ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
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ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
Latest from 1991 and speculation on the next manager with a queue of ex-Clarets
See link
https://www.uptheclarets.com/mullen-amo ... ace-casper
See link
https://www.uptheclarets.com/mullen-amo ... ace-casper
This user liked this post: Steve1956
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
I might have mentioned this before but after Mullen was appointed so began one of the most enjoyable periods of being a Claret began for me,we escaped the dark days of being in and around the bottom of the bottom division and had some fantastic away days culminating in the fantastic night at York...thanks Jimmy I enjoyed it,pity it ended like it did.
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
These next few months really cemented me becoming a Claret.
I had been going on games, with school mates for something to do for 3 or 4 years but never classed myself as a Burnley fan. But when Mullen took over it just went crazy. You had to be there no matter what.
I had been going on games, with school mates for something to do for 3 or 4 years but never classed myself as a Burnley fan. But when Mullen took over it just went crazy. You had to be there no matter what.
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
It was just before this that I stopped going on.
I was 12 and my dad took me every home game on the Longside before that. It was a combination of things, but I think the final straw was my hat getting nicked by a fellow fan as I was walking through to the Beehole in the freezing rain. I had a load of badges on it that I'd be collecting for a couple of years and I'd just had enough.
Only been to one game at the Turf since, the 1-0 win against Wigan.
I was 12 and my dad took me every home game on the Longside before that. It was a combination of things, but I think the final straw was my hat getting nicked by a fellow fan as I was walking through to the Beehole in the freezing rain. I had a load of badges on it that I'd be collecting for a couple of years and I'd just had enough.
Only been to one game at the Turf since, the 1-0 win against Wigan.
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
Your living up to your username right enoughsleeperclaret wrote: ↑Fri Oct 08, 2021 5:23 pmIt was just before this that I stopped going on.
I was 12 and my dad took me every home game on the Longside before that. It was a combination of things, but I think the final straw was my hat getting nicked by a fellow fan as I was walking through to the Beehole in the freezing rain. I had a load of badges on it that I'd be collecting for a couple of years and I'd just had enough.
Only been to one game at the Turf since, the 1-0 win against Wigan.
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
What a sad story.sleeperclaret wrote: ↑Fri Oct 08, 2021 5:23 pmIt was just before this that I stopped going on.
I was 12 and my dad took me every home game on the Longside before that. It was a combination of things, but I think the final straw was my hat getting nicked by a fellow fan as I was walking through to the Beehole in the freezing rain. I had a load of badges on it that I'd be collecting for a couple of years and I'd just had enough.
Only been to one game at the Turf since, the 1-0 win against Wigan.
My Dad had a scarf stolen in the 60s and it clearly still bothers him.
Did you start going again regularly?
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
Never takes hats on a terrace.
There used to be loads getting took of peoples heads and thrown in amongst the crowd for the owner to go and fetch. Mainly off their mates though.
Some got thrown back, some never seen again.
There used to be loads getting took of peoples heads and thrown in amongst the crowd for the owner to go and fetch. Mainly off their mates though.
Some got thrown back, some never seen again.
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
I had a scarf nicked back in the 1960s and my Wembley 1988 scarf fell into the hands of one of the squad. I won't name him but if you are reading this Icky Devaney, I hope you've looked after it.
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
Surely UTC could facilitate a scarf and hat return amnesty?
(It would help to clear a lot of space in my loft).
On another topic from the article, we had a few vacancies where Brian Flynn would definitely have been the popular appointment. I often wonder “what if”; both for the club and him. It feels like he never got a chance to kick on from what he did at Wrexham and he could easily have been our Dyche of the 90’s and steered us into the Championship (Division 2).
(It would help to clear a lot of space in my loft).
On another topic from the article, we had a few vacancies where Brian Flynn would definitely have been the popular appointment. I often wonder “what if”; both for the club and him. It feels like he never got a chance to kick on from what he did at Wrexham and he could easily have been our Dyche of the 90’s and steered us into the Championship (Division 2).
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
[/quote]
Your living up to your username right enough
[/quote]
that was the reason I chose it.
Your living up to your username right enough
[/quote]
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Re: ARTICLE: Mullen among the early candidates to replace Casper
Whenever Mullen is discussed I can still recall this day, one of the best pieces of sports journalism ever about a unique event.
Last updated : 06 November 2001 By Tony Scholes
Jimmy Mullen
It was published on Monday 27th January 1992, two days after the Clarets had gone out of the FA Cup to Derby County in a 3rd round replay at the Baseball Ground.
I was inside that ground that day and I have never, before or since, witnessed anything quite like it. Going out of the FA Cup is one of the lower points of any season but the atmosphere in the Burnley end that day was just incredible.
