Monday, December 29, 2014

L1 W2-0 (a) Fleetwood Town Friday December 26, 2014. K.O. 3:00PM. #bcafc

Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/46810838356/


===========================

Next/Upcoming Game


Signings, Loans and Injuries


Injuries
Billy Clarke will miss the Christmas period with a medial ligament damage in his knee.

===========================


Preview
BBC http://ift.tt/1AHZcm6

Game links
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11689272.FT__Fleetwood_0_City_2/
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/sport_bantams_pics2012/sport_bantams_pics2014_fleetwoodaway/
http://m.espn.go.com/soccer/gamecast?gameId=394018&action=stats

Highlight/ Goals
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9eJ61S0GDeQ


Post Game Interview
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_y2FwSi4v0



===========================

When the dust settled - match report


Bantams' Boxing Day heroes Hanson and Morais leave Fleetwood out for the count

7:20am Saturday 27th December 2014

By Simon Parker

Fleetwood 0 Bradford City 2

AN AFTERNOON of bracing sea air is the best Boxing Day cure for any Christmas excess and it certainly invigorated the Bantams yesterday.

The happy travellers made it six wins on the road in League One this season – and moved into the play-offs in the process.

There was added joy on the West Lancashire coast for James Hanson, who scored his first goal since the end of August to get the ball rolling.

Then Filipe Morais made sure to warm up a freezing afternoon and kill off any Fleetwood hopes of a comeback. The home side, for all their huff and puff, failed to muster one shot on target.

With Billy Clarke sidelined for up to four weeks, Hanson was back in the starting line-up for the first time since November 1. His last six appearances had all been off the bench – the longest only 20 minutes against Gillingham.

It was a blow to lose Clarke with a knee injury after the way is partnership with Jon Stead had blossomed. But for Hanson, there was plenty to prove following the frustration of the last few months.

Despite having two big men up front, City switched back to a midfield diamond to match the way that Fleetwood play. Mark Yeates played behind the front two, with Gary Liddle in the holding role.

Morais, despite being more tucked in, immediately found some width to ping in a useful cross that Stead nodded over the bar.

The on-loan striker then latched on to a through ball from Andrew Davies but his low shot was comfortably saved.

The atmosphere was lacking considering it was a Boxing Day game but the away end – limited to 1,300 because of the small size of their stand – were watching their side edge the early stages.

Yeates fired over from 25 yards as Phil Parkinson shouted at his team to keep Fleetwood penned in their own half.

But when the hosts did get out after 14 minutes, they were only a whisker away from opening the scoring. Stephen Dobbie squared to left back Danny Andrew, whose fierce drive flew inches over the join of the bar and post.

That lifted the hosts and Jamie Proctor looked to send Dobbie clear but his strike partner snatched at the chance, trying to take it early, and the ball bobbled wide.

Fleetwood's threat continued to build. Dobbie's next effort just beat the far post with two red shirts looking on when the slightest of touches would have turned it home.

Dobbie was playing his first game in a month and his rustiness in front of goal was clear as he dragged another promising opportunity off target after a loose pass from Yeates fell nicely into his path.

A thundering tackle from Stephen Darby set up City to win the game's first corner but Davies could not get enough on his header from the set-piece.

Play switched straight to the other end, where Josh Morris got goal-side of Filipe Morais. But his dangerous run was let down by another wild finish – Fleetwood had still failed to find a single shot on target for all their trying.

Dobbie caused more concern when he turned Davies inside the box but his cross-shot was blocked by Rory McArdle, having another typically solid afternoon.

Fleetwood left back Danny Andrew was struggling from the after-effects of that Darby challenge and had to limp off six minutes before the break. It was a break for City because he had looked useful on that side.

Ex-Leeds defender Stephen Crainey took his place – and was quickly left trailing by Yeates as City made Fleetwood pay for their wayward finishing.

The Irishman hung a cross to the far post, where Hanson was on hand to rise and nod the type of goal that he relishes.

It was against the run of play but the travelling fans weren't complaining – and their spirits remained high when Gareth Evans wasted Fleetwood's first corner by clearing the goalmouth. Memories were clearly still fresh of his goal celebrations for Rotherham that time.

Fleetwood's shooting radar had not improved over the interval as first Evans and then Proctor fired wide. Morais responded with a marauding run into the box which enticed keeper Chris Maxwell into no man's land but Hanson's header was hacked away.

