Total No. of Comments: 05 |
01 |
Story by |
Club supported by author |
Year of story |
Date of Submission |
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Prof. John Shepherd,
Professor of Geophysics
The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine,
Trinidad, West Indies |
Warrington. |
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1954 |
23/12/2004 |
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I am JBS from the P and B website.
In 1954 I was fifteen years old and
lived in Warrington but I am a long way from there now.
Bradford
is
about 40 miles from Warrington and there is now a 6-lane motorway
called
the M-62 that passes both towns so you can drive it in not much
more
than half an hour.
The kid on the P and B website probably thought
the
Romans built it but it didn't open until 1970. In 1954 the main
road from
south Lancashire to Yorkshire was a narrow winding road over
the
Pennines.
The railway was a much better way of doing the trip
because you
could catch the train directly from Warrington to Odsal. That
was the way
me and my mates went. That day there was a stream of special
trains
leaving at 15-minute intervals. There were also hundreds of
coaches from
Warrington and the nearby RL towns Wigan, Widnes, St.
Helens, Leigh
etc.- doing the trip by road and they all converged on that
single
road.
We didnt think the crowd would be all that big.
We
had drawn 4-4 with
Halifax at Wembley the previous Saturday and the crowd there
was only
around 60-70,000.
There were only four days between match
and replay so
there was no time to print tickets.
At one point the railway
ran
alongside the road.
That was when we realized that something
big was on.
There were coaches nose-to-tail all the way up to the top
and down the
other side with no movement at all.
We got to Bradford about
half an hour
before the kick off and walked to the ground. Odsal then was
not really
a stadium. It was just a big natural hole in the ground with
a football
pitch at the bottom and one grandstand close to the touchline
and
another opposite at the top of the slope.
(see
http://www.thisisbradford.co.uk/bradford__district/bradford/news/jim56.html
for a picture).
The standing area was bare hillside with crush barriers
scattered about. It rose up in two or three huge steps and
the flat
bits were dead ground where you couldnt see the pitch.
You can see one
of these down the left hand side of the picture.
Nobody really
knew what
the capacity of the ground was. The turnstiles were behind
the stand
at the top where it says ODSAL STADIUM and at the bottom right
where it
says BRADFORD NORTHERN RLFC.
There were so many people outside
the
ground that we couldnt get to the turnstiles but the
crowd pushed a long
section of the fence down flat and we simply walked in. I
would guess
that at least 10,000 people came in that way but were not
counted in the
official attendance. There were other holes in the fence too.
I dont remember much of the actual match Im afraid.
Jim Challinor
used the great Brian Bevan as a foil to score the first try
early on.
Scrum half Gerry Helme scored the second late on and Harry
Bath converted
one of them but I cant remember which one.
The trains
on the way back
were even more tightly packed than the ones going because
most of the
people who had managed to reach the ground by coach hopped
the train to
come back.
As we ran along the roadside again it was a complete
mess.
Many of the coaches were still facing towards Bradford and
were tangled
up with the ones coming back.
We got home on time and the
whole town was
rocking.
Great days!!!
THE ERA WOULD LIKE TO THANK PROFESSOR JOHN SHEPHERD FOR THIS
GREAT ENTRY.....
DOES ANYONE HAVE ANY MORE.....?????? Quigs..
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02 |
Story by |
Club supported by author |
Year of story |
Date of Submission |
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Gary Kitchen |
Leeds |
1954 |
28/12/2003 |
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Just read the stories on the 1954
Odsal CC replay.
It was two years before I was born but my dad and my uncle went
to that match on the bus from Leeds, and although neither of
them are with us any more they both used to tell me when I was
a kid of how they got in the ground but couldn't see the pitch
and couldn't move to a better place, they stood there in the
crowd listening to the game via messages being passed along
the supporters, a sort of worlds biggest chinese whispers game,
and the one thing that my dad always used to finish off with
was that they didn't get home until 2am and got a right royal
bollocking off their wives, remember this was in the days when
few houses had telephones so they couldn't ring home and explain
their transport problems, mind you knowing my dad and my uncle
they probably stopped for a few beers on the way home as well.
I now make the trip to Odsal from home in about 20 minutes,
its my favourite away ground as Leeds/Bradford games can pull
crowds of up to 24,000 and in todays health and safety concious
ground licences, thats pretty much a full house - gods knows
how 103,000 got in there, but my dad also told me that there
were many thousands who were not counted in the official figure.
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03 |
Story by |
Club supported by author |
Year of story |
Date of Submission |
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George of Widnes, Cheshire.
UK |
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1954 |
09/09/2004 |
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Maybe not my Favourite moment, but certainly
one that I still remember 50 years on.
The 1954 Challenge Cup Final at Wembley Stadium between Halifax
& Warrington resulted in a Draw & the replay was arranged
to be played midweek at Odsal Stadium Bradford.
