The Football League Paper

WHERE ARE THEY NOW?

We catch up with Walsall’s 1979-80 Division Four runners-up

- By Neil Fissler

DON PENN believes Walsall shot themselves in the foot when they bounced straight back to the Third Division a season after being relegated.

The Saddlers had slipped out of the division after 16 seasons and looked set to romp away with the Fourth Division title after going top at the end of December.

All they had to do was hold their nerve in the last four games, three of which were against promotion rivals Huddersfie­ld Town, Newport County and Bradford City.

But they took their eye off the ball, drawing against Huddersfie­ld and Bradford and losing their last two to Wigan, who finished seventh, and Newport.

“Our last game was against Newport County at home and I think it was the chairman who said, as a reward, ‘we will take you to Spain straight afterwards’,” Penn recalls.

“We were young kids and I don’t think our mind was on the game, which was totally wrong. We just wanted to get the game over and done with and lost 4-2.

“After the game, we went to Spain and, as kids, had a great time but it was the wrong thing to do. They should have booked it for a week later.

“I know we won promotion, but it could have been a lot better. We should have won the league handsomely, with six or seven games to spare, if we’d been more discipline­d and applied ourselves.

“We were the best team in the league and we had some really good players. Lads like Paul Waddington, who was the most skilful player at the club.

“Ian Paul would have been an England internatio­nal, but he had an injury and had to retire.

“He was by far and away the best player in the league and would definitely have made it.”

Bruises

Penn netted 25 goals, which made him the joint second highest scorer in the league, with Huddersfie­ld’s Ian Robins just a goal short of Aldershot’s Colin Garwood.

He says it will always be remembered as a case of never fulfilling the potential they had because of their youth and inexperien­ce.

“The season itself was OK. I could have scored 50 goals – I had that many chances. A lot of it was down to Roy McDonough, who played up front alongside me.

“He was a big lad and was my foil. He took all the bumps and bruises and I just stood there picking things up, to be perfectly honest. That and being in the right place at the right time.

“It worked out quite well for me, but really I look back and think I should have taken it more seriously and trained harder.

“But I was a young kid and I had young kids around me. We had a ball. It was a great time.

“Our idea of a warm down was a shower and into the bar for a couple of beers and socialise.

“We were naturally fit, to a point, but there wasn’t the science that is in the game now and we looked to socialise a little too much.

“We thought we were good young players and maybe that was the problem. We could have been a lot better than we were.

“We just didn’t fulfil our potential is probably the best thing to say about it.

“Experience counts for a lot but the trouble is when you have experience your legs have gone.”

1. Ken Oliver: Held a number of coaching positions before becoming a consultant to a sports management company and a selfemploy­ed taxi driver in Tamworth.

2. Jimmy Williams: Forward who still lives in the area and has had a variety of jobs, mainly in the double glazing industry.

3. Roy McDonough: Striker who won two promotions with Southend, managed Colchester, where he also worked as a car salesman, and has since worked for a property company in Spain.

4. Ron Green: Goalkeeper who worked as Coventry’s community officer and coached at Walsall’s centre of excellence before becom- ing a Black Country postman. 5. Ricky Sbragia: Central defender who later won promotion with York City. He went into coaching and managed Sunderland and Scotland’s Under-21s until September 2016. 6. Ian Turner: Goalkeeper and FA Cup winner with Southampto­n in 1976. He became a plumber and pipe fitter for BP and then a supervisor in the oil industry. 7. Kenny Mower: Full-back who was promoted and relegated twice with the Saddlers. An electricia­n’s mate at Butlers Foundries before becoming a rep. 8. Mark Rees: Winger and a member of the Aldershot side that resigned from the Football League. Lives in Cradley Heath, where he works as a selfemploy­ed builder and floor layer. 9. Richard Roberts: Physio who is now retired after working for the Saddlers and WBA. 10. Brian Caswell: Full-back who made almost 500 career appearance­s. He went into coaching for many years before taking a customer services job with BMW in the Midlands. 11. Tony Macken: Republic of Ireland full-back who returned to live in his native Dublin and has managed Drogheda United and Waterford United. Now a fitter in the gas industry. 12. Alan Buckley: Forward who is the Saddlers’ record scorer. Spent 30 years in management and also worked for BBC Radio Humberside. His brother Steve played for Derby County. 13. David Serella : Central defender who made over 400 career appearance­s. Settled in Lytham St Anne’s, where he became a milkman, running his own business, D E Serella Dairy Supplies. 14. Steve Waddington: Midfielder and son of former Stoke City boss Tony. Won promotion with Stoke and Port Vale and now lives near his native Nantwich. Works for Right Equity Release. 15. Ian Paul: Midfielder who succeeded his father, Jim, as Aston Villa kitman in 2003, having previously assisted him. He is still part of the Villa Park backroom staff. 16. Don Penn: Striker who worked as a television engineer for Granada and then Fire and Safety Service in Minworth, before joining a Wolverhamp­ton-based electrical company. NOT PICTURED Kevan Broadhurst: Central defender who joined the coaching staff at Birmingham City and is still coaching on their community programme. A regular summariser on local radio. Colin Harrison: Full-back and the Saddlers’ league record appearance holder, lives in his native Pelsall. He was reserve team trainer before running a carpet business in Rugeley. Jimmy Kelly: Winger who played for Wolves in the top flight but settled in the United States, where he runs a business, Waterford Plastics, in Oregon. Gary Williams: Right-back who helped Aston Villa win the League Championsh­ip and European Cup. Settled in North Yorkshire, where he worked in the pub trade and then in computers.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom