Crystal Palace √ LEICESTER CITY saturday, APRIL 01 2023 | 15:00
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palace √ leicester city sat 1 apr | 15:00
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08 captain
10 chairman 34 pub talk 40 Ben Bailey Smith 44 Jay Butts 46 over the road 49 south of the river 54 ABCD epl 56 2012/13 revisited 58 from the archive 68 beat brighty 70 stats & results
Directors Chairman Steve Parish, David Blitzer, Joshua Harris, John Textor Chief Financial Officer Sean O’Loughlin Sporting Director Dougie Freedman Club Secretary Christine Dowdeswell Head of Sports Medicine Dr. Zaf Iqbal Academy Director Gary Issott Director of U21 Development Mark Bright Chief Operating Officer Sharon Lacey Chief Commercial Officer Barry Webber General Counsel David Nichol Head of Ticketing Paul McGowan Head of Retail Foz Bowers Chief Marketing and Communications Officer James Woodroof Head of Safeguarding Cassi Wright Head Groundsman Bruce Elliott
12 You’ve got to have confidence, selfbelief – whatever you want to call it – to perform well at anything. You have to block out the noise and believe in yourself to perform at your best
Editor Will Robinson Design Billy Cooke, Stu Ellmer, Lucas Gough Contributors Ian King, Robin Johnson, Ben Bailey Smith, Toby Jagmohan, Tommy Macarthur, Jay Butts, Chloe Arthur Photography Neil Everitt, Sebastian Frej, Pinnacle Photo Agency, Getty, Toby Jagmohan Printer Bishops Printers
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palace √ leicester city sat 1 apr | 15:00
INTERNATIONAL EAGLES IMPRESS ON DUTY Palace’s international Eagles were busy during the break, as four senior players joined up with their national sides far and wide. Jordan Ayew started twice for Ghana as the Black Stars kicked off their bid for Africa Cup of Nations qualification, under new boss Chris Houghton. The Palace man won his 88th cap in a dramatic late victory over Angola, before adding an 89th in a draw in Angola. Also searching for a ticket to the tournament in Cote d’Ivoire
– which takes place in January, 2024 – was Cheick Doucouré, who faced Gambia twice with Mali. The 22-year-old started as the Eagles comfortably won the first meeting, before being rested in the reverse fixture. Marc Guéhi joined up with former Palace captain Gareth Southgate as England took on Italy and Ukraine, and despite not adding to his three international caps he gained valuable experience around the national team camp. Meanwhile, Michael Olise continued his progress with France Under-21s as they took on England and Spain.
Palace also had 10 Academy players join up with their national sides, with Killian Phillips, Tayo Adaramola, Sean Grehan and David Ozoh among those impressing.
Fan update
On this day: april 1st
Selhurst Park tours are still available to book via cpfc.co.uk, where you can explore parts of Crystal Palace’s historic ground usually only used by players and staff.
Palace travelled to Stamford Bridge in 2017 to play presumptive champions Chelsea, who were 10 points clear of nearest challengers Tottenham and in a rich vein of form. Sam Allardyce’s side were resilient, however, and scored twice in six minutes to cancel out Cesc Fabregas’ opener and complete a remarkable comeback, with Wilfried Zaha and Christian Benteke securing a memorable victory.
What’s inside Find out… how Vince Hilaire became a Palace cult hero despite facing off-field abuse (Page 50) and cast your mind back to a ‘whatcould-have-been’ transfer rumour from years gone by (Page 64). briefing
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manager
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Welcome to Selhurst Park to everyone supporting us today, and welcome also to Brendan Rodgers, the Leicester City coaching staff, directors, players and visiting fans.
I
t feels good to be back at the club – it has been an intensive couple of weeks as expected. It was a great pleasure to meet up with this group of players, a few of whom I know but a lot I didn’t know, and I have been pleased to make their acquaintance. We have had some great training sessions. When there is a change of managers it always affects the players, but morale has been good. It is important that we keep that going, because the environment around the club is going to be crucial over the next two months. Ray and I know each other well, and we have a working methodology which we believe in and which we believe is capable of helping the club. It is also good to welcome Paddy to the first-team setup. Paddy is someone I knew when I was at the club previously; he has a great future ahead of him and will be a really good addition to our staff. The competition for places is very much a level playing field. I have been impressed in this short period of time with the players I
didn’t know, and it is obvious that they have improved the quality of the squad. When I left two years ago we had an aging group, but now it is quite different: a young
The message to the players is clear: go out there, trust in yourselves, trust in your teammates and trust our fans to pull us through
squad, keen to play for the club who will be of crucial importance to us getting the points we need to stay in the league. The players are capable, there is no doubt about that. Ray manager
and I will do the right things for them and get them into the right position for matches, but that is when the fans play their part. In moments when things aren’t going so well, fans can hinder the team – that has never been the case here. In my four years the support was absolutely wonderful. You pulled us through in games and gave us energy in times when we were flagging. You boosted our spirits. All I can hope for is that you give us that same backing. But we know that it is a twoway street. Today, I want to see energy and enthusiasm. I want to see that the players are aware of our situation and aware that the fans need to be boosted by seeing a team that they can get behind. I want to see a lack of fear, and for people to demonstrate their quality and not be frightened they might fail. The message to the players is clear: go out there, trust in yourselves, trust in your teammates and trust our fans to pull us through. I am hugely looking forward to seeing you all again. Thank you in advance for your valued support
.
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captain
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The international break was a welcome break for us after an intense run of fixtures, and allowed us players to get back to basics on the training ground ahead of the return of domestic football.
I
t would be easy for our heads to drop after a difficult run of results, but morale on the training ground is strong and there is more determination than ever to turn things around, starting with facing Leicester this afternoon. We know that one positive result can make a huge difference both on the pitch in and in the stands, and we hope we can secure an important three points today. Having worked under Roy for four years in his previous spell at the club, it was a great pleasure to see him on the training pitch once again alongside Ray. As someone closely associated with the club for many years, Roy shares our desire to give 100 percent every week and to put everything into staying in the Premier League. His record over a long career – both in south London and elsewhere – demonstrates his ability as a manager, and his experience will be vital as we move into an important two months at the end of the season. Training this week has been intense, with the entire squad working hard to ensure we are in
I know that you can create a special atmosphere this afternoon to roar us on, and I hope that we can put in a performance that will make you proud
captain
a position to get a result today. We know that Leicester, despite their league position, are a very good side with plenty of talented players, and we have to be at our best to come out on top. We have welcomed the best sides in the league to Selhurst Park since the turn of the year – Newcastle United, Manchester United and Liverpool to name a few – and proved difficult to break down. Now, we have to add goals to our game, and looking at the amount of talent we have in the squad I know that we can become more clinical in the final third. Your support has been incredible all season, and we need that more than ever today. If there is one thing both the manager and I have come to recognise in our time at Selhurst Park, it is that the fans will stick with the side through thick and thin – more so, in my opinion, than at any other stadium in the country. I know that you can create a special atmosphere this afternoon to roar us on, and I hope that we can put in a performance that will make you proud. Make some noise!
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chairman
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Welcome to the directors, staff, players and supporters of Leicester City to Selhurst Park for this important encounter, and to each and every Palace supporter here to get behind the players.
I
’d like to begin by welcoming Roy Hodgson and Ray Lewington back to the club and thanking them for accepting the challenge of not only staying in the division but finishing as high as we possibly can. With Roy’s ability, experience, knowledge of the club and enthusiasm for the weeks ahead – along with Paddy in a new role as assistant manager and Ray as first-team coach – we believe we have the right group to lead us out of the most competitive relegation battles we’ve seen in 10 years in this division. As expected, Roy has hit the ground running and the mood at the training ground has been one of purpose, positivity, energy and togetherness. As never before we will need your support to rally behind the team and Roy during each of our remaining matchdays, we need to make Selhurst Park a fortress for these five home matches – to make it uncomfortable for the opposition by creating as much noise as possible to spur our players on. Roy rightly said that our club is known for its fighting spirit, and that is off the field as well as on it. I cannot emphasise just how much a difference your support, noise
and encouragement can make. There will be difficult moments I’m sure, but you have carried us through on countless occasions, and we will need you to do it again. All the clubs at the bottom can claim to have squads ‘too good to go down’, and many like us have been in the division a long time. The clubs that believe in themselves,
we need to make Selhurst Park a fortress for these five home matches
their players, and demonstrate the desire to stay in the league will be the ones that triumph. That belief system starts with me and each and every one of you, and I know you will be behind us every step of the way. A special mention to the four senior players – Jordan, Michael, Cheick, and Marc – and 10 Academy players who were on international chairman
duty over the last week. It is always a wonderful sight to see our players represent their country, which is testament to their club performances. It was also brilliant to see our Women’s team get a win over Blackburn at Bromley last weekend, in front of more than 1,000 supporters on Women’s Football Weekend. Congratulations to the players and staff. It’s an exciting time and there is a lot going on in the women’s game, and we are proud to be working with the FA on how the game develops. The academy goes from strength to strength. The Under-21s lie in equal third place and hopefully progressed yesterday in the Premier League International Cup against Liverpool, while the Under-18s are second after some impressive recent wins. Our Under-15s boys have once again qualified for the Floodlit Cup Final, and will face Arsenal in April. We have a strong record in that competition, and I wish coach Joe Antonelli and the group the very best of luck. Commiserations to the Under-13s who got through to the final of their cup competition, only to lose narrowly to Arsenal. Up the Palace
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Form is a fickle master in football – an aspect of the game few are betterplaced to recognise than Jeffrey Schlupp. Now approaching a decade as a Premier League player, the versatile midfielder has formed part of sides both title-winning and battling for survival. He tells Robin Johnson how the margin between the two can simply come down to a matter of confidence, a quality his new manager is working hard to restore…
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Confidence, for any player, is what you need to perform well main interview
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J
ust seven years have passed since the most unlikely of challengers broke the ‘Big Six’s’ routine stranglehold on English football’s top domestic prize. The visages of Andrea Bocelli serenading the King Power, Wes Morgan hoisting the Premier League trophy aloft – and Jamie Vardy’s now-revered party – live fresh in the memory, despite seeming aeons ago. Yet the detail most frequently overlooked in Leicester City’s ‘5000/1’ title triumph of 2015/16 was just quite how close they came to not competing in the Premier League at all. In mid-April 2015, Leicester were marooned at the bottom of the table, seven points adrift of safety and ailing in a perilous position, with nine games of the season remaining. Having rallied, seven wins from those fixtures secured Leicester’s Premier League status and, with new manager Claudio Ranieri instilling that all-important, but oft-elusive, property of confidence in his squad, many of those same players went on to achieve the unthinkable. The example is raised not to draw a parallel with Crystal Palace’s current position – far less threatening than Leicester’s at that point in the season – or indeed to predict their fortunes, but more to illustrate that the margins between winning and losing in the Premier League, particularly when extrapolated over the course of an entire season, remain fine. As Jeffrey Schlupp – a key cog in both Leicester’s side back then, and Palace’s team now, explains:
“Confidence, for any player, is what you need to perform well. “I don’t think you can be taught it. You’ve got to have confidence, self-belief – whatever you want to call it – to perform well at anything. You have to block out the noise and believe in yourself to perform at your best. It’s the most important thing for any player.” There is no doubting the level of talent in Palace’s current squad, but as new manager Roy Hodgson reiterated earlier this week, there is simply no replacement for self-belief.