City were playing with growing confidence, particularly Hanson, who was coming more and more into the contest. Strike partner Stead glanced across goal from a Yeates cross as they continued to look for the insurance of a second.

Pickford had still not had a shot to save – but he got a massive let-off in the 63rd minute. Proctor's vicious angled drive flew past the City stopper but crashed back into play off the post.

That was a reminder to the visitors about their slender advantage and they hit back straight away as Darby's deep cross was nodded back by Hanson for Stead. His shot on the turn had plenty of venom but Maxwell was equal to it to beat away.

The temperature rose when Conor McLaughlin caught James Meredith late with a touchline tackle. It happened right in front of the dug-outs and Parkinson flew across to remonstrate angrily with the Fleetwood right back.

McLaughlin was booked but referee Chris Sarginson did not call the City boss across for any words – and the home crowd were far from impressed.

Maxwell pulled off a superb save to deny Hanson a second as Knott's free-kick was headed back into the danger zone by Davies.

Referee Sarginson bizarrely gave a goal kick but City were not to be denied a minute later. With white shirts pouring forward, Stead's low cross was left by sub Billy Knott to give Morais a straight-forward tap-in.

It was the Portuguese midfielder's third City goal – and a timely one for his bargaining position given the on-going contract negotiations.

His future may be unclear but there is nothing uncertain about the record away from Valley Parade. It sets it up superbly for Gary Jones's homecoming tomorrow.

===========================

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

L1 D1-1 (h) Scunthorpe Saturday December 20, 2014. K.O. 3:00PM. #bcafc

Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/46810838356/


===========================

Next/Upcoming Game
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11684049.Nott_to_be_missed_____Thompson_sets_his_sights_on_Valley_Parade/
http://www.bradfordcityfc.co.uk/news/article/milton-keynes-dons-game-moved-2153840.aspx


Admission details confirmed for @MillwallFC F.A Cup tie
http://www.bradfordcityfc.co.uk/news/article/millwall-admission-details-confirmed-2152503.aspx



Signings, Loans and Injuries


Injuries
Matty Dolan is heading back to City (from Hartlepool) with a hamstring injury

===========================


Preview
BBC http://ift.tt/1JeTOus
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11678385.Parkinson__Bradford_City_must_steel_themselves_for_Iron_test/

Game links
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11680669.FT__City_1_Scunthorpe_1/
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/sport_bantams_pics2012/sport_bantams_pics2014_scunthorpehome/



Highlight/ Goals
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ndp59f3__CE


Post Game Interview
http://youtu.be/CGvJ4F5XbOs


===========================

Final whistle - match report


Parkinson: Bradford City were second best in second half

7:53pm Saturday 20th December 2014

By Simon Parker

PHIL Parkinson admitted City weren't good enough in the second half to hang on against Scunthorpe this afternoon.

Hakeeb Adelakun equalised in the third minute of stoppages at Valley Parade to cancel out Rory McArdle's fine first-half finish.

The visitors dominated after the break but had been frustrated by Jordan Pickford's heroics until the substitute struck late.

Parkinson said: "I thought we played some good stuff first half but in the second we just couldn't get out (of our half).

"Sometimes people think it's a tactical decision to sit back but we just didn't play well enough. We got pinned in and you've got to give Scunthorpe credit.

"Our goalkeeper has had too many saves to make when in past weeks he's hardly anything to do. I thought he was terrific.

"The two ways you play in the opposition's half is by moving up the pitch with the ball or sliding quality down the side of the two centre halves. We didn't do either of those things well enough."


===========================

When the dust settled - match report


Glad tidings and bad timing at Valley Parade

8:30am Monday 22nd December 2014

By Simon Parker

Bradford City 1 Scunthorpe 1

CITY fans found another use for the world record number of Christmas jumpers they were asked to wear to Valley Parade.

The festive woollies also come in pretty handy for covering your face after another sting in the tail.

Like Gillingham, a few weeks before, Scunthorpe rescued a draw with virtually the last kick of the afternoon.

Unlike Peter Taylor's smash and grab raid, Mark Robins' side could argue that it was the least they deserved after bossing proceedings from half-time.

Scunthorpe are used to late shows, coming on the back of that 32-penalty shoot-out marathon against Worcester three days earlier.

