When I was growing up in 1960âs Shotley, a village about 13 kilometres from Ipswich, our next door neighbour was from Birmingham. Barbara spoke with a somewhat whiny, nasal accent but was a very skilled seamstress and made some excellent clothes for my Action Man, including a pair of stripey pyjamas and a set of underwear, the sort of apparel I would wager most Action Men could only dream of, if indeed Action Men do dream, which I doubt. A few years later my sister left school and went to Birmingham University, and I remember visiting her there and discovering the delights of the Bull Ring and the then brand new, but now sadly demolished Birmingham Central Library, a concrete wonder in the Brutalist style; I also remember Birmingham having lots of blue and cream buses and I came home with a pocket full of bus tickets, which on the back had what looked like a squirrel stuck in a glass, the logo of Ansellâs brewery.
It was in December 1973 that I first saw Birmingham City play Ipswich Town at Portman Road; although eventually avoiding relegation by two places and five points (Norwich finished bottom), Birmingham were rubbish and Town won 3-0, and throughout the rest of the 1970âs I never saw Birmingham City do anything but lose at Portman Road. Fifty years later Iâm hoping history is repeated as I watch Town play Birmingham for the thirty-sixth time. Itâs a glorious, bright, sunny day as I leave my wife to an afternoon of watching people in lycra cycling around Belgium on the telly. The train is six minutes late, but once on board I am entertained by a man on his âphone who says âLet me call you on a normal phone, Iâm on the trainâ and âI think itâs a bit of a crap connectionâ, sadly I can hear him perfectly. The phone man gets off the train at the next stop and a chubbier man sits opposite me who looks a bit like the former Poet Laureate Sir John Betjeman, but of course it canât be him because he died in 1984. The dead poet doesnât stay long and soon walks off down the train, perhaps seeking inspiration.
Arriving in Ipswich I find it full of policeman in baseball hats, who eye everyone suspiciously and to my mind look like what would have happened if Sir Francis Chichester had been in Z cars. I want to stop and ask a policeman if Birmingham City supporters are considered dangerous, but I donât, I just assume they are. I carry on up Portman Road to âthe Arbâ, pausing only to buy a programme (ÂŁ3.50) from one of the ice cream booths, and crossing Civic Drive I admire a snippet of Victorian Ipswich skyline which includes the town hall clock, St Mary Le Tower and a bit of the Corn Exchange. The sound of happy drinking and chatter spills from an open upstairs window and from the garden of âthe Arbâ as I approach. Soon, with a pint of Mauldonâs Suffolk Pride (ÂŁ3.60 with Camra discount) in hand I find a seat in the beer garden which is full of pre-match drinkers. I flick through my programme, which today has a front cover across which stride the well-proportioned features of recent signing Lewis Travis, a bearded man who I am pleased to see doesnât have all his hair shaved off in a band around his ears and the back of his head like some unfortunate army conscript.






Another pint of Suffolk Pride later, and with everyone else in the beer garden already gone, I depart for Portman Road, politely returning my glass to the bar and thanking the bar staff as I do so. It seems it must be one of those days when the automatic turnstiles havenât been working as they should, as Portman Road is thick with queuing spectators and so is the back of the Sir Alf Ramsey Stand, but the queue at turnstile 62 moves along at an acceptable pace and I am soon shuffling past Pat from Clacton and Fiona and behind ever-present Phil who never misses a game and his son Elwood, to take my seat next but one to the man from Stowmarket (Paul).   Between me and Paul today is a quiet man with a dome-like bald head, although facially he resembles Baldric (Tony Robinson). In no time at all the players are parading onto the pitch and Murphy is announcing the team; at first he succeeds in keeping at the same pace as the scoreboard, but as usual he races off like a whippet after a rabbit and by the time we get to Wes Burns he is hopelessly out of sync and I am left to bawl out the players surnames  on my own as they appear on the scoreboard if I want to continue to pretend to be at a football match in France, which I do.  Murphy finishes his awful announcement with a cringe inducing â1-2-3, Blue Armyâ and as he says it again I think we are all meant to join in and shout âBlue Armyâ after three, but needless to say I donât. Heâll by saying âNice to see ya, to see ya niceâ next week.
With the usual communal rendition of Hey Jude out of the way, it is Ipswich, and more precisely Conor Chaplin who gets first go with the ball as the game begins under a pale blue, late winterâs afternoon sky decorated with puffs of grey cloud. Town are aiming at the goal in front of me and my fellow ultras, and as ever wear blue and white, whilst Birmingham City sport vivid, flaming red or orange shirts the colour of red-hot pokers, but adorned with black marks that make the shirt look as if it had been momentarily placed on top of a hot grill or barbecue. Their shorts are black and their socks are same colour as their shirts, but minus the decorative soot and scorch marks.
