Sunday 19 December 2021

Jim's column 18.12.2021

Three weeks ago I answered a question posed by Colin Heys regarding Coventry City's outfield players who have gone in goal owing to injuries and red cards to starting 'keepers. There have been nine occasions since World War 2 with the last being in 2005 when when manager Micky Adams failed to name a goalkeeper amongst his substitutes against Stoke City at Highfield Road and Stephen Hughes had to go between the posts after Ian Bennett was sent off three minutes into the second half. Hughes pulled off several good saves to earn City a point in a 0-0 draw.

I promised to write about the substitute goalkeepers who have been used since they were first allowed in 1992. There are twenty instances since Jonathan Gould was the first at Molineux in a League Cup game in 1995 after Steve Ogrizovic was sent off. Two others have been used after a red card with Chris Kirkland receiving a red at Chelsea in 2001 and Lee Burge getting sent off at home to Worcester City in the FA Cup in 2014. Kirkland, whose red card was later rescinded, made way for the unfortunate Alan Miller who let in six goals in his only ever first team appearance for the club. Burge's red card gave Ryan Allsop, who was the regular 'keeper at the time, a chance for the Sky Blues as he came on for Frank Nouble.

The seventeen goalkeepers who have been substituted through injury or bad form since 1992 are as follows:

Season Opponents Goalkeeper Substitute Score

1996-97 Arsenal (a) Steve Ogrizovic John Filan (84 mins) 0-0

2000-01 Preston (h) LC Magnus Hedman Chris Kirkland (31 mins) 4-1

2001-02 Watford (h) Magnus Hedman Andy Goram (45 mins) 0-2

2003-04 Sunderland (a) Pegguy Arphexad Scott Shearer (45 mins) 0-0

2008-09 Bristol City (h) Keiren Westwood Andy Marshall (20 mins) 0-3

2008-09 Plymouth (a) Keiren Westwood Andy Marshall (50 mins) 0-4

2009-10 West Brom (h) Keiren Westwood Dimi Konstantopoulos (10 mins) 0-0

2009-10 Portsmouth (a) FAC Keiren Westwood Dimi Konstantopoulos (45 mins) 1-1

2010-11 Watford (a) Iain Turner Michael Quirke (18 mins) 2-2

2010-11 Bristol City (h) Keiren Westwood Danny Ireland (45 mins) 1-4

2011-12 Derby (h) Joe Murphy Chris Dunn (45 mins) 2-0

2011-12 Nottm Forest (h) Joe Murphy Chris Dunn (69 mins) 1-0

2012-13 Crewe (h) FLT Joe Murphy Chris Dunn (45 mins) 0-3

2016-17 Southend (a) Lee Burge Reice Charles-Cook (43 mins) 1-3

2016-17 Gillingham (h) Lee Burge Reice Charles-Cook (45 mins) 2-1

2017-18 Yeovil (h) Lee Burge Liam O'Brien (45 mins) 2-6

2020-21 Cardiff (h) Marko Marosi Ben Wilson (95 mins) 1-0

Westwood leads the table for the most substituted with five, Lee Burge and Joe Murphy in second place. It is interesting to note that four of the occasions coincide with some of the worst home defeats in the Ricoh era. The Yeovil defeat in the League Two promotion season was a stunner as was the Crewe result that effectively ended City's Wembley hopes in the FLT semi final first leg in 2013. In the early days of the Ricoh years Bristol City had an excellent record at the Arena and two heavy defeats coincided with injuries to goalkeepers.

Michael Quirke's appearance off the bench was his first team debut and he made only three more starts for the club. Australian Danny Ireland's 45 minutes against Bristol City was his only league game for City but he did make a League Cup appearance two seasons earlier. Chris Dunn made his City debut as a substitute against Derby in 2011 and three of his six games for the club were from the bench. Last season Ben Wilson's appearance off the bench was his league debut for the club although he had played six cup games the previous season.

Iain Turner was making his debut, on loan from Everton, when he was sent off at Watford in 2010. For Pegguy Arphexad, signed by Gary McAllister from Liverpool, his inury meant the end of his brief five-game City career in 2003.

If you have a question about the history or statistics of Coventry City please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton


Sunday 5 December 2021

John Sillett (20 July 1936 – 29 November 2021)

Affectionately known as ‘Snoz’, John Sillett will be universally remembered as the man who masterminded Coventry City's 1987 FA Cup win. Few of his tributes will mention his role as a key player in the club's meteoric rise up the Football League in the 1960s or his magnificent achievement in managing the Sky Blues to three consecutive top half finishes in the top flight of English football.

John was born in Southampton but grew up in the Hampshire village of Nomansland - his parents Charlie and Anne Sillett ran the Lamb pub in the New Forest village. Charlie had a good football career with Southampton, making 183 appearances between 1933-38, mainly as a full-back and latterly as captain of the Saints. Charlie, who was a gunner in the Royal Navy in the war, sadly lost his life in 1945 when the ship he was on was sunk in a U-boat attack.

John and his elder brother Peter inherited their father's football talents and were both on Southampton’s books as teenagers. In 1953 with the Saints strapped for cash Chelsea, managed by Charlie's former teammate Ted Drake, signed the pair of them for £12,000. Peter, three years John's senior and already a regular at the Dell, went on to win three England caps at right-back and played in the Chelsea championship side of 1955 as well as a member of the 1958 England World Cup squad.

John, originally a centre-forward converted into full-back, got his first team chance on New Year's Day 1957 against the Busby Babes at Old Trafford alongside Peter and he was up against David Pegg, one of the country's top wingers who would sadly lose his life a year later in the Munich air disaster. Apparently John was a military policeman at the time and the Daily News match report was complimentary: 'Young Sillett, a military policeman, who borrowed a raincoat so he could travel in civvies, had Manchester United's bright young winger in custody for the 90 minutes'. However United, on their way to a second successive League title, won 3-0 and after two more games John was back in the reserves. A further league game (against post-Munich Manchester United) came the following season and it wasn't until the start of the 1958-59 season that John became a regular for the Blues by which time his pal Jimmy Greaves, who coined the nickname 'Snoz' on account of his over-sized nose, had hit the football scene like a whirlwind. In those days Chelsea could score for fun but also concede more – in 1958-59 they scored 75 goals but let in 98! Wolves, the reigning champions were beaten 6-2 and Newcastle 6-5 but they conceded six at Bolton, five at both Manchester clubs and Blackpool. Manager Drake introduced so many youngsters that the team were dubbed 'Drakes Ducklings' by the press and John played with outstanding talent such as Peter Bonetti, Terry Venables and Bobby Tambling. John had one black mark at Chelsea – he was sent off at Luton for a bad challenge on Luton's Northern Ireland winger Billy Bingham.