It was also a familiar feeling for City to blow another lead at Valley Parade. That's seven points dropped from winning positions in the last four home games.

The raw frustration at seeing another victory, however fortuitous, snatched away at the death revealed itself in the smattering of boos at the final whistle.

In the cold light of day, those critics must realise their reaction was over the top. Looking back over the whole piece, this was really a point gained by the Bantams rather than two robbed in added time.

You had to feel some sympathy for Jordan Pickford, whose agility and shot-stopping heroics had kept Scunthorpe at bay for so long.

To think it was not that long ago when the kangaroo court of social media had already condemned the Sunderland keeper as "another Simon Eastwood" – a young loanee incapable of conquering the occasionally brutal stage of Valley Parade.

That annoyed Phil Parkinson intensely at the time. His homework had told him what a good goalie City had acquired; trusted sources confirmed that Pickford was a star in the making.

Now we can all see it and there haven't been too many grumbles of late.

His virtuoso performance on Saturday personally deserved a better outcome after coming to City's rescue on three or four occasions in the second half procession towards the home goal.

His reflexes were exceptional, especially with the pick of the bunch when he acrobatically tipped over a Paddy Madden thunderbolt.

Pickford did get his breaks – Luke Williams should have scored rather than firing at him from close range and there looked to be little wrong with Andrew Boyce's leap above Andrew Davies that was chalked off in the first half.

But the keeper more than earned his luck. You will be hard pressed to see a better display between the posts this season.

In front of him, Rory McArdle continued his excellent season with another barn-stormer – at both ends of the field.

Not content with the day job, throwing his body in the way with a series of blocks and tackles, McArdle also morphed into Messi to score a goal of stunning quality.

McArdle jokes that his goals are pretty much always the same, headers from a set-piece. Well not any more.

His repertoire has now expanded to add left-foot curlers into the top corner. Yes, you read that right.

Pickford laughed afterwards that he had never seen one of them before in training. McArdle's exquisite effort certainly stunned Scunthorpe.

They were still riding the storm of an unsuccessful City shout for hand ball after Boyce charged down a shot from Filipe Morais. In the ensuing confusion, Jon Stead intelligently engineered enough space for McArdle to coolly convert from the edge of the penalty area.

That moment of magic gave City a slender half-time advantage they just about warranted, although Iron were justifiably aggrieved that their own centre half Boyce's name was not on the scoresheet.

The former pros in the press box were unanimous in feeling that the Scunthorpe defender's contact with Davies was legitimate and the "equaliser" should have stood.

That was one warning for City; the other came from Gary McSheffrey's cross that just had too much on it for Madden in front of goal before Pickford denied Richard Brindley's follow-up.

Parkinson's half-time message stressed the need to stay on the front foot. He reminded the players how they had pressured Leyton Orient and pinned them in their own half during the last home win.

But Saturday went the other way. Scunthorpe signalled their intentions straight from the re-start and immediately set the tone for 45 minutes (well, 49 unfortunately) of attack against defence.

Things could have been different if they had been reduced to ten men for Isaiah Osbourne's very late lunge on Billy Clarke. Parkinson saw it as a straight red but the striker got off with a booking.

So Scunthorpe's full complement continued their assault on the City goal. Pickford stood in their way, saving from Williams, McSheffrey and twice from Madden.

The home side still had their own promising moments but failed to make them count. Parkinson wondered whether it was fatigue from so much defending that blunted their effectiveness going forward.

They certainly lacked that cutting edge around the penalty area, typified when Jon Stead tried to be too deliberate after being teed up by Billy Knott's quick-thinking and shot straight at keeper Sam Slocombe when well placed.

Those are the opportunities that need to be taken to put a game to bed. City's clock management in those fateful added minutes should also have been much better.

When Yeates was fouled to the side of the Scunthorpe box, it should have been the signal for one last attack to eat up valuable seconds.

Instead a non-descript free-kick came to nothing and the ball was once again transferred to the other end.

Andrew Davies was unable to get a proper head on Miguel Llera's angled pass and it broke kindly for Hakeeb Adelakun. James Meredith was too tight to the substitute, who beat him easily before ripping up Pickford's clean sheet with a fierce cross-shot.

The timing stunk, though given Scunthorpe's mastery since the break maybe it was just as well they didn't have another 20 minutes to convert one point into three. You could see why they are unbeaten on the road under Robins.