âKeep right on to the end of the roadâ sing the visiting Brummies, and Pat from Clacton complains that it was Town fans who used to sing that when she first came to games, I think Pat thinks the Brummies stole it, and they apparently first sang it as recently as the 1956 FA Cup semi-final, so she might be right. At the front of the stand I can see Rayâs slightly bristly pate glinting in the winter sunlight. The flags on the roof of the Cobbold Stand hang limply, but below them itâs pretty noisy. The Birmingham goalkeeper John Ruddy is roundly booed by the Town fans because he used to play for Norwich. Four minutes pass; Town earn a corner and I bellow âCome On You Bluesâ. Pat from Clacton joins in, but doesnât bellow, and Iâm pretty sure ever-present Phil joins in too, but as boiling cauldrons of noise go, the Sir Alf Ramsey Stand is still an ice bucket.
The corner comes to nought, but two minutes later as, in a spirit of bonhomie, the whole crowd joins in with a minuteâs applause for Birmingham manager and former town captain Tony Mowbray, who is ill, Wes Burns scoots away down the Town right and pulls back a low cross which Keiffer Moore is about to sweep into the net when it is cleared off the end of his toe by a Brummie defender. Within sixty-seconds Moore nearly scores again, but shoots over when through on goal and itâs not long before heâs chalking up a third near miss with a scuff. He canât seem to get anything quite right, but undeterred the Town fans that sing, sing âAddy, Addy , Addy â Oâ and then those that serenade, serenade John Ruddy with âHeâs only a poor little budgie, his shirt is all tattered and tornâ. Birmingham have some forays forward too, but not as good as Ipswich âs and the afternoon is tense and exciting.
âCome On You Bluesâ I yell again and again as Town win their second corner, in the eighteenth minute, and Conor Chaplinâs header is caught by Ruddy. Two minutes later Wes Burns limps off and Omari Hutchinson sprints on. Then Birminghamâs number four Marc Roberts is laying prone on the grass and the game is stopped, but referee Mr Gavin Ward walks over to him lays his hand upon his back and Roberts is back up on his feet; I speculate to Fiona as to whether Mr Ward has healing hands before Pat from Clacton, having watched Leicester City play Leeds United on the telly last night reveals that she doesnât like the Leeds manager Daniel Farke, she thinks he looks scruffy and even dirty. I agree with her that he is a bit of a âFarkeâ because he managed Norwich City (twice), but secretly I quite like his German hippy vibe and suspect heâs quite nice, probably giving his players lifts home after training in his VW camper van.
A Conor Chaplin shot, another corner. Another chance to bawl âCome On You Bluesâ, and the first half is half over. Seven or eight minutes on and Sam Morsy shoots from 20 metres or so, Conor Chaplin is in the way, he looks offside, but diverts the ball past Ruddy and heâs not offside and he scores! Town lead 1-0. âE-i, E-i, E-i, O, Up the Football League we goâ sing the Sir Bobby Robson Stand before progressing on to their all-time favourite Christmas âNumber Oneâ and âHark now hear the Ipswich sing, the Norwich ran awayâ; who cares that Christmas is still another ten months away, although admittedly almost to the day.
Half-time is drawing near and Keiffer Mooreâs close range header falls straight to ruddy Ruddy again, before Town win what will turn out to be their final corner of the half and I bawl âCome On You Bluesâ for all Iâm worth. Then suddenly, there are chants from the Brummies up in the Cobbold stand of âWho the fuckinâ âell are you?â and âI canât read and I canât write, but I can drive a tractorâ which I donât think Iâve heard away fans sing this century. The Brummies cap it off with a more contemporary ditty that goes âYou are wankers, you are wankers, you are wankersâ, and the bonhomie of the sixth minute seems to have been lost somewhere.
Two minutes of normal first half time remain and Birmingham win their first corner, and then within a minute their second. âFour additional minutesâ announces Murphy and I worry how many more corners they might get, but corners are the least of our worries as following a run down the Town right by Birminghamâs Koji Myoshi, they have the cheek to equalise thanks to Jordan James. âWho are ya, who are ya ?â chant the Brummies, struggling to know how to react to their teamâs moment of success, and equally confused the Sir Bobby Robson standers chant back âWho the fuckinâ âell are you?â. I blame a diet of Coca Cola and fast food. Fortunately, Nathan Broadhead seems to know who he is and he dances himself into a shooting position, but sends the ball narrowly past the post before Mr Ward finally calls time on the first half.
After syphoning off some excess and spent Suffolk Pride, I join Ray and his grandson Harrison at the front of the stand and Ray bemoans Mr Wardâs inability to spot persistent fouling and thinks referees should be ex-players who understand what cheats footballers really are. Our conversation moves on to laughing about a former work colleague before the Town players are wandering on to the pitch again and itâs time for the football to begin once more and I must return to my seat where i still find time to eat a Nature Valley crunchy oats and honey bar.



