Showing posts with label Audenshaw Dynamo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Audenshaw Dynamo. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 May 2016

Matchday #30: Results and Final League Tables


Championship

Blyth Spartans 2  Excelsior Marlow 1
Dynamo Burnley 2  Spartak-Slavia 0
Hartlepool Petrochemical 2  Gainsborough Trinity 3
Liverpool St Helens 1  Red Star Mossley 2
Locomotive Crewe Alexandra 2  Manchester Central 2
Marine 8  Audenshaw Dynamo 0
Northwich Victoria 2  Wrexham 2
Stalybridge Celtic 3  Hungaria 1


Second Division

Bohemians 2  Merthyr Tydfil 1
Bradford Park Avenue 4  Marxist Polytechnic 3
Caledonia Thistle 3  Atletico Espanol 3
Crystal Palace 3  Sheffield Wednesday 2
Excelsior Benelux 2  Newcastle Blue Star 2
Inter-Italiano 2  Hendon Hotspur 0
Newcastle-Gateshead Dynamo 1  Torpedo Tranmere 3
South Liverpool Red Star 5  Manchester Newton Heath 3

 
 


The League reached its conclusion with Marine emerging as champions, thrashing Audenshaw Dynamo 8 - 0 - a result that also relegated the latter - to overtake Liverpool St Helens who lost, at the death, to Red Star Mossley, coincidentally the very team who had also recently put paid to Saints’ prospects in the Cup with another 2 - 1 victory in their semi-final replay.
Surprisingly in the aftermath of such an emphatic triumph, Marine’s was a first win in the five matches since what can now be considered their ultimately decisive victory at St Helens, but come the hour when they required nothing less than a positive result the Mariners produced the goods in irresistible style, subjecting hapless Audenshaw to wave after wave of attacks, settling any nerves by taking an early lead and then adding regularly to their score before, as Mossley scored late on the break at St Helens to hole the hosts’ hopes, celebrating their impending coronation with a gleeful three-goal salvo in the final five minutes.  Among the front-runners all season, & frequently leaders, Marine’s Championship-winning achievement cannot be underestimated, given that only once before in the now 36-year history of the national Football Alliance has a newly-promoted team won the league, even if the Mariners were only absent from the top flight for a single season before stepping up at the end of last term, the winning habit of promotion momentum obviously standing them in good stead & being maintained throughout this season until its successful conclusion. If Audenshaw can take anything from the double humiliation of both this defeat and the relegation it confirmed, it must be this experience that a club can bounce back so spectacularly from demotion.
For Liverpool St Helens, meanwhile, there remains nothing but the disappointment that their efforts ultimately fell short, on the day equalizing the concession of a first half goal to Mossley but never really gaining control of a match against in-form, stylish and well-organized opponents with Cup Final places next week to play for before succumbing to a sucker punch goal as they cast caution to the wind in search of the winner that would have won them the title irrespective of Marine’s efforts.  Such are the narrow margins between success and failure, Saints again missing out on the big prize after last season’s near miss, this one even more agonizingly closer although, ironically, their last term’s points tally would have won this one’s title, just, as would have the two points from a win over Mossley. Tellingly, St Helens’ loss to Red Star was their fifth in the six matches over the season against fellow ‘top four’ rivals (although, despite Mossley’s and Gainsborough Trinity’s strong finishes, only the top three were ever in the title race after the turn of the year) - their only win coming, even more frustratingly, at Mossley - which, added to last year’s return of just one point from the similar group of fixtures, identifies the root cause of the club’s failure to emerge on top of the pile, at least yet.
Reigning champions Stalybridge Celtic were relying on both of those clubs who began the day above them to lose in order to keep the slim hopes of retaining their title alive and at least did their bit with a straightforward 3 - 1 defeat of mid-table Hungaria, even as those hopes gradually flickered out with news of every goal Marine were plundering over in Crosby, establishing an unassailable lead in both their match and over Celtic. As St Helens simultaneously faltered, Stalybridge’s win at least allowed them the small consolation of claiming the runners-up ‘honours’ before their upcoming Champions’ Cup semi-final replay against Atletico Madrid in Paris and another shot at ending the season with a trophy and glory. Four defeats in the six local derby matches - to which can be added a Cup exit at the hands of Manchester Central - and a few others that seemed avoidable (and last season probably would have been avoided) significantly served to undermine Celtic’s Championship challenge this term, leaving them tantalisingly short of the rare achievement of successive titles.

