Well, as we know, lockdown was finally eased in England on 29th March , with the Government issuing roadmaps and seconding the finer details of the way forward to the various Departments. The DCMS (Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport) under Oliver Dowden MP put forth the usual woolly waffle about welcoming the return of grassroots sport and, as previously, left it up the various sports’ governing bodies to come up with the actual rules. Looking at soccer, most Step 8 (County Leagues) and below then had to make a decision “do we carry on where we left off last December?” or “do we arrange some sort of one-off Cup competition to take place during April, May (and by gracious consent of the FA) June?” Most Leagues opted for the latter, although some decided to carry on (those smaller leagues with fewer clubs who had completed most of their 2020/21 fixtures anyway) and others just gave carte blanche to their clubs to play friendly matches.
Anyway, assuming that the various Covid-related rules applied back last December would be re-applied from April, fixtures were duly planned, starting from Saturday 3rd April, and posted up as normal on the FA’s FullTime website. Then on March 24th, just before the re-start, the FA came up with its own pronouncement, entitled “Master Guidance for the Restarting of Grassroots Outdoor Football” – and buried in the middle of it was an absolute corker :
"No spectators are allowed at grassroots football as part of step one of the Government’s roadmap."
This was nothing to do with the Government and the DCMS - it was entirely the FA’s own interpretation!
Cue huge consternation. No spectators? Anywhere? Completely draconian! And to cap it all, some clubs, including Templecombe Rovers locally, had been advertising a commemorative programme to welcome back spectators to their first home game ….. before the FA stepped in, Templecombe had actually been my game of choice for April 3rd! Well, faced with the FA’s edict, I decided I’d give that Saturday a miss – the Templecombe game did go ahead, attracted a bumper crowd of 59 fans happy to ignore the rules , and we moved on to the following weekend, Saturday April 10th .....
On 6th April, the DCMS issued a further bulletin that effectively said that the FA had got it wrong . Spectators were allowed, and had been from March 29th. However, it introduced an entirely new facet – spectators could only attend if the game was played on public fields, but not on private land ! Dear oh dear – now you had to consult the Land Registry to find out if you could go to a game or not ! You couldn't make it up - as if the Coronavirus makes a distinction between public and private .....
Most clubs below step 8 locally play on public recreation grounds, but some were now actively seeking parish permission as to what they could or couldn’t do. At least one club – Milborne Port – had posted up “No Spectators” signs despite playing on a Rec. Other clubs who plied their trade on schools’ 3G pitches, and others with their own grounds, would obviously be a no-no for fans. I had planned to attend Templecombe’s second home game on 10th April, but in the event that became academic anyway – Ossie went down with the virulent virus the day before (thankfully rhino, not corona ). Four days of filling rubbish bags with snotty toilet tissue paper (thank goodness we’d stocked up for Brexit ) and gobbling packets of Strepsils (Honey and Lemon flavour, which the bird adores) ensued. Certainly no footie-watching, so now we move on to the following weekend, Saturday April 17th…..
A recovered Ostrich, a pleasant spring day, Templecombe at home again for the third Saturday in a row, and the only problem now was ascertaining the kick-off time …...
It was of course the day of HRH’s funeral, and the FA had blandly put out a suggestion midweek that all leagues should consider moving their afternoon kick-off times so as not to clash with the events at Windsor. Cue complete chaos again . Some leagues moved their kick-off times to 12:30, others to 16:15, others to a combination of both. Some leagues told the clubs to sort it out amongst themselves, which resulted in more than a few matches being cancelled because the home team and the away team couldn’t agree when to start ! At least the Yeovil and District League adopted a sensible compromise – kick off all games at 14:00 as originally planned, but extend half-time by an extra 5 minutes or so to incorporate one minute’s silence at 15:00, just before the start of the second half.
So, a gentle return to watching grassroots football after the recent lockdown. Slight problems driving the 10 miles or so to Templecombe as I found the back-road I’d normally take closed with diversions in place. I suspect the road closure was initially due to the fact that it passes the house where the property mogul Sir Richard Sutton and his wife were stabbed, the former fatally, last week , and the police wanted to keep journalists and other prying eyes at bay, but I’m surprised the restrictions are still in force; knowing the local constabulary, they’ve probably forgotten to lift the barricades .
Templecombe Recreation Ground is a pleasant, elevated venue at the back of the village’s main housing estate with scenic views across the Blackmore Vale to Cucklington and Wincanton in the distance. The ground is so elevated, it’s higher up than the top of the church steeple down in the village. Apart from the (closed today) sports and social club, facilities include two soccer pitches, a children’s adventure playground with a zip-line, a couple of tennis courts, basketball hoop, and a particularly scary-looking BMX track . There’s adequate parking with an overflow alongside the soccer pitch which was not in use today; getting out of the place, however, there’s a bit of a one-way system round the estate, so I was glad I’d checked it out on Google Maps beforehand. Basically, if you find yourself passing the Westcombe Stores, you’re going in the right direction to get back on the main drag .
Social distancing was no problem and I spent most of the game lounging on the grassy bank by the railings of the BMX track in warm sunshine, although a slight breeze got up later on.
The match was a bit of an end-of the-season mid-table battle, insofar as you can describe anything in an 8 team league as mid-table. Boring, gentle kick-about for the first 20 minutes, in which I was reduced to counting daisies (as one does ) before the home side’s number 10 decided to take matters into his own hands with a 20 yard run and clinical finish. He scored a fortuitous second on 27m, hoisting a speculative attempt from 40 yards which the visiting Manor Athletic keeper totally misjudged. He could have completed his hat-trick a few minutes later when the keeper decided to leave a cross-shot – it came back off the post. At which point Templecombe seemed to think they had the points in the bag, failed to press home their advantage, and that decision came back to bite them on the bum in the second half .
After the interval, possession was pretty much all Manor Athletic, but initially that was all it was – possession and no bite. The game desperately needed a Manor goal to ginger it up, and thankfully that’s what we got on 61m, their number 15 rifling the ball home. With everything to play for, Manor piled on the pressure and equalised on 73m; their number 7, unchallenged, from 10 yards. Templecombe looked a spent force and it was as much as they could do to grimly hang on to the league point - mainly thanks to their keeper who pulled off some outstanding saves and blocks in the latter stages. 2-2 and a fair result to a game which seems better in hindsight than it did at the time.
Yeovil & District League Premier (Step 11)
Templecombe Rovers 2 Manor Athletic 2
No admission or programme, no refreshments available - attendance just 21