                              John with Jimmy Greaves at Chelsea

John was a regular in 1960-61 and won his first representative honour when selected for the Football League that beat the League of Ireland 4-0 in Dublin. The following season however Drake was sacked after a poor start and John lost his place when Tommy Docherty arrived as manager. He was on the transfer list and playing in Chelsea's reserves in April 1962 when several managers including Coventry City's new boss Jimmy Hill enquired about signing him. After 102 games for the Blues John became one of Jimmy's first signings along with Willie Humphries. Nemo in the Coventry Telegraph described him as 'a six-footer, a hard defender with a relentless tackle'. He made his debut in a 2-0 home defeat to Hull City, playing alongside George Curtis, Ronnie Farmer and Dietmar Bruck on a grassless Highfield Road. Nemo liked what he saw that day and wrote: 'Sillett's unhurried defending, plus his calm positional play, stamp him as a full-back of much more than average use next season'.

In 1962-63 the Sky Blue Revolution started and John was the regular right-back, playing 49 league and cup games. Whilst never a spectacular player he was a solid defender and a steadying influence in the Coventry defence as well as a big character in the dressing room. City looked good bets for promotion from Division Three until Christmas when the worst winter of the 20th century took hold and little football was played for over two months. By the time the thaw came City had a massive fixture backlog, exacerbated by the club's best FA Cup run for fifty years. John played in all nine cup ties as City reached the quarter finals beating higher division opponents Portsmouth, after a three-game epic, and Sunderland before losing to Manchester United. It was the Sillett-Curtis partnership that combined for the late winning goal in the sensational finale against Sunderland – John's free-kick finding George's head in a crowded penalty area. Five days later he had to mark Bobby Charlton in the United tie and although Bobby scored two goals John had a fine game. After the cup exit they had 16 league games still to play in six weeks and their promotion challenge petered out mainly through tiredness. In the final game of the season, at QPR, John scored his first Coventry goal – a thumping free-kick from 25 yards.


                   Coventry City team photo 1962-63

Promotion was achieved in 1963-64 and in a virtually unchanged defence John missed only five games and was a key player in the team's success. In Division Two a slipped disc in his back affected him and restricted his appearances but he helped the club consolidate in the higher division with a tenth-placed finish. A concerted promotion push the following season ultimately saw the Sky Blues miss out on the top two places by a single point and John's back problems restricted him to 11 appearances. In a crucial top of the table game at Molineux in January it was John's free-kick that set Ray Pointer up for the winning goal. In total John made 128 appearances for the club and scored two goals.

In the summer of 1966 John was transferred to fellow Second Division club Plymouth Argyle as a replacement for Tony Book and played 41 games over the next two seasons, the second of which saw Argyle relegated. Imagine John's shock in 1967 when his old adversary Billy Bingham arrived as Argyle's new manager. With his playing career over, in 1968 John joined Bristol City where the his former Chelsea pal and former Coventry assistant manager Alan Dicks was in charge. As youth team coach John took Bristol to the semi finals of the FA Youth Cup in 1970 where they lost to Tottenham who went on to play the Sky Blues in the final. He went on to become First Team coach and many of his youth team went on to be part of the club's team that won promotion to Division One in 1976 including Gerry Gow, Tom Ritchie and Geoff Merrick. His son Alan told me that this was one of the most satisfying periods of his career, developing young players and guiding their careers through to the first team.

In 1974 he became manager of Hereford United and stamped his style on the team. Ably supported by veteran player-coach Terry Paine and the prolific scoring of Dixie McNeil the team won promotion from the old Division Three as champions in his second season. In the higher division John stuck by his principles and played attacking football but it was a step too far for the Bulls and they were relegated. John resigned in January 1978 with the club struggling at the foot of Division Three but not until he had unearthed a gem in Kevin Sheedy who signed for Liverpool.

In 1979 Jimmy Hill, now managing director, brought John back to Highfield Road initially as Chief Scout and later as youth team coach but he made his influence felt from day one. Garry Thompson was recovering from a broken leg and recalls: 'John was always encouraging me in the gym as I recovered. Later he was the great motivator in the management team and knew how to get the best out of me. He'd take me for a coffee and give it to me straight but always with a smile. When we beat West Ham in the League Cup semi final he was first on the pitch at the final whistle with a bear hug. He was a giant'.

John left the club in late 1983, soon after Bobby Gould became manager for the first time. Gould's replacement Don Mackay, who had succeeded John as Bristol City youth team coach, invited him back in 1985 to work with the youth team. His team, that included Steve Sedgley, Tony Dobson and David Smith, reached the semi-finals of the Youth Cup. In April 1986 with three games remaining the Sky Blues looked to be heading for relegation following a 5-0 thrashing at Anfield. Mackay was relieved of his duties and chairman John Poynton asked ‘Snoz’ to became chief coach supported by general manager and great friend George Curtis.

The partnership was immediately successful with two of the last three games won and relegation avoided with a final day victory over Queens Park Rangers. The pair brought a breath of fresh air and a smile to the club with their happy-go-lucky attitude and expressive style of football. Sillett got the best out of Dave Bennett and Cyrille Regis and with a side largely inherited from Mackay and Gould, but inspired by the partnership, the Sky Blues roared to the FA Cup final twelve months later.

John with his management team in 1989. (L to R): John Peacock, Terry Paine, Neil Sillett, John, George Dalton, Mick Coop, Mick Kearns

Only two low-key signings were made in the summer of 1986 with Keith Houchen and David Phillips arriving but there were promising signs from day one. The team lost only one of its first eight games playing entertaining attractive football and when they defeated Tottenham 4-3 at Christmas the football world started to take notice. The team were never outside the top half of the table and were a match for anyone at home, losing only three games all season. However it was away from Highfield Road that the Cup success was largely achieved with momentous wins at Old Trafford, Stoke's Victoria Ground and Hillsborough (twice). Undoubtedly influenced by Jimmy Hill, John and George developed a fantastic team spirit in the club with lots of off-pitch bonding with wives heavily involved, a bond that is still strong today.

On an unforgettable day in May 1987 Sillett's team put the smiles back on the faces of not only Coventry City but also football in general in one of the most exciting finals since the war. Older City fans will never forget him dancing around Wembley with the cup like a child who had been given the keys to a sweet shop. Big John was deservedly rewarded with promotion to team manager. Two months after the Wembley triumph he made his first significant purchase signing David Speedie from Chelsea for £780,000. His immortal quote at the time was “Coventry City have shopped at Woolworths for too long, from now on we’re shopping at Harrods”.

