Bradford were in the EPL for 2 seasons, but Valley Parade has defiantly deteriorated a lot since then. I doubt it would be allowed these days without major refurbishment.
@@philippczeskleba3988 yes .... Premier league gets billions in revenue each season, then the championship gets millions while league 1 and 2 get fuck all
Some of the flats overlooking the pitch at Orient are on Airbnb, during some games of the 2020-21 season, when crowds weren't allowed, groups of fans booked them out and were able to watch the game.
Love your stadium (stadia?) reviews mate. I'm probably one of three Aussie born Leyton Orient fans... basically my mate growing up, his family was from Rochdale and I needed a team to support in the same league. So I picked the club with the coolest name and the rest is history 😂 Made a pilgrimage to Brisbane Road a few years back before Orient dropped down the divisions. Cracking game and can confirm cracking little stadium too. Love to get one of those corner apartments when I become a millionaire. Keep up the good work! 👍🙏
Rest assured, you are not alone. I have been an O’s fan since 1965 even though I migrated to Australia in 1968. If you search hard enough, there are many more fans Downunder (up the O’s!). One day we will grace the Championship again. We just need to find another Laurie Cunningham.
When Grimsby Town are playing in the league (they yoyo between league and non-league) their stadium, Blundell Park which is actually in the neighbouring town of Cleethorpes, win the title of the coldest ground in the league. When an easterly wind whistles in of the north sea in February, it is cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey. On the plus side, there are some good pubs and excellent fish and chip shops nearby.
I visited Blundell Park during the early 90’s for a league match and the freezing North Sea wind 🌊💨 was breezing in over the rather aptly named Findus (frozen fish) stand! 🥶😂
Valley Parade was never the home of an amateur football club - it was built as the home of Manningham rugby league club, before they changed their name and football code and became Bradford City AFC in 1903.
The old Cowshed covered terrace roof at Prenton Park was sold to a farmer and is now an actual cowshed. The original one was bought from a farmer and thats why it was called The Cowshed.
It also was the "Home" end of Prenton Park, whilst the (then) uncovered Bebbington Kop end (or oart of it) was used by the visiting support, except for that period in the late 70's/early to mid 80's when three sides of the stadium were closed due to dafety reasons.
Prenton Park 'Tranmere Rovers' - The 'Cowshed' / Town End, so named from when the club entered the football league - 1924, it originally was from a Cowshed, the roof having five 'arches' (pyramid shaped), later demolished and a three arched roof installed. The ground had a major rebuild in the 1990's, the name stuck.
Those apartments at Orient are great. You can watch the Champion's League on the people's telly while your side is taking an absolute battering on the pitch outside on a freezing cold Tuesday night.
Thanks for uploading this video. The stadiums look very nice - particuarly those of clubs that weren't promoted to the top leagues and therefore could keep their terraces.
Never thought I would see my local football club get complimented lol. And yeah it does get a bit nippy, even in decent weather. I've just seen orients ground in the video, I'm liking that apartments are built around it, I think Oldham had that idea once, but, as usual, didn't happen.
Walsall fan here and i loved the analogy of the ground. Although the away end (on nearest the motorway) has always been rumored to eventually be upgraded to be double tier as well, but with the ground being leased to the club (former chairman, owns the ground; current chairman, owns the club) so we need to at least get the ground back in the hands of the club first before any major upgrades can happen i guess.
Bradford, Oldham and Tranmere are the pucks of the grounds in this league from the ones I have been to. These are great videos by the way. Thanks so much for making them!
FA Cup 1st round day coming up, cracking treeage traditionally on view just as the seasons turn too. Used to love it. Northampton's old ground is something to see and try and describe.
Mansfield Town's Field Mill Ground, now known as the One-Call Stadium, is the second oldest football ground in the world. Field Mill has been used as a football ground since 1861 (and as a cricket ground for a few years before that). The Sandygate Road ground in Sheffield, which was first used in 1860, is the oldest football ground in the world. It is currently used by Hallam FC. Bramall Lane, the current home of Sheffield United, was first used as a football ground in 1862 (though like Field Mill was used as a cricket ground for a few years before that). Field Mill is therefore the oldest football ground in the world that hosts professional football. It is also the oldest football ground in the Football League
You did not mention the crazy Magic Roundabout next to the County Ground in Swindon. The highest attendance at the CG was 32,000 but that was before the safety regulations were brought in to stop crush fatalities of spectators. I love the lower tier stadiums with their eclectic assortment of structures around the pitch.
