Finishing second to Scarborough in the Conference in 1986/87, while experiencing the most entertaining football
to be played at Underhill for some 15 years, had given us supporters a new hope for the future.
Chairman
Stanley Flashman had built a sound financial basis for Manager Barry
Fry to do what he excelled at - pushing his players and himself to
the limit to entertain the public and install the belief that if the
other team score three, there is no problem, we can score four!
Fry on the West Bank |
To
set the scene Full Metal Jacket, Fatal Attraction and Lethal Weapon
were the films to see. In the football world Everton had walked away
with the First Division title and Coventry had beaten Tottenham in
the FA Cup Final 3-2.
We
were all singing along to Never Gonna Give You Up by Rick Astley, I
Should Be So Lucky by Kylie Minogue and What Do You Wanna Make Those
Eyes At Me For? by Shakin’ Stevens.
Lincoln
City were the first 4th Division club to be automatically relegated
into the Conference. Manger Colin Murphy, who had top level
managerial experience with Derby County was in his second spell at
Sincil Bank and the Imps were to provide the main opposition with a
little help from Kettering Town for a Barnet squad which had hardly
changed since the previous season. After a very successful three
winning game pre-season tour of Norway Fry had drafted in ex Luton
Town and Coventry City full back Kirk Stephens and a young Gillingham
striker by the name of Graham Westley.
As the season progressed the
squad did begin to fill out and first to arrive was top England non
league midfield star Noel Ashford signed from league rivals Wycombe
Wanderers in what was at the time, the biggest ever transfer deal
between two non league clubs at the end of August. It was rumoured to
be in the region of £25,000.
Kirk Stephens |
Fry signs Graham Westley |
Noel Ashford |
As
fate would have it Barnet’s opening league fixture was against new
boys Lincoln City. A ferocious game (on and off the pitch) in front
of 2,600 fans, which saw a Dave Sansom hatrick and the easiest goal
Nicky Evans would ever score after Imps keeper Nigel Batch had
completely mis-kicked his clearance, set the adrenaline pumping among the Underhill faithful again. It eventually finished 4-2. The
game was marred by a reckless tackle on John Margerrison, who had had
more than his fair share of injuries during his Barnet career, It
left the midfielder in plaster and sidelined for several weeks. The
last day of August saw a 5-2 demolition of a Welling United side that
contained a soon to be Barnet player, Gary Abbott. This result left
the Bees third in the table with eight points from a possible 12
behind Weymouth and Stafford Rangers.
John Margerrison |
A
slip up at home to Telford United 0-2 was pushed under the carpet as
the Bees went on a goal infested seven match unbeaten run including
home wins over Northwich Victoria (4-1), Kettering Town (4-0, with
Nicky Evans scoring two against his old club) and Altrincham (3-1)
plus away wins at Bath City and Sutton United (both 1-0) and the main
event of the season so far - the absolute massacre of Wycombe
Wanderers at Loakes Park. Seven goals, including four from Evans and
two from Sansom destroyed the home side. It was the highest away win
since the formation of the Alliance League in 1979 but was memorable
for two other reasons. Noel Ashford had been held in a God like
esteem by Wycombe fans and during the second half a number of them,
some even wearing cut out masks of their hero, jovially stood
alongside the Bees fans. They then started chanting derogatory
remarks toward their chairman for selling him. This chanting was
wrongly reported as emanating from the Bees fans and an apology to
the fans was published in a later home programme. However even
funnier than that was at the end of September when Wycombe announced
their Player Of The Month for August, second place was won by Nicky
Evans! Numerous Barnet fans had posted nominations with the great
mans name on into the ballot box during the game.
Come and behold the King of Underhill |
New
faces were arriving at the club fairly regularly as Fry and Flashman
sought to reinforce the squad.
Double championship winner Nicky Ironton signed from rivals Enfield, Ian Fergusson joined from Bishops Stortford for his second spell at the club (this move involved a swap deal with Carl Hoddle) and a big centre forward by the name of Herbie Smith who had been terrifying the life out of defenders whilst at Fisher Athletic also put pen to paper - Mr Smith was to become legendary at Underhill within a week! Barnet were top of the table again but a fateful visit to Lincoln City was just around the corner.