Had City managed to hang on, they would have celebrated Christmas in a play-off spot after Garry Thompson had pegged back Rochdale equally late for next week's visitors Notts County.

That promises to be a bit special when Thompson and, of course, Gary Jones come to town. But please, let's hope for an uneventful finale.

===========================

http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11679344.Bradford_City_to_be_on_live_TV_once_again/

 CITY will be on TV again after the home game with MK Dons was chosen for live coverage on Sky Sports.

The game at Valley Parade has been brought forward 24 hours to Monday, February 9.

It will be the fifth time they have been shown live in front of the television cameras. Previously Sky broadcast games against Leeds, Barnsley and Sheffield United while BT Sport showed the FA Cup win at Halifax.

===========================

The Christmas Jumper Thing

https://twitter.com/officialbantams/status/546375856323833856/photo/1


===========================


Friday, December 19, 2014

L1 W1-0 (a) Chesterfield Saturday December 13, 2014. K.O. 3:00PM. #bcafc

Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/46810838356/


===========================

Next/Upcoming Game
http://www.bradfordcityfc.co.uk/news/article/city-going-for-christmas-jumper-record-2149220.aspx
http://www.bradfordcityfc.co.uk/news/article/milton-keynes-dons-game-moved-2153840.aspx                                                                                                                                                        
Signings, Loans and Injuries


Injuries


===========================


Preview
http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/30357079

Game links
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11665513.FT__Chesterfield_0_City_1/
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/sport_bantams_pics2012/sport_bantams_pics2014_chesterfieldaway/


Highlight/ WonderGoal
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1C9dz7pT0I


Post Game Interview
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXANijOnM80


===========================

Final whistle - match report


Billy Clarke's "pure quality" seals latest win for on-song Bradford City

6:17pm Saturday 13th December 2014

By Simon Parker

DELIGHTED Phil Parkinson hailed "a moment of pure quality" after in-form City bagged their fifth win in six games.

Billy Clarke's sensational second-half strike earned them a 1-0 win at Chesterfield – a result that moves the Bantams to within a point of the League One play-off places.

Parkinson said: "It was a moment of pure quality that was fitting to win any game of football."

The home side had to play the last 42 minutes down to ten men after skipper Sam Morsy was sent off for elbowing Andy Halliday. The City chief had no sympathy for the Spireites midfielder.

He added: "The lad flung his elbow in Andy's face and they are the sort of challenges that can break a cheekbone. Andy's got a shiner but he's okay – but it was dangerous.

"The lad has lost his discipline and ultimately it's cost them the game."


===========================

When the dust settled - match report


Birthday boy Clarke certainly brings something to the party as match-winner helps Christmas bash go with a swing

7:40am Monday 15th December 2014

By Simon Parker

Chesterfield 0 Bradford City 1

CHESTERFIELD'S pre-match DJ must have borrowed his set from the office Christmas party.

From snatches of Cliff Richard and Eddie Cochran to Modern Romance and T-Spoon, his collection of cheesy tunes from down the ages would have fitted in well at any works knees-up.

But the City players did not need any musical monstrosities to ensure their festive night out went with a swing.

They boarded the plane bound for Dublin after the game in the highest of spirits as the Bantam charge stepped up another notch.

These boys sure like to travel – this was their fifth win away from Valley Parade in the league this season and seventh in all.

And now they are once again making a bee-line for the play-off pack, sitting only a point adrift of sixth-placed Rochdale.

Billy Clarke will have led the celebrations in his homeland after marking his 27th birthday with a strong contender for City's goal of the season.

They could also be excused for raising a cheeky glass in honour of Chesterfield captain Sam Morsy, who pressed the self-destruct button on his own team's chances with a mindless sending-off.

One up against ten men, City should have had their party hats and glad rags on long before the final whistle.

First when Jon Stead inexplicably hit the post from five yards out after Clarke had laid the goal on a plate.

Then when Stead's through ball was missed by Sam Clucas which sent Filipe Morais in the clear – only to find Keighley's finest stopper Tommy Lee his equal in the one-on-one.

Put either of those away and the points were in the can. But failure on both counts did give Chesterfield a sniff that maybe all was not lost.

