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A musical starring Watford fans Stephen John Davis and Colin Mace. In 2023/24, a fan in the land of the living tries to bring a former legend back from the Watford Football Club afterlife. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
‘I hope the people who weren't there the night we made it felt a part of it'The Hornets make history, reaching the top flight for the first time. The 1981-82 season had gone almost perfectly. They were in the promotion hunt throughout the campaign, despite the fact local rivals Luton Town were ahead of them. There was the customary wobble in spring time but victory over Wrexham at Vicarage Road got the job done with a couple of games to spare.There was also a memorable FA Cup third round win over Manchester United – and the club's youth team followed in the footsteps of the seniors beating United in the FA Youth Cup final. The Hornets were on the up and Graham Taylor and his style of play was already attracting plenty of attention.Note: At the time, it was thought the club had been founded in 1891. Ten years later, when Oliver Phillips and Terry Challis were researching the origins of the club for the official centenary book, they discovered that the club had in fact been founded in 1881. Therefore promotion to the First Division was achieved in the season marking the club's 100th anniversary.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'I wish we'd been told it was just a normal game of football,' Neil PriceThe FA Cup final on May 19, 1984 put Watford on the biggest stage in world football, in front of a global audience of hundreds of millions. Just six years earlier they'd been facing the likes of Southport and Darlington in the Fourth Division.Finishing runners-up to Liverpool had been one thing but to reach Wembley marked the culmination of the journey, the realisation of a dream.Elton's tears flowed as Abide with Me and the national anthem played and the magnitude of the achievement sank in.For the players, the build-up to the final was tricky, Everton were a formidable opponent on the cusp of turning themselves into the best team in England, one of their goals should have been disallowed and, if truth be told, the occasion got to them as Watford's day in the sun ended up giving them the blues.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'Once we'd beaten Luton, I felt it might be our year'Before the draw for the FA Cup third round was made, Graham Taylor told Elton John to keep FA Cup final day free. Elton was about to set off on a huge European tour but he took Taylor's advice on board and asked his management company to keep Saturday, May 19 1984 free.Then the third round draw gave Watford a very difficult trip to local rivals Luton Town. They'd not at Kenilworth Road for almost 20 years.And when the Hornets were 2-0 down inside half an hour, Wembley was just about the furthest thing from their minds. But everything clicked into gear in early 1984 and Watford were one of the form teams in the country as they followed the yellow brick road to Wembley.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'When it kicks off, it's always the big guy who gets it' – George ReillyAs Graham Taylor sought to revamp his team, he stuck to his tried and tested methods. One of his biggest challenges was replacing the Blissett-Jenkins strikeforce that had been so successful.So he went back to what he knew and replicated the combination of a big target man and a quick striker. In came George Reilly from Cambridge United and Maurice Johnston from Partick Thistle. They struck up a lethal partnership on the pitch – and a mischievous one off it.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'I looked out there on the pitch. They were just kids.'In autumn 1982, Watford embarked on the adventure of a lifetime. First stop was West Germany and a UEFA Cup first round date with Kaiserslautern.The squad was entering a transitional period. Luther Blissett, Ross Jenkins and Gerry Armstrong had all moved on. Some of the players who'd helped the club to the First Division were coming to the end and, to make matters worse, the Hornets suffered a lengthy injury crisis.And, with all the club's new signings ineligible for Europe, it meant that the team that represented Watford as they made their debut in European competition could almost pass as a reserve and youth side.After defeat in West Germany, it looked as if Watford's adventure would be over early...Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'We've asked Milan for a million pounds, so that should be the end of that'In the summer of 1983, Watford prepared to say farewell to their favourite son, as Luther Blissett headed to Milan. Blissett had been with the team since the Fourth Division days and had just topped the First Division goalscoring charts ahead of Liverpool's Ian Rush as the Hornets finished runners-up in the league.An offer of a million pounds was too good to refuse. This is the story of how the deal came about...Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'I told the players we would not be changing our style. We were going to attack.'Watford had reached Division One well ahead of the schedule initially laid out by Graham Taylor and Elton John in 1977. The question was, were they ready to take on the best clubs in the country?The 1982-83 season came hot on the heels of the World Cup where the Hornets striker Gerry Armstrong had made headlines around the globe by scoring Northern Ireland's winning goal agains the hosts Spain. It intensified the spotlight on the Hornets as the new domestic campaign approached.Taylor believed in his players but he was not going to leave anything to chance. He scheduled a gruelling pre-season boot camp in Scandinavia and put the players through their paces. His wanted his squad to be the fittest in the division because he felt that would help them take a few teams by surprise.And that is exactly what happened. An opening day win over Everton was followed by a 4-1 thrashing of Southampton at The Dell. Watford then beat West Bromwich Albion at home to go top of the league for the first – and so far only – time.This is how the Hornets took the First Division by storm.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'I learned he was not the dictator the players thought he was' – John WardWe meet Graham Taylor's backroom team, who embraced the gaffer's inimitable style, and created The Watford Way. Both John Ward and Steve Harrison had been signed by Taylor as players. Tom Walley had hung up his boots when Taylor arrived in 1977 and had built a youth development system to rival the best clubs in the country. And physio Billy Hails completed a close-knit inner circle.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'His performance against Chelsea showed he was the last piece of the jigsaw.'In late summer 1981, Watford found the final piece of the jigsaw – John Barnes. The discovery of a 17-year-old spotted playing parks football in London is an almost mythical story with several different versions of how he came to sign for the Hornets. What is not disputed is that Barnes had an immediate effect and quickly became one of the most eye-catching young players in the country.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
English football was in the doldrums in the 1980s. Hooliganism was thought of as 'the English disease'. English fans caused trouble at home and abroad, culminating in the tragic violence that marred the 1985 European Cup final. England's grounds were run-down and blighted by fences designed to keep hooligans in.But Watford were determined to buck the trend and set a very different example. As humble as the facilities were, there were no fences obscuring the view at Vicarage Road. The Hornets established themselves as The Family Club and created areas where children and families could watch the game safely. While other clubs – notably Luton Town – banned away supporters and introduced an identity card scheme, Watford wanted to make football a game for everyone.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
‘He wanted to play with two wingers and attack. I thought, I love this guy.'Graham Taylor goes shopping again, spending a significant amount of Elton John's investment on a player from each of the North London giants and a much less heralded arrival from Oxford United.Two men from Northern Ireland were key to Watford's plans to push for promotion. Pat Rice had been Bertie Mee's captain at Arsenal. Gerry Armstrong was an eye-catching striker at Tottenham Hotspur. They were joined by Les Taylor, a hard-working midfielder from Third Division Oxford, and once they had settled in, Watford began to look like a team that was going places.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Southampton players just wanted to get out of thereThe Hornets complete a stunning League Cup comeback in September 1980, hitting seven past Southampton at Vicarage Road having trailed 4-0 from the first leg of the tie.It was the first result that really made people in English football sit up and take notice of what was going on at Watford. Graham Taylor would not have said publicly beforehand that he thought the comeback was on, he instilled a sense in his team that they could achieve the seemingly impossible.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'My biggest regret is using his phrase in interviews' – Graham TaylorWhat's the difference between a long ball and a long pass? It's a question that came to characterise the media's coverage of Graham Taylor's Watford team.In 1979, as Taylor was reflecting on the compromises he'd made on arriving in the Second Division, a statistician called Charles Reep wrote to him with a detailed breakdown of the numbers that led to success on the football pitch.Reep, who had been a wing commander in the Royal Air Force, had analysed hundreds of matches and had identified some key statistical truths about the game. One was that the great majority of goals were scored from moves consisting of three passes or fewer. Reep's methods had been instrumental in the success of the great Wolverhampton Wanderers side of the 1950s.But how did he come to work with Graham Taylor and what effect did his ideas have on Watford's success as they looked to push on and achieve promotion to the First Division?Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'If you didn't want a clip round the ear, don't cross Tom Walley'Meet Sergeant Major Tom Walley, the man who built Watford's youth system and turned boys into men.When Graham Taylor arrived at Watford there was no youth system to speak of. Their were barely enough young players to put out a side. Taylor knew that if Watford were to compete in the top divisions they needed to identify and develop their own young players.Tom Walley was a Hornets favourite – a veteran of Ken Furphy's team that reached the Second Division the first time round – but his knees had gone and his playing days were coming to an end.When Taylor met Walley for the first time he spotted something in the Welshman and put him in charge of revolutionising the youth set-up. Walley's combination of carrot and stick, his ability to identify talent and teach them what it would take to make it as a professional, paid dividends many times over as Watford earned a reputation for a progressive approach to developing young players.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
I knew I had to change something or it was the end of the dream - Graham TaylorWatford made it to the Second Division just two years into Elton and Graham's ten-year plan, but life was not easy rubbing shoulders with the likes of Chelsea, Sunderland and West Ham United.Taylor was determined to give the players who had steered the club to successive promotions a chance at the highest level but after an early-season defeat at Stamford Bridge he realised he had to change something. Watford's direct football had already attracted attention, and criticism. Conventional wisdom said that it would not work in the higher divisions and Taylor felt the pressure to conform. The Hornets survived relegation but the goals had dried up and Taylor felt he had compromised his principles. It was time to go back to basics.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Graham Taylor appoints a veteran, Double-winning manager as his assistant in the clearest sign yet that Watford were going places. With an emphasis on fast, attacking football and a desire to outscore the opposition home and away, Taylor's methods have an immediate effect as they win the Fourth Division title and then pass straight through the Third Division to reach the second tier for the first time in almost a decade.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'You're going to work harder than you've ever worked before' – Graham TaylorIn the summer of 1977, after two consecutive seasons stuck in the Fourth Division, Watford had a new manager. Graham Taylor had led Lincoln City out of the bottom division with a record-breaking points total and he swept into Vicarage Road determined to change the culture and drive up standards. His first job was to meet each of the players, look in the whites of their eyes and assess whether they had what it would take to embrace his methods. Taylor's impact was more or less immediate...Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It's summer 1977. Watford are languishing in English football's Fourth Division but they have a wealthy, flamboyant and famous owner who has dreams of taking them to the top. The rock star, Elton John, has only recently taken full control but he's a novice when it comes to running a football club.Elton's vision is to appoint England's World Cup-winning captain Bobby Moore as manager, but Watford's directors have other ideas and set about persuading the chairman to go for someone who knows what the lower divisions are all about. It takes an intervention from the legendary Don Revie to change the course of the club's history.The club the new manager inherits is a shambles. Greyhound racing takes priority over football at Vicarage Road. But the goal is clear, to reach the First Division in ten years...Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'I just wish he'd signed McClelland before he bought Tony.'Watford had survived two seasons in the First Division but Graham Taylor knew the club was not yet an established top-flight club. In the summer of 1984, he turned his attention to strengthening the team and signed two players who would become key parts of the team.Having finished runners-up at the first attempt, followed by an appearance in the FA Cup final, Taylor also knew that it would be hard to maintain the momentum and the excitement...Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'You're turning me into a Watford player now' – Brian TalbotAs Graham Taylor continues to refresh the team, not every player fits the mould. Watford move into the transfer market again to add Brian Talbot, an experienced midfielder who'd spent the best years of his career at Ipswich Town and Arsenal. Talbot was chairman of the Professional Footballers' Association and widely respected in the game, but he also had ideas of his own about how the game should be played...Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'I hated playing on the wing. I absolutely hated it' – David BardsleyGraham Taylor's gradual evolution produced arguably the finest team of his ten year reign in 1986-87. Tony Coton was the best uncapped goalkeeper in the country. John McClelland led the defence with an understated sense of calm. Kevin Richardson added silk in midfield. John Barnes had developed into an international-class winger and Mark Falco and Luther Blissett formed a subtle version of the little-and-large strikeforces the manager liked so much.The team had a solid league campaign and made their way through to the quarter-finals of the FA Cup, where they faced Arsenal at Highbury. It was a fiery game that ended in controversy and left the Hornets just ninety minutes from a return trip to Wembley.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'Never in a million years did we think we'd need him'Watford's build-up to the 1987 FA Cup semi-final against Tottenham Hotspur was plagued by misfortune. First Tony Coton got injured. Then his goalkeeping understudy Steve Sherwood got hurt too. With the transfer deadline having passed and many of the nation's goalkeepers cup-tied, Watford had to turn in the most unlikely direction.That's how Gary Plumley, a former player with Newport County and Cardiff City – and the son of Watford's chief executive Eddie Plumley – ended up playing in goal at Villa Park. Unfortunately, Graham Taylor's golden touch deserted him this time.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'No one got Elton and I together and asked if this was what we wanted' – Graham TaylorJust after the season had ended, with the disappointment of the FA Cup semi-final defeat to Tottenham still fresh in everyone's minds, the unthinkable happens.Graham Taylor announced he had the chance to go to Aston Villa. He half-expected Elton, or one of the directors, to implore him to stay. But no one stepped in.Did Taylor feel he'd taken Watford as far as he could? Was Elton's interest in the club waning? Did the other directors feel the manager wielded too much power?As with most of these things, there was no decisive answer but here is the story of how Watford's incredible decade of success came to an end, as told by the people who were involved at the time.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'It was a monumental error but I didn't see it and neither did Elton' – Dave BassettSummer 1987Meet the new boss, very different to the old boss. Elton John wasted little time lining up a successor to Graham Taylor. He called round to see Dave Bassett, who had been part of a similar fairytale journey through the divisions at Wimbledon. Bassett also had a reputation as a long ball manager, although Wimbledon's style was a lot rougher and readier than Watford's, especially as Taylor's side had evolved into a more sophisticated version over the years.On the face of it, Bassett was the logical choice, the perfect man to continue the story at Vicarage Road. But very early on it became apparent it was not a match made in heaven.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Every fairytale has to come to an end sometime. After the shortlived Dave Bassett era, Watford turned to the continuity candidate, Steve Harrison, who had been part of Graham Taylor's coaching staff throughout their most successful seasons.But Harrison – by his own admission – was not cut out for management and although the team made a good stab at making an immediate return to the First Division, they fell short in the play-offs. The glory days had passed and it would be the best part of a decade before they would be back at Vicarage Road, and it would take the return of Graham Taylor to bring them about. But that is another story...This has been Enjoy the Game, which was written and published by Lionel Birnie in 2010. The audio series was read by Colin Mace and was produced by Jon Moonie of From the Rookery End. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
'Right foot or left, Cally could drive it in, float it in or curl it. Brilliant'A portrait of an icon, one of the most mercurial homegrown talents in the club's history. Nigel Callaghan was often not appreciated as much as his teammate on the other wing, John Barnes. But Callaghan's ability to cross a ball made him one of the most effective wide players in the game. But Callaghan and Graham Taylor sometimes failed to see eye to eye and despite his brilliance, there was a sense that he could have achieved even more.Enjoy the game by Lionel Birnie. Read by Colin Mace. Produced by Jon Moonie. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Every week, we are highlighting a panel from TBRCon2023, looking back on the amazing variety of panels that we had the honor of hosting. This week, join moderator/blogger David Walters and audiobook narrators Travis Baldree, Colin Mace, Luke Arnold, Emily Woo Zeller and Robin Miles for a TBRCon2023 panel on "Audiobook Narration 101." SUPPORT THE SHOW: - Patreon (for exclusive bonus episodes, author readings, book giveaways and more) - Merch shop (for a selection of tees, tote bags, mugs, notebooks and more) - Subscribe to the FanFiAddict YouTube channel, where this and every other episode of the show is available in full video - Rate and review SFF Addicts on your platform of choice, and share us with your friends EMAIL US WITH YOUR QUESTIONS & COMMENTS: sffaddictspod@gmail.com ABOUT THE PANELISTS: David Walters is the founder of TBRCon and the FanFiAddict book blog. Find David on Twitter or FanFiAddict. Travis Baldree is the bestselling author of Legends & Lattes, as well as a professional audiobook narrator. Find Travis on Twitter, Amazon, Audible and his personal website. Colin Mace is a British theatre, film and TV actor that has appeared in Call the Midwife, Foyles War and the acclaimed ITV drama The Lost Honour. He has narrated for books such as The Shadow of the Gods, The Painted Man and more. Find Colin on Twitter, Audible and IMDB. Luke Arnold is an actor and fantasy author of The Fetch Phillips Archives, including The Last Smile in Sunder City, Dead Man in a Ditch and One Foot in the Fade. Find Luke on Twitter, Audible, Amazon and his personal website. Emily Woo Zeller Emily Woo Zeller is the voice of Panam Palmer in Cyberpunk 2077, and has done voice work/audiobook narration for The Last of Us Part II, Star Wars, This is How You Lose the Time War, Ninth Step Station and more. Find Emily on Twitter, Audible, IMDB and her personal website. Robin Miles is an American actor, casting director, audiobook narrator and audiobook director. She has acted in Broadway shows and on TV shows including Law & Order and Murder by Numbers. She has narrated for books such as The Fifth Season, Binti and more. Find Robin on Twitter, Audible and IMDB. FOLLOW SFF ADDICTS: FanFiAddict Book Blog Twitter Instagram MUSIC: Intro: "Into The Grid" by MellauSFX Outro: “Galactic Synthwave” by Divion --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/sff-addicts/message
The travelling Watford faithful had a chance take in new signing Ismaël Koné and a bunch of Academy graduates as they tried, but failed, to ignite the magic of the FA Cup. As well as their thoughts and observations of the 2-0 defeat at the Reading, Jon, Colin Mace and Lionel Birnie discuss the tragic loss of former Watford manager Gianluca Vialli. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the early hours of March 2015, the police receive a call from a nurse at a provincial Danish hospital...Uitgegeven door SAGA EgmontSpreker(s): Colin Mace
We have interviews and movie clips from the Edgar Wright movie LAST NIGHT IN SOHO. Hear from Edgar Wright, Anya Taylor-Joy, Thomasin McKenzie and Matt Smith. This movie has it all. It's a science fiction horror thriller with time travel. If anyone has the skills to pull this off it's Edgar Wright.
País Reino Unido Dirección Peter Cattaneo Guion Rosanne Flynn, Rachel Tunnard Música Lorne Balfe Fotografía Hubert Taczanowski Reparto Kristin Scott Thomas, Sharon Horgan, Amy James-Kelly, Robert Whitelock, India Ria Amarteifio, Jason Flemyng, Sophie Dix, Davina Sitaram, Greg Wise, Colin Mace, Karen Sampford, Charlie Hiscock, Shafali Rani Chung Sinopsis Cuando un grupo de esposas de militares deciden crear un coro en una base militar, un poderoso vínculo comienza a surgir entre ellas. La música y la risa transformará en cierta forma sus vidas, ayudándoles a intentar superar el miedo que experimentan cada vez que sus seres queridos se aventuran en peligrosas misiones en Afganistán.
Hey WTAF-ers!Top Trumps time again and this time it's the turn of one of the Satan's Fingers, Trevor Bagstone. We are joined by actor, Colin mace, to discuss and dissect Trevors scores. We also reveal the final scores for Count Fartula!WTAF LIVE 4 INFOBREAKING NEWS!!!!! NEW DATE!!!!! We have rearranged the date for WTAF LIVE 4 : THE FAREWELL to Friday 26th NOV 2021! All tickets that have been purchased will be valid for the new date. We want our last live show to be something special so we hope you will be able to join us for a night of This Country themed fun with a few surprises thrown in. Grab your tickets here - https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/sundial/t-ooylyj BE A PATREON PEEPER! You can support the podcast for as little as £1 a month and get great rewards such as :
Click here to buy: https://adbl.co/2zNJnDt Vakov Fukasawa used to be a Reaper: a bio-enhanced soldier fighting for the Harmony, against a brutal invading empire. He's still fighting now, on a different battlefield: taking on stormtech. To make him a perfect soldier, Harmony injected him with the DNA of an extinct alien race, altering his body chemistry and leaving him permanently addicted to adrenaline and aggression. But although they meant to create soldiers, at the same time Harmony created a new drug market that has millions hopelessly addicted to their own body chemistry. Vakov may have walked away from Harmony, but they still know where to find him, and his former Reaper colleagues are being murdered by someone, or something - and Vakov is appalled to learn his estranged brother is involved. Suddenly it's an investigation he can't turn down . . . but the closer he comes to the truth, the more addicted to stormtech he becomes. And it's possible the war isn't over, after all . . .