Do you not realise that Everton is actually an older club than Liverpool? Liverpool was founded as a breakaway from Everton and Everton originally played at Anfield.
Great channel. Looking forward to the Scottish lower leagues. Also your terrible jokes along with the odd good one is curiously British. Probably why I like the videos so much, and the stadiums (Stadia)
Honestly i'm not even british but i love these lower tier english leagues. they have so much soul and character. the stadia all look so homely and so much history. I like them alot more than the stadia in the premier league , some of them feel soullless and generic
Oldham athletic, definitely got to be the coldest ground, deserves the nickname, which was given to it by former manager Joe Royle. I think the date you've given it is wrong though, the club was formed in 1895 as Pine Villa, they took over Boundary Park from a previous team that went out of business.
I went to watch Wrexham play Salford on New Year’s Day, and it was one of, if not the worst grounds I’ve ever been to, there was a big attendance there (mostly from Wrexham), it was unsafe, to meet standards they made the pitch smaller. It’s quite obviously just been put up in a mad rush, because it felt like watching a football match from scaffolding ( and also the porta pottis)
I didn't realise Bristol Rovers had abandoned their new ground plans. They've already played in 3 places in my lifetime and I've seen my team play them at all three
Another enjoyable video. Why only mention when football clubs share grounds with rugby union clubs? In this video there is Spotland which is shared with Rochdale's rugby league club. Previous videos missed Hull City, Huddersfield Town, Wigan Athletic and Doncaster Rovers sharing with rugby league clubs, but mentioned the union groundshares. Looking forward to NRL and Super League videos.
Forest Green Rovers play at the New Lawn which is now the highest football league ground in England and is a couple of meters higher than The Hawthorns.
Prenton Park 'Tranmere Rovers' -The Bebington Kop, Tranmere fans end. A Kop (in Dutch), is a hill, one was famously held by a Liverpool regiment under horrendous fire in the Boer War in S.Africa - the name was 'taken back. to Anfield where the home fans stood. The name stuck - tradition still lasts, even though it is now all seated.
Thank you for the kind words on our stadium (Colchester United) we all hate it compared to layer road, and its even freezing in July 😂 we did beat Tottenham there once tho 😏
I used to live near Leyton Orient. First time when I’ve seen the stadium I thought I was tripping when I was the apartment buildings. In all due honesty, the stadium wasn’t too full when there were matches (2017-2018).
Not to surprising, since they had gotten relegated the season before, and had fans storm the field and riot with games still left in the season. There's a really good video by COPA90 on that situation.
Orient have averaged about 5,500 per match over the course of a season for a number of years, even while playing in the National league. Pretty steady support and a decent amount for League 2.
Christopher Luxford I used to play fifa07-08 heavily on career mode with Notts County. Leyton Orient was getting on my nerves because it was always beating me on simulations. Coming from a city in Romania where they played in champions league, I couldn’t believe how Leyton has such a great stadium for a club in tier 4 (for me). I was walking to Stratford almost daily for work so the stadium will remain part of the memories I have from London.
Oldham is still the coldest at a stadium I've ever been, including a day at Grimsby, especially when watching two teams beat out a 0-0 on the way to both being relegated, it was so windy that day that our goalkeeper had a shot saved at the other end. Swindon's stadium felt huge but empty when I went there, a bit like an abandoned ghost town. However while not in this video Kenilworth Road Luton is by far the worst stadium I have ever been to, squashed, run down, with an entrance to the away end through an actual house, broken glass littering the car park and holes in the fence that locals apparently cut through to steal things from the cars parked there, dreadful experience.
In 2019/20 the average League Two attendance was 4,664. Is there another fourth tier league in the world which can compete with this? There's some top tier leagues in Europe which can't even compete.
Because my club Grimsby Town FC got promoted from the National league to League 2, your videos are missing Blundell Park...my theatre of football dreams....
"...League 2. The name tells you everything you need to know. Its the fourth tier of English football...." Ummm...no?😂 Only having a laugh, this is a good, concise video. Good stuff👍👍
Vale park, the Wembley of the north…yeah I don’t know why either. Also I wouldn't pay to much attention to Sutton's artificial pitch. They no long have it due to league rules.