Below the top three, Red Star Mossley’s fine win at St Helens secured fourth place, to which they could yet add the Cup, whilst Gainsborough Trinity finished level on points in fifth after a 3 - 2 win at long-relegated Hartlepool Petrochemical - for both Mossley and Gainsborough, eventually ending the season with but three points fewer than the champions’ total, the league campaign could very much be regarded as a case of what might have been, again in the latter’s case and if only the Tony Mucklethwaite effect had been applied a little earlier in terms of the former, although a close analysis of Mossley’s results since appointing their former playing stalwart as manager reveals that, for all the rejuvenated team’s fine results, the contextually anomalous failures to win at either the ultimately demoted pair Audenshaw and Hartlepool, with an eminently winnable five points thus dropped, proved the difference between fourth and first: perhaps next term might bring the required consistency to mount a concerted challenge for the title?
At the opposite end of the table, Audenshaw Dynamo, having last week slid into the bottom two at the most inopportune time after a poor run of results coupled with Locomotive Crewe Alexandra’s recent revival, required nothing less than a win at Marine in order to have a shot at survival but, despite a brave effort, could obviously do nothing to stem the tide of the Mariners, even more determined as they were to gain the victory that could, and of course subsequently did, bring them championship glory: a 0 - 8 trouncing was a brutally cruel and humiliating manner of having relegation confirmed, as was the contrast in fortunes with victorious Marine, but the fact that the score only contributed to Audenshaw finishing the season with the worst goals-against total in the division highlights the single most significant contributory factor in them ultimately suffering the fate they did.

Crewe earned what would have proved an insufficient point from a 2- 2 draw with Manchester Central had Audenshaw miraculously prevailed at Marine, but, despite a season-long struggle for the newly-promoted Alex, they had done just enough to survive with crucially timely back-to-back wins in their previous two matches.   
Dynamo Burnley were the only other club to begin the day in any danger but a comfortable 2 - 0 victory at home to Spartak-Slavia allayed any fears, enabling the Clarets to finish fourth-bottom and draw level on 25 points with Excelsior Marlow, who ended the season with a sixth consecutive defeat, 1 - 2 at Blyth Spartans, a slump that left them relieved to have previously garnered a sufficient reserve to keep them clear of the relegation-threatened pack: in a curious statistic, Marlow’s final points tally, when added to last term’s 24, when they only just avoided the ignominy of being demoted as reigning champions, makes for a combined two-season total of the same 49 with which they won the title in some style in 2013-14, a palpable measure of their steep decline since, which the pre-season merger with last season’s wooden-spoonists Oxford seems to have done little to arrest.

Elsewhere, Northwich Victoria and Wrexham drew 2 - 2 in mid-table, enabling both to add another point to totals that improved upon last season’s - Northwich by a healthy seven and inconsistent Wrexham (who beat Marine home and away and achieved the season’s highest score in pasting Blyth 9 - 2 but lost twice by an aggregate of 2 - 11 to Manchester Central, who they finished a place above) by a more modest four - and respectively finish two places higher than last term. Manchester Central’s first season as such, rebranded from City, saw them finish five points and five places worse off, although their young team showed moments of potential, whilst Blyth Spartans struggled in most disappointing fashion, totalling ten points less than last term and plummeting from fourth and beaten Cup finalists to eleventh. Final day defeats for the eastern-flavoured pair Spartak-Slavia, debuting in the top flight after promotion in their inaugural season at national level last year, and Hungaria, still only two years old as an institution themselves, did little to dent what have been solid mid-table campaigns for both, finishing seventh and eighth respectively, worthy opponents for anyone and a match for the best on their day.


