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The Mighty Ipswich Town Football Club
Written by adamisablue on Saturday, 8th Dec 2012 22:54

So I'm sitting in my new local cafe in Amsterdam for another Champions League clash for Ajax of Amsterdam. Just sitting there minding my own business, drinking my pint when, all of a sudden, I'm flanked by a group of Spanish lads wearing Real Madrid replica shirts.

Then, something happened which I will never forget. Upon finding out I was English, they sparked a conversation (with their best Spanglish) and asked me, "What football team I supported in England?".

Without hesitation, "The mighty Ipswich Town Football Club!" I replied, with I must say a hint of irony (talking to supporters of an actual mighty club).

They looked bemused. "Not Man U? Not Chelsea? Why Ipswich?" So I told them, (and there are a few more answers that I've thought about since, just to pull a few memory strings).

The day my best friend at the time, a guy called Daniel Godfrey (if you're reading this or anyone knows him tell him I said hi), took me to my first game, Ipswich-Southend, a 1-1 draw with Micky Stockwell scoring.

The smell of the Portman Road pitch, the roar of the crowd that day, the floodlights shining, being amongst the 9,000-odd on a cold wet Tuesday against Swindon. Steve Sedgley slamming the post in the last minute of extra-time in the first play-offs.

The mighty Manchester United being humbled at Portman Road (twice!) and singing to them "Can we play you every week!". Beating Norwich 5-0 with an Alex Mathie hat-trick and the new boy Bobby Petta scoring twice.

Mauricio Taricco galloping down the wing "like a cheetah on the plains of the Serengeti!". Being disappointed that we couldn't sign both Matt Holland and Kevin Phillips, so we settled on Holland (what a bad signing that turned out to be, hey?).

David Johnson scoring for fun, the absolute DIN that stadium used to make on the big matchdays, the bus ride of the old players returning with the FA Cup they won 20 years ago. "Mr Robson?" as me and my mate approached him. "Please call me Bobby," he said winking and signing a bit of cardboard we found.

More play-off hurt. A bit more play-off hurt. Sitting in my seat week in, week out watching a team that actually cared, Holland's victory laps. Missing out on automatic promotion to face, you guessed it, more play-offs.

The best game of football I've ever seen live (and boy I've seen a few) followed by Jim's last minute equaliser and winning the play-off semi-final. Queuing up the night before outside the ticket office and camping at Portman Road just to get my tickets for Wembley.

Being so excited on Wembley matchday I walked from Whitehouse to Nacton because I couldn't sleep. Wembley (need I say more?). The party and atmosphere in the town that night, people lining the streets, singing late into the night, the car horns, the "Well done lads!" banner that greeted the fans and players on the way back. THAT season which followed. Alun Armstrong rising like a salmon at the back post against Inter.

I understand we haven't had too many memories like this in recent times, since the forced sale of our team back in 2005, and we've had a few false starts with this new regime, and some people complain that we have no soul since the takeover, but the memories I've stated above keep the soul alive, and no one can take that away from us.

And the best bit is, we were there every single step of the way. It is exactly the reason I looked a Real Madrid supporter in the eye and proudly told him "I support the MIGHTY Ipswich Town Football Club!"




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BillBlue added 08:40 - Dec 9
Yeah, me too. COYB
1

KiwiBlue3 added 09:17 - Dec 9
A great list but I'd have added a very relevent memory I have of Ipswich 1 Real Madrid 0. I was in the North Stand that night.



5

cartman1972 added 09:30 - Dec 9
Brilliant blog bud , absolutely right in everything you say and that is why i love this club and the memories and the hoping one day it will all be relevant once again .
2

MVBlue added 11:54 - Dec 9
Pretty simple for me; I was born in Ipswich, surrounded by people in Sixth form talking about the Blues, went down to watch a match vs Leicester City in the North stand which we won 4-1 with a Kiwomya hat-trick including a 30 yeard screamer. Been hooked since then. The buzz of the crowd, the passing moving football, the size of the club for the region all helped. Ups and downs, we've had a few. Its been so hard recently but with Mick you get that Mighty Blue feeling coming back. Look forward to reading about Ipswich once again.
1

Tractorog added 15:40 - Dec 9
Nice blog
2

DutchTownFan added 18:52 - Dec 9
Well, that's a question i'm asked at least five times a week, i know what it's like.... thanks for giving me a few more answers by the way!
2

King_of_Portman_Rd added 14:41 - Dec 10
"Holland's Victory laps"

One reason the guy will be endeared to all Town fans was the fact that win, lose or draw he would come over to the fans and show his appreciation.

Top bloke and the sort of character we have missed ever since
1

unbelievablue added 23:40 - Dec 10
You walked from Whitehouse to Nacton and survived?
0

FarringdonBlue added 06:13 - Dec 11
Love the blog but I'm just dying to know.... just how did the Real Madrid fans react to that?
2

adamisablue added 14:27 - Dec 13
kiwiblue- even in the 70's portman road is un-mistakable :) good video, bit too young to be there though

King of portman road- tis a very true point, but i seem to remeber winning more than anything else at portman road. ill just pop my rose tinted glasses back in there box now...

unbelievablue- i know still cant belive it myself, honestly it was like taking the one ring of power back to mordor...

farringdon- they just didnt get it. as i said above i didnt give them all the answers i did above, just the main points like the playoffs. they couldnt grasp life without the champions league, signing whoever they want, winning trophys etc basicly being a real madrid (or any other big club for that matter) means victory as a standard. answered with the old victory to ipswich means more to me than any other club argument but they just did not understand. was quite a healthy debate until they left for the ArenA, but guess you just hasd to be there :)
0

patrickswell added 14:58 - Dec 15
Just for the record, after that 1973 win at Portman Road, the team goit a goalless draw at the Bernebeau to knock Real out of the competition. So on a head-to-head basis, Ipswich really are mightier than Real Madrid :) ( I appreciate that by the same logic, Norwich are mightier than Bayern Munich but there you go...)
1

Chop_Chop added 21:26 - Dec 15
great blog but at 41 years of age i cant get as excited about that squad, the 81 squad was different gravy.
1
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