21/01 – not a day which went entirely to plan! At 12:00, the Ostrich duly set sail for Dorchester Town, where the opposition were Hayes & Yeading United, the last Southern League Premier Division which the bird needed to see to complete the set. It has been remarkably cold of late here in Dorset and the frost on the front garden, which is north-facing, hasn’t lifted for a number of days now. But the sun was out, and the day looked pleasant, albeit chilly. Passing through Sturminster Newton and crossing the River Stour, the white rime was abundant on the reeds of the riverbank, but nevertheless three anglers were sitting out under umbrellas, pursuing their hobby, and I never thought anything more of it. The cloud cover increased as I ambled down the infamous Piddle Valley (where it is reputed Cromwell once marched
) towards the county town, and I eventually drove into a strangely deserted football club car-park at the back of Tescos around 1:20. As the car park seemed to bear a number of signs indicating Permit Parkers only, I wasn’t too perturbed so drove out and parked up elsewhere before wandering round to the front of the ground to find the main entrance firmly locked up. At which point alarm bells sounded!
Returning to the car, I found another fan approaching the ground and asked him if the game was on. He looked as bemused at the lack of activity as I was, so we consulted Dorchester’s Twitter feed and found the match had been called off due to a frozen pitch 5 hours previously!
Back in Birmingham, I’d have checked if my chosen match was on as a matter of course at this time of year, but I hadn’t given it a thought now we are down south. And the strange truth is that it has been 4 or 5 degrees colder in Dorset than it has been in the West Midlands for much of the last week, and the cloud cover over the coast has allowed the frost to get entrenched.
So, what to do? Luckily I had the Non-League Paper with me in the car, so a quick bit of research of the fixtures page saw me heading back inland, at some speed
, the 15 miles or so to Blandford Forum where the Royals were booked to be at home in a Dorset League match; no floodlights, so an early 2:00 kick-off. Blandford was one of the grounds I had previously researched, and I remembered it was next to the cottage hospital, so into the town centre and thankfully the hospital was well signed from there. I hastily parked up in an already full car-park by the council-owned Recreation Ground and arrived pitchside, having missed the first 5 minutes of the game. Blandford were already a goal up thanks to a first minute penalty
, so I asked the obvious question, “is there a referee’s assessor here today?” and was told “yes, three of them!”
Blandford United have been in residence at the Recreation Ground since the 1920’s, I was told, prior to which they played somewhere down alongside the river, and the crowd apparently had to stand on duckboards along the banks. The two old boys I was chatting to then spun me a tale of how someone’s grandfather, playing for the home side, had got so incensed with the referee that he’s thrown said official into the river!
No such shenanigans today although the referee was fairly obviously keeping a tight rein on the affair.
Blandford used to have an ancient wooden stand, but that’s long since gone in favour of a small, modernish changing room block which also housed a tiny kitchen dispensing the basics. The pitch itself was railed, but there were no other facilities for the spectator. The first half passed quietly enough, still 1-0 at half time, but after that we hit the goal trail. Blandford’s second goal was tough on Bridport, their no.11 getting pack to intercept and rob a goal-bound home team player, but the ball ricocheted from the tackle onto the post and allowed the Blandford player to tap in the rebound. Chances were coming thick and fast, but the luck was going Blandford’s way and by 71m, they had added two further goals to make it 4-0. Game over, we thought. But then Bridport introduced a substitute up front, and two minutes later, he was well positioned to make it 4-1 when the home keeper and has defender had what could only be described as a terrible misunderstanding
. Three minutes later, the home rearguard got into an awful muddle again, and following a scramble in the box, it was 4-2. With 4 minutes of the game remaining, the Bridport sub completed his hat-trick with a quite outstanding bit of skill, bringing the ball down, controlling it, and chipping it over the keeper into the net. And two minutes later, Bridport were level, a free header from a corner.
In stoppage time, Bridport netted again but luckily for Blandford it was ruled offside, so the final whistle blew on a rather remarkable draw. Blandford had played really well, and I was particularly impressed by the way their midfielders sent their two strikers away on goal with delicately-weighted passes rolled through the away defence; the Bridport goalie made more than a few telling saves at the feet of an onrushing forward. But I don’t think anyone would have put money on Bridport scoring 4 in the last 20 minutes to draw level – a classic display of making every chance count. Excellent game!
Dorset Premier League (Level 7): Blandford United 4 Bridport Reserves 4
Admission by donation (so I proffered £3), no programme, mug of tea provided for me at half time for free as I was a "stranger" (a very nice touch!), Mars bar from the kitchen 80p, attendance a healthy 61.