To get in touch, please write to greensonscreen@argylearchive.org.uk

Greens on Screen’s first page was published in January 1999. Its early purpose was to bring Plymouth Argyle a little closer to those unable to see their team, and whilst it has changed a great deal over the years, its core themes - sites and sounds for Westcountry exiles - still stand. The site was very lucky to take on the content of Trevor Scallan’s Semper Viridis in the summer of 2007, and in 2009 launched GoS-DB, a wealth of facts and figures from PAFC’s history. A year later we embarked on a complete history of Argyle, with much-valued contributions from chapter authors.

Greens on Screen is an amateur website and proud of it. It is run by one person as a hobby, although there have been aspects of the site over the years that would be much the poorer without the hard work and much-valued contributions of a small band of volunteers.

Greens on Screen is self-taught and as a result, a little bit quirky. Amongst a few stubborn principles, advertisements will never appear (and don’t get me started on the plague of betting promotions on other sites). It began its life before many others, including the club’s official site, when there was a large gap to be filled, and although there is now a wide variety to choose from, GoS’s sole aim, to be a service to fellow supporters, still seems to have a place.

Steve Dean

SEASON 2013-14

npower Football League Two

 Final Points: 60  Position: 10

Player of the Year: Reuben Reid

 Young Player: Curtis Nelson

THE SEASON IN PICTURES

Telling the story of the season, a selection of 100 photos from over 5,700 in this year's match pages.

After five consecutive battles against relegation, the summer of 2013 saw major changes yet again at Home Park, although thankfully the upheaval was confined to the dressing room. The result was eight debuts by the end of the season's first month, and returning openers for two more: Reuben Reid's third spell at the club was to be his best, and Luke McCormick's homecoming was, thankfully, without too much fuss.  Off the pitch, hopes were high for the start of the Higher Home Park development, including the rise of the fourth-ever stand on Home Park's south side.

John Sheridan's first full season in charge saw three defeats in the first week, including broken ribs for Paul Wotton, although the League Cup exit at Championship side Birmingham City was a close affair. Then came a run of three wins in five, but hopes were quickly dashed by a sequence of eight games without a win and a place in the bottom six. Confidence on the pitch was low once again, as were spirits off it. Was this to be yet another season in a scrap for survival?

Neal Trotman's last-gasp winner at Mansfield at the end of October was perhaps the turning point of the campaign. The losing streak was broken; three league wins in four signalled a slow and somewhat hesitant climb up the table and a productive Christmas saw Argyle looking at the possibilities above rather than below. 20 points from 12 games in February and March, including an astonishing 4-0 victory at eventual play-off winners Fleetwood Town, projected the Pilgrims to a play-off place, but it was all to no avail. A thoroughly disappointing final six weeks - 6 points from a possible 27 - left the manager openly criticising his players for a lack of pride and belief, and promising big changes ahead.

Amongst the disappointments of the season: the campaign-ending injury to Luke McCormick at the beginning of February (and the abuse he had to endure from some opposition supporters); the team's baffling tendency to step back from opportunity; and home form, which lived up to the frustration of recent seasons.

On the plus side: captain Conor Hourihane managed an impressive 53 starts (just one missed, through suspension) and Reuben Reid made an appearance in every game. Reid scored 21 goals, including the Pilgrims' first senior hat-trick for seven years, making him Argyle's first striker to beat the 20 mark since Tommy Tynan in 1988-89.  Then there was the loyalty and optimism of the travelling Green Army, which continued to astonish, and for the first time in a very long time there was apparent harmony in the boardroom and just one manager in charge for the whole the season.

In many ways the season ended as it began. On the pitch, instead of the opener's five debuts it was five farewells in the closing game, an entertaining 3-3 draw with Portsmouth in front of an impressive 18,000 at Fratton Park to secure a comfortable 10th place. Three days later, the retained list confirmed the release of seven, including former player-of-the-season Maxime Blanchard; Jake Cole, who played a huge part in he club's fight for survival; and perhaps the unluckiest of them all, Luke Young, with over 100 appearances for the club and still just 21.

Summer arrived again and the manager's main challenge was a significant turn-over of staff. Off the pitch, grandstand number three remained erect. Groundhog Summer? Perhaps, and for some, big questions remain, whilst for others there is a solid base upon which to build. Will 2014-15 be a landmark season for the Pilgrims or just another in a long line? Time will tell.

Arrivals: (came & went in italics)
Lewis Alessandra
Jason Banton
Hamza Bencherif
Andre Blackman
Dominic Blizzard
Rommy Boco
Paul Hayes
Caolan Lavery
Luke McCormick
Marvin Morgan
Tope Obadeyi (twice)
Matt Parsons
Jamie Reckord
Reuben Reid
Enoch Showunmi
Nathan Thomas
Neal Trotman.

Youth debuts: Ben Purrington.

 

Departures: (came & went in italics)
Hamza Bencherif
Andre Blackman
Maxime Blanchard
Rommy Boco
Guy Branston
Nick Chadwick
Jake Cole
Warren Feeney
Paul Hayes
Caolan Lavery
Tope Obadeyi (twice)
Matt Parsons
Jamie Reckord
Reuben Reid
Enoch Showunmi
Neal Trotman
Isaac Vassell
Luke Young.

SAVED FROM THE CHOP

Click on the icons below for photos, commentary clips and full match details of the games against
3-Cheltenham (A), 14-Mansfield (A), 22-Oxford (A), 32-Fleetwood (A), 33-Morecambe (H), 37-Chesterfield (H),
46-Portsmouth (A), FAC1R-Lincoln (H), FAC3-Port Vale (A).

Football League Two 2013-14

starting appearance   appearing substitute   goals   cautioned   sent off




Click on name
for pen picture





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L1L2J2C1JQ
9N Chadwick 1418200
7P Cowan-Hall 2817500
11W Feeney 1210300
10R Griffiths 710300
19J Lennox 69100
29T Harvey 29100
8L Young 288200
28R Murray 67100
27A Gurrieri 266200
18G Madjo 95300
21M Lecointe 44000
16J Lowry 74000
18C Ugwu 24000
14O Bhasera 433100
15P Wotton 182200
30M Molesley 42000
17C Nelson 302300
4M Blanchard 422100
32A MacDonald 152200
3R Williams 142300
26A Charles 92000
2D Berry 311000
22J Sims 11000
28R Gorman 31100
23J Richards 11000
1J Cole 351000
20R Gilmartin 160000
10L Cox 100000
19J Banton 140600
18L Soukouna 00000
18J Bryan 100100
25I Vassell 00000
6C Hourihane 470500
5D Purse 220000
5G Branston 190000
24J Copp 00000
24R Reid 180200
13O Chenoweth 00000
30R Jenkins 20100
33S Griffiths 60000
26J Harper-Penman 00000
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