fatmandoop

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The story of AFC Wimbledon
As so often in the Wimbledon story, it all came down to a penalty kick. In the final moments of the final game of last season, Jack Midson stepped up to score from 12 yards. It was a goal that not only secured victory over Fleetwood Town but preserved the new Dons’ hard-won League Two status. The wave of euphoria as relieved fans invaded the pitch to celebrate evoked memories of good times past.

Just two years earlier, it was Danny Kedwell whose final penalty kick in the shoot-out decided the Conference play-off final against Luton Town at the City of Manchester Stadium. Such penalty heroics were hardly something new for older supporters, who remembered the saves from the spot that immortalised the names of Dickie Guy and Dave Beasant in FA Cup folklore.

It was preserving that glorious past that drove followers of the club to start again in the summer of 2002 after a specially appointed three-man FA commission shocked football fans everywhere by allowing the old Wimbledon FC to relocate to a Buckinghamshire new town. Determined not to let a proud 104-year history die, Dons supporters organised themselves and within just six weeks AFC Wimbledon – a club the commission had declared would be “not in the wider interests of football” – was born.

The new Dons’ opening match in the Combined Counties League attracted 2,449 fans to Sandhurst Town’s Bottom Meadow ground, where terracing was improvised from bales of hay. After finishing third at the end of that first campaign, AFC Wimbledon secured a league and cup double in 2004. The next season they won the Ryman League First Division South before taking three years to escape the Ryman League Premier Division.

Under the guidance of the experienced Terry Brown, the Dons won the Conference South title in 2008, but the Conference National proved a slightly tougher nut to crack. However, after finishing eighth in their debut season, the Dons secured the runners-up spot in 2011, and captain Kedwell demonstrated nerves of steel in that play-off final in Manchester as he fired home the decisive goal.

The rise of AFC Wimbledon has brought inevitable comparisons with their illustrious predecessors’ climb from the Southern League to the old First Division during the 1970s and 80s. That success culminated in a victory over Liverpool in the 1988 FA Cup Final, prompting BBC commentator John Motson to deliver the immortal line, “The Crazy Gang have beaten the Culture Club.”

Those days may be in the past, but the collective spirit lives on in the large numbers of fans who give up their time to run the present club. After 11 years of unbroken success, the fans are beginning to come to grips with the difficulty of trying to compete in League Two with one of the smallest playing budgets in the division.

Ever a realist, chief executive Erik Samuelson summed up the Fleetwood game from his own perspective. “It was a dramatic and very exciting final day, and we all ended up on a high as a result of that. But when you stop and think that we were only 18 minutes away from returning to the Conference, it is important to make sure that we do learn lessons.”

So here we are now, as of June 2014, Mr Lewis Hathaway will take over as AFC Wimbledon manager. Here is his visions for the club.
Year 1: Make a name for myself - and reach playoffs place (Not to worried if we don't go up)
Year 2: To have another great season and push for league 1
Year 3: To be in league 1 and Challenging MK Dons for league position
Year 4: Play off in league one (Not to worried if we don't go up)
Year 5: To have another great season and push for championship
Year 6: to be in chamionship
Year 7: To have another great season and push for the BPL
Year 8: To be in the BPL
Year 9: To have another great season and push for Title
Year 10:To win the BPL

More to follow
 
Please note : The first season has been finished and all screen shots are taken at the end of the season
 
Season 1

So this was so hard not to play this save. I found it so easy just to play another game. So I race through the season and I never screenshot any games, so this is a season review. Sorry guys, it was so gripping and I played the whole season straight in one session. I will show my starting tactics and when I added a tactic to my tactics. My transfers for the season. But I wanted to play to see what I was working with and was going to do this story the same as everyone else. I will do for season two. Sorry.

2014-2015

Pre-season

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Pre-season was very good. I leave the game control of all friendly’s to my assistant manager and I sit in the stand. The tactic I started with was:

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Transfers

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August

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Bad start to the season. Was having so many chances but not scoring many and after 4 straight defeats, I brought in on loan Joe Pigott from Charlton And changed my style of play and tactic.

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I change to this tactic for a couple of games as not scoring enough.

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September

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Results looked better but still not good enough. We scored in every game in September. So I looked at the tactics again and had a silly idea at 4 in the morning and I decided to have a go with it.

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Crazy with all those instructions but I needed the attacking force as I had three very good ST. But was also very worried about be over run in midfield. How does this get on?
 
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