Nice passes by Williams
Ndala has good feet and a bit of pace !
Last comment some good teamwork and I think we have found some decent young uns
£2.15 for a Hull Daily Mail? That can't be right surely? My father in law still has one delivered every day. The mad bas**rdI noticed today the paper copy is now £2.15, it'll soon be on the RIP thread.
The views expressed in my posts are not necessarily mine.
Maybe yesterdays at half price?My father in law still has one delivered every day. The mad bas**rd
It's only recently that I've stopped buying it, not because of the price but the content, or lack of.£2.15 for a Hull Daily Mail? That can't be right surely? My father in law still has one delivered every day. The mad bas**rd
I buy a paper some weekdays but they're extortionate at the weekend...The good lady used to nip out on a Sunday morning and get me 2 or 3,not anymore,they're approaching £3 a paper !!!£2.15 for a Hull Daily Mail? That can't be right surely? My father in law still has one delivered every day. The mad bas**rd
I remember the Green Sports Mail. Does that come out on a Sunday these days ?£2.15 for a Hull Daily Mail? That can't be right surely? My father in law still has one delivered every day. The mad bas**rd
That's probably a win for him...In that , you can choose your friends, but not your family!!You must log in or register to see images
HDM headline today links Hull riots to football.
Move on nothing to see here..That's probably a win for him...In that , you can choose your friends, but not your family!!
Joking aside, Did anyone see Chief Suspect No1. on Channel 5, the 'Hull flasher..'
Yep all that police work and a suspended sentenceThat's probably a win for him...In that , you can choose your friends, but not your family!!
Joking aside, Did anyone see Chief Suspect No1. on Channel 5, the 'Hull flasher..'
The Green Sports Mail ceased production years ago, possibly early 80's? I worked on it when I first left school, until I realised I had to work Saturdays and miss City. No-one advised me that if I knuckled down I could have still seen City, but with the reporter who was Brian Taylor in those days and got paid! Although the wages for me as a copy boy were only £5.50 a week. I got one chance to be in the press box and it was for a night game. I had to meet Brian outside the ticket office at the front of Boothferry Park and go from there, but having to catch two buses from North Hull to get there and across tea time I arrived a few minutes late and he'd gone. They never asked me again.I remember the Green Sports Mail. Does that come out on a Sunday these days ?![]()
The Green Sports Mail ceased production years ago, possibly early 80's? I worked on it when I first left school, until I realised I had to work Saturdays and miss City. No-one advised me that if I knuckled down I could have still seen City, but with the reporter who was Brian Taylor in those days and got paid! Although the wages for me as a copy boy were only £5.50 a week. I got one chance to be in the press box and it was for a night game. I had to meet Brian outside the ticket office at the front of Boothferry Park and go from there, but having to catch two buses from North Hull to get there and across tea time I arrived a few minutes late and he'd gone. They never asked me again.
Malcolm Richardson was the main man behind the production of the Green Mail and he worked on it all week. He was particularly good with the amateur football reports and leagues, local darts and pigeon racing and he was a font of local knowledge. He kept drawers full of hand written note books on previous Hull City games, teams, scorers, times of goals, attendances etc, which I found out to my peril when, i think as a punishment, he had me re-writing or it could have been updating his note books going back several years, all by hand in biro.
One Saturday when I was still working on it I was in charge of the teleprinter and my job was to take the football results down quickly, edit them and give them to the lino operators to print in the paper, speed was of the essence.
One match was delayed, from memory it was York City v Hartlepool United, division four, the last result on the coupon. I waited and waited, eagerly to get it in the paper so i could get off home.
It still never came through, so I made the score up thinking no-one would notice, it was only York after all, who's interested in them in Hull? So I penciled in 1-1, gave it to the lino operator, got my coat and toddled off home not giving it a second thought.
Monday morning, Jack Fluck the sports editor, called me to his desk in front of all the other seasoned newspaper men who were all watching above their reading glasses.
He asked who did the football results on Saturday afternoon? The York Hartlepool game? Was it me? He was an old school boss, and I froze in front him, stammering my excuses.
He said he'd had a very angry phone call saying someone had checked their pools coupon and thought they had eight score draws, gone out that night to celebrate and spent a fortune only to find out the following morning that York had won 1-0 and he hadn't won the jackpot at all.
I still do not know to this day if it was an office wind up or not but it sure did put me in my place. But I did get my Saturdays off from then on........and was 'let go' when i reached 18.