In the Second Division, one matter remained to be settled at either end of the table, with the combination of final scores resulting in Torpedo Tranmere winning promotion to the Championship and, at the other end of the emotional scale, Caledonia Thistle suffering relegation, although not necessarily back to the regional leagues but rather, possibly, the third tier of a revamped four-division national structure that is still under consideration at this juncture.
Tranmere timed their run to perfection, keeping pace with the promotion pack all season but never actually ascending to second place until this very last day, the three points gained from a relatively straightforward 3 - 1 victory at long-relegated Newcastle-Gateshead Dynamo elevating them above Sheffield Wednesday who fell 2 - 3 at Crystal Palace, the hosts snatching their winner as Wednesday strained every sinew in search of one of their own - more than this result, however, painful though it is in the immediate aftermath, the Owls will especially rue last weekend’s loss at home to wooden-spoonists Dynamo, in addition to earlier ones to another two of the relegated quartet, Atletico Espanol and Caledonia Thistle, ultimately undermining all their good results over the campaign that, cumulatively, had seen them spend only one brief week out of the top two since before the turn of the year and meaning they narrowly miss out on promotion again. For Tranmere, back at national level after a long break, it is a fabulous achievement for a young and stylish team to make the step up to the Championship at the first attempt, akin to Spartak-Slavia last term, and their season is still not over, with the Cup final against Red Star Mossley to come next Saturday, reached, let it not be overlooked, courtesy of matching and mostly out-playing subsequent champions Marine over both matches of the clubs’ semi-final tussle.

Leaving the division via the other exit, Caledonia Thistle owed their demise to a failure on the day to overcome second-bottom and already-demoted Atletico Espanol, finding themselves two goals in arrears before a late comeback earned but a point that was insufficient to overhaul Manchester Newton Heath despite the latter’s defeat at South Liverpool Red Star, the Heath finishing level with Thistle but surviving by the narrowest of margins by virtue of an extra away win over the course of the season. For Red Star, their win contributed to a total of 27 points garnered from the last 12 matches, an astonishing run of form, by far the best in the division, that, had they not endured such an underwhelming first half to the campaign, would surely have seem them very much in the promotion mix - as ever, consistency is key to success in the league.


 

Saturday, 7 May 2016

Matchday #29: Results and Updated League Tables



Championship

Audenshaw Dynamo 0  Gainsborough Trinity 1
Excelsior Marlow 1  Hartlepool Petrochemical 2
Hungaria 2  Liverpool St Helens 1
Manchester Central 2  Marine 2
Red Star Mossley 7  Blyth Spartans 2
Spartak-Slavia 2  Northwich Victoria 3
Stalybridge Celtic 6  Dynamo Burnley 1
Wrexham 0  Locomotive Crewe Alexandra 1



Second Division

Atletico Espanol 3  Hendon Hotspur 1
Manchester Newton Heath 3  Excelsior Benelux 1
Marxist Polytechnic 4  Inter-Italiano 2
Merthyr Tydfil 2  Caledonia Thistle 0
Newcastle Blue Star 2  Bradford Park Avenue 1
Sheffield Wednesday 0  Newcastle-Gateshead Dynamo 1
South Liverpool Red Star 2  Crystal Palace 1
Torpedo Tranmere 3  Bohemians 1




Saturday, 20 February 2016

Matchday #21: Results and Updated League Tables


Championship

Audenshaw Dynamo 4  Dynamo Burnley 2
Blyth Spartans 4  Spartak-Slavia 1
Gainsborough Trinity 5  Manchester Central 2
Hartlepool Petrochemical 0  Wrexham 2
Liverpool St Helens 0  Stalybridge Celtic 1
Locomotive Crewe Alexandra 1  Red Star Mossley 2
Marine 4  Excelsior Marlow 0
Northwich Victoria 1  Hungaria 2


