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Post by Colyton Gas. on Feb 6, 2018 17:37:10 GMT
When we played there two seasons ago we beat them 2-0.Goals from Browner and Monty and a rare appearance in the quarters from a NZ international called Rory Fallon. Anyway despite their lovely stadium the team were going through a bad patch and their manager-Ex Gas-was subject of a fans protest.Anyway,Sat thanks to an initiative where entrance was only£2 or something,they attracted 17,000 and are going great in the league.Good to see how they've turned it round and just up the road,Mansfield who we beat 2-1 are also doing well. County who gained their revenge recently when they knocked us out of the cup are making a few Bob from their FA Cup run.Things can change so quickly in football.
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irishrover
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Post by irishrover on Feb 6, 2018 20:05:26 GMT
I know that the Gashead party line is to dislike Notts County due to Warnock past+the whole Jocky Scott/Mark Stallard/Nicky Culkin incident from getting on for 20 years ago now. However, I have always had a big soft spot for them as I went many times when I was at Uni there in the early 2000s and I am glad that there finally seems to be some evidence that they are achieving some stability on their own terms.
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Post by Colyton Gas. on Feb 11, 2018 13:01:16 GMT
Talking of other clubs,Accrington played in front of 28,000 yesterday at the Ricoh!!!!!!!!! Currently looking good for automatic promotion.Their own ground is on a par with ours!!!!!!!!
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on May 18, 2019 5:24:12 GMT
I hope that the oldest football club in the world (founded 157 years ago) can bounce straight back up just like we did.
Not so sure Yeovil will be back for a long time, the club seems to be in real turmoil.
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 1, 2023 22:47:53 GMT
Notts County: Chief executive Jason Turner dies suddenly aged 50..ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/EA09/production/_129231995_mediaitem129232135.jpgNotts County chief executive Jason Turner has died at the age of 50, the National League club have announced. Turner, who had been in the role since March 2016, passed away suddenly on thursday 30th March. Notts said that Turner, who had also worked for Bath City, Newport County, Plymouth Argyle and Cardiff City, had "devoted himself" to the club. "We are devastated to report the loss of our much-loved chief executive, Jason Turner," said a club statement. "He was an outstanding CEO who was respected across football." Turner had described being Notts' chief executive as a "privilege". In a statement, his parents Jen and David said: "Words cannot describe our sadness following the loss of our beloved son, Jason. "We know this feeling will be shared by all of his colleagues and his many, many friends. "While we come to terms with this news, we ask for our family's privacy to be respected." Notts captain Kyle Cameron described Turner as a "great man". "He would bend over backwards for anyone and everyone involved in the club," Cameron added. "I'm lost for words and heartbroken by the news. Thank you for everything Jason you will be missed greatly by everyone."
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 9, 2023 20:45:46 GMT
Wrexham v Notts County - Monday 10th April - 3pm - Massive game for both teams who are on 100 points each, only 1 goes up automatically.