For the next three years Sillett achieved miracles. His team was rarely out of the top half of the table and never had a relegation battle, they finished 10th, 7th and 12th and reached the League Cup semi final in 1990. They did however suffer embarrassing FA Cup defeats at Sutton and Northampton but was gracious and sporting in his reactions to the losses. The '87 team slowly broke up but the spine of the team stayed: Oggy, Peake, Kilcline and Regis. He had his critics some of whom argued that he should have broken up the 1987 side sooner and that his transfer dealings were uninspiring. Despite this his cheery style always shone through and he was an excellent ambassador for the club.

In October 1990 he was surprisingly relieved of duties despite being 14th in Division One. Chairman Poynton dealt with his departure in an untidy fashion, negotiating with his successor Terry Butcher whilst John was on his sick bed and unaware of developments. Two months later, according to son Alan, he got a call from Elton John offering him the manager's post at Watford but he politely declined.

Eight months after departing Highfield Road John joined Hereford United for a second time but the club's finances were in a poor state and he failed to sprinkle his magic. After Hereford he worked as a pundit on Central TV and returned to watching the Sky Blues. Many fans will remember him for his rallying call on the arrival of Ron Atkinson in 1995 when the reception he received was almost as great as that given Big Ron. With managers these days going on well into their 60s one has to wonder if John retired from club management too soon.

He continued to live in Balsall Common and was part of Sven Goran Eriksson’s scouting set up working part-time with other former City managers Dave Sexton and Noel Cantwell in the early 2000s. He got to watch a lot of football and monitor the progress of squad players and possibles. He boasted that it was he that recommended Wayne Rooney to Sven! He and his wife Jean continued to be regulars at Coventry home games and in 2011 he was made a life president of the club also attending many Diamond Club and Former Players Association events.

John's other great love was horse racing and he and Jean have owned many horses over the years and he loved meeting up with his favourite trainers Barry Hills and Nicky Henderson where the talk was all football and horses. His horses Charlie Sillett (named after his father) and Major Laugh gave him success on the flat.

John's contribution to the football club and the city will never be forgotten and his name is woven into DNA of the club. The triumvirate of Coventry City's 20th century success, Jimmy Hill, George Curtis and John have all now died and their passing leaves a massive hole in the club's history but his smiling Wembley jig will forever be remembered.



Monday 29 November 2021

Jim's column 27.11.2021

Colin Heys posed an interesting question recently. He remembers the days before substitute goalkeepers were allowed in the English game and has fond memories of outfield players David Speedie and Bobby McDonald donning the 'keeper's jersey after injuries to City custodians. He wondered how many City outfield players have had to step into the goalkeeper's role.


I only have records for the post-war period and since 1945 there have been nine occasions, the most recent being in 2005 when manager Micky Adams failed to name a goalkeeper on the sub's bench against Stoke City at Highfield Road and Stephen Hughes had to go between the posts after Ian Bennett was sent off three minutes into the second half. Hughes pulled off several good saves to earn City a point in a 0-0 draw.


In the 1950s City defender Roy Kirk went in goal three times after injuries to Reg Matthews (twice) and Peter Taylor. At Newport in 1956 Matthews was injured early in the game and Kirk took over and although he saved a penalty City lost 4-2. In 1958 City goalkeeper Jim Sanders broke a leg in the 71st minute with City leading 6-0. Kirk took over and although he let a late goal in City won 7-1.


                              1950s defender and stand-in 'keeper Roy Kirk

Six years later it was the turn of Bill Glazier to suffer a broken leg, at Manchester City's Maine Road. Glazier had been signed for a world record fee for a goalkeeper just six months previously and his form had been so good that he had won three England under 23 caps and was tipped to be in Alf Ramsey's World Cup squad the following year. Bill's broken leg wrecked the chances of being understudy to Gordon Banks. At Maine Road with 41 minutes gone City were 1-0 down and Ronnie Rees pulled on the green jersey. Four minutes later Ken Hale pulled the Sky Blues level and Rees kept the Man City forwards out in a 1-1 draw.


Up to 1965 when substitutes were first allowed all the instances resulted in City playing with 10 men after the removal of the goalies but after that point an injured goalkeeper could be replaced by an outfield player. Maine Road was the venue again in 1975 when City goalie Bryan King was forced to leave the field after 69 minutes with the Sky Blues 3-0 down. Substitute John Craven came on and took the goalie's jersey and although City pulled two goals back Craven let in a 90th minute fourth goal.


The following season City were playing West Ham in a relegation four-pointer at Highfield Road. After 60 minutes, with the score 0-0, Sky Blues keeper Jim Blyth had to leave the field with an injury. Substitute Alan Green came on and left-back Bobby McDonald took over in goal. Fifteen minutes later Mick Ferguson fired City ahead but three minutes from time 'Pop' Robson equalised.


The next occurrence was in 1989 at Millwall when Steve Ogrizovic suffered a shoulder injury in the first minute. Oggy struggled on until the break by which time City, who had gone into the game as First Division leaders, were 3-0 down. Oggy didn't appear after half-time and David Speedie, not the tallest of players, went in goal and kept the home side at bay until the 89th minute when he was beaten by a screamer from Ian Dawes.


The full list of outfield players who have gone into goal is as follows:


Season Opponents Goalkeeper Replacement score

1952-53 Brighton (a) Reg Matthews Roy Kirk 1-1

1952-53 Bristol R (a) Peter Taylor George Lowrie 2-5

1955-56 Newport (a) Reg Matthews Roy Kirk 2-4

1958-59 Aldershot (h) Jim Sanders Roy Kirk 7-1

1964-65 Man City (a) Bill Glazier Ronnie Rees 1-1

1975-76 Man City (a) Bryan King John Craven 2-4

1976-77 West Ham (h) Jim Blyth Bobby McDonald 1-1

1989-90 Millwall (a) Steve Ogrizovic David Speedie 1-4

2004-05 Stoke (h) Ian Bennett Stephen Hughes 0-0


Goalkeeper substitutes were first allowed in 1992 and the need for outfield players to go into goal has virtually diminished since although happened with Stephen Hughes. However in that time there have been nineteen occasions where City have used their substitute 'keeper either through injury or red cards and I'll cover those in more detail next week.


If you have a question about the history or statistics of Coventry City please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton


Sunday 21 November 2021

Jim's column 20.11.2021

 I had the pleasure of meeting former Coventry City striker Julian Joachim before the recent Bristol City game. Julian was at the CBS Arena as the special guest of the Former Players Association and to publicise his biography entitled You Must Be Joachim which has just been published.