Second Division

Atletico Espanol 3  Crystal Palace 1
Bohemians 0  Newcastle Blue Star 1
Bradford Park Avenue 2  Sheffield Wednesday 2
Caledonia Thistle 1  Marxist Polytechnic 5
Excelsior Benelux 0  South Liverpool Red Star 2
Hendon Hotspur 10  Merthyr Tydfil 2
Inter-Italiano 1  Torpedo Tranmere 2
Newcastle-Gateshead Dynamo 3  Manchester Newton Heath 2

 
Pivotal. That could well be the word to describe Stalybridge Celtic’s 1 - 0 win at Liverpool St Helens, a single goal, inevitably and unerringly scored by Eoghan Money, in a closely-fought contest of few genuine chances enabling the reigning champions to replace Saints as leaders of the pack, exactly the type of result against a direct rival that ultimately decides fates and the destination of honours. St Helens’ defeat was rendered all the more costly, as the two points gained from Marine’s comfortable 4 - 0 victory over Excelsior Marlow moved Crosby’s finest up into second place above their local rivals, Tegwyn Prothero following up last weekend’s rescue-act brace of goals with a hat-trick this time out.
Wins for Red Star Mossley, Gainsborough Trinity and Hungaria enabled each to gain a little on Spartak-Slavia, who remain fourth, but now four points adrift of the top three, despite a 4 - 1 beating at Blyth Spartans which elevated the victors to the heady heights of eleventh position, further clear of danger, leapfrogging Manchester Central, Gainsborough’s victims, in the process. In the relegation places, Hartlepool Petrochemical’s and Locomotive Crewe Alexandra’s home defeats, to Wrexham and Mossley respectively, leaves matters unchanged, but Audenshaw’s rip-roaring 4 - 2 win over Burnley in the battle of the Dynamos resulted in the two exchanging third- and fourth-bottom places two points above the basement pair, again, as at the top of the table, a potentially critical outcome.
 
Of those challenging to replace those eventually relegated from the Championship, Marxist Polytechnic cemented their position atop the Second Division even more firmly with a devastating 5 - 1 win at Caledonia Thistle that confirms the Anglo-Scots as being deep in danger of departing the division via the other route, back down to the regional leagues.  Sheffield Wednesday’s 2- 2 Yorkshire derby draw at Bradford Park Avenue maintains their second position, albeit two points further adrift of the student leaders. Wednesday remain two points clear of third, but that berth is now occupied by resurgent Torpedo Tranmere, whose last-gasp 2- 1 win at Inter-Italiano enabled them to move above Bohemians, who suffered a second successive league loss, on this occasion surprisingly at home to Newcastle Blue Star.
South Liverpool Red Star’s renaissance continues courtesy of a 2 - 0 win at Excelsior Benelux, who remain fourth bottom but now three points adrift of safety. Unusually, both of the bottom two won, Atletico Espanol beating Crystal Palace most impressively, 3 - 1, and Newcastle-Gateshead Dynamo edging Manchester Newton Heath 3 - 2, although both clubs remain in grave danger of the drop as games begin to run out.

 




Saturday, 13 February 2016

Matchday #20: Results and Updated League Tables


Championship

Dynamo Burnley 3  Northwich Victoria 2
Excelsior Marlow 1  Manchester Central 1
Hungaria 7  Locomotive Crewe Alexandra 2
Liverpool St Helens 8  Audenshaw Dynamo 3
Red Star Mossley 2  Marine 2
Spartak-Slavia 2  Hartlepool Petrochemical 2
Stalybridge Celtic 5  Blyth Spartans 3
Wrexham 2  Gainsborough Trinity 2



Second Division

Crystal Palace 2  Newcastle-Gateshead Dynamo 1
Excelsior Benelux 3  Atletico Espanol 1
Manchester Newton Heath 2  Bohemians 1
Marxist Polytechnic 3  Merthyr Tydfil 0
Newcastle Blue Star 2  Caledonia Thistle 1
Sheffield Wednesday 3  Inter-Italiano 1
South Liverpool Red Star 4  Bradford Park Avenue 2
Torpedo Tranmere 3  Hendon Hotspur 2