Wrexham v Notts County: How Magpies have added 'theatre' to Hollywood showdown..ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/0801/production/_129294020_split_wrex_notts_get.pngWrexham's meeting with Notts County will attract a worldwide TV audience thanks to the interest generated by the Welsh club's owners Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds. Notts County know they have packed the National League title race with all "drama and theatre" that Tinseltown could want. The Magpies and Wrexham are both locked on 97 points and only separated by goal difference after Friday's games, are on record-smashing pace, and meet on Monday in what is being described as the biggest game in the history of fifth-tier football in England. Wrexham's Hollywood owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney have turned the battle at the top of non-league football into a global streaming hit. And while Notts boss Luke Williams says the documentary series is "brilliantly entertaining", he is not about to settle for his club being seen as a support act. "How exciting is it to see big players, players that have incredible form, with Hollywood owners and a famous club - an incredible club - in Notts County," Williams said. "There is a lot of very good ingredients for a great story and for great theatre. "And I think we are very fortunate to be involved in the production of this. We have to enjoy it. "Of course we have a determination and desire to win, but ultimately football is about people being able to experience emotions and experience drama - and it's all there." While Wrexham's owners have brought a never-before-seen level of glamour to the non-league game, Notts are used to wrapping themselves in star power. Singer-songwriter Jake Bugg is a lifelong fan who sponsors the club's away kit, with his name synonymous with their success this season as it is embossed on the front of their shirts. Wrexham have undoubtedly raised the profile of the league, but Notts have proven to be the competition's biggest draw, attracting record-breaking attendances for the division. ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/EE79/production/_129294016_mediaitem108088563.jpgChristoffer (left) and Alexander Reedtz have been the owners of Notts County since 2019 ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/812D/production/_129296033_mullin_langstaff.pngPaul Mullin was the National League golden boot winner last season, with Macaulay Langstaff leading the race this term Wrexham's Paul Mullin has plundered 34 goals, but even he has not been able to keep pace with Notts' record-breaking striker Macaulay Langstaff, who tops the scoring charts with 41. They share an insatiable appetite for goals, but their route to spearheading these two attacks are vastly different. Mullin dropped a division after top scoring in League Two in 2021 to supercharge Wrexham, while Langstaff took up a step in the non-league pyramid last summer to produce what has been a career-defining campaign in front of goal. ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/11985/production/_129296027_parkinson_williams_get.pngPhil Parkinson is in his second season at the helm of Wrexham, while Luke Williams has been in charge of Notts County since last summer
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Post by baselswh on Apr 10, 2023 6:38:04 GMT
Wrexham v Notts County - Monday 10th April - 3pm - Massive game for both teams who are on 100 points each, only 1 goes up automatically.
Wrexham v Notts County: How Magpies have added 'theatre' to Hollywood showdown..ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/0801/production/_129294020_split_wrex_notts_get.pngWrexham's meeting with Notts County will attract a worldwide TV audience thanks to the interest generated by the Welsh club's owners Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds. Notts County know they have packed the National League title race with all "drama and theatre" that Tinseltown could want. The Magpies and Wrexham are both locked on 100 points and only separated by goal difference after Friday's games, are on record-smashing pace, and meet on Monday in what is being described as the biggest game in the history of fifth-tier football in England. Wrexham's Hollywood owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney have turned the battle at the top of non-league football into a global streaming hit. And while Notts boss Luke Williams says the documentary series is "brilliantly entertaining", he is not about to settle for his club being seen as a support act. "How exciting is it to see big players, players that have incredible form, with Hollywood owners and a famous club - an incredible club - in Notts County," Williams said. "There is a lot of very good ingredients for a great story and for great theatre. "And I think we are very fortunate to be involved in the production of this. We have to enjoy it. "Of course we have a determination and desire to win, but ultimately football is about people being able to experience emotions and experience drama - and it's all there." While Wrexham's owners have brought a never-before-seen level of glamour to the non-league game, Notts are used to wrapping themselves in star power. Singer-songwriter Jake Bugg is a lifelong fan who sponsors the club's away kit, with his name synonymous with their success this season as it is embossed on the front of their shirts. Wrexham have undoubtedly raised the profile of the league, but Notts have proven to be the competition's biggest draw, attracting record-breaking attendances for the division. ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/EE79/production/_129294016_mediaitem108088563.jpgChristoffer (left) and Alexander Reedtz have been the owners of Notts County since 2019 ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/812D/production/_129296033_mullin_langstaff.pngPaul Mullin was the National League golden boot winner last season, with Macaulay Langstaff leading the race this term Wrexham's Paul Mullin has plundered 34 goals, but even he has not been able to keep pace with Notts' record-breaking striker Macaulay Langstaff, who tops the scoring charts with 41. They share an insatiable appetite for goals, but their route to spearheading these two attacks are vastly different. Mullin dropped a division after top scoring in League Two in 2021 to supercharge Wrexham, while Langstaff took up a step in the non-league pyramid last summer to produce what has been a career-defining campaign in front of goal. ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/11985/production/_129296027_parkinson_williams_get.pngPhil Parkinson is in his second season at the helm of Wrexham, while Luke Williams has been in charge of Notts County since last summer I hope both County and Wrexham go up.
