Friday, 3 April 2026

Shipshape and Bristol fashion

Charlton went down 1-2 to Bristol City at The Valley this afternoon.  They started brightly enough with a great effort by Harry Clarke, but then Scott Twine put Hodgson's heroes ahead.

Last ditch Dykes equalised on 29 minutes with the assistance of Kelman.

The visitors then went ahead from a free kick delivered by Scott Twine.   Noah Eile was able to score after Mannion fumbled the ball.

Charlton seemed lethargic with the crowd of nearly 21,000 subdued.

But then a series of substitutions livened things up and there were a number of opportunities in the last ten minutes of normal time with the keeper saving with his legs from Dykes and Campbell sending the ball off target.    The keeper also had to make a great save from Matt Godden.

Ramsay had to make an excellent tackle to prevent the Robins going 3-1 ahead.

The referee behaved as if his retirement plan was with Hargreaves Lansdown as every marginal decision went the way of their works side and he was taken in by their play acting

In truth it was the usual incompetence.  We should stop sending referees to Specsavers and use a more up market optician like Bayfields.

Charlton remain 18th, eight points above Leicester City.

Frustrated manager Nathan Jones said: At the start of both halves, we were poor and that's cost us the game today.

"We work every single week on starting fast and being front-footed and in the first 50 seconds, we mess about it and give a corner away and that sets the tone.

"It was a game we could have drawn or won in the end but we didn't show enough quality in the final third and some of our defending was so un-Charlton like, it was crazy.

"The start killed us. When we're in the game, we know we're going to be strong late on attacking that end, but we're not giving ourselves a chance.

"It's a carbon copy, the last three home games, we're not learning from that and that's tough to take."


Thursday, 2 April 2026

Do you remember the 1971/2 season?

That was the challenge laid down by Ramsgate-based fan Rick Everitt in a recent Richard Cawley podcast.

My honest answer has to be, no.   In September 1971 I moved to the Midlands to take up a job offer in Coventry and then met a new girl friend.

In the preceding two seasons the Addicks had finished third from bottom in the old second division.  That was not a relegation position way back then.

In 1971/2 things seemed to be going quite well, at least in terms of survival.  Admittedly, the home league gate was down to just over 10,000, the worst figure since 1927/8.   The club had to sell two houses at a profit to make ends meet but the overdraft was nearly £100k.   (£1.17 m in 2026 prices).

Then, a collapse set in.  Our last win was Game 38 in mid-March.  There were a few draws, but our last two matches were a 0-2 home defeat by Millwall and then a 5-0 thumping at Blackpool which sealed our fate.

The Rickster's point is that it could still go pear shaped.  We need one more win for safety or perhaps a few draws.   Let's hope we can get that win against Bristol City tomorrow. 

Roy Hodgson says that his training session went well, although he seems to be under the impression that his first game is on Saturday.

Bristol Live reports: 'Despite the change in the dugout, the Reds will have to continue to deal with the injury issues that have plagued the side over the course of the last two months.

The expectation remains that Rob Dickie, Rob Atkinson and George Tanner will not play again this season while Luke McNally and Joe Williams have also been sidelined in recent weeks, with no exact time frame placed on when they could return to the fold.'

As a client of Hargreaves Lansdown for some 40 years I have indirectly contributed to the considerable sums of money that Steve Lansdown has put into the team, albeit without achieving the goal of promotion.

To be fair, they have got me into a club that, whilst it may no longer be exclusive with 3 million members, is still worth joining.   More importantly, when I was recently accused of money laundering, they came resolutely to my defence.   Still want to beat their works side.

CAS Trust points out that Roy Hodgson is the fourth new manager this season to have his first game against Charlton: https://www.castrust.org/2026/04/bristol-city-on-good-friday/

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

Jones the preacher man


Charlton manager Nathan Jones is going to use some of his summer break to preach in a Welsh village.   The elders of the tin tabernacle in Llanddewi Brefi have been impressed by his style of delivery.  Instead of using the pulpit he runs up and down the aisle shouting at the congregation.

Jones has prepared a number of football themed sermons which will also be available as podcasts:

God does not need VAR as he is the ultimate referee and never makes a mistake in his judgments.

2.     God does not need a fourth official: the Holy Trinity is enough for Him.

3.     With divine help it is possible to resurrect a club like Charlton and see it ascend to the Promised Land of the Premier League.

4.     You can save penalties – if you have been saved.

5.     There has never been a Saint Nigel.

6.     You discover that your neighbours are Millwall – are they beyond redemption?



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