NEWENT TOWN F.C. AND THE CARING CHAIRMAN

Chairman Dennis Stringer tending to a very wet pitch ahead of Littleton fixture

NEWENT Town F.C. are a team in safe hands with the chairman who is looking after things from the ground up.

Dennis Stringer, 68 from Gorsley, near Newent Gloucestershire spent an hour and a half draining and levelling the pitch before their match on Sunday, where they came away with a 3-2 victory over Littleton after a late winner.

Stringer said:

“I wanted to make it presentable, so I got a Harris fence rail and tied some rope to it and dragged it up and down the pitch.”

He also used a fork to help drain any excess water from the pitch before kick-off.

The pitch has had verti-draining carried out a couple of times a year, but this cannot be maintained often by many clubs because it can cost up to £300 with the use of a tractor and machinery.

But that is just the start of the maintenance and care that has gone into the club in the six-year period. Stringer has been chairman since taking up the role in 2016.

The former Royal Marine physical training instructor runs a building company called Country Construction with his two sons, Ben who is also current first team manager, and Darren who also represents Newent Town F.C.

They recently built an extension on the club, including a bar area, changing rooms and toilets.

Clubhouse extension built by Dennis Stringer and his sons, Ben and Darren
Clubhouse bar

They also built a picture-perfect brand-new stand, with a firm who has connections with the club providing necessary steel.

Newent Town’s Spotless new stand

The work posed financial challenges as the FA originally gave the club a grant of £70,000, which only covered the cost of floodlights.

The final total came to around £100,000, with a smaller grant eventually helping cover cost that had been put into the building work by Dennis and Country Construction.

This included costs of the extension on the club building and the paths which was all completed by Dennis and his sons.

 Stringer had been to school at Newent and joined the Royal Marines in the mid 70’s, where he became a physical training instructor.

 He was in the Royal Marines for nine years and would play for the club when he had leave periods from his duties.

After leaving the Marines in 1984, Dennis took the Newent team for fitness training when they were a county league side.

 He then joined Newent Town F.C. youth with his sons, taking them through the youth system for a 10-year period.

It was in the year 2000 he joined the senior setup, running the line, mowing, and marking the pitch and carrying out other duties for approximately 20 years.

During this period, he also managed the side for a few years until six years ago he became chairman and still looks after the club to this day.

Link to the club’s Twitter page: https://twitter.com/newenttownafc

Llantwit Major F.C Football Manager 22 Challenge Shirt Giveaway – The Extraordinary Welsh 2nd Division Club

LLANTWIT Major F.C are giving away a free football shirt to anyone who can qualify for the Champions League, whilst using the team in the popular video game Football Manager 22.

The game replicates real life football tournaments, and to qualify for the Champions League, a Welsh team would have to win the Cymru Premier division.

This would ensure qualification to the early play-off rounds before the Champions League group-stage.

 In order to complete the challenge, a player must get past the play-off rounds and into the group-stage.

The challenge has already been completed by one Twitter user called Laurence, with the club announcing they will award anyone else who completes the challenge with a shirt before 14th January.  


Another Twitter user was also given a shirt after Tweeting proof of winning the Champions League with Llantwit Major FC in last year’s edition of the game.

“Someone who has thousands of followers and is a well-known content creator started following us and made a tweet a few weeks later talking about our social media.” Said board member Ben Dudley.

“As a small club, we have to do things differently to get noticed”

However, this doesn’t tell the full story of Llantwit Major F.C.

The team based in South Glamorgan currently play in the JD Cymru South, the 2nd division of Welsh football, where they currently sit in 2nd place.

They are only two points behind the leaders, Jonathan Jones’ Pontypridd Town.

Under manager Karl Lewis, who is still in charge after five years at the club, they rose from the amateur ranks, to win the Division three title in 16/17, and then the Welsh Football League Division Two title in the 17/18 season.

They had gone from lower leagues to winning the third tier of Welsh football and back-to-back promotions with a strong core of local players.

“We’ve worked to a policy of getting players who are already familiar with each other.”

“A lot of the squad have been friends their whole lives and are all from the local area.

“You can see in the clubhouse and on the field, people don’t just want to win for themselves, they want to win for their mates.”

After the success, some players have moved on to represent Welsh Premier sides.

Striker Adam Roscrow moved to Wimbledon AFC in the English League One and club legend, Sam Snaith, also came close to a big move to Newport County before the Covid 19 pandemic struck.

Other players have stayed, with goalkeeper Jack Lansdowne currently playing his 14th season at the club.

