Roughly where I was too
Me too.Roughly where I was too
I was up there as well, just to the left and in with the Hereford fans. I reckon there were as many Brighton as Hereford in those seats.Me too.
The football league had refused to accept a promoted team due to ground sharing, which really pissed off some of the Conference Chairmen. The conference were not about to accept known trouble makers without a stadium of their own.Unbelievable day!! Amazing drama and tension with a happy ending. Right up there for me with Doncaster in August 2011.
I don't subscribe to 'the Albion would've folded if we'd been relegated to the Conference.' Yes it would have been a struggle (as it was in D3) yes the gates would have been small (as they were in D3) but we would've kept going and after a season we would've stormed the Conference and got back to the FL, in all likelihood under Mickey Adams as well, as given our size I think he would've been prepared to drop down to manage us, knowing full well eventually he would've got us going.
Seems strange now thinking back to those times as to how far we've come....a long way (literally) from Edgar Street to Stadio Olimpico.
Fair points. Even if we had entered further down the pyramid we woud've still survived IMO.The football league had refused to accept a promoted team due to ground sharing, which really pissed off some of the Conference Chairmen. The conference were not about to accept known trouble makers without a stadium of their own.
I believe we would have been forced to enter further down the football pyramid.
“Sense of menace”. There were quite a few fights before and after.The day in Hereford is one I will never forget - the long train journey, the rain before kick-off, the sense of menace in the town, how badly we played first half, the save at the death and, of course, the equaliser!
Those pictures confirm something I thought on the day, that we could have got more fans in that away section easily.