31/08 - First Qualifying Round of the FA Vase (the FA Cup for minor non-league clubs) today, and two or three interesting encounters in the area with Cornish clubs making their annual foray across the Tamar Bridge. The game I chose was, needless to say, the lowest scoring one of the bunch , but interesting nevertheless.
The venue was Keynsham Town FC and Keynsham is a pig of a place to try to drive to. It’s half-way between Bath and Bristol on the A4 trunk road, but to drive there on main roads from Dorset normally involves passing through Bath city centre, and no-one in their right mind does that if it possibly can be avoided. Not if they want to arrive at their destination the same day, that is. The alternative is to try to find a cross-country route through the Mendips and that’s not easy either. My preferred way (well I’ve done it once before, but got lost twice coming back ) is to Frome, then across to Radstock, and then through the hills via Camerton and Timsbury to pick up the A39, and you have plenty of time to admire those pretty little villages because, this being BANES territory (Bath and North East Somerset District Council), each village has a two to three mile section of 20mph roads! So it’s a long journey.
Turning right onto the busy A39 is not the easiest task, but after that it’s quickly off onto the B3116 and that leads you down into Keynsham, where another long 20mph stretch awaits you. I didn’t fancy traversing the town centre itself, so used the A4 bypass to get round it, and turned back down Daisy Hill towards the conurbation and the AJN Stadium.
Getting into the stadium carpark wasn’t easy either (you have to pick up a narrow sliproad that dives behind a brick wall) and I was glad I’d found that out by researching Google Street View before setting off. But the carpark was tarmacked, spacious and well laid out, unlike the usual potholed, loose gravelled dumps I usually have to frequent. The pitch is a 4G artificial surface, a bit of a rarity in these parts, but the rest of the stadium was a bit ho-hum. There’s a clubhouse and changing room building down one side, but nothing on the other three. And the bar was very nondescript, not much in the way of furniture, and the Sports TV was one of those projection arrangements onto the back wall that tends to lose all focus and definition in the picture.
In town today were Helston Athletic, who had made the sensible decision to travel up yesterday evening. It’s a shade under 200 miles, and not one to be done on a Saturday in August. My 38 miles from Dorset was bad enough! Helston have been tipped to win the South West Peninsula League Premier West this season, so Keynsham, newly promoted into the equivalent Western League Premier Division, were aware they’d be no pushovers - and an incident as early as the second minute set the scene. Keynsham’s veteran Scott Saunders, in the back line of defence, slightly misjudged a long ball hit forward, and instead of firmly heading it back, he deflected the ball the other way towards his keeper. Quick as a flash, Helston’s Alfie Flack was past him, onto the ball, and all but nutmegged the home keeper Ash Clark. Clark did well to sit on the ball!
What quickly became obvious was that Helston, a young side, were whippet-fast and they mercilessly chased everything (including the home keeper ). The Keynsham defensive four were under huge pressure from the start, and it wasn’t a huge surprise when Helston took the lead on 13m. A corner to the near post was glanced on to Olly Brokenshire, who cleverly juggled the ball past a defender and rammed it home.
The story of the rest of the match is quickly told. Keynsham couldn’t make much headway and got cross with themselves. Helston’s fast forward surges always looked dangerous. The game got a bit fractious later on; referee Mike Halford booked four and calmed it down. Both sides had a penalty shout turned down; neither looked like penalties to me although Helston’s had more merit. Helston played out time by the corner flag. And that was it for this week! Entertaining enough, and another Cornish football club in Ossie's bag.
Only got lost twice again on the return journey, but not as badly as last time!
24/08/19 – Buildbase FA Vase First Qualifying Round: Keynsham Town 0 Helston Athletic 1
Admission: £4, including a free 32pp programme, not a bad read.
Refreshments: A run of the mill pasty £2.50 and chips (of the frites variety), on which I accidentally put too much salt £1.50
Attendance: 71. Poor, really, I’d have thought they’d get more than that, but Bristol City were at home today so I wonder if that’s a factor.