Just for Kicks – Season 1994/95
It’s probably hard for anyone who wasn’t watching Isthmian
League Football in the 1994/95 season to believe that this actually happened,
but I assure you that it did. For one season the league agreed with the FA to
trial the use of ‘kick ins’. The law change basically meaning that a player
could choose to ether throw the ball in as normal or kick it instead. The kick
would be treated as a throw in, meaning players could not be offside when
receiving the ball, but also you could not score direct with a kick in. The
idea being that it would provide more goal mouth incident and encourage more attacking
play.
The consequence of the new initiative was that teams quickly
worked out if you filled your team with 6ft plus, well built giants, you could
use any restart from within 70yards of the opposition goal as a set piece and
pump the ball into their box. Most Isthmian League games became a 90 minute
series of set pieces and goal mouth scrambles. There were a few teams who
refused to use them initially, sticking to the principles of football, but the
majority embraced the route one nature encouraged by the rule.
Bromley manager George Wakeling saw his team challenge near
the top of the table for the majority of the season, helped by the superb set
piece delivery of Joe Francis and the aerial prowess of strikers Carl Richards,
Micky Brown, Trevor Aylott and Richard Cherry.
There was one game at home to Molesey where Francis scored,
or was directly involved in, three goals within a space of five minutes as
Bromley won 4-3. One of the goals saw Francis drive the ball from a kick in
directly towards goal, if The Moles keeper had left the ball it wouldn’t have
counted, but in attempting to tip the ball over the bar he only got his finger
tips to it and pushed the ball into the roof of the net for an own goal! Another
incident that is carved into Bromley folklore happened away at local rivals Sutton
Utd. With the game tied at 1-1 in the final few minutes, Bromley were awarded a
penalty. Richard Cherry saw his spot kicked saved and cleared over the touch
line by a home defender. Francis quickly returned the ball into play via a
perfectly weighted kick in, which found Cherry still stood on the penalty spot
distraught, the striker looked up just in time and headed the ball over the
stranded Sutton keeper into the net to make it 2-1 to Bromley and win the game,
heralding chaotic scenes behind the goal as the Bromley support went crazy.
It wasn’t easy for teams to adapt to not using kick ins when
playing in other cup competitions and teams selections had to change to allow
for different types of players. Bromley entered six cup competitions along with
a 42 game league campaign, they exited the FA Trophy, Kent Senior Cup, Club
Call Cup and Diadora League Cup at the first time of asking, going one round
further in the London Challenge Cup before losing 6-4 away at St Albans City.
In the FA Cup The Ravens did beat Bognor Regis Town 3-2 at home before losing
in a second replay 1-0 to Gravesend & Northfleet Utd, the home game being
watched by 805. The biggest home gate of the season came on Boxing Day when 916
watched second place Bromley lose 2-0 at home to Dulwich Hamlet. The lowest
home league attendance being the 253 hardy souls who turned up in the pouring
rain for a midweek 6-0 home loss to bottom of the league Marlow at the end of
March. The game should never really have been played with standing water all
over the pitch, but the Ref insisted it went ahead and the visitors adapted
better to the conditions.
The traditional post Christmas slump saw The Ravens
challenge for the top fade, slipping to seventh by the Spring before securing a
sixth place finish with a decent run in, including a 5-0 win over Walton &
Hersham thanks to goals from Mickey Brown (2), Pat Gordon, Keith Sharman &
Frank Coles. Club Legend Coles along with Carl Richards, Andy Salako, Dean
Francis, Ollie Adedji and Keith Sharman all played over 40 matches in the 52
game season. Joe Francis finished the season as top scorer.
Unsurprisingly the Kick Ins experiment only lasted one
season before being scrapped. For the football purist it was an anathema, it
stifled any creative midfield play at all. For the likes of myself, who like
the rough and tumble of lower league football, it was a lot of fun, but we knew
it wouldn’t last.
PREMIER DIVISION
Pos
Name
Pld W D
L GF GA
Pts
1 Enfield 42 28
9 5 106
43 93
2 Slough Town 42 22
13 7 82
56 79
3 Hayes 42 20
14 8 66
47 74
4 Aylesbury United 42 21
6 15 86
59 69
5 Hitchin Town 42 18
12 12 68
59 66
6 Bromley 42 18
11 13 76
67 65
7 St Albans City 42 17
13 12 96
81 64
8 Molesey 42 18
8 16 65
61 62
9 Yeading 42 14
15 13 60
59 57
10 Harrow Borough 42 17
6 19 64
67 57
11 Dulwich Hamlet 42 16 9
17 70 82
57
12 Carshalton Athletic 42 16
9 17 69
84 57
13 Kingstonian 42 16
8 18 62
57 56
14 Walton & Hersham 42 14
11 17 75
73 53
15 Sutton United 42 13
12 17 74
69 51
16 Purfleet 42 13
12 17 76
90 51
17 Hendon 42 12
14 16 57
65 50
18 Grays Athletic 42 11
16 15 57
61 49
19 Bishop's Stortford 42 12
11 19 53
76 47
20 Chesham United 42 12
9 21 60
87 45
21 Marlow 42 10
9 23 52
84 39
22 Wokingham Town 42 6
9 27 39
86 27
Enfield won the league, but turned down promotion with
Slough taking their place in the Conference. Chesham, Marlow & Wokingham
were relegated to Division One.
Twenty six years on Bromley & Sutton Utd are highest
placed, competing in the National League. Only Dulwich Hamlet & St Albans
compete at the equivalent level. Hayes & Yeading merged in 2009, Enfield
split into two clubs, the fan run Town in the Isthmian League with the other in
the Essex Senior League.
Wokingham (now merged with Embrook) along with Walton &
Hesham have slipped the furthest down the pyramid to county league division one
level, while Purfleet changed their name to Thurrock before eventually folding
in 2017.
Col