So to the Season “Proper”!
Every year, over the summer months, Ossie sits down with quill, ink and the FA FullTime Non-League website and, as the various leagues release their fixtures, starts to plot out a Master Plan of teams he needs to see or grounds he needs to visit . Usually, all goes well until late in the day, the wretched Western League issue their fixture lists - at which point the bird shouts “Aaarrghhh”, throws his spreadsheet up in the air, and has to start again from scratch as the Western League seem to unerringly delight in setting up vital games on dates which clash with other leagues ! If you just follow one team like Leeds or Man U, you don’t have this problem, but for the seasoned ground-hopper, it’s an annual nightmare - choices, choices ……
Anyway, this 2023/24 season, touch wood, all has gone swimmingly for once, and the Ostrich has a nice little itinerary in place through to April 2024 which happily encompasses all 17 of his never-seen-before target teams - five in the Vanarama National South (Step 2), two in the Southern League (Step 3), seven in the Wessex Leagues (Steps 5 & 6) and three in the Western Leagues (also Steps 5 &6). The only peculiarity has been the Vanarama League fixture compilers having a right giraffe and sending three of my five Step 2 teams to Yeovil Town on three successive Saturdays . After three successive Saturdays at The Huish, I shall probably have lost the will to live , as well as being bankrupt, as despite relegation, they’ve hardly reduced their ticket prices .
However, the Master Plan is in place, is up and running, and fingers crossed Ossie will reach the finishing line, although the threat of bad weather postponements over the Winter months always lurks .
First up, Saturday 5th August, newly-transferred into the Wessex League Division 1, AFC Aldermaston (“The Atom Men”) were visitors to Downton . I always enjoy a visit to the Robin’s Nest, although it’s a bit of hike, and despite Downton being quite close to Salisbury, I actually have to drive into and out of Hampshire (at Fordingbridge) to get there. The BBC Weather App had been forecasting all sorts of mayhem in the run-up to that day, but by Saturday morning, the stormy winds had been downgraded to just plain gusty, mainly coming in during the second half, so, given it’s a 65-mile round trip on decidedly country roads, I gave it a whirl nevertheless, and arrived relatively unscathed despite a tremendous downpour sweeping across the A338 at Breamore.
Downton are one of the big hitters in their league, and they had no trouble in despatching Aldermaston 6-1 in an action-packed opening match of the season. As I type, they remain unbeaten in 5 games and top the table. During the second half, the wind did indeed pick up and the line of 50 foot silver birches on the side of the ground opposite the stand were absolutely thrumming by the final whistle . I decided to drive back a slightly longer route via Salisbury itself and the A30, quite hairy at times and plenty of debris on the carriageways. Food prices were high; I was charged £1.30 for a Snickers bar !
Ossie’s next game was back at Frome Collegians, an evening pre-season friendly between their reserves and Coleford Athletic from the Mid Somerset League. An altogether better game than Collegians’ first team friendly against Bratton the previous week, Coleford turned out to be quite a hefty side - but their roving no.11, a hulking 6 foot 3 or thereabouts, was like greased lightning up front and his sheer pace regularly left the Frome defenders trailing in his wake. He scored after 13m, dribbling across the box before planting the ball in the corner of the net, but he also had at least four 1 on 1’s with the keeper throughout the match and failed to make any of them pay . The home team looked dead and buried with 10 minutes left, but somehow clawed two goals back to earn a creditable draw.
Saturday 12th August saw the Ostrich at Westfield FC, a first visit to a ground which has been on his bucket-shop list for some time, as it’s on the campus of the Best Western Centurion Hotel, Radstock, and I was hoping for a decent meal before-hand , but it turned out to be not quite that sort of hotel, and I finished up with a tuna and sweetcorn baguette and pint of milk from the local Co-op!!
