To get in touch, please write to contact@greensonscreen.co.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 2012-13

npower Football League Two

 Final Points: 52  Position: 21

Player of the Year: Onismor Bhasera

 Young Player: Conor Hourihane

THE SEASON IN PICTURES

A selection of 100 photos from over 5,600 in this year's match pages, telling the story of the season.

Home Park's summer of 2012 began with the visit of a flame lit by the rays of the sun at the site of ancient Olympia, said to be a symbol of purity and endeavour for perfection. Fine words butter no parsnips, as they say, but at least a corner had been turned and there was a real sense of optimism amongst Argyle fans over the summer months. Administration was a thing of the past; Akkeron were at the helm for their first full season and James Brent had set a budget to suit a play-off push.

Two 5-0 defeats in pre-season friendly matches were a sobering reminder that optimism would not be enough, but a convincing win in the first game of the season, unusually the opening League Cup fixture, lifted spirits. It wasn't to last; two wins in the following 11 matches set the scene for the struggle to follow. Six points in succession helped to steady the nerves, but a period of one draw and seven games lost, including the ignominy of defeat at the hands of 6th-tier Dorchester Town in a televised FA Cup tie, saw mounting pressure as December arrived.

By New Year's Day, Carl Fletcher's side had managed just seven points out of a possible 39 - relegation form by anyone's standards - and it came as no surprise that the first game of the new year was Fletcher's last, although for the manager to announce his own sacking at the post-match press conference was unusual to say the least, and equally poignant.

A new manager was appointed within five days. With a long career in the game, both as a combative midfielder and a manager with a proven track record in the lower divisions, John Sheridan's honesty and plain speaking quickly endeared him to the faithful. The battle ahead - to avoid the drop - was all that mattered, although other issues emerged for some - the new grandstand plans proved to be controversial and the prolonged delay in appointing a new Chief Executive was little short of a mystery.

After victory in his first game, Sheridan quietly set about the task ahead. Four wins out of a possible six in March was more like the form to match the supposed playing budget, but sadly other sides had the same idea, and as the final weeks drew near, there could only be one focus: Football League survival. The scramble at the bottom was intense and the usual 50-point safety line seemed unlikely to apply this time, and so it proved.

If the FA Cup tie at Dorchester was the low point of the season, then the penultimate away game - victory at Chesterfield - was probably the most significant. The three points gained after an inspirational performance was almost enough, but as many had predicted and most had feared, the fate of Plymouth Argyle and six other sides would be decided on the last Saturday of the season. Thankfully, despite defeat at Rochdale, the Pilgrims survived, albeit with just a point to spare. So the club  finished in its lowest-ever place in the Football League - 89th - a position equalled only once. Unsurprisingly, that was last season.

For the second consecutive campaign, Argyle's League survival was in doubt right up to the wire. The summer of 2013 will nevertheless be like its predecessor; the recent past will be put to one side and optimism will build as the manager forms his own team, not to mention a buzz of anticipation as the formal plans for the development of Higher Home Park are scrutinised. For any number of reasons, including the position of TV cameras and the siting of the great and the good, 2013-14 is likely be a very different season. But one part of the furniture will be sorely missed; after 13 years of loyal service, Romain Larrieu's release marked the end of an era. It is such a shame that the timing, no doubt affected by the angst on the pitch, did not afford him a proper and deserved send-off.

Arrivals: (came & went in italics) Jason Banton, Guy Branston, Joe Bryan, Anthony Charles, Paris Cowan-Hall, Lee Cox, Rene Gilmartin, Johnny Gorman, Rhys Griffiths, Scott Griffiths, Andres Gurrieri, Ross Jenkins, Jamie Lowry, Alex MacDonald, Guy Madjo, Mark Molesley, Ronan Murray, Reuben Reid, Gozie Ugwu

Youth debuts: Tyler Harvey, Jamie Richards

Departures: (came & went in italics) Jason Banton, Joe Bryan, Anthony Charles, Ollie Chenoweth, Jordan Copp, Lee Cox, Johnny Gorman, Rhys Griffiths, Scott Griffiths, Jed Harper-Penman, Ross Jenkins, Joe Lennox, Jamie Lowry, Alex MacDonald, Guy Madjo, Mark Molesley, Ronan Murray, Darren Purse, Reuben Reid, Jared Sims, Ladjie Soukouna, Gozie Ugwu, Simon Walton, Robbie Williams

SAVED FROM THE CHOP

Click on the icons below for photos, commentary clips and full match details of the games against
4-Northampton (H), 8-Morecambe (A), 12-Barnet (A), 22-Exeter (A), 24-Torquay (H), 28-Morecambe (H),
35-Barnet (H), 39-Southend (A), 40-Exeter (H), 44 Chesterfield (A), 46-Rochdale (A), FAC1-Dorchester (A).

Football League Two 2012-13

starting appearance   appearing substitute   goals   cautioned   sent off




Click on name
for pen picture





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L1J1C1C1
1R Larrieu 102000
2D Berry 333000
3R Williams 300200
4C Fletcher 111200
5S King 60000
5D Purse 240200
5S Zubar 50000
6C Nelson 201000
7L Daley 174200
8S Walton 405800
9J Tsoumou 47200
10S Fletcher 24000
10T Hitchcock 55000
10C Sutherland 54100
11W Feeney 273300
13L Soukouna 175100
14O Bhasera 263200
15L Young 217200
17J Sims 40000
18J Copp 01000
19B Gibson 151000
19P Wotton 180100
20C Hourihane 366200
21W Atkinson 232400
21J Lennox 26000
22M Blanchard 280200
22J Griffiths 45000
23J Cole 390000
24I Vassell 08000
27M Lecointe 913200
28P Bignot 160000
29N Chadwick 193500
31A Hemmings 185200
32A MacDonald 153400
33O Chenoweth 10000
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