Two matches to report on this week, so let’s get cracking!
First up, a Bank Holiday Monday fixture in Somerset - to the self–styled Royal Capital of Ancient Wessex to see a top v bottom game which the hosts predictably won, although they had a frustrating afternoon of it all round
.
Somerton’s ground is part of a large recreation area on the eastern side of town, alongside the B3153 Langport Road. Before you reach the playing fields, if you turn into the residential Gassons Lane, the entrance to the spacious car park and clubhouse is almost immediately on your right. This clubhouse hosts the changing rooms, toilets and apparently a snooker hall, but no other facilities were open today; it also has a wooden veranda from which one could watch the soccer (at a bit of a distance) if it were raining.
The campus incorporates a couple of hard tennis courts, a skate park, crown green bowling club (where I watched a couple of ladies practising for a while, and pretty good they were, too
), a large (and well-used today) children’s play area, along with a half-size 3G pitch marked for soccer and hockey, various other grass soccer pitches, and Somerton Rugby Club (which I visited backalong pre-pandemic) at the other end of the site. It’s all nicely laid out, with plenty of well-trimmed hedgerows separating the various sports.
Somerton were in front on 6m with a well-worked goal; a run down the right wing, cut inside and cross for an easy conversion at the far post, all very precise. A calmly taken penalty, with the keeper diving the wrong way, made it 2-0 on 14m but Welton Rovers immediately pulled one back, a free kick into the area being expertly steered home. Somerton restored their two goal lead on 22m when a blocked shot ran free and was hammered back in from the edge of the area. The hosts had the opportunity to score more in the first half, but their goal attempts unfortunately started to get increasingly wild
.
Welton started the second half quite well, pegging Somerton back in their own half. As the game progressed, it began to get a bit tetchy, however, the general mood decidedly not being helped by a club linesmen whose default position seemed to be “offside”. Ah, club linesmen, the bane on lower-level non-league soccer
. If he flagged once in the second half for offside, he flagged a dozen times, and Somerton were the team being penalised. Not saying his decisions were all wrong, but let's just say some were extremely marginal
.
The referee confined himself to “having a word” with players as and when necessary to calm things down and didn’t get his yellow card out until added time, when a crunching tackle deserved more than a reprimand. Somerton’s 4th goal arrived in the 61m when a ball into the box was deflected high in the air and dropped down just below the crossbar; an attacker managed to bundle it in without bundling in the keeper as well
. Two further goals followed on 73m and 81m, the latter an absolutely venomous drive from 25 yards, which I think summed up Somerton’s overall frustration
. Nevertheless, an entertaining game on a sunny afternoon.
30/08/21 – Somerset County League Division 1
Somerton Town 6 Welton Rovers Reserves 1No admission charge, no programme, and no refreshments available on-site.
Attendance: 22
We had, that Monday, studied the long-term weather forecast, with most pundits forecasting a drear September with storms and below seasonal temperatures. (As I sit here now, with the sun out, the temperature well into the 20’s, and even the Infernal Hot Water Device on the roof burbling merrily to itself, go figure!
) So we decided to cut our losses and harvest all the green tomatoes from the various vines dotted around the back garden, as some of them were starting to rot, and others drop off – no hope of them ripening. Weighing the proceeds, we found we had just over 2lbs worth in old money, so green tomato chutney-making it be!
Now by coincidence, the local fly-sheet had printed a recipe in its last edition – “Auntie Fanny’s green tomato chutney”
. Auntie Fanny was born at the turn of the century near Dorchester; she handed her chutney recipe down in her family. The ingredients listed cited 1 ½ lbs of tomatoes, so (not without some misgiving from Mrs O) we scaled things up and tweaked the recipe as we thought fit.
Ingredients:
1 ½ lbs of green toms (we had 2 lbs)
1 lb apples (we used 2 lbs, or 3 Bramleys, but of course once you’ve cored them ….. we left the peel on)
1 ½ lbs of onions (again, we used 2 lbs; we usually carry a goodly supply)
1 ½ lbs of brown sugar (we used white sugar, which again we had in the house, and cut the quantity a bit)
1 ½ pints of vinegar (we had two tag end bottles on the go, one white and one cider, so utilized those and cracked open a new bottle of white to make up just 1 pint, no more)
1 oz of ground ginger and ½ tsp turmeric (luckily we had both in the house)
1 tblsp salt ‘n pepper to taste.
3 tblsp cornflower.