With it absolutely teeming down at 14:40, I did wonder about making a dash for nearby Welton Rovers as there’s no cover at Westfield’s ground, the only potential shelter being the tall fence and line of conifer trees behind one goal, but I stuck it out and was rewarded with a rain-free first half and intermittent drizzle after the break. The game itself, however, was a bit of a non-event. After just a minute, Burnham’s Curtis Bradshaw raced through the defence onto a long ball but trying to control it, it bobbled up and he inadvertently handled it. Then on 3m, from almost the same position, he got his shot away and a defender deflected it past the keeper to make it 0-1. Bradshaw scored again on 29m, a thumping header from a corner, and that was effectively game over. Westfield scored the obligatory late consolation goal on 89m, a direct free kick swung in from wide; cue a frantic extra four minutes or so, but Burnham, who promptly took the ball to the corner flag, weren’t to be denied . Not the most exciting of games, but an interesting afternoon out in the old Somerset Coalfields.
The following Saturday, up to Shaftesbury to see the second of this season’s target teams, Hamble Club from Hamble-le-Rice near Southampton. Big yachting area and all that . Watched by a pretty large crowd of 197, this was an FA Cup Preliminary Round tie, and Shaftesbury duly defeated the Monks quite comfortably at the end of the day, although even the most ardent Rockies fan wouldn’t have put money on a home win at halftime. Both sides traded early goals, Shaftesbury taking the lead on 5m through Joe Wickham who rode three tackles on the edge of the box before scoring, and Hamble equalising 4 minutes later through Clayd Roach, who was a constant thorn in the home side’s flesh throughout the afternoon. Both sides played hi-tempo, aggressive football, and hit the woodwork more than once - with Hamble gaining the upper hand, Roach put an easy chance wide on the half-hour mark, and the Rockies in particular were grateful for the lino’s offside flag on several occasions.
The visitors took a 1-2 lead on 52m when Roach netted a superb goal from wide, and I thought at this stage that Hamble would probably go on to win the tie. But no, Shaftesbury equalised on 64m with a slightly contentious penalty (for hand-ball, I believe), and on 68m took the lead when Wickham collected a long cross-field ball from Holmes, sidestepped the keeper, and rolled the ball into an empty net. That took the wind put of Hamble’s sails, and they conceded two further goals on 79m and 85m, both scored by Ash Pope with decisive strikes.
Now there’s a lot of talk at the moment about the “new rules” this season and in particular time-wasting. Well, I’m usually loathe to criticize any referee, but late in the second half, we saw the Rockies keeper dribble the ball wide across the goal area, wait until an opponent was approaching him, pick up the ball and then collapse prone on the ground . Not once, but twice. If that’s not time-wasting, what is? And he had been warned about it previously. Surely a yellow card - but no, nothing . Previously, a home player had booted the ball away when a free kick had been given against him, and (following the inevitable mass outrage from the Monks ) had been duly booked. We are going to need to see some consistency here ……. anyway, it was a very enjoyable afternoon’s entertainment, and the quality Cheeseburger at half time for £4 went down very nicely .
Tuesday 22nd August, and this particular local derby involving my “home town” club would normally be well off my radar; however, it was a lovely evening down here in Dorset, (the ambiance only soured by the fact that the local muck-spreading season has now commenced - phew! ), and as I’m not a huge fan of Gillingham Town, I thought there’d be a certain vicarious pleasure in seeing how many a resurgent Warminster Town would whup the woeful, managerless Tangoes by .
Not that that notion went entirely to plan …..
Two horrendous - and I mean horrendous - defensive mix-ups on 8m and 20m gifted Gillingham two first half goals. Warminster equalised firstly on 13m via a close range header, and then again on 25m after poor defending at the Gillingham end. The Tangoes did most of the pressing in the second half and were rewarded with a 66th minute winner which took a huge deflection off an away defender. The game concluded with 10 minutes additional time (probably about right with injury stoppages) and a welter of bookings from an increasingly unamused referee , including at least two on the home team bench, as Warminster frantically chased an equaliser.
Now as I mentioned, this was a local derby and the crowd was abysmal - just 41 . This was Gillingham’s fourth home game this season; the other attendances have been 42, 36 and 32. That really is financially unsustainable at this level of football, and unless they can increase their support, I do wonder how long they’ll last. Anyway, over and above a fiver for admission and programme, I did my bit and contributed a further £2.50 at half-time for a decent Cornish pasty .