Not the best of weeks.
My S received some rather disturbing news - blood tests show that she needs to be monitored for myeloma, which is a form of bone cancer. She does not have it yet as such; she has no visible symptoms, but there seem to be “indicators” present. Nothing can be done at the moment; it’s just a question of wait and see how things progress.
At the same time, Mrs O’s annual health check revealed her blood sugar levels are just one point off being classified Type 2 diabetic!
“You’re lucky,” I said, “you’ve narrowly avoided an appointment with the diabetic nurse and being given The Lecture!”
Still, we now both have an incentive to diet and lose the poundage, so we shall be good company for each other. No more KitKats, no more cheese, no more apricot jam on toast ….
And today – yet another storm.
We’ve had Ciara, Dennis and Ellen – I was expecting this one to be Frank, but apparently the Spanish Met Office got in first and named it Jorge, on the grounds that nobody in the UK knows how to properly pronounce it.
I believe it is something like “Haw-hee” or “Hee-haw” or even possibly “Huawei”. Whatever. But these storms, cropping up every weekend, they’re becoming a pain in the neck.
Plan A today was Radstock Town FC. That game got cancelled Friday night, and Radstock’s Twitter feed indicated that they were seriously considering making an application to the Bristol and West Water Polo League, which tells you everything you need to know about the state of their pitch.
Plan B was the local rugby club’s second XV game against East Dorset RFC, but I couldn’t get any social media confirmation that it was on. Last time I rocked up there, I found the opposition had failed to raise a team, leaving me under 10 minutes to get across town to the soccer ground, and it looked like being a repeat scenario today – until I found out, around 11:00 this morning, that the soccer team, Gill Dons, had switched their home game to the artificial 3G pitch at Blandford School! Excellent – a confirmed “Game On” and a new ground to visit!
There are very few artificial pitches in Dorset – only 4 full-size ones as far as I can see. Three are on the south coast – at Slades Park, Bournemouth, the Dorset FA headquarters at Hamworthy, and Dorchester Town FC’s ground. And then there’s Blandford. This pitch was opened in 2015 by Marieanne Spacey (retired Arsenal, Fulham and England striker – 91 caps - and no, I’d never heard of her either
). If I am reading the Football Foundation article about it correctly, it seems to have cost something just over £800,000 to install which is a phenomenal sum
, although I think this may have involved associated landscaping and other works, and a BBC article dating from that time says the average cost of a full-size artificial pitch was around £500,000 anyway. The floodlights were another £70,000. Blandford’s pitch was inevitably "funded" by grants from the FA and also from the County Council - which explains why my rates are so high.
Driving through town to get out on the Shaftesbury road, I was horrified to see that the rivers had well overflowed their banks – we must have had a lot of rain last night. Still, the flood plains were doing their bit – huge lakes of water - and no actual property appeared under threat. As a precaution, I took the “top” road from Shaftesbury to Blandford, rather than the main A350 which has a number of trouble spots in wet weather.
Having parked up at Blandford School next to the Leisure Centre, I wandered off to find the 3G pitch and whilst I could see it, I seemed to be caught in some sort of Crystal Maze of dead-end pathways and high wire fencing preventing access to it.
So I trundled back to the Leisure Centre.
“How do I get to the soccer pitch?”
“Not from here.”
“Oh!”
“You need The Other Entrance …… ”
Which turned out to be half a mile awa,y back down the road I'd come along, and even then I had some difficulty navigating through the school campus and was relieved to eventually spot the Gill Dons’ goalkeeper who pointed me in the right direction.
So what do you get for your £800k – well, not a lot.
The pitch in a wire mesh cage, a bit of hardstanding down one side for spectators, and a gurt big shipping container for the sports / maintenance equipment. Nothing else, and crucially - no shelter as I eyeballed a very ominous black cloud growing on the horizon.
There was also a bone-chilling sou-westerly gale sweeping across the pitch – strong enough to rock my car when I’d parked up at the school.
We got underway and Wareham got the early break, a quick through ball to their no.17 enabling him to lob the Gill Dons keeper. Wareham looked the better side on balance but there’d been no further score when, on the 20m mark, the heavens opened and we had the Mother of all Hailstorms.
We spectators took the only option open to us – we flattened ourselves round the back of the equipment container which was the only place we could find any form of shelter!
When we emerged 10 minutes later, the ground was white, the wind was howling, and the game still in progress. And then it hailed again!
At half-time, a drenched, bedraggled and shivering Ossie made it into the foyer of the changing rooms along with the teams and the rest of the spectators.
Within 5 minutes, the wind had becalmed and the sun was out!
Dons then notched two goals in two minutes, both scored by their no.14. He poached the first goal, managing lunging at a cross and deflecting the ball into the roof of the net, whilst the second goal was a run through the middle, brushing off a couple of defenders on the way. With Wareham now seeking an equaliser, things got a bit heated, and the game finished with a couple of controversies. Firstly the Wareham manager was yellow carded for dissent, promptly said something further the referee, and was shown a red. All he then did was walk from one side of the pitch to the other, and joined us spectators on the hardstanding!
And then the referee, completely unaccountably, played 7 minutes extra time. There had been one minor stoppage and no second half substitutions so where this came from, I have no idea. And Wareham bundled in that equaliser in the 95th minute ……
29/02/20: Dorset Senior League Division 1 (Step 9). Gill Dons 2 Wareham Rangers Reserves 2
Admission free, no programme
Refreshments: a KitKat from the Leisure Centre £1
Attendance: 15, wet and frozen ....