
Wembley Stadium evokes
black-and-white grainy pictures of the FA Cup from my childhood – the build-up
on the BBC as soon as you got up, fish and chips for lunch, then my dad and I
huddled around the television, with John Motson, the BBC commentator, in his sheepskin
jacket.
"Oh,
what a goal! What a goal! Radford the scorer... and the crowd are invading the
pitch."
Wembley
Way has lost none of its magic. In the station, fans emptied from trains like
toothpaste from a tube onto the platforms. Groups of fans boomed out their
anthems while we snaked through the station, tunnelling our way towards the
exits, anxious to get a glimpse of the stadium.
When
I’d spent hours of my life singing, ‘From
Boothferry to Wembley, we’ll keep the Hull flag flying high’, I’d never
expected that my beloved – and hapless - football club would ever rock up at
Wembley. The closest we’d come was the Football League Trophy final in 1984 when
it was played at our home ground, plus the short-lived Watney Cup final in 1973,
and we’d come up short in both. Our trophy cabinet was a dusty wasteland.
Here we are on the edge of greatness, the ‘promised land’, the Premier League. The
pinnacle of football. All it would take was one victory and quizzes featuring
the largest city never to have played in the top flight of football would all
have to be re-written.
I stopped
at the top of the steps, shielding my eyes from the sun and took an enormous
gulp. There it was, the famous Wembley arch, and soon my team, my boys, would
be playing underneath it. Taking photos at every step, I made my way slowly down
the steps, taking in hot-dog scented air, listening to the scarf sellers’ calls,
waving my foam tiger paws. The road was busy with fans, who all looked like I
felt – a mixture of anticipation and glee. It felt like the whole of Hull had been
scooped up by the hand of God and deposited in this hallowed place.
Every few metres, you saw a familiar face from
the KC Stadium or someone you knew. For me, it was Katie, one of my best friends
from secondary school, who I hadn’t seen for 20 years. Here she was, gathering
me up into a bear hug. More selfies taken, the path split. Hull City fans on
one side, Bristol City fans on the other. A bronze tribute to Bobby Moore - one
of England’s World Cup winning heroes - at the head of Wembley Way got a pat
for luck and then it was time to go in.
Security
next and then in minutes, it was onto an escalator so big it felt like you were
travelling to the Moon. My cousin, Anthony, was waiting for me at the top. I’d
spent ten hours queueing for his tickets. I must have looked like I was ready
for a drink, he took me straight to the bar. A pint of lager was thrust under
my nose and I took a slug of my pint, the first of many.
Seeing
the Wembley pitch took my breath away and tears pricked my eyes, it just didn’t
seem right that my little team would soon be taking this big stage. I was going
to be sitting with everyone who I sat with at every game home and away – Sarah,
Martin and Dawn. We sat in the same order we did for home games, for luck.
Giant
inflatable sausages with flags bearing each club’s badge were hoisted above the
pitch. The teams were shown on the big screen. Hull City, the Tigers - Myhill,
Ricketts, Dawson, Turner, Brown, Ashbee, Garcia, Hughes, Campbell and the
home-town boys, Barmby and Windass, who would later take centre stage. The
national anthem was sung with gusto, followed by the obligatory handshakes.
Phil Brown, the Hull City manager, looked as orange as if he had just stepped
off a plane from Benidorm. Impressive fireworks shot into the air, like
cannons, on all sides of the stadium and it was time to kick off.
The
first few minutes seemed to pass quickly. I spent much of it rubbing my palms
on my knees and trying to steady my breathing. A few half-chances, a
nasty-looking injury to a Bristol City player, then the moment… Nick Barmby
played a through ball to Fraizer Campbell, who took the ball into the penalty
box, going past a Bristol City player, stumbling, looping the ball from the
by-line back across to Dean Windass, who was waiting at the edge of the box. He
was always meant to be there. Every time I picture it, I see it in slow motion.
Dean Windass, the bleached-blond boy from Gypsyville, hit one of the sweetest
volleys you will ever see and in no time, the net was bulging.
In the crowd, we had been clutching each
other, breaths caught in our throats – and then unbridled joy! The deafening
roar of the Hull crowd, who were at the other end, reached a crescendo. Everyone
around me went crazy, jumping up and down. I must have hugged everyone in my
row including friends, total strangers and men in tiger costumes. If we
squeezed each other tight, it wasn’t a dream. Tears were streaming down my
shocked face and I was gulping for air. I remember looking at my watch and
thinking, ‘Jesus, there’s still so long to go.’ A full half, plus the three
minutes of the first half that remained. Half-time was spent discussing that
stunner of a goal and wondering if we were dreaming.
The second half seemed endless.
Every time I looked at my watch, mere seconds had gone by. Another look, not
even a minute had passed. The match was going to be played forever. In the
final minutes, Bristol City had one last hopeful shot at goal, which was
gathered up by goalie, Boaz Myhill. Our central defender jumped onto his back
like a limpet and ruffled his hair. Good old, dependable Bo. The whistle to end
the game sounded and Dean Windass raced across the pitch, sunk to his knees as
if he couldn’t run any further and kissed the turf. I sunk into my seat too. My
legs would no longer support my weight. Head in my hands, I was crying like an
over-running bath. It had happened. Hull City were in the Premier League. In
the words of Phil Brown, who would later sing it karaoke-style on the pitch, ‘this was the best trip I’d ever been on’.

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