Familiar Friends
Chelsea and Dulwich Hamlet have had several encounters over the years.
Prior to the first floodlit game in1964 the teams met in
October 1929 in a London Challenge Cup* tie at Stamford Bridge. The Dulwich
team from 35 years earlier included the legendary Edgar Kail, Jack Hugo, Cecil Murray, Alf Solly and Leslie Todd (who went on to
become more famous as a Kent County cricketer). Chelsea did not underestimate
the amateurs and again put out their first team which included three full
internationals, and won 4-0. They finished the season runners up in Division 2
and were promoted alongside champions Blackpool.
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Dulwich were
no strangers to Stamford Bridge, having played there the previous season
(1928/29), when it was the venue for the semi-final of the FA Amateur Cup.
Opponents Ilford booked their place in the final with a 4-1 win. On the way to
the semi-final Dulwich put seven goals past Wycombe Wanderers in the third
round and another seven past Aldershot Traction Company in the quarter final.
Now fast-forward to March 1956, the same place and the same stage of the same competition. This time Dulwich were overcome by the Corinthian- Casuals. On the day, fifty coaches lined Dog Kennel Hill to ferry a few thousand Hamlet supporters to West London to boost the enormous crowd to 27,000. Despite the occasion, it wasn’t the greatest display by a Dulwich side, and they ended up losing by three goals to one, Ernie Skipper with the Dulwich goal. Corinthian-Casuals were defeated in the replayed Final by the northern giants Bishop Auckland.
The Hamlet also contested for the 1949/50 London Charity Cup with Wimbledon at Stamford Bridge. Due to fixture congestion, this match was held over and actually took place in September of the following season. The Dons won 2-1.
After the floodlights game it was another ten years before the clubs would meet again. In May 1974 another friendly was arranged as part of the deal that saw striker Alec Jackson move from Dulwich to the West London club. Peter Bonetti was still keeping goal for Chelsea, but this time it was he was who was on the wrong end of three goals. But unfortunately for the pink and blues Chelsea scored 7 (seven) at the other end.
After the floodlights game it was another ten years before the clubs would meet again. In May 1974 another friendly was arranged as part of the deal that saw striker Alec Jackson move from Dulwich to the West London club. Peter Bonetti was still keeping goal for Chelsea, but this time it was he was who was on the wrong end of three goals. But unfortunately for the pink and blues Chelsea scored 7 (seven) at the other end.
When the
clubs next met, the tables were turned. Chelsea had been relegated from the
First Division with a pitiful 20 points. Even if there were three points for a
win back then they would have only amassed 35 points. And so, on Tuesday 14
August 1979, beneath those same pylons the Hamlet recorded a 2-2 draw with
Chelsea.
The last
time the Hamlet entertained Chelsea was midway through the 1993/94 season, on
18 December 1993 at the present Champion Hill ground. It finished in a 2-2
draw. Jim Cannon’s Dulwich side were actually two nil up through Darren
Brodrick and Francis Vines but Chelsea came back into it with two late goals.
Two other matches
to note: In the 1949/50 season (11 Feb 1950) Chelsea Juniors beat their Dulwich
Hamlet counterparts in the semi-final of the London Minor Cup. Chelsea had
already won the previous rounds 14-0, 13-0, 11-0 and a walkover. Dulwich were
able to keep the score down to a respectable 2-0 loss. Chelsea went on to lift
the trophy. The two teams met again the following year at the quarter final
stage but this time the Hamlet saw success, winning 3-2.
* The London Challenge Cup competition was discontinued in
2000. Oddly, the last two finals were contested by the same teams – Uxbridge
and Dulwich Hamlet. The Hamlet won in 1999, but the final match was a 2-2 draw,
but won on penalties by Uxbridge.
Postscript.
Since writing this article we have come across an earlier meeting between the two clubs. This clip is from 1912/13 season.
Originally published in HH30 Winter 2016
Copyright © Jack McInroy
Postscript.
Since writing this article we have come across an earlier meeting between the two clubs. This clip is from 1912/13 season.
Originally published in HH30 Winter 2016
Copyright © Jack McInroy
Chelsea did not underestimate the amateurs and again put out their first team which included three full internationals, and won 4-0. They finished the season runners up in Division 2 and were promoted alongside champions Blackpool.
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