01/09 – An absolutely horrendous drive down to the county town last Sunday; torrential rain with the occasional bout of monsoon.
The roads were flooded even before I left Gillingham, and by Shaftesbury I was questioning my sanity, but I plugged onwards, and eventually the rain eased ever so slightly into a heavy downpour. Parking up at Dorchester Town’s ground, I got soaked just locking up the car, and that was under trees, before sprinting the 150 yards or so to Tescos next door for some therapeutic shopping (5 tins of Vegetable Curry
).
Yeovil Town Ladies finished well bottom of the FA Women’s Super League Division 1 last year, with only 2 points from 18 games, and there was some doubt whether they would be allowed to retain their “franchise”, as to do so, they had to go from part time to full time professional. That costs a lot of money, and unlike other clubs such as Everton or Chelsea, Yeovil Ladies receive no financial help from their parent club. But somehow, they managed to find the sponsorship and persuade the FA to agree to them retaining their status, so they are starting the 2018/19 season with a brand new squad of players – and a new ground, as Yeovil Town told them they had to go find another home. Thankfully, Dorchester Town, who during this close season have replaced their grass with a spanking new 3G artificial pitch, welcomed them with open arms, hence my rain-swept journey! The newly laid pitch looked absolutely pristine, but understandably played a bit slow in the wet …..
What can I say about the game? I’m afraid it was appalling, by any standards.
The leisurely pace made an Over 50’s Walking Football team game seem positively frantic.
There was very little joined up play, a lot of it was “hoof and hope”. The only real incident in the first half came when Yeovil’s Nicola Cousins’ glancing back-header very nearly wrong-footed Megan Walsh in goal. The second half was winding down to the dreariest of goalless draws when Crystal Palace hit Yeovil with a complete sucker punch, an easy close range header converted by Jordan Butler after the Yeovil defence had palpably failed to clear a bouncing ball in the six yard box. Only then, in the last 5 minutes or so, did we see any sort of urgency from the Yeovil team – and by that time it was far too late.
In fairness to Yeovil, as mentioned above, they have a brand new squad this season, and will need time to gel together, but on this afternoon, I'm sorry to report, I can only say that they were bad, bad, bad.
FA Continental Tyres Cup Group Match (a sort of “League Cup” played before the “League” fixtures start): Yeovil Town Ladies 0 Crystal Palace Ladies 1
Admission: £3 concession. Parking fee £2.
Programme: £3 (16pp glossy printed on card which rapidly turned mushy in the damp. It was overpriced rubbish at £2 last year, now I’m afraid it is even more overpriced rubbish.
)
Refreshments: None. I couldn’t be bothered to queue for the hatch in the torrential rain.
Attendance: 301 (announced). Considering the conditions, and the trek down from Yeovil, actually that’s not bad!
To Saturday, and I should have been opening my rugby union season at Maidenhead RFC, but thanks to the continuing Saturday rail strikes, courtesy of the intransigence of the fat-cat South Western Railway barons / Trotskyist militant RMT union leadership (feel free to delete either one according to your own political preference), long distance trips remain off the menu at present, so it was a pleasant drive down to the Black Gold Stadium, Tatnam, Poole, and unlike last season, I didn’t get lost and spend 15 minutes circumnavigating various trading estates before locating the soccer ground.
Parking is still available on the Oakdale School car-park, from which it’s a short walk to the stadium, (past suburban houses, in the middle of which I spotted three much older buildings: “Tatnam Farm”, “The Old Forge” and “The Tannery”, no doubt harking back to days of yore before the Borough of Poole came knocking).
With time to kill, I walked south over the railway line into the suburb of Sterte to try and find a food store (none, just a closed Chinese takeaway and a rather strange hairdressers
) then west through a high-rise estate (where I picked up a couple of fir cones for home decoration
) and across a dual carriageway to the Holes Bay Nature Reserve, on the banks of the upper reaches of Poole Harbour, with its excellent views across the water to Twin Sails Bridge and Hamworthy, where Hamworthy United’s floodlights were visible above the trees.
Poole used to have a big old stadium, but the club went through troubled times a number of years ago, and now have a very mundane home. It’s a slightly cramped campus with all the buildings behind one goal, mainly featuring a club shop, a food hatch, and a smallish clubhouse which does get rather crowded. Pitchside, there’s a low-slung seated stand down one touchline and a bit of terracing; that’s about it.
As for the game, it was difficult concentrating on the first 15 minutes or so as the Red Arrows were visibly performing aerobatics off behind the clubhouse end (Bournemouth Air Festival)
and other aircraft were “staging” overhead, awaiting their turn to entertain the crowds on the seafront. Overall, it was a fast, free-flowing, end-to-end sort of game in which Poole should really have done better, but despite often good approach work, they were surprisingly hesitant up front. Coupled with this, the Staines defence were easily muscling the home side off the ball, and their keeper, Manny Agboola, looked pretty rock solid. On 37m, a Makhosini Khanye inswinging free kick rattled the home crossbar, but Poole finished the first half quite strongly with a goal chalked off for offside.
Staines took the lead on 63m with a fast break out of defence that put Andre Odetola through on goal and he skilfully lifted the ball over the keeper and into the far corner. Poole pressurised, and tried everything to get back into the game, but a second Staines breakaway goal always looked on the cards, and duly arrived bang on 90m with a fortuitous effort from Andy Ali. A slightly flattering scoreline, but Staines did deserve the win. The match finished with the Poole captain, in the middle of the park, throwing a huge hissy fit
at his own front line, and I imagine it might have been quite tasty in the home changing room after the game ….
Evo-Stik League South / Premier South (Step 3): Poole Town 0 Staines Town 2
Admission: £8 concession, programme: £2. (A 44pp glossy effort, good value, lots of colour photos; it would have been nice if they’d included a history of Staines, but that said, they did provide detailed pen-pics for the away squad, something which other clubs often don’t.)
Refreshments: £2.50 for 5 chicken nuggets (no chips!
) and £3 for a bacon roll from the hatch, also £3 for a “Tatnam Treble”
, which is a round, mild, whole cheddar cheese they (I assume) sell for club funds. The cheese stall, should you ever go, can be found by the entrance to the pitch …...
Attendance: 362