So instead of cruising to another three road points, City had to sweat it out through some anxious late moments – most notably when Jordan Pickford produced a blinding reflex tip-over to deny a disbelieving Jay O'Shea.

But aside from a few frayed nerves in the dug-out and gnawed fingernails in the away end, maybe that was not such a bad thing.

The elusive clean sheet has been a long time coming. It was fitting that a first shut-out since October 4 should be earned the hard way.

Boss Phil Parkinson said: "I'd love to have killed the game off and we should have done. But, in a way, we've had to show that real grittiness about us.

"We've got that work ethic about us and physically you can't carry anybody on your travels.

"We showed the same qualities that have been required every time we've been successful away from home.

"I didn't want to make too big a thing of it after the Dartford game but it hurt Steve (Parkin) and I that we'd conceded again.

"Jordy and the back four are working so hard on the training ground, with the midfield in front of them, to get that clean sheet.

"Saturday will do everyone the world of good. You talk about big moments and Jordan made a truly Premier League save – you need your goalkeeper to produce like that at times."

That bullet dodged thanks to the youngster's agility, Parkinson called Clarke to the touchline ten minutes from time to reinforce the message about not letting the win slip from their grasp.

He wanted the post-match talk to be dominated by Clarke's winning goal not a case of "what ifs" as Chesterfield chased a late equaliser – something they had achieved on the previous two occasions when City came visiting.

"We missed two chances at 1-0 to put the game out of sight," added Parkinson. "That gave Chesterfield a lift and we sat back and it affected us for a while.

"Sometimes you don't take your chances, but when a striker doesn't score, he needs the back four to make sure that doesn't get remembered.

"In the same way, if a defender makes a mistake and gives away a goal, it needs a striker to dig you out of it.

"There's that kind of spirit within the boys at the moment. Everybody is working so hard for each other."

Pickford's return was one of two changes from the FA Cup team, with Parkinson also bringing back Andy Halliday for Billy Knott in midfield.

The Scotsman's presence was the manager's nod towards solidity over flamboyance and he was a central figure in the afternoon's key talking point three minutes after the break.

As he got a pass off, Halliday was caught with a flying elbow from Morsy and collapsed to the floor. The Spireites skipper was a goner, although the crowd's angry claims that the City man had milked it were shot down by the shiner he was soon sporting.

Halliday jokingly tweeted afterwards that he was "still handsome" but Parkinson called it the type of clash that could have broken his cheekbone.

It was a mindless moment from a player who had been Chesterfield's best up to that point.

Just two minutes before, Morsy's teasing cross along the six-yard box just eluded the lunging Gary Roberts. The slightest of contacts would have put the Spireites ahead.

His moment of madness then followed – and eight minutes later City cashed in through Clarke.

There was a hint of hands about the way he brought down a lofted pass but his swivel and shot left no argument, the ball arcing perfectly into the furthest point of the home net.

City had not made the most of some decent scoring opportunities before the break, Clarke especially with a header he looped over the bar from close range.

That did not matter when he put their most difficult chance of the afternoon into the top corner.

After that, it was down to resilience at the other end to see the job through and the team's Christmas do could kick off on the perfect note.

Attendance: 6,809

===========================

Liverpool 2 Bradford City 0 - F.A Youth Cup match details - pictures by @tmgphotography -
http://t.co/hcvaUDsRVh http://t.co/PNS0DM0jSl

===========================

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

FAC2 W4-1 (h) Dartford Sunday December 7, 2014. K.O. 2:00PM. #bcafc

Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/46810838356/

===========================

Next/Upcoming Game
FAC3 v Millwall (a). Games to be played between 3rd and 6th of January
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11654041.Lions_Den_offers_FA_Cup_tie_with_bite_for_Bradford_City/
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11656421.Bradford_City_in_race_to_tie_down_Morais_after_Den_return/

Signings, Loans and Injuries

Filipe Morais back in contention for @dartfordfc tie - http://t.co/htdzBBQXr3 http://t.co/NIlxnUgPKK


===========================


Preview
Preview followed by live coverage of Sunday's FA Cup game between Bradford City and Dartford.
BBC http://ift.tt/1yAhk0g
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11608046.Dartford_date_revives_memories_of_happy_Tayls_for_former_Bantams_boss/
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11647884.Dartford_boss_Burman__Bradford_City_are_our_cup_inspiration/

Game links
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11650919.Full_time__Bradford_City_4_Dartford_1/
http://m.espn.go.com/soccer/gamecast?gameId=409450&action=stats
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.814613631918607.1073741964.377072282339413&type=1
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/sport_bantams_pics2012/sport_bantams_pics2014_dartfordhome/

Highlight/ Goals
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvcyvM9mIIM

Post Game Interview
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xF---wOkHa0



===========================

When the dust settled - match report


Deadly double act dash Dartford hopes as Bradford City march on

6:26am Monday 8th December 2014

By Ross Heppenstall

City 4, Dartford 1

ALAN Shearer will make the FA Cup third-round draw at The Deep aquarium in Hull tonight.

