Saturday 30/04/16 – National League 1 (Level 3) @ 15:00
Loughborough Students RFC 57 Fylde RFC 17Admission: £6, programme: £2
Refreshments: 50p pint of milk from the Students Union shop, while in the ground £3.50 for an excellent meaty burger, £1 coffee - and £1 for a Snickers bar which was pretty outrageous!
Attendance: around 300
Today, an easy Bank Holiday Saturday drive up the M42 to Ashby de la Zouch (once I’d cleared a two-mile tail-back on the A5 at Tamworth approaching the motorway roundabout) and then across country to Loughborough. Entering the main university complex from Epinal Way, you are stopped at the security barrier in order to declare your intentions and to receive a Visitors Pass. As I mentioned last week, I was supposed to be directed to Car Park 9, but the instructions given were less than succinct and accompanied by a lot of hand-waving in various directions, (but in fairness to the officer concerned, he was trying to dissuade an early-season bee from gaining access to the security hut via his hatch at the time
). Nevertheless, I followed his instructions to the letter and not surprisingly finished up in entirely the wrong place, so retraced my steps and dug out the map I’d printed off the club website which allowed me to navigate my way to the right parking area.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loughboro ... norama.jpgThe College was founded in 1909, acquired University status in 1966, and it’s a fair size, the grounds covering 438 acres. Notable alumni include athlete Seb Coe, test cricketer Monty Panesar, England rugby’s Fran Cotton, and Paula Radcliffe. I had time to have a look round the pretty modernistic campus. It’s primarily, but not completely, a Sports University (it also has a major Engineering Department); there’s a lot of grey-walled slab-like concrete buildings (which could, I guess, be illicitly used for rock climbing practice
), and plenty of No Smoking signs. Pavement lamp-posts are lined with banners bearing quotes from students (such as Anand Ondhia – BSc Chemistry and Rachael Bennett – BSc Psychology with Ergonomics) extolling university life. I turned a corner around the side of the School of Sport Exercise and Health Sciences and stumbled into a huge open space, called the Shirley Pearce Square (named after a former Vice Chancellor) that looked big enough to hold a North Korean Military Parade, and was populated by earnest young students propelling bicycles or dressed in regulation jogging gear and trainers. On the other side of this expanse, and across the main road, is the Technology Centre, which at least provides smoking shelters for the less purist. Strange sculptures abound, like the UK Swatch Olympic Art Clock – make of it what you will ….
http://empedia.info/resource/161?set=maps%2F7Returning to the rugby pitch, I see there are two pop-up “Event Pay Stations” at either end of it, but to be honest, you could access the ground from the car-park and completely avoid them if you wanted to. In fact, I walk round one of these tents unchallenged and head for the refreshment area, where I acquire a burger and enquire if there's a shopping mall on the campus. I had a letter this morning from an old school pal who announced that he and his long-term partner had quietly eloped to Gretna Green last week and got married (
), so I need a Congratulations card. I’m pointed in the direction of the Student Union building, but that means passing a Pay Station to get out of the ground and I haven’t so far paid to get in! Thankfully, the Ostrich was able to display his considerable charisma and charm the ladies in the tent, who let the bird through with a minimum of raised eyebrows.
The outside doors to the supermarket appear to be locked, so Ossie accosted a passing student and blagged his way into the Students Union building proper, accessing the shop from the inside. You’d have thought, at a University, they’d have had plenty of Congratulations cards on display, but rather worryingly, most of them seem to be “With Deepest Sympathy”! As I am not sure if my friends sense of humour extends that far
, I opt for an Art Deco style of love hearts, before finding my way outside again and past the “Fusions” night-club, which seems to be doing a roaring and raucous daytime trade. Back at the pay-station, Ossie proffers his money and flutters his eyelashes, but that doesn’t stop the ladies insisting on applying an inky pad to the back of one of his claws, a “pass-out” stamp, which considering how porous the ground is, does seem a trifle superfluous .....
So, time to take stock, and it’s a 3G artificial surface – this is the first rugby game I’ve seen on a synthetic pitch – and it certainly lent itself to fast, running rugby, with the ball bouncing “true” more times than not. There’s no spectator shelter (thankfully the circling rainstorms held off for the duration of the game), but the pitch has wooden railings, and these are slightly elevated on a bank on the cricket pitch side, so Ossie can perch and get quite a decent view of proceedings. All in all, it’s a pleasant venue - given reasonable weather.
There was nothing riding on this final match of the season, with Fylde mid-table and Loughborough Students having just avoided relegation, so both sides embarked on an open game with a final tally of 12 tries scored and no penalty attempts. The Students were quickly out of the block and 12-0 up after 4 minutes, a Fylde defender unfortunately being seriously hurt in the build up to the second try and stretchered off. Fylde rarely got out of their half and Loughborough put 45 points past them before they finally scored on 41m – 45-5 at the interval. The pick of the home players was 19 year-old winger Rotimi Segun who displayed electric pace and an unnerving knack of barrelling through any opposition on his way to a hat-trick of tries.
Loughborough eased up after the break and basically traded tries with Fylde in a lower-tempo second half, the away team having much more territorial possession. It was an enjoyable game today, with the accent firmly on entertainment.
And so ends the Ostrich’s blog; it’s time to say goodbye to our feathered fiend who will be relaxing during the summer months, watching the hapless Coventry Bears rugby league side getting thrashed at regular intervals, and poring over next season’s fixture lists when they eventually get published in July.
I hope you’ve found Ossie’s journals interesting - and hopefully perhaps even a little bit entertaining!