The book is a fascinating look at Julian's playing career that spanned over 20 years from Leicester City in the early 1990s to a slew of East Midlands non-league teams in the 2010s. 'Jockey' as he was known throughout his career was a prodigious youngster at Filbert Street and as a 17-year-old represented England at under-18 level at the European Championships. England, who boasted a stellar squad including Robbie Fowler, Paul Scholes, Gary Neville and Sol Campbell, finished third in the championships but Julian was voted player of the tournament and also won goal of the tournament. He also made an immediate impact for the Foxes with a goal that was runner up in the BBC Goal of the Season as well as one at Wembley in the play-off final.





At Leicester he played over 100 games and won two promotions to the Premier League before a big money move to Aston Villa. Along the way Julian had a few issues with some of his managers including Mark McGhee at Leicester and John Gregory at Villa before Gordon Strachan signed him for Coventry in 2001. Injuries hampered his first two seasons at the club and he is less than complimentary about Gary McAllister's management skills but he bounced back from his adversities to shine in his final season, being voted Player of the Season by the London Supporters Club and netting 11 goals.

Julian has had his dark times too and the book deals with the bullying he endured and the issues that footballers have after retiring. Although Julian never hit the heights of his early career at Coventry his story is a fascinating read for all football fans.

Last week I wrote about instances of City coming from behind to win games with ten men and Keith Ballantyne has a different take on the question. He asks: 'Have City ever failed to beat a team with nine men? I seem to remember a game against Forest at Highfield Road'

There are eight instances of City's opponents being reduced to nine men, all since 1991 in the era when red cards became far more common. Six instances came between 2001 and 2008 and the last time was in 2012 when Middlesbrough had two men sent off at the Ricoh as City recorded a rare win that season. Of the eight games, six were victories and two drawn. The game that Keith refers to was an early season night game just after the club were relegated in 2001 and Forest held out for a 0-0 draw after Stern John was sent off just before half-time followed by Matthieu Louis-Jean in the 67th minute.

City, on the other hand have been reduced to nine men with red cards on six occasions. The first time was in the club's inaugural season in the Football League, 1919-20, in a 1-0 win at Hull, with Billy Walker and Jock Blair sent off together with a Hull player. It was 74 years before the next instance of two red cards – Paul Williams and Richard Shaw ordered off in that famous 3-3 home draw with Wimbledon. The most recent incident was at Portsmouth in 2019 when Dabo and Kastaneer were sent off before City recovered to gain another 3-3 draw.

If you have a question about the history or statistics of Coventry City please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton


Sunday 14 November 2021

Jim's column 16.11.2021

What an incredible game against Bristol City last Saturday at the CBS Arena! Many fans were calling it the most exciting game since we were relegated from the Premier League twenty years ago and it's hard to think of many better. For the fourth time this season at the stadium the Sky Blues came from behind to win and the third occasion with a winner in added time. It's a testament to the team's never say die attitude, the level of fitness and the game management of Mark Robins. Bristol City, a team that had won on five of their seven visits to the stadium before Saturday, followed Nottingham Forest, Reading and Fulham in being turned over by a gutsy home performance.

One extra twist on Saturday was the fact that they did it with ten men, following the dismissal of Ian Maatsen on the stroke of half-time for a foul inside the penalty area which resulted in a spot-kick for the visitors. It's only the fourth time in the club's history that a ten-men City team have come from behind to win and the first since 1999 when Charlton Athletic succumbed 2-1 at Highfield Road after City's John Aloisi was shown a red card for lashing out at a far from innocent Danny Mills with the score 1-0 to the visitors. Goals from Noel Whelan and substitute Trond Soltvedt saw the Sky Blues home.

The other two occurrences were in away FA Cup games in the 1990s. In 1995, in a Third Round replay at the Hawthorns, City's Paul Cook was sent off early in the game before Albion took the lead just after half-time through Paul Raven. Minutes later the Baggies were also reduced to ten men when Darren Bradley saw red. Roared on by a large Sky Blue Army, City left it late but won the game through Dion Dublin and a brilliant solo effort from Peter Ndlovu. Perhaps as both teams finished with ten men it doesn't count.

The following season Ron Atkinson's team travelled to Plymouth for a Third Round tie. After eighteen minutes Dave Busst was ordered off for a foul on the edge of the penalty area. From the resulting free-kick Argyle took the lead through Ian Baird. Early in the second half ten-men City came to life and scored three goals in six minutes to clinch a 3-1 victory and a place in Round Four. The scorers were Ally Pickering, his only goal for the club in 75 appearances, John Salako and Paul Telfer.

Several readers have asked me if Coventry City's rise through the leagues has been matched or bettered by anyone in the same period. The low point, position-wise, for City was in February 2018 at Mansfield when a late controversial penalty by Jonson Clarke-Harris grabbed a point. After that game City were ninth in League Two (or 77th in the 92) and six points outside the play-off positions. Now they lie fourth in the Championship (24th in the 92) – an improvement of 53 places in just over three and a half years and the most spectacular rise in the club's history and even better than Jimmy Hill's on-field improvement.

Looking at the league tables back in February 2018 the only other club to jump two divisions in the intervening period are Luton Town, who led League Two on the date (69th in the 92). Luton currently stand 11th (31st in the 92)in the Championship, an improvement of 38 places. The next best club is Blackpool with a rise of 30 places to their current 10th place in the Championship. When one looks at teams currently in League One it is fascinating to see the big clubs that City have leapfrogged over in that time. Ipswich, Sheffield Wednesday and Sunderland were all in the Championship that season whilst Wigan, Portsmouth and Bradford City were all in the top half of League One.

Last week I had the pleasure of attending the 45th anniversary of Coventry City London Supporters Club's formation. Held in London, 70 City fans from the capital and the South East enjoyed a great evening and were joined by a large contingent from the football club including Joy Seppala, Tim Fisher, Mark Robins and Dave Boddy. It was great to catch up with many old friends who came out to celebrate a great milestone in CCLSC's history.

As one of the original eleven members I was asked to pay a tribute to the founder Colin Heys who was in attendance. Colin placed an advert in the Tottenham programme for City's game there in October 1976 and the following month organised the first get together. Colin, who has lived in Kent for all that time, was a leading light in CCLSC for many years but travelled all over the country watching the Sky Blues. He has now watched over 2200 matches and that includes a staggering run of 684 consecutive first team games over 13 ½ years.