Nicky Ironton |
Double championship winner Nicky Ironton signed from rivals Enfield, Ian Fergusson joined from Bishops Stortford for his second spell at the club (this move involved a swap deal with Carl Hoddle) and a big centre forward by the name of Herbie Smith who had been terrifying the life out of defenders whilst at Fisher Athletic also put pen to paper - Mr Smith was to become legendary at Underhill within a week! Barnet were top of the table again but a fateful visit to Lincoln City was just around the corner.
Herbert Smith |
The
FA Cup run pitted Barnet against lower league opposition four times
in a row and all were away from home. Witney Town (3-0),
Irthlingborough Diamonds (4-0), Berkhampstead Town (3-0) and
Willenhall Town (6-0) were all easily despatched with Evans and
Sansom scoring for fun. The arrival at Underhill of then 4th Division
Hereford United in the 1st round proper was an altogether different
proposition. Nearly 3,000 witnessed a disappointing performance by
Barnet whose natural passing game seemed to desert them and they went
down 1-0.
The
October evening fixture and 2-1 defeat at Sincil bank was frustrating
for many reasons and memorable for others. The black players in the
Barnet team were subjected to vile racist chanting, with bananas
being thrown onto the pitch plus the large Barnet contingent in the
4,600 crowd were subjected to continuous verbal abuse and
intimidation from the Lincoln fans, plus the odd missile was thrown
into a segregated enclosure that was hardly fit for pigs. The toilet
and refreshment facilities were frankly unacceptable as was the
standard of the stewarding and not a programme seller in sight! Right
moan over, but you must understand that non league fans were
accustomed to a more relaxed environment at games, changing ends at
half time and standing or sitting where they wished. The times they
were a-changing. The Bees played some scintillating football but the
Referee lost control of the game very early on in an hostile
atmosphere reminiscent of the opening game of the season. He also
awarded City the most dubious of penalties.
Fry under supervision at Sincil Bank |
Barnet’s goal came from
an unlikely source in Kevin Millett but they were reduced to ten men
when Noel Ashford got his marching orders early in the first half for
retaliation to an appalling challenge and then incredibly to just
nine men. Substitute Herbie Smith, making his first team debut and
who had only been on the field for a matter of minutes, was also sent
in for an early bath for an alleged punch!
For
various reasons December and early January threw up five successive
home league games. Only two points were dropped out of a possible 15.
This run was interrupted by a 2-1 defeat at Enfield in the League Cup
and a 1-1 draw at Windsor and Eaton in the FA Trophy 1st round. The
Bees went through to the second round winning the replay 2-1. Barnet
celebrated a six point Christmas with back to back wins at Underhill
over Enfield 3-0 and Sutton United 6-2. The aggregate attendance for
these games was nearly 8,000 and Andy Lomas in the Barnet goal had
the perfect quiet Christmas.
Andy Lomas |
The
New Year saw Mr Flashman pull out the cheque book again to sign goal
machine Gary Abbott from Welling United for around £15,000 and
defender Nicky Bissett from Dagenham. “Abbo” was to make his
mark virtually straight away with three goals in the outstanding 4-2
win at Telford.
Other players to join the ever growing Underhill
squad included Lee Payne, full back Phil Stacey also from The
Daggers, midfielder Steve Parsons and in March a young ex West Ham
trainee by the name of Paul Wilson.
Gary Abbott |
Our
2nd round FA Trophy visitors were Bromsgrove Rovers and they
surprised everybody with a thoroughly professional performance at
Underhill drawing 0-0 and produced an even better performance in the
replay winning 3-1. Yet the general consensus of opinion amongst the
Barnet supporters I felt was one of relief at being left free to
concentrate on the important matter of attempting to win the league.
