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Football: Bay hoping to make it three out of three; UNIBOND LEAGUE.


WITH two big wins already this season over Warrington Town, Gary Finley's Colwyn Bay Colwyn Bay (kôl`wĭn), Welsh Bae Colwyn, town (1991 pop. 27,002), Conwy, N Wales. It is a popular seaside resort. Colwyn Bay has an amusement park, several theaters, a zoo, a botanic garden, and the Pwllychrochan Woods.  side will aim for a third at Cantilever Park Cantilever Park is the home of Warrington Town Football Club who play in the Northern Premier League Division One. The ground has a capacity of 3,500 and can seat up to 500 under the famous Cantilever Stand (from which the ground takes its name).  tonight (7.45pm), writes Mike McEvoy.

Bay thrashed the Wire 7-1 at home on New Year's Day New Year's Day, among ancient peoples the first day of the year frequently corresponded to the vernal or autumnal equinox, or to the summer or winter solstice. In the Middle Ages it was celebrated among Christians usually on Mar. 25. , following on from a 4-0 victory against the Cheshire outfit at Llanelian Road Llanelian Road is a multi-use stadium in Colwyn Bay, Wales. It is currently used mostly for football matches and is the home ground of Colwyn Bay F.C.. The stadium holds 2,500 people and was built in 1984 after the club moved from their former home in Eirias Park. .

"They were two great results, but tonight is a different game as we haven't played them at their place yet," said Finley.

There is a doubt over Colwyn centre-half James Glendenning, who went off injured in the second half of Saturday's 2-1 victory over Gresley Rovers.

Kyle Armstrong is expected to replace him in central defence, partnering Chris Taylor who was red-carded against Gresley but whose subsequent suspension is not expected to apply immediately.

The win against third-placed Gresley, which shifted the Bay up to nth and still in sight of the play-offs with plenty of games in hand on their rivals, will have boosted confidence.

"I thought we battled really well after losing our two central defenders and going down to 10," said Finley. "We were hanging on a bit towards the end, but deserved to win for the commitment we showed."

And Finley added the Bay could still push for promotion.

"Even if we manage to win three-quarters of our games in hand, we can still get right up there," he said.

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Colwyn Bay boss Gary Finley
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Title Annotation:Sport
Publication:Daily Post (Liverpool, England)
Date:Jan 29, 2008
Words:234
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