
Britannia Stadium - Stoke City
Conference Play Off Final
Aldershot v Shrewsbury Town
Sunday, May 16th 2004, 3pm
Tim Rigby
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1. Why you were looking forward to
going to the ground (or not as the case may be)? |
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4. What you thought on seeing the ground, first impressions of away end then
other sides of the ground.?
We came to the ground from the opposite side of the A50, so although when you
enter Stoke towards the city centre the ground looks to be on top of a hill, we
actually descended down onto it.
The outside of the ground isn’t one I would tend to like, being very bland, and
done almost on the cheap, but with the area you walk through being rather run
down, and with not much in the area directly around it, it does tend to stand
out, and look an impressive sight in amongst the hills.
Whenever Wolves aren’t playing, I try to pop along to the Gay Meadow, and so
although being semi-neutral, it was a natural decision to support Shrewsbury,
and because of this we were sat in the Sentinel Stand, and had a good view of
the action, the ground was of a good size, with the impressive John Smiths Stand
opposite, but the three open corners really doesn’t do it any favour, although
again, not being a fan of the bland ‘bowl’ type stadiums, I think that design
would vastly improve the overall look and feel of the ground.
5. Comment on the game itself, atmosphere, stewards, pies, toilets etc..
The facilities were good, as expected with a new stadium, although I did think
that the concourse underneath the seats was unusually cramped for a stand of
that size. I couldn’t really have any moans about that, or the stewards on hand
in the stadium, who seemed generally quite helpful.
The game was very tense, with neither side looking to stretch themselves too
much. Aldershot scored first, and were looking like they would capitalise on the
game, but Shrewsbury got back into it with a scrambled goal from Duane Darby
just before half-time.
The second half was much the same as the first, but without the goals,
Shrewsbury probably had the better chances, but like their fans on the
atmosphere front, Aldershot really dominated. With the 90 minutes up, the game
went into Silver-goal extra time. If we thought the game had been tense up until
then, then it doubled in the anxiety stakes. I'd managed to get along to the
semi-final second leg versus Barnet, which after Shrewsbury had levelled the tie
with winning the game 1-0 we thought that the 5-3 penalty win at the end was
exciting as it gets, but this game was to beat even that.
Like in normal time, neither side really went for it, but for the first time in
the game, Shrewsbury really started to capitalise on their opponents, with
Aldershot starting to tire. Again there were no goals and it went to penalties.
Shrewsbury were to go first, and the penalties were due to be taken at the
opposite end of the ground to us, in front of the Boothen End (or as it was
renamed for the day- The ‘Shrew’-then End!). Up first was Luke Rodgers, this was
a banker, having scored the penalty goal in the semi-final and subsequently
scoring a penalty in the shoot-out there was no way he would miss. So up he
steps, and bang, apparently its still in orbit to this day! Oh dear, its all
gone wrong, so up steps the Aldershot player, against hope of all hopes, Scott
Howie guesses the right way and dives to save it, brilliant, were back in it!
Jamie Tolley stepped up next, and buried it with no problems, back in front,
easy! The next Aldershot player came, and Howie saves again, 1-0, in front,
brilliant! Jake Sedgemore (someone who I used to go to school with) had no
problems in making it 2-0 to Shrewsbury, before Howie made it 3 in a row, with
yet another save. Ex-Telford full-back Trevor Challis was the man given the
responsibility to win it, and he had no problem in securing a swift return to
the Football League, so from the initial disaster of Luke Rodgers miss, Scott
Howie had been instrumental in securing the overall victory for Town.
It was hard on Aldershot, whose team had probably been the better overall, and
indeed the clubs fans had been magnificent with non-stop singing throughout the
game, drowning out Shrewsbury fans who were there in twice as many numbers.
6. Comment on getting away from the ground after the game:
Getting away from the game wasn’t too bad, of course staying behind to celebrate
had given the Aldershot and neutral fans the opportunity to get away, so it was
no problem leaving. Once more there was no public transport, but walking was
still the preferable option with the traffic queues around the ground being
horrendous again.
7. Summary of overall thoughts of the day out:
Overall it had been a very good day out, a tense, but good game and the joyous
outcome for my adopted team had meant it was certainly better than having a
typical boring Sunday doing nothing!
Football is of course full of coincidences, and with this being the last game
and ground of the 2003/04 season that I went to, perhaps unsurprisingly Wolves
were drawn away to Stoke for the first day of 2004/05! In all honesty its not a
ground I will look forward to going to as an away fan, even with there being no
sense of trouble from Aldershot fans, the ground itself, and the surrounding
area has an aura of a place that you wouldn’t really want to be and stand out as
not being a Stoke supporter, but as a neutral its definitely worth a trip,
although probably one of the less memorable ones of the 92.
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