A couple of years ago, in London for the weekend, I was invited to a house party somewhere in the middle of the city where I knew no-one bar the guy I had tagged along with. Between the lift and the door to the flat I asked who’s house party it was I was about to attend and what they did. “They’re in a sketch troupe,” was my mate’s answer, said as if that were a normal sentence that someone might say. “Oh right,” I replied, before pressing on, “but what do they do for a living?” “That,” he replied, “they’re in a sketch troupe,” and in we went. Continue reading “Talking a Good Game; On Becoming a Football Commentator”
Author: glen wilson
Doncaster Rovers Belles – 2013 FAWSL Season Preview
It’s that time of year again. League tables are starting to be annotated with Ps and Rs, play-off dreams are being shrugged off and put down to the cheddar eaten before bed, and the summer stretches out ahead of us as a long expanse of nothingness in which we’ll have to feign an interest in tennis to get our sporting kicks. But, it doesn’t have to be that way. Because as one season ends another one is just beginning. Step aside fellas, here come the Belles. Continue reading “Doncaster Rovers Belles – 2013 FAWSL Season Preview”
Stadium Tedium; 10 Things That Modern Stadia are Missing

I’ve mentioned this before in these pages, but a couple of years back I was in a pub when I noticed the television above the bar showing a Rugby League match. There was no sound, but the anchor and pundits were rolling through their pre-amble in front of backdrop of red seats and newish concrete; I gazed for a good couple of minutes wondering where they were; Salford perhaps? Maybe St Helens. Wakefield? One wide-panning shot later I clocked it. They were at the Keepmoat. Continue reading “Stadium Tedium; 10 Things That Modern Stadia are Missing”
Football’s Faults: #1 ‘Clem’
I’ve been moonlighting this season as editor of the Rossington Main matchday programme, Main Issue. In that publication I’ve run a series called ‘Football’s Faults’ highlighting everything wrong with the game. Rather than keep those articles exclusive to the hardy souls who head down Oxford Street I’ve chosen to share them here, beginning with this critique of the Football League Show‘s ‘Clem’ which also recently appeared in When Saturday Comes magazine…
In my childhood football was a simple game, played by twenty-two men and narrated by John Helm. Growing up in Yorkshire, Goals on Sunday was my football fix, and it delivered all I needed from a football highlights show. Extended coverage of the region’s main game (ie. Leeds) before the break, goals from all the others after it, and hope that Helm made it through Division Four before mum called me to set the table.
But in the years since, the simplicity has departed. Someone in a glass walled office has gathered suits round a flip-chart and decided I need more than just football highlights from my football highlights. I need interactivity, I need new angles, I need a man eating a pie on the halfway line as the teams come out behind him, and the result of this ‘blue-sky thinking’ is Mark ‘Clem’ Clemmit.
My first engagement with Clem, like many of you, was through the Football League Show’s Potted History feature. A vehicle in which he would flit around a club’s empty stadium, popping up behind seats and trophy cabinets as if he’d somehow escaped from the hand of Matthew Corbett, to read us extracts from the club’s Wikipedia entry.

Mercifully, the feature was withdrawn, but Clem soldiers on attempting to engage with football folk in what middle-management perceives to be their language. Everyone is a mate, ex-players are ‘legends’, players have great ‘tekkers’ and try to score ‘worldys’. Whenever I hear Clem speaking football I’m always put in mind of Arthur Bostrom’s Officer Crabtree in Allo Allo. Like Crabtree’s French, Clem’s ‘banter’ may do enough to convince those in power he’s the real thing, but the rest of us can’t believe he’s getting away with it. You need only view Twitter during a broadcast to see that in his pursuit of this banter Clem has become football coverage’s equivalent of The Texan from Joseph Heller’s Catch-22; a man so happy and good-natured that ultimately no-one can stand him.
Holding enthusiasm for the Football League is no bad thing, especially given much of the media’s tendency to portray it solely as an alternate dimension where Premier League clubs cease to be; like when Eastenders characters move to Manchester. In that sense Clem’s sincerity is a welcome break from cliché and patronisation. However, too often the enthusiasm is over-played, and instead comes across as the sort of faux-jocularity displayed by someone you vaguely know as they lead up to asking for a favour; “Here he is… Gaffer, the Gaffer, eh? Look at you, check the suit out. How you settling in? Yeah… hey, look… mate… you couldn’t lend us a fiver could you?”
