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Club News

ANDREW BENNETT 1959-2018

8 February 2018

Club News

ANDREW BENNETT 1959-2018

8 February 2018

100 Years of Coconuts’ obituary for Club Historian Andrew Bennett, who sadly passed away yesterday aged 58. Alongside 100 Years of Coconuts, the Club is planning a full tribute to mark its respects for Andrew’s fantastic contribution and love for Cambridge United, wholly guided by his family’s feelings.

It is with immense sadness that 100 Years of Coconuts passes on the news of the death on Wednesday, 7 February 2018, at the age of 58, of Andrew Bennett, Cambridge United supporter, club historian and writer extraordinary.

Andrew became known to the wider U’s fanbase through his brilliantly written match reports, compiled almost totally from memory and first published online in the late 1990s. His death came at a time when the third print volume of his magnum opus, the definitive history of Abbey/Cambridge United, titled Celery & Coconuts, was moving into production for autumn publication. 

Typically, despite suffering from a long illness that necessitated lengthy periods of debilitating treatment, he finished the manuscript long before deadline, and had already prepared future volumes.

Born in Kingston upon Thames, Surrey in 1959, Andrew moved with his family to Cambridgeshire when he was very young. The Bennetts lived in several villages before settling in Histon, where Andrew lived for the rest of his life.

After gaining A levels in English and French at Netherhall School in Cambridge, he embarked on a 33-year career with the National Westminster Bank. Following redundancy from NatWest in 2012, he started work in earnest on Celery & Coconuts, which continued after he secured a job as a porter at Selwyn College in 2014.

Football, and Cambridge United in particular, was one of Andrew’s great passions; a vast music collection testifies to another.  While one room of the house he shared with his mother, Joyce, was filled with shelves, racks and cabinets of carefully sorted CDs and vinyl discs, another contained an astonishing collection of U’s memorabilia and programmes. He was a meticulous and thorough keeper of records and statistics, a trait that led to him being named United’s club historian in the summer of 2017.

His father was ‘not much of a football fan’ in Andrew’s recollection, but he nevertheless took the young man to watch United and Cambridge City on alternate Saturdays. There was never any question that he would become a City fan, however. His first U’s match came on 13 April 1970, when United beat Gloucester City 3-0.

He recalled last year that his first favourite United player was the fleet-footed winger Peter Leggett. ‘My favourite footballer at the time was George Best, so naturally United’s version, Peter Leggett, with his Peter Wyngarde/Jason King droopy moustache, made the biggest impact on me in my early days as a United fan,’ he said. ‘Then came Brian Greenhalgh, and later there were the great 70s sides with the likes of Steve Spriggs, Steve Fallon and Alan Biley.’ Leggett was the provider for George Harris, Bill Cassidy and Malcolm Lindsay in that 1970 win over Gloucester. Andrew’s attendance at that match was followed by countless others, at home and far afield, over the ensuing decades.

The rise in the 1990s of the internet, and its opportunities for expression and communication, gave Andrew an outlet for his gift for entertaining and illuminating writing. Encouraged by editor Andrea Thrussell, he started to contribute his inimitable match reports to the unofficial United website and the Moosenet news group, and they soon won legions of fans.

Tellingly accurate, captivatingly written and often laugh-out-loud funny, the reports related the exploits of the likes of Le Dieu du But (Lionel Perez), Terrier Fleming and Captain Fantastic (Paul Wanless). Many readers looked forward eagerly to attempting Dancing Shaun (Marshall)’s Dance of the Week.

More recently published on social media by 100 Years of Coconuts – of whose management committee he was a dedicated and valued member – Andrew’s reports were followed by regular articles for the United programme, contributions to the Coconuts website and, latterly, Celery & Coconuts, whose first two volumes – Newmarket Road Roughs and Risen from the Dust – have met with critical acclaim.

The result of tremendous dedication and many long hours of research in the Cambridgeshire Collection and elsewhere, Celery & Coconuts – whose publication will continue – will stand as a tribute to a kind, devoted, brilliant and unimaginably brave man.

His long battle against cancer was fought with unfailing cheerfulness and resolute determination. Coconuts will communicate funeral arrangements when they are to hand.


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