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iris123

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Everything posted by iris123

  1. In all honesty, you haven't been to a meeting for around 20 years and have often said you lost interest in the sport around 50 years ago. So why d you still try to disrupt things and annoy people within the sport ? There must be some hidden issues at work here
  2. I am waiting for the tales with the start girls to come up on the speedway museum site
  3. You do like leading us around the garden path. But also admit to having a bad memory. Maybe set it all up on a boozy Friday night and forgot about it by the next morning. We have all done something similar
  4. Plus Gus has a very good website of his own http://www.guskuhn.net/GKMLtd/GKM Intro.htm
  5. Maybe more appropriate here ?
  6. Forgot about the original one. I started this one, after New Cross memories 2 was hidden/ deleted a few days back I guess the starter of that thread had also forgotten the original
  7. I have no idea what goes on in his head. But then I think I am in good company, as i doubt he does either
  8. Ask your grandson if he can set your laptop up to get past the gustix blocker I put on the image
  9. Seen this ad, and it looks like Ovaltine had a fairly long association with speedway. Ron Johnson , Malcolm Craven of West Ham and Mart Seiffert of Wimbledon are others featured I guess in the pre-war and probably post war eras, a number of products used speedway riders. Of course the famous cigarette series are well known. What others were there ?
  10. An interesting site for old sports stadia. Scroll down and a few photos of remains of the old stadium. Unfortunatelly not very good. When i visited the site there was certainly more to see of the terracing and , as i said previously the ticket office/entrance gate house https://www.derelictlondon.com/londons-long-lost-sports-grounds.html
  11. Any chance this place held Dirt Track meetings ? Seems to be mention of motorcycle races as well as greyhounds here From 1906 racing bets could be accepted; In the years that followed, until it was incorporated into Munich in 1930, the tax to be paid by the Trabrennbahn was the main source of income for the municipality of Daglfing . In 1909 a second grandstand was built for 1,000 spectators. Racing was restricted during the First World War , but not given up. During the Munich Soviet Republic in 1919, the trotting course was briefly occupied by Spartacists - equestrian sport was the domain of the nobility and the well-to-do bourgeoisie. In the times of crisis in the 1920s, greyhound races , car races and motorcycle races also took place on the trackinstead of. In the 1930s, when sport was heavily promoted by the National Socialist regime , a lighting system that enabled evening races and a new restaurant were built. The "Silver Horse of Germany", advertised from 1937, was conceived as an international trotting award. In April 1938 the main stand was destroyed by fire. https://second.wiki/wiki/trabrennbahn_daglfing
  12. Sounds right. I know i have a video somewhere of his with an England v USSR test at Plough Lane as one of the features. Distinct voice
  13. Also a short home movie piece. Sounds like it is taken from one of the videos a guy in Manchester put together.
  14. Looks like Germany have a test against Denmark lined up. What sort of level it will be though ? Veranstaltungskalender 2022 Sa. 05.03.22 - Training Sa. 12.03.22 - Training Sa. 19.03.22 - Der Hammer Sa. 26.03.22 - Training Sa. 09.04.22 - ADMV-Meisterschaft Sa. 07.05.22 - Pokal für Frieden und Freundschaft Sa. 21.05.22 - ADMV-Meisterschaft Sa. 11.06.22 - KKJS des LK OPR Sa. 18.06.22 - Pokal des Bürgermeister der Stadt Wittstock Fr. 08.07.22 - Training Sa. 09.07.22 - National Cup Sa. 23 07.22 - Länderkampf D - DK Sa. 13.08.22 - ADMV- Meisterschaft Sa. 08.10.22 - Race of the Night Sa. 29.10.22 - Helloween-Party
  15. Could it be this guy ? https://twitter.com/gustixspeedyguy
  16. Yes i know it isn't perfect and no mention of Jack Milne and his world title either
  17. An article for Weekly Tales, about the once great New Cross Rangers Speedway team. The drone of speedway bikes once reverberated around the ‘frying pan’; the Millwall track was lost in 1963, demolished by 1969. Motorcycle racing is frequently associated with the glamour and ceremony of the superbike events that tour the globe. Speedway is a cousin, with limited pomp and procession. Instead, there’s dirt and danger aboard a bike with limited technology and no brakes. It was recently declared that speedway is facing its demise, in desperate need of investment and reinvention that is unlikely to come. For a period, the sport of speedway racing attracted audiences that could rival the attendances at football matches. London laid claim to 10 clubs, from the New Cross Rangers to the White City Rebels, this form of motorcycle racing was popular in Britain for over 50 years. Though it continues today, it has failed to rival the rapid growth of other motorsports. *** In the mid 1920s, Fred Mockford and Cecil Smith, owners of London Motor Sport Ltd, sought to create a mile-long track in Crystal Palace. Their hope of establishing a form of motorcycle racing was granted by the trustees of the historic Crystal Palace. They had brought Speedway to Britain from Australia. It was a death-defying spectacle featuring leather clad men, a thrill for spectators. The first event to take place on the track pitted the home country against the founding father, Australia and its popularity was cemented for decades to come. The club, however, was