What better way to get away from all the political shenanigans on Tuesday than a quick evening jaunt “up the hill” to Shaftesbury for a Wessex League Cup tie. And despite the fact that it bucketed down with rain for most of the first half, quite an enjoyable encounter ensued against Eastleigh-based AFC Stoneham.
I haven’t been to Shaftesbury’s soccer ground for a while now, but it was the same old procedure, park up by the Sports Club and Bar (virtually deserted) and head over to Tescos for a quick browse round the shelves as the football club never open their gates until about ¼ hour before the game – not that there was exactly a crush for this one as very few punters turned up in the soggy weather conditions. Nevertheless, although it’s a bit of a “tin pot cup competition” both sides gave it their best shot in the circumstances with plenty of end-to-end stuff and more than a few sliding tackles on the wet surface
The Rockies aren’t having a particularly good season both on and off the pitch, where their slightly dubious scheme to turn half their car-park into a car hand-wash franchise has not exactly found favour with the Town Council’s Planning Committee. Especially as the latter own it. AFC Stoneham, however, are doing somewhat better in the League, and are looking forward to occupying their new ground shortly, although opening has apparently been delayed because there’s no electricity yet, SSE having failed to build the necessary nearby substation. This will be the ground where – I think I’ve mentioned this before – every player, official and crucially spectator, will have to register online with the Hants FA to obtain a personal QR code just to get into the damn place, so it’s not likely the Ostrich will ever visit the stadium, as the bird can’t cope with such new-fangled techno-skulduggery.
Although a goalless draw and a penalty shootout to decide the tie looked on the cards right up to the 80th minute, Stoneham sneaked a last-gasp win when the home keeper dropped a cross and substitute Tom Hogan jabbed it home. An always watchable game despite the cold, miserable conditions.
25/09/19 – Wessex League Cup Round 2: Shaftesbury 0 AFC Stoneham 1
Admission: £4, no programme (not unexpected for such a cup game).
Refreshments: I have learnt to avoid their flaky sausage rolls, the only hot food on offer.
Attendance: 26
So to Saturday, and after a number of long journeys in recent weeks, I had been contemplating yet another trip “Up the Smoke” today, this time to see London Scottish RFC who play in Richmond, but an increasingly apocalyptic series of weather forecasts led to Ossie putting discretion before valour, and staying reasonably local. So after consulting the runes, it was off on a 40 mile car journey into deepest Wiltshire and the town of Devizes. I had thought about a trip to Salisbury, but the clincher against that was the closure of the main road through Shaftesbury affecting my return journey – it’s carnival night there, and unfortunately I think it’ll have been a bit of a wash-out.
Devizes RFC were entertaining Bath-based Combe Down, a club I hadn’t previously seen. The latter had made a strong start to the season, unbeaten after two games, whilst Devizes, the “Saddlebacks”, had started with a good win over Thatcham but lost in a bruising encounter at Grove last Saturday.
Devizes’ ground is just outside the town centre on the Marlborough road, next door to the Wiltshire Police headquarters. It’s a multi-purpose sports club with a cricket pitch and umpteen smart hard tennis courts, and the V-shaped clubhouse sits in the middle of the complex. It must have at least 150 solar panels on the roof, which I presume is a nice little earner! Like Rosslyn Park last week, the interior furnishings are rather spartan, not many places to sit and relax, although there were some benches on the veranda outside, which also provided a bit of welcome cover when the rain showers set in.
Although the scoreline was very similar to last Saturday, this was certainly a more watchable game, largely for its comic elements in the first half, and ill-disciplined second half which saw Combe Down down to 13 men at the end, having run out of available substitutes for injuries and then having a player sin-binned, and Devizes down to 14 men after a straight red card for O’Connor for a reckless tackle, although it did seem a bit of a harsh decision to me. Devizes’ early kicking for touch was sometimes wayward to put it mildly, the ball confusing the heck out of Combe Down by often swerving unexpectedly back into midfield , and Devizes also seemed to have got the art of the “hospital pass” down to a fine art, their full back certainly less than amused with his team-mates as he clambered upright having been sat on by a few opposition heavies .
The first half saw relentless pressure from both sides but the only two tries were notched by the home side. On the stroke of half-time, Combe Down kicked a long range penalty to make the score 14-3. After the break, the away side quickly scored and converted a try, but 14-10 was as good as it got for them; Devizes’ tenacity kept on forcing them into defensive errors, and they soon built up an unassailable lead to leave Combe Down effectively dead and buried.
28/09/19 – Wadworth 6X Southern Counties South (Level 7): Devizes RFC 45 Combe Down RFC 10
Admission: free
Programme; £3, match-specific 28pp effort, see below
Refreshments: 2 chicken pasties, £2 each. Small but perfectly formed …..
Attendance: 108
The programme. Completely off the wall! More like a good old-fashioned university rag mag than a rugby programme Mostly unrepeatable on a family forum, these are about the only three gems I can provide without exciting the Moderators:
“As David Cameron reveals juicy details about his forthcoming book in an attempt to boost sales, Waterstones confirms pre-orders have doubled - they’ve just received a second one!”
“Convert your sofa into a sofa bed - by forgetting your wife’s birthday ….”
“After Border Patrol captures 86 people trying to cross the English Channel in small dinghies, Sajid Javid warns that many more Tory MPs may try to escape.”