It's the penultimate game of the season and the Hornets (in our make believe end of the football season commentaries) will face Manchester City, a team we have not been able to beat since our return to the Premier League. We sit on 38 points, have two very tough games to go and are not yet clear of the drop zone. This afternoon, our commentator Colin Mace is joined again by Kenny McPhee on co-comms for what looks to be a certain defeat. Can the Hornets do the unthinkable for a second time this season? COME ON YOU ORNS!!!
Are you missing football on a Saturday? Of course you are and so are we. This podcast is very unique and we hope it till give you something of a normal Saturday afternoon, supporting Watford. Colin Mace, professional actor (currently seen in Military Wives), FTRE co-host and Hornet Heaven narrator, has imagined and commentated on Watford v Leicester game... the whole 90 minutes. And he plays the part of both commentator AND pundit (Kenny McPhee). It has gone on-line at 1pm on Saturday 4th April 2020 and, to get the full Saturday afternoon experience, you will need to press play at 2:46:50. By doing that the whistle will blow at 3pm, exactly. It is spectacular and we think it will be the perfect company on a football-less Saturday. Put it on and get on with your jobs around the house and you will feel like there is a real Watford game going on. So download the podcast and press play at 2:46:50 Stay Safe Hornets!!
Click here to buy: https://adbl.co/2FYs0Bq Crowfall is a gritty epic fantasy for fans of Mark Lawrence, Scott Lynch and Daniel Polansky. A sorceress cataclysm has hit the Range, the final defensive line between the Republic and the immortal Deep Kings. Tormenting red rains sweep the land, new monstrosities feed on fear in the darkness, and the power of the Nameless, the gods who protect the Republic, lies broken. The Blackwing captains who serve them are being picked off one by one, and even immortals have learned what it means to die. Meanwhile the Deep Kings have only grown stronger, and are poised to deliver a blow that will finally end the war. Ryhalt Galharrow stands apart from it all. He has been deeper into the wasteland known as the Misery than ever before. It has grown within him - changed him - but all power comes with a price, and now the ghosts of his past, formerly confined to the Misery, walk with him everywhere. They will even follow him, and the few surviving Blackwing captains, on one final mission into the darkness. (p) Orion Publishing Group 2019
'Dreamland' is written by Brian Eley and performed by Colin Mace. This is the Chain Reaction Project. The Chain Reaction project is a series of stories written in response to each other. A story is passed to the next writer in the chain, and they respond to it with another story, as loosely or as closely as they wish. Their story is then passed onto the next writer, and so on. Produced by Lydia Thomson Supported by Red Apple Creative With thanks to Theatre 503.
CHELSEA 4-2 WATFORD With a result that didn't reflect the performance, the Hornets may have left Stanford Bridge frustrated, but, on the morning after, Jon calls Mike, Colin Mace and Olly Wicken to talk through the positives of the game. Did Deeney have the impact we all hoped, will Ricky from Rio recover from the results and what can we expect from the latest series of Hornet Heaven?
SWANSEA 1-2 WATFORD A third consecutive away win for Watford, and things feel a lot better than they did 7 days ago. Jon and Mike, with Colin Mace on the phone, talk about the game and Marco's Silva's half time tactical changes. They also take your questions - Should we dream of Europe, When will Will Hughes and Okaka get a run out and which position is the most important in 4-2-3-1?
BOURNEMOUTH 0-2 WATFORD Jon is joined by Kelly Somers, Kieran Thievam and Colin Mace as they talk through the away win at the Cherries. How have the Hornets moved on from the home draw to Liverpool and have the new boys started to make an impact on the squad? Oh and yes, you can hear that chant and keep it stuck in your head until Bristol City at home.