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Post by lostinspace on Apr 10, 2023 9:46:39 GMT
My money is on an away win in front of a stunned partisan Welsh crowd... league form says nothing should make the top two spots....but playoff lottery for one could be their undoing
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Post by lostinspace on Apr 10, 2023 14:59:20 GMT
as "the big game" in the National League gets to half way, it's County leading with a late first half goal
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 10, 2023 15:02:57 GMT
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Post by lostinspace on Apr 10, 2023 15:22:16 GMT
Mullins equalises on 50 minutes.....all to play for still
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 10, 2023 15:35:51 GMT
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 10, 2023 16:01:04 GMT
Latest: Wrexham 3 Notts County 2
Kyle Cameron for County levels it at 2-2
Elliott Lee for Wrexham takes the lead back 3-2
Latest: it's all over 3-2 to Wrexham in this huge game between the top 2 in the National League.
Wrexham P 42 - Points 103
Notts.Co P 43 - Points 100
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 10, 2023 19:00:18 GMT
Remaining games for these 2 teams at the top..
Wrexham - Barnet (a) Yeovil (h) Boreham Wood (h) & Torquay (a)
Notts.Co - Woking (h) Maidstone United (a) & York City (h)
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Post by Colyton Gas. on Apr 10, 2023 20:41:59 GMT
County miss late pen.They are getting full houses so hope they come back up.
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Apr 10, 2023 21:22:26 GMT
Wrexham 3-2 Notts County: Drama befitting Hollywood as hosts close on League return..ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/F188/production/_129323816_gettyimages-1251351288.jpgThe on-field drama captivated Wrexham's Hollywood owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney as much as the rest of the crowd When those involved in the world of film, fantasy and superheroes struggle to find the sense in the drama, then you know you are witnessing something special. But the surreal has become the norm for Wrexham and their silver-screen stewards, Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney. When the fans finally made their way out of the Racecourse after their top-of-the-table thriller with Notts County on Monday, when even the groundstaff had stopped working on the pitch, the north Wales club's co-chairmen were still treading the turf, still smiling, still seemingly shaking their heads in disbelief. Granted, their financial backing and all the razzmatazz that accompanied it was always going to make promotion back to the Football League seem like a reality for Wrexham after 15 long years. But the way in which they took an almighty step towards ending that exile in a 3-2 victory over nearest rivals Notts County was stretching credibility even for those used to the weird and wonderful of Hollywood. Both teams already on 100 points going into the game? Needs work. Two teams with more than 100 goals? A bit more oomph, perhaps. How about a penalty in the final minute of injury time, saved by a 40-year-old, in former England keeper Ben Foster, returning to the club he last played for 18 years ago? "I can barely speak, it was absolutely, stunning, fantastic, incredible," said McElhenney. "I think that was the most exciting sporting event this crowd ever seen, let alone the millions watching at home." ichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/standard/240/cpsprodpb/7C58/production/_129323813_gettyimages-1251400736.jpgAnd there were millions watching, partly because of the record-breaking runs engineered by both sides amid the jeopardy of only one automatic promotion spot, and partly curiosity about the Welcome to Wrexham TV documentary that has been a hit on both sides of the Atlantic. Journalists from the Netherlands, Italy and Germany were all represented in the Racecourse's press box, while local hoteliers said that hearing north American accents on trips to watch Wrexham are now commonplace. On Thursday, a coach trip with fans from San Francisco turned up just to see the pub featured in the documentary and catch a glimpse of the stadium. Those who descended on Monday, though, were very much here for the game being billed as the biggest in non-league history. By mid-morning the fans were queuing near the stadium, trying to enter the pre-match parties. Even the night before the talk was of tickets, of tactics, of the tension