About Me

Hello all. I am currently doing Sports Journalism at the University of Central Lancashire (UCLAN) in Preston. In my blog i shall look at any large sports stories whether it be the big sports such as Football, Cricket and Rugby or even the fortunes of Table Tennis and Bowls. Contact me at gmarah@uclan.ac.uk, twitter.com/gmarah26, http://www.facebook.com/greg.marah

Tuesday, 31 May 2011

This One Really Hurt - Huddersfield Town 0-3 Peterborough

So 48 hours on (or so) I am finally getting to terms with a defeat that could set my football club Huddersfield Town back a few years especially if our failure to achieve promotion means our best players leave and our chairman puts his chequebook away.

So to finally let my frustrations out I’m writing this blog post (and a rather long one) to describe my day visiting to so called “Theatre of Dreams” where my dreams along with 32,000 fellow town fans including roughly 15,000 part-times saw the club who finished with the highest number of points in League One and not be promoted and a club who didn’t lose a league game in 2011.

After a tense and nerve-racking penalty win over Bournemouth done in the only way Huddersfield Town can achieve victory, the hard way, things were looking up as I set off early doors to Manchester. (And we still have never won a home play-off leg)



6am wakeup call and at Huddersfield Train Station at 715am for a game 30 miles away and with kick off at 3pm, bonkers I thought but the masses already on the platform showed today was going to be a long one for those travelling to the dark side of the Pennines and the queuing systems and extra trains TransPennine Express promised weren’t there as hundreds shoved their way onto the first train of the day. As we set off only several of the 20 or so Wooldarians (a word coined by my good friend Boothy) made in onto the train.

Spoons Breakfast at 845 and as one Peterborough Fan kept asking when they would serve alcohol (9am) the drinking began as I aimed to enjoy what could be one of the best days in my life supporting Huddersfield Town. Joined later by those who missed that sardine can that was the first train from Huddersfield we soon made our way to Old Trafford, although the moron driving our taxi dropped us about half a mile from where we asked.

The search for a good pub was in force with none in the vicinity of Old Trafford letting in Town fans. I don’t know whether it was the fact that Peterborough were Fergie Juniors team or they expected most Town fans to drink in Manchester City Centre but a long time searching ended up with everyone I came with going into the ground whilst I joined by Manchester City supporting friend in going to one of these Peterborough pubs The Trafford. Whilst I made sure my Yorkshire accent wasn’t heard my friend Jordan attempted to make himself not vomit at the sight of Manchester United memorabilia whilst we discussed how good Nigel De Jong is.

Half two came and into the ground I went sitting with some of my “Nonsense” town supporting friends. The entry in to our side of our ground was made spectacular by the generosity of our Chairman Dean Hoyle giving out 30,000 or so free shirts turning our end of the ground blue and white, although DATM had already killed my surprise. The only discomfort was the distinct lack of leg room that Old Trafford provides. Anyone over 5 foot 6 must have been in pain as my legs went to sleep during the game.



So to the game and no surprise that Lee Clark had stuck with the “away” formation of 4-3-3/4-5-1 which has worked well over that past few months but without our top scorer Jordan Rhodes who yet again found himself on the bench. Benik Afobe who has worked hard but not scored the chances he should have was up top on his own supported by Bolton loanee Danny Ward and Gary Roberts.

The game took an age to kick off and after 10 minutes of Martin Solveig’s Hello we finally got underway. A tedious start but Peterborough got in to their groove and had two great early chances through talisman Craig Mackail-Smith. How he and George Boyd were ever in this league for a whole season is beyond me!

Mackail-Smith’s first chance was only denied by a wonder tackle from Antony Kay who had a brilliant game for us and was my man of the match. His second chance came after a very iffy decision in the middle of the park when I think Lee Peltier was fouled and CMS only could hit the post. Mackail-Smith’s movement caused town a lot of problems and they really should have been one up. Town finally found a foot in the game towards the end of the first half but chances were limited and we were not getting enough balls on the floor to play football and use our wingers to full effect. Benik Afobe was holding the ball up well and really should have scored just before half-time when the ball fell to him inside the 18-yard box but in usual Benik fashion he slipped and sent his shot wide. Second choice ‘keeper Paul Jones also made a vital interception as a Gary Roberts free-kick was on the way to meet two town players at the far post. 0-0 at half-time was generous as Peterborough had the chances to be one up.

Town started the second half in a much better fashion with Danny Ward and Jack Hunt surging down the right hand side and beating Peterborough’s left-back Grant Basey with ease. After Jones was again called into action to brilliantly intercept another cross, Ward skinned Basey before launching a rasping shot which hit the bar. With Town on top Lee Clark may have missed a trick in not brining on another striker as Afobe struggled on his own up top whilst also fluffing yet another opportunity. His opposite number Darren Ferguson took off Basey and the game changed with firstly Grant McCann seeing a free-kick go narrowly over before his second free-kick saw Peterborough take the lead with Tommy Rowe deflecting the ball in. However, as replays showed (the picture below) after the game which rubbed salt in to all Town fans wounds Mackail-Smith who was fouled in the build-up was offside and went down like he played for Barcelona.