The England legend knew a thing or two about the art of goal-scoring and forging a successful strike partnership.

Well, City fans will be glued to their television sets for this evening's draw having witnessed a new combination come to the fore.

Billy Clarke and Jon Stead were both on the scoresheet again yesterday as Phil Parkinson's men marched into round three with consummate ease.

For Shearer and Chris Sutton, or more pertinently James Hanson and Nahki Wells, read Clarke and Stead.

Wells has long gone, of course, and his old partner-in-crime Hanson cannot currently get into Parkinson's team.

The form of Clarke and Stead, and the way they so compliment each other, has dictated that they must start.

It remains to be seen whether Stead will extend his stay beyond the end of his current loan spell, which expires on January 3.

But he is clearly loving life at Valley Parade – it is now four goals in his last six games – and his burgeoning relationship with Clarke is thriving.

Stead created the space to set up Clarke for a tenth-minute opener and the Huddersfield striker then side-footed home a second shortly after the half-hour mark.

In truth, 2-0 at half-time flattered Dartford.

The Bantams were superior in every department and the only disappointment for Parkinson was that the lead was not greater.

Still, the pace, width and urgency with which his men attacked the Conference outfit was pleasing all the same.

Outstanding second-half strikes from impressive widemen Filipe Morais and Mark Yeates underlined the gulf in class between the sides.

The goals, coming within the space of a minute, meant all four of City's front four players had notched.

So there was to be no giant-killing act at City's expense.

The romance of the world's oldest knockout cup competition was limited to a good old-fashioned boisterous away following of 471 fans from Kent.

That and a second-half consolation goal for Lee Noble.

The fact that Parkinson admitted he would love to face Manchester United at home in the next round said everything about the FA Cup.

What other knockout competition in the world can engender such passion and fervour?

Nobody could accuse Parkinson of not doing his homework on the opposition as he had been to watch Dartford twice since the second-round draw was made.

Some managers might have sent a scout to see the Kent outfit play, or asked for a DVD of their recent games.

Not Parkinson.

Not when there was so much at stake for City yesterday; a coveted third-round place and potential money-spinning tie against a Premier League giant.

He drove down to deepest, darkest Kent to watch Tony Burman's team against Chester and then away at Eastleigh last week.

The Darts lost both games but Parkinson was taking no risks.

The Bantams boss thus picked his strongest available side, recalling the fit-again Morais on the right wing and giving Ben Williams a run-out in between the posts with Jordan Pickford ineligible.

Morais came in for Andy Halliday, who had been suffering from a migraine earlier in the week, but those were the only two changes to the side which thumped Leyton Orient the week previously.

Dartford are struggling in the Conference but they have some notable names in their ranks.

In their starting line-up was Peter Sweeney, who played for Millwall in the 2004 FA Cup final against Manchester United, ex-Blackburn goalkeeper Jason Brown and Mat Mitchell-King, formerly of Crewe and AFC Wimbledon.

And the FA Cup being the FA Cup, there were some great stories in the non-League side's ranks.

Brothers Elliot and Tom Bradbrook both juggle high-powered jobs in the City with turning out for the part-timers.

Ryan Hayes works nights at a London meat market and Max Cornhill is a fashion designer.

Dartford actually had the game's first chance, when Danny Harris fired just wide from inside the 18-yard box.

From there City took control, often stretching their visitors to breaking point down the right flank, where Stephen Darby and Morais linked up to excellent effect.

It was a similar story on the left wing as James Meredith supported Yeates at every given opportunity.

The opening blow was struck as early as the tenth minute, when Stead neatly created the space to cross low from the left flank.

The ball found its way to Clarke, who eventually fired the ball home from close range after some desperate Dartford defending threatened to keep him at bay.