The Green Sports Mail ceased production years ago, possibly early 80's? I worked on it when I first left school, until I realised I had to work Saturdays and miss City. No-one advised me that if I knuckled down I could have still seen City, but with the reporter who was Brian Taylor in those days and got paid! Although the wages for me as a copy boy were only £5.50 a week. I got one chance to be in the press box and it was for a night game. I had to meet Brian outside the ticket office at the front of Boothferry Park and go from there, but having to catch two buses from North Hull to get there and across tea time I arrived a few minutes late and he'd gone. They never asked me again.
Malcolm Richardson was the main man behind the production of the Green Mail and he worked on it all week. He was particularly good with the amateur football reports and leagues, local darts and pigeon racing and he was a font of local knowledge. He kept drawers full of hand written note books on previous Hull City games, teams, scorers, times of goals, attendances etc, which I found out to my peril when, i think as a punishment, he had me re-writing or it could have been updating his note books going back several years, all by hand in biro.
One Saturday when I was still working on it I was in charge of the teleprinter and my job was to take the football results down quickly, edit them and give them to the lino operators to print in the paper, speed was of the essence.
One match was delayed, from memory it was York City v Hartlepool United, division four, the last result on the coupon. I waited and waited, eagerly to get it in the paper so i could get off home.
It still never came through, so I made the score up thinking no-one would notice, it was only York after all, who's interested in them in Hull? So I penciled in 1-1, gave it to the lino operator, got my coat and toddled off home not giving it a second thought.
Monday morning, Jack Fluck the sports editor, called me to his desk in front of all the other seasoned newspaper men who were all watching above their reading glasses.
He asked who did the football results on Saturday afternoon? The York Hartlepool game? Was it me? He was an old school boss, and I froze in front him, stammering my excuses.
He said he'd had a very angry phone call saying someone had checked their pools coupon and thought they had eight score draws, gone out that night to celebrate and spent a fortune only to find out the following morning that York had won 1-0 and he hadn't won the jackpot at all.
I still do not know to this day if it was an office wind up or not but it sure did put me in my place. But I did get my Saturdays off from then on........and was 'let go' when i reached 18.
Great stuff T.T.The Green Sports Mail ceased production years ago, possibly early 80's? I worked on it when I first left school, until I realised I had to work Saturdays and miss City. No-one advised me that if I knuckled down I could have still seen City, but with the reporter who was Brian Taylor in those days and got paid! Although the wages for me as a copy boy were only £5.50 a week. I got one chance to be in the press box and it was for a night game. I had to meet Brian outside the ticket office at the front of Boothferry Park and go from there, but having to catch two buses from North Hull to get there and across tea time I arrived a few minutes late and he'd gone. They never asked me again.
Malcolm Richardson was the main man behind the production of the Green Mail and he worked on it all week. He was particularly good with the amateur football reports and leagues, local darts and pigeon racing and he was a font of local knowledge. He kept drawers full of hand written note books on previous Hull City games, teams, scorers, times of goals, attendances etc, which I found out to my peril when, i think as a punishment, he had me re-writing or it could have been updating his note books going back several years, all by hand in biro.
One Saturday when I was still working on it I was in charge of the teleprinter and my job was to take the football results down quickly, edit them and give them to the lino operators to print in the paper, speed was of the essence.
One match was delayed, from memory it was York City v Hartlepool United, division four, the last result on the coupon. I waited and waited, eagerly to get it in the paper so i could get off home.
It still never came through, so I made the score up thinking no-one would notice, it was only York after all, who's interested in them in Hull? So I penciled in 1-1, gave it to the lino operator, got my coat and toddled off home not giving it a second thought.
Monday morning, Jack Fluck the sports editor, called me to his desk in front of all the other seasoned newspaper men who were all watching above their reading glasses.
He asked who did the football results on Saturday afternoon? The York Hartlepool game? Was it me? He was an old school boss, and I froze in front him, stammering my excuses.
He said he'd had a very angry phone call saying someone had checked their pools coupon and thought they had eight score draws, gone out that night to celebrate and spent a fortune only to find out the following morning that York had won 1-0 and he hadn't won the jackpot at all.
I still do not know to this day if it was an office wind up or not but it sure did put me in my place. But I did get my Saturdays off from then on........and was 'let go' when i reached 18.
