03/11 - Deciding from the write-up that the new psychological crime thriller “Dark Heart” was too gruesome for the tastes of Mrs O and myself
, I made a last minute decision on Wednesday to wander over to Westbury for an evening game in the Western League’s equivalent of the “League Cup”. The trophy is named after a former Chairman of the league, Les Phillips, who passed away in 1988 – a real character, apparently, who did much to keep the league afloat financially by arranging sponsorship deals with both Rothmans (presumably the cigarette manufacturers) and Great Mills (DIY stores). The attraction of this Halloween match was in the opposition, Odd Down, not a team I’d seen play before.
Odd Down like to be known as Odd Down (Bath).
I’m not entirely sure why; after all, there is only one Odd Down anywhere in the country that I can find, so I’m unsure who they worry they might be mistaken for. Possibly Huddersfield.
Odd Down is indeed a small community on the edge of southern Bath - it hosts part of the Wansdyke medieval earthwork, which is an At-Risk Ancient Monument, being in an “unsatisfactory condition” apparently due to gardening ….. (!).
Odd Down also sports a massive Park and Ride serving the City, which is soon to introduce a swingeing congestion charge scheme, effectively ruling out all vehicles from its polluted centre other than, as far as I can see, rickshaws and tandems.
This cup tie matched rampant top-of-the-table Westbury with a rather ordinary middle-of-the-road side, and what we got was not a thrashing but a completely unexpected result - a salutary lesson to all programme editors that making comments like “I think this season represents a very good chance to win our first ever [insert name of cup here]” is very much tempting fate!
We kicked off and Odd Down promptly lit the afterburners, whizzing round the field like a team possessed.
Westbury looked completely rattled at times and found it difficult to make any headway - towards the end of the first half, the home management team were calling for more composure and less whinging
. Odd Down had already taken the lead with a close range effort from Williams (13m) and what had initially threatened to be a 100mph game of aerial hoofball had mercifully subsided into something a bit more entertaining.
Odd Down’s second goal looked like it was scored directly from a corner (68m), Westbury’s no.5 received a straight red for a head-down shoulder barge nine minutes later, and Odd Down completed the scoring with a soft penalty shortly thereafter. Deserved win for the Bath side, and a night Westbury will want to forget!
To complete the spooky Halloween theme, travelling home at night through the Deverills, a ghostly white apparition suddenly appeared in the headlights, lifted off a fence post, and disappeared over a hedge. Thinking about it, it’s many years since I’ve seen a barn owl in the wild ….
Les Phillips Cup Round 1: Westbury United 0 Odd Down (Bath) 3
Admission £4 concession.
Refreshments: No hot food available tonight, so just tea inna mug £1.
Attendance: 64, including a number of footballing “anoraks” from “oop north”, judging by the conversation.
To Saturday, and since I last visited the Specsavers County Ground, home of the Dorset FA and Hamworthy United FC back in February, they have completed the extension to the clubhouse, relayed and extended the patio smoking area, posted signs up saying they are in consultation with Poole District Council to ban smoking even from that
, and either put in (or refurbished) a proper turnstile block next to the old entrance; it was in use today and I’ve not been aware of it before. In anticipation of a large crowd (which didn’t materialise), I arrived early to secure parking, being a bit limited on-site, caught the last 5 minutes of some U-13s game between Dorset and Wiltshire on the 3G artificial pitch, and then adjourned to the bar for the reasonably entertaining AFC Bournemouth v Manchester United showing on the widescreen.
Today’s visitors were Falmouth Town for an FA Vase cup tie, who had apparently travelled up yesterday and stayed in the area overnight. On the pitch, they were a slight disappointment given their hyped-up credentials – currently 2nd in the reclusive South West Peninsula League Premier Division, scoring an average of over 3 goals a game so far this season, and 0-6 demolishers of Bridport FC in West Dorset in the last round. Hamworthy, who aren’t having a particularly good season this year by their own standards, certainly handled them efficiently in a goalless first half that didn’t generate a lot of action, although the home side’s Chris Senior did have to hook one bouncing ball off the line. And a slightly whistle-happy referee didn’t help matters either.
Falmouth eventually opened the scoring on 62m when Jordon Annear neatly tucked a cross in at the near post. I’ve had to confirm that he was the scorer off Twitter, because Falmouth’s shirt design incorporates numbers which are displayed in outline, rather than block, and being grey on yellow
, were consequentially difficult to identify.
My initial reaction was that Hamworthy wouldn’t have the wherewithal to get back into the game, but two judicious substitutions on 72m, introducing Dan Cann and River Smith up front, changed all that. Walker scrambled the equaliser on 86m, which might have been helped in by the away keeper and / or a defender, to take us into 30 minutes’ extra time, and by that point Hamworthy were beginning to stamp their authority on the game. Cann made it 2-1 on 94m, the ball seemingly taking a heavy deflection past the keeper, and a Walker penalty on 111m after Smith had been brought down in the area sealed the result.
A good, workmanlike victory at the end of the day for the Hammers in a game that, for me, never quite hit the heights.
FA Vase Round 2: Hamworthy United 3 Falmouth Town 1 (after extra time, 1-1 at 90m).
Admission £5 including programme.
Refreshments: Freshly-cooked chips (which meant they were (a) too hot and (b) somewhat underdone) £2, plus a passable chicken and mushroom pie £3 from the kitchen.
Attendance: 139