It’s been positive. For many of us, the new manager is a familiar face. A lot of us know how he likes to work. We saw the international break as a chance to refresh and really have a crack at the last bit of this season – the last 10 games to come Starting with today, just 10 games remain for Palace between now and the end of the season. After a difficult run of both fixtures and accompanying results – the Eagles remain winless since the turn of the year – now is the time to look forwards, not back. “It’s been positive,” Schlupp describes the mood at Palace’s Copers Cope training ground over the international break. “For many of us, the new manager is a familiar face. A lot of us know how he likes to work. “We saw the international break as a chance to refresh and really have a crack at the last bit of this season – the last 10 games to come. Jeffrey Schlupp
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We’ve had a managerial change, and we want to come back from the international period with a clear mind, ready to go. “Roy is obviously a familiar face, with familiar tactics to a lot of us. He’s getting his message across early because it’s not like we’ve got a whole season to work on stuff – we’ve got two months of the season left to try and get results, and change things around. “The manager has just been getting some positivity back into the group. Obviously, with the way things have been going, some people’s confidence – and in general that of the team – might be a bit low, so he’s been getting that positive factor back again. “We want to be on the front foot, and take the game to teams. We want to play games to win, not to just show up. We want to have that mindset change. Everybody’s just excited to get playing again now.” Excitement, mindset and confidence – all perfect complements to Palace’s abundance of natural talent. Ask any of Schlupp’s long-term teammates at the club, and they will often say that the current squad contains the greatest ability and potential of any in the club’s recent history. The midfielder himself is nearing 200 appearances in red and blue since joining the club from Leicester in January 2017, and – now in his seventh season in south London – recognises this team’s affinity with Palace values. He smiles: “I’ve been here a few years now, and I think I have a good idea what this club is about. We’ve got a good fit with everyone here at the minute.
“We try and explain it to any new players who come in. We tell them about the DNA of the club. I think, even recruitment-wise, we look for that when we bring players in. “In some of the games we’ve played in the last couple of years, since we brought a lot of the younger players in here, we’ve performed at a very high level. The argument is that we probably haven’t done it consistently enough over that time.
The manager has just been getting some positivity back into the group. Obviously, with the way things have been going, some people’s confidence – and in general that of the team – might be a bit low, so he’s been getting that positive factor back again
“When we’ve performed at a really high level, it’s hard then to follow it up by doing it for long periods like the top teams do. We know the quality is there in this team – it’s just about bringing it out on a more regular basis.” Having made over 100 appearances previously under Hodgson, Schlupp retains a positive relationship with the incoming manager. Indeed, Hodgson himself has spoken about the advantages of knowing many of the squad already, while also recognising that the club has taken steps forward in terms of the quality of its addition in recent seasons. Schlupp explained: “My relationship with the manager was Jeffrey Schlupp
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We know the quality is there in this team main interview
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With the gaffer, Ray and Paddy, we’ve got some great staff main interview
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always really good when he was here last time, and with [first-team coach] Ray [Lewington]. Whenever I was called upon by them, I feel like I gave my best, and we’ve got good trust between us. “The new players here, who didn’t really know about them, have come to us ‘senior guys’ – as you might want to call us – to ask questions, and we’ve given them an insight as to what it’s going to be like working under the manager and Ray.
We obviously had a great time before under them – a great four seasons with them, which were successful for the club – and we’ve told everyone what to expect
“We obviously had a great time before under them – a great four seasons with them, which were successful for the club – and we’ve told everyone what to expect. “Everyone loves [assistant manager] Paddy [McCarthy], obviously. We worked with him over pre-season and everyone knows him and respects him. The message that he is bringing across is really important as well. He’s someone you can chat to, but who will also give it to you straight and tell you exactly how you need to hear it. “With the gaffer, Ray and Paddy, we’ve got some great staff, and a great opportunity to go and do something good. It helps Jeffrey Schlupp
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we’re going to try everything we can to turn it around main interview
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everyone buy into it really quickly and everyone’s happy and ready to go.” The players’ aim on Saturday, then, will be to assert that same quality upon Leicester City – a club with whom Schlupp’s footballing story is significantly intertwined. Born in Hamburg, the Ghana international was a product of the Leicester youth academy and, having scored a hat-trick against Rotherham United on his first senior start for the Foxes, became a Premier League winner with them in the aforementioned 2015/16 season, playing in 24 of their 38 league matches that season. To return to the original point, Schlupp highlights the key ingredient of that development, breakthrough, and eventual title charge: confidence. “We’d finished the season before really well, and took that straight into the next season. We took it each week as it came, really, but we just kept winning… and everyone knows what happened at the end of that season. “To be honest, we only started believing we were going to win the league not long before we actually did it. The confidence and the belief in the group was really high, and that allowed us to go into every game thinking we were going to win.” It is a similar quality Schlupp, Hodgson and everybody connected with Palace will be looking to embody over the coming month – particularly when Leicester visit Selhurst this weekend. The 30-year-old explains: “It’s a huge game for both clubs, of course. We’ve had a tough run since the start of the year, playing against pretty
much all of the top teams, and now we’ve got another tough run – but in a different way. “It’s probably going to get a bit scrappy down there. The table’s pretty tight, and with Leicester being the first game back, it’s definitely going to be an exciting game, and one we’re looking to win. “It just shows how competitive this league is. It’s so close. There are only a few points between eight or nine teams. Everyone’s competing, everyone’s building, and it’s showing in how tight the league is at the minute.
We’ve got 10 games left, so everyone’s got to buy into what we’re doing straight away so that we can get some good results on the board, and get that good feeling back
“We’ve got 10 games left, so everyone’s got to buy into what we’re doing straight away so that we can get some good results on the board, and get that good feeling back. “To the supporters: thank you for sticking by us. We’ve gone through a tough run together – but we’re going to try everything we can to turn it around, and win games to repay you.” In a season of tight tables, a campaign of fine margins – and a competition where confidence has on so many occasions proven its power – Schlupp knows all too well that the smallest lift can have the largest effect Jeffrey Schlupp
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the follow -up
Jeffrey Schlupp has played in the Premier League for the best part of ten seasons – but how will he cope when confronted with the top-tier questions of The Follow-up?
#17 What do you do when you get home from training? Most days, get on the sofa and turn the TV on! I’m usually watching a series – I’m not a fan of daytime TV, to be honest – so I’ll turn Netflix or Amazon Prime on and keep watching whatever I’ve been watching.
#8 Which team did you support as a child?
#27 Which football legend would you most like to have played with?
Hamburg in the Bundesliga – that’s where I was born, and where I’m from. It used to be Arsenal in the Premier League, but not so much now that I’m playing against them.
Because I used to watch Arsenal when I was growing up, it would have to be Thierry Henry. In terms of players I’ve met, it’d be either Cristiano Ronaldo, or David Beckham. the follow-up
#42 Which would you rather fight: 20 duck-sized horses or one horse-sized duck? One horse-sized duck. Whatever it is I’m fighting, it’s got to be one-on-one!
#55 If you could uninvent one thing, what would it be? Probably social media. I like using it, but it’s just taken over everything for everyone.
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Worth a try? Probably. Discover the refreshing, crisp and perfectly balanced taste of Carlsberg Danish Pilsner.
Brewed in the UK, the Danish way. Enjoy responsibly.
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Did you know? Leicester City won their first Charity Shield in 1971 despite having won neither the FA Cup nor the league title. However, due to double-winners Arsenal having European commitments to fulfil, Leicester were invited as Second Division champions to take on FA Cup runners-up Liverpool in the Wembley showpiece.
opposition
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the foxes After years of unprecedented success, Leicester now find themselves locked in a relegation battle under Brendan Rodgers .
match preview -
story so far
The Foxes have won the FA Cup and the Premier League title in the last decade since promotion, but inconsistent form this season has seen them slip down the table and they come into this weekend just a point above the bottom three. James Maddison’s stellar performance for England during the international break demonstrated the considerable talent they still have at their disposal, but every game and every point will be crucial between now and the end of the season if they are to avoid a return to the second tier. Palace drew with Leicester in October and will hope they can go one better under Roy Hodgson this time around.
Home
away
third
recent matches Opposition
Position
17th
Points
25
most recent = bottom
score
h/a
position
0-1
h
14th
1-2
h
na
1-0
a
15th
1-3
h
16th
1-1
a
17th
harvey barnes The academy graduate has
Top scorer
J. Maddison / H. Barnes (9)
gone from strength to strength
Most assists
James Maddison (6)
has already netted nine times
Most passes
Wout Faes (1,343)
under Brendan Rodgers and in the Premier League this
opposition
dangerman
season..
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last five √ palace
most recent = bottom
JEFFREY Schlupp
fixture
1
1
december 28th, 2020
1
2
april 26th, 2021
2
2
october 3rd, 2021
1
2
april 10th, 2022
0
0
october 15th, 2022
selhurst park
Schlupp spent five years in Leicester’s academy system after moving to the United Kingdom from Germany as a child, and was part of the club’s legendary titlewinning side in 2015/16. He completed a move to south London in 2016 and has moved into a midfield role in recent seasons – he is approaching 200 appearances for the Eagles.
