3 UP AND 3 POINTS
Printed in the National League South game v Worthing Saturday 15th February 2025 We won 4-0 in front of 783
Well, that felt good. After two months without a win (but two credible draws against Torquay and Eastbourne) we finally tasted victory against a Maidstone side who must hate coming to Arbour Park. ‘Get your Ed-on that’ as someone witty put it. After the whistle, we serenaded the players and our manager Scott Davies admitted it had been consuming him and he could actually sleep tonight – well that’s if his newborn would let him. Maidstone were probably the best supported club we’ve had here all season and at one point outnumbered Slough supporters in the Wheatsheaf about 10 to 1. Amazing what the offer of free food can do!
In other news every club in the National League has got behind the 3UP to the English Football League campaign. It’s a no brainer. Just two promotion spots has created a bottle neck that has filtered down to the north and south divisions – pushing finances to the limit just to try and compete.
Today's opponents manager has said that if Worthing want to reach their full potential they will have to go full time and he reckons in a few years most clubs at our level will be. Where the money will come from to pay for that is another matter but the National League are already going to introduce financial rules that align with the English Football League.
No club that's ever been promoted from the National League has come straight back down while the majority that have been relegated have struggled to escape their lower league purgatory and failed to bounce back straight away. Those current league clubs might be Turkeys voting for Christmas, but they will appreciate that extra place if they ever grace themselves in what Sutton supporters dubbed the Bastard League.
The English Football pyramid is the envy of the world we are often told, which is why of course they stopped financial lifelines like FA Cup replays.
The Rebels from Worthing have been Sloughs opponents for many a season and visiting them, it always felt like the club had so much potential, but was run like some meat raffle mentality dusty old working men's club. In January 2015 the playing budget was cut with huge debts and their future looked in serious doubt. Then along came George Dowell. After his football career was cut short from a car accident that left him paralysed, at just 21 he became the UK’s youngest football chairman.
He set about transforming the club; ground improvements, 4G pitch, refurbished clubhouses – oh and better players and some even better managers. There’s a fantastic feel to the place, the footballs flowing and crowds have rocketed, the food is edible and quite a few Brighton supporters I know have swapped the Amex for Woodside Road. The only downside is that some of their stewards could do with lessons in not creating the situations they are employed to diffuse. They would do well, to look at how the ones at Slough deal with issues.
Tuesday night it was off to a park to watch some football. There can’t be many grounds that are based in a park, but then St. Albans is quite an unusual, unique place with every other pub claiming to the oldest in England. Their ground is a cross between the antiques roadshow and the trendy Laines of Brighton with micropubs at each corner. Lenchy's dad said it was the best football club pub crawl he’s done in ages! The West Ham boys had their very own tour guide, who managed to get us lost trying to find a pub and said she only went to the football for the chicken. In the end Slough served up a dollop of tripe.
Our club is seriously punching above its weight, the fact that Dartford went down last season, and St Albans struggling this season just shows the strength of the league. But in terms of the size of the town, there is so much potential for growth and every week there’s new initiatives happening – the latest being a new football development officer starting their post with a brand-new schools programme.
The jump up to the National League is as brutal as the Championship to the Premier League. Let’s see if the new Independent Football Regulator knocks some sense into its wild west finances, and that its the football on the pitch not just how much you have in your pocket that occasionally wins you games.