..
  Corinthian-Casuals Football Club
  • Home
  • Teams
    • Men's 1st Team >
      • Fixtures and Results 2024-25
      • League Table
      • Match Reports
      • Player Profiles
    • Women's Team >
      • Fixtures and Results 2024-25
      • News
      • Women's Player Profiles
    • Youth Section >
      • Contact the Youth Section
    • Schools XI
    • Walking Football
  • Club
    • News & Interviews
    • Contact CCFC
    • Who's Who
    • Club Rules
    • Supporters' Charter
    • Photo Galleries
    • Casuals In The Press >
      • Strictly Casuals
      • Hyphenated (David Bauckham)
      • 19th Century Globetrotters (Football Times)
      • Football History (Outside Write)
      • The Most Important Club (iNews)
      • Egri Erbstein Tournament (Blizzard)
      • Tolworth To Budapest (When Saturday Comes)
      • European Champions 2019 (iNews)
      • When Casuals Met Paulista (Football Times)
      • Boys From Brazil (Non-League Paper)
      • Why Real Madrid Wear White
    • Casuals on Youtube
  • Matchday Info
    • Getting Here
    • 2024-25 Ticket Prices
    • Season Tickets
    • Armada Group Stadium
    • Get Involved
    • Covid Risk Assessments
  • Commercial
    • Online Shop
    • Casuals Clothing
    • Sponsorship Opportunities
    • Some Amazing Facts About Casuals
    • Monthly Draw
    • Clubhouse Bookings
  • History
    • Corinthian-Casuals
    • History of the Corinthians
    • History of the Casuals
    • Corinthian Tours
    • Corinthian Greats
    • Managers
    • Former Grounds
    • Trivia
    • Remembrance
  • Corinthianos
    • Visitando o Estádio Armada Group
    • Fiel Londres
  • Membership
    • International Membership

90 Not Out

28/3/2016

1 Comment

 
PictureDoug Insole (right) alongside friend and Corinthian-Casuals President Micky Stewart.
David Harrison pays tribute to two great Corinthians who turn 90 this year.

Doug Insole


On April 18 Doug Insole will be 90. To mark the event we would like to pay tribute to a remarkable sportsman and distinguished member of Corinthian-Casuals.


Doug Insole was born in Clapton in 1926. He went to school at the Sir George Monoux GS in Walthamstow; after brief evacuation during the war he was soon playing cricket for London and Essex schools and joined Walthamstow Avenue for whom he played for two seasons.

In the final years of the war he spent two years military service in Special Signals helping intercept and decode German signals, at an outstation for the famous Bletchley Park code-breaking centre.

At Cambridge from 1946 he captained the university at both football and cricket and in his last year in 1949 also topped the Essex County averages with two centuries and 219 runs against Yorkshire. Meanwhile, in 1948 he was a founder member and first captain of Pegasus, the combined Oxford and Cambridge football side, and played for them for two seasons before moving on to Corinthian-Casuals. In his book on Pegasus, centre half Ken Shearwood described him as "a heavy deliberate sort of player with a tremendous shot in either foot, who'd get hold of the ball and keep it."

For Casuals Doug played First Team football for an incredible 14 seasons, marking up some 339 appearances, including the 1956 Amateur Cup Final at Wembley in front of 80,000 against Bishop Auckland where his cross from the right laid on Casuals' goal in the 1 - 1 draw. During his time with the club he played in eight different positions, including once as goalkeeper.

But it's as a cricketer and administrator that he is best known. From 1950 he was captain of Essex transforming them into one of the top county sides. Micky Stewart, who played against him many times for Surrey remembers him as "a consistent run-scorer and an outstanding captain, on and off the field". He was described in the press as "astute, popular, intelligent and attacking, inclined to be adventurous and exciting rather than conservative".
Over a decade he played 450 First Class matches, scored 25,241 runs including 54 hundreds, at least one against every other county in the game. As a right arm medium pacer he took 138 wickets including 5 for 22 against Surrey. He also kept wicket. In 1956 he was one of Wisden's Cricketers of the Year.

He played 9 Tests for England, and was vice-captain on the tour of South Africa in 1956, topping the averages and helping England draw the series. He was a member of the MCC Committee for 20 years, Chairman of the England select ors for 10 years in the 60s. He managed the England tour of Australia in 1978/9; was awarded the CBE that season and was President of the MCC for 12 months from October 2006. He's a Life Vice President of the Football Association.

For all of his cricketing career he played as an amateur when the breed was fast dying out, holding down a marketing job with the building giants Wimpey. Remarkably, also, he continued to play for Corinthian-Casuals after his First Team days were over, turning out regularly for the "A" and Schools teams . His last game was a charity match at Leatherhead in 1978/9 when he was 52. So congratulations and best birthday wishes to an all time sporting giant from all of us at the club.