The team known as “the Windmill Army” currently play at the Prince Moomin’s Palace, after a girlfriend of one of the players won a raffle costing £20 to rename the stadium.

They were anticipating a club record attendance against Undy Athletic on 27th December, with hundreds of school pupils were invited until the game was postponed due to Covid restrictions.

Euro 2020 Final: How do England Win?

England have incredibly reached their first major tournament final since 1966 and are one step away from breaking a massive barrier for English football.

Before the tournament opinions on England’s chances were split, and even after their first two group games there were massive questions about the creativity of the side and team selection.

Fast forward three weeks and social media is flooded with “It’s coming home”, men with bleach blonde hair and Atomic Kitten are confessing their love for Gareth Southgate.

Meanwhile, Italy have extended an incredible unbeaten run to 33 matches which is the longest unbeaten run in their history.

Roberto Mancini’s men are more dynamic than Italy teams of the past, but still have a rock solid defence and can still play a trademark long pass to open defences.

Home advantage could prove vital

So how do England win their first major tournament in 55 years?

Raheem Sterling

Raheem Sterling has 3 goals and 1 assist so far in the tournament.

There is no other place to start. Raheem Sterling has arguably been the player of the tournament and England need him in this fixture.

He has been the creative spark in the majority of England’s play.

He has been central to everything England have done and it would be hard to think where England would be without him.

Three weeks ago, he wouldn’t have been the first player on the team sheet for many England fans before the tournament.

Sterling finished the season with 10 league goals, which isn’t bad but he won the league with Man City and wasn’t as prolific as in previous seasons.

Phil Foden also played less minutes than him in the same side and scored 9 goals.

Jack Grealish had also caught the eye at Aston Villa, often controlling games by himself and taking on the creative workload for the whole side.

There were big calls from fans online, calling for Sterling to be dropped and to start Grealish.

Gareth Southgate kept faith in Sterling who has caused problems for opponents by cutting in with darting runs and creating chances, or scoring tap-ins with good attacking movement.

Against Denmark it is his attacking movement that caused Simon Kjaer to slide the ball into his own net and deep into extra time showed he still had the legs to keep playing.

He is bound to play a key roll against Italy, with pace to burn against a strong but ageing back line.

The Italian Centre-backs

Italy’s Veteran Centre-back Giorgio Chiellini

Italy are famously known for having a rock solid defence and have been throughout history.

Conceding to Austria in the round of 16 saw the end of a clean sheet streak lasting 1,168 minutes of football, which was a new world record for an international team.

They have conceded a goal in both games since then, against Belgium and Spain.

Leonardo Bonucci and Giorgio Chiellini have been such an effective partnership over the years for both Juventus and Italy but there is a weakness.

With age the pair are only getting slower and despite their brilliance, this can be exploited.

Morata’s goal for Spain highlighted this against Italy, when he ran at the defence.

The full-backs aren’t the fastest either, with the exception of Emerson who often doesn’t start.

Chances to exploit this will be few and far between because Italy’s defence often plays in a low block, but with an abundance of pacey wingers and especially Sterling’s runs inside it is possible for England to take advantage.

Team Spirit

It is very difficult to be able to quantify this, but it is clear to see the squad has gelled much better than in previous tournaments under Gareth Southgate.

There are players from a mixture of clubs who have bonded well, despite competing fiercely against each other in the league.

Previous generations of England players, like Gerrard, Lampard, and Ferdinand have been outspoken about the lack of chemistry they had for England.

In contrast, the current back line often consists of Kyle Walker and John Stones of Manchester City, with Harry Maguire and Luke Shaw of Manchester United.

Despite playing for rival clubs they couldn’t be better as a unit.

They have conceded one goal for the whole tournament and that was a direct freekick, setting a new record for most consecutive games in a Euros tournament without conceding a goal (5).

The team chemistry has been captured in vlogs like this one on England’s Youtube channel:

Adaptability

Throughout the tournament the team has shown the flexibility to be able to play a back four or a back three with wing-backs.

The pace of Walker and Shaw allows for support going forward or cover for the centre-backs in defence.

Southgate normally opts to match the opponent’s formation at the back so will probably play a back four against Italy.

They have also shown adaptability in terms of substitutes, with Jack Grealish playing a major role in the two goals against Germany after coming on with 20 minutes left.

Against Denmark, Grealish was substituted off in extra time so Southgate could change the formation to a back five to see out the rest of the match when 2-1 up.

In a final, this quality could prove the decider if England are to win, as there are few squads in international football who have such depth in quality and versatility.

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