What was worse is that heads dropped and a misplaced pass and poor closing down allowed Mackail-Smith in for an easy shot outside the area which took a slight deflection and left Town 2-0 down in 90 seconds of madness. Game over and although Clark brought two strikers on it was gone, the chance of a return to the 2nd tier of football for the first time in ten years.

They scored a third as we left tow at the back but attentions were on events happening in the stands. Although I couldn’t see the full extent of what happened, the sight of a “fan” (and I use the term loosely) with a clenched fist and covered in blood as well as a girl around my age clearly scared and crying isn’t a sight you should see at the clubs biggest game in nearly a decade. The poor lad was left half-dead by the alleged four morons who beat the living daylights out of him and stomped on his head as the Police took vital minutes to intervene. An act of sheer idiocy and malice was followed by ignorant fans lobbing their shirts paid for by our chairman perhaps in disgust but a huge disrespect to the club as well as the thousands who left as their 2nd goal went in. Maybe that’s what you get with day-trippers.

I stayed to the end and saw their celebrations and I congratulate Peterborough on their promotion. On the day they were just the better side but the score line flattered them.



And just like ten years previous where I was sat in the stands crying as we were relegated from the then Division One I was stood there in tears again. The sight of our captain Peter Clarke crying (above), who has given his heart and soul to the club, pushed me over the edge and a hard long emotional season has finally come to an end with not much to shout about at the end of it although performances were great and records were broken.

From great performances against Notts County away on the first day of the season, comebacks like that one against Cambridge in the FA Cup, well ground out victories such as that against Tranmere away from home, great derby wins over Sheffield Wednesday, awful performances such as our away defeat to Oldham and the ever so nearly’s like Arsenal in the FA Cup and Sunday, 2010/11 has been a season to remember.

The journey back was a hard one. Anger, sadness, disbelief all rolled into one. At least my good friend and birthday-boy Boothy cheered me up. Stood on his own surrounded by a few Peterborough fans he sung his heart out (influenced by alcohol I imagine) “Theres only one of me singing”, “When Huddersfield Town go up again (next season)” were a few of my personal favourites although it became rather repetitive.

The realisation of defeat is a hard one to take but what the hell we’ll do it next season. (said for the seventh or eighth year running now) And I certainly will be there roaming around the country on a few weekends next season whether it be both Sheffield teams away or all the way down to Stevenage on a Tuesday night.



At least thing at my club have changed and we are not settling for poor players and poor finishes which we got under the Davy/Ritchie regime. Hopefully next year Clark and Hoyle will get the promotion they deserve.

They say the Play-offs are the best way to go up and they are but they forget to tell you how much defeat hurts and I believe it hurts more than a cup final as promotion means a hell of a lot more. Give me second place anytime! See you next season Huddersfield Town.

Thursday, 3 March 2011

Associate teams have a place in the Cricket World Cup

So it’s the time every four years in the cricketing world where we complain about how long this world cup takes about the poorer teams in the competition aren’t providing the proper spectacle.

Although this world cup seems an improvement upon the farce in the West Indies it is still lasting nigh on seven weeks.



However, the International Cricket Council’s drastic solution for the next world cup see’s the teams cut to ten which seems very harsh and would mean that some decent associate teams may miss out. Leaving the associate nations to instead focus upon Twenty/20 cricket in the world events that are held every two years.

So far in this world cup we have already seen Ireland shock a lethargic England side, Canada push Pakistan close, Ireland almost beat Bangladesh, Zimbabwe show they could at times match Australia and England nearly suffered further embarrassment against Holland. Is it right that the ICC is pushing these teams out?

Of course you have seen that Kenya have been constantly beaten easily so far and except for the recent Pakistan game Canada have been nowhere near the standard required. But would Ireland be here if there were only 10 nations in this world cup.



Kevin O’Briens brilliant 50 ball century typified this and when you have Netherlands also pushing England close with Ryan Ten Doeschate (above) hitting 100 you have to question whether the ICC have gone the wrong way about shortening the tournament.

A simple was to rectify the tournament would be having 12 teams with the three best associate teams as well as test playing nations with two groups of six and only the top two qualifying. To have quarter-finals in a world cup which contains just 14 teams is a bit silly when you would say that only 8 of the sides are of a decent standard.

To leave the associate teams out in future world cups could prove costly especially if teams such as Ireland continue to develop and provide shocks. Instead their best players like George Dockrell may follow Eoin Morgan to play for England. Perhaps a mistake was made by not offering Ireland test status.