Eight minutes later, Morais crossed dangerously from the right but Clarke could only volley over the crossbar when well placed.

Billy Knott, who enjoyed a fine game in the middle of the park, then combined with Clarke to set up Stead, whose close-range effort was blocked.

The Bantams continued to probe but, if anything, were too intricate at times as they sought to increase their lead.

Darby hit a fierce piledriver from distance which narrowly missed the target, before City did grab their second goal in the 31st minute.

This time Yeates did well to cross low from the left inside the penalty area and Stead's predatory instincts saw him stretch out a leg to bury the ball.

Two-nil and effectively game over.

Dartford afforded City acres of space to play at times and the Bantams continued to create chances after the interval.

Sure enough, goal number three arrived in the 58th minute when Morais hit a blistering right-foot drive, which appeared to take a slight deflection into the top corner from 25 yards.

With City fans still celebrating, Parkinson's men advanced forward again straight from the restart and Yeates showed delightful skill to cut in from the left and curl a fine right-foot shot into the far corner.

Dartford replied when Noble cleverly back-heeled in Rory McAuley's cross in the 64th minute.

Soon after, Noble hit a fierce shot from distance which Williams turned away. A second goal for Dartford at that point might have made things interesting.

Probably not, though, as City booked their place in tonight's draw with plenty to spare.
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#FootballRemembers
https://twitter.com/officialbantams/status/541694484493639680/photo/1


http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11653964.Bradford_City__Dignified_silence_can_still_speak_volumes_about_Valley_Parade_tragedy/

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Thursday, December 04, 2014

L1 W3-1 (h) Leyton Orient Saturday November 29, 2014. K.O. 3:00PM. #bcafc

Read this article online
http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/
https://www.facebook.com/groups/46810838356/


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Next/Upcoming Game
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11638565.John_Hendrie_column__Bradford_City_must_be_wary_of_FA_Cup_giant_killing/
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11641158.Attitude_everything_as_Clarke_urges_Bradford_City_to_avoid_an_FA_Cup_off_day/
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11644462.McArdle_desperate_to_avoid_Dartford_banana_skin_with_Bradford_City/


Signings, Loans and Injuries

League Two side Hartlepool United sign Bradford City midfielder Matthew Dolan on loan until the end of December.


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Preview
Preview followed by live coverage of Saturday's League One game between Bradford City and Leyton Orient.
BBC http://ift.tt/1xQml0S

Game links
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/11635126.FT__City_3_Leyton_Orient_1/
http://m.espn.go.com/soccer/gamecast?gameId=393979&action=stats
http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/sport/sportbcfc/sport_bantams_pics2012/sport_bantams_pics2014_orienthome/

Highlight/ Goals
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vzmexYl378w


Post Game Interview
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ODS8H19-LqY


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Final whistle - match report



Parkin: Bantams knew that win was coming

7:14pm Saturday 29th November 2014

By Simon Parker

ASSISTANT boss Steve Parkin savoured City's return to winning ways at Valley Parade this afternoon and declared: It was only a matter of time.

The Bantams beat Leyton Orient 3-1 - their first home victory since October 4 and only the third of the season.

Billy Knott opened the scoring in a one-sided first half before sub David Mooney levelled for the visitors, who then had former City loan striker Chris Dagnall sent off.

Two goals in the space of three minutes from strike duo Billy Clarke and Jon Stead then clinched the points.

Parkin said: "I don't think there's been a great weight lifted because we've been playing well. It was only a matter of time before we got the win we deserved."

He praised the role of Stead, who has now scored three during his loan spell from Huddersfield.

"Steady is a very positive person in the dressing room. He has a terrific work ethic, he looks after himself and he is a definite winner.

"His performances over the last few weeks have shown that. He's a real threat and has got a nice partnership going with Billy Clarke."

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When the dust settled - match report


Nice one my son, as Bantams home and h-O's-ed – with a little help from the Knotts

8:30am Monday 1st December 2014

By Simon Parker

Bradford City 3 Leyton Orient 1

CITY should club together to make sure Billy Knott's parents are there every week.

Mum and dad have watched three games since Knott headed north in the summer – the Bantams have won the lot and their son has scored every time!

After Crawley away and the Capital One Cup classic with Leeds, you can add Leyton Orient on Saturday to the list for City's lucky omens from Canvey Island.