KING POWER STADIUM
selhurst park
KING POWER STADIUM
KING POWER STADIUM
Recent clash
1-1 sat mar 18th gtec community stadium
starting xi 31
D. IVERSEN
27 T. CASTAGNE 15
H. SOUTTAR
18
D. AMARTEY
21
R. PEREIRA
22 K. DEWSBURY-HALL 25 w. ndidi 7
h. barnes
10
j. maddison
37 tete
27 7 15
22
31
10 18
25 37
21
20 p. daka subs 1 33 24 26 34 40
d. ward l. thomas n. mendy d. praet l. brunt w. marÇal-madivadua
42 b. soumarÉ 9 j. vardy 14 k. iheanacho
opposition
Boot in both camps
20
01
28
03 04 wout faes
caglar söyüncü
POS DEFENDER
POS DEFENDER
NAT BELGIUM
NAT TURKEY
18
16 danny ward
victor kristiansen
daniel amartey
POS GOALKEEPER
POS DEFENDER
POS DEFENDER
NAT WALES
NAT DENMARK
NAT GHANA
91 saves
6
clean sheets
29
Height
1.91m
Joined
June 20th 2018
Debut
August 28th, 2018 v Fleetwood Town
Ward put Wales’ World Cup disappointment behind him as he got back to action at Leicester City, where he has been No. 1 since Kasper Schmeichel’s departure to Nice in 2022. He has an FA Cup medal under his belt, as well as a runners-up medal in the Europa League during his time at Liverpool under Jürgen Klopp.
opposition
player profile
29 apps
Age
career history:
Wrexham, Liverpool, Morecambe (loan), Aberdeen (loan), Huddersfield (loan)
29
27 33 timothy castagne
luke thomas
POS DEFENDER
POS DEFENDER
NAT BELGIUM
NAT ENGLAND
15
08 22 kieran drewsbury-hall
harry souttar
POS MIDFIELDER
POS MIDFIELDER
POS DEFENDER
NAT BELGIUM
NAT ENGLAND
NAT AUSTRALIA
player profile
youri tielemans
7
Age
24
Height
1.98m
Joined
January 31st, 2023
Debut
February 4th, 2023 v Aston Villa
career history:
Dundee United, Stoke City, Ross County (loan), Fleetwood (loan)
apps
1 assist 391 PASSES
Australian international Souttar signed for Leicester on the back of a successful World Cup in Qatar, where he won plaudits for his performances throughout the tournament. Standing at six feet and six inches tall, his aerial prowess is aided by a confidence on the ball that made him a sought after prospect during seven years at Stoke City.
opposition
30
24 25 nampalys mendy
wilfried ndidi
POS MIDFIELDER
POS MIDFIELDER
NAT SENEGAL
NAT NIGERIA
10
26 42 boubakary soumaré
POS MIDFIELDER
POS MIDFIELDER
POS MIDFIELDER
NAT BELGIUM
NAT FRANCE
NAT ENGLAND
player profile
dennis praet
Age
26
Height
1.75m
Joined
June 20th, 2018
Debut
August 10th, 2018 v Manchester United
career history:
Coventry City, Norwich City, Aberdeen (loan)
james maddison
42 goals
153 apps 29 assists
Maddison’s continual rise since signing for Leicester City as a 21-year-old has seen him develop into one of the country’s most exciting playmakers, becoming pivotal to an FA Cup winning side and earning a first England call-up. He was voted the club’s Player of the Season in 2021/22, and already has nine Premier League goals this season.
opposition
14
31
07 09 harvey barnes
jamie vardy
POS FORWARD
POS FORWARD
NAT ENGLAND
NAT ENGLAND
20 37 PATSON DAKA
TETê
POS FORWARD
POS FORWARD
POS FORWARD
NAT NIGERIA
NAT ZAMBIA
NAT BRAZIL
189 apps 24 Assists
40
Age
26
Height
1.85m
Joined
August 3rd, 2017
goals
Debut
August 11th, 2017 v Arsenal
Iheanacho’s introduction to English football was an emphatic one, scoring 14 times as a teenager in his first season for Manuel Pellegrini’s Manchester City, before adding another seven in Pep Guardiola’s first campaign. A big money move to Leicester followed, and he has continued to impress at club and international level.
opposition
player profile
KELECHI IHEANACHO
career history:
Manchester City
32
33
stat pack After winning four consecutive Premier League games against Leicester between 2017 and 2019, Crystal Palace are now winless in their last seven against the Foxes (D3 L4).
63 03
Leicester have won just one of their last six away league games against Crystal Palace (D3 L2), with their last two visits to Selhurst Park ending level.
22
38
01 39
43%
average possession %
49%
14
points gained after trailing
8
277
shots
300
38
goals conceded
47
6
clean sheets
6
16
wout faes
joachim anderson
88 54 39 ariel duels won
ariel duels won
opposition
03
34
It’s Saturday afternoon, kick-off is ticking closer and you're first to the pub. Before long, hazy memories and almost-accurate stats will fill the air. Brush-up for your Leicester pre-match below.
DIDN'T they... Have a flirtation with the ‘sash’. Palace’s association with the sash is well-known, be it the red and blue flourish across a clear white background, or this season’s black third kit sporting the design in bold colours. But Leicester had their own dalliance with the sash too – albeit almost 150 years ago. First founded in 1884 as Leicester Fosse – cool name, we think you’ll agree – the club initially turned out in black shirts pierced by a bright blue sash, along with white shorts and black socks. It’s a kit that would be entirely unique in today’s game, but it only lasted two years until 1886, after which the more
After eviction from their first ground on Mill Lane, Leicester played at the County Cricket ground while looking for a new place to call home
traditional blue shirts and white shorts began to be adopted long-term. Shame.
didn't he... Build both Selhurst Park and Filbert Street. Well, almost. After eviction from their first ground on Mill Lane, Leicester played at the County Cricket ground while looking for a new place to call home. Soon enough, they secured a plot of land on Filbert Street and moved in. From 1891 they played home games at the ground, but it was a stadium only in name. They needed expert help, and up stepped the most renowned architect in the footballing world: Archibald Leitch. Leitch was a Scottish architect renowned for his work designing stadiums across the country, and he set about improving Filbert Street – even adding a new two-tier stand in 1927. He may have taken inspiration from a stadium he had designed just four years earlier down in south London, which had been named Selhurst Park. pub talk
It’s hard finishing runners-up, but you can always tell yourself next year will be your year. For Leicester, this didn’t quite ring true If you are reading this, you have almost certainly set foot in a stadium designed by Leitch. His most celebrated achievement is Craven Cottage, but he also built all or most of Everton’s Goodison Park, Arsenal’s Highbury, Liverpool’s Anfield and
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Manchester United’s Old Trafford. Oh, and Ibrox, Molineux, Villa Park, White Hart Lane, Hillsborough, Fratton Park, Ewood Park, The Dell, The Den, Deepdale, Celtic Park and Brammall Lane. Also Hampden Park, Roker Park and Windsor Park and Twickenham. Much of his work may now have been replaced by modern structure, but his legacy in British football lives on.
year. For Leicester, this didn’t quite ring true. In 1928/29, they were sweeping all before them. Portsmouth came to Filbert Street and were dispatched 10-0 and the league title was within reach, but The Wednesday proved too strong and Leicester missed out by a single point.
pub talk tibdit Leicester, like Palace, take part in a fiercely contested rivalry that the media insist on calling by a silly name. While Palace and Brighton face each other twice a season in the Premier League – more than often enough for Sky Sports News to stop referring to it as the ‘M23 Derby’ – Leicester have not faced Coventry City for more than 10 years. Although they might both point to bigger rivals – Coventry to Aston Villa, and Leicester to Nottingham Forest – the fixture was often marred by violence and tensions run high when the two meet. It is, sadly, referred to as the M69 Derby after the 24 mile stretch of motorway between the two. Still, thanks to roadworks it was upgraded, because it had been the A46 Derby before that. A minor improvement.
wEREN'T they… Made to wait 87 years for a first league title. It’s hard finishing runners-up, but you can always tell yourself next year will be your
season or the unpunished tackle on Reg Osborne in his first press conference as manager. Talk about being out of touch… But then the fairytale occurred, and Leicester did the unthinkable. The only people not celebrating were the bookmakers, whose hubristic 5,000-1 odds at the start of the season had come back to haunt them. Some £25 million were lost, with one punter winning £100,000 after betting just £20 at the start of the season. Some luck
Pre-match pint Kotchin – 3.9%
A full 86 years later, as they kicked-off the 2015/16 season, there was probably little hope that this was the year to right the wrongs of 1929. In fact, Claudio Ranieri didn’t even mention Arthur Chandler’s 34 goals that pub talk
To Kotch: London slang; To chill out, relax, enjoy doing nothing in particular. This is the perfect beer for that. A hoppy blonde ale brewed with Cascade hops to give it a citrus and peach aroma.
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30 YEARS OF THE PREMIER LEAGUE
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Manchester United 1-3 Crystal Palace – September 19th, 2020 This Old Trafford win came in front of empty seats as Palace beat United on home turf for the second season running, with fans forced to watch from home during the COVID-19 pandemic.
30 years of the Premier League
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In-game Purchases (Includes Random Items)
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doc brown Ben Bailey Smith looks toward familiar comforts
40-41
chloe arthur Chloe Arthur on her rise to a Scottish international
42-43
JAY BUTTS Jay Butts on a dream move to south London
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rio cardines 46-47
Rio Cardines on an international break to remember
viewpoint
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doc brown Ben Bailey Smith, aka Doc Brown, does it all – acting, rapping, writing, directing, you name it. The multifaceted Palace fan is also a patron of Palace for Life Foundation. In each edition, he offers his unique take on the world in SE25.
DREAMS √ NIGHTMARES Well, that was a weird St. Patrick’s Day wasn’t it? It’s hard to know where to begin when you’ve spent two thirds of a season being relentlessly upbeat in your programme column and then suddenly the carpet is whisked away from under your feet. My last piece was all about the power of fear and technically this one should be the bigger, bolder, scarier sequel, full of nightmarish twists and jump scares, BUT… Surely there’s no one better to bring you a warm malted milk, read you a soothing bedtime story, assure you there are no monsters under the bed, tuck you in and leave the door ever so slightly ajar than Roy Hodgson. Even if monsters did appear, Ray Lewington would just scream “AWAY!” from the corridor and off they’d scatter. There’s been an immense amount of verbiage from journalists and supporters alike over the past couple of weeks about the decision making at Selhurst. I’ve lost count of how many Eagles and fans of
other clubs have stopped me to ask what I think – am I outraged, am I sad, am I worried, is it wrong, is it right? After the initial shock, I’ve maintained the same position, the one every Eagle should now hold in my opinion: we can debate the leadership until the cows come home but the cold hard fact is there is only thing worth talking about now and that’s staying in the Premier League. That’s it. What’s done is done. Old face replaced by new face replaced by old face – let’s all have a big ding-dong about it AFTER we’ve beaten Forest and Ben Bailey Smith
I distinctly remember saying to myself: “I’ll never forget you guys! Bye QPR, see ya Brum, ta-ta Brom...” secured an eleventh year in this world-famous competition. There is literally nothing to discuss other than how loud, proud and Palace we need to be from
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Only Uncle Roy can chase the nightmares away now. And why not? He’s done it before. In such a fast moving sport, it’s no wonder we all tend to have short memories or recency bias, but Roy has been performing miracles for some time
today onwards, cheering the boys over the line. Because I don’t know about you but I’m not going back to the Championship. Please don’t make me. I’m begging you. The weird thing is, when we left, when our sentence finally came to an end, I distinctly remember saying to myself: “I’ll never forget you guys! Bye QPR, see ya Brum, ta-ta Brom – I’ll keep an eye out for all your results, check in on how you’re doing.” Within a couple of months of being Charlie Prem Potatoes, I couldn’t even remember who was IN the Championship. Now I’ve been spoilt for over a decade, swanning around in Palace-branded silk kimonos and diamond encrusted sliders, huge medallion with a Premier League Logo pendant swinging back and forth across my bare chest, eating Lobster rolls and contemplating a European jaunt or two. I can’t go back to the Championship now – I’ll never survive! I’m too pretty for the lower leagues! Those monsters will eat me alive! Only Uncle Roy can chase the nightmares away now. And why not? He’s done it before. In such a fast moving sport, it’s no wonder we all tend to have short memories or recency bias, but Roy has been performing miracles for some time (let’s skirt over Watford please). This is a guy who got his first coaching badge at 23 years old. I can’t recall what I was doing at 23 but I’m relatively sure most of my greatest achievements were largely pub-based. Hodgson actually got out of way, way bigger Ben Bailey Smith
holes than the one we’re in now. He even did a Brian Clough before Brian Clough! Most of us know that Roy cut his teeth coaching in Sweden, but did any of you know that after Halmstad escaped relegation ON GOAL DIFFERENCE, Uncle Roy won the blooming league with them the following season when they were favourites to go down? Crazy.
