logo
'Immortality' awaits Walsall play-off hero

'Immortality' awaits Walsall play-off hero

Yahoo20-05-2025

Walsall legend David Kelly says "immortality" awaits any Saddlers player who can score the goal to get them promoted at Wembley next week.
The Saddlers face AFC Wimbledon in the League Two play-off final on Bank Holiday Monday (26 May), bidding to end a six-year absence from the third tier.
It is only the third time Walsall have reached a play-off showpiece game - and they won both of the previous two.
The Saddlers beat Reading at the Millennium Stadium in 2001 and Bristol City back in 1988, winning promotion to the second tier on both occasions.
Kelly, now 59, scored a hat-trick in the 4-0 'third leg' replay win over the Robins 37 years ago, back when the play-off finals were decided over two legs, home and away.
That is a day still treasured by players and fans all these years later and Kelly told BBC Radio WM: "It's immortality for whichever player scores that winning goal."
David Kelly's My Sporting Memory - Walsall's 1988 play-off final
Darren Byfield's 'My Sporting Memory' - Walsall's 2001 Second Division play-off final.
While Kelly's Saddlers treble did not come at the national stadium, he did score there for Tranmere Rovers in their EFL Cup final defeat by Leicester City towards the end of his playing career in 2000.
Walsall, meanwhile, somewhat staggeringly for a club founded in 1888, have only ever played at Wembley once, losing the 2015 EFL Trophy final 2-0 to Bristol City.
So, should any Saddlers player find the net on Monday, they would write their name in Walsall folklore as the club's first ever Wembley goalscorer.
"It's a fabulous opportunity," former Republic of Ireland striker Kelly added.
"The build-up to a Wembley game is so very, very different. It's nerve-wracking, that's for sure.
"It's the home of football. It will be a very, very big crowd. It's something to look forward to and embrace.
"You very, very rarely get to play in the best stadium in world football – Wembley is the most iconic stadium out there. It's a big, big privilege to play there."
While Kelly retains strong links with the club, another Walsall play-off hero - Darren Byfield, who scored the extra-time winner against Reading in Cardiff 24 years ago - is even closer.
Byfield, former husband of pop star Jamelia, is a member of Saddlers boss Mat Sadler's coaching team at Bescot.
He's witnessed a rollercoaster season first-hand. Walsall led the league by 12 points in January only to falter and end up in the play-offs after the agony of Bradford snatching the final automatic promotion place on the regular season's final day.
But they rebounded strongly to beat in-form Chesterfield 4-1 over two legs in the semi-final.
"Both performances, home and away, against Chesterfield, were brilliant - Mat [Sadler] set his team up really, really well," added Kelly.
"We would all have taken [at the start of the season] the play-offs. They've done brilliantly to get to the final and we just need that little bit of fortune to get over that fence and into League One."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

SEC propaganda blitz for College Football Playoff speaks to need for more Big Ten games
SEC propaganda blitz for College Football Playoff speaks to need for more Big Ten games

USA Today

time6 hours ago

  • USA Today

SEC propaganda blitz for College Football Playoff speaks to need for more Big Ten games

SEC propaganda blitz for College Football Playoff speaks to need for more Big Ten games Show Caption Hide Caption Kirby Smart on college football's future Kirby Smart urges leaders to prioritize the game's future over personal or conference agendas in playoff talks. If you're explaining, you're losing. I thought about that old Ronald Reagan quote last week at the SEC spring meetings while the conference launched a days-long propaganda campaign explaining why it deserved more respect from the College Football Playoff committee. The SEC's best programs lost too often the past few years. Alabama's four losses last season marked its most since 2007. Georgia lost just twice in three seasons from 2021-23 before losing three times last year. LSU hasn't lost fewer than three times in a season since 2019. That 2019 season also marks the last time Florida won more than eight games. The less said the better about Auburn's past five seasons. We can debate whether the playoff committee would have been wiser to select a three-loss SEC team rather than SMU, but there's no arguing this: A Big Ten team won the national championship each of the past two seasons, and the SEC didn't even advance a team to the title game in those years. The SEC's consecutive seasons without a champion mark its longest drought since Florida State and Ohio State won the titles in 2013 and 2014. It's not that the SEC came unglued. It remains a deep league with few weaklings, but the SEC's cream wasn't as sweet as the Big Ten's last season. That left the SEC to explain its mightiness with rhetoric and graphs, rather than pointing to the national championship scoreboard. 'This (league) is not like any other,' SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said on the final day of his conference's propaganda blitz in Miramar Beach, Florida. Sankey paired that quote with a packet of paper several pages in length that sought to explain the SEC's greatness. NO CUPCAKES: If SEC wants playoff respect, it needs tougher games BIG DECISION: SEC's Greg Sankey can be hero or villain in playoff debate While several SEC coaches and administrators tried to prop up the league with their words, LSU coach Brian Kelly broke ranks and spoke some plain truth. 'Look, the Big Ten right now holds it on the SEC,' Kelly said. 'They won the last two national championships. That's the reality of it.' Here's more reality: Big Ten teams went 6-4 in games against SEC opponents last season, including postseason results. Kelly, a skilled orator, didn't compliment the Big Ten for no reason. He paired his praise by challenging the SEC and Big Ten athletic directors and commissioners to come to agreement on more interconference matchups between these two super leagues. Count Kelly among those who favor a Big Ten-SEC challenge. 'As (SEC) coaches – and I can speak for the room – we want to play Big Ten schools,' Kelly said. 'You've got to get a partner. You've got to get a partner who says, 'We're in for that, too.' We've made our voice clear. Our ADs know that, as well.' Kelly exaggerated when he said he spoke for the room of SEC coaches. In truth, some other SEC coaches sounded more squeamish about the idea of an annual game against a Big Ten foe. Kelly is smart to push the envelope, though, because the SEC needs this interconference challenge more than the Big Ten does. The SEC ruled the four-team playoff, but the conference up north scored the early advantage in the expanded playoff, both in number of qualifiers and bracket advancement. The SEC might be deeper in number of robust teams, but a 12- or even 16-team playoff works well for the Big Ten's quest to qualify its top quartet, even if the conference wavers down ballot. This season, SEC newcomers Texas and Oklahoma will play Ohio State and Michigan, respectively. Alabama's game against Wisconsin is the only other Big Ten-SEC matchup. 'We want to get challenged (by Big Ten opponents),' Kelly said, in what amounted to chiding a heavyweight belt holder to step into the ring. The SEC's most authoritative path to gobbling up at-large playoff spots would be to repeatedly beat Big Ten teams in non-conference clashes. Consider the SEC's basketball uprising. It dominated the non-conference schedule last season, including a 14-2 record in the ACC-SEC challenge. Come Selection Sunday, an NCAA record 14 SEC teams qualified for March Madness. The SEC didn't need to explain itself, because it owned the scoreboard. Not too many years ago, that was true of SEC football, too. This little Big Ten revolution spurred the SEC to double down on talking points. Anyone that spends that much time explaining must be losing a bit too much for comfort. Blake Toppmeyer is the USA TODAY Network's national college football columnist. Email him at BToppmeyer@ and follow him on X @btoppmeyer.