 
The goals rained down at leaders Liverpool St Helens, where the home team deluged Audenshaw Dynamo by 8 - 3, a result all the more astonishing considering the visitors, courtesy of a quick two-goal salvo just before half-time, turned an earlier deficit into a 3 - 2 interval advantage, defending reasonably under sustained pressure from the Saints - eager to return to winning ways after last week’s first defeat in nine at Burnley - and counter-attacking with lethal efficiency. Following the break, however, Audenshaw’s dynamism deserted them and they imploded, withering in the face of the renewed onslaught and allowing St Helens to ruthlessly rack-up a further six goals without reply: the stuff of which champions are quite possibly made?
A similar margin of victory, with only slightly fewer goals, as Hungaria, victims of a seven-goal concession to a rampant Marine last Saturday, this time out performed an impressive volte-face and put Locomotive Crewe Alexandra to the very same sword, subjecting their unfortunate opponents to a 7 - 2 ‘revenge’ beating every bit as merciless as that suffered by themselves: the predatory Istvan Kovacz helped himself to four of the Magyars’ total.
Also in the goals but more closely shading a total of eight by 5 - 3 were Stalybridge Celtic, consequently moving up to second in the table and nipping Blyth Spartans recent revival in the bud in the process.
A week on from their thrashing of Hungaria, Marine found themselves under the cosh and were mostly outplayed by Red Star Mossley - unbeaten in four league and cup matches under new boss Tony Mucklethwaite - but the Crosbyites managed to rescue a point from an apparently hopeless position as last-throw-of-the-dice supersub Tegwyn Prothero’s late, late brace scraped a 2 - 2 draw from two goals down: again, such resilience, or the ability to conjure something from seemingly nothing, might suggest that the Mariners are not without certain of the requisite championship-winning credentials too, even if they have dropped a place to third (they are, after all, level with Stalybridge and only a point behind St Helens).
In matters at the wrong end of the table, Dynamo Burnley’s epic comeback 3 - 2 victory over Northwich Victoria courtesy of 86th, 89th and 90th minute strikes to recover a two-goal deficit elevated them from second-bottom to above both Crewe and Audenshaw, adding even more insult to the injury inflicted by the pair’s crushing defeats, with the Alex replacing Burnley in the relegation berth above Hartlepool Petrochemical, who remain firmly anchored at the basement despite a rare point earned in a worthy 2 - 2 draw at Spartak-Slavia who themselves are a little isolated in fourth, three points from third and four clear of fifth.
In the second tier, Marxist Polytechnic’s straightforward 3 - 0 beating of Merthyr Tydfil allowed the students to maintain a three-point lead at the top of the division, whilst Sheffield Wednesday replaced Bohemians in second place, prevailing 3 - 1 over Inter-Italiano, a first win in four, as Bohs lost at Manchester Newton Heath, their first reverse following a four-game winning streak. Torpedo Tranmere followed up their stirring Cup second replay triumph over Dynamo Burnley with a 3 - 2 last-minute edging of Hendon Hotspur to arrest a sequence of three successive league losses to move back within two points of Bohemians.
Of those fighting to remain in the Alliance, South Liverpool Red Star’s renaissance continued with an impressive 4 - 2 defeat of Bradford Park Avenue, affording them the luxury of moving out of the bottom four, Caledonia Thistle slipping into the danger zone instead following their loss at Newcastle Blue Star. Excelsior Benelux also boosted their survival hopes by beating last-placed Atletico Espanol 2 - 1, keeping the pot boiling nicely on what is sure to remain a close-run situation at the wrong end of the table.
 

 




Wednesday, 10 February 2016

Football Alliance Cup 2016: Second Round, Second Replay


Torpedo Tranmere 3  Dynamo Burnley 1 (a.e.t.)

(at Manchester Central)

The second round saga concludes after another two hours of pulsating action, Tranmere torpedoing Burnley's Cup aspirations for this season with two extra time goals after drawing level in the final five minutes of the scheduled ninety.
Deserved winners on the night and equal competitors throughout the course of the three matches, Tranmere now progress to the next round to meet the Championship's other Dynamo, at Audenshaw.

