The Large One
Who's Next?
What a day.
It's so easy for many people - especially those who weren't there - looking at how rosy things are in the garden now, to not realise how much peril Brighton & Hove Albion were in from 1995-97. In short, we had no idea whether, come the end of the season, Brighton & Hove Albion would even exist - all options were on the table.
Bill Archer's arrogance and intransigence were such that he didn't care for Brighton's future. The FA didn't care. The Football League didn't care. But thankfully, some fans of other clubs did care...
In December 1996, a 16 year-old Plymouth Argyle fan, Richard Vaughan, hit upon a simple but brilliant idea to have fans from all clubs to descend on The Goldstone Ground, in their home shirts, to show support for our fight to get control of the Albion away from Bill Archer, David Bellotti and Greg Stanley.
And so was born FANS UNITED.
Aided by some excellent promotion from BISA, the Supporters' Club and some inspired work by Warren Chrismas, on 8th February 1997 - 20 (yes, TWENTY) years ago today - fans from over 65 clubs, resplendent in their own nipple-burning home shirts, visited a fog-laden Hove for the Albion's match against Hartlepool United. The crowd - officially 8,412 (yeah, right) - sang anti-Archer and anti-Bellotti songs all day, led by some bloke in a Chelsea shirt in the North Stand.
The result was vital. The 5-0 win meant Brighton scored more than Hereford United. A stat that looked meaningless on 8th February; it was pivotal come the final reckoning at the end of the season.
We all have such fond memories of the day, from the fog, to the number of different shirts, to the enlarged crowd, and Craig Maskell's hat-trick (and subsequent booting his own match ball into the North Stand crowd).
It was the probably the start of the (mostly) upward trajectory of the club's fortunes, culminating in the Albion being where there are now. But that in itself is another story entirely...
But meanwhile, what were your memories of Fans United Day, 20 years ago today?
It's so easy for many people - especially those who weren't there - looking at how rosy things are in the garden now, to not realise how much peril Brighton & Hove Albion were in from 1995-97. In short, we had no idea whether, come the end of the season, Brighton & Hove Albion would even exist - all options were on the table.
Bill Archer's arrogance and intransigence were such that he didn't care for Brighton's future. The FA didn't care. The Football League didn't care. But thankfully, some fans of other clubs did care...
In December 1996, a 16 year-old Plymouth Argyle fan, Richard Vaughan, hit upon a simple but brilliant idea to have fans from all clubs to descend on The Goldstone Ground, in their home shirts, to show support for our fight to get control of the Albion away from Bill Archer, David Bellotti and Greg Stanley.
And so was born FANS UNITED.
Aided by some excellent promotion from BISA, the Supporters' Club and some inspired work by Warren Chrismas, on 8th February 1997 - 20 (yes, TWENTY) years ago today - fans from over 65 clubs, resplendent in their own nipple-burning home shirts, visited a fog-laden Hove for the Albion's match against Hartlepool United. The crowd - officially 8,412 (yeah, right) - sang anti-Archer and anti-Bellotti songs all day, led by some bloke in a Chelsea shirt in the North Stand.
The result was vital. The 5-0 win meant Brighton scored more than Hereford United. A stat that looked meaningless on 8th February; it was pivotal come the final reckoning at the end of the season.
We all have such fond memories of the day, from the fog, to the number of different shirts, to the enlarged crowd, and Craig Maskell's hat-trick (and subsequent booting his own match ball into the North Stand crowd).
It was the probably the start of the (mostly) upward trajectory of the club's fortunes, culminating in the Albion being where there are now. But that in itself is another story entirely...
But meanwhile, what were your memories of Fans United Day, 20 years ago today?