There’s a storm a brewing...

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I remember seeing us playing in gale force conditions in our 2-1 win at West Ham in Sept 1974. Woody's equaliser is what I would describe as "the goal that defied science". My dad had driven down to my boarding school in Newbury for that day and took me and my three schoolmates to Upton Park to watch the match. Just before we got in the ground the gale-force wind blew a match ticket out of my dad's hand and he had to chase after it for about thirty yards. West Ham were leading 1-0 at half time and United faced playing against the strong wind for the second half and even if we had won a penalty it would be an almighty struggle to have enough power to shoot past the goalkeeper. Even now my Norwich-supporting mate would still recall the goal Woody scored in the match.
Here is what Benny Hill (not the comedian!) wrote in the Morning Telegraph two days later: “Long after Alan Woodward has finished his playing career, the fans will be talking about the goals he scored for Sheffield United; the spectacular, the face saving, the dramatic. Rarely it seems, is he involved in the run-of-the-mill goal. Invariably there are moments of drama when his power and skill combine to smash the ball into the net. At Upton Park he pulled one out of the hat to celebrate his birthday and put United level in the 78th minute; it was a wonderful example of his ability to read an opportunity and to do something positive as it comes. Intercepting a short pass from Holland just inside the West Ham half, Woodward streaked through the centre to slam the ball from 25 yards past a startled Day. John Lyall, the new West Ham manager, put the incident in a nutshell when he told me; “You can't give Woodward chances like that: he's too good a player.”
 



I hope it's blowing a gale.
In the posh seats tommorow so you can all feck off peasants.
 
Only to be expected - we’re going fishing...

:)
OH dear, lots of pub time forecast. I once fished just below Peebles. The first night it proper poured making the river unfishable. The ghillie took us up a feeder stream by a golf course. The stream was about the size of the Porter. A weir must have been holding back a large number of fish waiting for the rain. For a couple of hours countless numbers of salmon battled their way up and over the weir. The next day when the water had dropped the stream looked as though it would be only good for small trout.

Edited to add. Of course we didn't try for those salmon though, as usual we wouldn't have caught any.
 
OH dear, lots of pub time forecast. I once fished just below Peebles. The first night it proper poured making the river unfishable. The ghillie took us up a feeder stream by a golf course. The stream was about the size of the Porter. A weir must have been holding back a large number of fish waiting for the rain. For a couple of hours countless numbers of salmon battled their way up and over the weir. The next day when the water had dropped the stream looked as though it would be only good for small trout.

Edited to add. Of course we didn't try for those salmon though, as usual we wouldn't have caught any.
The stream you mentioned is probably the Leithen, it runs into the Tweed a couple of miles above our beat - if I’m honest, I’d rather have too much water than too little, as there’s not a lot of point in fishing where you can cross the river without getting your feet wet.....it’s been like that for the last three years.
 
The stream you mentioned is probably the Leithen, it runs into the Tweed a couple of miles above our beat - if I’m honest, I’d rather have too much water than too little, as there’s not a lot of point in fishing where you can cross the river without getting your feet wet.....it’s been like that for the last three years.

There's not much point fishing most days on Tweed☺ though once I did have three in a morning off Middle Pavilion, best 23.5lbs. Most times I was happy with a take.

On our Peebles trip, although we didn't stay there, The Hydro was a nice place to take refreshments.
 
If a strong wind passes over the top it will create an effect similar to that which makes sailing boats sail and planes fly. Science innit.

You mean the Bernoulli effect will cause a low pressure zone above the stadium. Although that would normally create lift, it could generate a recirculating vortex within the stadium. That would produce very interesting wind effects with an updraft at the upstream end of the stadium and a down draft at the other end, with the wind at pitch level going in the opposite direction to the wind above the stadium.

There again, it could just be fucking windy!
 
Not too bright at The London Stadium either. Bilic's a dead man walking.Do you think they might take a punt on...... Forget it.
 

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