25/11 – An inauspicious week
, but it ended well!
Firstly, both Mrs O and I are avid readers and have been happy, over the past year, to donate close on (I reckon) £200 worth of pristine hardback and paperback books to the local library. However, taking the latest donations down there on Monday, I was told they were no longer wanted. Fair enough, that’s their prerogative, but the manner in which I was told was, shall we say, not exactly forthcoming
. So, their loss, and we’ll make alternative arrangements in future – there’s at least two local villages where the old red telephone kiosks have been turned into “local libraries”, and of course there’s also the charity shops.
The next disaster was Wednesday evening – a Wessex League Cup Round 2 tie for the Ostrich, and third time unlucky this season as I failed to get that all-important crucial winning injury-time goal ….. and thus had to succumb to a live penalty shoot-out for only the second time in my career!
The match was again up at Shaftesbury; lower-ranked Fawley, from the Southampton area, had the better of the first half, bossing midfield and the Rockies found it rather difficult to get to grips with the game. As early as the 3rd minute, Fawley bounced one off the top of the bar, and they also had a sharp header cleared off the line after 21m.
This was followed by a more even second half in which Shaftesbury hit the bar and then had the ball deflected over the top in a 50th minute goalmouth melee, but otherwise chances were few and far between and the main action on the field was a slightly over-exuberant referee booking 6 players.
So, to the dreaded spot-kicks
. Shaftesbury’s first penalty came back off the bar and their fourth was parried away by the keeper. Fawley converted all their four penalties relatively easily to win the tie. Still, I guess if it hadn’t been for the penalty shoot-out, this would have been one of those unmemorable games quickly consigned to the history books, so one must be grateful for small mercies.
Thursday brought an unwelcome phone-call from the insurance brokers chasing documents we sent them back in September and which one can only conclude hadn’t arrived or they’d lost.
I wasn’t very happy about it, and I eventually told them I’d hand deliver replacements on Friday. Which entailed a 80 mile round trip to the other side of the county – Bridport – but we did get to go down to West Bay (Broadchurch, of course
) to see the sea and drink coffee in the Crab and Lobster, although Mrs O was less than impressed at having to walk on shingle wearing her new boots!
Saturday dawned, and Ossie emerged for today’s jaunt wearing full protective clothing and a face veil!
Why? Because we were going Up the Nest to see the Hornets!!
Hornets RUFC’s’ ground is situated in Hutton Moor Road just off the A370 on the eastern outskirts of Weston-super-Mare. Travelling from North Dorset, I opted for the A371 via Wells, Cheddar and Banwell, but it’s a pig of a road with numerous speed restrictions and narrow points, and another time when travelling to that part of Somerset, I might consider the A303, Taunton and the M5, despite the considerable extra mileage. On entering Weston-super-Mare, you pass the Helicopter Museum, which rather menacingly has what I suspect is a Rapier missile battery pointed at the main road
, and take the A370 towards town over the Flowerdown Bridge. At the next roundabout – Hutton Moor – bear left staying on the A370 and immediately scissor across into the outside lane of the dual carriageway so you can pick up the slip-road signposted for the Hutton Moor Sports Centre at the next lights. Turning off the A370, you’ll see the rugby ground immediately on your right, and the car park entrance is just past the next roundabout. The Sports Centre’s on the other side of the road.
The pay station is at the gate, and there’s a good amount of parking leading down towards the clubhouse, which is spacious and unpretentious; a club lunch (for past Colts team members) in progress when I arrived. There are two pitches running parallel to each other, both floodlit, and the main pitch, closest to the entrance, has an artificial playing surface, only the second rugby union one I’ve come across, I think, after Loughborough University. A small, modern-looking corrugated-iron stand (no seats!) provides an elevated view from the half way line, and a video platform scaffolding construction lies next to it. Between the stand and the entrance is a small refreshment hut dispensing pasties and drinks, and an electronic scoreboard resides in the clubhouse corner. It looked like they were having some fun programming it before the start (they had to omit the “K” in Bracknell to make it fit the display!
) , but it worked perfectly during the game.
Hornets are the newcomers in town, founded as a community club in 1962; in contrast Weston-super-Mare RFC have been around for 142 years. They are both, however, in the same division, and the first of the season’s local derbies is scheduled for next Saturday. Hornets are currently bottom of the table, so today was very much a must-win fixture against fellow strugglers Bracknell (10th ex 14). The home side looked fine going forward but the basic problem is tackling in defence. Bracknell made more than a few surging runs during the first half, the 3G pitch being ideal for a fast-paced handling game. Hornets opened the scoring with a short-range dive-over on 4m, but by the 10th minute were 7-12 in arrears as defensive coverage failed and Bracknell exploited the gaps. The hosts quickly pulled back a penalty, game on, and then spent the remainder of the half pounding the Bracknell line, utilising superior drive in the scrum, and some pretty deft close passing. Bracknell couldn’t hold out, and two rapid converted tries around the half-hour mark, with a further score just before the interval, made it 29-12 at half-time.
Just after the restart, Hornets opted for an easy penalty in front of the posts to put further distance between them and their opponents, and then elected for consolidation rather than flamboyance
. Bracknell never got back into contention, and Hornets ran out comfortable winners. An enjoyable end to the week on a sunny but cold day, when the shelter of the stand from the stiff westerly breeze was very welcome …..
South West Premier (Level 5): Hornets RUFC 42 Bracknell RUFC 17
Admission: £5 (non -member), programme: included with admission (28 pp glossy, excellent value – all the basics plus a recent history of Bracknell and a few quirky articles besides)
Refreshments: £3.65 for an OJ and two well-filled buns, (ham salad and pulled pork – finger lickin’ good!
) from the bar, £1.70 for a tray of fairly run-of-the-mill chips from the kitchen hatch. They had a huge array of dressings you could put on your chips, unfortunately I piled on the American Mustard and subsequently regretted it
), attendance: 151