Southern League Cup action was at the forefront for AP Leamington fifty years ago. Facing Waterlooville at home ‘Brakes won this hard-fought Southern League Cup tie more easily than the score [1-0] suggests. They were much the better side and with more finishing luck could have quite eaxily reached the last four with several goals in hand.
Waterlooville, leaders of the southern section, opened
strongly and for a time presented their hosts with considerable problems. But Jimmy Goodfellow effectively killed their
resistance with his 30th minute with his headed goal and Brakes
gained almost total control. The
Hampshire side did come back during a furious late assault.
But the home defence
stood firm and Dave Avery’s header wide of the near post was the closest
Waterlooville came to forcing a replay.
With Steve Lee, Keith Shrimpton and Goodfellow gaining a hold in
midfield, AP spent most of the game going forward and they should have added to
their lead. Norman Foster saw a terrific
right foot shot cannon from the bar; Neal Armstrong headed across the face of
an open goal; and Lee was slow to react to a clear chance when the ball bounded
loose in the penalty area.’
Brakes then went to Nuneaton Borough for the
semi-final. ‘Delighted Jimmy Knox
summed up AP Leamington’s humbling of Nuneaton Borough yesterday “We wanted to
win – they expected to.” And that’s not
a bad assessment from the AP manager, who takes the club into the final of the
Southern League Cup for the first time in their history.
For AP ran, and
fought, and harassed their Premier Division opponents into total submission in
a colourless semi-final at Manor Park.
And after wearing down Borough with sheer determination, they struck a three
goal blast in the last seven minutes.
Goal No.1 came in
the 84th minute when Ivor Talbot was given the freedom of the pitch
to slam in a 35-yarder while Borough’s defence stood and watched. Goal No.2 came five minutes later when Talbot
again did the damage. He robbed Kirk
Stephens on the halfway line, ran on to have his effort half-saved by
goalkeeper Keith Ball and Neil Armstrong tapped in a simple goal. Goal No.3 came a minute into injury time. And
what a shocker for Borough! Ray Bridgett
brought Armstrong down a few yards from the by-line over 20 yards out. And Steve Lee cheekily scored direct from
the kick!’
‘It was no less than AP deserved, for they gave Borough’s
tame attack little scope; snuffed out the midfield and looked sharper in attack. My man of the match was Steve Lee, whose
promptings from the middle of the park proved too much for Borough. But AP also had in Ernie Wilkinson, Dennis
Taylor, Tony Bowden and John Brady four defenders who were in control of their
job.’
Shell shocked Nuneaton supremo Geoff Coleman said ‘there
will be no drastic steps taken.
Coleman’s words will comfort his players who cannot be other than
shocked by their own performance. For
without taking anything away from A.P., who played exactly to manager Jimmy
Knox’s plan, Borough were tragically under par. They showed none of the fight and tenacity
that took them through a run of nine games without defeat.’
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