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Silkscarf - that was my place too whichever way we were kicking, then up to the bar at the top of the stand to get a bottle of pop off my dad
Quote from: roversdude on January 07, 2024, 09:30:42 amSilkscarf - that was my place too whichever way we were kicking, then up to the bar at the top of the stand to get a bottle of pop off my dadExcellent! I’d sometimes wander up to the Rosso End. Then in front of the cowshed in the second half! It seemed a massive and impressive ground, but it was the only one I’d been in.
I remember the front three of Kitchen , O'Challaghan and Miller well from our 1970's encounters with Rovers , that was some front three back then and a mystery as to why Rovers never got promoted from the old fourth division back then .I wonder how long you'd be able to keep that trio together at Rovers today ? , not long I'd imagine as they seemed to play for Rovers for years back then .I remember going to Boundary Park to see us play Oldham Athletic in the old second division around 1987 , plastic pitch if memory serves me right and big Brendan played centre half , must have dropped back in to defence in the latter stages of his career .He still scored the winner for Oldham that day from a corner !!! .It's just a revolving door today with players isn't it ? .Nobody other than Copps or Bobby Hassell for us ever seems to stick around long enough for fans like ourselves to feel an emotional attachment to them .The players obviously make more money today but whether they will be remembered as fondly as Peter Kitchen by the fans in the future is debatable I guess .
My overriding memory of the great Peter Kitchen is scoring a goal at the Rosso end where he got in the penalty box and dribbled his way past 3 or 4 players before slotting the ball in the goal (i can't remember who he scored it against), fantastic skill.
Quote from: tyke1962 on January 07, 2024, 10:17:13 amI remember the front three of Kitchen , O'Challaghan and Miller well from our 1970's encounters with Rovers , that was some front three back then and a mystery as to why Rovers never got promoted from the old fourth division back then .I wonder how long you'd be able to keep that trio together at Rovers today ? , not long I'd imagine as they seemed to play for Rovers for years back then .I remember going to Boundary Park to see us play Oldham Athletic in the old second division around 1987 , plastic pitch if memory serves me right and big Brendan played centre half , must have dropped back in to defence in the latter stages of his career .He still scored the winner for Oldham that day from a corner !!! .It's just a revolving door today with players isn't it ? .Nobody other than Copps or Bobby Hassell for us ever seems to stick around long enough for fans like ourselves to feel an emotional attachment to them .The players obviously make more money today but whether they will be remembered as fondly as Peter Kitchen by the fans in the future is debatable I guess .I remember fondly my first trip to Oakwell as a spotty 14 year old (ish) looking forward to a great match which didn't disappoint as I think it ended up 1-1. Pretty sure we had Kitch and O'Callaghan up against Mick McCarthy and Nick Pickering. We had Windy Miller on the wing while your scorer was Millar I think. Great crowd, great atmosphere but the only dodgy thing was our horrible away kit of yellow shirts and brown shorts!
Can only echo what others have said. It was mainly Kitch, O'Callaghan, Miller, Laidlaw, Peacock who got me excited as there was always the hope and expectation we would score goals. Trouble is, we conceded plenty too. I recall Kitch being on the transfer list for quite some time (guessing at his own request) but it didn't seem to affect his performance. There was a season, was it 75/76? When we came the closest to getting in to the top 4 only to fade badly after that brilliant 2-1 Friday night win at home v Huddersfield in March, going on to lose badly at Southend, Watford and Bradford? which killed us off. The season we had Woodcock and Ian Bailey on loan. I think we knew then it was highly likely we would lose Kitch and O'Callaghan. Kitch wasn't always the most pleasing on the eye with his scruffy demeanor, hunched shoulders etc and I guess that might have been a factor why the bigger clubs didn't take a punt on him. It was pleasing though that he did get the chance to showcase his great talent and skill at a decent level.
Am I thinking of the right Decka, was on Scunnies books? If it is he was a quality player
Quote from: ravenrover on January 07, 2024, 04:37:27 pmAm I thinking of the right Decka, was on Scunnies books? If it is he was a quality playerNo, RR. He played for that great Middlesborough team that Stan Anderson managed before he managed us. That team had players like Laidlaw, McMordie, Hickton, and O'Rourke. They hammered us 4-0 at Belle Vue in 1966.Dek then moved to Leyton Orient. He finished his career with York, and then Hartlepool. After retiring, he became the manager of the Main Line nightclub.He still lives in Arksey.
Kitch had Mike Elwiss as a strike partner too for 2 or 3 seasons in the early 70’s.There was two years between them (Kitch being the elder) & it’s interesting how their two careers panned out.When Elwiss broke into the side as an 18 year old from the youth team in the 71/72 season he scored 2 goals on his debut at home. I can remember him scoring so early in games that if you weren’t in ‘position’ by the time kick off came you’d miss his first goal!They played together in 73/74 season the highlight of which was the never to be forgotten fixture when we drew Liverpool in the FA Cup at Anfield the then current League Champions. Liverpool took the lead with a goal from Donny born Keegan (was he really turned down by Rovers because he was deemed to be too small or is that an urban myth?), Kitch then restored Rovers lead only for Keegan to score again but Big Bren scored to make it 2-2 & in the dying minutes Rovers hit the woodwork robbing them of a famous victory.Elwiss left Rovers in 1974 for a then record fee for the club of £70,000 to PNE. He’d scored 30 goals for Rovers in 97 appearances (figures gleaned from Tony Bluff & Barry Watsons excellent book ‘Donny. The Official History Of. Elwiss played for Preston for 4 seasons before moving on to Crystal Palace for £200,000 (no sell on clause for us of course!). He played for them for 2 seasons helping them to gain promotion to the First Division in his 2nd season but a persistent knee injury put paid to his footballing career in 1980.Kitch on the other hand stayed at Rovers for another 3 seasons before a £40,000 move to Orient. He’d scored 90 goals for Rovers in 228 appearances. He was top scorer for Orient in his first season with 21 league goals plus 7 in the FA Cup which saw them beat Chelsea & Middlesbrough on the way to the semi final.Our kid met up with Kitch last seasat a game & Kitch was telling him about his career. He said that after the Middlesbrough game (in which he scored) he met up with Bobby Robson who had tried to sign him before he moved to Orient. Kitch said Ipswich offered £35k for him & Robson said he couldn’t offer anymore because the club had just bought Paul Mariner & Mick Mills. Rovers wanted £70k so the deal broke down. Bobby Robson told Kitch he had followed his career since & told him he was the finest footballer he’d never signed.Kitch moved onto Fulham after just 2 seasons at Orient signing for a fee of £150k (again no sell on clause!) but when Fulham changed managers Kitch fell out of favour & was dropped to the reserves where he scored 31 goals but was never called back into the first XI despite Fulham languishing at the foot of the table. Kitch moved onto Cardiff in 1980 for £100k. He scored 21 goals for them in 67 appearances.Two fantastic Rovers strikers who happened to come along in the same era, both Donny born & products of the youth set up at the time which also produced Stan Brookes & Steve Uzelac.I doubt we’ll be ‘blessed’ with two better locally born strikers playing together again.They were both a joy to watch.