Is survival this year and the Premier League trophy next year too much to ask? Yeah, okay definitely maybe. But if we’ve got the man who chases away nightmares, at some stage we have to turn back to dreams. For now, welcome home Roy
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cpfc women Crystal Palace Women broke club records in 2021/22, and are looking to do the same this season. In each edition, we hear directly from one of the squad, with Scotland international Chloe Arthur discussing her journey from Erskine to the bright lights of Birmingham and London…
chloe arthur Age
28
Joined
Summer 2019
Position
Midfielder
Apps
18
Goals
0
Career highlights
Arthur made her senior international debut for Scotland at just 20-years-old, and has since gone on to win over 30 caps for her country.
Take note of
The tough-tackling midfielder is well versed in competing at the top end of the league table, having helped Hibernian finish second in Scotland’s top-flight, and won promotion from the Championship in her debut season with Bristol City.
chloe arthur
My whole childhood was me, my brother and a football – all day, every day! We’d play out on the street until dark when my Mum would call us in. I didn’t have any idea I’d want to do it as a job – it was just a genuine love of football. I went on to play for my school team. I was the only girl who played, which came with a bit of stick from other boys’ teams. They were always surprised at first, but then they realised I could actually play. When I was 12 or 13, I had to move to play for a girls’ team. I remember thinking I didn’t want to, because I was used to being one of the boys, but then I started at Celtic’s academy, where my full youth career was based. A lot of players who look really talented quite often fizzle out, which is why I always say to kids now: “Everyone develops at their own rate.” Some people are a lot better than you when you’re younger, but if you work hard, you’ll get there. I was an example of that – so many people were more talented, but I just worked hard and made sure I did extras every single day to kick on. When I left school, I went to the National Performance Centre
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in Stirling. There were roughly 15 players there, considered the best in Scotland at that time. We stayed there and studied at the same time, so we were up early in the morning to train at 7am, then we’d go to university or college or whatever, and then we’d train at night – it was pretty hectic!
Palace have similar values to me in terms of where they want to take the women’s game
Football back then just hindered me more than it does now, and it got to the point where I wasn’t enjoying it. It was important for me to get that enjoyment back
I made my senior Scotland debut in 2015. We were playing Northern Ireland and I came on alongside two of my best friends, FC Rosengard forward Fiona Brown and Rangers goalkeeper Megan Cunningham. I was young in comparison to the rest of the squad, but it was really nice to get my debut and move upwards from there. I moved to Edinburgh for my final year or two, which is when I moved to Hibernian. I then moved to Bristol City – the manager at the time was Willie Kirk, who knew me from Hibs – and that’s when my career started as England at 21. It was more professional, and an opportunity for me to learn as a person and a player. We won promotion in my first year, which was one of the best periods of my life. Then, I joined Birmingham City in 2018 and Aston Villa in 2020, who chloe arthur
were both in the Women’s Super League. For some diehard fans, that will have seemed a crime, but it was the right choice for me from a footballing point of view. Last summer, I moved to Crystal Palace. For me, getting older, my values have changed. The move was about me enjoying my football, and putting myself first. Aston Villa have progressed a lot this year, but I’d played in the Women’s Super League for maybe five or six years, and it does get tough mentally when it becomes draining. I was battling with my mental health. Everyone’s experience is different, and it was just getting too much for me. It’s something I’m really passionate about now: listening to myself. Football back then just hindered me more than it does now, and it got to the point where I wasn’t enjoying it. It was important for me to get that enjoyment back. Everyone’s got to go off their own feelings and do what’s right for them. Whether they feel like the right decision is to move, to stay, or to take a step back, that person should do it. People who feel drained over a long period of time have to work out what they value, link that in with actual reality, and make choices for themselves – and nobody else. Palace have similar values to me in terms of where they want to take the women’s game and their style of play. I spoke to the national team and got advice from lots of people whose opinions I value – and it’s definitely been the right decision for me.
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jay butts
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academy JAY BUTTS - Under-18s Physiotherapist It was a dream of mine to work in London. I studied in the United States and qualified as a physical therapist in 2016.
i
'm used to working around a lot of athletes, having worked in a sports clinic, but I knew I always wanted to work full-time in football – or ‘soccer’! I moved over to London in 2018 with my wife. I didn’t have a job when I arrived, but I got my foot in the door at AFC Wimbledon as Under-23s Physio. I was there for one season before taking up the role of Under-18s Physio at Crystal Palace in August 2019. I’m responsible for anything and everything medical related for the Under-18s. It may be assessments, preparing them for training, gym or pitch rehab, injury recovery and rehabilitation. I’m also there on matchdays – so I’m the one who will run on the pitch and assess the players if required. If a player has an injury, they could be out for several days or several months, after which they will undergo rehab to fully recover. Rehabilitation takes up most of my time. A session is usually one to two hours and typically happens in the morning and afternoon. Some players may get a low-grade muscle strain that only keeps them out for a couple of weeks, or they
There is genuinely no better feeling than when you have been able to work with a player and get him back on the pitch and playing
jay butts
might get an Anterior Cruciate Ligament injury which would require surgery. Typically, after a surgery, the rehab will last six months to a year, and maybe even longer depending on the severity of their injury. For instance, one of our players picked up a bad hamstring injury in pre-season. He missed several months of the season, but the medical team – myself, Joe Ranson our Head of Medical and Sean Carmody our Academy Doctor – with help from departments like nutrition and psychology, got him back through that time out. It was a long injury and the recovery process involved: a lot of rest, gym work, getting back on the pitch, modified training and finally a return to full training. Now he’s back to featuring in matches and scoring goals. Nowadays there is rarely ever a career ending injury. It is such a great feeling for me to help them and to help them press on in their career and they are grateful too. There is genuinely no better feeling than when you have been able to work with a player and get him back on the pitch and playing
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over the road rio cardines
Getting to know rio cardines -
Age
16
Joined
Under-16s
Position
Full-back
Apps:
12
Goals:
2
Highlights so far
Playing for Trinidad and Tobago Under-17s at the CONCACAF U17 Championship.
Take note of
Rio possess the qualities of a modern-day full-back. He is capable of pushing forward to aid an attack, while also being equally adept at dropping back and defending.
rio cardines
The opportunity for a player to represent their country is something that doesn’t come around often, if at all, in many careers. When Rio Cardines was asked to play for Trinidad and Tobago, he couldn’t turn it down. The youngster joined the Eagles at Under-16s, after featuring for a number of sides across the country at pre-Academy level. He earned his debut for Rob Quinn’s Under-18s this season against Norwich City and made an instant impact by scoring in a 2-2 draw. Since then he has been a near-constant presence in the side and his performances earned him a call-up to the Trinidad and Tobago Under-17s side for the CONCACAF U17 Championship. “I was so proud to represent my country, but it was actually quite a stressful experience initially! I was out there a week before the actual tournament on a training camp and I had to sort out my Trinidad and Tobago passport. “There was a lot of chaos when I was trying to get the
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passport sorted out, my dad had to change his flight back three times during that week and my grandad had to get a new birth certificate issued, it took a lot longer than expected. “I wasn’t 100% sure whether I could go and compete in the tournament in time, but when they named their 20-man squad, they only listed 19 players – they left
Rio has shown his adaptability to play in both fullback positions, highlighted his fantastic physical attributes, along with his ball striking ability and deliveries from set-pieces – which have been a big asset for the group, especially in the second part of the season rob quinn under-18s manager
it was a great experience nevertheless, and I feel like I did my family proud by representing my country. the next step is Under-20s with Trinidad and Tobago a space for me in the hope that I could get it sorted.” Thankfully, Cardines managed to get his passport sorted in time, with the help of his dad, and got on another flight to Guatemala where the tournament was taking place. “As soon as I landed, I got on a taxi to the hotel and when I got there I saw all the boys outside - ready and waiting in their kits! I had to run in and quickly get changed before getting on the coach to the game. I actually rio cardines
started that game too, but we narrowly lost 3-2 to Canada. We made it all the way to the round of 16, where we lost 3-2 to El Salvador in extra-time. “I scored in that game, but unfortunately we were knocked out. It was a great experience nevertheless, and I feel like I did my family proud by representing my country. The next step is Under-20s with Trinidad and Tobago, Under21s with Palace and hopefully the senior teams aren’t far off.”
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APSLEY
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Keeping you posted on all things south London. Over the page, relive the emergence of one of the club’s greatest ever players – and the darker side of his journey to the top…
tim roth Screen legend Tim Roth was born and brought up in Dulwich, and is known for his collaborations with iconic director Quentin Tarantino in films like Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction and the Hateful Eight. The Palace fan has been nominated for BAFTAs, Golden Globes and Academy Awards.
free jazz sundays Bermondsey Square 2nd April 2023 Although you can never rely on the sun to shine in London, you can always hope for the best – and if it is a beautiful day why not provide a fitting soundtrack too? Enjoy a lazy Sunday afternoon with some beautiful jazz music, with food and drink available from local restaurants and bars surrounding the square.
SOUTH OF THE RIVER
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i
n 1976, Vince Hilaire watched the Crystal Palace first-team prepare for the weekend with envy. He knew his time would come, but as the senior players boarded the coach for Lincoln City, he was, once again, watching from afar. Then Terry Venables approached him, and his life changed. “I was just 17-years-old, and was told by Terry Venables that one of the lads had fallen ill,” Hilaire remembered years later. “Not for one minute did I think I would get in the 12 selected, but as we were a bit short of attacking options, I was put on the bench.