Saturday, 7 November 2015

Matchday #10: Results and Updated League Tables


Championship

Excelsior Marlow 3  Hungaria 3
Gainsborough Trinity 3  Dynamo Burnley 2
Hartlepool Petrochemical 2  Northwich Victoria 2
Locomotive Crewe Alexandra 1  Blyth Spartans 1
Manchester Central 1  Stalybridge Celtic 0
Marine 7  Liverpool St Helens 1
Red Star Mossley 3  Audenshaw Dynamo 0
Wrexham 2  Spartak-Slavia 3

 
 
Second Division
 
Bohemians 3  Bradford Park Avenue 3
Caledonia Thistle 4  Excelsior Benelux 2
Hendon Hotspur 1  Crystal Palace 4
Inter-Italiano 8  Newcastle-Gateshead Dynamo 0
Marxist Polytechnic 5  Manchester Newton Heath 4
Merthyr Tydfil 2  South Liverpool Red Star 1
Newcastle Blue Star 3  Atletico Espanol 0
Torpedo Tranmere 4  Sheffield Wednesday 3
 

 

Saturday, 1 August 2015

'Home' and Change Colours 2015-16 #1: Audenshaw Dynamo

Throughout August, we'll be running a series of drawings representing each of the Football Alliance's club colours for the coming season, both their first choice 'home' kits and the alternative strip to avoid colour clashes, in order for the reader to be able to imagine which colours each team might be sporting in any given fixture.

First up, we'll present the sixteen clubs in the Championship and then do the same for the Second Division, beginning the process, alphabetically, with Audenshaw Dynamo, known as such since beginning last season back in the top tier, previously being Audenshaw Athletic, who,  historically,  were founder members of the old Fourth Division, then the fifth level, of the original national Football Alliance back in 1980-81, finishing that season 14th of 16 teams, but subsequently steadily rising through the divisions until achieving Championship status in 1997-98, at which level they've since spent all but one season (2013-14),  mostly in mid- to the lower half of the table, with a few examples of relegation brinksmanship along the way.

 
('Home' kit left, change to the right)

The models for the drawings of the players were taken from the Belgian 'Football 76' sticker album published by Panini, being stylistically in keeping with how we imagine the retro appearance of the Football Alliance to be, existing forever in its own aesthetic timewarped bubble.
 

Saturday, 9 May 2015

Matchday 29 Results & Updated Tables


Championship

Audenshaw Dynamo  2   Stalybridge Celtic   2
Burnley  1   Hartlepool United   2
Hungaria  2   Liverpool St Helens   2
Manchester City  3   Oxford Excelsior   1
Matlock Town  5   Marlow   3
Mossley  4   Gainsborough Trinity   2
Northwich Victoria  1   Wrexham   1
Red Star Sunderland  2   Blyth Spartans   1



Second Division

Atletico Espanol  3   Sheffield Wednesday   1
Crewe Alexandra  2   Gateshead Dynamo   3
Hendon Hotspur  3   Inter-Italiano   2
Manchester Newton Heath  6   Newcastle United   0
Merthyr Tydfil  2   Marine   2
Nelson CBR  4   Crystal Palace   1
Newcastle Blue Star  3   Spartak-Slavia   1
South Liverpool Red Star  3   Bradford City   2



Stalybridge Celtic confirmed as Champions, gaining the point they required at neighbours Audenshaw Dynamo, whilst the only team who could have overtaken them at the start of play, Gainsborough Trinity, were blowing their last chance with defeat at Mossley, who would never knowingly do Celtic a favour, of course - a thoroughly deserved triumph for Stalybridge, consistently the best team in the league and impressive winners of the title, their second but first in 30 seasons.
At the bottom, Matlock Town have given themselves a chance of avoiding relegation, even if they remain in the bottom two, by beating closest rivals Marlow in a 5 - 3 thriller, rendering Hartlepool's surprise win at Burnley critical to their hopes of survival too. Oxford Excelsior's virtually-certain demotion was confirmed by their defeat at Manchester City.

