logo
Bus times to Bolton Wanderers first season game against Stockport County

Bus times to Bolton Wanderers first season game against Stockport County

Yahoo2 days ago
Here are the times for the buses that Wanderers fans can take to the team's first game of the season.
Bolton Wanderers take on Greater Manchester rivals Stockport County in the match kicking off at noon today.
However, the Bee Network has warned fans travelling to the game at Stockport's Edgeley Park stadium, that there are no trains between Manchester and Stockport.
Due to major engineering works, no trains will stop at Stockport station until the work finishes on Friday, August 22.
The station is closed for 21 days to remove the old bridge and install a new railway bridge and roundabout.
There is a rail replacement service in place - but fans have been warned that spaces on these buses is limited.
Transport for Greater Manchester (TfGM) has put in place a direct bus service from Bolton Interchange to Edgeley Park to help fans get to the game.
READ MORE: Bolton Wanderers fans snap up Stockport County tickets in rapid time
READ MORE:
READ MORE: Bolton Wanderers boss unconcerned with squad's experience
The bus will depart from stand G in the interchange, at the following times:
9.45am
9.50am
9.55am
10am
10.05am
10.10am
After the match, the buses will take fans back to Bolton Interchange, and tickets can be bought on the direct bus service.
Prices are £10 for an adult return and £5 return for under 16s.
Bee Network products will not be accepted on the service, but concessionary passes can be used.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

England face searching Ashes questions after India series thriller
England face searching Ashes questions after India series thriller

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

England face searching Ashes questions after India series thriller

England suffered an agonising six-run loss to India at the Oval on Monday as one of the most dramatic Test series of recent times ended in a 2-2 draw. Their next major red-ball assignment is a five-match Ashes series away to arch-rivals Australia -- where England have gone 15 Tests without a win -- starting in November. Below AFP Sport looks at some of the key issues that emerged from England's rollercoaster contest with India and what they mean for their quest to regain the Ashes 'Down Under'. Stokes central to England's hopes What England gain from having Ben Stokes in their side was never more evident than when their inspirational captain missed the fifth Test with a shoulder injury -- a fresh worry following his history of hamstring trouble. The 34-year-old all-rounder was the most threatening member of England's attack against India, taking 17 wickets at 25 in 140 overs -- the most he has bowled in a series. Stokes also looked back to his best with the bat, scoring 141 in England's mammoth total of 669 in the drawn fourth Test at Old Trafford. By contrast specialist opener Zak Crawley failed to reach three figures in nine innings. And at the Oval, the sight of vice-captain Ollie Pope running off to the dressing room to receive what appeared to be tactical guidance from Stokes did not say much for England's depth of leadership. England limited-overs captain Harry Brook, also a mainstay of the Test team and a lively skipper in the Stokes mould, could yet prove a better fit as vice-captain against Australia. Fast-bowling plan under threat England have long believed a battery of genuinely fast bowlers is essential if they are to win an Ashes series in Australia for the first time since 2010/11. But fitness issues could blight their best-laid plans. Jofra Archer made an encouraging return to Test cricket against India but played just two matches as England looked to manage the express paceman's workload. Mark Wood, another bowler with genuine pace, has not played Test cricket for nearly 12 months and had knee surgery earlier this year. The inconsistent Josh Tongue's return of 19 wickets at under 30 in the India series could well see him selected for Ashes duty, with Gus Atkinson's five-wicket haul on his return to Test duty at the Oval doing his cause no harm. Spin dilemma England, and Stokes in particular, have shown huge faith in Shoaib Bashir, a 21-year-old off-spinner unable to hold down a regular place in a county side but who has now taken 68 wickets in 19 Tests at 39. In the India series, Bashir's 10 wickets came at an expensive average of 54.1, before a finger injury ruled him out of the last two Tests. But Hampshire stalwart Liam Dawson failed to seize his chance in the drawn fourth Test, with Stokes appearing to tell the left-armer where he should be bowling on the Old Trafford pitch. Leicestershire's 20-year-old leg-spinner Rehan Ahmed, already England's youngest Test cricketer, is another option. England, however, didn't bother with a specialist spinner at the Oval, deploying Joe Root and Jacob Bethell -- clean bowled following a reckless charge down the pitch during a second-innings collapse -- for a mere 11 overs combined. But former Australia captain Ricky Ponting believes England should stick with Bashir for the Ashes because of his similarity to outstanding Australia off-spinner Nathan Lyon. "Australia will have probably three or four left-handers in their line-up which will aid the right-arm off-spinner as well," Ponting told Sky Sports. "And it's the over-spin that you need in Australia." jdg/ea

Lotus to join show of F1 championship winning cars
Lotus to join show of F1 championship winning cars

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Lotus to join show of F1 championship winning cars