forced to relocate in 1933 and a new home in New Cross was built. Mockford and Smith founded the New Cross Rangers in time for the 1934 season. The track was an iconic site of early speedway racing. Banked edges that surrounded the muddy periphery were a unique feature; the ‘frying pan’ had sweeping bends and short straights, resulting in tense races, injury and tragedy. The ground was home to greyhound racing; tightly positioned behind rows of terraced housing, factories and railway tracks. The followers of Crystal Palace became the Supporters’ Club of New Cross; fans wore the orange and black team colours throughout the move. The Maltese Cross became the badge associated with south east London’s newest speedway team. Speedway was a popular sporting event throughout the early 20th century. The sport excited audiences in a similar manner to that of football in the Premier League era. There was money to be made from gate receipts as capacity crowds of 30,000 descended upon the terraces of the old Millwall track.The ‘Lambs’ as they came to be known (conceived because the track was positioned between Canterbury Road and the Old Den), had talented riders in their midst. The heroic Tom Farndon was adored by fans. A brave, fearless rider, Farndon jostled against champion riders throughout the 1934 season. He was indispensable to the team as they secured the London Cup and a third-place league finish. The team paraded their wares down the Old Kent Road in front of an adoring public. In their second season, 1935, difficulties would arise for the club. Performances were not at the level of the previous season. A poor performance in the league was compounded by a dismal display in knockout tournaments. This was overshadowed by a crash involving Tom Farndon. The young prospect, poster boy of the Rangers, Farndon crashed into his fallen teammate Ron Johnson. He was propelled from his bike; the landing proved fatal. His final days were spent in a hospital in Greenwich. His celebrity was such that thousands of fans waited at the gates to be updated of his condition. News of his passing caused significant grief to the hoards of Rangers supporters. The death of Tom Farndon was the first tragedy in British speedway history. Worse was the fact that Farndon was close to cementing himself as the greatest rider of his generation. Such was the stature of speedway racing, that the people of Millwall lined the streets on the day of his funeral. The remainder of the season was insignificant; New Cross lost all the remaining fixtures of the 1935 campaign. *** The club experienced success in the 1938 season, winning the league for the first time. By the time of the Second World War and abandonment of the 1939 season, New Cross’s fortunes had reversed. They were rooted to the bottom of the table. The club experienced success in the post-war period but their future would not endure the coming decades. The Den was consistently the finest track in British speedway, with Mockford and Smith investing heavily on a premium surface. The results of their investment would be short term. New Cross struggled to survive after the recommencement of speedway. In 1953, 25 years after Mockford and Smith had established the Crystal Palace franchise, their beloved Rangers were experiencing hardship. A combination of television competition, entertainment tax and a shortage of spending money forced Mockford into closing the ‘frying pan’. The effects of the New Cross closure were profound for the entire sport, precipitating a decline in speedway across the country. A resurgence of the New Cross team occurred in 1959. Abandoned tracks across the country were reopened. Johnnie Hoskins, the manager of Wembley, West Ham and Newcastle in previous years, had the desire to oversee the rebirth of New Cross. It had been 6 years, but speedway returned with a match between New Cross and Wimbledon. The hope that surrounded these tremors of activity were decidedly short lived. A couple of seasons spent in the lower leagues delayed the inevitable. Their matches failed to attract interest; support had waned for a team that lacked quality riders. The golden era of Farndon and Johnson, hurtling around the track in a battle for first place, was gone. New Cross Rangers, in their famous orange and black attire, had their last meet at the ‘frying pan’ on the 5th August 1962. The track was sold, with stock cars dueling it out until 1969. It was finally demolished in 1975, as disputes between the stadium owners British Rail and the leaseholders ended the speedway association to south east London. https://the-dots.com/projects/the-new-cross-speedway-428366
  18. Lovely photo from 1962 http://www.millwall-history.org.uk/the_den4.htm
  19. I only ever saw the stadium when it was closed and partly demolished. The old ticket houses and some of the terracing when I used to go to the Den Would love to hear some other memories of the place and maybe a story or two of those that attended. I promise not to hide the thread
  20. The Bill filmed down our road in Colliers Wood once. Had a big canteen bus parked there for a couple of days
  21. Yes, I was going to say it was a massive and fairly rapid fall from grace for the old place when a decade later it was so empty and on the brink of closure
  22. I apologise if this has been put up before, but it is an amazing site with tons of facts and some great reads If for instance you are looking for details of the first Wimbledon meeting in say 1928, this would be the first place to look Enjoy https://www.speedwayresearcher.org.uk/
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