27/04 –After last week’s goal-fest, back to Earth on Easter Monday.
I had been thinking of a visit to Somerset League Castle Cary but they confirmed early that their game was postponed, so I settled for a jaunt “up the road” to Warminster Town. The trouble is, the “road” in question is the A350 (Poole/Bournemouth to the M4 motorway and points north), and I am always a bit concerned as to how busy it might me with holiday traffic – certainly in the past I’ve been involved in long queues trying to get out onto it at Longbridge Deverill, my normal route.
So I planned an off-the-cuff long detour round country lanes to emerge on the A350 at about the only set of traffic lights on it between the coast and Chippenham
– the junction with the Mere to Hindon B road. After a tortuous journey, I arrived at the lights, turned left with a sigh of relief – and found the A350 completely deserted!
I drove in solitary splendour up to Warminster and arrived about one and half hours before kick-off, but perhaps that was not a bad thing because I got one of the last three remaining parking spaces on the road outside the ground. That was nothing to do with Warminster’s #makeit 200 campaign (their usual attendance is often less than half that) and everything to do with the fact it was a gloriously sunny afternoon and everyone was down in the adjacent town park!
The game itself between two middle of the table sides was nothing to write home about, 88 minutes of fairly inconsequential stuff sandwiching a purple patch of two goals in two minutes just before half-time, Warminster full-back Harry Barnes curling a lovely direct free kick away from the keeper and into the top corner of the net, and Devizes full back Matt Russell scoring an almost identical goal from open play just a minute later.
Western League Division 1 (Step 6): Warminster Town 1 Devizes Town 1
Admission: just £2.50 for an Ancient Ostrich and £1 for a decent programme.
Refreshments: decent batch of freshly cooked chips at half time £1
Attendance: announced as 237! There were indeed a lot of folk there, but that’s higher than I would have personally thought …..
Saturday brought Storm Hannah, and a very interesting game just over the border in Somerset. We’ve been intermittently following the fortunes of Sherborne RFC this season, who have carried all before them in storming to the Southern Counties South championship. Well, two weeks ago, they needed to win their final match to make it a 100% record in league games – but travelled to second-place Frome and lost 23-20! Commiserations to Sherborne, but that set me up nicely with Frome achieving home ground advantage in a winner-takes-all promotion play-off game against the Southern Counties North runners-up, Buckingham RFC.
So, off to Gypsy Lane, avoiding at least three large branches blocking the carriageway en-route
, for my first visit to the ground. It’s not easy to get at, involving travelling the length of the town’s bypass, and cutting back in through a rabbit-warren of a large housing estate before exiting back into the countryside. Not knowing what sort of crowd they’d get, I made the traditional early arrival, only to find, rather disconcertingly, a lot of cars leaving the ground in convoy, but that turned out to be to do with the Juniors who’s been playing in the morning.
It’s a large campus with either 4 or 5 subsidiary pitches (I counted 9 sets of goalposts!
) and the main pitch in front of the clubhouse, which looked large on the outside but was quite pokey on the inside, although illusions of size might have been distorted by the 150 or so folk queuing in front of the bar
! I forsook that to investigate the “Pasta and Chilli Room”, which was serving neither pasta nor chilli, just teas and possibly more beer, and also playing host to the local radio DJ and his sound system (plaintive quote: “Does anyone actually know the rules of rugby?”, to which I would think most rugby fans might have a bit of sympathy. So I finished up outside, bellowing over the 100-decibel Indie Music mix at the people running the barbeque for something hot and tasty.
For the game, I wandered round the far side of the pitch to avoid the intermittent glare of the sun, but promptly encountered another hazard – the wind was gusting so strong that the Ostrich twice nearly lost his spectacles!!
However, being on the far side of the pitch meant that I could at least now see the electronic score-board and timer that was situated up in the clubhouse rafters, and not visible to anyone on the main side of the ground
.
Frome started the encounter like a train, and from the outset employed a hard-running, close-passing forward game that had Buckingham at full stretch. After a lengthy siege, they did eventually score a try on the half-hour mark, and wisely notched a penalty just before the break to turn around 10-0 up. Buckingham upped their game in the second half and looked more of an attacking side – again wisely, half way through the final period, they opted for a fairly long-range kick at goal rather than finding touch; everyone around me thought they should have gone for touch to get a better position, but my feeling was getting on the board, and getting within one score of Frome’s tally with 20-odd minutes to go, was a pretty astute psychological move.
And they duly scored it to make it 10-3.
Frome kept pressing but handling errors were slowly starting to creep in, and the Buckingham defence was pulling off some excellent saving tackles when they needed to. With 10 minutes or so left, Buckingham scored (and converted) the crucial try to level the scores, and all of a sudden extra-time started looming! But then, with just two minutes left, a disastrous mistake by Frome, giving away an easy penalty in front of the posts for Buckingham to nudge in front 10-13. In added time for stoppages, Frome started panicking – two awfully mis-placed kicks for touch gave possession back to Buckingham, and they capitalised by scoring two late, late tries to win the game 10-23 – a scoreline that ultimately was no reflection at all of the game we’d just witnessed!
Southern Counties Divisional Play-Off 2018/19: Frome RFC 10 Buckingham RFC 23
Admission free and no programme.
Refreshments: Bellowing incomprehensibly at the barbeque for a hot-dog rewarded me with a boerewors (£2.50)!
No, I had no idea either! Internet research shows it’s a South African Cumberland-type sausage. Strange taste; it’s supposed to be beef, but it could have been impala or even Ostrich for all I knew ….
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BoereworsAttendance: I walked round the ground at half-time for a bit of entertainment, as I was never going to get anywhere near the bar, and came up with 687, give or take 50 or so either way ....