Saturday 24/10 – National League 2 North (Level 4)
Luctonians RUFC 8 Macclesfield RUFC 26Admission £10 (including programme), coffee £1.50, small but tasty pasty at half-time £2.
Attendance – I’d say around 350
Late October and with the onset of winter (and early kick-offs because most rugby union clubs don’t have floodlit first team pitches), it’s time to start the Ostrich's assault on the five remaining teams I need to see in this division, and consider the vexed question of the Macclesfield Blues, number 20 on this season’s hit-list. I had wondered about travelling to see them play Sandal at home in November, killing two birds with one stone, but I’m not sure I want to drive 60-odd miles up a road-work strewn M6 followed by an overland hike through unfamiliar territory in Cheshire – this is only a hobby, after all, and sometimes discretion must take the better part of valour!
So, a quick re-jig of the Ostrich’s master fixture list, and it was off to deepest Herefordshire today to a ground I first visited at the tail-end of last season; we’ll catch up with Sandal at a later date.
Setting off at 10:30 for a 2:15 kick-off, a lengthy journey ensued through on-and-off rain with heavy traffic and numerous slow stretches on the M42(S) and M5(S), followed by even slow farm vehicles between Droitwich and Great Whitley, and in the Tenbury Wells area. A burst of heavy rain heralded my arrival at Kingsland, and with a corporate hospitality dinner in full swing in the clubhouse, there was nowhere for the weary bird to perch, so I repaired back to the shelter of the car with my coffee to await the start of the game.
Kingsland is a straggly village around three miles west of Leominster, with more than a few nice bungalows on the market (in fact Mrs O and I did have a look at them on Rightmove backalong), but possibly not that many amenities. There’s a gert big Morrisons supermarket at nearby Barons Cross, just outside Leominster, and I suspect everyone for miles around gravitates there for shopping. The rugby ground is on the edge of Kingsland, opposite a rather imposing monument dating from 1799 and commemorating the rather obscure, but nevertheless “obstinate, bloody, and decisive” Battle of Mortimers Cross, from the Wars on the Roses.
http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/Detai ... &id=150047Click on “read official list description” for the full wording of the monument, if you’re interested.
The sports complex is known as Mortimer Park, and Luctonians are the “old boys” of nearby Lucton School, although like the vast majority of old boys rugby clubs, it’s now open to all. The School is an independent girls ‘n boys establishment, age range 0-18, day or boarding, and comes with its own equestrian centre; if you want to send your nipper there, the annual fees are a cool £29,955 for Year 7+ boarders ….
This was my second visit to Mortimer Park and I do think that this rugby ground is one of the most attractive in the Midlands; from the small elevated stand you have sweeping views down the River Lugg valley towards the Welsh border – today, as the rain front passed through, a washed blue sky appeared as a band behind the green hills and gradually extended towards the ground during the first half, the sun eventually breaking through. I noted that since I was last here back in April, they have cleared an area behind the cricket pavilion at the far end of the complex for a projected £110,000 new changing room block, having secured a £70,000 Sport England grant. This Streetview shot will give you a flavour of the location, but doesn't really do it justice (if you pan round, you'll see the monument in situ):
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@52.25318 ... 56!6m1!1e1So, to the match! This featured bottom of the table Luctonians vs second placed Macclesfield Blues, and the first half can only be described as dour. Or possibly dire.
Both sides played a tactical kicking game; Lucs looked to stifle Macclesfield at every opportunity, and succeeded bar one blip on 26m when Marwick rumbled through for an unconverted try. 0-5 at the break; 0-0 would have been more appropriate.
Luctonians had missed a moderately easy first half penalty, and then missed another just after the restart. If these had been scored, we might have been in for an interesting tussle. But on 51m, Lucs’ Jones was sin-binned and Macclesfield’s Franky Barker exploited a glaring gap in the home defence which Lewis Barker converted. Macclesfield went down to 14 men when Finnemore was perhaps harshly yellow carded for what the referee and assistant adjudged to be an off-the-ground tackle, and Lucs finally got on the scoreboard via a Silver penalty. 3-12.
Lucs’ Monkley was then sin-binned for yapping at the referee straight after that official had cautioned both captains about back-chatting
, and Macclesfield made the game safe with two further converted tries on 63 and 69m. Luctonians scored a late consolation with an unconverted pushover try touched down by Dan Smith.
Not a game to live long in the memory, I think. Smooth journey back to Birmingham until I arrived on the M6(S) at Spaghetti to find my northbound exit route closed off – that unfortunately diverted me southwards onto the Aston Expressway, just in time to hit all the traffic trying to depart Villa Park …..