In the Second Division, things remain tight and the promotion places still undecided going into the final round, with only Marine of the top four picking up a point, although Sheffield Wednesday's defeat at Atletico Espanol rules them out of the equation now, whilst the bottom two were hammered.


Saturday, 28 March 2015

League Cup Quarter-Finals Results



Audenshaw Dynamo  1   Marine  1
Blyth Spartans  2   Manchester Newton Heath  0
Gainsborough Trinity  5   Mossley  1
Hungaria  3  Hendon Hotspur  2

Saturday, 28 February 2015

League Cup Second Round Results



Atletico Espanol  2   Hungaria  3
Burnley  3   Audenshaw Dynamo  4
Gainsborough Trinity  2   Manchester City  1
Hartlepool United  2   Blyth Spartans  4
Manchester Newton Heath  3   South Liverpool Red Star  2
Marine  2   Spartak-Slavia  1
Mossley  3   Liverpool St Helens  1
Red Star Sunderland  2   Hendon Hotspur  3

Wednesday, 4 February 2015

League Cup First Round Replays


Audenshaw Dynamo  4   Crewe Alexandra  2 (aet)

Burnley  3   Gateshead Dynamo  0

Hartlepool United  2   Newcastle United  2 (aet)

Saturday, 24 January 2015

Matchday 18 Results & Updated Tables


Championship


Audenshaw Dynamo  3   Marlow   0
Burnley  5   Northwich Victoria   2
Hartlepool United  3   Matlock Town   2
Hungaria  5   Mossley   0
Liverpool St Helens  1   Blyth Spartans   3
Manchester City  5   Red Star Sunderland   2
Oxford Excelsior  3   Wrexham   3
Stalybridge Celtic  4   Gainsborough Trinity   1



Second Division

Atletico Espanol  2   Marine   5
Crewe Alexandra  2   Newcastle Blue Star   3
Gateshead Dynamo  4   Merthyr Tydfil   0
Hendon Hotspur  3   Nelson CBR   1
Inter-Italiano  2   Bradford City   1
Manchester Newton Heath  3   South Liverpool Red Star   1
Newcastle United  1   Spartak-Slavia   2
Sheffield Wednesday  1   Crystal Palace   1



Monday, 12 January 2015

Matchday 16 Results & Updated Tables


Championship

Audenshaw Dynamo  2   Burnley  0
Blyth Spartans  3   Matlock Town   4
Hartlepool United  3  Marlow  2
Hungaria 2  Manchester City  2
Liverpool St Helens  5   Red Star Sunderland   1
Oxford Excelsior  2   Mossley   1
Stalybridge Celtic  6   Northwich Victoria  2
Wrexham  1   Gainsborough Trinity   1



Second Division

Atletico Espanol  1   Crewe Alexandra   1
Bradford City  5   Merthyr Tydfil   2
Gateshead Dynamo  1   Marine   4
Hendon Hotspur  3   Manchester Newton Heath  0
Inter-Italiano  3   South Liverpool Red Star   2
Newcastle United  3   Nelson CBR   3
Sheffield Wednesday  0   Newcastle Blue Star   1
Spartak-Slavia  2   Crystal Palace   1



Saturday, 6 December 2014

Matchday 14 Results & Updated Tables


Championship


Blyth Spartans  2   Red Star Sunderland  0
Gainsborough Trinity  2  Mossley  0
Hartlepool United  2   Burnley  2
Liverpool St Helens  7   Hungaria  4
Marlow  0   Matlock Town  1
Oxford Excelsior  2   Manchester City  2
Stalybridge Celtic  6   Audenshaw Dynamo  4
Wrexham  1   Northwich Victoria  2



Second Division

Bradford City  2   South Liverpool Red Star  1
Crystal Palace  1   Nelson CBR  2
Gateshead Dynamo  1  Crewe Alexandra  0
Inter-Italiano  2  Hendon Hotspur  3
Marine  4   Merthyr Tydfil  1
Newcastle United  1  Manchester Newton Heath  2
Sheffield Wednesday  2  Atletico Espanol  1
Spartak-Slavia  4  Newcastle Blue Star  1