Saturday 09/04/16 – National League 1 (Level 3) @ 14:30
Hartpury College RUFC 31 Rosslyn Park RUFC 27Admission: £5, programme: £1
Refreshments: £3 burger and onions before the game, £3 hot dog at half time. 70p Snickers bar from the clubhouse.
Attendance: 233
Today, a trip to “The UK’s Premier Sport and Education Setting where Nothing Stands in the way of Your Success”. Well, that’s what it said on the clubhouse wall ….
The most straight-forward way of getting from Birmingham to Hartpury College, which is affiliated to the University of the West of England, is down the M5, take the M50 to Junction 2, and then south on the A417 Gloucester road. The promise of extensive roadworks on the M5 in north Worcestershire, however, meant I diverted via Studley, Evesham, Tewksbury, and across the River Severn on the B4213 at Hawbridge, a pleasant enough journey despite traffic queues at various bottlenecks. The Hartpury campus is in the countryside just south of Hartpury village, and about 5 miles north of Gloucester itself. The college specialises in animal husbandry, veterinary and welfare, (there’s a large farm complex on the north side of the campus, and there’s also animal collections including meerkats, llamas and prairie dogs, but no ostriches, and Ossie was keeping a decidedly low profile today
) and also sports – I believe Gloucester RUFC use their extensive facilities for training. VVers will know that Kaz’s daughter studied here, and a superb place it is.
On turning into the campus, I found there was some sort of equine dressage event going on near the entrance, but I knew the sports college was about ½ mile further on, the only problem being how to get there as there seems to be a clock-wise one-way road system. However a guy with a walkie-talkie was staking out the entrance road, and having paid my admission cash to him, I was directed off down a track to the right and told to find his colleague up at the car-park. Successfully parked a stone’s throw from the pitch, I purchased a programme from a lad in a nearby hut, and decided to explore the college on foot. I walked up the hill past Dingle and Rudgeley Halls residential accommodation – they cater for up to 1,000 students living on-site, and there’s about 2,500 overall on the roll, so I was told, with the rest being bussed in daily from Gloucester and surrounds – and a new building called the College Learning Centre that looked completely deserted. It’s all very clean, attractive and modern, but there’s a propensity for 10 foot high green wire mesh, certainly surrounding the halls of residence. To keep the meerkats in or the ostriches out?
Back at the sports campus, I wandered round the ground. There’s a grandstand fronting the pitch incorporating a large sports hall (indoor netball court), the rugby clubhouse and various classrooms, I think; peering through windows there seemed to be desks and wall posters extolling Sports Nutrition on the one hand, and Marijuana on the other.
The other notable feature is that the grandstand is the Home of the Motivational Poster, i.e.:
“Contrary to popular belief, there most certainly is an ‘I’ in ‘Team’. It is the same ‘I’ that appears three times in ‘Responsibility’.” And:
“The Guy in the Glass
When you get what you want in your struggle for self
And the world makes you King for a day
Just go to the mirror and look at yourself
And see what that guy has to say.
You can fool the whole world down the pathway of years
And get pats on the back as you pass
But your final reward will be heatache and tears
If you’ve cheated the guy in the glass.”There was also a series of posters extolling all the various sports taught at Hartpury (Equine, Rowing, Modern Pentathlon, Netball, Soccer, Rugby, Golf) and naming the major alumni who had graduated from each one, including Dan Norton of England Rugby 7’s and Majeed Waris, a striker for FC Lorient and Ghana. I see, in passing, Waris was sent off last November in a French Ligue 1 game for launching a kung-fu kick on an opponent who’d riled him. “The guy fouls me,” he apparently said. “He was not sanctioned and I have a bad reaction to severe tackles. I should not have done it but I had no intention of hurting him or to kill him. I just wanted to scare him.” Yup, definitely three ‘I’s in ‘Responsibility’ …..
http://www.theguardian.com/football/201 ... mp-kung-fuAnyway, suitably chastened rather than motivated, the Ostrich stepped back outside overlooking the floodlit, wooden-railed and grass-surfaced No.1 Rugby pitch, which has three dugouts on the opposite side to the grandstand, and an electronic scoreboard strangely set in a neighbouring field (which appeared to house pig hutches but no pigs
), and even more strangely counted down from 40:00 minutes rather than conventionally showing time played. There’s a second full-size and floodlit rugby pitch behind one of the goals, but this is 3G and surrounded in the ubiquitous green mesh. There are a number of other enclosed outdoor pitches dotted around the sports campus, including at least one other rugby training pitch, with a camera tower and little else.
The match pitted 2nd in the table Hartpury against mid-table (but currently on a good run) Rosslyn Park. Hartpury were, I gather, under strength due to student international call-ups. At first, the home side looked light-weight as Rosslyn Park bludgeoned over three unconverted tries in the first half, all scored by No.8 Hugo Ellis, with Hartpury only able to reply with four medium-range but well-taken penalties from Gareth Thompson. 12-15 at the interval.
Thompson tied the game at 15-15 on 50m with a penalty in front of the posts, but then Cochrane took a superb juggling catch at full tilt and ran it in under the posts for Hartpury’s first (and only) try. With Rosslyn Park’s Piper being sin-binned, the home side extended their lead to 28-10 with two further penalties, but on 68m Ellis notched his fourth try to keep the away side in contention. A final 76m penalty from Thompson made it 31-20, but with a couple of minutes remaining Field touched down for the visitors and Sneddon’s conversion made it 31-27. Rosslyn Park were inexorably taking the ball up the field in the final play, but lost their chance by conceding a final penalty, which Hartpury whanged gratefully into touch to seal the win.
Not perhaps the greatest of games, but always absorbing - two contrasting styles of play, and the result in doubt right to the end. Just time for a fast run back up the motorway, but the Ostrich was delayed 30 minutes in the final stretch of his journey through Erdington due to road works. I must get a poster saying “The Last Mile is Always the Longest” ….