CAMBRIDGE UNITED
Sky Bet League 2
Saturday 6th August 2016
Saturday 6th August 2016
Kick Off 3.00 pm
Stadium
The Abbey Stadium Newmarket
Road Cambridge CB5 8LN
Telephone
(01223) 566 500
Club
Colours Amber and Black
Nickname
The U’s
Key
Personnel
Midfielder
Sean Derry is the Head Coach and had a long 650 plus game career from
1995-2013 notably with Notts County, Crystal Palace, Leeds United and
Queens Park Rangers. His first taste of management was at County
before he took the reins at Cambridge in November of last year.
Impress
the Locals
Cambridge
were elected to the Football League from the Southern League Premier
Division in 1970 in place of Bradford Park Avenue. Gary Bull, George
Reilly and Gary Poole where signed by the Bees from Cambridge Utd in
1988 for a ridiculous joint fee of about £5,000, what a waste of
money that was! Dion Dublin left Cambridge for a club record fee of
£1,000,000 to Old Trafford in 1992 after failing to impress Barry
Fry on a brief on loan period at Underhill. “Schoolboy error there
Baz!”
Brief
Directions by Road
Take
the M11 and come off at junction 11. Pick up the A1309 towards
Cambridge. Pass through the village of Trumpington and turn right
onto the A1134 (Long Road). After about a mile you will come to a
roundabout, turn left onto Mowbray Road (still the A1134) and just
follow this road. It becomes in turn Perne Road, Barnwell Road and
Brooks Road, remaining as the A1134. At the end of Barnwell Road turn
left onto Newmarket Road and the ground is on the left after about
400 yards.
Car
Parking
Very
limited
at the stadium but plenty of parking is available at the various DIY
stores and Tesco on Newmarket Road.
Directions
by Train
Cambridge train station,
which is a direct service from Kings Cross and takes under an hour,
is a long walk away (over 2 miles) from the Abbey Stadium. I've done
it three times, you need refuelling on the journey!. However the bus
services are frequent and the number 3 is the bus that stops outside
the ground. Journey time approx 30 minutes. Taxis are plentiful but
expensive about £10 made for sharing.
Eating
and Drinking Locally
The
nearest pub to the ground is The Wrestlers. It’s very friendly but
sometimes becomes home fans only before some games. Normally it has a
fantastic real ale selection and does excellent Thai food. The
supporters club at the ground is normally members only pre match
although if you can talk your way in it is tardis like in its size
and very comfortable. The Green Dragon about a 15 minute walk away
(cross Stourbridge Common and over the river via the footbridge) is
normally a good bet for traditional pub food. For those coming by
train the walking route above will take you through a rabbit warren
of streets in the Romsey area of town. This is littered with some
lovely real ale boozers which are worth a look. In particular The
Salisbury Arms on Tennison Road, The Devonshire Arms on Devonshire
Road, The Kingston Arms on Kingston Road and my personal favourite
the Cambridge Blue on Gwydir Street.
Ground
Description
Utd
moved to their existing home in 1932 where is remained fairly
undeveloped for nearly 30 years. The Main Stand on one side is a
covered two tiered all seated stand, part of which is used as a
Family enclosure. It was first built in 1965 and extended in
1969.Opposite is the Habbin Stand,
it is fully covered although there are a number of supporting
pillars. The
northern end of this is allocated to home fans. When large away
followings are expected the southern end is given to away fans.
To the left of the main
stand is the South Stand, which was opened in 2002. It bears a
similar resemblance to a stand at Brisbane Road. It is all seated and
replaced a former shallow open terrace that I am sure some of our
older supporters will remember from the neck ache sustained and felt
on the way home! It will be our home for the game. The North Terrace
at the other end of the ground is covered and is reserved for home
fans only. However, it only runs for half the width of the pitch
finishing in line with the eighteen-yard box. Open terrace completes
the picture.
Admission
Prices
Adults
£19, Concessions £13, Under 16's £9
Previous
Meetings and Memories
The
last visit was in December 2015 when a John Akinde goal was not
enough in a 2-1 defeat in front over over 6,000.
The
ground holds special memories for older Bees fans in that the 3-0
re-replayed 3rd round FA trophy tie against Boston United
in February 1987 was held at the Abbey. It was one of the greatest
Barnet performances and David Sansom's finest hour in a Bees shirt,
two superbly taken goals and a what a headband!
Barnet knocked Cambridge
United out of the LDV competition in January 2000 in the first round
with a golden goal from Frazer Toms. Barnet also knocked Cambridge
United out of a 1st round FA Cup tie in 1965 at Underhill 2-1 in
front of over 6,000 but that was even before my time! The great Billy
Meadows has always said that he scored the perfect hatrick there in
April 1970 , left foot, right foot and header, but we ended up 3-4
losers on the day! Another fine performance was in September 1997
with Phil Simpson resplendent and a 3-1 away win thanks to King Kenny
Charlery, Greg Heald and Sean Devine.
Celebrity
Watch
Famous
people connected with Cambridge and surrounding areas are 10 a penny
including Comedian
Rory McGrath, who can often be spotted cycling round town, Lord
Jeffrey Archer, Terry ‘overgrown allotment’ Waite, Sid ‘Ricky
Butcher’ Owen, Original 1960’s Pink Floyd frontman Syd Barrett
(See Emily Play is a monster record), Don ‘Sing Lofty’ Estelle,
Ian ’Don’t tell him Pike’ Lavender and Professor ‘this chair
talks’ Stephen Hawking. John Halsey the drummer from the Beatles TV
spoof tribute band The Rutles was allegedly the governor of the
Castle Inn public house – now that is cool.
My
thanks go to Graham Steed, or “Edd” as he is known, for his
significant contribution to this guide.
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