22/04 – One think I have learnt in the South-West is never assume a kick-off time will be as publicised. Easter Monday afternoon, I rolled into Meadow Lane, Westbury at 1:30 and asked the guys on the gate if I could park up and go have a browse around the town as I had an hour and a half to kill.
“Wouldn’t bother, mate, there’s only two shops and we start at 2:00”
“Since when?!”
“Since Almondsbury suddenly decided they wanted to change the time!”
That wasn’t the only strange conversation. It’s rather an old-fashioned ground with a corrugated tin club-house and brick walling around the pitch rather than rails. The Ostrich propped itself up against the latter, next to another spectator, who eyed the bird suspiciously as it took out its sheet of paper to record notes on the game.
“You’re not doing what I’m doing, are you?”
“Um, well, I’m not a reporter ….”
“Neither am I!”
“Err – I’m just a groundhopper …”
“I’m a referee’s observer!”
Ah, one of the fabled taciturn assessors who usually reduce the man in the middle to an incompetent card-waving wreck. But in fact this chap was quite chatty and I spent a very interesting afternoon in his company. For example, the Almondsbury no.9 stands up to and eyeballs the home keeper. The referee ushers the forward away and allows the keeper to punt the ball downfield.
“Ah, now I’ve got something to talk to him about!”
“Really? Looked pretty innocuous to me ….”
“Yes, but,” showing the Ostrich his notes, “that’s the third time that forward’s done that. The referee should have stepped in at that point, given the goalie a free-kick, and the forward a severe b*llocking!”
We agreed overall, as Westbury finished the game 3-1 winners, that the referee, in his first year in the middle at this level (Western League), had had a reasonable game, but there again, he hadn’t had to cope with anything too controversial. Was sold an Extremely Small steak and kidney pie at the hatch for £1.50.
Wednesday evening, and a tale of two towns. As Gillingham Town voluntarily take a two-step demotion, up the road, the Rockies (Shaftesbury Town) have secured back-to-back promotions and will play in the Wessex Premier next season, their highest ever level. At the same time, the Reserves are also in the hunt for promotion from the Dorset Football League Senior Division. They have six games still to play, which will keep both them and me gainfully occupied until mid-May, and tonight raced into a three goal lead in the first 20 minutes against Poole Borough. The visitors, however, proved quite resilient and actually pulled a goal back, which concentrated the home team’s minds in the second half, and that was the final score, again 3-1. Was sold an Extremely Flaky sausage roll at the hatch for £1.
So to today, and time for an end-of-season spectacular!
Working on the principle of “do it now before I get too old”, it was off on the 10.17 train for Exeter, and onwards from there down the east bank of the River Exe to Exmouth. Just £20.55 with a Senior Railcard. Arriving unseasonably early, I wandered off into the town, where I found a shop called Mother Earth advertising “legal cannabis substitutes available here”
. However, Ossie was after an entirely different legal high and hit the KFC two doors down!
The rugby ground is virtually on the sea front so I wandered back the promenade and found a bench seat, opened my KFC box, and about a minute later, a large herring gull walked up and started staring at me from a distance of about 10 feet.
I put up with this for a while but then, feeling slightly unnerved, I relocated down the pathway to the next bench seat. After a minute or so, the herring gull padded down the pathway, stopped 10 feet away, and started staring again. I've felt safer walking through Birmingham City Centre at night! So I packed up my box, marched ¼ mile round the headland, and sat down on the shingle. I’d just finished eating when a herring gull landed next to me ….
The game this afternoon pitted two teams going in opposite directions. Exmouth are bottom of the table and already relegated. Bishop’s Stortford had to win to secure the title and promotion. They were over the line for their first try inside 1 minute and 15 seconds by my stopwatch, and had secured their four-try bonus point by the 20th minute. 7-33 at the interval, Bishop’s Stortford scored their first try of the second half in 1 minute and 6 seconds! The result, as they say, was never in doubt, and “The Cockles” were duly crushed.
Swans, two egrets and a grey heron spotted from the train on the banks of the Exe estuary, whilst between Gillingham and Exeter I saw 5 small deer (presumably roe deer), a hot air balloon, and more bunnies than you could shake a stick at. Home by 7:15 after an enjoyable excursion.
National 2 South (Level 4): Exmouth RFC 7 Bishop’s Stortford RFC 60
Admission with programme £6, Zinger Box from the KFC £5.89 (chicken fillet garnished with iceberg lettuce and mayo, two chicken wings, small tub of chicken gravy – I crave chicken gravy
– small bag of fries and a Diet Pepsi with ice – or rather ice with Diet Pepsi ….), bag of Bassetts Jelly Babies £1 from the stall in the ground, and £2.30 for an Americano to go from the Costa Coffee outlet next to the Oggy Oggy Pasty Shop in Exeter, where I was able to break my journey on the way back, attendance 267.