It's January 1st 1985.
I'm sitting on quite possibly the
ricketiest Number 11 bus I've ever been on and the driver seems to
be contriving to hit every pothole. Every vibration is pounding
through my fragile bonce as the words of my dad resonate in my head.
“Self inflicted wounds, no sympathy”.
Despite the pounding in my head, I
decide that music must be a better option and I turn on my Sanyo
personal stereo. I have to turn the volume up high to drown out the
noisiness of the diesel engine, the drone of the chattering
passengers and the general creakiness of the bus.
“All is quiet on New Year's Day”,
wails Bono through the fluorescent orange sponge of my headphones.
Quiet? You are having a laugh Bono!
We are making so much noise as kick off approaches that it's impossible to make out the team news on the tannoy and it's not until the players emerge that we can work out who is playing where. There is some consternation around me that Colin Gibson has been selected in midfield ahead of |Gordon Cowans, with some people calling Graham Turner an idiot, but not everyone agrees with the dissenters and I'm one of them.
As it turns out Gibbo will have a decent game.
Things don't start too well though. This particular Albion side has a reputation of being physical and they certainly aren't going to hold back in the rumbustious atmosphere of a local derby. Villa players react in kind and after just thirteen minutes Albion get what was probably an inevitable penalty. Carl Valentine attempts to ghost past Tony Dorigo and the Australian lad's response is robust. Neil Midgley bravely points to the spot to ire of an increasingly lively Holte End and Derek Statham puts the Baggies one up from the spot.
With the Baggies forced to rearrange, Villa look more and more the better side with Steve McMahon dominating the midfield, so it's no massive surprise to see his lob setting Paul Birch free to score Villa's second.It doesn't take much to turn the atmosphere at an eighties soccer match and this incident turns the vibe particularly ugly.
There are 38 fouls in the game, 23 of them perpetrated by Albion players.
Villa boss Graham Turner states “You expect local derbies to be a bit physical.” after the game. David Cross and his elbow ensure that attempting to catch the bus home after the match will turn out to be “a bit physical” too.
The game has certainly got the adrenalin flowing, which seems to have cured the New Year hangover.
Just need to find a way through the Witton Lane riot now to get to the bus stop.
Villa boss Graham Turner states “You expect local derbies to be a bit physical.” after the game. David Cross and his elbow ensure that attempting to catch the bus home after the match will turn out to be “a bit physical” too.
The game has certainly got the adrenalin flowing, which seems to have cured the New Year hangover.
Just need to find a way through the Witton Lane riot now to get to the bus stop.

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