I was just 17-years-old, and was told by Terry Venables that one of the lads had fallen ill, Not for one minute did I think I would get in the 12 selected
“We were losing the game and assistant manager Alan Harris kept prompting Terry, saying: ‘Get him on, what have we got to lose?’ I wasn’t quite sure how to take that! “I prefer to think that he thought I might turn the game for SOUTH OF THE RIVER
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us, as opposed to being the only option. It was a special moment.” Hilaire was introduced with 15 minutes remaining, but couldn’t prevent Palace from slipping to a 3-2 defeat. Nonetheless, it was the starting point for one of south London’s great cult heroes. Although he received an enormous amount of support in south London, there was a darker side to his playing days. As a black player competing in the 1970s, racist abuse was commonplace. “You could probably say most away games for black players like myself, it would probably be threequarters of the ground: monkey chants, Nazi salutes and general derogatory name calling whenever you received the ball,” he recalled. “In my early days, it was the norm. To be honest with you, because of the time it basically didn’t bother you because you expected it. Thankfully, the majority of people over the years have been made aware that it’s not acceptable to use that sort of language by the people that have said: ‘No, I’m not having that because that hurts.’” Hilaire has spoken of the need for more education, and his hopes that – while the situation has markedly improved – things can get better still. “An ignorant person can be changed, a racist person cannot. Luckily for people in this country, there are more ignorant people than racist people and that’s a fact. That is an absolute fact. “You can’t have kids growing up in the world now thinking that
anything other than a player playing in a different coloured shirt does not deserve their support. But if they’ve got a different colour skin, that has got absolutely nothing to do with it. “If someone’s a dirty player, he’s a dirty player. A dirty black player is not relevant. A skilful player is a skilful player, they’re not ‘a skilful black player’. You don’t define people by the colour of their skin or what religion they are, you define them as a person.” Hilaire pushed on from his debut in 1976 and quickly established himself in the first-team, going on to win the Player of the Year award in 1979. It was during this season that Palace had one of their finest hours, as a record crowd of 51,482 crammed into Selhurst Park to witness a promotion clash. Palace went into the game in fourth, but, with the season finishing at different times for different teams, they had a game in hand, and would gain promotion with a win. Burnley were the opposition. “The magnitude of the game didn’t sink in until we got onto the coach and started going up towards the ground, then we understood the magnitude of the game and it did seem like a final,” Hilaire remembers. “The common practise for a midweek game would to report for 5pm. But in that particular game, because of the importance, Terry [Venables] wanted us to report at around midday for a spot of lunch to get us away from the pressure. “We were under no illusions that it was another game. We SOUTH OF THE RIVER
came out of the hotel and in the coach it took us about 45 minutes for a five minute journey because of the crowds.” Hilaire played a huge part in Palace’s win, but as the crowd poured onto the pitch he was in a daze. In truth, he cannot remember too much of what happened later.
Early in the match I took a bang on the head. I got two assists in that game so a few people said: ‘I think you should play concussed more often!’
“Early in the match I took a bang on the head and the game was a little bit of a blur because I was slightly concussed,” he says. “I got two assists in the game so a few people said: ‘I think you should play concussed more often!’” It may have faded from Vince Hilaire’s mind, but it’s a memory that will live forever in the minds of the thousands that celebrated long into the evening. It’s why, to this day, his name can elicit a smile on the streets around Selhurst Park
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THROUGH THE LENS
JOE WHITWORTH’S DEBUT
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through the lens
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The Premier League celebrates its 30th anniversary this season, with Palace there at the start in 1992/93 and still there today – with a few detours along the way. Here, we break down the club’s Premier League spells, letter by letter.
t
I
touchline
f you’re reading this at half-time, you may be thinking: ‘What is going on down there in the dressing room? How does a manager really mastermind an important victory?’ Well, throw away anything you’ve seen in a Hollywood blockbuster. The motivational speeches that characterise cinema’s great works of sporting fiction are just that: fiction. The reality is far more technical – as Roy Hodgson once revealed, looking back on Palace’s victory over Chelsea that put an end to a disastrous seven-game losing streak to begin the 2016/17 season. “In those days, we’d only just started working with the team,” Hodgson explains. “All your messages are relatively new, and there are so many important messages you need to reinforce that you’re never short of things to say at half-time. “We would have focused on aspects of our defending: making
sure the back four didn’t drop too deep, that we got up to players on the ball and recovered our positions when we lost the ball. “We were getting Wilf [Zaha] and Andros [Townsend] to drop in a bit deeper when we lost the ball, to stop [Cesc] Fabregas going deep and having the freedom of the park, and thereby preventing other players like [Yohan] Cabaye and [Luka] Milivojevic and [Jeffrey] Schlupp to [have to] leave important positions to pressurise the ball. “We were working on the basis that we had done well to get ourselves in this position. Now, let’s make sure we keep sticking to our principles and our gameplan, and all the things we believe are necessary to try and keep this advantage and not let them back into the game. “It’s always a wonderful feeling when it pays off. There’s always going to be a relief if you’ve abcd epl
played the game you prepared for all week, and you see the players do the things that you hoped they would do, and give performances you hoped they would give. “That is not only satisfaction and great pleasure, it’s also relief because you know going into that game other outcomes would have been possible.” It may not work coming out of Brad Pitt’s mouth, but in the Premier League it’s not about scripting fine moments, it’s about results.
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under the radar...
In football, we tend to focus on the ‘sexy’ things. At one end, it’s the goalscorers, the skilful wingers and the dynamic No. 10s. We inadvertently let out a satisfied noise when they weave around an opponent, slice through a seemingly impenetrable back-line or smash the ball – with almost inconceivable purity – off the crossbar and into the back of the net. At the other end, it’s the defenders. We become wide-eyed when they skip past an onrushing attacker, we go positively weak at the knees when they smash into an advancing opponent with such timing and precision that it brings spectators to their feet. Hell, we even
applaud incomprehensively when they play a fairly simple pass from one side of the defence to the other. But there are so many players for whom the limelight is not available. Week after week they plug away, and only years into their career are they appreciated for their integral role to the team. Take Claude Makelele, arguably the most important cog in a Real Madrid side chock-full of far bigger names and more glamorous players. He was packed off to Chelsea to make way for another star signing, and redefined the Premier League’s idea of a defensive midfielder. At Palace, there have been so many of the same ilk. Cheick Doucouré is never going to lead the back-pages
andros townsend Coming through the Academy at Spurs, Townsend’s turbulent early career saw him make nine loan moves before breaking into the first-team, but it was at Palace that he finally found some stability. Signing in 2016 with 13 England caps to his name, the winger made 168 Premier League appearances for the Eagles, filling the No. 10 slot vacated by Yannick Bolasie and scoring some iconic goals in the process. He had an eye for the spectacular – much has been written about his Puskas Award nominated strike against Manchester City in that iconic 3-2 victory in 2018 – and he has won the Premier League’s Goal of the Month award three times.
abcd epl
by virtue of his position, but Palace are a far stronger side when he plays. He gets on with his job quietly and efficiently. James McArthur was absent from the pre-season previews of so many pundits, but how much have the Eagles missed his calmness and experience in midfield? For a club like Palace, there is often a sense that players are overlooked due to the badge on their chest rather than their capabilities on the field. That seemed to change last season, however, when – for the first time since 1991 – the Eagles saw three players called up to the national side. Tyrick Mitchell, Marc Guéhi and Conor Gallagher were recognised by Gareth Southgate, just as Geoff Thomas, Ian Wright and John Salako had been years earlier. Three Palace players featuring for England, managed by a former Palace captain? Try ignoring that…
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ian king
Having been on the brink of collapse in 2010, Crystal Palace earned promotion back to the Premier League 10 years ago this season. Here, Club Historian Ian King tells the story of a dramatic campaign – with a little help from the stars of When Eagles Dare.
March 5th: Palace 4-2 Hull City It was a top of the table clash at Selhurst Park as fourth placed Palace welcomed second placed Hull City during a full midweek programme of Championship fixtures. Injuries meant Kagisho Dikgacoi appearing at right-back. Both teams were on the attack from the off and after 30 minutes Jonny Williams was felled in the penalty area, but Glenn Murray saw his spot-kick saved. Just before half-time the Eagles were awarded another opportunity from 12-yards for handball; Kevin Phillips’ effort was almost saved but had enough power to beat the ‘keeper. Within eight minutes of the restart Phillips completed his hattrick, slotting home Wilfried Zaha’s square pass and then curling
home another, but the Tigers reduced the arrears with 15 minutes left. The Eagles replied immediately, as Zaha played a one-two with Murray to race through and score. In the dying minutes, Hull added a second but the Eagles had a vital victory in their push for promotion. Hull were the only side in the top six to lose that evening and the Eagles were only one victory away from second place.
March 9th: Palace 2-2 Leeds United A brace for Glenn Murray saw him break the 30-goal barrier for the season but the second came late on to save a point for the Eagles. Starting brightly, it took nearly 30 minutes to break down the visitors defence when Zaha linked with Williams and the latter’s pinpoint cross to the far post found
an unmarked Murray to head home. Barely had the second-half started before Zaha had a glorious opportunity, but he curled his effort narrowly wide. Then, out of nothing, Leeds were level as the Palace defence were found out of position for Steve Morison to tuck home. Worse was to follow 20 minutes from time as a long ball forward from the ‘keeper found Morison who, on the run, volleyed past Julian Speroni. Ian Holloway sent Phillips on as Williams flashed an effort wide and Stephen Dobbie
march 5th Jacob Butterfield plays his last game of his loan from Norwich City
2012/13
57
fired over, but with six minutes left Damien Delaney strode forward and his cross-field pass found Murray to volley home at the far post. The Eagles could have moved into second place as Watford lost at home to Blackpool.
March 17 : Brighton 3-0 Palace th
With Watford and Hull both suffering defeats the previous afternoon, there was a glorious opportunity to move into an automatic promotion place with victory at our arch-rivals. For most of the first-half the Eagles had marshalled the Brighton attack well and carved out a couple of openings, the best falling to Jonny Parr when Zaha played him through. Two minutes before the break the Seagulls managed to score twice as Leonardo Ulloa’s scruffy header was deflected beyond Speroni and David López curled an unstoppable free kick off the crossbar. Phillips and Andre Moritz were brought on at the start of the second-half but within a few minutes Ulloa netted his second as the ball was headed back across the Palace goal for him to volley past his fellow Argentinian. The Seagulls were able to regain sixth place in the table but were still six points behind the Eagles
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player in focus
ashley ‘jazz’ richards
BORN: 12th April 1991 – Swansea APPEARANCES: 11 GOALS: 0
‘Jazz’ made his debut for Swansea City as an 18-yearold in 2009 but at the start of the 2012/13 season found his opportunities limited and asked to go out on loan. He arrived at Selhurst Park in the January transfer window, making his Eagles’ debut away at Huddersfield. He settled in at right-back, covering for the injured Joel Ward, appearing eleven times while providing a couple of assists and unluckily having a goal chalked off for offside as the team fought its way into the play-offs.
