Stage: Leeds, NME/Radio 1
Time: Saturday 4.20pm
Dress code: Sharply-combed fringes and sleeveless T-shirts for the band, apart from singer Tom Clarke, who's in a blouson jacket. Jumpers for the crowd - it's turned cold and cloudy overnight.
In summary: Another band who are big with the kids and, therefore pack out the second-biggest stage. The Coventry teenagers sing angry songs about small-town life. Clarke is the focal point, gesticulating like a Gallagher and singing in a voice more than vaguely reminiscent of a young Paul Weller.
Highlight: The set peaks early on with Had Enough. "I want to see every fucking hand in the air" orders Clarke in exactly the same way as he did at Reading yesterday. The crowd oblige. It's a great tune with a bit more variation than a lot of the Enemy's material. The two-part chorus has everyone hurling out "had enough! had enough!", even though they don't mean it.
Better than: The Horrors, whose spooky punk posing attracted barely half the crowd of Clarke and co. The Enemy's furious, gobby, but ultimately self-confident music strikes a real chord with an audience of their peers.
Worse than: The Jam. He can nick his vocal stylings, but Clarke can't yet write a melody like Paul Weller.
Talking point: Bassist Andy Hopkins is forced off stage after a quick stage dive ends in aggro from security who won't let him back on. He storms back on eventually, after leaving Clarke and drummer Liam Watts to busk through two-thirds of a song by themselves, and bellows into the mic, "If that had happened on the street, I would have had you ... [quotation curtailed for reasons of foul language]."
Where they'll be next year: It all depends on how their second album ("out next June" trails Clarke) goes down.
Mark out of 10: 6