of not blowing their big chance of promotion. They knew the A-list owners would be in town, but that's the norm now. That's just Ryan and Rob. The football was what mattered. And the showpiece delivered. The rough and tumble of non-league football, illuminated by the skill of John Bostock's opening free-kick for the visitors in first-half injury time, then the surge of Wrexham momentum that saw Paul Mullin and Jacob Mendy put the hosts ahead. Notts County, having shown this season they fancied more than a supporting role in this Hollywood script, responded, then trailed once more, before their penalty in the final seconds. "Excluding the birth of my children, I'm not sure I have," said Reynolds when asked if he'd ever experienced anything quite as emotionally draining as the match, answering against the background sound of Status Quo. Surreal, but again the norm. "This is the most romantic game on earth. It was one of the most unique situations. My voice is shot from screaming. "I'm used to working under extreme pressure, but usually I have some kind of say and control in it; here I had nothing so all I could do was watch and hope like everyone else." And so they did, every moment captured by documentary cameras. Yet speak to anyone around the club and it is clear that this is not for show. They have fallen for football - and Wrexham - hook, line and sinker. In turn, the fans of Wrexham who have seen enough bad times to be justifiably cynical, have fallen for them. They too shook heads in disbelief. More than once, as the songs from the nearby Turf hotel where the club was founded carried on into the night, supporters turned and said 'you couldn't make it up'. Reynolds added: "Everything about the sport and the way the sport is handled here, the pyramid system, relegation and promotion, creates stakes like nothing else. "This was a game people will talk about for ages and the attention coming on the National League is special, but worthy of this town and of Notts County. "What both sides have achieved is historic. I don't think I've seen anything like it." Reynolds is not wrong. Wrexham - who lead Notts County by three points with a game in hand - need seven more points from their final four games to be sure of promotion. They are already just four shy of breaking the record for most points in a professional league in the history of English football. "I speak for Rob too when I say our hopes and goals rest on the hearts of the Wrexham supporters," added Reynolds, who with McElhenney invested £3m last season alone according to recent accounts after their initial £2m to take over the fan-run club in 2021. "We want this for the town as much as anything. I'll be fine no matter what happens, but we want this for the town and the community." A community it's now normal for them to feel part of. They were just two of the 10,000 at The Racecourse on Monday, ones who threw their arms around each other and celebrated into the night like all the rest. Surreal yes. But that's Wrexham for you these days. ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/1833C/production/_129323199_gettyimages-1481201114.jpgichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/00CA/production/_129320200_gettyimages-1251350953.jpgReferee: Scott Tallis Attendance: 9,924
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on May 15, 2023 9:46:23 GMT
Notts County Fans Celebrate 'The Best End To The Best Season'..ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/CD8E/production/_129722625_gettyimages-1489816545.jpgichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/172CA/production/_129722949_notts_pa.jpgichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/standard/480/cpsprodpb/F9D0/production/_129725936_countyfans.pngNotts County are heading back to the Football League - after a day of drama for fans at Wembley. The Magpies clinched promotion by beating East Midlands rivals Chesterfield 4-3 on penalties in a tense play-off final on Saturday. The team returned to Meadow Lane on Sunday to a heroes' welcome from hundreds of supporters who gathered to celebrate promotion. Fans said they were proud of the players and manager Luke Williams. Colin Sisson, 42, from Nuthall, has been a County fan since 1985 but said the play-off final was among the most memorable for him in all that time. He said: "I'm glad it's done and I'm glad we won but I think I'll have an emotional hangover for a while yet. "We've had a great season and we've rarely felt like the underdogs but I think we were here. "I was never confident. "It