Online dictionary definitions:
hop (noun)
1) a hopping movement:
"place the rabbit on the floor to have a hop around"
2) a short journey or distance:
"a short hop by cab from Soho"
3) an informal dance:
"the society's regular fortnightly hop"
4) a twining climbing plant native to north temperate regions, cultivated for the flowers borne by the female plant, which are used in brewing beer.
However, there’s one missing ….
Hop - a day-long non-league footballing event in which around 200 sweaty, overweight, beer-gutted, 60-70 year old male football fans gather at three or four soccer matches, each with staggered kick-off times, to meet socially, yak incessantly, boast and show off, buy specially-made football club badges and programmes, eat copious numbers of hotdogs and burgers, and drink real ale.
Would you want to attend one of these “social” gatherings?
Thought not.
Me neither! I wouldn’t touch them with a bargepole!
Saturday was the day of the annual Yeovil and District League Hop, already postponed twice this season due to bad weather, but much anticipated by the aficionados . It is a time that old acquaintances can be renewed, much merriment can be had, and the clubs like it, because if your average attendance is 30, and all of a sudden it’s a guaranteed 230, you can charge admission, sell programmes and ramp up the catering profits. Local residents don’t like it as much, mind you , because local parking is overwhelmed, and there’s large groups of strangers hoving around looking for the nearest fish and chip shop or pub. More “organised” hops even arrange a coach service between the football grounds!
So to Saturday, and the three Yeovil Hop games were scheduled for 11:15 at Ilchester, 14:00 at Bruton and 17:00 at Langport. Taking his usual jaundiced view of these matters , the Ostrich decided he’d do his own Yeovil Hop, avoiding the madding crowds, and visit Pen Mill Athletic at 14:00 and Yeovil Town at 17:20 (conveniently a late kick off to accommodate BT Sport, although how on earth you can consider the wretched Yeovil Town “Match of the Day” fodder defies belief ).
In the event, though - starting Thursday, 60 hours of continuous, incessant rain, ranging from mizzle to downpour, completely wiped out all the local matches . The Hop was duly cancelled (I do feel sorry for the organiser, a certain Tim Lancaster, because a lot of work must go into the co-ordinating of these events to make them run smoothly, and I can well sympathise with his heart-felt Tweet “That’s it - never again!” ), and Ossie’s 14:00 game was inevitably one of the casualties. But Yeovil Town did get their game on for the TV cameras. In fact, walking around the ground to the Ticket Office, I had to take some care avoiding tripping over a multitude of snaking cables leading to and from various large vans and satellite dishes .
To the match, and it was another inept performance by the Glovers which sees them further embedded in the National League relegation mire . They seem to have no plan, no cohesion, lack confidence and appear toothless up front - the team has scored just 31 goals in 38 League matches. Today’s performance against mid-table Southend United was marginally better than the Maidstone United game I saw at the beginning of February, but it was still pretty dire. As in that match, they conceded a first half goal, Jake Hyde being in the right place at the right time to score easily from 10 yards after 23m, and Yeovil were duly booed of the pitch at the interval, but even the boos were half-hearted this time around .
Again, as in the Maidstone game, they brought on Alex Fisher at half-time and back in February he secured them a point in the second half. Not so this time; after 54m he was involved in a collision with Southend keeper Collin Andeng-Ndi, and it was immediately apparent he’d received a serious injury. It was a classic 1 on 1 situation with the keeper coming out for the ball and the Yeovil player chasing in after it - the clash was unfortunate, accidental, and the keeper, who got to the ball first, certainly not to blame for it. After 5 minutes or so on-pitch treatment, Fisher was stretchered off, and from post-game comment, it’s a suspected broken ankle.
The Sun's take on it:
https://www.thesun.co.uk/sport/21910226 ... ex-fisher/
Andeng-Ndi was subsequently roundly booed by the Yeovil faithful, not only for that incident but also for fully displaying his Master’s Degree in time-wasting . No ball could be caught without a protracted roll on the ground , and the 11 minutes of extra time was more than justified. That said, when Yeovil did get on target, he pulled off a stunning near-post save from Josh Staunton .
On 84m, Yeovil’s Miguel Freckleton was dismissed for a second yellow, and Southend’s Rhys Murphy hooked the ball into the net in the first minute of injury time to complete the Shrimpers’ victory. They shouldn’t congratulate themselves too much, however; they played like a team with a hang-over for most of the game. Way too much hoof-ball down the side-lines, and Smith didn’t really have a lot to do in the Yeovil goal.
After the game, manager Mark Cooper cut a dejected figure in his post-match interview , and the phrase “dead man walking” came readily to mind. About a fortnight ago, it was announced that Yeovil Town had been “taken over” by some 28yo called Matt Uggla, the son of a Canadian millionaire businessman, replacing the controversial Scott Priestnall who fans blame for the team’s demise, but since that announcement, there has been radio silence …….
Anyway, a massive next 10 days looming for Yeovil - they have to play fellow strugglers Dorking at home and Gateshead and Aldershot away. We shall see what we shall see!
01/04/23: Vanarama National League (17:20 ko)
Yeovil Town 0 Southend United 2
Admission: £5 (concession) for a seat in the Screwfix Stand, basking in the late evening sunshine. The maximum adult ticket price is £10 - matchday admission has been reduced for this and the remaining home games this season in an attempt to “#PackThePark” and generate some atmosphere; well, it’s certainly boosted the attendance by around 1,000. I can live with £5 considering the dross on display - better than the usual concession charge of £19 .
Car parking: £3.
Programme: £3 - 40pp glossy, all the basics included, but not exactly an absorbing read.
Refreshments: Didn’t bother, massive queues.
Attendance: 3,630 (announced), including 246 away fans.