04/03 – continuing my pursuit of Wessex League clubs battling with the drop, today it was off to the south again, this time to catch a game featuring Hythe and Dibden FC. Christchurch play at the Hurn Bridge Sports Centre, which isn’t really in Christchurch, it's located just a couple of miles or so from a ground I’ve previously visited, Bournemouth RFC, the two venues being neatly separated by the length of the main runway of Bournemouth (Hurn) Airport.
The route I travelled last December to watch the rugby, via Blandford and Wimborne, wasn’t the easiest drive, so today I thought I’d try an alternative, travelling the country way over the Cranborne Chase and then via Verwood and Ringwood. I made reasonable time to the hamlet of Tollard Royal, but hit an unexpected traffic jam with the road blocked by cars trying to turn into the already full and overflowing carpark of the “King John” pub. Having managed to inch my way past that, I got out of the 20mph zone in the village only to find a group of cyclists in front of me. Eventually I overtook them only to find another group a bit further on.
Rounding a bend, I looked in front of me up the hill at Minchington Down – and there were scores of the beggars all puffing their way up it!
Cyclists everywhere … in single file, riding two abreast, in farm gates unpacking their saddlebags, performing stretching exercises against telegraph poles, clambering out of ditches, repairing roadside punctures – I even passed one poor bloke standing on the wrong side of the road clutching a single bicycle wheel … where the rest of his mount was, I have no idea
! Must have been a hundred of ‘em all told – and I had to get past the lot of them, all this on a ruddy bendy B-road. And this went on for 8 flippin’ miles
– all the way across the A354 roundabout and on to the road down into Cranborne village, where thankfully they were turning off. I passed through the narrow 20mph zone at Sixpenny Handley following a buxom lass who was freewheeling it down the hill swigging from her water bottle! I was either motoring at 6 mph in the gutter or 60 mph on the wrong side of the road trying to overtake them – unbelievable!!
Nerves suitably frayed, I arrived at the Hurn Bridge Sports Centre, parked up, and wandered into the well-appointed bar. I don’t know if Jo was at Old Trafford today, but Manchester United v Bournemouth was being shown live and I must confess to a small air-punch when Boruc saved Ibramowhatsis’s second half penalty. The rest of the clientele in the function room, needless to say given my location, went wild …..
Paid my admission and discovered I’d been very fortunate – the ground had just passed two pitch inspections that morning, the final one taking place whilst I was holed up in the clubhouse
! The pitch looked OK, but it was certainly soggy after the recent rain; the ground staff were darkly muttering that today’s game should have been called off, but thankfully the match referee overruled them and the game went ahead. The pitch did cut up a bit, but not to the extent that play was affected.
The game pitted 5th placed Christchurch against a Hythe & Dibden side firmly in the bottom four, and some way adrift of the next team up the ladder, Folland Sports, who we met last week at Weymouth. On paper, a banker home win. The teams were led out by the Christchurch Under 9’s side, who I’d previously encountered eating chips in the bar, being minded by three or four frazzled adults; it was a bit like herding cats
. The ground is in a beautiful setting, surrounded on three sides by the tall conifers of one of the western outposts of the New Forest. During the first half, one wayward shot at goal skied over the protective netting and disappeared into the dark, forbidding woodland, so the Under 9’s promptly hared after it – frantic attempts to round them all up were still going on at half-time!
The match itself didn’t quite follow the form book. Christchurch had the bulk of possession but displayed an inability to convert chances (or as their goalie audibly put it at one stage: “Cannot we just GET THE $£%&% BALL IN?”
); at the other end, Hythe kept the said home keeper reasonably busy. Perusal of the programme confirmed my worst fears – Christchurch hadn’t featured in a goal-less draw so far this season …. and so it was to be. Honours even; a good point for Hythe in their relegation battle and they might even have nicked all three with a bit of luck. Possibly not the most memorable of matches, but entertaining enough.
Wessex League Division 1 (Step 6): Christchurch 0 Hythe & Dibden 0
Admission £3, an excellent 32pp programme rammed with facts, figures and articles £1.50, apple & mango J2O and cheese ‘n onion crisps (Walkers) from the bar £2.85, bacon butty (2 rashers) and minestrone cuppasoup from the tea hut £3.65, attendance 92.