@@astro8856 I know I’m a stoke fan, so the number of jokes out of it is brilliant. including the fact they couldn’t finish the Lorne street stand for years and years and years.
So about Mansfields stadium and THAT east stand. I've spoken to staff there and it's an unstable building so fans cannot go in there. They also can't demolish or rebuild the stand due to the houses behind it so they just use it for advertising
Loving these videos mate, though the jokes need work 🤔. When you get the time, can you make some videos about English non league football grounds. So much quirky history... Anyway, keep up the good work.
How have you managed to make a video about the grounds for 2021-2022 and got pictures for Stevenage's ground from 6years ago before the massive North Stand was built?
The interesting thing about League 2 is how the stadiums are like a combination of non-League stadiums and Premier League quality stadiums.
you mean valley parade
Which, as I'm sure you know, is because for some clubs it's the highest they've ever been, while for others it's the lowest.
@@luxford60 yep. Perfect description.
Bradford were in the EPL for 2 seasons, but Valley Parade has defiantly deteriorated a lot since then. I doubt it would be allowed these days without major refurbishment.
@@helvete983 big work gone on this summer in fixing it up behind the scenes, in ten/fifteen years we'd need to get back up there it'd be long sorted
Of course the 4th division of English football, and the 3rd tier of the Football League, is officially titled League 2. Makes perfect sense.
Clear as coffee
Premier league
Championship
League 1
League 2
-----------‐--------------------
Non league
@@thejannerofplymouth3654 so League 2 is the 4th Division ???? wat
@@philippczeskleba3988 yes .... Premier league gets billions in revenue each season, then the championship gets millions while league 1 and 2 get fuck all
@@thejannerofplymouth3654 in germany it is the same. the 2nd and 3rd division are poor as hell
Some of the flats overlooking the pitch at Orient are on Airbnb, during some games of the 2020-21 season, when crowds weren't allowed, groups of fans booked them out and were able to watch the game.
There is also a health centre/GP survey in the west stand. Got my Covid Vaccination looking over the pitch
Sutton United have done brilliantly well to get to the league, they are a proper local club, good luck to them.
Love your stadium (stadia?) reviews mate. I'm probably one of three Aussie born Leyton Orient fans... basically my mate growing up, his family was from Rochdale and I needed a team to support in the same league. So I picked the club with the coolest name and the rest is history 😂
Made a pilgrimage to Brisbane Road a few years back before Orient dropped down the divisions. Cracking game and can confirm cracking little stadium too. Love to get one of those corner apartments when I become a millionaire.
Keep up the good work! 👍🙏
Rest assured, you are not alone. I have been an O’s fan since 1965 even though I migrated to Australia in 1968. If you search hard enough, there are many more fans Downunder (up the O’s!). One day we will grace the Championship again. We just need to find another Laurie Cunningham.
I work at orient and its great a lovely little ground very family oriented club with friendly atmosphere
When Grimsby Town are playing in the league (they yoyo between league and non-league) their stadium, Blundell Park which is actually in the neighbouring town of Cleethorpes, win the title of the coldest ground in the league.
When an easterly wind whistles in of the north sea in February, it is cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey. On the plus side, there are some good pubs and excellent fish and chip shops nearby.
I visited Blundell Park during the early 90’s for a league match and the freezing North Sea wind 🌊💨 was breezing in over the rather aptly named Findus (frozen fish) stand! 🥶😂
Valley Parade was never the home of an amateur football club - it was built as the home of Manningham rugby league club, before they changed their name and football code and became Bradford City AFC in 1903.
The old Cowshed covered terrace roof at Prenton Park was sold to a farmer and is now an actual cowshed. The original one was bought from a farmer and thats why it was called The Cowshed.
It also was the "Home" end of Prenton Park, whilst the (then) uncovered Bebbington Kop end (or oart of it) was used by the visiting support, except for that period in the late 70's/early to mid 80's when three sides of the stadium were closed due to dafety reasons.
Love this channel man!!Been in love with stadium’s since creating your own in the LMA games, would love that kind of feature in FM !
love how salford's lights are in the shape of their logo, a very nice little detail
Interesting thing about Exeter City's SJP it has the largest standing terrace in English football
Prenton Park 'Tranmere Rovers' - The 'Cowshed' / Town End, so named from when the club entered the football league - 1924, it originally was from a Cowshed, the roof having five 'arches' (pyramid shaped), later demolished and a three arched roof installed. The ground had a major rebuild in the 1990's, the name stuck.
trfc entered the league in 1921, more or less on the day 100 years ago.