If you have a question about the history or statistics of Coventry City please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton


Sunday 31 October 2021

Jim's column 30.10.2021

Richard Owen was in contact recently to tell me that his father Rod is soon celebrating the 70th anniversary of his first Coventry City game and asked me to confirm the details. Rod remembers it as a game just before Christmas at home to Notts County when County's star centre-forward Tommy Lawton scored in a home defeat for the Bantams.

                                     Tommy Lawton


Rod thought it was 1951 but after checking the records I was able to confirm that it was 16th December 1950 making it 71 years since his first game. Two weeks ago I wrote about the eight game winning start to that season and City went into that game having not lost at home with nine wins and one draw and second in the table behind Manchester City.

On a snow covered pitch with blue chalk marking the lines the surface was treacherous but Lawton, more renowned for his heading ability, skated over the icy pitch in the first minute and netted with a low shot. The former England striker made it 2-0 after 15 minutes following another City defensive mistake on the slippery ground. Bryn Allen pulled a goal back in the second half and though City piled pressure on the Notts defence they held out for a 2-1 win to end City's unbeaten home record. In those days the last two Saturday's before Christmas were notorious for lower than average attendances and the club must have been pleased with the gate of 25,102.

Tommy Lawton was a prolific scorer before and after World War Two. Signed by Everton as a 17-year-old in 1937 he scored 34 goals as Everton won the league title in 1938-39 and after the war he played for Chelsea, Notts County, Brentford and Arsenal, making his last appearance in 1955 two weeks before his 36th birthday. He scored 22 goals in 23 full internationals in an England shirt and 24 goals in 23 games in war-time internationals. A true giant of the game.

Richard says that his dad tells him that he used to sneak in as a lad when the turnstile operators turned a blind eye occasionally! Richard continues: 'He was a policeman in Coventry, Warwickshire and Birmingham from the 1960s into the 1990s so policed occasional Coventry games as well as Birmingham City. It was actually through Blues that he got us Cup Final tickets in 1987. He started taking me and my sister in the late 1970s and we went together right into the mid-1990s when I went to the USA. But he kept going with friends of mine and I rejoined him on my return in 2008. When we got relegated to the fourth tier he almost retired having got back to where he started, but Mark Robins has given him a new lease of life and is going now with my 6-year-old lad and the thought of making the trip back to the top for the second time is keeping him going!'

Even though it is 71 years and not 70 Richard is hoping to do something special for the Stoke home game just before Christmas.

Jon Burton had some interesting questions for me recently. He wanted to know which City players had scored 40 or more goals in a season as well as the youngest and oldest players to score hat-tricks for the club.

Clarrie Bourton is the only City player to score 40 or more league goals – he scored 49 in 1931-32 season and 41 the following season. He was a veritable goal machine and went on to net 189 goals in league and cup for Coventry.

The youngest hat-trick scorer is Adam Armstrong, on loan from Newcastle, who was a month short of his 19th birthday when he scored three goals in the 5-0 win at Crewe on New Years Day 2016.

The oldest is probably George Lowrie who was 33 years and three months in February 1953 when he scored three goals in a 4-1 victory over Millwall in a Third Division South match. Lowrie was in his second spell with the club having joined in the summer of 1939 as a 19-year-old and having to wait seven years for his full debut! He was a prolific scorer for the City immediately after the war, scoring 47 goals in 56 games, including five hat-tricks in 1946-47, and earning a big money move to Newcastle United. The move to the North East didn't work out and following a spell at Bristol City he rejoined Coventry in 1952.



One of these days, perhaps not in my lifetime, the Sky Blues will win at Preston! Not for the first time City took the lead there with a stunning shot from Tyler Walker only to be pegged back and beaten by a lively home display in the second half. The Deepdale hoodoo continues and City have now failed to win in all 20 league visits there.

If you have a question about the history or statistics of Coventry City please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton


Sunday 24 October 2021

Brian Nicholas (20.4.1933-14.10.2021)

It's sad to report the death of former Coventry City player Brian Nicholas at the age 88. An old-fashioned wing-half, Brian made 121 appearances for the club following spells at Chelsea and Queens Park Rangers. He was a key member of Coventry's 1959 Fourth Division promotion side but was one of several players who did not survive the arrival of Jimmy Hill in 1961.

Born in the mining village of Cwmaman near Aberdare in South Wales his parents moved to Slough when he was four years-old. At school he was a natural athlete – he won the 440 yards hurdles at the All-England Schools Championships and had a cricket trial with Middlesex but football was his first love. Despite being Welsh-born, in 1948, at the age of 14, he won four England Schoolboys caps, one of them against his country of birth in a game played at Highfield Road. Playing alongside future full internationals Norman Deeley and Albert Quixall, he helped England to a 2-1 victory in front of a 25,000 crowd. Another youngster in the team was Mark Jones who later signed for Manchester United. Brian and Mark were great pals and roomed together. Mark was tragically killed in the Munich Air Disaster in 1958, an event that deeply saddened Brian.

                         Brian at QPR in 1949

Within a year Brian, who had a shocking head of red hair back then, had left school, signed as an apprentice for QPR and on 7 May 1949, at the age of 16 years and 17 days he made his debut for the Second Division side at home to Leeds United. Leeds had their own prodigious 16-year-old that day, John Charles, who went on to become a Welsh legend.

Brian turned professional on his 17th birthday but didn't appear in QPR's first team until 1950 mainly due to National Service commitments. After making five appearances in 1950-51 and six the following season, he became a regular first-teamer in 1952-53 by which time the R's were in Division Three South. Brian had other talents on the pitch - in 1954 against Bristol City he went in goal for fifteen minutes when the QPR 'keeper was knocked out. A week later with both QPR 'keepers on the injured list he played in goal from the start against Torquay. He let in two goals in the first half but kept the Torquay forwards at bay in the second half as QPR came back to win 4-2. In all he played 120 games for Rangers, scoring two goals and in 1955 was selected to play for the London XI v Swiss club Basle in the inaugural Inter Cities Fairs Cup. There was talk that season of him being selected for the full Wales side and in the summer of 1955 Brian moved across West London to recently crowned First Division champions Chelsea then managed by the legendary Ted Drake.

At Stamford Bridge competition for places was stiff and Brian had two excellent wing halves ahead of him in England international Ken Armstrong and Derek Saunders. He played 10 games in the first season including four games in seven days in February as Burnley took the Pensioners to four replays in their FA Cup tie. He was remembered at Chelsea for his lack of hair – he lost most of his hair by the time he was twenty! Over three seasons he played 29 games for the Blues and appeared against numerous Coventry past and future players including goalkeeper Reg Matthews, John Sillett, Alan Dicks and Bobby Laverick as well as a 17-year-old goalscoring sensation Jimmy Greaves.