I love the way Ian [Holloway] sees football. That’s how I grew up back in Argentina: the way we keep the ball and the way the players move around the pitch. I love that style of football Julian Speroni
march 9th
march 12th
Neil Warnock returns to Selhurst Park as manager of Leeds United
Manager Ian Holloway celebrates his 50th birthday
2012/13
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from the
Times have changed over Crystal Palace’s rich and storied history. In each edition, we dust off the archive and reprint a story from one of the club’s historical programmes. This week, we republish an interview with a young new signing still adapting to the Palace way of life – whatever happened to him…
Crystal Palace v Leicester City – April 20th, 2013
joel’s goal After arriving last summer, Joel Ward is nearing the end of his first ride on the Selhurst rollercoaster. Unbeaten runs, managerial changes, blockbuster transfers, injury layoffs and winless sequences have brought towering highs and unexpected lows. But reaching the play-offs could provide a few more thrills and spills yet to come… 2013 didn’t get off to best of starts for Ward. A groin injury picked up against Huddersfield at Selhurst just before Christmas saw his promising start in a red and blue shirt hit the buffers. As the bleak winter months reluctantly gave way to spring sunshine, he embarked on a gruelling rehabilitation programme only to see a knee problem arise as the end of the tunnel loomed large. It takes someone who possesses plenty of character to put it all behind them, forget the hardships and keep striving towards the goal, and the 22-year-old has
that in abundance. Despite over three months away from first-team action, his class display against Barnsley showed he is already back to his pre-Christmas best.
It was frustrating for me to be sidelined through injury but I’m the kind of person who stays mentally strong, keeps pushing on and do whatever I can to get back “It’s been a great first season but it’s also been a tough one with the injury,” he said. “I feel as though I’ve settled in well here and I really like the club and the ethos around the place and I’m enjoying being back in the first-team from the archive
picture and getting game time. Hopefully we can make that final push and be there or thereabouts at the end of the season. “The team have done fantastic this year; we’ve got a great bunch of guys that I can’t speak highly enough of and we’re a determined and resilient group. It was frustrating for me to come out of that and be sidelined through injury but I’m the kind of person who stays mentally strong, keeps pushing on and do whatever I can to get back and stay fit and that’s what I’m doing. “We will do everything in our power to make sure we give ourselves the best opportunity of getting into the play-offs. They give us a great chance to get promoted; I’ve never experienced them before and don’t know what they’re like but it’s a great chance for us. If we do our jobs the way we have been this season and focus hard then there’s no reason why we can’t go on and potentially come out on top. “Promotion would be a massive achievement but we’re taking baby steps and looking at one game at
59
a time and I feel that’s the best way to approach it. Hopefully we can keep moving forward and give ourselves the best chance we can to get us to where we want to be. “ Such is the topsy-turvy nature of Palace’s season that the last time they faced the Foxes seems like a hazy blue with all the changes at Selhurst this season. Lennie Lawrence and Curtis Fleming masterminded the Eagles to their first ever victory at the King Power Stadium, having seen Dougie Freedman move to Bolton Wanderers six days earlier.
Promotion would be a massive achievement but we’re taking baby steps and looking at one game at a time and I feel that’s the best way to approach it The majority of the squad saw the departure of the man who inspired them to move to SE25 and such a blow could have derailed the promotion dream before it even got started. However that game back in October proved a squad of consummate professionals such as Ward never allowed it to affect from the archive
them. With Holloway at the helm, the momentum was maintained and now it’s Palace who sit in the top six ahead of today’s opponents. “These things happen in football, opportunities arise and people move on. Dougie was a very good manager and I’m thankful that he brought me to the club. Every manager has their different ways of doing things and under the gaffer now I’m happy. He’s brought extra things to the team and is imposing his way on us. “When we last played Leicester it was important that the lads came together and when those things happen it highlights how much of a tight-knit group you are, and I think that showed. It didn’t affect our play and we continued to do our jobs and stuck together.” The last two performances at Selhurst haven’t gone to plan, but the fact remains that only Watford and Birmingham have won on Palace’s patch this season. Ward believes that this has to remain the case for today’s game and a final day showdown with Peterborough to give his side the best chance of prolonging their campaign past the 46 game mark. “I’ve always said that your home ground needs to be a fortress. For the majority of the season we’ve done that and we’ve been unfortunate in the last few games. We need to make sure we stay focused and try to continue to make this a ground where opposition players fear to come to.”
.
The above copy is printed verbatim.
60
palace for life
Disability Sport at Palace
t
his weekend marks the Premier League Supports campaign, which celebrates some of the amazing work clubs across the country are doing for their communities, and at Palace we’re focusing on our Disability Programme, which is partly funded by the Premier League. Keep an eye out for some of our participants dotted around Selhurst Park this
almost 14 million people have a disability in the UK, which represents around 22% of the total population, and in Croydon alone, this is nearly 55,000 people matchday, including our season-sofar unbeaten Powerchair team! At Palace for Life, we have been delivering Disability Sport
sessions in south London for over 20 years, and over this time have worked with hundreds of people living with a disability, helping them develop their physical and mental well-being through sport. According to the latest census, almost 14 million people have a disability in the UK, which represents around 22% of the total population, and in Croydon alone, this is nearly 55,000 people, 15.8% of the borough’s population. According to Sport England, disabled people are almost twice as likely to be physically inactive (43%) compared to those with a disability (23%). We know that physical activity is beneficial to everybody, and we believe that everybody should be able to access sport. Our Disability programmes are designed to do just that. palace for life
All of our programmes are designed to improve motor skills and physical fitness, but a big part of our programme is also to improve overall wellbeing and selfconfidence and to give opportunities for social interaction with new friends and the wider community. Our extensive schools programme is designed to enhance the motor skills and social and communication abilities of children with disabilities. Our experienced and specialist-trained disability coaches deliver a mixture of curriculum lessons and afterschool clubs tailored to the needs of each individual. We work in special educational needs schools, or mainstream schools to deliver disability-specific programmes. We also offer Vision Impaired and Blind Football, a monthly visually
61
impaired sport session in partnership with the Royal Society for Blind Children for young people aged between five and 25 with a visual impairment. These sessions focus on improving spatial awareness, communication, and sport-specific techniques through fun activities. Our Down’s Syndrome football team stole the hearts of Palace fans when visiting first-team training last season. Our sessions provide a safe and fun environment for people with Down’s Syndrome to play football and make friends, with weekly indoor football training sessions and the opportunity to play for the DS Eagles in friendly football matches and national festivals. Our Powerchair football team currently sit unbeaten and top of the league. These sessions offer a fast-moving indoor game played in a four-a-side format, open to players aged eight and over. We offer people who wouldn’t otherwise be able to play any form of football the opportunity to be part of Palace, with weekly training sessions focusing on chair movability, ball control, passing, teamwork and tactics, and the opportunity to play for Crystal Palace Powerchair F.C. in the Wheelchair FA’s south-east regional league. We always want to welcome new participants and continue to build a more inclusive and diverse community through sport, so if you know anyone who might benefit from our sessions, please do get in touch. For more information about our Disability Sports programmes, head to palaceforlife.org
Support Palace for Life in our mission to raise £1 million to help us transform thousands of more young south Londoners’ lives.
donate a pint from your pre-match routine below
.
palace for life
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63
on
From audacious signings to headline-grabbing ownership bids, Palace have built a collection of tall tales over time. Here, we pick apart the most outlandish rumours from club history, with today’s focus on a member of the current squad…
ON ROTATION
64
d
avid Nugent needs no introduction. Signed by Palace under Peter Taylor in 2007, he went on to score 103 goals in 228 games for the club in all competitions, including that memorable winner in the 2009 play-off final at Wembley. He is credited with almost singlehandedly keeping Palace in the top-flight in 2010, and his 16 Premier League goals ran Didier Drogba close for the Golden Boot. He scored in every round of Palace’s successful League Cup winning campaign in 2012, including the winner against Cardiff City in the semi-final and the winning penalty against Liverpool in the final at Wembley. Wild celebrations marked Palace lifting the trophy, and a European adventure awaited. The Eagles shocked the continent by reaching the knockout rounds of the tournament – Nugent scored in all three away games, against AEL Limassol, Marítimo and, most memorably, Inter Milan – before dreams of the final in Amsterdam were put to rest at Lyon. The dodgy offside call is still bemoaned in pubs around south London to this day. Nugent left the club in 2015, signing for Major League Soccer side New York Red Bulls. As an established England international, earning 22 caps and scoring eight times under national team boss Harry Redknapp, he had earned the chance to spend the final years of his career in the Big Apple. We should probably stop here. Make-believe is fun, but this ON ROTATION
65
alternative universe is beginning to sound a bit too appealing. Of course, you may have realised by now – unless this is your first Palace game, in which case we apologise for grossly misleading you – that all of the above never happened. But it could have done. In 2007, Palace were indeed interested in a young England Under-21s international playing at Preston North End, who had impressed since his arrival from Bury just a few years earlier.
David Nugent is a player that we are interested in, but I feel that he is probably looking to get into the premiership, We are waiting to see what develops there peter taylor While still at Preston he received his first call-up to the England senior side, scoring on his debut against Andorra and achieving ‘one cap, one goal’ status. He was the first Preston player to receive an England call-up since Tom Finney, and the first outfield player to represent the Three Lions while playing in the Football League since Michael Gray in 1999.
It was to be his first and last England cap, but it didn’t seem so at the time. The sky was the limit, and Palace wanted to get in at the ground floor. “David Nugent is a player that we are interested in, but I feel that he is probably looking to get into the Premiership,” Taylor revealed. “We are waiting to see what develops there.” Wait Palace did, but the rumour mill was churning. In the midst of endless rumour and unsubstantiated reporting, where better for a reliable source of information than an online forum? Suddenly, Nugent had been spotted in the car-park outside Sainsbury’s, and his signing was imminent. It didn’t matter that no such proof of the signing existed. He was in south London, he was ready to sign – he was an Eagle in all but name. Except, of course, he wasn’t. Nugent signed for Portsmouth for £6 million, and completed his dream move to the Premier League. He struggled in the top-flight but scored some important goals, representing Burnley, Middlesbrough and Leicester before dropping back down the divisions. For those at Selhurst Park, their abiding memory of Nugent will be two-fold: a non-appearance in a Sainsbury’s car park, and a wonderful solo goal at the Holmesdale Road End – only for the wrong team. In 2007, as Taylor’s interest was picking up, Preston arrived in the FA Cup fourth round and Nugent danced around the entire Palace backline before slotting past the goalkeeper. “I always remember… ON ROTATION
the Crystal Palace goal in the FA Cup, away, where I basically sprinted from the halfway line, took on about five players and put it in the top bin,” he later recalls.
always remember… the Crystal Palace goal in the FA Cup, away, where I basically sprinted from the halfway line, took on about five players and put it in the top bin david nugent
We all remember it here, too, David. If only you had been wearing red and blue while you did it. Dreams of European trips to the San Siro may seem fanciful now, but isn’t that the beauty – and the tragedy – of the rumour mill? A player becomes a crucial part of your future. You begin to imagine a life together, a happy future where all your dreams come through. But before you know it you are reminded that it was a mere flirtation, a cruel glimpse of an alternative reality, and your carefully plotted path to success is pulled from under your feet. Sainsbury’s legend David Nugent – what could have been?
