11/02 – a reasonable lull in the cold weather last week enabled us to visit Cranborne on Wednesday for a pub lunch in the “Sheaf of Arrows” and a good poke round the WVS’s second-hand bookshop nearby. Huge clumps of snowdrops in the wooded valleys en-route seemed a harbinger of Spring, but the temperature dipped sharply again on Friday and by today it was positively Arctic. I didn’t have a particular game in mind for this Saturday, so it was a question of checking the Twitter feeds of a number of various options to see who was on, who was off, and who were hedging their bets. Only Shepton Mallet FC were declaring “Game on”, and I was very tempted, but eventually I plumped for a reasonably short trip to Warminster where both soccer and rugby clubs had home games, but neither had actually tweeted. A fortuitous decision; Shepton Mallet’s game was a 0-0 draw!
So, north to Mere, and then up and along the top of White Sheet Hill (where snow was visibly lying in the copses along the roadside, and also where the fields had been ploughed) before descending through the five country hamlets known as the Deverills, the beech hedges each side of the road still thick with tarnished copper leaves. Then back to reality, up the A350, swing round Warminster on the A36 bypass, and into the town from the west end.
Warminster RFC’s motto is “nil satis nisi optimum”, which is interestingly the same as Everton FC. The Merseyside club correctly translate this motto as “only the best is good enough”, but Warminster, for some reason, have, (according to the club’s 2016/17 Fixture Card which I picked up), interpreted it as “In hindsight, it was alright”! Quite where they got that from, I have no idea, but if it was alright on the night, who’s arguing?
The Folly Lane clubhouse is modern, attractive, and built in the same light-coloured hamstone brick with chocolate brown window fittings as our current bungalow, so I felt quite at home hurrying inside and out of the raw wind. There’s a small bar, the Mother of all widescreens (showing the Scotland v Italy game), and a well-stocked trophy cabinet. Patio doors lead out onto a raised wooden decked veranda overlooking the length of the first team pitch, a superb viewing platform - or it would have been if it hadn’t been facing north and directly into the stream of prevailing snow flurries which were visibly cascading down the ravines off the Salisbury Plain on the opposite side of the town and winging their way across the valley. The Ostrich’s glasses quickly misted up with warm breath in the cold atmosphere, the bird’s ears were frostbitten despite wearing a hoodie , and the half-time cup of instant coffee was one of the most welcome beverages Ossie has ever imbibed.
Warminster are having a pretty good season, second in the table but some way from catching Corsham. Today’s visitors, Supermarine RFC, are pretty much relegation fodder. Supermarine are based in Swindon; they were, I assume, originally part of the social club affiliated to the Supermarine aircraft company (aka Vickers Armstrong). These days, of course, Swindon is synonymous with Honda.
All in all, it was a pretty even game, not without its humorous moments, as when an home attacking player collided with a defender 15 yards from the try-line; they both then staggered a further 10 yards before simultaneously falling flat on their backsides alongside each other, laughing. And when Supermarine managed to engineer a 4 to 1 overlap on the left wing – the ball was dutifully flung out to them, but the first three players all totally failed to intercept the pass. The loose ball bounced up wickedly in front of the fourth player – he managed to catch it, but it was so unexpected, he was far too startled to do anything constructive with it.
10-7 ahead at the interval, Warminster notched a try in the first minute of the second half, but in a failed attempt to intercept the try scorer, Supermarine’s full-back fell awkwardly and was left grounded, clutching his shoulder. The physios decided he shouldn’t be moved (possible neck injury), an ambulance was summoned, but as the player was half-on, half-off the pitch right in the corner of the goal area, the referee resumed play. They built a barricade of padded goal-post protectors around the prostrate player to act as a wind-break, and the ambulance duly turned up around 20 minutes later; two medic plus a third in a fluorescent jacket who filmed the entire operation using shoulder-mounted camera equipment. Presumably for training purposes, but all rather surreal. Anyway, no major injury to the player; they got him upright and walked him off, the camera-person trailing behind.
I was relieved when the game finally ended – the wind had picked up, the snow flurries were gusting, and I was completely perished. Three hours on, back home and I’m still shivering. I sincerely hope Shell was warmer at Villa Park!
Dorset & Wilts 1 North (Level 8): Warminster RFC 24 Supermarine RFC 12
No admission, no programme, orange J2O £1.80, 2 x soft buns from behind the bar (ham & tomato, cheese & onion) £4 towards the rugby club’s Easter Tour, coffee from the club’s kitchen £1, attendance 35.