18/03 – midweek on Tuesday evening, Gillingham Town at last managed to stage one of their current backlog of fixtures (all resulting from a badly draining pitch) and recorded a routine win in their Dorset Senior Cup Semi-Final over a lively Swanage Town side from two steps below them. Gillingham put out a full-strength squad; possibly a wise decision as their 3rd placed Dorset Premier League opponents created more than a few viable chances on the night. The final result was 5-0 which was possibly a bit flattering, but The Tangos (as Gillingham are apparently nicknamed
) took their chances.
As for today, the Master Spreadsheet called for a visit to National 2 South club Poole Town FC, not a place that the Ostrich was particularly looking forward to visiting
. Poole Town are in rather a state of limbo at present – they currently play at Step 2, are well-placed for a play-off spot that could lead to promotion to Step 1 next season – but their ground is, shall we say, rather rudimentary, doesn’t meet the ground grading criteria at present, and they are under an active threat of an enforced relegation to Step 3 if they don’t carry out remedial works. They play in the grounds of a school, and for a club at such a high level, their car-parking facilities seem particularly sparse. Ossie does prefer to park on the premises rather than the street wherever he can (fond memories of the Aston Villa Junior Hooligans offering to “watch over your car, mister” while you are at a match, for a suitable pecuniary reward, of course. Or else dented bodywork, or possibly no tyres, when you return after the game)
. So, whilst conducting the usual research into suitable back-up fixtures in the area, I did come up with a rather decent alternative, and didn’t need much persuading to change my venue for the afternoon.
The RFU (rugby union) has its equivalent of the FA Cup. Well, sort of
. There are in fact three national trophies, the Intermediate Cup, the Senior Vase and the Junior Vase (entry based on the league levels at which the competing clubs are playing). Each of the four main divisions – South West, Midlands, North, and London & South East – run regional knock-out cup competitions, and the winning teams from each region go forward into the National semi-finals, the two winners then playing the grand final at Twickers
. Level 7 teams play for the Intermediate Cup and today Swanage and Wareham RFC took on Truro RFC in the South West Divisional Final.
For the journey down to the coast, (Swanage & Wareham actually play on the outskirts of Wareham, not a million miles from the top end of Poole Harbour, and quite close to the extensive RSPB reserve at Arne), rather than travel the twisty and tortuous A350 from Shaftesbury to Blandford Forum, I experimented by taking the signposted back-road, recommended for lorries, over the top of the Fontmell and Stourpaine Downs. Once you’ve got through a long 20 mph stretch at Melbury Abbas and climbed up onto the top of the downs, you can bat along a reasonably straight road at a good 50 mph, with excellent views on your right down into the Blackmore Vale, and before you know it, you’re coming out on the Blandford by-pass. After that, it was back on the A-roads to Lychett Minster and Wareham, and most noticeable as I approached the sandy heathlands around Upton were the bright yellow flowers covering the gorse bushes which are so typical of that coastal area.
The Swans (their club badge, a stylised wildfowl of the same name, was actually designed by Sir Peter Scott) have quite a tidy if windswept ground, comprising three pitches tucked in between allotments and farmland. A pair of buzzards were soaring above the ground, circling and climbing, and black-headed gulls, (in their breeding plumage) were quartering the pitches looking for available take-away (or should that be fly-away
) food. The clubhouse sported a clocktower but was otherwise unobtrusive; inside mounted on the walls were a couple of fascinating displays of old international rugby programmes and match tickets, some dating from the 1950’s.
Prior to the main event, Swanage and Wareham Thirds took on Bournemouth Fourths in a friendly, which wasn’t a classic, and ended 17-5. Pick of the action was one of the Swans’ forwards, a bearded gentleman who, let us say, might give dieticians and GPs recurring nightmares
, who gathered the ball in his own half and set off on a lumbering run. Unusually for him, I suspect, he found himself through the opposition lines
, and with only one defender between him and the touchline 40 yards away. He bulldozed onwards, getting noticeably slower and slower, and with a total inability to side-step or change course ran headlong into the lone defender, whereupon our hero collapsed in a heap and had to be substituted for a 10 minute breather before being in a position to continue!
The Cup Match itself turned out to be pretty one-sided affair; the Swans unfortunately didn’t turn up on the day, as the saying goes. Their handling let them down badly and their play was a bit one dimensional. By the 25 minute mark, Truro were 3-14 in the lead, and the writing was on the wall. The killer blow came when their full-back ran in his fourth try just a minute into the second half to make the score 3-24; after that Truro happily coasted, adding four further tries, one of which involved an interception and unhindered gallop the length of the field. So Truro now go forward to play Charlton Park from South-East London in the National Semi-Finals, whilst the Swans will be able to concentrate on the League where they are still in with a chance of promotion to Level 6.
RFU Intermediate Cup South West Divisional Final (Step 7 clubs): Swanage & Wareham RFC 10 Truro RFC 46
Admission with programme £3, two bacon and egg baps (Ossie in greedy mode
) and a cup of coffee a bargain £4.80 from the food hatch in the bar, attendance a bumper 287.