Hubert Doggart OBE, M.A., Poet and Player

George Hubert Graham Doggart is another distinguished member of the club who's recently celebrated his 90th birthday. He was a contemporary of Doug Insole on both football and cricket fields and an outstanding all-round sportsman.

Hubert undoubtedly owed much to the teaching and inspiration of his father, Graham Doggart, a Corinthian who captained the full England international side against Belgium in 1924 and also won four amateur caps. He played an incredible 203 games for Corinthians scoring 207 goals; also 34 games with 21 goals for Casuals. Notable he scored the single goal in Corinthians' famous defeat of Blackburn Rovers in the FA Cup in 1924. He played cricket for Cambridge, Durham and Middlesex, was on the committee at Sussex CCC. and was Chairman of the Football Association from 1961 - 3. He died while chairing an F.A. meeting in June 1963 aged 66.

Hubert was born in Earls Court on 18th July 1925, went to school at Winchester where he was captain of both football and cricket. Leaving school in 1943 he was commissioned in the Coldstream Guards and served as a Lieutenant in the British Army of the Rhine occupying Germany for two years after the war.

In 1948 he went to King's College Cambridge to read history. He won Blues in no less than five different sports, cricket, football, squash, racquets and fives and was captain in all except fives. In his first cricket match for Cambridge he scored 215 not out against Lancashire, still an English record for a debutant. A year later he and partner John Dewes put on an unbeaten 429 for the second wicket against Essex of which Doggart made 219. In 1950, when captain of the university he was picked for England but, against the spin bowling of "those two little pals of mine", Ramadin and Valentine he managed only lowly scores.

Meanwhile he'd established himself as a powerful and aggressive footballer, at inside forward, captaining the University after Doug Insole. They both went on to play for Pegasus, the combined Oxford and Cambridge side in their first match in 1948. Ken Shearwood, at centre half, described Doggart as "big, awkward, high stepping and snorting all the while as he bore down on any ball that he considered his."

With Insole, after a season with Pegasus, Doggart joined Corinthian-Casuals, enjoying an slightly irregular but spectacular career until 53/4. In 1951 between October and December he scored 13 goals including three hat tricks - against Cambridge University, Dulwich Hamlet and Woking. The C-C Newsletter describes a goal against Brentwood and Warley in a cup match in Dec 52: "Insole took the ball to the goal line then crossed to Doggart to pivot on his left foot and smash the ball on the volley into the roof of the net. A magnificent goal." During these years, and later, he also played for the Old Wykehamists, captaining them to three wins in the Arthur Dunn Cup.
After Cambridge Hubert went straight back to teach at Winchester where he remained for 22 years, much of that time as a housemaster, also running football and cricket. In the holidays he continued to play for Sussex, captaining them in 1954. He also went on cricket tours to the West Indies, East Africa and South America. In 1972 he became Headmaster of King's School Bruton in Somerset until 1985.

As an administrator he was in much demand. He was President of the MCC for 1981 - 2 and Treasurer 1987 - 92; also President of the Cricket Society 1983 - 98. He has also been President of the English Schools' Cricket Association.

Throughout this extraordinary career Hubert has always had a deep love of words, poetry and history, has published four books and continues to write the occasional sonnet - and not least some verses composed literally overnight in February about Corinthian-Casuals. What better way to end this tribute to Hubert and to his wife Sue than to reproduce the verses here.

HAIL SOCCER, FINE ‘INVENTION’
Of all the Games that ‘we’ ‘invented’
Some watched al fresco, others tented,
Soccer and Cricket I’d persuade
To head my sporting cavalcade.
Should I have, earlier, praised with zest
‘The Beautiful Game’- when at its best?
Especially as my Dad, A.G.,
Captained England in ’23!
We thank Thee, Lord, for what we treasure-
For memories past and present pleasure:
Corinthian values we can reach
By reading Monty Rendell’s speech.*
The deeds heroic still ring true-
Of G.O.Smith and Lindley too;
Of Ashtons, Bower, Chadder, Creek
And Hegan (just a few I seek)
And now there comes a crucial date,
When Corinth joined Casuals in ’38.
Both Clubs could claim a studded history.
The hyphen was no sacred mystery
To those who thought- come wind, come weather-
The Clubs would better thrive together,
Retaining, happily, the ‘feel’
Of the noble Amateur ideal.
One memory before I end…
In ’56 we bucked the trend
When a Wembley final saw us draw;
A replay thus knocked at our door.
How sad that Micky- ruled by fate-
From Trinidad+ arrived too late
To affect the vital replay’s score.
His effort seems Amateur to the core!
England we praise, without dissension.
The Corinthian-Casuals earn their mention.
GHGD