There are fewer clouds in the sky and a seagull sits on the central flagpole on the Cobbold stand as play resumes. Massimo Luongo is booked for a harmless looking foul and then Nathan Broadhead wins a corner and Axel Tuanzebe heads the ball at Ruddy and Mr Gavin completes the Town central midfield on his bingo card as he books Sam Morsy for another innocuous, imagined infringement. Birmingham win a corner and I notice that the floodlights seem brighter as the sun sinks lower behind the West Stand. Birmingham have more attacking intent this half and an undetected Jay Stansfield shapes up to volley a cross at the Town goal, but gets it completely wrong and the ball skids harmlessly off the side of his boot; popular 1980âs chanteuse and winner of TVâs âSearch for a Starâ, Lisa Stansfield could probably have done better.
With thirty-one minutes of normal time remaining applause breaks out around the ground, I am a little mystified but Fiona tells me it is for another Town supporter who has sadly died. Two minutes later and Nathan Broad is substituted with Jeremy Sarmiento, whilst Birmingham ostentatiously make a triple substitution; one of the departing players being former Town starlet, Andre Dozzell, who I hadnât really realised was playing, so some things don’t change. Birmingham and Town exchange corner kicks and the Sir Bobby Robson stand even chants âCome On You Bluesâ before repeating âBlue and White Armyâ at least three times a few minutes later after Jeremy Sarmiento shoots wide.
The sixty-ninth minute arrives with Town playing competently but unable to find the key to a second goal and therefore Pat from Clacton fishes the masturbating Cambodian monkey charm from her purse. She rubs his head for luck and then keeps him inside her glove, which is probably the best place for him. Murphy has now counted the crowd and tells us that there are 29,363 of us here today including 1,979 away supporters and he thanks us for our continuing support, which could of course melt away at any moment.
Back on the pitch, I become aware of Birminghamâs number 34, Ivan Sunjic, who, with his long hair and beard has something of the popular impression of the Messiah about him. Moments later , although he might look like Jesus, Mr Ward doesnât think he plays like him and he books him for a foul on Omari Hutchinson. Fourteen minutes remain, and while Ipswich are dominating, Birmingham manage to break away and Jordan James forces Vaclav Hladky into a save to win a corner. Beams of golden sunlight stream across the upper tier of the Sir Bobby Robson Stand, which is probably a bit of a bugger if you’re sat there with the sun in your eyes.
Eleven minutes remain and continuing pressure wins Town a corner. Two minute later and Omari Hutchinson plays in Axel Tuanzebe who seems to run in slow motion into the box before carefully squaring the ball for Jeremy Sarmiento to side-foot into the goal and Town lead 2-1. Itâs taken twelve minutes but the masturbating monkey from Cambodia has worked his magic. âJeremy Sarmiento, something, You Knowâ chant the home crowd impressively, even if I canât work out all the words. At least I know the lyrics to âHark now hear the Ipswich sing, the Norwich ran awayâ so, I feel like theyâre doing it for me when they sing it again.
Not long left, but another goal would be nice. As I left âthe Arbâ earlier I heard the bloke who I assume to be the owner tell someone he would put money on 3-1 today, and that would seem to be a fair reflection of the game. Pat, Fiona and I all look at one another and agree it feels like it suddenly got colder, as if s a ghostly presence has just walked up the stand, or itâs nearly five oâclock in the afternoon and itâs February. Either way, Pat is looking forward to her baked potato when she gets home, which sheâs having with a Marks & Spencer prawn salad; I think sheâs a creature of habit is Pat.
The last five minutes of normal time have arrived and Conor Chaplin is down hurt. Birmingham make another substitution and the sun shines on the girder across the roof of the Sir bobby Robson Stand. Itâs the final minute of normal time and Conor Chaplin is replaced by Marcus Harness with, as Pat from Clacton tells us, âhis lovely blue eyesâ. I tell her I can see them sparkling from here, which of course I canât. There will be six minutes of additional time Murphy tells us. I am confident that Town are more likely to score than Birmingham and am sure a statistical analysis would prove me right. Thereâs a throw in, a high ball forward, Keiffer Moore nods it on and Omari Hutchinson is through on goal with just Ruddy to beat, which he does. âE-i, E-i, E-i-O, Up the Football League we goâ is the chant and Town are going to win 3-1. Town do win 3-1. Axel Tuanzebe is voted man of the match by some sponsor or other with a very long name, and with smiling faces Pat and Fiona make a quick exit as Mr Ward blows the final whistle. The quiet man with the dome-like head who has quietly sat next to me leaves quietly.
I linger to enjoy the post-match celebration and to applaud. The man from Stowmarket and I agree that Axel Tuanzebe has played a masterful game as if he was told exactly what to do and he has studiously and calmly followed it to the letter. Itâs been a magnificent match which I have thoroughly enjoyed. Itâs been tight and close, but Ipswich have always been the better side; they had ninety minutes in which to win and saw nothing wrong in using nearly all of them all to do so, well why not? As a final thought, Iâm glad I donât have my Action Man anymore, if I did I would be regretting tonight that Barbara never made him an Ipswich Town kit.














































