Those apartments at Orient are great. You can watch the Champion's League on the people's telly while your side is taking an absolute battering on the pitch outside on a freezing cold Tuesday night.
This aged well.
Thanks for uploading this video. The stadiums look very nice - particuarly those of clubs that weren't promoted to the top leagues and therefore could keep their terraces.
Before Sixfields Stadium opened Northampton Town shared the County Ground with Northamptonshire County Cricket Club
Thank you for this. Sometimes I think the National League should be now League Three, with the same up and down quota as between league Two and One.
Yes, I agree there is a strong case for consolidating the National League into the main Football League structure.
I'm an Orient fan and other than our own I like Boundary Park (Oldham) quite a bit. Proper football ground even if it is cold 🥶
Never thought I would see my local football club get complimented lol. And yeah it does get a bit nippy, even in decent weather. I've just seen orients ground in the video, I'm liking that apartments are built around it, I think Oldham had that idea once, but, as usual, didn't happen.
Walsall fan here and i loved the analogy of the ground. Although the away end (on nearest the motorway) has always been rumored to eventually be upgraded to be double tier as well, but with the ground being leased to the club (former chairman, owns the ground; current chairman, owns the club) so we need to at least get the ground back in the hands of the club first before any major upgrades can happen i guess.
It's an away trip ground tick off , being right next to the motorway....
... . Hope you get 6pts off the scum when you visit Devon
Similar to Orient in that the ground, and the blocks of flats, belong to a former chairman.
Bradford, Oldham and Tranmere are the pucks of the grounds in this league from the ones I have been to.
These are great videos by the way. Thanks so much for making them!
FA Cup 1st round day coming up, cracking treeage traditionally on view just as the seasons turn too. Used to love it. Northampton's old ground is something to see and try and describe.
Mansfield Town's Field Mill Ground, now known as the One-Call Stadium, is the second oldest football ground in the world. Field Mill has been used as a football ground since 1861 (and as a cricket ground for a few years before that). The Sandygate Road ground in Sheffield, which was first used in 1860, is the oldest football ground in the world. It is currently used by Hallam FC. Bramall Lane, the current home of Sheffield United, was first used as a football ground in 1862 (though like Field Mill was used as a cricket ground for a few years before that). Field Mill is therefore the oldest football ground in the world that hosts professional football. It is also the oldest football ground in the Football League
Never forget the Bradford City fire
I wil never forget them
It was lit.
I forgot but I heard it was lit
@@beantaz3862 cigarette falling into litter under wooden stands.
@@beantaz3862 Rubbish comments about being lit, no proof whatsoever.
Excited to see Forest Green. I took them from league 2 to league 1 on FIFA 18. Haven't played recently because I've been distracted by your videos lol
You did not mention the crazy Magic Roundabout next to the County Ground in Swindon. The highest attendance at the CG was 32,000 but that was before the safety regulations were brought in to stop crush fatalities of spectators. I love the lower tier stadiums with their eclectic assortment of structures around the pitch.
league 2 (tier 4) in england is fully professional and 60% of the national league (tier 5) is fully professional.
Yeah I like Carlisle's ground, like the team too.
Dont know how old your footage of Holker Street Barrow is but there have been a lot of major changes since a roof at the far end for starters
Do you not realise that Everton is actually an older club than Liverpool? Liverpool was founded as a breakaway from Everton and Everton originally played at Anfield.
Great channel. Looking forward to the Scottish lower leagues. Also your terrible jokes along with the odd good one is curiously British. Probably why I like the videos so much, and the stadiums (Stadia)
Very old pictures of the Sutton ground. It looks a lot fresher last few years. Also the 3G pitch has gone now due to league regulations
Stevenage has a new stand behind the goal now matching the oposite end and a VIP bar underneath it so it's a lot better now.
Honestly i'm not even british but i love these lower tier english leagues. they have so much soul and character. the stadia all look so homely and so much history. I like them alot more than the stadia in the premier league , some of them feel soullless and generic
It would be cool if you did European League of Football stadiums, anyways amazing job like always!
yup i agree, hope to see more teams next year though
Cheers! I most likely will make that video.
I knew I wasn't the only one who thought Bradford's stadium looks like St James park.
Lots of different channels for stadiums (stadia) , but this is the best 👌
PAFC
Cheers!