made a big difference having the penalties taken at the end where the Notts fans were. I'm telling you, we were trying to suck the ball into the net. "It's been quite a journey from the dark days of relegation out of the league and now getting back. "We've got a great manager and a great team and I'm looking forward to next season." However Dane Vincent, from Bingham, said he needed "a little break" from football after the agony of a penalty shootout. "It's never dull with Notts," he said. "It was a great day but a bit of a blur. I don't mind admitting I was sobbing in the stands - and I wasn't alone. "It would have been a real sick bucket day if we'd come up short. "For so many years as a Notts fan you turn up expecting to lose but this has been the best end to the best season and it has really galvanised the fan base. "I feel optimistic and that's not normal." Iris Smith, chair of the Notts County Supporters Club, said she cheered herself hoarse at Wembley. "It was fabulous. What an experience," she said. "Everyone has played their part this season - the players, the manager, the backroom staff and the fans. "For me one of the best things was seeing young supporters at Wembley for the first time with eyes like saucers. She added: "If we can keep this team together and Luke (Williams, the manager) we'll have a season to enjoy back in the league after four years of close encounters." Chesterfield FC congratulated Notts County on their promotion. In a tweet, the club said: "It still hurts but we are so proud of the lads. "We will be back and stronger than ever."
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on May 15, 2023 19:44:48 GMT
Notts County: How promotion to the EFL returns a 'badge of honour' to Magpies..ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/38BB/production/_129732541_notts_pa.jpgTheir relegation to non-league football for the first time in 2019 meant 161-year-old Notts, a founding member of the Football League in 1888, lost their mantle as the 'world's oldest football league club'. Signs proclaiming Notts' place in the annals of the game, which were all around their home ground, were either taken down or covered over with black tape. For the Magpies, the years of non-league exile were dark days. Cedwyn Scott finally ended the years of purgatory with the decisive penalty in their 4-3 shootout win against the Spireites after Notts twice battled back to draw 2-2 at the end of extra time. "In context it's enormous, it's a massive moment in the history of the club," Notts County boss Luke Williams told BBC Sport. "We have shut the door on the worst times the club has experienced since its beginning. "Now we are trying to walk through the next door. "This is a huge moment to now continue to rebuild the image and brand Notts County and try to step it forward to where it should be." Notts County historian Michael Chappell, 79, is a lifelong fan who can trace his family's lineage of support back to his great grandfather, who was born just two years after the Magpies were founded. "I've seen the best and worst," Chappell told BBC Sport about his decades of following the East Midlands club. "It's been a humbling experience in the National League. "I'd prefer to go to the great football pitch in heaven with us being a league club and preferably a league club with a reputation for being on the up." 'A badge of honour'Notts County are famed for being the team that gave Italian giants Juventus their iconic black and whites stripes - a link that got the Magpies invited to Turin in 2011 as the opponents the Serie A club wanted to play first when they opened their stadium. Juve are known as the 'Old Lady' of Italian football, but Notts' place as elders of the game is best summed up by their ability to seamlessly adopt the tag of 'world's oldest professional club' when their league status was taken away. And while the mantle of 'world's oldest football league club' is not as catchy, a little clunky and in need of explanation to anyone unfamiliar with the football pyramid in England - when leagues are still leagues outside the Football League - it places them at the front of the line of sporting trailblazers. "It is treasured by fans to have it back," Chappell said. "It means the world because it's such a badge of honour. "The history does bind a lot of people to the club. We are proud of it, fans are proud to be part of it. It's passed on through the generations. "It has almost been our epitaph, but that little saying is something you can hang on to, it gets us recognition."
