MANAGER Paul Carden and assistant Mark Beesley have committed their futures to Warrington Town. The pair have both signed new two-year deals at Cantilever Park, which run to the end of the 2022-23 season. Carden took charge in October 2016 and has reached the Northern Premier League Premier Division play-offs in both of his completed seasons at the helm. Yellows won their divisional play-off in the 2018-19 campaign thanks to a memorable win at South Shields, only to lose a one-off super play-off to miss out on promotion to the National League North. Like almost every football club, the Covid-19 pandemic has put a serious strain on Town s financial resources, with the past two seasons being cut short.
APRIL 16, 2016 – a date no Warrington Town fan will forget in a hurry. It was on that day that the journey they currently find themselves on really started – the beginning of a run they hope will take them higher up the footballing pyramid. The sun was out and Cantilever Park was packed to see a record-breaking Yellows team seal the Northern Premier League First Division North title in typically authoritative style. The celebrations after the trophy presentation. Picture by Mike Boden However, the 6-1 hammering of Prescot Cables was just the crowning glory of something years in the making. “The whole day was fantastic, especially for Toby (Macormac, club chairman), his wife Lisa and all the directors,” says Stuart Mellish, who ended the season as co-manager alongside Lee Smith having started it assisting manager Shaun Reid.
Full extent of Harvey’s aftermath starts to come into chilling focusby wpjljron
Monday, August 28th, 2017.Full extent of Harvey’s aftermath starts to come into chilling focusHOUSTON The full extent of Hurricane Harvey’s aftermath started to come into chilling focus Sunday in Houston and across much of Central Texas, as rain measured in feet, not inches, overwhelmed lakes, rivers and bayous, leaving several people dead and thousands displaced in a weather disaster described as “beyond anything experienced.” Across the nation’s […] HOUSTON The full extent of Hurricane Harvey’s aftermath started to come into chilling focus Sunday in Houston and across much of Central Texas, as rain measured in feet, not inches, overwhelmed lakes, rivers and bayous, leaving several people dead and thousands displaced in a weather disaster described as “beyond anything experienced.”
Class Consciousness and Working Class Emancipation
Discussion with the Angry Workers of the World (AWW)
This article originally began as a response to the AWW’s reply to our review of their book Class Power on Zero Hours in Revolutionary Perspectives 16.(1) However, as we were writing it, the AWW published another blog article entitled “The necessity of a revolutionary working class program in times of coup and civil war scenarios”(2) in which we can see that the promised move towards organisation and an escape from reformist demand struggles mentioned at the end of Class Power on Zero Hours has indeed taken some shape.
“He’s been everywhere on loan – York, Fleetwood, Southport, Newport, Tranmere. Now he’s probably Preston’s best and most consistent player.
“It shows me that there’s a path through non-league, especially for defenders, where you have to go and learn the basics of the game. The bit on the ball, that can always come, you can always learn that later, but the basics, you have to have them.
“I look up to someone like Ben because he’s had the same path as me and now he’s doing really well in the Championship.”
Funny old game football, isn’t it?