A "legendary" Formula 1 team will showcase some of its former world championship winning race cars at a motorsport festival, organisers said. The Silverstone Festival in Northamptonshire, due to be held over the August bank holiday weekend, has announced four cars from the former Norfolk-based Team Lotus will be part of display featuring F1 cars raced by all 34 of the sport's world champions. The showcase is part of a special celebration to mark the 75th anniversary of the Formula 1 World Championship. Nick Wigley, the event's director, said the display was an "ambitious challenge that no one has ever attempted before". He said: "Now, the star-studded collection is not only nearly complete, but it also features an incredible number of title-winning cars. McLaren, Mercedes, Red Bull, and Williams have already confirmed their support for the showcase, contributing title-winning cars driven by illustrious champions including Ayrton Senna, Nigel Mansell, Fernando Alonso, Sir Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen. Team Lotus was founded by Colin Chapman and recorded its first F1 entry in 1958. Based at Hethel, near Norwich, the team counted world champions Jim Clark, Jochen Rindt, Emerson Fittipaldi, and Mario Andretti among its drivers. British driver Clark was intrinsically linked with Team Lotus in its formative years, winning titles in 1963 and 1965 and the "iconic" Lotus 25/R4 in which he won his first crown will join the display, alongside those driven by Rindt, Fittipaldi and Andretti. The festival will also feature performances from Natasha Bedingfield and Craig David presents TS5. The Silverstone Festival runs from 22-24 August. Follow Northamptonshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X. More on this story Festival to showcase biggest display of Senna cars Related internet links Formula 1

Dan Ndoye: Nottingham Forest forward with gifts for fans, who ‘took stairs' to top of game
Dan Ndoye: Nottingham Forest forward with gifts for fans, who ‘took stairs' to top of game

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Dan Ndoye: Nottingham Forest forward with gifts for fans, who ‘took stairs' to top of game

