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Showing posts from October, 2025

Who do you REALLY support?

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When somebody asks you "what football team do you support?", what do you answer? Think about that for a moment or two before answering. How many football clubs do you follow? Again, be honest with your answer. And, do you have a favourite Premier League (EPL) or English Football League (EFL) club as well as a favourite non-League club? Once more, you should be brutally frank with your answer. Of course, only YOU will see or know your answers, but the end result is how honest you are with other people when they ask you that question again, "What football team do you support?" The wise person will always include each of the teams that they follow. The person that hedges their bets will always offer the EPL or EFL team only, while virtually nobody will ever think about mentioning the non-League side that they very often frequent to watch their games in relative comfort but which is not necessarily attached to a fashionable or well-known club. That is generally borne o...

AI - No getting away from it!

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Artificial intelligence (AI), once thought of as science fiction, is surrounding us all more and more every day. The robots are taking over the asylum! I am the first person (maybe) to advocate that we try and avoid AI whenever and wherever we can, especially if any of us are involved in writing activities like authorship, newspaper reporting or essay writing for school, college or even university. AI can be wrong with its/their information and there are websites that can actually tell, very accurately, whether or not the assignment or other written work that you try to put forward as your own creation is really written by AI. I know this as a true fact because, although I write my own articles, posts and books, I always run my work through a plagiarism checker before I publish anything I have written. Okay, that way of checking is not quite AI, but then I also run my written work through one or two AI-detection websites 'just in case'. Unsurprisingly, I have had a 100% hit rat...

Victorian football in the snow

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This is a glimpse of how it might have been for footballers in the early days of the organised version of the game in the UK. Football throughout the ages has been bound by the rich tapestry of passion, innovation, resilience and crunching tackles. The modern game became organised in the 1850s and certified by the introduction of the Football Association in 1863. 19th century football underwent a significant transformation; out went 'whatever rules suit' decided on the day of each match and in came firstly the Sheffield Rules and then the FA's Laws of the Game. Up until then the game was seemingly played combining a mixture of soccer and rugby, depending on what the teams decided on the day. Confusion, or what? When we look back at those early organised football days, we could be forgiven for thinking "why didn't they choose the summer months in which to play?" and, indeed, why didn't they? Presumably it was because that would get in the way of the already...

Clamping down on 'air cards'

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Does it irritate you? I know it irritates me. When players get fouled they or some of their team mates immediately turn to the referee and wave their hand, gesturing that the player who committed the foul must receive a yellow card (minimum). The antic of players waving such an 'air card' crept into our game in the 1990s and, at that time, referees were quick to stamp on it and issue a yellow card to the 'air card' waver. And then players seemed to take stock of the situation and the practice stopped. That is, until recent seasons, when the dastardly act crept back into our game, seemingly after the 2020 'Covid' World Cup tournament held in Qatar in 2021. A few years ago, I wrote an article for a Cray Wanderers matchday programme, about this annoying action that has again crept into our domestic game of football, mainly via international players who seem to 'get away with it' in their own countries' leagues. Referees are now starting to get tough aga...

The Happy Wanderer No. 2

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A couple of days ago I wrote a short post about Percy Addleshaw, writer of a poem called 'The Happy Wanderer', in 1896. I now wish to go back a bit further in time to the early 1800s and speak about another poet, who also penned a work called 'The Happy Wanderer' but was later set to music.  In the early 19th century, a German called Florenz Friedrich Sigismund (1788-1857) put pen (or quill) to paper (or parchment) and wrote a poem in 1847 called 'Mein Vater war ein Wandersmann' which, translated from German, means 'My Father was a Wanderer'. It has also been catalogued as 'Der fröhliche Wanderer' ('The Happy Wanderer'). Yet is wasn't until just after the end of the Second World War that another German, Friedrich-Wilhelm Möller (1911-1993), put the words of Sigismund's poem to the catchy melodic tune that is now associated with the song. This was followed shortly afterwards by Möller's sister Edith adapting the song for the Ob...

Where have you seen him before?

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Imagine the scene... back in 2003, when I took over the custodianship of the official Cray Wanderers website from Jerry Dowlen, I was looking for a mascot image to include on the site header. I eventually found one (the faded version in the picture, left) , courtesy of the public domain, and I decided to name him 'Jamie Kempster'. Now, Jamie Kempster was a midfielder who was playing for the Wands at the time and his name popped into my head first. Thereafter, my little football image was unofficially known by that Cray player's name. If you were among the very many visitors to the old official club website between 2003 and 2012, you would have no doubt seen 'JK' adorning the site header. I also used his image on the front cover of a short book I wrote in 2006 called 'Forever Amber: The Story of the Cray Wanderers FC Website So Far' (now out of print) . He has been around our club in one form or another for over twenty years. Fast-forward those 20+ years and ...

What You Will Not Find Here

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I have received a message from a visitor to this blog site asking me why I am not including any match reports on Cray Wanderers games. The answer is quite simple and comes in three stages. However, before I list what those stages are, I must mention that I am very pleased with the progress that this blog site is making. It is now attracting many visitors and not just from our football club or from a football background in general. Of course, the impish personality in me could up the ante and receive even more visitors to the site by being much more controversial in my work but, this site is still relatively new and I've experienced my share of hot water in the past; I don't particularly wish to revisit that scenario. I don't write about politics (very much!) or religion (very much!), so that's the controversy bits out of the way! All I can continue doing is what I know best, writing from experience and my ability to find unusual items of interest to research and write a...

The Happy Wanderer

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Back in 2004, while I was still 'doing my thing' with the official Cray Wanderers website, I came across a poem called 'The Happy Wanderer', during one of my research moments and uploaded it to the site. At the time, the internet was still in its infancy and very little information was known about the author of that poem, Percy Addleshaw. Mr Addleshaw was, apart from writing poetry, a barrister and a writer. He lived from 1866 to 1916. He was a graduate of Christchurch College, Oxford and he was called to the bar in 1893. He was also known to write poetry under the nom de plume Percy Hemingway and apparently wrote 'The Happy Wanderer' in around 1896. The Happy Wanderer (Percy Addleshaw, 1866-1916) He is the happy wanderer who goes Singing upon his way, with eyes awake To every scene, with ears alert to take The sweetness of all sounds, who loves and knows The secrets of the highway, holds the rose Is fairer for the wounds the briars make; He welcomes rain that h...

The Meaning of Cray

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This was one of the last articles of mine to appear in a Cray Wanderers matchday programme towards the end of the 2024-25 season. For those readers who collect the Wands' programmes and wish to check up on this, the article appeared versus Bowers & Pitsea on Saturday 22 March 2025. The article is based on knowledgeable fact and research. I have reproduced the item here, as I believe that it is right and proper to do so, if only to remind and notify future visitors to this website and who maybe never obtained a copy of that programme that this is what the word 'cray' actually means — and has meant for hundreds of years. It also ties in nicely with the history of Cray Wanderers Football Club theme. Believe it or not, the word ‘cray’ does not only mean ‘crazy’. This is apparently a modern way of using the word by younger generations of people. The historical word ‘cray’ comes from the Saxon word ‘crecca’ and the Welsh word ‘craie’, meaning ‘a brook or fresh water’, which i...