It seems the Only Way to win is with Essex there...

Knott had his own personal fan club at Valley Parade as a posse of friends and family made the trip from home to mark his 22nd birthday the day before.

Saturday night was always going to be a lively one – and he made sure the celebrations began early with his first goal since that memorable strike against the noisy neighbours at the end of August.

His finish into the same net in front of the Kop was hardly of the same calibre, rolling the ball home after the excellent Jon Stead had carved the O's wide open.

But it was arguably just as significant on a ghost-busting afternoon for the home side. At last, City have remembered how to win at Valley Parade.

After the false dawns against Doncaster and Gillingham, a home game finally went to plan. And suddenly the Bantams find themselves back into the top ten and within touching distance once more of a play-off spot.

The performances were there for the previous two outings but City paid the price for lacking an end product. Not this time.

The shot count illustrated the one-way traffic, the home side mustering over 20 efforts on goal and Leyton Orient just one on target.

The fact that the visitors scored with their only accurate shot did raise the scary prospect of a sequel to Gillingham's smash and grab the week before.

But this time, at least, the clock was on City's side. They had a good 20 minutes to respond again rather than 20 seconds.

They also received a helping hand from rookie referee Darren Handley, whose trigger reaction to Chris Dagnall's foul on Knott certainly swayed the contest back in their favour.

The one-time City loanee was late with the challenge but Knott over-egged the reaction with a roll or two. Dagnall must have anticipated a yellow card but instead the first-year official reached straight for his red.

As the striker trailed dejectedly off the pitch, any momentum that Leyton Orient had built from their unexpected equaliser went with him.

City, to their credit, regained control of the situation and took full advantage. So much so, that there wasn't a squeak of alarm or discomfort in the final ten minutes – and when could we last say that?

Phil Parkinson had talked in the build-up about keeping confidence levels high despite that deflating stoppage-time sucker punch last time out.

And City's first-half dominance suggested there were no mental scars carried over. Mark Yeates typically set the tone with a dipping half-volley early on, Andy Halliday diverted a close-range header straight at keeper Adam Legzdins and Clarke flicked another just beyond the far post.

Stead and Clarke are a joy to watch when in full flow and their cleverness of thought and movement was proving too much for the Orient rearguard.

Yeates and Halliday kept them well supplied from either side and Knott's bustling midfield play rediscovered the joi de vivre of his opening month of the campaign.

But some things never change. Clarke's goal-bound shot was sneakily turned away by centre half Scott Cuthbert's right arm and referee Handley refused to flinch under the weight of home appeals.

The volume of City attacks continued to build towards the break. Yeates fired over again then Stead burst through but saw his effort smothered one-on-one by Legzdins.

Orient, who had managed just one off-target shot from the otherwise disinterested Gianvito Plasmati, were hanging on for the half-time whistle like a boxer desperate for the end of the round.

They did not get there as Halliday clipped a pass over the top to pick out another intelligent run from Stead. The striker drew the defence and committed the keeper before leaving Knott to convert.

The midfielder fittingly gestured towards his private gang as he milked the goal celebration.

Leyton Orient picked their game up after the break but then they could have not been as poor again.

Slowly, they edged their way into the contest and home hearts were in mouths when a cross by Andrea Dossena, the left back once of Liverpool, struck another Anfield old boy on the arm.

But skipper Stephen Darby got away with it as Handley perhaps decided to "even things up" for his earlier non-penalty award.

City had lost some of their fluency and an edginess was creeping into the crowd.

The similarities with the previous Saturday were evident, especially when Halliday's header was fumbled on to the bar by Legzdins.

Foiled once again by the woodwork, City found themselves pegged back to level terms three minutes later.

Orient had got little change out of the home defence up to that point but Rory McArdle slipped and allowed sub David Mooney to power away and finish with aplomb. Parkinson had been undone by one of his Colchester old boys.

But Dagnall's dismissal instantly restored the odds in City's favour and they cashed in with two goals in the space of three minutes to dismiss any doubts.

Yeates burrowed into the box and created space for James Meredith to drive in a low cross which Clarke buried in the roof of the net.

Then Legzdins, whose kicking had been flaky throughout, scuffed another from a lively back pass straight to Stead, who gobbled up the gift.

Home, sweet home once more ...
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