Couhig hints at securing new investors for Reading
Couhig hints at securing new investors for Reading

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Couhig hints at securing new investors for Reading

Reading owner Rob Couhig has hinted that he and business partner Todd Trossclair are working to "bring in a couple of partners" to add more financial firepower to the club. The American businessman and lawyer completed a takeover of the Royals in mid-May and has since been working alongside new chief executive officer Joe Jacobson to get the club back on its feet. Couhig has said that manager Noel Hunt will have money to spend on players this summer, and suggested that he is looking to bring in more investors. "We're doing some things to make sure that Todd and I are not alone out there with our money," Couhig told BBC Radio Berkshire. "Although I think we could certainly afford it, we're bringing in a couple of partners that will add to our financial strength. "When it comes to spending, you can't go in like Mr Dai (Yongge) did and just spend money on players without some rational basis to the revenue the club generates." Bloomberg claimed weeks ago that Miami-based investment firm - Aliya Capital Partners were set to join Reading's ownership group. Part of the work that Couhig has done so far is to organise which of the players will be staying and which will be leaving this summer. The annual retained list showed that 11 first-team players had been offered new deals, and since then midfielder Lewis Wing has been the only one that has committed to remain. "We know how much money we can spend without violating the rules," Couhig added. "We will have as much money as all but three or four clubs in the league. "We're doing everything we can to increase the revenue so we can spend as much as we can on players, the more we spend on players then the better chance we have of success. "Our goal is to be successful and we want to be ambitious but honour our core principles of honesty, transparency and financial sustainability." Couhig also touched on the Royals' academy, and what the future would hold for what is currently a 'category one' set-up. Reading are well-known for their development of young players, with a prime example being Michael Olise, who the club financially benefitted from when he made a big money move from Crystal Palace to Bayern Munich in 2024. "We're going to do our best to keep the academy as a category one," Couhig said. "But I'm a huge believer in the Brentford or Wycombe model where you have a great developmental squad which brings in late teens performing at a high level in with the first team. "What probably will happen we won't know for sure for some months as I haven't had a chance to chat about it yet, but Joe (Jacobson) has and he's making it a priority, the academy is not going anywhere." Reading offer new deals to 11 but release six Reading midfielder Wing signs three-year deal 'I stick with it,' new owner Couhig reassures Royals Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data

MLB reinstates 4 players after yearlong bans for betting on baseball

time19 hours ago

MLB reinstates 4 players after yearlong bans for betting on baseball

Major League Baseball's one-year suspensions for betting on the sport ended for four players Thursday — San Diego starter Jay Groome, Athletics relief pitcher Michael Kelly, Philadelphia infielder José Rodríguez and Arizona reliever Andrew Saalfrank. The A's announced they reinstated Kelly along with left-hander T.J. McFarland, who was on the injured list. They optioned right-handers Elvis Alvarado and Justin Sterner to Triple-A Las Vegas to make room on their big league roster. Saalfrank was optioned to the Diamondbacks' rookie-level Arizona Complex League. The Padres have not announced their plans for Groome, but the Athletic reported he was not offered a contract, making him a free agent. The Phillies have not announced their intentions regarding Rodríguez. Kelly was suspended for betting on baseball while in the minor leagues, and the other three minor leaguers were penalized for betting on big league games. Each player wagered less than $1,000. Saalfrank and Rodríguez played previously in the majors. The players violated Major League Rule 21, which is posted in every clubhouse. They were handed mandatory one-year suspensions for betting on games in which they did not participate. If they had bet on any games they attended in person — even if they didn't play — they would have been banned for life.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store