In January 1958, languishing in Chelsea's reserves, Coventry's recently appointed manager Billy Frith swooped to sign Brian for a 'substantial' fee. City were in the bottom half of the old Third Division South and looking odds-on to be 'relegated' to the new Fourth Division in the divisional reorganisation at the end of the season. Two days later Brian made his debut at right half at Torquay in a 1-0 defeat and so poor was City's form that none of Brian's first nine games were won. His home debut came a week later against Brentford and after a 0-0 draw Nemo in the Coventry Telegraph reported: 'Nicholas, making his home debut promised well. He was fearless in defence and always fought for the ball.'

The team's away form was dire with 21 goals conceded in five games including a 7-1 loss at Southampton and any hope of avoiding relegation disappeared. Despite a brief flurry of wins at the end City finished 19th.

The following season was a different matter and the team were always in contention for promotion with Brian an influential player in the middle of the park. From the end of September the team were never out of the top four and the shrewd signings of Paddy Ryan, Ronnie Farmer and Arthur Lightening ensured that manager Frith led them to promotion at the first attempt.


             The 1959 promotion squad with Brian third from left on front row

The team hit the top of the table in early December and Brian was given the accolade of 'Player of the Year' by Nemo in the Coventry Telegraph. On Boxing Day at home to Torquay however tragedy struck when Brian sustained a serious ligament injury which kept him out of action for three months and meant he missed the promotion run in.


Back in Division Three the following season the Bantams almost made it successive promotions but missed out after two bad defeats at Easter, finishing fifth. Brian was an ever present until a loss of form at the end of March after which City's promotion challenge faltered. In 1960-61 he started the season as captain but inconsistent form cost him his place and played only 10 games all season and went on the transfer list at one stage. City's upward momentum however stalled and they finished 15th but Brian was back to full fitness in 1961-62 in what was to be a momentous watershed season in the club's history.


Brian started that season as the first-choice right half but results were very patchy and things came to head in November with home defeats to Crystal Palace and Kings Lynn, in the FA Cup. Frith was sacked and in came Jimmy Hill and the revolution started. Brian initially retained his place in the new regime but by March 1962 with Farmer fit again after injury Hill preferred him to Brian. It was no surprise at the end of the season when he was given a free transfer. In total he made 121 appearances for the club but never scored a goal.


Settled with his family in Coventry, Brian decided not to take up offers in league football but signed for Southern league club Rugby Town. He had a brief spell as player-manager with Hinckley Athletic but after suffering knee problems he left the game in October 1963, aged 30, and went to work at Massey-Ferguson, Coventry where he worked until retirement. There he teamed up with many old playing colleagues including Reg Matthews, Alf Wood and eventually Ronnie Farmer. After retiring from Massey he worked as a driver for Europa Cars well into his 80s.


In the modern game Brian would be classed as a defensive midfield player, steady, skilled and a strong tackler but capable of defence splitting passes. He was an effective defender in an era when pitches were not the best and opposing forwards were rugged and uncompromising. He was a popular member of the Former Players Association (CCFPA) and attended virtually every Legends Day before Covid. He was great pals with Lol Harvey, who passed away last year and they and their wives were also regulars at Diamond Club lunches.

                                Brian at Legends Day 2015

Brian died peacefully, surrounded by his family. He had been married to his wife Margaret for 65 years and he and Margaret had two children, Kevin and Kim, six grandchildren and one great-granddaughter. Brian loved football and was a regular at Sky Blues home games over many years, enjoying friendly banter with friends such as Lol Harvey and Ronnie Farmer and often accompanied by several generations of his family. Brian was a true gentleman and a genuinely nice man who will be missed by all that knew him.


Sunday 17 October 2021

Jim's column 16.10.2021

Coventry City's impressive six wins home start to the season prompted regular reader Rod Ison to contact me to check when City's record home start of eight consecutive starts was set. He thinks it might have been 1950-51 - that was the season that, as an 11-year-old, he became a City supporter. He wrote: 'From memory, the season kicked off with a 2-0 away victory at Notts County. I recall a home win over Bury and a ‘never to be forgotten’ 6-1 victory against Blackburn Rovers at Highfield Road.'

                                 Coventry City 1950-51

He asked if I could list the home record in that run with the goalscorers. Rod continues: 'My Dad, whilst drinking in the Elastic Inn persuaded Ken Chisholm and Les (Plum) Warner to visit our house, and I was somewhat tongue-tied in their presence!


The run of wins in 1950 was as follows:

August 21 Leeds United 1-0 (Roberts) (30,213)

August 26 Preston 1-0 (Roberts) (24,676)

September 9 QPR 3-0 (Chisholm 2, Lockhart) (22,298)

September 11 Birmingham 3-1 (Roberts 2, Chisholm) (30,448)

September 23 Leicester 2-1 (Chisholm 2) (33,324)

October 14 Blackburn 6-1 (Allen 2, Roberts, Chisholm, Lockhart 2) (34,918)

October 28 Doncaster 3-1 (Roberts, Chisholm, Own goal) (32,757)

November 11 Swansea 3-1 (Roberts, Chisholm 2) (29,672)


The run of victories was finally ended on November 25th when Barnsley held the rampant Bantams to a 3-3 draw. Highfield Road was certainly a fortress in those days – the previous season had ended with four home wins and a draw and only three home games were lost in the calendar year of 1950.


Rod's hero, Ken Chisholm, was in deadly form and went on to score 24 goals that season before joining Cardiff City and later Sunderland.


There is a glut of books written by former Coventry City players this year and in the run up to Christmas they include biographies of Mark Hateley, Bryan King, Julian Joachim and Garry Thompson. One book with a different tale to tell however is from City fan James Adams. His book 'Attached to Coventry City, 1958-2020' tells the story of James' support of the club from the days of Billy Frith, as a teenager, to the present day. His support during the Jimmy Hill era was, like many teenage Coventrians, obsessional but immediately after promotion to the First Division in 1967 he turned his back on the Sky Blues. He went off to university and discovered a different faith, a religious one, as well as girls, and for the next twenty years or so he barely followed the club.


His passion was rekindled in a conversion-like experience and he has been re-attached to the club for the last 35 years. In a fascinating story James describes his rollercoaster journey and points to Attachment Theory and the feelings and bond that us fans develop for our club. This is a unique and interesting book and highly recommended for any Coventry City fan. It is out now and published by Pitch Publishing.