Nicky Bissett |
February
arrived and another home win, including two goals from Parsons in a
3-2 victory over high flying Weymouth, set the club up for the short
hop into the county of Middlesex for the return fixture against
Enfield. However the biggest league gate of the season at Southbury
Road of over 2,200 witnessed a poor display from the Bees who were
beaten 0-2. Two more frustrating games at Altrincham (1-1) and
Maidstone (1-2) allowed the chasing pack to close the gap in the
league.
Nicky
Evans returned from injury in March and it was to become a very
productive month for the club who won 10 points out of a possible 12.
Fry’s attacking policy was illustrated by the fact that he started
most games in the month with three forwards (chose from Nicky Evans,
Gary Abbott, Dave Sansom, Herbie Smith and Keith Alexander) plus a
winger (Edwin Stein) and attacking midfielders (chose from Noel
Ashford, Ian Ferguson, John Margerrison, Steve Parsons and Robert
Codner). Defenders Kevin Millett, Kirk Stephens, Steve Cox, Phil
Stacey, Nicky Blissett, Peter Brown and Glyn Creaser were given a
massive responsibility especially as usually only three of them
managed to get on the team sheet! Home wins over Fisher Athletic and
Macclesfield Town were overshadowed by the excitement generated by
the slaughter of Wealdstone at Lower Mead. Six Barnet goals hit the
back of the net including the eagerly awaited debut goals from the
irrepressible Herbie Smith. The celebrations for his two goals are
ones that I wish I could re-live if only to experience again the
sheer pleasure on his face as he fell to his knees in front of
hundreds of his admirers - marvellous.
Approaching
April the Bees were five points clear although they had played two
more games than both Lincoln in second place and Kettering Town in
third. A brilliant attacking display in the 2-0 win over Maidstone in
front of 3,510 fans at Underhill was ironically the start of a poor
run of form which saw the club gain a total of only five points from
the final six games. Lincoln and Kettering on the other hand picked
up points. Defeats at Weymouth (0-2) and Northwich (1-2) and the 1-1
draw at Kidderminster Harriers were made to look even more depressing
when considering all three were mid table teams who had little to
play for and were in no danger of being sucked into the relegation
zone. With each club having just two games remaining Barnet had 77
points, Lincoln had 76 points and Kettering 75.
Barnet’s
last home fixture of the season was against another mid table team in
Runcorn and it had taken on massive proportions. It was a very simple
equation - win this one and the last game of the season at Welling
United and Barnet would be champions. Would you believe that a Barnet
hero from the future was to spoil the party in front of 5,143 fans,
the biggest Underhill attendance since 1972. Barnet created chance
after chance but only one was converted by Steve Cox while Mark
‘Spike’ Carter (soon to be a darling of the Underhill terraces)
hit the winner in a 2-1 win for Runcorn.
It was only the Bees second
defeat of the season at Underhill. and the silence at the final
whistle was tear jerking especially as Lincoln City had beaten
Stafford Rangers at Sincil Bank 2-1. The Imps were now two points
clear and they just had to win their last game at home to Wycombe to
return to the Football League at the first attempt. A draw and a
Barnet win would not be good enough however as Barnet’s goal
difference was far superior.
The
Bees Bank Holiday Monday fixture at Welling United, unfortunately
marred by some crowd trouble, turned out to be a comfortable 2-0
winning performance in front of Welling’s biggest crowd of the
season by far (over 2,500). Yet time had run out as news filtered
through that Lincoln had got the result they needed beating Wycombe
2-0 in front of a Conference record crowd which still stands to this
day of 9,432.
Barnet FC 1987-88 |
Commenting
with hindsight is easy but 93 league goals was proof enough of the
entertainment served up by Barry Fry’s team. However to win the
championship a club needs a certain balance and above all
consistency. At home Barnet had got it right but their cavalier
attitude away from home which had won many accolades and praise had
been the clubs undoing and too many games were lost or drawn at a
vital time. To their credit Lincoln held their nerve until the bitter
end although their style of play would never have endeared them to
the neutral supporter.