The final whistle blew and nobody moved at one end of the ground, the players applauded the fans and left the field but the chanting just kept on and on. Nobody was ready to leave.
Eventually manager Jimmy Mullen brought his players back out to the sort of reception reserved for Cup winners and Champions, not for a side just gone out of the FA Cup.
I have discussed it with some of the players and they still talk about it in almost amazement. It's what's being a Claret is all about.
This is what John Sadler had to say about it all.
Burnley Roar Out Warning to the Top Dogs
by John Sadler
Jimmy Mullen is due in court this morning to answer a drink-drive allegation. On Saturday, he watched his goalkeeper inexplicably drop the ball to present Derby with a decisive second goal that swept his team out of the F.A. Cup.
Andy Farrell challenges for the ball
No, you couldn't claim that these have been the happiest few days in the life of the manager of fourth division Burnley. And yet Mullen has found himself at the centre of a remarkable phenomenon, perhaps unique even in the grand history of football's most romantic competition. I don't care what kind of response former Burnley midfield man Brian Flynn received as manager of Wrexham on their latest day of glory at West Ham. It wouldn't have been a patch on the acclaim given to the boss of the club where he began. I want to tell you about the most heartening, stimulating and optimistic football occasion I have experienced for many, many years.
Derby v Burnley was a match in a time warp. A third round replay played on fourth round day. But the real blast from the past came from far more distant days, when fans came only to back their beloved team, not fight their opposite numbers. When fences weren't needed and policemen merely smiled in approval. Burnley took 4,000 Lancashire lads and lasses to the Midlands. And they were sensational.
Soon after goalkeeper Chris Pearce dropped his dreadful clanger they set up one of the loudest, sustained dins I've ever heard on a football ground anywhere in the world. "Jimmy Mullen's claret-and-blue-army" was the chant from the terraces and double-decker stand that housed Burnley's admiration society.
Derby score after Chris Pearce's error
Over and over they chanted it. Clapping and stamping their feet and drumming the advertising boards in perfect rhythm. On and on for 20 minutes until the end of the match and another 15 minutes afterwards, until I urged the club's chairman to get his manager and players to leave their dressing room, return to the pitch and wave their appreciation. The bedlam was almost deafening. It was a colourful and spectacular sight.
But it is something far more important than that. I wanted others to see and hear it. Big men, important men who are making decisions that could alienate the game from ordinary working folk. I wanted Graham Kelly to be there to prove to him that those who talk of Super Leagues should not underestimate the passion of the so-called little clubs. I wanted Sir John Quinton to be there so that the bank chairman chosen to preside over the elite could learn something of life at the other end of the scale. I wanted officials of Manchester United and Arsenal, Liverpool and the other fat cats behind the move to change the face of football to hear the voices of the people.
Mike Conroy in the action with John Deary in the background
The bedlam of Burnley was not simply a cry of support for another of the F.A. Cup's beaten teams. It was a roar of defiance. "Traditions," said Arthur Cox, Derby's manager whose time in north east football taught him all there is to know about fanaticism. "You heard the traditions of Burnley's past out there today. A major club of 30 years ago, don't forget." Those who kept up that incessant, thunderous clatter were real fans. Genuine football people with a deep love of their club, no matter the result of a single game. They had nothing to do with the executive box brigade and corporate hospitality merchants to whom football is pandering in the modern era. They stood in the rain, sat in the cold and screamed their allegiance to a game which, at the highest level, continues to turn it's back.
English football has no right to dismiss or take lightly the support of people like those who raised their voices so valiantly at the Baseball Ground. This, remember, was the support of a team who lost to a deflected free kick and a goal handed on a plate by a goalkeeper who couldn't catch the ball. The frost that caused so many postponements had the managers and scouts flocking to Derby. Brian Clough, David Pleat, Neil Warnock, Ian Branfoot together with scouts from Villa, QPR, Norwich, Portsmouth, Leicester, West Ham, Leeds, Manchester United, Oldham, Coventry, Cambridge, Blackburn to name but a few. Some will report back about individual players or one side or the other. But all will first tell the story of those incredible Burnley supporters.
So at last the message will be cast far and wide. The cry from the Fourth Division will reach high places. "In all my 23 years in the game I've never witnessed anything like that," Jimmy Mullen gasped. "It left my players feeling they were prepared to die for those people."
It left Arthur Cox thinking out loud: "Burnley have had a reminder of how things could be. It was a demonstration of potential. They now have to try and make sure they get promotion and don't let those people down."
And that is a sobering thought.
Last updated : 06 November 2001 By Tony Scholes
Jimmy Mullen
It was published on Monday 27th January 1992, two days after the Clarets had gone out of the FA Cup to Derby County in a 3rd round replay at the Baseball Ground.
