Monday 31/08 – Midland League Division 3 (Step 9, sort of)
Boldmere Sports and Social Falcons 3 Smithswood Firs 4Admission free, programme no, very welcome cuppa coffee 60p and bag of crisps 70p
Attendance – 22
If you imagine the non-league footwall scene as a village pond, last Saturday we were floating with the dragonflies. This afternoon, we are down at the bottom with the mud-worms ...
On a rainy Bank Holiday Monday, I decided to "stay local" and knock off the nearest ground in the non-league pyramid to the Nest that I hadn't previously visited. What I hadn't reckoned on was (a) a Sunday bus service so it took me well over an hour to meander two and a half miles (as the crow flies) to the Boldmere Sports and Social Club and (b) that the predicted easing of the rain wouldn't occur by 3:00. There is nothing like standing in incessant drizzle at the side of a railed field with absolutely no cover wondering whatever possessed you to choose this particular venue. As I remarked to the nearside linesman, a 40-something-yo Asian gentleman, before the game got under way: "We must be mad". He just grinned.
Up the driveway between two houses on the Boldmere Road (and I walked straight past it first time of asking), stands the old timbered social club, with its polystyrene ceiling tiles and disco glitterball, which was open for business. Next is a newer brick-built clubhouse / bar, which was closed, and the changing rooms, and walking on, you pass a small-size netted artificial pitch, and then arrive at the main grass pitch, which slopes slightly between the goals; there’s a grassy area to the right which I think used to be a junior pitch but isn’t now, and the Cross City railway line runs along the far side. The social club (opened by Sir Norman Fowler in 1987) was doing quite a good trade, and not all in relation to the soccer.
Boldmere Sports and Social Falcons have, I believe, been going for a number of years as a junior boys club with a Birmingham AFA affiliated adult side, but a couple of seasons back took the plunge to enter a Saturday team at the bottom of the pyramid which means in theory they could be hosting Manchester City in around 20 years time, given the requisite number of promotions. Smithswood Firs started their journey to fame in 2008, again in the Birmingham AFA. Neither side has much of a social media presence, so I'm not too sure of the history.
The game itself was a cracker, and had virtually everything. Smithswood served early intent with a Weeks shot narrowly wide, and then ran up a 0-3 lead in the first 17m – a Thomas drive from the edge of the area (10m) before Russell rounded the defence on the left at some speed and swept the ball home (14m), and the same player repeated the move three minutes later, only this time it seemed Lynch put Russell’s shot into his own net (although FullTime, the FA-run non-league results service, credits it to Russell). Boldmere made a tactical substitution to steady their midfield and the game was flowing quite evenly until 38m when Firs’ Thomas fell awkwardly in a tackle, resulting in a lengthy delay while he was helped off the pitch. Boldmere pulled a goal back through Tydlacka on the stroke of halftime.
The injury was serious enough for an ambulance to be summoned, which turned up by the end of half-time, and there was a further delay whilst the injured player was attended to by the dugout, and given a pain reliever before being wheeled off. We restarted the game 21 minutes down, with Boldmere immediately aggrieved that they weren’t awarded a penalty. Chances abounded at both ends. Boldmere defender O’Connor cleared a corner by heading it off the underside of his own bar before the home team pulled a goal back with a beautiful direct free kick from Leeney that faded into the top nearside corner of the net (56m) and equalised through a weaving O’Neale run through the middle and cool finish (61m).
The game could have gone either way at this stage, but Firs clinched the points when Russell repeated his first half feat of rounding the back of the defence and lashing home a drive that left the Boldmere keeper grasping at thin air (69m). The match finished with Boldmere laying seige to the Firs goal in search of an equaliser, but it never came.
Home for a quick meal and then …
Monday 31/08 @ 19:45 - Evo-stik Northern League Division 1 South (Step 4)
Romulus 1 Chasetown 2Admission: £4 Programme: £2 (40pp glossy, and immeasurably better in both content and presentation than in previous seasons. Immeasurably!) Refreshments: none
Attendance: 103 (league website)
A “now’t on the telly” match tonight; I couldn't be bothered to watch that Lenny Henry thing, so a late decision to trundle down to my local Step 4 ground, Sutton Coldfield Town, to see tenants Romulus FC take on local rivals Chasetown, which turned out to be quite an entertaining affair.
There is a huge contrast between landlords Sutton Coldfield Town ("The Royals", founded 1879) and tenants Romulus ("The Roms", founded 1979). The stewards at the former once nearly threw me out of the ground when I challenged their admission policy of concessions for females at 60 and males at 65 on Sexual Discrimination grounds. Absolutely no sense of humour.
On the other hand, the Roms are the only club who have ever given me a complimentary bowl of fruit salad for attending a game (some muck-up with event caterers, and they had a mountain to dispose of ...)
The only major close-season improvement work at Coles Lane appears to be a properly laid out car park with bays, arrows and no-entry signs, replacing the previous free-for-all. The Royals will probably be employing their own traffic wardens, mind ..
Chasetown were 0-1 up in 8m with a fine opportunist goal from James Dance. The Roms keeper parried a cross and Dance, back to the goal, had the presence of mind and skill to hook the bouncing ball smartly over his shoulder and into the net. Plenty of cut and thrust in a quick-fire first half, but no further score.
Roms equalised on 48m through MacDonald, the keeper possibly losing sight of a scudding shot. But Chasetown won it with an emphatic 57m Dance penalty after Evans had bundled over an attacker on the bye-line. Roms pressed, but Chasetown held on competently to the end of the game. Neither side will probably set the division alight, but it's early days yet.