.
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from the
The page for Palace supporters: taking your comments from the terraces into the programme. This week, we print your messages. Want to get in touch? Use the details below.
Happy Birthday Dad! Picture of you and grandpops to put a smile on your face at todays game. War veteran, Palace fan and Croydon legend. RIP Grandpops miss and love you. Happy 4th Birthday Zachary Sharkey. 4th Generation of PALACE supporters! Lots of love Daddy, Mummy, Nana, Grandad, Uncle Marcus, Auntie Antonia and all the extended Bance family! EAGLES
Congratulations to my Dad Terry Crane celebrating his 78th Birthday, lifelong Palace fan and a bloody great Dad
Happy 40th Birthday Andrew Foley! Love Becky, Emily and Ryan x
In loving memory of Terry Panting, a wonderful man and a lifelong Crystal Palace fan. He will be missed dearly by his loving wife and family.
Charlie Dennis Ellacott. Your story touched the hearts of the Crystal Palace Family. Your strength and determination was inspirational. You will always be loved, and always remembered. Rest in Eternal Peace Charlie. #EPIC
from the terraces
Happy 14th birthday to Cian Jones. Enjoy the footy and your day out. Lots of love from Dad, Mum, Orrin, Rigby and Uncle Dean
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Happy 70th birthday dad/grandad. Lifelong Palace fan. Have a great day, love all the family. Eagles
Peter could light up any room, an incredible man who has impacted so many communities, families and grass roots football. You’ll be missed by so many but what a fantastic life.
Happy birthday Sally Clarke for tomorrow (2nd April) season ticket holder Block F. Love from Martin
Have a great day Jae at Selhurst Park today, first time here at the mighty Red & Blue Mark Hoda (Croydon) and Heather McDonald (Bovey, MN) celebrate 23+ years of friendship at today’s CPFC vs. LCFC match. They met while both working for the MP for Leicester East.
RIP Mark Myers, 91 years young. CPFC fan for over 65 years. Much missed by all of his family already. Never forgotten x
It is Elliot Burr’s (aged 5) first visit to Selhurst Park, enjoy your first Crystal Palace football match. Love from Mummy, Daddy, Nana and Grandad, Uncle Harry and Auntie Laura In memory of Steve Styles , a lifelong Palace supporter and season ticket holder. He leaves behind his loving wife Marilyn and son Stuart. Steve will be sorely missed by all his friends and family.
In memory of Keith Beach who sadly passed away recently. He attended his first game in 1974 and was a season ticket holder right up to the present day. He’ll be sadly missed by all those who knew him.
Email programme@cpfc.co.uk Belated happy 12th birthday Thomas, hope you have a great day. Love Mum, Dad, Freddie, Ivy and Maryann. Xxxx
from the terraces
with a message of 30 words or fewer and an image to feature on our messageboard.
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Meet today’s mascots, hark back to a famous cup run, prep for what’s coming up next and pit your wits against Brighty below.
Alfie Lyons AGE:
12
SCORE PREDICTION:
2-1
Fenton Kemp AGE:
12
Ciaran Farrell
Jacob Watts
AGE:
AGE:
11
SCORE PREDICTION:
3-1
2-1
AGE:
9
2-1
Want to feature as a mascot? -
Charlie Pritchard SCORE PREDICTION:
10
SCORE PREDICTION:
SCORE PREDICTION:
3-1
round-up
Email: liam.connery@cpfc.co.uk
69
next up: leeds
Best memory: Palace have enjoyed some famous days at Elland Road, but the surprise victory against the beaten European Cup finalists in 1976 stands out, as Peter Taylor and co. marched towards the FA Cup semi-finals.
It’s a trip to the north west for Palace as they head to Elland Road to take on Leeds United on Saturday, 8th April (17:30 BST). Travel: Leeds Train Station is a 40-minute walk from Elland Road, but shuttle buses run regularly to the stadium and cost just £2.50 for a return ticket. Pre-match: There are a variety of pubs around Leeds, all of whom accept away fans. In the past, The Drysalters has been a regular haunt, while Howard’s Bar at the stadium has accepted travlling fans in the past.
BEAT BRIGHTY In each edition, club icon Mark Bright calls it how he sees it and predicts events from the day’s football. See how you fare and try to Beat Brighty! Scoring: One point for every correct result, three for a correct scoreline.
Brighty
You
2-0 1-0 1-1 1-2 total Manage to Beat Brighty? Keep track of your total score above!
round-up
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team stats: women / U21s / U18s Coral-Jane Haines Haines scored the winner as Palace Women secured a vital three points at Brammal Lane.
Ademola Ola-Adebomi Ola-Adebomi notched a brace against Arsenal to take his personal tally for the season to eight.
Asher Agbinone Agbinone scored twice as the Under18s came out on top in a barnstorming encounter with Arsenal.
Home fixture Away fixture Cup fixture (Crystal Palace score shown first)
AUGUST Sun 21
London City Lionesses
W 1-0
Sat 27
Coventry United
W 3-0
SEPTEMBER Sun 18
Southampton
L 1-2
Sun 25
Blackburn Rovers
W 3-1
Sun 2
Bristol City
L 0-4
Sun 16
Sunderland
L 0-2
Sun 23
Bristol City
L 0-3
Sun 30
Durham
W 1-0
OCTOBER
NOVEMBER Sun 20
Charlton Athletic
L 1-2
Sun 27
Lewes
L 1-4
DECEMBER Sun 4
Lewes
W 1-0
JANUARY Sun 8
Watford
W 5-1
Wed 11 Charlton Athletic
L 0-2
Sun 15
London City Lionesses
L 0-5
Sun 22
Coventry United
L 2-3
Sun 29
Durham
L 0-3
Sun 5
Southampton
L 0-2
Sun 12
Durham
W 1-0
Sun 26
Sheffield United
W 2-1
FEBRUARY
MARCH Sun 5
Bristol City
L 0-3
Sun 12
Sheffield United
W 1-0
Wed 22 Birmingham City
L 1-3
Sun 26
W 1-0
Blackburn Rovers
APRIL Sun 2
Sunderland
Sun 16
Birmingham City
Sun 23
Lewes
Sun 30
Charlton Athletic
AUGUST Mon 8 Brighton & Hove Albion W 3-2 Fri 12 Manchester United W 5-1 Fri 19 Fulham D 2-2 Fri 26 Wolves W 2-1 Tue 30 Swindon Town W 2-0 SEPTEMBER Sat 3 Tottenham Hotpsur W 3-0 Fri 16 Chelsea D 3-3 OCTOBER Sat 1 West Ham United W 1-0 Tue 4 Bristol Rovers L 0-2 Sun 9 Everton L 3-4 Tue 18 Plymouth Argyle L 0-1 Sat 22 Manchester City D 3-3 Mon 31 Arsenal D 1-1 NOVEMBER Fri 4 Leicester City D 0-0 Mon 14 Sheffield United W 2-1 Mon 21 Newcastle United W 1-0 Mon 28 Bristol City D 2-2 december Sat 3 Bristol City L 2-5 Mon 19 Newcastle United L 2-3 JANUARY Sun 8 Brighton & Hove Albion W 4-2 Fri 13 Sheffield United D 1-1 Mon 16 Fulham L 1-2 Sun 22 Liverpool W 1-0 Mon 30 Manchester City L 0-5 FEBRUARY Mon 13 Leicester City D 1-1 Mon 20 Manchester United D 0-0 Mon 27 Tottenham Hotspur D 1-1 MARCH Sun 5 Everton L 0-1 Fri 17 Arsenal W 2-0 APRIL Mon 3 Chelsea Fri 7 Blackburn Rovers Mon 17 West Ham United Mon 24 Wolves MAY Mon 1 Blackburn Rovers Sat 6 Liverpool
women/u21s/u18s
SEPTEMBER Tue 6 Hertha Berlin Wed 28 Paris Saint-Germain FEBRUARY Sat 4 Dinamo Zagreb Wed 8 SC Braga MARCH Fri 31 Liverpool
W 1-0 W 7-3 L 1-2 W 2-1
AUGUST Sat 13 West Ham United L Sat 20 Aston Villa W Sat 27 West Bromwich Albion W SEPTEMBER Sat 3 Brighton & Hove Albion W Sat 17 Southampton W OCTOBER Sat 1 Chelsea W Sat 8 Sheffield United W Sat 22 Leicester City L Sat 29 Fulham D NOVEMBER Sat 5 Leeds United L Sat 19 Norwich City D Sat 26 Tottenham Hotspur L DECEMBER Sat 3 Brighton & Hove Albion W Sun 11 Manchester United L JANUARY Sat 7 West Ham United L Sat 14 Fulham W Sat 28 Aston Villa W FEBRUARY Sat 18 Brighton & Hove Albion D Sat 25 Arsenal W MARCH Sat 4 Tottenham Hotspur L Sat 11 Arsenal W Sat 18 Leicester City W APRIL Sat 1 Southampton Sat 15 Norwich City Sat 22 Chelsea Sat 29 West Bromwich Albion
2-3 4-0 3-0 3-0 3-2 3-2 2-1 1-5 2-2 2-5 2-2 1-3 5-0 1-3 0-4 4-0 2-1 2-2 1-3 2-4 4-3 5-1
71
women Name
u21s
Apps
Goals
Name
u18s Apps
Chloe Arthur
18
Tayo Adaramola
Paige Bailey-Gayle
18
Josh Addae
Goals
Name
Apps
Goals
24
Cormac Austin
16
2
4
Kalani Barton
12
Kirsty Barton
8
1