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Jun 22, 2023 4:58:35 GMT
David McGoldrick: Striker on the romance of returning to childhood club Notts County..By Andrew Aloia & Charlie Slater, BBC Sport.ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/16CAB/production/_130055339_gettyimages-1245685853.jpgDavid McGoldrick could not resist the chance to be a football romantic when deciding to return to childhood club Notts County. The 35-year-old, who was playing in the Premier League just two years ago, was a striker in demand after scoring a career-best 25 goals last season for League One side Derby County. More lucrative approaches from Championship clubs were knocked back, while the Rams - a club that handed him a career lifeline when he was considering retirement just 12 months ago - were also rebuffed after a chance to move back to Meadow Lane became a possibility. In the same week that McGoldrick re-signed for the League Two club, 18 years after being sold to Southampton, Ballon d'Or winner Karim Benzema agreed a big-money move to Saudi Arabian champions Al-Ittihad. Instantly, former Republic of Ireland international McGoldrick's transfer was seen as one for the romantics. "So people keep telling me," the striker replied with a smile. "I've got to the age where money isn't everything. "Happiness is a massive part of family and it's something I'm trying to teach my kids. How can I teach that to my kids and not practise it myself? "I didn't want to look back in 10 years time and say I had a chance to play for Notts County but I turned it down for a few more bob somewhere else. "It's a great move for me, for my football career. Take away all the other stuff that comes with it and it's where I want to be playing in terms of my future." The death of his brother this year was also a major influence on his decision, one which he openly admits meant taking a "significant" pay cut. "Money doesn't keep people alive," McGoldrick told BBC East Midlands Today. "The money thing is at the back at the minute, it's more about being good to myself." 'I'm not 25 and searching for the big move'ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/0484/production/_130165110_gettyimages-1284428708.jpgDavid McGoldrick played in the Premier League and Championship with Sheffield UnitedNottingham-born McGoldrick was nine when he first joined Notts. His first experience of treading on the Meadow Lane pitch was as a ball boy, before going on to make his first-team debut at the age of 16 in 2004. He was quickly sold to Southampton and - after a short loan spell back at Notts in League Two in 2005 - he has spent much of his career playing in England's two top divisions. Since last playing in the Premier League in 2021 with Sheffield United, he has featured in the Championship with the Blades and gone on to play in the third tier with Derby, where he enjoyed the most prolific season of his 19-year career. McGoldrick, who counts Derby's fierce rivals Nottingham Forest among his former clubs, was among the high-profile names the Rams built around after they came out of administration with just five first-team players on their books last summer. His goals quickly endeared him to the Rams faithful and he went on to scoop the club's Player of the Season and Players' Player of the Season awards. Telling Derby boss Paul Warne that he would not take up the club's offer of a new deal was "one of the toughest conversations" of McGoldrick's two decades as a professional footballer. "But he understood," the striker said of Warne's reaction. "He did all he could to keep me but at the end of the day, he is a great man and he understood my decision. "I'm not young, I'm not 25 and searching for the big move." 'Notts no retirement home'
ichef.bbci.co.uk/onesport/cps/800/cpsprodpb/2B94/production/_130165111_mcgoldrick_pa.jpg David McGoldrick scored three hat-tricks for Derby County last seasonIn May, he was at Wembley as a fan, celebrating as Notts won promotion back to the English Football League with a penalty shootout win against Chesterfield. No deal was in the making then, but Notts went on to act quickly to pull off one of the EFL's most surprising coups of the summer. It supercharges an attack that already boasts record-breaking National League scorer Macaulay Langstaff, who netted 42 times last season. While he was not thinking how he could improve Notts at the time, the Magpies' nervy victory - which twice saw them fight back from a goal down to win promotion at the national stadium - showed McGoldrick what influence he could have on a club that intends to climb the divisions. "I played Premier League, Championship and League One and scored goals in every one of them, so I feel like I bring a lot of experience to the team," he said. "At Wembley, the big occasion, they didn't play their fluent football and maybe on the big occasions, I can bring that calmness and experience to the club." And now that he is back at Meadow Lane, he is determined to make the most of his second coming as a Notts player. It is also where he intends to try to start the next chapter of his football career as a coach. "I always had it at the back of my mind that I want to finish here," McGoldrick said. "I haven't come here as a retirement home. I've come here to play and play as many games as I can. "The dream is to play for the next couple of years, be part of the team, be successful and you never know, maybe take the club to another division. "I also want to go into coaching in the future so learning from Luke Williams I can gain many things. Hopefully, I can coach at some point at this football club."