* Monty Rendell, Headmaster of Winchester College, past Corinthian, made the speech
‘In Memory of the Fallen’, in 1919, at the new Crystal Palace ground (see .'A History of the Corinthian Football Club’, by F.N.S.Creek, pp 52-54)

+ Micky Stewart was one of E.W.Swanton’s team touring the West Indies when the call came. I am a witness since I practised with him several mornings on the Savannah, outside our hotel. In his excellent autobiography, Micky talks, selectively, of the great Clyde Walcott’s coming out to be with us on one occasion, but- we’ve joked about this - he seems to have forgotten about his loyal club- mate!

1 Comment

Crunch Easter Weekend

26/3/2016

0 Comments

 
Picture
Casuals going into battle today in the first of two games in three days that could define their season.

With the race for the playoff's intensifying James Bracken's men know they cant afford to drop many more if any from the remaining six games.

On Easter Saturday we travel down to Sussex to face a Peacehaven & Telscombe side battling to avoid back to back relegations.

When the sides met back in September Casuals recovered from going a goal down early on to record a 3-1 victory.  Today's hosts are 2nd bottom and have not won since the end of November. In 2016 they have picked up a solitary point and are 6 points behind East Grinstead who are just outside the drop zone.

The Sports Park, Piddinghoe Avenue, Peacehaven , BN10 8RJ

From west - via Rottingdean. Travel for around ten minutes from the main crossroads in Rottingdean east bound, passing through Saltdean and Telscombe Cliffs along the South Coast Road. Once you are in Peacehaven go over the roundabout using the right hand lane. You will pass a small Sainsbury’s and then a BP garage on your left . Piddinghoe Avenue is the second turning on the left. Travel over the mini- roundabout and into the car park area 100 metres ahead.


Public Transport
By train/bus via Brighton.
Arrive at Brighton station and exit through the main walkway directly in front of the barriers. Find a taxi or a number 12 Bus. Number 12 buses leave either from the stop outside the station - 50 metres on the left as you leave the station or from outside of Boots which is five minutes walk down Queens Road, which starts in front of the station, and bear left at the Clock Tower. The bus journey is around 20 - 25 minutes. Get off at the Gladys Avenue stop. The ground is just five minutes away. Head north (sea behind you) then go left at the top of Gladys Avenue and then right at the mini roundabout into Piddinghoe Avenue and walk 100 metres and the ground is in front of you.

Adult: £10 
Over 65s: £5 
Under 18: £Free
Programme: £2 
Golden Goal: £1
Snack Bar menu. Please note we only accept cash, sorry no cards.
Pint from £3.50, Bottles from £2.50, Soft Drinks from £1
Chips £1.50 Burgers from £2.50

On Monday Casuals return to King Georges Arena where we host Carshalton Athletic side who themselves have an outside chance of making the playoff's.
Kick off is 3pm

Admission for the match is
£8 adults 
£4 Concessions
U16's Free (with accompanying paying adult)

Match day Programme £2

Live match updates are available via the clubs twitter account



​

0 Comments

Folkestone Invicta v Casuals

11/3/2016

0 Comments

 
Picture
Folkestone Invicta  V Corinthian Casuals 
Saturday 12th March 3pm
Ryman Division One South






Where do they play?

Folkestone Invicta Football Club
Cheriton Road Sports Ground,
Cheriton Rd,
Folkestone
CT19 5JU, 
     

Whats the ground like?
Good ground - good crowds. A big open terrace at the far end which overlooks the cricket green. Proper non-league ground and it will be sad to see them leave the league next season although we hope to join them.



How much does it cost to get in?
Adults: £9
Concessions: £6
U16's £2




 How do I get there?

By car:
We are located near the M20 motorway, if you are coming from outside Folkestone. Drive on the M20, and take an exit before the A20. Continue to drive along the Cherry Garden Avenue, and you should be able to see our stadium from there.
By train:
Our stadium is nearest to two railway stations; Folkestone West and Folkestone Central. Plan your journey accordingly and be sure your train will stop at one of these stations. Walking distance from each of the two stations is approximately 5 to 10 minutes.
(Folkestone West is marginallly closer)
By bus:
Buses to Cheriton run every eight minutes from the town centre (bus station) on weekdays.
Service Nos. 71, 72, 73 and 17 (less frequent, which goes on eventually to Canterbury.
Get off just past Morrisons Supermarket.
 

