second owing much to fine work from Bishop.
Notts were incredibly close to doubling their lead on the hour mark, with Jeff Hughes latching onto a fine Arquin pass at the far post but lobbing his volley off target and Francois Zoko heading a follow-up effort goalwards that was somehow clawed out by Murphy.



Coventry were trying to press but struggling to really create anything of note, with Leacock's fantastic last-minute challenge on substitute Cody McDonald summing up the way things were going for the Sky Blues. Notts seemed to have sealed things eight minutes from time, when Arquin played the ball into Jeff Hughes who cleverly backheeled the ball back into the path of the Frenchman, who deftly bent it home from the edge of the box. It was a goal of real quality and beauty from Notts, who deserved all three points having shown real control of the game after going infront.



They were given a scare when Richard Wood headed in a Fleck corner with two minutes to go but survived four minutes of aerial bombardment from a physical Coventry side to claim all three points. It was actually an entertaining game, despite the backdrop of sky blue seats and seemingly utterly disinterested, joyless home fans. It's hard to blame them though, but Coventry may be finding the sort of level that their concrete boot of a stadium will tie them to.
 

ccfc92

Well-Known Member
Got to laugh I guess. Making us sound like a nothing club. Coming from a club that also hasn't achieved anything since probably the 60s.
 

SBS

Active Member
To be fair, he's hit the nail on the head. Our stadium was planned for the likes of Muse, not the Sky Blues.
 

StevieM

Well-Known Member
I think the guy calls it exactly right, unfortunately, as he states;

"despite the backdrop of sky blue seats and seemingly utterly disinterested, joyless home fans. It's hard to blame them though, but Coventry may be finding the sort of level that their concrete boot of a stadium will tie them to."

It is interesting to read what other supporters think and not have a "sky blue tint" on everything, the summarisation of Baker,Cody and (half-arsed !) McG was spot on imo,

Sad isn't it that this is where we are at?

Try to PUSB please!
 

smileycov

Facebook User
Well i must have miss read it then, because i think the cheeky bastards should take a long look at them selves!!
 

LJC_CCFC

Well-Known Member
Notts County average just over 6000 fans in a 20,000 seater stadium, you would think they would get more than that with the success they had in recent seasons maybe their just a small club...
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
Did'nt they get crowds in that region when they had that take over two or three seasons back with Sven in charge,surprised it did'nt do them more damage to be honest
 

1nilandwe...

Well-Known Member
He's absolutely spot on unfortunately. An excellent report, although the match report was ever so slightly Notts-tinted, but not enough to be annoying.
 

WestEndAgro

Well-Known Member
I must be the only one who doesn't mind it's location.

I think you are, the location is terrible, most of the small towns near bye mainly follow Leicester, it we couldn't find a central location we should have used the other side of the city, Warwick, Leamington, Stratford, Rugby where we do drum up quite a lot of support.
I agree with most of the report, the Ricoh is one Big White Elephant, a mill stone round our neck, slowly strangling us.
 

Derbys_Pie

New Member
Notts County average just over 6000 fans in a 20,000 seater stadium, you would think they would get more than that with the success they had in recent seasons maybe their just a small club...

Nobody would dispute us being a small club, but then most clubs don't have to compete with a club the size of Forest a rivers width apart.

I'm not too sure where you're getting this success in recent seasons from, but if you define success as winning division 4, and missing out on the play offs last season on goal difference, then yes we have. We got 13,000 the day we won League 2, but it's going to take more than a decent couple of seasons after 20 odd years outside the top two divisions to get that on a regular basis.

I must admit, the report is a little on the cheeky side, and would probably ruffle a few feathers if i was a Coventry fan, but he does originate from Leicester :thinking about:
 

WillieStanley

New Member
"We're bigger than them... We were the first, Juve want to be us and look... We have a proper local rival!"

