by floyd__streete »
28 May 2007 14:28
Only the young, the alzheimers and the plastics have an excuse for this date not being imprinted on their brain with a branding iron. Tomorrow is the 12th anniversary of that monumental ocassion and today being play-off final day I want to talk things through.
It was the best of times, it was the worst of times. Reading FC's bravest failure; our most heroic of all the cock-ups that had blighted the history of a club who up until now had never won much worth winning. What a day; 40,000 had made their way up from the Royal County for this one in the cause of barking for the Biscuitmen. 10 weeks later our first home game of the new season attracted less than a quarter of that number.
IIRC, the fun had started the previous day. Mr Mad and Mike Lewis walked the 40 miles to Wembley, presumably as a result of some drunken bet after a big sesh at The Red Lion in Upper Basildon. At the time we lived on Shepherds Hill and the route took the Mad entourage past us; we dressed in blue and white and waved flags in encouragement as they past. That night I didn't sleep, it was like all my childhood December 24th's had come at once.
The following day and cars parked up at our gaff, waiting for the big bus hired by my brother's football manager to take selected family/friends/hangers-on to Wemberley. Folk turned up bedecked in blue and white, many with home-made badges and large foam COME ON YOU ROYALS hands. The M4 was a tooting mass of Reading and we arrived in good time for a wander around the stadium to take in the atmosphere. 2-Ten FM were as ever on the bandwagon and had set up camp nearby, inviting their gathered audience to join in with RFC chants and songs. Any time a stray Bolton fan wandered past 9normally with Phillips 6 on their back) they were given the WHO ARE YA treatment.
The team showed up - which was rather good of them really - and the bus drove through the Wembley gates to the most extraordinary wall of noise and colour. Thumbs up, we were going up. Bolton rolled in to a less convivial welcome - he's fat, he's queer, he takes it up the rear - McAteer, McAteer. Once inside the build-up was interminable. The earlier bright sunshine had given away to drizzle and overcast skies. It was the kind of weather that meant business. The Wembley scoreboard rolled with messages as I read and re-read the programme; Shaka, Shaka, what's the score? Reading to win by four read one.
And for half an hour or so it looked like we could and would. Nogan danced through, Adie stuck out a foot. 2-0, and Wembley rang to the strains of Are You Watching Mark McGhee?. Lovell stepped up to take a penalty and delirium abounded. Saved, rebound over the the top. 40,000 people let out a long sigh. One seat to my left my Dad's mate shook his head and frowned. I didn't want to see frowning; we were 2-0 up and we were going to win.
The middle portion of the game just disappeared and for all I know didn't actually happen as I spent most it staring intently at the scoreboard, concentrating. About 53 Reading players limped off injured in the cause, they gave it their all. I sweated blood myself; at 2-1 now inside the last 10 minutes the nerves got to me and I accidentally chewed off a thumb nail. Fabian De Freitas rolled in that disgusting goal, the one where the ball stuck between stanchion and the back of the net and I sat with a bloody tissue around a thumb which by now was throbbing.
The wait between the end of normal time and the start of extra time was the equivalent of being sat in a dentist's waiting room with all your family and 40,000 others. I cannot recall anyone speaking, but I looked along the long line of family and friends and all the faces carried achy expressions. Subdued wasn't the word; Phil Parkinson and Tom Jones, two absentees amongst the walking wounded, came round to try and whip up some noise again.
It did pick up - briefly. We knew we'd lost already, 4-2 confirmed what we already expected and then Jimmy Quinn rattled in a beauty to make it even more cruel. The journey home was quiet, contemplative. What little talk there was on the way home was of winning the title next season and of keeping Shaka, Osborn, Taylor et al for a successful promotion challenge. This time next year we were going up. But much like the cheer which greeted Parky and Jones, nobody really truly believed in that either.
Back home and, too emotionally exhausted like the rest of us to cook, dear mother went to get us fish and chips. The chips were cold and horrible.
25/3/06 was closure of some sort and the wounds of that day have been bandaged, the ghost exorcised. Only our anecdotes remain as evidence of the pain. 29/5/95 was a brilliant, bad day. A day almost too painful to remember, but also a day too memorable ever to forget.