West Bromwich Albion Miscellany
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David Clayton
David Clayton is an acclaimed biographer, whose titles include The Richard Beckinsale Story and The Curse of Sherlock Holmes: The Basil Rathbone Story (both published by THP).
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West Bromwich Albion Miscellany - David Clayton
Robson
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to Pete Wild for lending me his precious collection of Albion paraphernalia. To all the website editors and historians who may be unheralded in name, but I’d like to thank you for making all your hard work accessible for my research needs. A special mention to Tony Matthews (and Colin Mackenzie) for the superb 1987 collation of Albion history and stats and also to www.baggies.com for their boundless information. To Michelle Tilling, my editor at The History Press – this book arrived later than a Martin Jol tackle – and special thanks, as always, to my wife Sarah and our three beautiful young children, Harry, Jaime and Chrissie. That’s pretty much it – for facts and figures from elsewhere, thanks as well. You know who you are.
David Clayton, 2009
A STROLL IN THE PARK
West Bromwich Albion Football Club actually began life (as if you didn’t already know) as West Bromwich Strollers. In 1878, a group of men from Salter’s Spring Works in West Bromwich decided to form a football team. With no club shop (there was no club yet!), no JJB Sports-type stores in existence and no Argos, the fledgling team needed the correct equipment, so after chipping in sixpence apiece, several of the prospective team took a stroll (you can see where this is leading) to neighbouring Wednesbury, several miles away, to buy their first football. Along the way, some bright spark suggested they should name their team after their excursion and so the club was christened the West Bromwich Strollers – though they are no relation to the San Francisco side, the Bay City Strollers.
BLOODY HELL
Who could ever forget the grisly clash of heads between Albion’s John Wile and Ipswich Town’s Brian Talbot which occurred during the 1978 FA Cup semi-final at Highbury? Well, Mrs Talbot and Mrs Wile for a start! Wile and Talbot emerged from a (literally) full-blooded challenge with gaping head wounds that would haunt the millions of TV viewers who were unlucky enough to watch it on Match of the Day. The memory of such heroics in the line of duty still remains strong in the minds of the Baggies fans who witnessed it more than 30 years on. Wile was Albion’s Terry Butcher, a fearless warrior of the back four who spent 13 years as a player at The Hawthorns, clocking up 619 appearances in all competitions including exactly 500 in the League.
THE YAM-YAMS (THE WOLVES FANS): A DEFINITION
As per an official definition of a Yam-Yam, AKA supporter of Wolverhampton Wanderers: ‘A person from the Black Country area of the West Midlands of England. Yam-yams use a slight variation of English that is often incomprehensible to non-locals (and even to their neighbours from Birmingham, with whom they share many similarities in vocal accent) due to both the thick accent of the speaker and the frequent exchange of standard words in place of local terminology. One of the most famous features is the ‘yam yam’ sound when saying certain phrases. ‘You are’ is pronounced ‘yo’am’ and ‘are you’ is pronounced ‘am ya’.’ So now you know – Bostin!
BAGGIES FANS RULE THE WORLD – OFFICIAL
In 2002/03, Albion’s fans were voted the best in the Premier League by fellow Premier League supporters. Also in 2002, as part of the BBC’s Test the Nation series, Albion fans were revealed as ‘more likely to be smarter than any other football supporters, registering an average score of 138.’
BAGGIES ORIGINS
It’s unclear when or how Albion acquired the nickname of the Baggies and it was a moniker the club initially used to frown upon. One theory is that it is derived from the heavy money-bags the gate men used to carry around the pitch perimeter in days gone by – or perhaps it was due to a baggy style kit the players once wore, but this seems unlikely as the kit the team played in was used for many years before the Baggies moniker started to do the rounds. Another suggestion is that the name was bestowed on Albion supporters by Aston Villa supporters, making a joke of the large baggy trousers (Madness, anyone?) that many Albion fans wore at work to protect themselves from molten iron in the factories and foundries of the Black Country. Of all the theories, however, it seems the gatekeeper idea may be the most likely of all nickname origins. When Albion moved to The Hawthorns in 1900, the club took the nickname of ‘the Throstles’ – a local name for the thrush, which was a common sight around the abundant hawthorn bushes the ground took its name from. The new ground had just two gates in its early years, one behind each goal, and on match days the gatekeepers would gather up the takings at each end and be escorted by police officers along the sides of the pitch to the centre line where a small office was located under the stand. The admission money, mostly in pennies, was carried in large cloth bags. It wasn’t long before the gatekeepers’ appearance in front of the main stand developed into a chant of ‘here come the Baggies!’ giving the team a new, if unofficial, nickname.
CREATURES FROM THE BLACK LAKE
The unknown, obscure and, as far as we can work out, now extinct tiny Midlands club Black Lake Victoria will forever hold a place in the history and, dare we suggest, hearts of Albion fans around the globe. It was Black Lake Victoria who became West Bromwich Strollers’ first official opponents on 13 December 1879. The game, played at Dartmouth Park, ended 1–0 to West Brom. The pioneers that day for the Baggies were: Biddlestone, Twist, H. Bell, T. Smith, Johnstone, Stanton, Bisseker (captain), Stokes, E.T. Smith, Timmins, Aston, and G. Bell. Around 500 people turned up and reliable sources suggest Harry Aston grabbed the winner. What became of Black Lake Victoria? Well, all we can find is this rather sorry piece of travel info:
‘Black Lake tram stop is a tram stop in Black Lake in the West Midlands, England. It was opened on 31 May 1999 and is situated on Midland Metro Line 1. It is situated nearby the site of Swan Village railway station, which closed with the rest of the line in 1972.’
Next time you’re passing that particular tram stop, give a moment’s thought to the long-forgotten players of Black Lake Victoria – that could have been the Baggies!
CHINESE, JOHN?
Albion became the first British football team to tour China in May 1978 after the Chinese government approached the Football Association with the request of sending a decent team over with the intention of promoting the sport over there. Ron Atkinson’s side played four matches on the tour, during which Baggies star John Trewick commented that he had no intention of going to visit the Great Wall of China because, as he so succinctly pointed out, ‘If you’ve seen one wall, you’ve seen them all.’
Despite Trewick’s reticence, the tour was an enormous success, attracting huge crowds, and was the subject of a TV documentary. A total of 239,900 fans watched the four tour games with more than 80,000 in attendance for two successive matches