Ossie usually starts each season with some sort of meticulously-researched Master Plan, the compilation of which keeps him busily occupied throughout the months of June and July
. What usually then transpires is that the Plan, by the end of August, is in serious disarray
, and by the end of September, it’s been ripped up entirely!
So this year, apart from a general principle that each match attended should feature a new ground or at least one new team, the bird has been quite laid back and taken things week by week. And lo, a sort of a plan has emerged from the mists, rather by default, and that is to finish off seeing all the teams in the Step 1 National League. Two down already (it should have been three but for that car bulb problem last week
), today saw Ossie making his second visit of the season to the Laithwaite Stadium in Woking, this time to see the landlords take on Ebbsfleet United. Duly accomplished, that leaves me with four National League teams still to catch up with – Chesterfield, Notts. County, Sutton United and Aldershot.
Ebbsfleet United have a peculiar bit of history. Originally Gravesend and Northfleet FC, they changed their name to Ebbsfleet United in 2007 to better identify with all the massive regeneration and new-build projects in their particular locality. At the same time, the club was actually taken over by an internet venture – MyFootballClub . co . uk, a revolutionary idea which apparently involved paid-up website members owning the club, voting (online) on decisions and even picking the team!
Well, that had moderate success but interest in the concept quickly waned, and Ebbsfleet, in 2009/10, were relegated to Step 2. By May 2013, they had racked up financial debts and all but folded. However, luckily for them, a white knight stepped in
– Dr. Abdulla Al-Humaidi and the Kuwaiti firm KEH Sports Ltd. – and the good doctor, as benefactor, has poured a lot of money into the infrastructure of the club, and helped them win back their National League spot in 2017.
Woking gained promotion from Step 2 at the end of last season, but remain one of the few teams in the league with a part-time squad. Completely against expectation, they’ve rattled off six wins on the trot, and actually went into this game as league leaders. Ebbsfleet were one off the bottom, so you’d be putting your money on a banker home win. Right ….
Woking opened the scoring on 7 minutes with what must be an early contender for my Goal of the Season
. Tyreke Johnson, a 20 year old on a 6-month loan from Southampton (and yes, he has made appearances as a substitute in the Premiership), picked up the ball about 25 yards out and unleashed an absolute blockbuster of a shot that Ebbsfleet’s keeper Jordan Holmes despairingly dived for but got nowhere near as it scorched into the net. The rest of the half was a fairly even affair, but the Woking forward line didn’t look all that co-ordinated, and 1-0 at the break was eminently fair.
On 49m, a Woking attacker was strongly challenged in the box by Ebbsfleet’s keeper, and although the home player kept his feet, Simon Jackson, the referee, pointed to the spot. It seemed a harsh decision to me, but I was at the far end of the pitch, so maybe I missed something in the challenge. Jake Hyde’s spot-kick, however, struck the corner of the crossbar and post and bounced clear. Ebbsfleet promptly went up the other end and had a reasonably good penalty shout of their own for handball turned down.
By the 70th minute, still 1-0 and looking like that’s how it would end up, despite the Ebbsfleet goal leading a charmed life at time, Ossie was sharpening his pencil and pondering his report along the lines that “to be a successful side, sometimes you have to win ugly, and that’s just what Woking were doing today, although it was a bit of a stretch to think they’d be able to keep this up all season” when the game took a completely unexpected twist. Firstly, Woking got their second goal on 77m, the Ebbsfleet defence completely melting away in the face of a strong run by Dave Tarpey who slipped the ball to Hyde to easily beat the keeper. But 6 minutes later, after a raft of substitutions, the Fleet’s Alex Reid got on the end of a deep cross and diverted it into the roof of the net. 2-1 and cue both sides playing frantic football. And in the first minute of extra-time, Ebbsfleet clinched a totally unexpected draw, Myles Weston floating a sublime free-kick over the wall and across the keeper into the net. Funny old game, football, I don’t think anyone had seen that coming, certainly not the away fans!
A late finish meant a bit of a route-march back to the station, nevertheless managing to arrive at 17:13 for the 17:16 stopper to Salisbury, where I usually grab a cup of coffee while waiting for my onwards connection to Dorset. But there was no sign of the 17:16, and everything was totally disrupted (again!
) - this time the cause being trespassers on the line at Surbiton. But it transpired the 16:46 through train to Exeter was running 40 minutes late, so I was able to catch that one, giving me the unlikely prospect of arriving home slightly earlier than expected! Fat chance, however, they announced when we reached Andover that the train was being terminated at Salisbury, so I did still get to purchase my Americano at the Pumpkin Seed (where the Ostrich had an argument over being short-changed by 1p
) whilst waiting for the next train west, that one thankfully being only 10 minutes behind time.
14/09/19 – Vanarama National League (Step 1): Woking 2 Ebbsfleet United 2
Admission: £13 concession, and a decent programme for £3.
Refreshments: Nothing from the burger bar - I consider £5.50 for a basic burger to be larcenous
. 75p for a KitKat from the corner store by the station, and £2.
79 for the coffee.
Attendance: 1,942