To Shaftesbury on Monday morning to get passport-style photographs taken for the renewal of our oldie driving licences.
Mrs O’s renewal papers had come through the post indicating the requirement for a mugshot - I genuinely had thought (hoped!
) that we had left that little bit of bureaucracy behind on turning 70, but apparently not. You can renew online if you have a valid passport number (they pinch your photo from that) but we haven’t had passports for years, definitely no cruising for Ossie!
So mugshots it was, courtesy of Saxon Photographic (can’t be beggared with all that fuss twiddling with the height of those stools you get in supermarket booths
), and the benefit of their service is that they run the results through their computer to ensure your photo meets all the required digital parameters. We shall see!
The Baguette Bar was closed
so we had to make do with pasties from the nearby bakers.
Tuesday evening, and the Ostrich is donning black overcoat, muffler and wig.
“Why the heavy disguise, Ossie?”
“You know what happened the last time we went down to Gillingham Town. I don’t want to be recognised …”
Wincanton Town are still nomadic, playing their home games in Gillingham, so the short journey from the Nest followed by the long drive down the rutted track to the Woodwater Lane ground for the evening’s fixture. My last visit was for Gillingham’s pre-season friendly against lower league Ilminster Town, for which they tried to charge me a larcenous £6 for admission (as if it were a proper League fixture), only reducing it to £5 when I complained. We didn’t part on the best of terms that day …….
Thankfully, they didn’t recognise me as I paid up at the entrance gate for the Wincanton game, so maybe Ossie’s disguise worked!
Visiting Nailsea & Tickenham FC were promoted into the league last season and have been going great guns since, currently lying 2nd in the table. They looked impressive from the start and it only took them 5m to score the first of three clinically-taken first half goals. They were speedy in attack, pursued Wincanton relentlessly, and defended well when required. Wincanton had their fair share of play but no-one could really argue with the half-time score-line.
0-4 on 53m, and the game was well out of Wincanton’s reach at that point, but given the hard, fast pace of the game, it was almost inevitable there would be a badly-timed tackle and resulting melee at some point; this duly occurred on 60m with referee Ella Broad having no hesitation in red-carding the visitor’s no.8, who was decidedly an unhappy bunny at the decision and had to be ushered off the pitch
. He was last heard demolishing the changing room furniture
. That incident seemed to unsettle the Swags* a bit, they lost a little of their composure, and Wincanton got a goal back on 68m, a close-range effort forced home. The visitors keeper then made a number of smart saves as Wincanton pressed, right to the end, but there was no further scoring.
* Nailsea Town FC were the “Swans” and Tickenham United FC were the “Stags”, so when the two clubs merged in 2015 …..
Wincanton’s return to their Moor Lane ground continues to be delayed by remedial drainage work to the pitch, and I did hear a rumour tonight that the leisure company running the sports centre building there might be in difficulty due to a near-tripling of their energy bills
, but I have no substantiation of this. Wincanton, in the meantime are reputedly trying to source portacabins for their ground in case they get locked out of the leisure centre changing rooms. Wouldn’t surprise me if there aren’t a few more clubs out there relying on shared facilities and potentially facing similar difficulties ....
Tuesday 25/10/22: Western League Division 1 (Step 6)
Wincanton Town 1 Nailsea & Tickenham 4Admission: £4 (concession) and Raffle: £1 (was it drawn? Nothing announced ….
)
Programme: £2 - 28pp, informative effort with all the basics included.
Refreshments: 2 x pasties £5. One cheese ‘n onion, one traditional.
Attendance: 67
Now the clocks have changed, I’ve started to review the Master Spreadsheet containing all my planned fixtures up to next April. I had planned on visiting one or two far-flung venues, but the truth is I’m finding it more onerous these days driving in the dark.
If soccer clubs with floodlights stick to 3:00 Saturday kick-offs, then I might start giving them a swerve unless they are very local. There is, however, chatter that because of the energy crisis, some leagues are allowing 3:00 kick-offs to be brought forward so floodlights don’t need to be used. Rugby clubs, and minor league soccer clubs without floodlights, have by necessity tended to adopt 2:00 kick-offs in winter so at least you can be getting away at the end of the game whilst it’s still light, something I prefer. We shall see how things progress.
Which brings us on to Saturday’s entertainment and the bird’s first visit to Gainsborough Park for a number of seasons - the home of Sherborne RFC.
There’s ample space to lose your car in the aircraft hanger-sized parking lot which serves the rugby, Sherborne Town FC and the rest of the Terrace Playing Fields complex in general. The rugby clubhouse is on the other side of the car park from the pitch, up a short track, and it’s a fairly small building but does contain a kitchen / hatch for hot food and drinks; I see they are still appealing for funds to improve it (as well as the playing surfaces) and have been doing so ever since we moved down here in 2016.
Crediton RFC arrived unbeaten in seven matches and heading the league table, whilst the home team had won their first game of the season - narrowly - then lost their next six. Although Sherborne took the lead after 8m, (when Crediton erroneously assumed a long kick forward was going to go beyond the dead ball line, but it didn’t, allowing Austin, following up, to touch down), the visitors easily controlled the rest of the game and scored three tries in each half without reply. Their only blip was one of Avery-Wright’s conversions hitting a post and bouncing back in-field.
Sherborne had their moments, but the Crediton defence was solid - they bided their time, dug in, and punished Sherborne’s mistakes. The visiting forwards were dominant and all of their tries were clinically executed; in fact, one had the suspicion that they played the game throughout comfortably in second gear. Crediton’s winger Josh Woodland notched the final two tries and was only denied a hat-trick in the closing minutes by a marginal forward pass.
So not the most exciting of games today; Crediton simply “got the job done”.
Saturday 29/10/22: Regional 2 Tribute South West (Level 6)
Sherborne RFC 7 Crediton RFC 40Admission: £5
Programme: included. 28pp glossy, match-specific, a number of interesting articles and quite humorous in places. The front cover was a tribute to Geoffrey “Churchill” Clutchall, former player and Assistant Bar Steward, who was celebrating his 70th birthday.
Refreshments: (1) Well now, here’s a thing.
Arrived in the clubhouse an hour before the start, seeking a pasty. Long queue, joined it and eventually worked my way to the front - where I had a plate of cottage pie, carrots, peas, Yorkshire Pudding and gravy thrust into my hand.
“Err, I’m a visitor - how much do you want for this?”
Great consternation. Nobody knew.
It transpired what they were doing was doling out the Pre-Game Sponsors Lunch! After much deliberation, I was simply told to beat it - which I did, still clutching the plate!
(2) Frankfurter sausage inna bun with boiled onions, from the refreshment hut alongside the pitch at half time (£3.50). I know prices have risen, but really!
Attendance: 154. A surprisingly small crowd by Sherborne’s pre-Covid standards.