Next week the Sky Blues travel to Preston North End's Deepdale still seeking a first league win at the old ground. In 19 league visits since 1949 the Sky Blues have failed to win having drawn seven and lost 12 games. Neither of City's great managers, Harry Storer and Jimmy Hill, won there nor did a host of other 'gaffers'. Micky Adams failed to win in three visits, Chris Coleman lost two games and Mark Robins has drawn one and lost one. There was a League Cup win under Gordon Strachan in 2000 and way back in 1910 City, then a non-league side, pulled off a giant-killing act by knocking First Division Preston out of the FA Cup but it seems that the Lilywhites have been punishing us for that Cup shock ever since.


If you have a question about the history or statistics of Coventry City please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton

Sunday 10 October 2021

Jim's column 9.10.2021

The Sky Blues bounced back from the 0-5 loss at Luton to stun one of the promotion favourites Fulham on Saturday lunchtime with another thrilling home display. Trailing to a first half goal Mark Robins' team destroyed the Cottagers in 20 devastating minutes to win 4-1 and record a sixth straight home league win (seven if you count the last home game at St Andrews. Six home wins from the start of the season is the best since 1950-51 when City set the club record by winning their first eight games at Highfield Road and were unbeaten at home until mid-December. That season City led the old Second Division on New Years Day but their promotion challenge fizzled out in the spring and they finished seventh losing only three home games all season. A half decent away record would have seen City promoted to Division 1 16 years earlier than they were!


Seven consecutive home league wins (counting the final game at St Andrews) is the best run since 1955 when under new manager Jesse Carver the Bantams had excellent home form in Division Three South. The team won six and drew two of the first eight before a run of seven home league wins before suffering a defeat to Northampton in mid-January by which time Carver had decamped to Italy. The club record run of consecutive home league wins is 11 set in 1952-53, again in Division Three South.


                       Coventry City 1955-56

Viktor Gyokeres can't stop scoring right now and has now netted 9 goals in 11 league games, the best start to a campaign by a City striker since Callum Wilson blew the doors off Sixfields in 2013-14 with ten goals in the first 11 games. George Hudson also scored 10 in the first 11 in 1963-64. Vik has some way to catch the inimitable Clarrie Bourton who in 1931-32 scored 14 goals in the first 11 games and became the fastest ever to 20 goals, reaching that figure in just 14 games.


Gyokeres' two goals against Fulham meant he was the first Coventry player to score braces in successive home games since Adam Armstrong in his amazing scoring season in 2015-16. On Halloween 2015 Armstrong scored twice in a 3-2 victory over Peterborough then four days later repeated the feat in a 4-3 win over Barnsley.


It was Fulham's first league visit to Coventry since the 1967-68 season, City's first season in the top flight, when the Londoners shocked the Sky Blues by winning 3-0 with two goals from a young Allan Clarke and one from Joe Gilroy. In the return the following April City grabbed a valuable point in their relegation battle with Brian Hill's only ever goal in the top flight and left Fulham six points adrift at the bottom and virtually doomed for relegation. In the intervening 53 years the teams have somehow avoided each other – both sides have been down to Division Four – until now.


To answer Paul Brucculeri's question, we have met Fulham in a Cup tie since 1967, a two-legged League Cup tie in 1982. The teams drew 2-2 at Craven Cottage with two early goals from Jim Melrose cancelled out before half-time by Tony Gale and former Lockheed Leamington star Roger Brown. The second leg at Highfield Road was a dire game and after no goals in 90 minutes it went to extra-time and finally ended goalless with City going through on the away goals rule. Looking at the line-ups that night it's interesting to note that Fulham had two youngsters, Paul Parker and Ray Houghton, who went on to have stellar careers elsewhere.


If you have a question about the history or statistics of Coventry City please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton



Sunday 3 October 2021

Jim's column 2.10.2021

Coventry City fans have endured the definitive roller coaster of emotions in the last week. On Friday night their team put on a sparkling display against Peterborough at the CBS Arena to secure their fifth home win of the season and retain their 100% home record since the return to Coventry with a 3-0 victory. Five days later they travelled to Luton and were on the wrong side of a 5-0 thrashing with the same eleven players who had performed so superbly on Friday looking a shadow of their former selves.


On Friday they briefly went top of the Championship, for the first time since 2001, until West Brom's late winner over QPR inched the Baggies one point ahead of the Sky Blues. On Wednesday the team went down to the biggest league defeat since 2006 when Micky Adams' team lost 5-0 at West Brom. The Baggies led 3-0 at the break with goals from Diomansy Kamara (2) and Jason Koumas before Kevin Phillips and Paul Robinson made it 5-0. Adams' side went into the game in 10th place, unbeaten in five games but the defeat put the skids under the team, they failed to win in eight games including an FA Cup exit to lower status Bristol City and Micky was given the sack. Since that dreadful day at the Hawthorns City have suffered three five-goal Cup defeats:


2007-08 West Brom (home) FA Cup (0-5)

2012-13 Arsenal (away) League Cup (1-6)

2016-17 Norwich (away) League Cup (1-6)


The first half at Kenilworth Road was particularly horrific with City shipping four goals. This last occurred at Plymouth in 2008-09 when the home side led 4-0 by the 37th minute before Chris Coleman's side shored up the defence and kept a clean sheet in the second half. City did ship four first half goals against Crystal Palace in a 2-4 home defeat during the dreadful run under Micky Adams mentioned above but one has to go back to 1991-92 for the previous instance of a 4-0 half-time scoreline when Man United scored all their goals in a 4-0 win before the break. Since 2000 City have had a 4-0 half-time lead themselves on seven occasions, the last time at Cheltenham in the 6-1 victory in League Two in 2018.


To finish on a brighter note I have to mention the crowd at the Peterborough game. The noise was something to behold and was a big influence on the result. The attendance was 20,652 and included 1,638 visiting fans, making the home following 19,014. I've checked the records and that total of City fans has only been exceeded twice in night league games since the move to the Ricoh in 2005.

The highest by far is the Gillingham game in 2014 when a crowd of 27,306 (26,811 home fans) was present with the second highest for the Birmingham game in 2006 (27,212 – 21,841 home fans). Lets hope Wednesday's hammering at Luton doesn't put the crowds off from coming today to see the Fulham game. Those fans who stay away are missing some very special football at the moment and the Luton game was a blip in an otherwise good start to the season.


If you have a question about Coventry City's history please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton



Sunday 26 September 2021

Jim's column 25.9.2021

 Tributes have been flowing in for Jimmy Greaves who passed away last weekend. Along with Bobby Charlton, Jimmy was every schoolboy's hero when I was growing up – an era when you could have heroes that didn't play for your team. Jimmy was the greatest English goalscorer and his record supports that view. 44 goals in 57 internationals, 413 domestic goals in a 14-year career only punctuated by a short unhappy spell with AC Milan between his time at Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur.


