Stoke Potters
Edinburgh Monarchs
Premier Trophy
44
49
Saturday 22nd April 2006
Loomer Road

We gave a very convincing performance to overcome Stoke and their over-watered track.

Why was it so wet? It was obvious as soon as we arrived that it was far too damp to dry properly on an overcast day, and so it proved. Endless tractor driving between heats may have been designed to improve the surface, or to delay matters while their riders prepared for multiple outings.

Alan Mogridge was banned from the meeting because he had been due to ride at Rye House in the British semi-final the same night. He was there in his 'civvies' and rider replacement covered him well with paid 9 from the first 3 rides.

As at Redcar Henrik started with a perfect gate and 4 laps to beat Lemon, and with Theo easily heading Michael Coles we were ahead right away.

Derek blew the opposition away again in heat 2, but the scores were levelled in heat 3.

Rusty was back and it looked like he would team up with Derek to share heat 4, until Derek came down on the slippery third turn of lap 3.

Theo clicked into gear to beat Kessler in heat 5, with Henrik keeping Clews at the back. That levelled the scores but we then went 6 down over the next two heats, with Evans showing himself to be a danger man by winning heat 7.

We were soon back in contention, and again it was Derek involved with Theo to easily beat Michael Coles in heat 8. It's hard to see Colesy continuing if this is the best he can do.

Rusty got out in front to win heat 9, and heat 10 was a crucial one. With Lemon in it and Evans replacing Coles Stoke must have been confident, but it was our Matthew and William who led the way. A mistake by Matthew on the final lap gave Lemon some hope, but he crashed on the final turn trying to come through.

The same Stoke pair faced Henrik and Theo in the next, and this time Lemon did win but we snuffed out the Evans threat to maintain our two-point lead.

Matthew was terrific again in winning heat 12, with Derek taking third from Clews.

What a fuss we then had over heat 13. If Rusty was doing anything wrong, it wasn't obvious - but the heat was stopped twice, first to warn Rusty then to exclude him. And each time Stoke had been on a 5-1!

Stoke must then have been very frustrated when we brought in Derek and he won the heat with Henrik second! Even Lemon didn't get a look-in.

With an 8-point lead it was nearly over, but Lemon then took a TS ride. William and Derek outgated Kessler who dropped out on lap one, thus virtually guaranteeing our victory. Lemon did catch our pair, and barged his way past to take an excellent win, but we went into the last race 5 ahead.

Once again there was some palaver as we attempted to use the ineligible Matthew, but eventually Theo and Rusty both passed Evans to share the heat.

A super win, with some very good race results, our riders refused to be upset by either the track or the home officials.

Stoke has always been one of our happier hunting grounds but strangely enough last year the Monarchs produced one of their worst displays of the season there. The team went down to an injury-ravaged Stoke side who were further decimated during the match.

Last year Stoke's casualties were terrible. No sooner had Paul Pickering and Jan Staechmann started the season as their top two, the pair of them suffered injuries so bad that they are still out of the sport.

This year the Potters have a brand new top pairing which in the past has been more associated with Exeter. Mark Lemon is the number one and is partnered by former Monarch Michael Coles who many supporters will remember was actually married in the old Powderhall stadium.

The middle pairing consists of Paul Clews and Robbie Kessler while Alan Mogridge forms the third partnership with reserves Barrie Evans and Luke Priest.

So how do we measure up to that lot? Luckily Rusty Harrison returns for this match after missing last night's meeting against Redcar. Rusty is one of the best visiting riders at Stoke. Last year when Stoke were propping up the side with guests to cover their injured riders, Rusty was one of the most popular choices with some excellent scores there. If he is on top form tonight he should score heavily. With Henrik Moller and William Lawson making tremendous strides we are going to shock a few sides this season and Stoke could well be one of them. To do so we will have to compensate for the added strength that Mark Lemon brings to the side. Michael Coles has been inconsistent but has some big scores to his name. This will be the danger partnership as far as our chances go.

The second pairing depends very much on Robbie Kessler's fast starts. He is a hard man to pass at Stoke but Paul Clews is a bit uninsurable. Alan Mogridge has always been one of the most entertaining riders to watch and has the ability to notch up big scores. The middle order can be contained though and this we will have to do to achieve success.

At reserve, both Barrie Evans and Luke Priest usually score well at home but Derek Sneddon's form at present gives us great hope that we can at least match their points haul from the reserves berth.

Edinburgh are without doubt a hard side to assess these days. With each match we see the potential for continued improvement being met. Teams like Stoke are the ones who could suffer when the Monarchs hit it off together. If things go right tonight an away win is a distinct possibility. Here's hoping so anyway.