McNasty
Member
Aw shucks, TSNB - you've made a happy man very old. Think medical science may need a forklift though. :cheers:
Medical science or the local branch of CAMRA ? ;)
Aw shucks, TSNB - you've made a happy man very old. Think medical science may need a forklift though. :cheers:
Medical science or the local branch of CAMRA ? ;)
:) --- if I had a choice, it would be the latter!
From memory it is. :dizzy:
Ha - I was in The Ship again yesterday, H. Lucky that I timed it for when Old Bert the 'Shots fan wasn't!
Aw shucks, TSNB - you've made a happy man very old. Think medical science may need a forklift though. :cheers:
Hey,that's a Ronnie Scott(RIP)line and I'm old enough to have seen him deliver it in person.:)
Hey,that's a Ronnie Scott(RIP)line and I'm old enough to have seen him deliver it in person.:)
I 'borrowed' it from Van The Man --- from a live offering, 'A Night In San Francisco,' I think.
And at the start of the 2nd half, a dozen or so of our original north bank from the late 60's walked round the touchline into their south bank and tore into their mob. The story that circulated was that after we had drawn at Roots Hall to them in the F.A.Cup 1st round in 1969, our lads had a rough time at the replay and took their revenge on this eventful day. I remember watching it as the guys in question wer'nt kitted out in butchers coats, boots, harringtons etc, but sported casual gear so not to make them stand out.
That Gillingham game in 1972 was a nightmare to get back to the train station, police concentrated on getting majority of fans to coaches , if you was on the train you had to go past the open end where all their fans were, we kept getting ambushed all the way back to the station it really was a case of win some lose some and getting split up, but we were the Southend north bank and we won more than we lost and when we all met up at the station we gave them an almighty running.
Yes,and he of course "borrowed" it in turn from Ronnie Scott.Ask RichieC. We used to go drinking in the bar upstairs quite a bit back in the day.No admission and they had the music from the main room downstairs piped in for free.
A Fulham fan was killed in that alley leading to the station around about this time.
out of you gezzers, who was in the pak then in the late
60 s then do tell??????????????????????
Most of the contributions to this thread have been from the 70s. But first and foremost, the PAK was the name given to the North Bank choir, which evolved as a direct result of Southend playing Friday and Monday night home games. The name had nothing to do with Punch And Kick and there wasn't any elected leader. From memory, the original suggestion on one of the away trips in 1967 was "The Pack", but Wolves fans were known by that name. After some discussion, the C was dropped and the name PAK was adopted.
Although Southend drew good numbers @ more localised away games: Colchester, Watford, Gillingham etc. The numbers to such delightful venues as: Barrow, Carlisle, Workington, Hartlepool, Darlington etc. were limited to the contents of one beat-up 52-seater Supreme coach with no heating and Pete "Bonzo" Valentine's white van. I also remember making a couple of evening trips with Mick Staines in his mini-van.
From these coach trips Young Blues, the first supporters club football team was formed. We used to play @ Eastwoodbury Lane in Division 6 of the Sunday League. Our kit was a very old SUFC change strip of red, going on pink, kindly donated by the Club. Getting back from the long overnighters @ 5am and having to turn out for a 10.30am kick off could be tough.
The PAK first got its reputation as a force to be reckoned with in 1968 @ Lincoln. Having previoulsy suffered a coach bricking @ Sincil Bank the year before. Shrimpfan will remember that day ;).
Many of the original crew are still around @ Roots Hall and we bump into each other from time to time and reminisce ... as old people do!