I was inside that ground that day and I have never, before or since, witnessed anything quite like it. Going out of the FA Cup is one of the lower points of any season but the atmosphere in the Burnley end that day was just incredible.
The final whistle blew and nobody moved at one end of the ground, the players applauded the fans and left the field but the chanting just kept on and on. Nobody was ready to leave.
Eventually manager Jimmy Mullen brought his players back out to the sort of reception reserved for Cup winners and Champions, not for a side just gone out of the FA Cup.
I have discussed it with some of the players and they still talk about it in almost amazement. It's what's being a Claret is all about.
This is what John Sadler had to say about it all.
Burnley Roar Out Warning to the Top Dogs
by John Sadler
Jimmy Mullen is due in court this morning to answer a drink-drive allegation. On Saturday, he watched his goalkeeper inexplicably drop the ball to present Derby with a decisive second goal that swept his team out of the F.A. Cup.
Andy Farrell challenges for the ball
No, you couldn't claim that these have been the happiest few days in the life of the manager of fourth division Burnley. And yet Mullen has found himself at the centre of a remarkable phenomenon, perhaps unique even in the grand history of football's most romantic competition. I don't care what kind of response former Burnley midfield man Brian Flynn received as manager of Wrexham on their latest day of glory at West Ham. It wouldn't have been a patch on the acclaim given to the boss of the club where he began. I want to tell you about the most heartening, stimulating and optimistic football occasion I have experienced for many, many years.
Derby v Burnley was a match in a time warp. A third round replay played on fourth round day. But the real blast from the past came from far more distant days, when fans came only to back their beloved team, not fight their opposite numbers. When fences weren't needed and policemen merely smiled in approval. Burnley took 4,000 Lancashire lads and lasses to the Midlands. And they were sensational.
Soon after goalkeeper Chris Pearce dropped his dreadful clanger they set up one of the loudest, sustained dins I've ever heard on a football ground anywhere in the world. "Jimmy Mullen's claret-and-blue-army" was the chant from the terraces and double-decker stand that housed Burnley's admiration society.
Derby score after Chris Pearce's error
Over and over they chanted it. Clapping and stamping their feet and drumming the advertising boards in perfect rhythm. On and on for 20 minutes until the end of the match and another 15 minutes afterwards, until I urged the club's chairman to get his manager and players to leave their dressing room, return to the pitch and wave their appreciation. The bedlam was almost deafening. It was a colourful and spectacular sight.
But it is something far more important than that. I wanted others to see and hear it. Big men, important men who are making decisions that could alienate the game from ordinary working folk. I wanted Graham Kelly to be there to prove to him that those who talk of Super Leagues should not underestimate the passion of the so-called little clubs. I wanted Sir John Quinton to be there so that the bank chairman chosen to preside over the elite could learn something of life at the other end of the scale. I wanted officials of Manchester United and Arsenal, Liverpool and the other fat cats behind the move to change the face of football to hear the voices of the people.
Mike Conroy in the action with John Deary in the background
The bedlam of Burnley was not simply a cry of support for another of the F.A. Cup's beaten teams. It was a roar of defiance. "Traditions," said Arthur Cox, Derby's manager whose time in north east football taught him all there is to know about fanaticism. "You heard the traditions of Burnley's past out there today. A major club of 30 years ago, don't forget." Those who kept up that incessant, thunderous clatter were real fans. Genuine football people with a deep love of their club, no matter the result of a single game. They had nothing to do with the executive box brigade and corporate hospitality merchants to whom football is pandering in the modern era. They stood in the rain, sat in the cold and screamed their allegiance to a game which, at the highest level, continues to turn it's back.
English football has no right to dismiss or take lightly the support of people like those who raised their voices so valiantly at the Baseball Ground. This, remember, was the support of a team who lost to a deflected free kick and a goal handed on a plate by a goalkeeper who couldn't catch the ball. The frost that caused so many postponements had the managers and scouts flocking to Derby. Brian Clough, David Pleat, Neil Warnock, Ian Branfoot together with scouts from Villa, QPR, Norwich, Portsmouth, Leicester, West Ham, Leeds, Manchester United, Oldham, Coventry, Cambridge, Blackburn to name but a few. Some will report back about individual players or one side or the other. But all will first tell the story of those incredible Burnley supporters.
So at last the message will be cast far and wide. The cry from the Fourth Division will reach high places. "In all my 23 years in the game I've never witnessed anything like that," Jimmy Mullen gasped. "It left my players feeling they were prepared to die for those people."
It left Arthur Cox thinking out loud: "Burnley have had a reminder of how things could be. It was a demonstration of potential. They now have to try and make sure they get promotion and don't let those people down."
And that is a sobering thought.