The chirpy Cockney burst on to the English football scene as a 17-year-old in 1957 scoring on his Chelsea debut against Spurs at White Hart Lane and netting 22 goals in his first season. The Coventry connections at Chelsea were there from day one; Reg Matthews was an ever present between the sticks and future City players Brian Nicholas, Alan Dicks and John Sillett were also at the Bridge. Jimmy's long friendship with Sillett started back then and endured all those years. The team picture of Chelsea, taken in 1957, has Greaves second right on the front row, Nicholas second left on the fron row, Dicks far left top row and Matthews third left with Peter Sillett, brother of John, between Dicks and Matthews.


In his famous ITV role with Ian St. John (another City link) in Saint and Greavsie, Jimmy found a new career in which again he excelled. The Saturday lunch-time show with the humorous Greaves and the straight-man St. John was light relief from the more serious Football Focus. In 1987 Jimmy predicted City's demise in the FA Cup from the fourth round onwards and it became a prediction he couldn't alter even at Wembley in the final. As the Coventry fans chanted 'are you watching Jimmy Greaves' Jimmy was as pleased as punch that his old mate 'Sill' had lifted the trophy.


Several readers have asked me if Jimmy ever played at Highfield Road. City didn't reach the First Division until 1967 so their supporters didn't have the chance to see him 'in the flesh' until the latter days of his career. His first meeting with the Sky Blues, in October 1967, coincided with the managerial handover from Jimmy Hill to Noel Cantwell. Greaves, of course, ruined the party. City, two down in 10 minutes through Greaves and Cliff Jones, pulled level with a Ronnie Rees brace, then Jimmy settled the match with what Derek Henderson, writing in the Coventry Telegraph, described as 'a world-class goal from a world-class player'.


He went on to describe the goal: 'Greaves looked harmless enough when he moved on to the ball just outside the box. But seeing Bill Glazier advance slightly, he looped a dipping shot which floated into the top left hand corner. Let no one say it was lucky – it had the hallmark of genius about it'.


In the return at White Hart Lane the following April City were desperate for points but Jimmy again terrorised the Sky Blues, scoring two goals in a 4-2 home win, and once again Henderson waxed lyrically: 'More than anything else, the reason why Coventry City were outwitted.....was a living legend by the name of Jimmy Greaves. Defences from Moscow to Montevideo have never fathomed how to put the clamps on this remarkable goal-snatcher. And for the second time this season, the Sky Blues had cause to reflect on his uncanny ability of being in the right spot at the right time, and of his knack of making his shots tell.'


The following season Jimmy scored 36 goals for Tottenham but failed to net against City, mainly due to the superb marking of Brian Hill who never gave him an inch. Spurs did, however, do the double over the Sky Blues again. Finally in December 1969 City managed to defeat Spurs 3-2 at Highfield Road and again Greaves, whose scoring record was declining, was not on target. Four months later Jimmy was off to West Ham as a make weight in the biggest transfer in British football at the time – Martin Peters valued at £200,000 joining Tottenham.


Jimmy had his ups and downs at West Ham, where he teamed up with his close friend Bobby Moore, and in January 1971 they and two other West Ham players were caught drinking in a Blackpool nightclub on the eve of an FA Cup tie (which the team lost). The players were fined and suspended for a month. The end of the suspension coincided with a game at Highfield Road and Greaves atoned for his misdemeanours by snatching the only goal. That was the last time Jimmy played against the Sky Blues.

If you have a question about Coventry City's history please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton


Monday 20 September 2021

Jim's column 18.9.2021

Wednesday night's 1-0 victory over Cardiff City made it four home league wins in a row – the first time City have started a season in that form in Coventry since 1973. I say 'in Coventry' because two seasons ago at St Andrews the team won its first five home league games.

Back in 1973 Gordon Milne's team started with a similar bang to this campaign. An opening day 1-0 home victory was followed by a similar victory over Liverpool at Highfield Road. Then came two away games, a 2-2 draw at Burnley and a single goal defeat at Manchester City by a controversial penalty. Two more home wins followed, over Southampton (2-0) and Manchester City (2-1), to make it four out of four at home. A 1-0 loss at Chelsea preceded a fifth home win over Derby (1-0) thanks to a Colin Stein goal. The winning sequence came to an end with a 2-2 home draw with Newcastle but the team's excellent run continued with a win at Leicester (2-0) that lifted them to second place in Division One behind the unbeaten Leeds United. A week later the first home defeat was suffered at the hands of Everton when two goals in the last 10 minutes saw the Toffees grab a 2-1 victory. Unfortunately it was downhill from there and the team failed to win any of its next seven league games and slipped into the bottom half of the table.

Coventry City fans are flocking back to the CBS Arena this season following the return from St Andrews and the attendances this season have been excellent with the aggregate gates of the first four games the best since 2008-09. Wednesday night's gate for the Cardiff game was 16,372, with 1,440 away fans. Midweek night games traditionally attract lower gates and I had to check when there last was such a high attendance. Excluding the Gillingham (return from Northampton) crowd of 27,306 and Bank holiday games the last time there was a higher midweek league crowd at the Arena was for the visit of Newcastle in December 2009. That night a crowd of 21,688 was present but that included 4,000 Geordies. Before that it was 18,566 for the visit of West Brom in 2007. To give some perspective on the progress of the club – the first evening game of 2017-18 attracted 6,151 for the visit of Carlisle. The combination of the return to Coventry and the highly attractive winning football is bringing the fans back and let's hope this continues. The visit of Peterborough on Friday night is the opportunity for more of those missing fans to turn up.

It was sad to hear of the death of Manchester-based Sky Blues fan Tommy Kehoe last month. When I lived in the North West in the late 70s and early 80s Tommy and I used to travel regularly together to Highfield Road and to watch City play in the North. He was great company and had a season ticket in front of the opposing manager's dugout at Highfield Road. Always one for a bit of banter, one day he gave Brian Clough a verbal roasting that didn't go down well with the Forest supremo.


                     Tommy Kehoe with son TJ

His son TJ has picked up the Sky Blue mantel and get to games as often as he can and together with Tommy's widow, Margaret and his sister Donna, will be at the CBS Arena next Friday when the club will honour Tommy with a message on the scoreboard and a short tribute in the programme.


If you have a question about Coventry City's history please drop me an email at clarriebourton@gmail.com and follow me on Twitter @clarriebourton