The gabled roof at Carlisle's ground is almost identical to the 'Cowshed" that was once at Tranmere Rover`s Preston Park.
Oldham athletic, definitely got to be the coldest ground, deserves the nickname, which was given to it by former manager Joe Royle. I think the date you've given it is wrong though, the club was formed in 1895 as Pine Villa, they took over Boundary Park from a previous team that went out of business.
You've obviously never been to Hull City for a Tuesday night game then.
these stadiums are cool.
The english fourth division stadiums are beautiful. The Leyton Orient's stadium is a mini Stamford Bride
I went to Oldhams stadium on an away day with Bradford City and it was freezing every where
Congratulation to Oldham for no longer having the coldest ground in League Two!
im a walsall fan up the SADDLERS
The Sidemen brought me here from both Brisbane Road and The Valley in EFL League One.
I went to watch Wrexham play Salford on New Year’s Day, and it was one of, if not the worst grounds I’ve ever been to, there was a big attendance there (mostly from Wrexham), it was unsafe, to meet standards they made the pitch smaller. It’s quite obviously just been put up in a mad rush, because it felt like watching a football match from scaffolding ( and also the porta pottis)
I didn't realise Bristol Rovers had abandoned their new ground plans. They've already played in 3 places in my lifetime and I've seen my team play them at all three
Yeah his comments on Rovers didn't age well given our Chairman's comments last week....
Gotta love Bradford City.
Another enjoyable video.
Why only mention when football clubs share grounds with rugby union clubs?
In this video there is Spotland which is shared with Rochdale's rugby league club.
Previous videos missed Hull City, Huddersfield Town, Wigan Athletic and Doncaster Rovers sharing with rugby league clubs, but mentioned the union groundshares.
Looking forward to NRL and Super League videos.
Salford's floodlights in shape of the badge nice little touch
Forest Green Rovers play at the New Lawn which is now the highest football league ground in England and is a couple of meters higher than The Hawthorns.
Looking forward to visiting these
Could you make some videos about the smaller leagues stadiums, like the superliga in denmark?
Seeing this great channel analyse my Leyton Orient's stadium is great :)
Prenton Park 'Tranmere Rovers' -The Bebington Kop, Tranmere fans end. A Kop (in Dutch), is a hill, one was famously held by a Liverpool regiment under horrendous fire in the Boer War in S.Africa - the name was 'taken back. to Anfield where the home fans stood. The name stuck - tradition still lasts, even though it is now all seated.
Lots of clubs had a Kop at the time when the Battle of Spion Kop was a recent event.
Thank you for the kind words on our stadium (Colchester United) we all hate it compared to layer road, and its even freezing in July 😂 we did beat Tottenham there once tho 😏
I have visited 12 of these, mainly in cups and some far off league encounters. However, quite a few have changed since my last visits.
Quaint. That's the word you were looking for, for Harrogate.
Wasn't expecting to see my house in a video when I clicked on it. I live 10 mins walk away from prenton park
I used to live near Leyton Orient. First time when I’ve seen the stadium I thought I was tripping when I was the apartment buildings. In all due honesty, the stadium wasn’t too full when there were matches (2017-2018).
Not to surprising, since they had gotten relegated the season before, and had fans storm the field and riot with games still left in the season. There's a really good video by COPA90 on that situation.
Orient have averaged about 5,500 per match over the course of a season for a number of years, even while playing in the National league. Pretty steady support and a decent amount for League 2.
2019-20 season had Orient's highest average attendance since the 1980-81 season. Significantly smaller ground capacity nowadays of course.
Christopher Luxford I used to play fifa07-08 heavily on career mode with Notts County. Leyton Orient was getting on my nerves because it was always beating me on simulations. Coming from a city in Romania where they played in champions league, I couldn’t believe how Leyton has such a great stadium for a club in tier 4 (for me). I was walking to Stratford almost daily for work so the stadium will remain part of the memories I have from London.
Oldham is still the coldest at a stadium I've ever been, including a day at Grimsby, especially when watching two teams beat out a 0-0 on the way to both being relegated, it was so windy that day that our goalkeeper had a shot saved at the other end. Swindon's stadium felt huge but empty when I went there, a bit like an abandoned ghost town.
However while not in this video Kenilworth Road Luton is by far the worst stadium I have ever been to, squashed, run down, with an entrance to the away end through an actual house, broken glass littering the car park and holes in the fence that locals apparently cut through to steal things from the cars parked there, dreadful experience.