Victor Akinwale
28
6
Freddie Bell
20
Annabel Blanchard
22
5
Kofi Balmer
24
1
Rio Cardines
14
2
Charley Clifford
1
Freddie Bell
1
Junior Dixon
18
12
Maliq Cadogan
13
Rianna Dean
7
1
Polly Doran
22
1
Aimee Everett
14
Anna Filbey
20
1
Fliss Gibbons
12
1
Shauna Guyatt
14
Coral-Jade Haines
20
3
Elise Hughes
21
6
Annabel Johnson
18
Fran Kitching (GK)
19
Natalia Negri (GK)
4
Owen Goodman (GK)
Leigh Nicol
1
20
Seán Grehan
30
Danny Imray
19
Jackson Izquierdo (GK)
2
Caleb Kporha
4
Fionn Mooney
3
1
Adler Nascimento
2
Ademola Ola-Adebomi
26
8
David Omilabu
31
8
David Ozoh
27
2
Jadan Raymond
15
Kaden Rodney
28
William Eastwood (GK)
2
Joseph Gibbard
17
Jake Grante
19
2
2
Jackson Izquierdo (GK)
17
Eyimofe Jemide
22
David Obou
5
David Ozoh
2
1
Caleb Kporha
18
3
James Leonard
1
Finlay Marjoram
5
3
Giulio Marroni
2
Zach Marsh
20
Hindolo Mustapha
15
1
Adler Nascimento
13
5
8
Ellie Noble
8
Hollie Olding
15
Chloe Peplow
8
Laurence Shala (GK)
Dylan Reid
4
Kirsten Reilly
19
Cardo Siddik
3
Kaden Rodney
3
Molly-Mae Sharpe
21
3
Matthew Vigor
4
Laurence Shala (GK)
4
Isabella Sibley
7
1
Noah Watson
20
Basilio Socoliche
17
5
Jack Wells-Morrison
28
Franco Umeh-Chibueze
5
2
Joe Whitworth (GK)
9
Vonnte Williams
19
1
F
A GD Pts
2
Hope Smith (GK) 20
Lizzie Waldie
3
1
All statistics correct as of 17:00 Wednesday, March 29th pos CLUB P W D
L
1
bri
18 13 3
2 30 9 +21 42
2
lon
18 11
4 36 17 +19 36
3
F
A GD Pts
pos CLUB P W D
L
1
2 63 23 +40 44
A GD Pts
20 13 5
2
che
22 12 7
3 50 30 +20 43
3
liv
21 10 5
6 37 26 +11 35
3
bir
17 10 2
5 28 18 +10 32
4
cha
17 9
4
4 30 21 +9 31
5
sou
18 7
6
5 16 12 +4 27
6
cry
18 9
0
9 19 27 -8 27
7
dur
17
7
3
7 25 21 +4 24
8
lew
16 6
4
6 16 20 -4 22
9
9
F
mci
pos CLUB
P W D
L
1
18 16 0
2 64 25 +39 48
whu
2
cry
18 10 3
5 48 35 +13 33
3
ful
16 9
4 50 26 +24 30
3
4
cry
20 9
8
3 37 28 +9 35
5
ful
20 8
6
6 40 28 +12 30
4
tot
16 9
1
6 34 30 +4 28
6
bha
20 8
4
8 41 36 +5 28
5
che
16 8
2
6 39 33 +6 26
7
ars
20 7
7
6 29 29 0 28
6
bha
17 6
4
7 22 35 -13 22
8
mun
21 6
9
6 37 53 -16 27
7
ars
17 5
4
8 37 39 -2 19
eve
20 7
4
9 30 38 -8 25
10 whu
21 7
3
11 33 41 -8 24
3
11 24 40 -16 21
sun
18 5
3 10 23 26 -3 18
10 bla
17 3
7
7 14 23 -9 16
11
sun
18 4
3
11 22 23 -1 15
13 tot
20 4
8
12 cov
18 2
0 16 15 57 -42 6
14 lei
20 2
5 13 19 45 -26 11
11
wol 20 6
12 bla
21 6
2 13 32 43 -11 20 8 24 36 -12 20
women/u21s/u18s
8
lei
16 6
1
9 24 34 -10 19
9
sou
16 5
3
8 31 38 -7 18
10 wba
15 4
3
8 20 28 -8 15
11
avl
17 4
3 10 33 53 -20 15
12 nor
18 3
3 12 23 49 -26 12
72
Joel Ward
Tyrick Mitchell
Luka Milivojevic
James Tomkins
Marc Guéhi
22/23 FIXTURES & RESULTS 02
03
04
05
06
palace Career Appearances
325
93
193 130
72
palace Career goals
5
1
29
4
AUGUST
Home fixture Away fixture Cup fixture (Crystal Palace score shown first) Started Used sub Unused sub Goal(s) Yellow card Red card
ALL-TIME
MAY
APRIL
March
FEBRUARY
JANUARY
DEC
NOV
OCTOBER
SEP
Date
Opposition
attendance/ KICK-OFF
Fri 5
Arsenal
25,286
L
0-2
17th
Mon 15
Liverpool
52,970
D
1-1
16th
Sat 20
Aston Villa
25,012
W
3-1
9th
Tue 23
Oxford United
9,564
W
2-0
Second round
Sat 27
Manchester City
53,112
L
2-4
12th
Tue 30
Brentford
25,043
D
1-1
13th
Sat 3
Newcastle United
51,863
D
0-0
15th
Sat 1
Chelsea
25,125
L
1-2
17th
Sun 9
Leeds United
25,002
W
2-1
15th
Sat 15
Leicester City
31,298
D
0-0
13th
Tue 18
Wolverhampton Wanderers
25,099
W
2-1
11th
Sat 22
Everton
38,939
L
0-3
13th
Sat 29
Southampton
25,130
W
1-0
10th
Sat 5
West Ham United
62,451
W
Wed 9
Newcastle United
51,660
D
2-1 0-0 (3-2)
Third round
Sat 12
Nottingham Forest
29,045
L
0-1
11th
Mon 26
Fulham
25,176
L
0-3
11th
Sat 31
Bournemouth
9,972
W
2-0
11th
Wed 4
Tottenham Hotspur
25,169
L
0-4
12th
Sat 7
Southampton
20,320
L
1-2
Third round
Sun 15
Chelsea
40,075
L
0-1
12th
Wed 18
Manchester United
23,343
D
1-1
12th
Sat 21
Newcastle United
25,350
D
0-0
12th
Sat 4
Manchester United
73,420
L
1-2
12th
Sat 11
Brighton & Hove Albion
24,827
D
1-1
12th
Sat 18
Brentford
17,122
D
1-1
12th
Sat 25
Liverpool
25,842
D
0-0
12th
Sat 4
Aston Villa
41,893
L
0-1
12th
Sat 11
Manchester City
25,844
L
0-1
12th
Wed 15
Brighton & Hove Albion
30,933
L
0-1
12th
Sun 19
Arsenal
60,247
L
1-4
12th
Sat 1
Leicester City
15:00
Sun 9
Leeds United
14:00
Sat 15
Southampton
15:00
Sat 22
Everton
15:00
Tue 25
Wolverhampton Wanderers
19:30
Sat 29
West Ham United
12:30
Sat 6
Tottenham Hotspur
15:00
Sat 13
Bournemouth
15:00
Sat 20
Fulham
15:00
Sun 28
Nottingham Forest
16:30
Result
fixtures & results
Position
10th
10
Michael Olise Albert Sambi Lokonga Jordan Ayew Eberechi Eze Wilfried Zaha Vicente Guaita Jean-Philippe Mateta Jeffrey Schlupp Joachim Andersen Nathaniel Clyne James McArthur
07 08 09 10 11 13 14 15 16 17 18
61
7
164
83
454 153
60
191
62
195 250
6
0
16
9
89
9
16
1
1
0
0
9
26
7
1
11
0
0
0
0
Fixtures & Results
Kaden Rodney
58
David Ozoh
36
Adler Nascimento
29
Owen Goodman
28
Jaïro Riedewald
26
Kofi Balmer
22
Joe Whitworth
Nathan Ferguson
2
1
Naouirou Ahamada
41
Cheick Doucouré
21
Chris Richards
19
Odsonne Edouard
Sam Johnstone
19
Will Hughes
73
41 43 44 63 76 77 78
2
0
82
0
0
1
1
0
0
3
0
0
0
0
74
PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE 22/23
pos
Club
P
W
D
L
F
A
GD
Pts
28
22
3
3
66
26
+40
69
manchester city
27
19
4
4
67
25
+42
61
manchester united
26
15
5
6
41
35
+6
50
1
arsenal
2 3 4
tottenham hotspur
28
15
4
9
52
40
+12
49
5
newcastle united
26
12
11
3
39
19
+20
47
6
liverpool
26
12
6
8
47
29
+18
42
7
Brighton & Hove Albion
25
12
6
7
46
31
+15
42
8
brentford
27
10
12
5
43
34
+9
42
9
fulham
27
11
6
10
38
37
+1
39
10
chelsea
27
10
8
9
29
28
+1
38
11
aston villa
27
11
5
11
35
39
-4
38
12
Crystal Palace
28
6
9
13
22
38
-16
27
13
Wolverhampton Wanderers
28
7
6
15
22
41
-19
27
14
leeds united
27
6
8
13
35
44
-9
26
15
everton
28
6
8
14
22
40
-18
26
16
nottingham forest
27
6
8
13
22
49
-27
26
17
leicester city
27
7
4
16
38
47
-9
25
18
west ham united
26
6
6
14
24
34
-10
24
19
bournemouth
27
6
6
15
25
54
-29
24
20
southampton
28
6
5
17
23
46
-23
23
All statistics correct as of 17:00 Wednesday, March 29th
nottingham forest wolves
arsenal leeds
chelsea aston villa
bournemouth fulham
west ham southampton
Saturday, April 1st - 15:00
Sunday, April 2nd - 14:00
brighton brentford
newcastle man utd
Saturday, April 1st - 15:00
Sunday, April 2nd - 14:00
crystal palace leicester
everton spurs
Saturday, April 1st - 12:30
Saturday, April 1st - 15:00
Saturday, April 1st - 15:00
Saturday, April 1st - 15:00
Saturday, April 1st - 17:30
Monday, April 3rd - 20:00
premier league
this week’s fixtures
man city liverpool
Crystal palace f.c. Joel WARD Tyrick MITCHELL Luka MILIVOJEVIC James TOMKINS Marc GUÉHI Michael OLISE Albert SAMBI LOKONGA Jordan AYEW Eberechi EZE Wilfried ZAHA Vicente GUAITA (GK) Jean-Philippe MATETA Jeffrey SCHLUPP Joachim ANDERSEN Nathaniel CLYNE James McARTHUR Will HUGHES Sam JOHNSTONE (GK) Odsonne EDOUARD Chris RICHARDS Cheick DOUCOURÉ Naouirou AHAMADA Nathan FERGUSON Joe WHITWORTH (GK) Jaïro RIEDEWALD David OZOH Kaden RODNEY Charlie ELLACOTT
02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 21 22 26 28 29 36 41 44 77 78
LEICESTER city f.c.
T. Robinson A. Nunn S. Ledger R. Jones M. Salisbury I. Hussin
For Ticketing, reaction and highlights download the Official Palace App
01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 12 14 15 16 18 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 31 33 34 37 40 42 44 57
Danny WARD (GK) James JUSTIN Wout FAES Çaglar SÖYÜNCÜ Ryan BERTRAND Jonny EVANS Harvey BARNES Youri TIELEMANS Jamie VARDY James MADDISON Alex SMITHIES (GK) Kelechi IHEANACHO Harry SOUTTAR Victor KRISTIANSEN Daniel AMARTEY Patson DAKA Ricardo PEREIRA Kiernan DEWSBURY-HALL Jannik VESTERGAARD Nampalys MENDY Wilfred NDIDI Dennis PRAET Timothy CASTAGNE Daniel IVERSEN (GK) Luke THOMAS Lewis BRUNT TETÊ Wanya MARÇAL-MADIVADUA Boubakary SOUMARÉ Sammy BRAYBROOKE Will ALVES