Perhaps I’d have more time from Clem if it looked like his nickname really annoyed him. If every time Manish handed over to him we were greeted by a shot of a man grinding his teeth and fixing the lens with a stare that contained dark thoughts of revenge, I would be able to take him at face value, possibly even sympathise as he tried to be taken seriously.
But he doesn’t. He remains Clem by his own choosing and an insistence so resolute I had to look up his actual name whilst penning this piece. Instead of gaining empathy Clem is the kid at school trying too hard, hanging on the edge of the incrowd; laughing too keenly at the other kids’ jokes, particularly the ones at his expense. He seems all too happy to play the part of the fool – the office joker – the guy with Yackety Sax as his ring-tone, the bloke who spends each and every December with mistletoe hooked through his belt buckle.
In Clem lies the crux of the Football League Show’s failings, in that it endeavours so earnestly to please, ultimately it disappoints. For all its attempted features and interactivity, by this time, post-midnight on a Saturday, and with any sense of perceptiveness already dulled out of us by Alan Shearer’s punditry come narration, we don’t want whimsy, nor do we want to think. We just want goals and maybe the odd red card. Nothing more.
Poor Clem. Because unlike a large amount of people presenting and opining on football on television he is clearly knowledgeable about his subject, and his features do offer insight. But in their current slot, they serve only as something we have to get through in order to get what we came for, like time spent with relatives to get to the Christmas presents. Perhaps, for all our sakes, it is time for the BBC to kill off the over-eager mauve clad Jim Henson character gone sentient that is Clem, and give the football journalist Mark Clemmit a chance instead.
What if Paul Heffernan had just booted it into Asda car-park?
In December 2005, Rovers came within a minute of knocking Arsene Wenger’s Arsenal side out of the League Cup, and reaching their first ever major trophy semi-final. In issue 52 of popular STAND fanzine, produced in April 2011, editor Glen Wilson looked back on that game and wondered… what if? Continue reading “What if Paul Heffernan had just booted it into Asda car-park?”
Great Things Gary Johnson Has Done
Earlier this week we were admonished on twitter by fanzine reader and Yeovil fan Seb White who was none too impressed with a reference in Issue 60 to the “hot air boasts” of Glovers manager Gary Johnson. There is, we replied, much more where that comes from; most notably a whole double page feature penned by our now editor of popular STAND from back in February 2004. So here is that very article, which initially appeared in issue 25 of the fanzine, where Glen Wilson celebrates Great Things Gary Johnson Has Done. Continue reading “Great Things Gary Johnson Has Done”
A Doncastrian Non-League Day
This Saturday sees the third annual ‘Non-League Day’. The brainchild of QPR fan James Doe, Non-League Day was initially launched to encourage fans of Championship and Premier League to use the international break in their own club’s fixtures to get along and support their local grassroots sides instead. The initiative has proved a huge success, and though Rovers may no longer be in the top two tiers of the game, popular STAND is still happy to endorse the day, and encourage any of you not making the trip to Hartlepool to get your football kicks with a local non-league side instead. Continue reading “A Doncastrian Non-League Day”
Editorial: Finding value for money
Issue 60 of the fanzine went on sale at Saturday’s game against Shrewsbury. As a taster to what you will have missed if you failed to get your hands of a copy we bring you Glen Wilson’s editorial on modern football pricing and consumerism. Continue reading “Editorial: Finding value for money”
The Long Weekend; five matches, five days, four countries
Doable. That’s Ralph’s verdict. It’s always Ralph’s verdict. And, as ever, that’s enough for you to agree to go along for the improbable; the unrecommended but ultimately possible. Wales Under 21s play in the Czech Republic’s northern tip on Monday evening. Within 24 hours of that final whistle the senior team kick-off 600 miles away in Serbia. Attending both is, apparently, doable. So you question not how, you simply book flights. And then, feeling confident, you chuck in three more games across Friday and Saturday, because if you’re going to commit to doing silly challenges like these things you should commit fully. Cardiff. Doncaster, twice. Jablonec. Novi Sad. Five matches. Five days. Four countries. Doable. Continue reading “The Long Weekend; five matches, five days, four countries”
Playing Away: Whitby Town vs Blyth Spartans
Continuing our series of sneaking off whilst Rovers’ back is turned for a bit on the side popular STAND Editor Glen Wilson hops up the North Yorkshire coast to the Turnbull Ground for Whitby Town vs Blyth Spartans. Continue reading “Playing Away: Whitby Town vs Blyth Spartans”