My Mate had just taken delivery of a new Austin Somerset Car
so we thought it would be a good excuse to try it out with a
trip over the Pennine Hills to Bradford for the Game, a slow
& tedious journey in those
days before Motorways.
We allowed ourselves plenty of time for the trip.
Our intention was to park the car near the Stadium & then
go into the centre of Bradford by Bus or taxi for a meal &
a few drinks & return to the ground in time for kickoff.
We had a good journey to Odsal arriving about 21/2 hours before
kickoff, parked the car opposite the Stadium in a designated
car park, & became aware of the crowds of people Milling
around the area with a small
queue starting to form outside the entrance, it was at this
stage that we made the decision to abandon the meal & drinks
plan and get inside the ground.
It soon became apparent that thousands of other people had also
decided to see the game and before long it was a case of trying
to secure a good vantage point to watch the game.
My lasting memory of the game itself was seeing Gerry Helme
the Warrington halfback duck under the Halifax fullbacks attempted
tackle near the try line to score a wonderful & vital try.
At the end of the game we returned to the car park to find that
the Police had closed the exit so that no vehicles could leave.
The traffic was in absolute chaos with all roads around Bradford
gridlocked for hours.
We didnt move off the carpark for 2 hours & then it was
a slow crawl for many a mile, all the eating & drinking
places had closed.
We arrived back home in the early hours very hungry & thirsty.
It was only next day in the press that we learned that we had
been part of a World record Rugby League crowd.
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04 |
Story by |
Club supported by author |
Year of story |
Date of Submission |
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From
Laurie Hopkinson
KINDLY REPRODUCED FROM THE BRADFORD INDEPENDENT
SUPPORTERS ASSOCIATION WEBSITE |
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1954 |
20/04/2005 |
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Back
in the 1950`s, "male bonding" and "spending quality time together"
hadn`t been invented, but for "me and my Dad", going to Odsal
was a wonderful substitute. Two particular examples of the Odsal
experience in those days are still prominent memories.
On the 31st October 1951, Bradford Northern was scheduled to
play against a Kiwi touring team, the first ever RL game to
be played under floodlights. Me and my Dad arrived at Odsal
with eager anticipation, the vast bowl was virtually in darkness
(Health & Safety regulations in those days were much more primitive).
Cautiously, we walked and slid down the ash slope at the scoreboard
end until we found a convenient railway sleeper to stand on.
As kick-off time arrived, the floodlights were turned on and
the pitch was brilliantly illuminated, revealing that both teams
had taken up their positions under cover of darkness. An awe-inspiring
sight for a small boy, in an era when most streets were dimly
lit by gas lamps.
Challenge Cup Final Replay 1954
On 5th May 1954, me and my Dad (and about 120,000 other fans)
set off to watch the replay of the Challenge Cup Final between
Halifax and Warrington. By the time we got into Odsal, the crowd
had assumed the proportions which most of you will have seen
on the aerial photographs displayed in books and on club walls
wherever the game is played. We finished up standing on the
track round the top of the bowl, at the scoreboard end (about
where cars are parked for BISA meetings). Particularly for an
11 year old, the view of the pitch from this position was severely
limited, so my dad scouted around the nearby perimeter fence,
found a heap of rubble, and proceeded to build me a small pile
of bricks to stand on. From my new vantage point I could see
from the halfway line to the dead ball line at the Rooley Avenue
end, probably more than a lot of those present. It was many
years before I realised that I had witnessed a small part of
history being made.
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05 |
Story by |
Club supported by author |
Year of story |
Date of Submission |
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From
Harold Winterburn
KINDLY REPRODUCED FROM THE BRADFORD INDEPENDENT
SUPPORTERS ASSOCIATION WEBSITE |
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1954 |
20/04/2005 |
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The memory of the epic replay still
lives in my memory and, although the game itself was not a classic,
the size of the crowd was amazing.
I, my sister and three brothers decided to visit Odsal on a
pub trip from Otley. Everything seemed pretty normal as the
bus approached the stadium on Rooley Lane but when the bus driver
unloaded his passenger, that’s when we met with the vast crowd
trying to get through the turnstiles.
Each gate was jam-packed with folk squeezing and shoving and
the mounted police were trying to ease congestion which was
nigh impossible. My sister and I finally entered the ground
about three-quarters of an hour before kick off and it was a
hopeless cause trying to get down on the terraces which were
full from the fence up to the highest rim of Odsal Bowl.
After walking right to the other end above the speedway pits,
we found a small space from which only half the pitch could
be seen. The big shock about the crowd size was that it had
been a rainy day and nobody expected over 100,000. After the
game it took us three-quarters of an hour to find our transport
with there being bus after bus stretching for miles.
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