it25/08 – It’s not often that you find an Ostrich at what you might call a non-Non League match.
The last time Ossie ventured out to a “proper” Football League game was back in April 2016 with a visit to Crewe Alexandra, but this week, well, needs must as there has been a complete dearth of interesting evening fixtures in the area, and now’t on TV, so on Tuesday, the bird decided to wander across the border into Somerset for a Division 2 encounter between Yeovil Town and Oldham Athletic!
It’s difficult driving to Huish Park at the moment as there’s heavy roadworks and lane closures from the end of the Cartgate link road (which takes you from the A303 into Yeovil), up past the crematorium and the big trading estate, almost up to the ground itself. Like all good roadworks, they seem to have been going on for ever, but noticeably on this visit, the cones had multiplied considerably, and certain sections of what is usually a busy road had been reduced to one-way traffic. That was OK as the one way was the way I was going, but it left me with some nasty questions about how I was going to get back home. Pulling up at the booth in the stadium car park to pay my £3 parking charge, I asked the guys how best to drive out at the end of the match.
“Where you want to go to?”
“Gillingham.”
“Um …”
“It’s in Dorset. North Dorset.”
“Err ….”
“The A303!”
“Ah! When you leave the car park, go THAT way”
And they both pointed in different directions ….
So I parked up and asked a couple who parked next to me the same question.
“You know the double roundabout?”
“Sorry, no I don’t.”
“Well when you find it, go straight across …”
Eventually, I elicited that it was a question of skirting the northern edge of the town (Thorne Lane, which I vaguely remembered from when we used to live down here years ago, but it was countryside in those days, and it’s all part of a brand new housing development now) to get across to the A37 and rejoining the A303 at Ilchester.
This being a "proper" football match, and as I had had no intention of booking on line, I had to obtain a Match Ticket from a Match Ticket Office, which was easy enough once I’d wandered around to the other side of the ground where the Admin Offices are, and this helpfully told me I was allocated Seat 3 in Row H of Block L, but it was only after several minutes' searching in the (very) small print at the bottom that it told me I had to use Turnstile 9, which was right in the opposite corner of the stadium! So back I went, only to be met by a phalanx of security guards, and as it was a slow evening, I was told:
“Empty your pockets!”
“OK, right. Here’s the match programme. And here’s a piece of paper I use to record the scores. And here’s a biro to write on the piece of paper. Do you mind holding them for me?”
Non-plussed security guard holds out his hands.
“Thank you. Now here’s another biro which I will use in case the first one doesn’t work. And here’s my car keys. And here’s all my loose change. Shall I count it out for you?”
The other security guards start to fall about laughing ….
“OK, OK. That’s fine. Turnstile’s over there ….”
It was quite a reasonable seat on the half-way line (although I inadvertently sat in Block M at first, which was next to the Oldham fans – my mistake). They made plenty of noise and had quite a decent drummer, rather than the usual moronic and tuneless thumping you usually get. The ground was about half full, but as it’s a smallish stadium, there was plenty of atmosphere. But as for the match …. well, my first 0-0 of the season, but nevertheless, it was quite a decent game which could have gone either way (mind you, I got nicely taken to task when I posted a short but positive report about it on the non-league internet forum I frequent, as it so happened three other forum members had also attended the game, and had considered it rubbish!
). Anyway, there was a lot of neat, tricksy play and individual skills on display from both sides for the first 35 minutes, after which it did get decidedly scrappy before the interval and we had a fair few stoppages for injuries. Interestingly, the same young lass accompanied both trainers onto the field when they were summoned, and I’m wondering if she was providing some sort of independent medical assessment regarding head injuries, perhaps?
Yeovil, with the outstanding Sessi D’Almeida patrolling midfield, had had the majority of attacking play in the first half, but ran up against a solid Oldham defence. Oldham played more positively in the second half, and at the end of the day, well deserved their point. Their best chance came when Dan Gardner turned outside his defender and unleashed a thunderous 15 yard shot that cannoned back off the post, whilst Yeovil’s Omar Sowunmi rose high to connect with a free kick into the box but placed his header just wide. In a frantic last 5 minutes, Oldham scrambled one off their line, but a Yeovil winner at that point would have been a bit of a travesty.
Football League 2: Yeovil Town 0 Oldham Athletic 0
Admission:
£20 oldie concession, matchday price, for a seat in the Screwfix stand.
Programme: £2, and on sale outside the ground. 48pp glossy, perhaps a bit light-weight on content, more a sort of community magazine, but all the basics, nevertheless. Some clubs are now dispensing with paper programmes and moving them on-line, but Yeovil are committed to issuing printed programmes, and apparently at the first two home games this season, they sold out.
Refreshments: £6 discounted meal deal, which seemed the best solution given Yeovil’s somewhat overpriced fayre. You get a pasty, drink, choc bar and crisps, for about £2 less than what you would have paid individually. The crisps were Burts, which are not a patch on Walkers, and the coffee was execrable.
Attendance: 2,904 including 262 away fans (announced)
To Saturday, then, and a pensive Ostrich was counting up his fevvers. The club crest of today’s visitors, Saltash United, from just across the River Tamar by Plymouth, apparently incorporates the town heraldic seal of a lion rampant, a crown, and a couple of ostrich feathers! Something to do with the Duchy of Cornwall, it is said, and our elderly Ossie can ill afford to lose any more.
The home team was Westbury United, whom we have already met on a few occasions in these reports, and the encounter an FA Cup tie, which does sometimes result in the otherwise reclusive South West Peninsula League teams venturing as far west as Wiltshire. So a game of some interest to the non-league aficionado.
I set off for Westbury’s ground reasonably early, thinking I might encounter holiday traffic hold-ups on the A350, (which runs from Poole / Bournemouth north through Shaftesbury and Westbury to the M4), but although traffic was heavy, it was flowing quite steadily. On arrival, the gates were open, but unmanned, and the ground appeared deserted
- after wandering around a bit, I managed to find a couple of the Westbury players and confirmed the match was on. About 20 minutes later, while the gates were still unmanned, and the bar still closed up, a coach load of fans arrived from Cornwall and started piling into the ground – cue a lot of running around by the couple of Westbury officials who had turned up to get things organised and collect the admission money!
Well, we eventually got a reasonably entertaining game without hitting any great heights. The result flattered Westbury, really; Saltash gave the home defence a good work-out in the first half and Westbury’s attacking options seemed to consist of hoofing the ball upfield without any great cohesion amongst the frontrunners. Nevertheless, Westbury took the lead deep into stoppage time before the half-time interval when from a direct free kick, Kovacs forced the ball into the net during a goalmouth melee.
Substitute Ferguson came onto the field on 51m, and cleverly poached Westbury’s second which sparked a fairly wild goal celebration. It also killed off the match as Saltash never looked like getting back into it after that, and Allen’s persistence in following up a defensive blunder which left Saltash’s keeper exposed sealed the win just before the end.
FA Cup Preliminary Round: Westbury United 3 Saltash United 0
Admission: £3 concession. programme: £1
Refreshments: 2 reasonably tasty pasties @ £1.50 each, but one was only half-heated up properly, and service in the tea hut could be best described as languid …...
Attendance: 160