28-08-2025, 13:45
![[Image: Screenshot-2025-08-28-122709.png]](https://i.ibb.co/Fk9Q2RKW/Screenshot-2025-08-28-122709.png)
Another local away match before the meaningless International weekend off, 4am alarm, 6.30 coach, every possibility it will be dark when we start and end the marathon trip.
Mates on holiday, so it's a solo journey.
https://www.portsmouthfc.co.uk/
MANAGER
John Michael Lewis Mousinho (born 30 April 1986) is an English professional football manager and former footballer. He is the head coach of EFL Championship club Portsmouth.
Mousinho began his professional football career at Brentford, having previously played for Chesham United and Notre Dame Fighting Irish, the latter whilst studying at the University of Notre Dame. He spent two and a half years at Brentford, before joining Wycombe Wanderers in June 2008 on a free transfer. Mousinho played regularly for Wycombe for two seasons, experiencing both a promotion and relegation during his time there. He signed for Stevenage in June 2010 on a two-year contract. In his first season, Mousinho helped the club earn the second of back-to-back promotions, scoring the decisive goal in the 2011 League Two play-off final, and finishing as the club's joint-top goalscorer for the season.
Following an injury-disrupted 2011–12 season, Mousinho left Stevenage and signed for Preston North End. In his final season at Preston, he was loaned out to Gillingham and then returned to Stevenage before being released and joining Burton Albion in June 2014. He made 127 appearances for Burton over three seasons, winning the League Two title in his first season and achieving promotion to the Championship a year later. In August 2017, he signed for Oxford United, where he made 151 appearances before retiring from playing in January 2023. Alongside his playing duties, Mousinho was elected as chairman of the PFA in May 2021, a position he held until January 2023, when he stepped down to take on his first managerial role, as head coach of League One club Portsmouth. He led the team to promotion to the Championship as champions of League One in the 2023–24 season.
![[Image: 500px-Mousinho.jpg]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/d/d3/Mousinho.jpg/500px-Mousinho.jpg)
SO FAR
![[Image: Screenshot-2025-08-28-123418.png]](https://i.ibb.co/S4Y9gBq2/Screenshot-2025-08-28-123418.png)
![[Image: Screenshot-2025-08-28-123630.png]](https://i.ibb.co/8gKymJx0/Screenshot-2025-08-28-123630.png)
NEWBIES
![[Image: Screenshot-2025-08-28-123755.png]](https://i.ibb.co/PZj8pgVH/Screenshot-2025-08-28-123755.png)
HISTORY
![[Image: 500px-HMS_warriorjune20092.jpg]](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/96/HMS_warriorjune20092.jpg/500px-HMS_warriorjune20092.jpg)
HMS Warrior is a 40-gun steam-powered armoured frigate[Note 1] built for the Royal Navy in 1859–1861. She was the name ship of the Warrior-class ironclads. Warrior and her sister ship HMS Black Prince were the first armour-plated, iron-hulled warships, and were built in response to France's launching in 1859 of the first ocean-going ironclad warship, the wooden-hulled Gloire. Warrior conducted a publicity tour of Great Britain in 1863 and spent her active career with the Channel Squadron. Obsolescent following the 1873 commissioning of the mastless and more capable HMS Devastation, she was placed in reserve in 1875, and was "paid off" – decommissioned – in 1883.
She subsequently served as a storeship and depot ship, and in 1904 was assigned to the Royal Navy's torpedo training school. The ship was converted into an oil jetty in 1927 and remained in that role until 1979, at which point she was donated by the Navy to The Maritime Trust for restoration. The restoration process took eight years, during which many of her features and fittings were either restored or recreated. When this was finished she returned to Portsmouth as a museum ship. Listed as part of the National Historic Fleet, Warrior has been based in Portsmouth since 1987.
T'OTHER GAMES
![[Image: Screenshot-2025-08-28-124337.png]](https://i.ibb.co/jP2JP0Gn/Screenshot-2025-08-28-124337.png)
Why should a man go to work, if he has the health and strength to stay in bed?