15/07 – on the menu for today’s entertainment was Westbury United v Swindon Town. Now there’s quite a bit of controversy at the moment over Premiership and Football League clubs sending teams to local non-league neighbours. The non-league team usually advertises the match (and charges!) as if it were the opposition first team squad coming; inevitably, the “team” that turns up is a disappointing mix of mainly reserves and triallists, with perhaps one or two “big names” thrown in. Full marks then to Woking who realised, very late last week, that Watford were sending their reserves, not the Premiership squad, for their advertised friendly, and hurriedly reduced the admission fee from £15 to £10. And indeed, Westbury United were advertising today’s game against Swindon Town as if it were a full-blooded affair, but I picked up a rumour from elsewhere that it was going to be Swindon’s Under 18 Development squad .....
Anyway, having spent most of yesterday evening trying to plot a roundabout route from here to Westbury avoiding as many main roads as possible (the A350 through that town is a bit of a north – south holiday route if you’re heading to Purbeck or Bournemouth), the whole project was suddenly ejected straight out of the window when a late trawl of local clubs’ fixtures suddenly produced a fair old surprise – Shepton Mallet were hosting a South West Peninsula League side, Torpoint Athletic who reside just over on the Cornish side of the River Tamar, across from Plymouth. Now why on earth a SWPL club were prepared to make a 215 mile round trip for a friendly, I have no idea, and neither , strangely, did any of the Shepton officials I spoke to, including the manager, who replied “don’t ask me, I’m just the coach – I leave all that to the committee!”
Because of their geographical location, South West Peninsula League clubs (Cornwall and Devon) rarely venture off their own patch and don’t tend to look for promotion to higher leagues because of the travelling. They do enter the FA Cup and FA Vase competitions (and generally perform quite well against sides outside their region) but opportunities to see teams from this league are as rare as hens’ teeth. So, a hasty revision of the Ostrich’s plans, and a trip over the Somerset border to The Playing Fields, Old Wells Road, which turned out to be located up a track in the middle of an estate on the west side of town.
Shepton Mallet’s ground looked spruce and tidy, ready for the new season. It’s in an attractive setting, surrounded, but not hemmed in, by tall fir trees (and one huge sweet chestnut) with the main buildings painted to highlight the club colours of black and white. There’s three eclectic stands of varying age – The Dean Gregory Memorial Stand, the Tony Wolff Memorial Pavilion, and a slightly decrepit, unnamed one on the half way line which Ossie set up shop in. It rained consistently throughout the match, with intensity varying between drizzle and downpour, so the broken guttering didn’t help! Nor did the 8 year old brats pounding backwards and forwards at the back of the stand, giggling hysterically , but there you go.
Despite these tribulations, it was a pretty good game for the spectator. Both sides played competitively; it could have been a cup tie rather than a mere friendly. Chances abounded at either end, and with more than a few sitters missed, a 1-1 draw was an eminently fair result. Torpoint’s no.9, who scored a second-half equaliser, celebrated with a long knee-slide on the wet turf that I shouldn’t think endeared him particularly with the groundsman. A friendly club, Shepton Mallet, and I think I’ll be back there again before too long.
Pre-season Friendly: Shepton Mallet 1 Torpoint Athletic 1
£3 admission, no programme, 70p for a Mars bar, £2 for an orange J2O, and £3.80 for a Shepton Whopper (cheeseburger, bacon, onion and chips in a large bap!), attendance 48.