Port Vale Football Club is a football club in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent, England, which plays in League One, the third tier of the English football league system.
Port Vale is one of the few English league clubs not to be named after a geographical location, their name being a reference to the valley of ports on the Trent and Mersey Canal. They were founder members of the Second Division in 1892 and of the Fourth Division in 1958. After playing at the Athletic Ground in Cobridge and The Old Recreation Ground in Hanley, the club returned to Burslem when Vale Park was opened in 1950. Outside the ground is a statue to Roy Sproson who played 842 competitive games for the club.
The club greatest success was in the 1950s when they were FA Cup semi-finalists in 1954 and won two divisional titles with Freddie Steele's "Iron Curtain" defence and then Norman Low's more attacking style. John Rudge was manager from 1983 to 1999; under his leadership the club reached eighth in the second tier in the 1996–97 season. Since his reign the club have declined, slipping into the fourth tier whilst entering administration in 2003 and 2012. The decline was arrested when Paul Wildes and Norman Smurthwaite bought the club out of Administration in 2012 and manager Micky Adams achieved automatic promotion from League Two in the 2012–13 season.
If I had I drink... I'd drink it
If I had a drug... I'd take it
I'd do anything to peel away the pain I feel right now
It's a mild December 31
And snow cries hard onto flooded earth
But it can't compare to tear-soaked beds
Shared by forbidden lovers again
One more time: Before we fade away
And turn the page
One last time: With a final kiss
Remember this 12/31
Now I'm the one who sits alone
It's my fault I can't hold my own
You see I'm broken down and bleeding from a
Six month scab we peeled away tonight
In the years last hour
The swan song will fade at last
And I will sing no more