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bluetornados
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Post by bluetornados on Oct 2, 2023 19:17:26 GMT
EXCLUSIVE: Ex-Arsenal starlet not giving up on Premier League dream after Arsene Wenger hailed "special talent"..
i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article30887818.ece/ALTERNATES/s1200d/1_Dan-Crowley-2.jpg Ex-Arsenal midfielder Dan Crowley has scored twice in seven matches for Notts County this season Notts County midfielder Dan Crowley is not giving up on his dream of playing in the Premier League - six years since being released by Arsenal. The 26-year-old has enjoyed a fine start to life at Meadow Lane after joining the Magpies on a free transfer earlier this summer. Crowley, who left Morecambe at the end of last season, has scored twice in seven matches so far, with Notts sitting at the top of League Two. However, it is safe to say Crowley has had a rollercoaster of a career since his permanent exit from Arsenal in 2017. He has spent time out in the Netherlands with Willem II and SC Cambuur, as well as having spells in the EFL at the likes of Birmingham, Hull and Cheltenham. Despite now finding himself in the fourth-tier of English football, Crowley is hoping to work his way back through the pyramid and into the Premier League. Speaking to Mirror Football, he said: "I want to play in the Premier League, I want to score a lot of goals and get a load of assists. How many? I don't know." i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article30888046.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/0_Dan-Crowley-5.jpgJack Wilshere and Dan Crowley with Arsenal in 2015 He added: "I think it's always been in my nature to play in the Premier League. It hasn't happened for whatever reason, but that's always my goal." Crowley joined the Gunners as a 15-year-old from Aston Villa in 2013 after Arsene Wenger had pushed for the signing. He penned his first professional contract as soon as he turned 17 and was included in Arsenal's first-team squad to travel out for the 2015 Premier League Asia trophy in Singapore. Although he was also hailed as a "special talent" by Wenger, Crowley failed to make a senior appearance for the Gunners before being released at the end of his contract. Although he acknowledged the disappointment of not playing a single minute, Crowley took many positives from the experience. When asked about what went right, he said: "Little things that people don't see, small progress in myself, learning from such great professionals and great players. "From the outside, it probably doesn't look like much went well, obviously it didn't end the way I wanted it to, I wanted to be playing for Arsenal in the Premier League and that didn't work out. "But there were small, little things that went well. I learnt a lot about myself, I learnt how hard it is to play in the Premier League and to be at the top. I took a lot of learning from my time at Arsenal." It didn't take Crowley long to find a new club after his departure from Arsenal, with the midfielder joining Eredivisie outfit Willem II on a three-year contract. He struggled for game time during his first season at the club, before Crowley went out on loan to second-tier side SC Cambuur. i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article30888223.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/0_Dan-Crowley-4.jpgDan Crowley in action for Birmingham in 2019Having returned to Willem in the following summer, Crowley cemented his place in the XI and impressed, scoring six times in 40 appearances in 2018/19. Crowley had been linked with a move back to England with Aston Villa in January 2019, but instead he found himself signing for arch rivals Birmingham. Crowley was a mainstay in the Blues side in his first season, but ended up falling out of favour and spending the second-half of the 2020/21 campaign on loan at Hull. He helped the Tigers win the League One title before leaving Birmingham at the end of his contract. After a short spell at Cheltenham, a second stint with Willem and less than six months at Morecambe, Crowley dropped down to League Two with Notts in July. He is thoroughly enjoying his time in the East Midlands and admitted he hasn't been at a club before where "everything is so good". i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article30888313.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/0_Dan-Crowley-3jp.jpgDan Crowley in action for Notts County
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