
Nevertheless, despite the snuffling, to Street, in Somerset on Wednesday for a visit to the Clarke’s Village Shopping Outlet. A pleasant journey on a lovely crisp morning. On arrival in the car-park, Mrs O, who is wise to these things, served Ossie with an ACBH (Anti Chocolate Behavioural Order)

Later in the week, now somewhat recovered, a quick scan of the fixture lists revealed that if Heybridge Swifts had thought they’d managed to avoid the Ostrich, well, they hadn’t.

My only previous visit to Dorchester’s relatively new-build stadium was just after it opened back in 1990, and today, like Weymouth’s new ground built around the same time, it looks a little bit in need of TLC. Back in those days, there was huge boom in building supermarkets across towns in this area, and often town-centre football clubs were targeted along the lines of “you give us your ground, we’ll build a shiny new stadium for you on the outskirts”. I remember this time well as hundreds of self-employed Paddy bricklayers swarmed into the area for the construction work, and in my previous life as an accountant, I had quite a lot on my books! In interviews, I was often defeated by the (mainly Northern Irish) accent, and occasionally had to use a workmate as an interpreter. They were all loveable rogues with little regard to Health & Safety; I remember one lost part of a finger when he left it under a brick hoist …..

Dorchester Town’s situation was slightly different in that their old ground was out-of-town anyway – it’s now a Tescos Superstore, and the new ground was built alongside it. The other thing is that both Tescos and new soccer ground are on Duchy of Cornwall land, so the architecture was more than somewhat influenced by Prince Charles, who apparently undertook a number of clandestine visits to keep an eye on progress

To the match, and Dorchester got off to the best of starts with a goal from Ormrod after 3m; a glancing header from a left-wing cross. After that, the game settled down into a fairly low-key affair with both teams rather hesitant on a pitch that already looked a little threadbare, goodness knows what it will be like next February. Ormrod blazed over from a good position, and Dorchester tended to do more of the attacking, but Heybridge’s Bantick put the ball wide after creating an excellent opportunity for himself by dummying defender Martin on 44m – it was possibly their first viable chance.
Into the second half, and the youngish referee started wielding the yellow card – 6 players were booked in total but it wasn’t a particularly niggly game. Heybridge’s Dark dinged one over the bar in a goalmouth melee on 62m, but otherwise the game continued to drift. If Heybridge’s game plan was to lull Dorchester into a false sense of complacency, it worked wonderfully

FA Trophy 2nd Qualifying Round: Dorchester Town 1 Heybridge Swifts 2
Admission: £6, parking: £2; excellent 44pp programme: £2
Refreshments: None, I couldn’t afford any after buying the bear.
Bear: £15 (I had to reassure the elderly lady who I think had hand-knitted its woolly scarf and bobble-hat that it was going to a good home

Attendance: 319
* https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jn_-SYMHLcU