Wednesday 16 November 2022

R.I.P Jim Fox - a great friend

 14/11/2022 

Jim, from Hylton Castle in Sunderland, is my best mate who died after 2 years of cancer this afternoon. 

He was a passionate anti-fascist and anti-militarist whose life changed when he was left sickened by his involvement as a British squaddie on 2 tours of Belfast in 70s. He went AWOL and got sent to a detention camp in Colchester for 6 months and dishonourably discharged. 

 

He was a very bright lad and his dad was a miner. He'd got 3A Levels, all at grade A, and was accepted after the Army period at Durham Uni and he got a first in RE. He was a teacher for most of the rest of his life. 

 

He was a NUT rep in West London for many years. 

 

When he returned to Sunderland he helped leaflet lots of estates with Sunderland Fans Against Racism leaflets. It was tricky at times. 

 

When the club appointed Di Canio, a fascist, as manager, he and I (and one or two brave others) urged fans to cancel season cards and when club agreed to return monies, we'd paid for our season ticket for following season, Sky Sports agreed to film the cheques as we collected them. 

 

Sadly, I got delayed and missed this. I urged him not to do it alone. He did, he got a torrent of abuse including death threats. The cops said he and Iris, his wife, should leave town. He refused and, in fact, got no further shit, partly because he was ex military. He did loads of work with refugees and asylum seekers. 

 

One of the ironies is he's died on Remembrance Sunday, which he always wore a white poppy on. At Sunderland matches he'd remain sat down and nobody challenged him when he said he was ex military. I will miss him very badly. 

 

Mark Metcalf 

Wednesday 9 November 2022

Back to the 92 as I attend the Brentford v Gillingham match in the EFL Cup

 






As part of my birthday celebrations the day before I attended the Brentford v Gillingham League Cup tie on Tuesday 8 November and which means I have, again, (I first completed the 92 in 1989) been on all current 92 Premier/Football League grounds. 

The game produced a shock as Gillingham, 20th in the fourth tier, knocked out Premier League side Brentford on penalties. This followed a 1-1 draw. 

I had suggested to some Gillingham fans who I walked to the ground with from the tube station (which for some unfathomable reason is closed in the hour after the game ends - so much for the much vaunted please use public transport appeal of Brentford in its various publications) that their side might cause a shock and was laughed at. I guess they are happy to have been proved wrong. Gillingham scored from their only shot and hung on to record a draw.

The Brentford ground was full, and I was able stand throughout the match as there is a safe standing area. I was next to a Nottingham Forest fan who was, like myself, making his first visit to GTech Community Stadium, opened on 1 September 2020, and who had also in the past visited The Bees previous ground, Griffin Park, that opened in 1904. The Forest fan estimated that he had watched football on around 130 league grounds which is a good total.

According to my own figures the GTech Stadium was the 160th League ground I have visited. I will list all these grounds very soon, but I think it is unlikely that anyone can beat this figure. I believe that in lifetime there has been a total of 164 league grounds - I was unable to do Gateshead before they departed the Football League in 1960, Accrington Stanley (went out of business in 1962), Bradford Park Avenue (voted out of Football League in 1970) and Southport. (1978)