07/10 – a rugby union double for the Ostrich this weekend! Firstly, When I used to work in Dorset, we always had a saying: “Tell ‘em Tuesday, but don’t tell ‘em which”
The same seems to apply to Friday night rugby kick off times in the county; it wasn’t until midday that I managed to ascertain via the North Dorset RUFC twitter feed that it was 19:45. So, an evening excursion to Yeovil! The A303 can still be a bit of a pig even outside the holiday season, and west-bound traffic was slow around Sparkford but thankfully not stationery. Yeovil RUFC’s ground is situated south of the conurbation just off the A37 Dorchester Road; you need to look for a roundabout with a pub or restaurant called the Red House, and the ground’s entrance is signposted from there. There’s a large carpark as befits a club out in the sticks, and a long, low, white-painted clubhouse that turns out to be rather spartan and functional. There are 4 pitches, the main pitch and one training pitch floodlit, and overlooking the complex is one of the four Barwick Park follies, the Cone, which is 75 feet high and resembles a wizard’s hat with a knob on the end. These are 19th century in origin, and thus predate Terry Pratchett famous Discworld creation!
https://en.wikipedia.org/...ile:Barwick_Cone.jpg Yeovil RFC are a club with a bit of an identity crisis. They may or may not be the Ivel Barbarians. As far as I could glean from the Honours Boards, Yeovil RFC merged with Westlands RFC to form Ivel Barbarians RFC in 1995, and nothing seems to have changed since. Nowadays, though, they ply their trade as Yeovil again, but there’s still plenty of Ivel Barbarians references – the entrance to the ground, the scoreboard (not in use tonight), and the team carry “Barbarians” on the back of their shirts.
This Friday night game pitted Yeovil against my local team, North Dorset, whom I saw a few times last season, and frankly looked a little lightweight. They seem to have improved somewhat this season; still a nippy side but the scrummaging was impressive, with Yeovil often very much on the back foot. After a fairly dour first 15 minutes, the home side opened the scoring after pressure on the right, and were 12-3 in front on 27m when there was possibly the moment that changed the game – a Yeovil player was clean through with the line in front of him, but tweaked a hamstring and collapsed
allowing North Dorset to regroup and clear. After that, the momentum changed and North Dorset led 12-13 at the break thanks to a push-over try (33m) and a surging run through three defenders (37m). On 34m, one of the bank of four LED floodlights on the clubhouse side failed, and couldn’t be resuscitated despite attention; luckily, it was one of the two inside pylons rather than a corner one, so there was still sufficient light to continue; well, just about ....
After the interval (only 4 minutes), North Dorset let rip with some spectacular running, including a 60 yard punt return down the right touchline. Yeovil gamely tried to get back into the match, but couldn’t really compete defensively. Final result 20-49 and entertaining fayre on the night.
To Saturday, then, and an early morning flu jab and pulse check
and indifferent weather forecast suggested a trip not too far from home by car rather than train, so I opted to visit the newly-christened “Commsplus Stadium at Hyde Park” for Ossie’s first sighting of the Taunton Titans. There’s quite a big carpark – pay at the entrance gate – but it was full by around 2:00, however there is overflow parking in a field on the opposite side of the road. Entering the clubhouse through the “Welcome” doors will only get you into an empty reception area for the conference suite, although upstairs are toilets and a private room where a club lunch was being held. If you walk past the club shop (which is advertised as selling programmes, but doesn’t) and the kiosk with the rather stilted “blazer” (who was selling programmes and raffle tickets), and continue past the 200 seater stand to the far end of the clubhouse, you’ll find a smallish bar and coffee corner (where only one harassed girl was serving on the Costa machine, and I gave up queueing for a drink as a bad job during halftime
) and a red tent with a barbecue providing the only food – again, just one guy serving and with everything being prepared to order apart from a plain burger, I opted for the plain burger ……
On the far side of the floodlit main pitch are the dugouts and the Les Phippin Memorial Stand, basically a small non-descript Atcost style steel construction, containing just a single ancient office chair, worn down to the foam stuffing
. There’s an excellent tannoy system, but an over-exuberant and over-loud announcer, who unfortunately failed to announce half the Worthing squad names. Still, I shall forgive him, he played my favourite Olly Murs track before the start.
Taunton went into this game with a perfect record of 25 league points in 5 starts, and this was never in danger. They scored two tries in the first 7 minutes before Worthing woke up, and clinched the fourth try bonus point on 20m to make the score 24-7. After that, it was just a question of how many, and it would have been more if kicker Gary Kingdom, whose praises for reliability with the boot were heartily sung in the programme, hadn’t had a distinctly average day at the office, missing 5 moderate conversion attempts. Taunton were tenacious in attack and held possession for long periods. Pick of the forwards was flanker Ratu Vakalutukali (or “Toots” as he was listed in the player line-up in the programme
) who notched a hat-trick of tries. Referee Adam Wookey sensibly allowed play to flow, although another referee might have had an issue with the constant 10 yard encroachment during set plays, noticeably by Taunton. He gave a 76m penalty try and sin-binned Worthing’s Whittall following an incident in a Taunton drive about 10 yards from the away try line, which might have been for hacking the ball out of player’s hands, but it was a somewhat unclear exactly what had happened.
Enjoyable high-scoring romp and if Taunton can keep up the sort of tempo they displayed today, they’d be a good bet for promotion this season.
National 2 South (Level 4): Taunton Titans RUFC 81 Worthing Raiders RUFC 17
Admission £8 (oldie concession), programme £2 (surprisingly poor quality for a big club), burger £2.50, attendance around 400 at a guess.