seagullsovergrimsby
#cpfctinpotclub
I remember listening to BBC Radio Brighton when we played away games and the 15 minute updates as there was no live whole match commentary.
To answer my own question regarding James Alexander Gordon taken from Wikepedia;
I remember listening to BBC Radio Brighton when we played away games and the 15 minute updates as there was no live whole match commentary.
You've called The Seagull line on Brighton 8049 that's the number for Albion information every day 24 hours a day.Yes indeed I have, but I would also have been stopping at payphones to check on progress via the Seagull Line.
Sometimes the midweek away matches were part of a sports evening on Radio Brighton when the studio guest would whitter on about the state of cricket in Sussex whilst we waited for the update via a crackly and faint (landline) phone connection.Me too. had to endure some awfully dreary programme (Whispering Bob harris, I think, for some of the time) and every so often Radio brighton would but in with a report but the amount & lenght was regulated.
The best game I ever 'listened to' in this fashion was away at Shresbury. At half time the reporter said neither team could score in a month of Sundays...
.....next report and Albion were winning 4-1....
...next report and it was 4-3 so quite a sweat to the full time report and we had won 5-3 away. Quite a game.
Who remembers Neil Coppendale? Me and my Dad were interviewed by him walking up Wembley Way in 1983 I would love to hear Radio Brighton's OB of that day.
I recall he introduced us to most of Neil Smillies family.