Ground Number: 1505
Tuesday 2nd December 2025
Stapleford Town 3-3 FCV Grace Dieu
United Counties D1
STAPLEFORD TOWN FC - A BRIEF HISTORY
The club was established in 2012, replacing Stapleford Villa, who were established a decade earlier. They were primarily a youth side at first, establishing an adult team in 2017. They entered the Notts Senior League Division 1, winning the title at the first attempt. The success continued with the Premier Division title the following year; however, at the time, they didn't have the facilities to allow promotion. After a couple of modest finishes during the two pandemic-interrupted seasons, Stapleford finished as runners-up to Southwell City in 2022, whilst sharing at Borrowash Victoria. Further titles followed in 2023 & 2024, and following a groundsharing agreement at Radford, they were finally allowed to take promotion to the United Counties League Division 1. They finished in mid-table last season before moving home in the summer to a now-upgraded ground.
Stapleford Town entered the FA Vase for the first time this season; however, they lost 3-0 at home to Coalville Town. Local cup honours include the Notts FA Junior Trophy in 2018 and the Notts FA Senior Trophy in 2023. The town of Stapleford is located six miles from Nottingham and has a population of around 15,500. Stapleford lies on the border between Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. To the north of Stapleford is Ilkeston, and to the east is Beeston. To the west across the River Erewash is Sandiacre, and in the south is Toton. Sir John Borlase Warren, an 18th-century MP for Nottingham and an admiral, lived in Stapleford. The now-closed Happy Man and Warren Arms pubs were named after him and his family. A large Wetherspoons named after him is located in the town centre. Dave Watson, who was a defender in the Sunderland team that won the FA Cup in 1973, was born in Stapleford in 1946.
MY VISIT
Stapleford Town was the second closest ground that I needed to visit. Originally, I was due to visit when they played Coalville Town in October, but it was moved due to a county cup game. Then, I was due to visit on 18th November, but the game sold out, something I learned before I had a wasted journey. At nearly 250 miles, though, it was a fair old way. Nevertheless, I decided that it would be done on a midweek. They played at home on a Tuesday fairly often, so I had plenty of choice. That Forest game was perfect, with not many options on, although I could have done with their 3G pitch the previous week, as I went without a game until Friday. On the day of my original visit, Twitter was down, and it was only via email that I learned that the game in the Notts Senior Cup had sold out. The third and hopefully final attempt was on 2nd December against Grace Dieu.
From my game at Mile End, it was around a ten-minute walk to the station. I learned that Wycombe had drawn at Rotherham after being 1-0 up, not a bad result all told. From there, it was a few minutes wait for a Central Line tube to Bank and then the Northern Line to Camden Town. The place was rammed for some reason, and it was a slow walk to the Ice Wharf Wetherspoons, 461 for me. Packed in there too, nowhere to sit. At least my £2.99 pint of Stowford Press was obtained quickly with excellent service at the bar, but this was not a place that I was keen to revisit. The Northern to Euston and a walk to Euston Square provided me with the final train of the day, a Metropolitan Line to Amersham. This was not as plain sailing as I'd have liked. A 'points failure' at Chalfont and Latimer meant we were booted off the train at Rickmansworth. Or not, as they fixed it within ten minutes, I made the bus by the skin of my teeth and was home by 8.40. A few drinks and dinner were had, though not enough to take my mind off of work the next day. I really could have done with more sleep, but I was not tired. In any case, I am reluctant to let work affect my day off in a negative way.
I was asleep just after 11, and slightly tired the next morning, but I didn't care. It was an OK day at work, far less stressful than other Sundays, but still very busy. As planned, I went to Flackwell Heath Ladies v Barton United Ladies after - my first visit to Wilks Park since last July. It was a fairly decent game, Flackwell deservedly winning 2-0. After, I went to Home Bargains, which was full of the usual noisy families. I found what I wanted, though, the Irn Bru Winter Spiced drink, which I had been after for ages without luck. Finally, I got home, 12 hours after leaving for work that morning. It was an early night on Sunday, and Monday was a decent day at work. Another early night saw me sleep for eleven hours on Monday night, and I woke up just after 9 am. As a result, I didn't do my usual walk to town and back until well past 10, meaning that it was far busier than usual as I hit the shops just before lunchtime. I got all that I needed, arriving back around 2 and having lunch.
As a result, I didn't have much time to kill before it was time to go. I checked my tyre pressures and watched TV for a bit before leaving around 3.30. Colin wasn't ready, and so I had to go up to his messy flat where he was still in bed. It was lucky that everything was unlocked, as my phone calls failed to wake him up. We got going 25 minutes later than intended, as he took a long time to get ready. It was a pain getting to and onto the M1, but once we were on it, it was a very decent run up. The variable speed limit helped with both traffic flow and fuel economy. We were at the ground by 6.40 and walked the 15 minutes to the Sir Admiral John Borlase Warren Wetherspoons. A revisit for me, but an excellent example of a Spoons with several boxed ciders. I was driving, and it was midweek, so Cranberry juice it was. Along with the Christmas Brie and bacon burger, it cost £9.31. It was most enjoyable, and it was nice to sit in the warmth. From there, it was a fifteen-minute walk to the ground, where we arrived just on kickoff. £6 was excellent value for entry and would have included a programme had they not run out. News later reached us that Wycombe had lost 2-0 at Northampton in the Vertu Trophy, annoying as I enjoyed the early kickoffs at home. It was good to see and chat to Shrewsbury fan Lee Vaughan, who had made his way down for the game.
Stapleford sat 5th in the league, having won fourteen, drawn four and lost five of their games so far. They were in mixed form and had suffered a 6-0 hammering at the hands of Staveley Miners Welfare on Saturday. Newly promoted FCV Grace Dieu were a place lower in 6th, having won eleven, drawn nine and lost two. They were unbeaten in seventeen, but had drawn six of their last seven. On Saturday, they drew 1-1 at South Nortmanton Athletic. It was the visitors who were on top; they took the lead through a good run and a low shot by Jerrell Sellars on 12 minutes. They doubled their lead on 18 minutes, an attack down the left, a low cross and a shot from ten yards by Jack Butterfill. On the half hour, it was 3-0, a good ball forward and a low finish from 20 yards, which turned out to be a deflected own goal. In the second half, Stapleford were better. They pulled a goal back on 50 minutes through Oliver Ball, lobbing over the keeper after he could only palm the initial shot out. It was 3-2 on the hour; a goal-line clearance was not enough as it was over the line, scored by Max Taylor. There was another clearance off the line, a real game of two halves. Five minutes from time, Stapleford got the equaliser they deserved, a David Olatomide header from a left-wing cross to spark jubilant scenes. They had a number of chances to win it, but were quite wasteful near the end.
THE GROUND
HICKINGS LANE RECREATION GROUND is a fairly typical modern 3G cage. The main pitch is on a tight footprint. As a result, the space is narrow, and the ground has just one end, plus one and a bit sides. There are two metal stands, as ever, one seated and one standing. They hold around 50 each, but at least they are in good colours and have the club badge on them. The club facilities are behind the goal where you come in. They are fairly bland, but offer a basic range of food and drinks. The bar upstairs has Sports TV. There is a small car park at the ground, plus parking on the road outside. Buses run nearby. The town is a short ten-minute walk away. This offers a good range of pubs, restaurants and takeaways. Despite a road cutting straight through it, it looks like a place with plenty to make a good day out.
























