Bridesmaids again but some happy faces! |
On
a brighter note attendances at Underhill were up on the previous
season (average 2,600). Nicky Evans topped the scoring charts with 31
goals from just 39 games in all competitions followed by Dave Sansom
with 27 from 48 games. They really were the dynamic duo. Gary Abbott,
Keith Alexander and Robert Codner all made double figures.
Barnet
were Bridesmaids again and it was so hard to take. The following
season was to be one of consolidation and foundation building but it
did have its rewards too.
GM VAUXHALL CONFERENCE RESULTS ATTENDANCE AND SCORERS 1987-88
Lincoln City | H | Won 4-2 | 2,598 | Sansom 3 (2 pens) Evans |
Fisher Athletic | A | Drew 2-2 | 1,101 | Stephens, Westley |
Macclesfield Town | A | Drew 2-2 | 1,311 | Evans, Alexander |
Welling United | H | Won 5-2 | 2,322 | Sansom 2 (1 pen) Creaser Fergusson Evans |
Telford United | H | Lost 0-2 | 2,062 | |
Bath City | A | Won 1-0 | 533 | Stephens |
Wycombe Wanderers | A | Won 7-0 | 1,606 | Evans 4, Sansom 2, Codner |
Northwich Victoria | H | Won 4-1 | 1,535 | Codner, Sansom, Evans, Alexander |
Kettering Town | H | Won 4-0 | 2,141 | Evans 2, Creaser, Codner |
Sutton United | A | Won 1-0 | 979 | Codner |
Stafford Rangers | H | Drew 2-2 | 2,282 | Sansom, Alexander |
Altrincham | H | Won 3-1 | 2,598 | Creaser, Evans, Alexander |
Lincoln City | A | Lost 1-2 | 4,624 | Millett |
Runcorn | A | Won 1-0 | 1,081 | Sansom |
Bath City | H | Won 4-0 | 2,344 | Ironton, Ashford, Sansom, Evans |
Cheltenham Town | A | Won 2-0 | 1,674 | Evans 2 |
Kettering Town | A | Drew 1-1 | 2,245 | Sansom |
Wealdstone | H | Won 5-1 | 2,167 | Evans 2, Codner 2, Ashford |
Dagenham | A | Drew 0-0 | 696 | |
Boston United | H | Won 1-0 | 2,045 | Sansom (pen) |
Enfield | H | Won 3-0 | 4,105 | Alexander 2, Codner |
Sutton United | H | Won 6-2 | 3,813 | Alexander 3, Ashford 2, Codner |
Cheltenham Town | H | Drew 1-1 | 2,751 | Codner |
Dagenham | H | Won 3-2 | 1,175 | Sansom 2 Ashford |
Telford United | A | Won 4-2 | 2,824 | Abbott 3, Alexander |
Stafford Rangers | A | Drew 1-1 | 1,867 | Sansom |
Weymouth | H | Won 3-2 | 2,414 | Alexander, Parsons |
Enfield | A | Lost 0-2 | 2,216 | |
Altrincham | A | Drew 1-1 | 1,540 | Stein |
Maidstone United | A | Lost 1-2 | 1,329 | Evans |
Fisher Athletic | H | Won 2-0 | 2,191 | Evans, Alexander |
Macclesfield Town | H | Won 2-1 | 2,312 | Evans 2 |
Wealdstone | A | Won 6-0 | 1,556 | Evans 2, Abbott 2, Smith 2 |
Kidderminster Harriers | H | Drew 1-1 | 3,067 | Abbott |
Boston United | A | Lost 1-2 | 2,703 | Awartife |
Maidstone United | H | Won 2-0 | 3,510 | Codner, Abbott |
Wycombe Wanderers | H | Drew 1-1 | 2,956 | Alexander |
Weymouth | A | Lost 0-2 | 1,747 | |
Northwich Victoria | A | Lost 1-2 | 1,483 | Sansom |
Kidderminster Harriers | A | Drew 1-1 | 1,851 | Codner |
Runcorn | H | Lost 1-2 | 5,143 | Cox |
Welling United | A | Won 2-0 | 2,517 | Sansom (pen), Own Goal |
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