Preston North End
On my first visit to Deepdale, then I had thoroughly enjoyed
visiting the ground. It had been a great trip, nice ground, a visit
to the football museum and the rare occurrence of a Wolves win away
wrapped up with a wonder goal from George ‘chicken legs’ Ndah!
Despite all that though, the main thought in my mind was one that
most people seemed to share, the ground really would look great when
the fourth side was finally completed, and during 2008, the club had
finally got round to doing it, replacing the former Pavilion Stand
with the brand new Invincibles Stand, so I was looking forward to
making another trip there and from when the fixtures were released
in June, our game with them in September was circled as one to go
to.
As it turned out, I did end up getting a bit of a sneak preview one
month early. Coming home from Barrow I had a bit of time to spare
whilst changing trains at Preston, so had popped along to Deepdale
and had a look around, being fairly impressed, even though it was
still a bit of a building site, so when the day of the game
eventually came round I was in a good mood, looking forward to both
the match and seeing what it looked like finished.
As usual, we caught the train northwards, leaving Wolverhampton just
after 10am and arriving in Preston with no trouble, having had to go
via Manchester due to no direct services, but arriving just after
midday. Having seen the ground and museum before, then I was in no
rush to get back, so we found a nice little pub called the Stanley
Arms in the city centre, having a few drinks before it was
eventually time to walk up to the ground.
After going in, then we found out that the match had actually been
delayed due to traffic problems, so we waited and at 3:15pm it
eventually kicked off, both sets of fans having worked themselves up
for it. With Wolves sitting top of the league and Preston just two
points behind in third place, both sides still unbeaten, then it was
a big game with all to play for. The hosts were the ones who started
the brightest, and early on it looked like they might have won a
penalty when Stearman handled on the line, but the referee adjudged
it to have been ball to hand, despite the protests of Neil Mellor.
It was bad news for Preston, and they were made to pay for it in the
35th minute after an effort from a corner had been
smashed against the bar and played out, the ball back in to the far
post found Chris Iwelumo who in spectacular style hit an overhead
kick straight into the net to make it 1-0. Following that, Wolves
looked like they could have gone further in front, but in the
minutes leading up to half time then it was Mellor again who was
left appealing as he had two efforts ruled out, the first whilst he
was clearly offside and the second more harshly as the ref blew for
an earlier foul.
If the first half had been fairly even, perhaps more dominated by
the home side, then it was Wolves who utterly dominated after the
break. A second goal was added in the 66th minute,
Iwelumo again who tapped home a low cross from the right on the
break. He bagged his hat-trick five minutes later, Kightly having
been scythed down in the box by Billy Jones, which resulted in the
big man stepping up to make it 3-0 and effectively game over. His
day wasn’t finished there though, and the rest of the game fell into
controversy, starting in the 75th minute when he turned
from hero to villain, getting sent off after an innocuous clash of
heads with Sean St Ledger who was at lengths to tell the referee
he’d made a mistake and with the game in stoppage time, Wolves went
down to 9 men when Wayne Hennessey came out to stop Mellor breaking
into the box only to take him down. Whilst no doubt a penalty, it
wasn’t a malicious foul, but the referee still saw it necessary to
show the red card and Mellor stepped up to score from the spot
before the game ended.
Throughout the match there had been a great atmosphere, particularly
in the away end where Wolves had travelled in impressive numbers,
3300 making the journey north, and after having been kept in for a
good 15 minutes after the game, everyone eventually left in high
spirits, the journey home seeming to go a lot quicker than it
usually does!
Overall, it had been a great day out, mainly down to not just the
result, but the style of the win, however it was also good to return
to the ground and see it finally completed. The new stand has been
built to a different design to the rest, still single tiered, but
smaller with two rows of executive boxes above (only one row in use
at present), but it still looks good, and the clock and ‘Deepdale
Preston’ writing is a nice touch. One thing I did think was a shame
to see go was the old ivy covered offices from the Pavilion Stand.
Sadly they were demolished, and I’m not a great fan of the exterior
of the ground, which looks a little bland in my opinion, but the
inside is great and at present it easily ranks as one of the best
grounds in the Championship, and a fine example of a redevelopment. Previous Visits to Deepdale
Page last updated 19/10/08
All
material copyright
©
T.S. Rigby, 2008
Deepdale
Result -
Preston North End 1-3 Wolverhampton Wanderers
Competition - Coca-Cola Championship
Attendance - 17,567
Ground Number - 18 (return visit)
Pictures:
Welcome to Deepdale!
Rear of the Tom Finney Stand
Main Reception
The Clubshop
Rear of the
Alan Kelly Town End
Rear of the
Invincibles Stand
Rear of the Bill Shankly Kop
The Football Museum
The Tom Finney Statue
Looking across the Bill Shankly Kop
The
Invincibles Stand
The Alan Kelly Town End
The Tom Finney Stand
The
Tom Finney Stand
The Alan Kelly Town End
The Invincibles Stand

Panoramic 1
(Click
to enlarge)

Panoramic 2
(Click
to enlarge)
(including pics of old Pavilion Stand)