Ossie was promptly despatched to procure the Bramleys, the cornflower and the fresh bottle of vinegar, and found he needed to raid Waitrose to source the first two items. There were, in fact, very few Bramleys left on the shelf – I guess I might have had to buy Granny Smiths as a substitute). All our green tomatoes were very small, so a mammoth chopping session followed, and once everything was prepared, we fired up the cooking pan on the gas hob. It didn’t take too long to boil it up and reduce it, although we needed to add extra cornflower to get it thickened. We had a quantity of “Bon Mamman” 375g jam jars in store, and plenty of left-over jampot covers and discs from the previous year (“Which way did you say the waxed side goes?”, grumbled Ossie
), so the former were sterilized in the oven and once the hot fruit mix was ladled out, we found we’d got around 8 ¾ lbs of chutney!
Not bad; it will keep us going through the winter months.
Plan A for Saturday’s match was Westbury United Development vs Bradford Town Development, but this had disappeared off the face of the FA’s fixtures site by Friday, (or might even have been a figment of my imagination in the first place
), and Plan B, Dilton Marsh Wanderers, were still frantically appealing for a referee on Saturday morning
, so I didn’t risk it. That left me scouring the local games, and a top of the table clash between Potterne and Seend United, both unbeaten so far, seemed an interesting third choice.
Potterne (which I guess you will never have heard of) play in Market Lavington (which I also guess you will never have heard of), and that large village turned out to be right out in the wilds of Wiltshire, necessitating a lengthy cross-country drive from Westbury, passing HMP Earlestoke en route; it’s often featured on the local TV News and I’ve always wondered where it was – now I know! A few years back, an inmate of the jail, working outside on the prison farm, decided to "leg it" by commandeering the prison farm's tractor
. He'd got about 10 miles from the jail before a retired prison officer, driving the other way, recognised the vehicle and wondered what the prison's tractor was doing haring down the main road ....... cue a "Keystone Cops" car chase
https://www.gazetteandherald.co.uk/news ... of-escape/Getting to Westbury in the first place proved difficult; the Warminster bypass was closed with no signposted diversions (the result of an accident during the morning) and Warminster town centre was therefore understandably virtually in gridlock. That cost me 30 minutes or so on the journey, but I still arrived in good time.
The soccer ground is at the top end of a road called Northover, a narrow lane leading off the village’s main drag by the Co-op and car park. It’s on top of the downs, with fine views over the valley, and has plenty of parking, albeit a bit rough in places. There’s a changing-room pavilion with a small overhang behind one goal, and abutting this building, on each side, are (a) a small wooden equipment store and (b) a squat, stone building which looked for all the world like a cricket ground score box, but turned out to be the toilets!
The pitch noticeably slopes from side to side. There are no railings, no dugouts, and nearly no corner-flags either, but they arrived belatedly after three minutes’ play
. The other interesting feature is the 16 or so training floodlights, spread around the perimeter (apart from one lonely one seemingly abandoned in a neighbouring field) and mounted on poles of varying heights and wonkiness. Most, but not all by any means, were even pointing towards the pitch!
The first half was a bit too fast and furious for its own good. Both sides got stuck in from the start with some hefty challenges on display, and the referee had to keep a firm hand on proceedings from the outset. Potterne’s attack looked a bit lightweight and the visitors had little difficulty repelling them; there were also rather a lot of aimless downfield punts by both sides through to the opposing keepers. It wasn’t spectacular, but it was certainly absorbing, and I was taken by surprise when the half-time whistle blew; I realised I hadn’t looked at my watch once during the half!
Seend United, the visitors, took the lead straight after the interval. A long throw-in into the box, the ball bobbled, the defence froze, and Reynolds headed home from a couple of yards out. That rattled Potterne, recriminations set in, and they looked in danger of falling apart – a second goal for Seend was thus no surprise and arrived on 56m, a glancing header from a corner, and the referee had to have a lengthy discussion with the home goalkeeper to dissuade him from throttling his defence
. Seend then had plenty of chances to make the game safe – not least from the penalty spot (72m) but the kick was well saved. There was a final twist to an entertaining game when Potterne did manage to pull a goal back, poked in from a quickly taken corner (87m), but by then it was too little, too late. A deserved win for the away side on the run of play.
30/08/21 – Trowbridge & District League Division 2
Potterne 1 Seend United 2No admission or paperwork.
No refreshments available on-site, but I’d taken along 2 scotch eggs (Aldi – 89p) and, because scotch eggs are so dry, Mrs O’s Yokebe diet milk shaker flagon with about ½ a pint of milk!
Attendance: 43 – a lot of families enjoying the hot and hazy weather.