If you see Dan Ndoye driving around Nottingham, he might have a gift for you. When the Swiss winger was at Bologna, he would often keep a few club shirts, with his name and number on the back, in the glove box of his car as a potential keepsake for any fans he encountered. He would, naturally, have a pen handy for autographs, too. Advertisement A confident young man, then. But one thing that came up with every person The Athletic spoke to about Nottingham Forest's record signing is his friendly personality, so the stashing of ready-to-go merch reflects his effusive nature, rather than any sort of presumptive arrogance. The deal taking Ndoye to Forest was complicated by competition from Napoli and Juventus, and Bologna driving a tough bargain for their star winger, who eventually cost £35million ($47.5m). Eventually crawling over the line in the last week of July, the move had been in the ether for a year. Ndoye was offered to Forest in 2024 for around £25million, but they were not in a financial position to make the move. He had only been with Bologna for one season, scoring a single goal, but after some breakout performances at Euro 2024 with Switzerland and a Serie A campaign in which he found the net nine times, including the winner in the Coppa Italia final, he is a much more rounded player. From his perspective, too, last summer might not have been the right time to make the move. He has always been cautious about planning his career, looking for the next level but recognising it is better to take relatively small steps and play regularly to develop and improve, rather than go for bigger leaps and get lost in the shuffle. That partly informed the 24-year-old's decision to choose Forest: he could have gone to the reigning Serie A champions in Napoli, or Italian giants Juventus, where he would have played in the Champions League, but he has always wanted to play in the Premier League. Ndoye views Forest as the perfect size: big enough to be competitive, but not so established that his development could be stunted. He could have been in England much earlier than this. Arsenal, Manchester City and Southampton were among the clubs who looked at Ndoye when he was in the youth system of his first club, Lausanne-Sport, who competed in Switzerland's second-tier Challenge League. Interestingly, Forest's current chief football officer, Ross Wilson, was Southampton's director of football operations at the time. Advertisement Ndoye's game improved significantly at Bologna under Thiago Motta and, last season, Vincenzo Italiano, who made him a much more clinical finisher. 'Last year (with Thiago Motta) I rarely went looking for goal,' he told Gazzetta Dello Sport in May. 'Motta asked me to stay out wide more. Italiano granted me more freedom, the chance to score and to attack the box more.' Earlier in his career, one of the most influential figures was Sebastien Bichard, who coached him as a youngster at Lausanne. 'I remember very well this young, frail 12-year-old boy,' Bichard tells The Athletic, when asked about his memories of the first time he saw Ndoye play. 'He was already a very good dribbler and a fast one. What was already magnificent about him was his passion for the game, for the ball, for football. I immediately noticed his ability to play with his body, to outwit the opponent with the ball at his feet. There was something rare about him.' Bichard was particularly influential during a strange period in 2020 — for all of us, but Ndoye in particular. He had agreed a move from Lausanne to Nice (two clubs owned by Jim Ratcliffe's INEOS), but remained in Switzerland on loan for the remainder of the 2019-20 season, the plan being to move that summer. Then Covid-19 hit, and there was no football in the Swiss second tier for four months: not ideal for anyone, but particularly not for a player who had a new club to impress. Ndoye had to stay sharp somehow, and that's where Bichard came in. 'We met very early in the morning to do individualised training sessions on a very difficult village pitch, hidden from view, to prepare for his future move to Nice.' That move to Nice didn't go to plan. There was a gap of just three weeks between the fragmented season in Switzerland and the start of the new one in France. He began with some promise, but only started three games in Ligue 1. He was only 21 but already in danger of stagnating. Advertisement The following summer, he moved on loan to Swiss Super League side Basel, where his career was reinvigorated. He worked with Patrick Rahmen, who would later coach him for the Switzerland Under-21s, and his job was to restore Ndoye's confidence. 'That was key to his development under me and his subsequent coaches,' Rahmen tells The Athletic. 'When he felt that we were counting on him, he could develop game by game and find his confidence.' At Basel, he became a key part of the team quickly, and after a season on loan, the move was made permanent. 'He realised that he could be a difference-maker at a higher level,' says Rahmen, 'but his performances weren't consistent at first. Accordingly, it was a process for him to develop as a player at a club where he received a lot of trust from me and the coaching staff. He then put this into practice, both at the club and with the national team.' His progress wasn't linear. Rahmen remembers a conversation they had before a game against Spain's under-21s in 2023. Ndoye's confidence had dipped again after a long spell without a goal or assist. 'We had a long personal conversation where we talked about pressure and how to deal with his own expectations,' says Rahmen. 'We discussed it in detail and broke it down so that he could forget all the pressure for this game and simply look forward to the game and play without worry. He implemented this brilliantly and played an outstanding game, scoring a goal.' Ndoye's progression was bumpy at times, perhaps explaining his self-critical side. He analyses his performances independently of the work his clubs have done and replays matches on the same day. He looks for mistakes and areas of improvement. He has spoken about not getting much sleep some nights after studying a game particularly closely. 'It's also important to know that Dan had an atypical career path,' says Bichard. 'He wasn't always recognised for his true worth — he earned his first Swiss youth cap at the under-18 level. Advertisement 'He has a great capacity for work, is a good listener, and is ready to never give up. He now performs at a high level, as he did when he was younger, but with much more consistency and effectiveness today.' Or, as his father, Saliou, put it, speaking to Swiss outlet 24 Heures: 'Some people take the elevator and everything falls into their hands very quickly, they are propelled to the top while still very young. Dan, on the other hand, took the stairs. He is where he is because of his work.' Ndoye is extremely family-oriented. 'A career has its ups and downs,' Ndoye told 24 Heures. 'A player's mental state accounts for 70 per cent or 80 per cent of their performance. I have a mental coach who helped me a lot when I was younger with concentration issues. But nothing replaces family. It's a necessity.' Saliou is from Senegal and was a decent amateur player in his day (as a smooth attacking midfielder, he picked up the nickname 'Platini'), and now splits his time between Switzerland and a real estate business in his homeland. His mother, Virginie, is Swiss and he has two younger siblings: a brother, Issa, and a sister named Eva. Issa is a photographer and videographer who made a glossy social media clip charting Ndoye's journey to Nottingham, while Eva studied at university in America last year. Virginie missed the start of Euro 2024, where Ndoye played for Switzerland, to attend her graduation. Both were with him as he completed the formalities of his move to Forest. A post shared by Dan Ndoye 🦁 (@danndoye10) Throughout his career, some combination of his immediate family members have usually lived with or near him, moving to Nice then Basel then Bologna. While they won't be moving en masse to Nottingham, they always try to ensure a couple of them are close by at any one time. 'They provide the balance Dan needs,' says Bichard. One family member who will be joining Ndoye more permanently in Nottingham is Alpha, the husky that Eva persuaded him to get a few years ago. 'A life without Alpha is unimaginable for me,' Ndoye told Blick this year. 'She gives me a lot of love and takes my mind off things when I'm out walking or lying on the couch, which helps me enormously, especially after games.' Advertisement As for slightly less furry friends, he is still close to former Bologna team-mates Joshua Zirkzee — the Manchester United forward with whom he plays Call of Duty online — and Riccardo Calafiori, now of Arsenal. Bologna's scouts went to watch Ndoye play for Basel, and while there, were also impressed by Calafiori (who they also already knew about), signing them both in 2023. Nottingham Ndoye also asked Remo Freuler, Bologna's Swiss midfielder who played for Forest, about the move to Nottingham, and was told only good things about the club. His signature goal celebration — showing his 'claws' and growling like a big cat — stems from his family and his childhood. 'Since I was a child, my parents have compared me to a lion,' he said last year. 'They often say that the Senegalese players are the Lions of Teranga. So it was just a little reference to my second nationality.' Ndoye has big boots to fill, having been signed shortly after the sale of Anthony Elanga to Newcastle United. But if Forest fans keep seeing that celebration, there will be plenty of takers for one of those shirts, signed and fresh from the glove box.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store