Whatever happens in the years to come, people will remember O’Briens (above) fantastic innings as he went in with no hope for the Irish and led them to victory. Perhaps the ICC should look at this before tampering with the tournament yet again.

Tuesday, 8 February 2011

Ferrari on the way to stardom

Not many can ever call themselves a world champion but one UCLan student is one of the brightest stars in martial arts.

Ferrari Faqiri, a second year sports journalism student, enjoyed a successful 2010 which included winning the world martial arts championships in Las Vegas.

Preston born Ferrari has subsequently been nominated for a prestigious award, The Most Up and Coming Sports Personality at this year’s British Asian Sports Awards.



“It’s fantastic to be nominated for the most up and coming sports personality of the year, it just shows my hard work is being recognised and its gives me that little buzz to work even harder because even greater things lay ahead.”

No stranger to hard work Ferrari has to manage a university workload alongside a tough training regime which sees him work in the gym for up to fifteen hours a week.

“Just knowing the balance between university and training is hard. When I’m at university I’m a student and when I’m at the gym I’m an athlete, i try to give both equal time because i aim to be successful in both.”




Ferrari’s feet are completely on the ground thanks to one large influence in his life, his father Hashmat who coaches Ferrari and has also been nominated for Coach of the year in the British Asian Sports Awards.

“With my dad being nominated for coach of the year it’s fantastic because he works just as hard as me, He plays a key role getting me prepared for tournament as well as training. I started competing in martial arts tournaments at around 14/15 years old that’s also when i started working with my dad because i felt he would be the one to take me to where i need to be.”

Ferrari is now firmly setting his sights on what the future will bring, including possibly representing Great Britain in the Olympics next year. However, he will not stop focusing if he doesn’t manage to compete in London.

“If it comes it comes, I’m focused on being the best. Opportunities will come and i take them, there is no time limit on my success.”

“My goal is just to be the best i can be and whatever tournaments come along the way i just go out there with one aim to win.”

The British Asian Sports Awards will take place next month at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London.

Full Story will be available in UCLan's student paper "PLUTO" next monday.

Follow me on twitter. twitter.com/gmarah26

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Tuesday, 1 February 2011

AFC Fylde 1 - 3 Salford City

Salford City overcame AFC Fylde in a controversial win at Kallamergh Park thanks to a Steve Foster hat-trick.

It was Fylde though who started out brighter, having a goal from Andy Bell disallowed in the 10th minute for offside.

Even though the game was a scrappy affair, it sprung to life in the final five minutes of the first half, when a dubious penalty was awarded which Foster calmly slotted home.

Fylde hit back straight away thank to Matt Walwyn who collected Matty Kaye’s cross before turning it in.

Salford from the kick off attacked Fylde’s goal forcing Lewis Edge into a brilliant save before Foster scored the rebound.

Fylde started to find their feet in the second half but were always chasing the game against a well organised Salford team.

With Fylde pushing for an equalised Salford were dangerous on the break first hitting the woodwork before Foster completed his hat-trick with a cool finish although he appeared to be offside.

Man of the match: Steve Foster

Interview with Kelham O'Hanlon (AFC FYLDE MANAGER)



Interview with Mick Stringfellow (AFC FYLDE DEFENDER)

Thursday, 25 November 2010

Data Skills Test





Above are two charts looking at data from the Guardian's datablog which is looking at the number of fatalities on each make of aircraft commercially available.

The first chart shows that MD-80 make of aircraft to be the aircraft which has the most fatalities. The aircraft has been involved in many crashes since it was first in use in 1980 and is now being phased out by many airline companies including American Airlines who it is primarily used by. The aircraft is 30 years old which explains the number of deaths comapred to other newer aircraft but it can be also said that it's safety has led to it's decline in current operational aircraft.

The second chart is comparing the different comapnies which make aircraft. Boeing have by far the most fatalities comparing it to Airbus. However, in recent times there have been many incidents involving Airbus', even recently with a Quantas Airbus A380's engine exploding in mid-flight, leading to all of the A380's to be grounded for 3 weeks.

Although the graphs show how many fatalities there are with air travel, air travel still reamins one of the safest modes of transport and figures for 2009 show it was the second safest year for air travel with an accident every 1.4 million flights.


Video Skills Test



The interviewee is a staunch Rochdale fan ever since he moved into the Rochdale area. I felt that Liam Geraghty, the interviewee, would give a good interview on a subject he knows very well and a subject he has a lot of passion for.

I interviewed Liam inside to avoid any background noises. In the background is his Rochdale poster and Rochdale away shirt along with Liam wearing his home Rochdale shirt. These props aided the interview due to their direct relevance.

Friday, 5 November 2010