All the one's mentioned above but a strange memory for me rather than a celebration was Charlton Athletic December 7th 1968 when there were barely 5,000 on the Holte in a crowd of about 12,000. It highlighted how massive, lonely and intimidating a terrace it was with the odd sporadic chant echoing around like the acoustics in a cathedral. I think this is more vivid because of the other extreme against Cardiff a few weeks later when it was pretty full for a Brian Tiler debut goal, so I'll claim that as my most memorable Holte end celebration.
Old Holte in about 82 or 83 against the Blues - I took my sister who was only about 17 and it poured. Withe scored right near the end I seem to recall, prodding the ball through the keeper's legs and it rolled agonisingly into the net, taking what seemed like ages. We were halfway up the Holte and by the time the celebrations came to an end, she was in a completely different section. The last I saw of her was her falling away in front of me as the crowd surged forward. I used to love the days when you had to arrive a couple of hours before KO to get in the queue to guarantee you'd get in
Quote from: richard moore on August 04, 2014, 01:15:58 PMOld Holte in about 82 or 83 against the Blues - I took my sister who was only about 17 and it poured. Withe scored right near the end I seem to recall, prodding the ball through the keeper's legs and it rolled agonisingly into the net, taking what seemed like ages. We were halfway up the Holte and by the time the celebrations came to an end, she was in a completely different section. The last I saw of her was her falling away in front of me as the crowd surged forward. I used to love the days when you had to arrive a couple of hours before KO to get in the queue to guarantee you'd get inOnly goal of the game. That was early in the '83-'84 season and Van Den Hauwe's back pass got stuck on the wet pitch and Peter Withe nipped in to score. I don't remember it being particularly late in the game though. A few months previously we beat them by the same scoreline 1-0 on Easter Monday ans Gary Shaw did get a late goal around the 80th minute I think. The game you are talking about is possibly the only derby when the 'dislike' on the pitch beat the 'dislike' in the stands.
Quote from: Damo70 on August 04, 2014, 01:26:12 PMQuote from: richard moore on August 04, 2014, 01:15:58 PMOld Holte in about 82 or 83 against the Blues - I took my sister who was only about 17 and it poured. Withe scored right near the end I seem to recall, prodding the ball through the keeper's legs and it rolled agonisingly into the net, taking what seemed like ages. We were halfway up the Holte and by the time the celebrations came to an end, she was in a completely different section. The last I saw of her was her falling away in front of me as the crowd surged forward. I used to love the days when you had to arrive a couple of hours before KO to get in the queue to guarantee you'd get inOnly goal of the game. That was early in the '83-'84 season and Van Den Hauwe's back pass got stuck on the wet pitch and Peter Withe nipped in to score. I don't remember it being particularly late in the game though. A few months previously we beat them by the same scoreline 1-0 on Easter Monday ans Gary Shaw did get a late goal around the 80th minute I think. The game you are talking about is possibly the only derby when the 'dislike' on the pitch beat the 'dislike' in the stands.Noel Blake hilariously missed a penalty by striking he ball along the ground in a waterlogged area. It barely reached Spinky.Game aka "The battle of Brum".
Just has to be Dalian's goal in the Semi Final, the place actually rocked with delirium. Then in slow motion they nearly got a winner a minute later, which was surely the largest sigh of relief on the Holte as the ball hit the post a rolled to safety.