Regarding Kenilworth Road, I rather like the quirkiness of accessing the ground through a small gap set within a block of terraced houses.
Interesting diversity and good humour.
Brunton Park (Carlisle) is the largest stadium in England with terracing.
Brisbane Road Stadium seems very cool with those appartments.
12:25 I like how the ligths are formed like their logo
Came for the run down on stadiums, stayed for the murde - sorry - self defence mystery
I've been to most of these stadiums. Done over 50 between the premier league and league 2.
The shape of the salford badge matches the shape of their floodlights
I like this music in the intro!!!
In 2019/20 the average League Two attendance was 4,664. Is there another fourth tier league in the world which can compete with this? There's some top tier leagues in Europe which can't even compete.
Leyton Orient looked cool outside and inside too 👍
Could we get the English conference League stadiums video please PS I love you work on your channel it's amazing
And conference north & south.
Cheers! I can't say for sure. But maybe.
@@TheWideWorldofStadiums thank you 👍 much appreciated
Take me home Wetherby Road 💛🖤
Because my club Grimsby Town FC got promoted from the National league to League 2, your videos are missing Blundell Park...my theatre of football dreams....
Thanks for putting the orient stadium as the thumbnail stadium :)
Walsall had the best chicken curry pies when I went there last time.
Balti pies
@@chrismeers2448 thanks couldn't remember the exact name but were great
Yes, I had a couple of pints and a balti pie before kick off and the same again at half time.
I still think you should do The National League. A mix of semi pro sides in tiny grounds, and ex League fully pro clubs in much bigger ones.
I love the old stands
Holker Street has been a football ground for over 100 years,not a rubbish dump.
Could you please do the Major League Rugby stadiums!
The Broadfield Stadium is actually named after the neighbourhood its located in, which is Broadfield. 😁
You are 100% correct my. I live in Broadfield and have done since 1980 for my sins. Lol
Spectators don’t use the Stratton Bank (I don’t know why) at Swindon, everyone goes in the other three stands
"...League 2. The name tells you everything you need to know. Its the fourth tier of English football...."
Ummm...no?😂
Only having a laugh, this is a good, concise video. Good stuff👍👍
Oldham athletic is the coldest ground in the football league I should know as I was a steward there in the 70's!
The Rolf image was very funny.
Victoria park was were I saw my fist football matches seems I was born on in Hartlepool
3rd League in Germany got pretty nice Stadiums.
Most of these stadiums are better than all of the Bulgarian first league stadiums
That might be true, but you guys have that ancient Roman stadium. I was in Plovdiv just recently, it's pretty cool.
@@TheWideWorldofStadiums Yeaa that one is amazing and it’s so cool that they still make concerts there
Vale park, the Wembley of the north…yeah I don’t know why either.
Also I wouldn't pay to much attention to Sutton's artificial pitch. They no long have it due to league rules.
They had loads of land and were going to build a massive stadium there but then realised that they didn't have enough fans to fill it.
@@astro8856 I know I’m a stoke fan, so the number of jokes out of it is brilliant. including the fact they couldn’t finish the Lorne street stand for years and years and years.
Thanks for calling Stevenage bucolic we do have plenty of trees as well 😂
Bramell Lane is the oldest sports ground not football ground, and the stand at field mill had a fire
Love the videos you left the best till last UTS
Cheers!
good stuff. made me laugh too.
So about Mansfields stadium and THAT east stand. I've spoken to staff there and it's an unstable building so fans cannot go in there. They also can't demolish or rebuild the stand due to the houses behind it so they just use it for advertising
Barrow's capacity is 5400, not 5045.... otherwise a great video
I must have miscounted. My bad.
Loving these videos mate, though the jokes need work 🤔. When you get the time, can you make some videos about English non league football grounds. So much quirky history... Anyway, keep up the good work.
You need to update stevenage stadium since this video weve built a new all seater stand behind the goal where the standing end used to be
How have you managed to make a video about the grounds for 2021-2022 and got pictures for Stevenage's ground from 6years ago before the massive North Stand was built?
Stevenage has a new stand for 2 years. Perhaps you could update the video?
THANK YOU MY GOOD SIR
No worries, my good sir.
You are a legend sir, you consider doing the national league as wel?
Cheers! I can't say for sure. But there's a good chance I will.