Saturday 21/11 – Midlands 2 West (North) – (Level 7)
Harborne RUFC 14 Old Saltleians RUFC 40 (that’s per the RFU website; I scored it 14-38!
)
No admission or programme
Refreshments: Nothing obtainable on site. However, the Ostrich unerringly tracked down the nearest food source as the RVS Café on the ground floor of the Birmingham Women’s Hospital, which is about 150 yards from the pitch. Go in at Reception, then past the South Birmingham Breast Unit, round the corner and it’s just beyond the Assessment and Birthing Centre. I had a Ginsters Festive Turkey, Pork Stuffing and Cranberry slice and an Americano coffee take-out for £3.80.
Attendance: 39 (h/c) and a black dog which obviously didn’t think a fat lot of the proceedings and made a dash for the exit during the first half.
On a bitterly cold but bright day, I thought it politic to tick off team number 23 on the Ostrich’s seasonal hit-list, as I knew this wasn’t a venue to visit in inclement weather. It’s an easy one to access by public transport; train to University station, cross over the road and then head in a straight line along the pedestrian path for the huge carbuncle known as the New Queen Elizabeth Hospital, passing the signs commemorating the site of the old Roman Metchley Fort en-route, then turn right uphill alongside the carbuncle, carry on past the Women’s Hospital, and straight on into Metchley Park Road. Just up there on your left is the Metchley Lane Gymnastics Centre and changing rooms for various playing fields - basically two elderly wooden-clad buildings with no facilities for spectators.
I first visited Metchley Fort as a nipper with my primary school back in the 1950’s. They’d actually reconstructed part of the buildings back in those days but that’s long since gone now, and the site is pretty much swallowed up by the ever burgeoning medical buildings in the QE Hospital complex.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metchley_FortThe new QE Hospital, opened in 2011, has now weathered in but looks a bit plasticky and tacky on the outside, to be honest. It’s huge and dominates the skyline from the south and the west. I’m not sure about the care there, either; for example, did you know that in 2013, the hospital actually suspended a surgeon over allegations he branded his initials onto a patient's liver? Takes signing for your work to a whole new level ….
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Eli ... BirminghamHarborne RUFC got promoted at the end of last season, and therefore appeared for the first time on the Ostrich’s radar, hence today’s visit. They are having a tough time of it, however, in M2W(N), having now played 8 and gained no league points.
I first saw the opposition, Old Saltleians RUFC, back at the end of the 2009/10 season. They’d gone through the year unbeaten, but had to defeat their rivals Lichfield, at home, in the last league game of the season to clinch the title and promotion. It was a “winner takes all” game – and in front of a huge crowd of over 300, including the Ostrich, they lost, 19-20.
Not to worry, that gave them a home tie two weeks later in the second place play-offs against Old Laurentians, who had finished second in the East division, and winning that would also secure them a promotion spot. So the Ostrich attended that game as well – and Salts also lost that one, 12-14!
Old Saltleians were founded in 1933 as the old boy’s club of Saltley Grammer School. If I’ve got this right, Saltley Grammar School, in time, subsequently became Saltley School, and then Saltley School and Specialist Science College – and in 2014, this school was named as one of the notorious Birmingham “Trojan Horse” schools
; hopefully now it has turned a corner ….
http://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/mi ... on-9081759The rugby club have got their own problems as well! In 1955, they acquired their current ground near Water Orton, only to lose their main pitch in 2001 to the M6 Toll road. They moved sideways so their pitches are now alongside the motorway – but have now found that their complex will be totally obliterated by HS2 when it gets built …..
To the match, and Harborne were in trouble even before the start as the referee rejected four of the six match balls as being underinflated, and no pump appeared to be available. To add to the grass-roots feel of the game, the referee started the proceedings in a dark-blue tracksuit top with a hoodie; however, he did change into a more conventional blue shirt after 5 minutes.
Old Salts were quickly out of the blocks, and 0-28 up by 26m with Harborne rarely mounting any sort of threat. 0-33 at the interval, the second half was a slightly different story. Harborne notched a converted try from the restart, and then gave Salts as good as they got. Salts got frustrated, and by 65m were down to 12 men with 3 in the sinbin!
The home side managed a second converted try on 72m, their forwards rumbling a scrum over the line, but that was the extent of their comeback, clumsy handling badly let them down, and an unconverted Salts try at the death completed the scoring. A good game, but by gum it was cold out there on the sidelines today!