First, a minor triumph! We have harvested and eaten our first fig!!
Mrs O decided to plant a common or garden
ficus carica up against the back fence a couple of years ago, and having established itself and started produced an annual crop of inedible, hard green bullets, we suddenly found this week one which had turned brown and ripened. And very sweet and tasty it was too!
This Saturday saw all the ties played in the First Qualifying Round of the FA Cup, which is usually a red-letter day for non-league ground-hoppers like Ossie, because all sorts of strange fixtures arise and, in this particular area, it brings Cornish clubs across the River Tamar and up into my back yard. So, a no-brainer for Ossie today in Frome Town vs Bodmin Town – but wait
; the wretched Covid virus enters the equation.
Frome Town decided to make their game (400 spectators allowed) all ticket, through online sales only. Well, blow that for a game of soldiers.
I’m not pre-booking match tickets at Frome’s level; Yeovil Town still owe me £17 from last season!
And what if it rains – both ends at Frome’s ground are open terracing, the seated accommodation which runs down one side would probably take 80 or so by the time you’ve cordoned off two out of every three seats for social distancing protocols, and that leaves 320 drenched fans potentially cramming like sardines under the covered terracing on the far side. Frome Town were trumpeting last Monday they’d sold 150 tickets already and it would be a certain sell-out, no tickets on sale on the day, so that was the final straw and I consigned that particular fixture to the dustbin. (By Thursday, mind you, they’d gone strangely quiet and on Friday they tweeted that they still had 150 tickets unsold
so these would be available on the day at the turnstiles. Well, bully for them.
They’d already lost my custom.
With the current rise in Covid cases nationally, I’d been thinking of reverting to my original game-plan of picking games where the attendance was likely to be under 100 anyway.
“What criteria do we use when we chose a fixture, Ossie?” I asked.
“It has to be driveable, no public transport,” intoned the Feathered One, sagely.
“Correct. And?”
“And it has to be local - Dorset, Somerset and Wiltshire!”
“Yes. By the way, does that include Fordingbridge?”
“Now don’t you get all technical with me – I’m only a bird-brain”
“Right, well, what else then, Ossie?”
“There has to be a new team which we haven’t seen before, or a new ground to visit”
“OK. And finally?”
“It has to include a team with a silly name so we can keep Frank amused ….”
“Precisely!”
“So ……..”
“It’s looking a bit like Team Gryphon then, isn’t it, Ossie, …..”
“Yup” said the bird.
In this game, never assume.
Despite both FA FullTime websites (the old, corrupt “Admin” one and the new, all-singing-and-dancing but totally user-unfriendly “Public” one
) proclaiming today’s venue as the Gryphon School’s 3G pitch in Sherborne, a last minute check on Twitter pointed me to an entirely different ground – The Terrace Playing Fields, which are part of the giant Sherborne Leisure Centre complex. Of course, this is a place I’ve already visited many times, for Sherborne rugby and Sherborne Town soccer, but there are some basic football pitches down at the entrance to the car park which are new to me. The Terrace Playing Fields area is best described as rather like Machu Pinchu, but without the shelter or the facilities, and hosting more midges than your average Scottish glen.
The usual easy drive overland through Buckhorn Weston to Templecombe and Henstridge ensued, only encountering one horse and one rabbit en-route, both of which I managed to avoid. Not as exciting as my last trip that way two weeks ago; back then I was confronted by two goats in the middle of the road!
Having arrived and established that I’d got the right ground – I was warmly welcomed by a Team Gryphon player who was mildly amused anyone would be daft enough to want to watch them – I settled down in the car with an old Dick Francis thriller and nearly missed the kick-off!
Team Gryphon are an already well-established and successful Sunday league club who have taken their first steps this season towards operating an adult Saturday side. Starting, of course, at the bottom of the pyramid. Barwick and Stoford Reserves, the opposition team, are based in the village of Barwick which is near Yeovil Junction railway station, and that ground is on my hit list for a visit later this year, all being well.
Barwick Reserves had started their season with a 1-9 home drubbing, but didn’t look anything like that bad today; well, not for the first 20 minutes, but then they quickly conceded three goals. Gryphon’s no.10 was displaying a really fast set of heels, and he completely outpaced a covering defender to clip the ball past the out-rushing keeper for the first goal. Four minutes later, he accelerated through the right-hand side of the defence and volleyed home, 2-0. Gryphon’s no.8 then delivered a perfectly-struck free kick into the top right-hand corner of the net, and their fourth goal on 43m was a peach as well, deliciously curled by no.10 from just inside the box.
Barwick made a slightly better fist of the second half, until Gryphon hit them with another rapid three goal blast, the first of which looked to me to be suspiciously offside
, but Barwick did manage to pull a goal back, taking advantage of a fumble by the home keeper. Gryphon completed their comprehensive victory with a final curled 15 yarder on 78m, which just left time for a couple of bookings following a minor bout of handbags, to finish off an excellent game!
12/09/20 – Yeovil & District League Division 2 (Step 13) – Team Gryphon 8 Barwick & Stoford Reserves 1
Admission: free
Refreshments: I didn’t bother investigating if the Rugby Club bar was open. Too far to walk!
Covid Rating: 1/10. Sherborne Town Council had installed a hand sanitiser at the entrance gate to the playing fields, but apart from that - nothing!
Attendance: 16
And finally, from the local FB pages:
Dorset & Wilts Fire Brigade
Our first incident tonight was #Shaftesbury who attended a premises where the occupier had attempted to destroy a Wasp nest using a flame thrower. He had not only set the tree alight but also got significantly stung!