That's what I read. Grow up County.
 

stupot07

Well-Known Member
Thought it was quite a good article although the location of the stadium has nothing to do with small crowds in fact apart from the last 2 years we've had bigger gates than at highfield road.
 

jacobncfc

New Member
Alright all, is always fun when these end up on other teams' forums, but at least you're nicer to me than Milton Keynes were. Just a couple of things:-

I've got nothing against Coventry at all, in fact I quite like you as a club and have nothing but respect for your fans. As another Notts fan said, I grew up in Leicester, so anyone who annoys those plastic, pointless weirdos goes down well with me.

The guy who said about out small crowds - that was sort of the point. ML is too big for us, really, but in general it still has a reasonable atmosphere and is a fun place to go and watch football. I can get the train up from uni in London and make a five minute walk last for four hours thanks to the amount of cracking pubs and stuff on the way. When we were a shite League Two side, a comparable low to yours now, that was basically all that kept me going. I just couldn't imagine the Ricoh being a fun place to go every other week, is all, because of where it is.

On the game, I thought you were pretty good and probably warranted a point despite fizzling out after we scored. By that point it should probably have been 3-3 though. You were as impressive as anyone I've seen is play this season, bar Tranmere. You'll be fine.
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Thought it was quite a good article although the location of the stadium has nothing to do with small crowds in fact apart from the last 2 years we've had bigger gates than at highfield road.

Correct. Pride park and the Brittania are very similar on location. Difference is that they maintained the initial upturn in crowds. In Stokes case this is due to upsurge in form. If we had made it to the premiership ground location would never be an issue.
 

Lord_Nampil

Well-Known Member
Thought it was quite a good article although the location of the stadium has nothing to do with small crowds in fact apart from the last 2 years we've had bigger gates than at highfield road.

the difference is we have averaged over 20K in the stadium we know the fan base is there and we know the fan base know where the ground is! We didnt use moving to the stadium as a spring board (mainly down to the fact the agreement to how we play int he stadium doesn't benefit us)!

As for the artical, i skim read it and think fair enough if thats what you think, id like Mark Robins to read it and see what he thinks! If we had played any where near as good as we did against Swindon we would have won, the thing is at the moment Notts are consistent (well away from home) we havent got any Consistency yet untill we do will always be on the back foot! Robins knows that and im sure he is working to change that mentality!
 

Lord_Nampil

Well-Known Member
Correct. Pride park and the Brittania are very similar on location. Difference is that they maintained the initial upturn in crowds. In Stokes case this is due to upsurge in form. If we had made it to the premiership ground location would never be an issue.

Look at the attendance on the 3rd November 2007 at Stoke they played the sky blues in front of what i remember about 12,5K including 1,000 sky blues fans! Derby have never got below 20K in a league game at Pride Park (though they think this season will see that record go)
 

pusbccfc

Well-Known Member
The Ricoh isn't the downfall of this club, its the ownership.
If we had ownership from the start we'd be in a far better state now!
 

VisitingPie

New Member
Well we have to sometimes, what would be the point otherwise?!

You'll never hear a notts fan (well we may have the odd delusional among us) claiming to be anything BUT a small club. So forgive us. When us minnows manage to conquer the mighty coventry, (I nearly said MASSIVE but no, not whilst Bradford and the Wendies are around), we allow ourselves a little pat on the back! ;)
 

jimmyhillsfanclub

Well-Known Member
I reckon its a quality report.....

....We are shit.....we are where we deserve to be.....we are not, never have & never will be a BIG club.

Get over it.

Right....I'm off to Brentford to watch us get battered.

:whistle::whistle:
 

Real

New Member
There is no need for people to post bitter responses, it was a great article which summed us up quite well, (that's if you can take off the Sky Blue tinted specs of course).
 
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Moff

Well-Known Member
I thought it was a great, honest article that hit home a few truths to us.

I am enjoying the banter more this season with fans with similar aspirations to ours, although our aspirations keep falling lower and lower!

The fans of teams we play this season seem to be less up themselves than fans of teams in the higher divisions, (not including S Weds and Southampton who we seem to have a good laugh and mutual respect with) and there seems to be more fans unity and honesty in assessments of us as a club and team.

Although I want us to be successfull and get promoted (although it could be a long long wait) I will enjoy the more better quality banter, with more realism, whilst it lasts
 

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