How did they do last weekend?
A 1-1 draw at an ever improving Walton Casuals 

How did we get on there last season?
A midweek 4-1 defeat witj Joe Hicks seeing red
 
Anything else I should know?
A superb club shp and also great views from the ground looking across the south downs

Dont forget if you cant join us, follow all the action on Twitter @corinthiancas

0 Comments

Casuals 2-2 Hastings United

8/3/2016

0 Comments

 
Picture
Second half goals from Warren Morgan and Jamie Byatt (pictured) rescued a point for Corinthian-Casuals as they battled back from 2-0 down to earn a draw with playoff rivals Hastings United.
 
And Casuals Boss James Bracken believed they were ‘unlucky not to come away with three points’ and hailed his side’s fighting spirit.
 
Hastings took the lead in the eighth minute when Billy Medlock let fly with a 25 yard effort that beat stand-in keeper Ricky Bowry with no chance.
 
They doubled the lead on 20 minutes after Zac Attwood was allowed to turn and shoot past Bowry.
 
Casuals fought back with Sekou Kaba hitting the post and Hasting’s keeper Harry Doherty made a superb last ditch save to deny returning hero Jamie Byatt.
 
The comeback began after the break when on 57 minutes, Warren Morgan made an impressive burst into the box and fired from an acute angle past Doherty.
 
In a half dominated by the home side, Byatt went close again before finally latching onto a Morgan ball and slotting home to level the scores.
 
James Cottee had a golden chance to sneak three points but his snap shot went agonisingly wide with Doherty stranded.
 
The draw lifts Casuals up into seventh, two points from Hastings who remain in fifth place, taking up the final playoff spot.
 
“One thing we never lack is fighting spirit. We showed it on Saturday and we’ve shown it again tonight,” said Bracken after the match.
 
“But let’s not forget there was an awful lot of quality out there today. We’ve dominated that game for the majority of it. Hastings scored two goals in the first half against the run of play and then sat deep.
 
“Second half, we’ve almost taken them apart and we’re unlucky not to come away with three points.
We’ve got eight games to go and we’ll have a right good go and see if we can get to the playoffs.
 
Speaking of the loss of Captain Danny Bracken and in-form striker Shaun Okojie, Bracken said, “It gives you a little concern in the back of your mind when you miss your goalkeeper who’s played 185 consecutive games. It’s never easy. I’ve got faith in everyone in the squad including Ricky (Bowry) who’s stepped in tonight and done really well.
 
“Shaun’s scored eight goals in eight games and that’s a big miss for us. But other players step up to the plate, including Warren Morgan who’s got a goal and Jamie Byatt who’s bagged another.
 
“I want the boys to get points out of every game. We’ll turn up at Folkestone on Saturday motivated. Every single game I turn up to, I seem that little bit more focussed, that bit more motivated as we get to the business end of the season. I hope that’s rubbing off on the players.
 
“We travel to Folkestone knowing that they’ll win the league – they’re the best team in it this year, as the table tells you. But we’ll go there and try and cause another upset because we like to make a habit of that. 

Full match report to follow.

0 Comments

Casuals v Hastings United

8/3/2016

0 Comments

 
Picture
Corinthian Casuals v Hastings United
Tuesday 8th March 2016 7.45pm
Ryman Division One South

The race for the playoffs continue this evening as Casuals host Hastings United in the Ryman league.

Both sides come into the match in good form although Casuals will be looking to find some consistency after following up superb away wins with a poor showing at home in recent weeks.

Back in February the sides played out a thrilling 3-3 draw.

As today is International Women's Day the club are delighted to announce free entry for all women this evening


​Admission for the match is

£8 adults 
£4 Concessions
U16's Free (with accompanying paying adult)

Match day Programme £2

Live match updates are available via the clubs twitter account

0 Comments
<<Previous

     Archives

    June 2025
    May 2025
    April 2025
    February 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    May 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    November 2017
    October 2017
    August 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    December 2014
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014
    May 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    February 2014
    January 2014
    December 2013
    November 2013
    August 2013
    March 2013

© Copyright 2024 Corinthian-Casuals Football Club. All rights reserved.
Developed and maintained by the CCFC Technical Development team.
King George V Arena, Queen Mary Close, Hook Rise South, Tolworth, Surrey KT6 7NA
Corinthian-Casuals Football Club Limited is a Company Limited by Guarantee. No. 11976450
VAT Reg:
 383864552
© 2025 Corinthian-Casuals Football Club
King Georges Field, Queen Mary Close, Hook Rise South, Tolworth, Surrey, KT6 7NA.


Copyright Corinthian-Casuals Football Club 2017