They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

For the chaps here

Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby TheOstrich » 03 Nov 2020, 13:57

Absolutely, WM :| . I know there's been a bit of a backlash against this latest scrapping of grassroots soccer, but well, if you're going to have a lockdown, you've got to do it properly. So no grumbling from the Ostrich's Nest. To be honest, getting 13 games in between August and now was a "bonus" I didn't think I would have seen, given all the "politicking" over sport during the summer.

More controversial is the enforced cancellation of all youth football outside of the school environment, so kiddies activities like the commercial FastFeet Football are also suspended.

Community Rugby Union has bitten the bullet and scrapped the 2020/21 season, which was another no-brainer, really. Clubs can play friendlies if they want, but there will be nothing "organised".

Ossie may be back squawking again in December, but we'll have to wait and see ...
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Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby TheOstrich » 05 Dec 2020, 23:27

The Ostrich is back!! :D Again …. :x

After my happy meanderings through the Yeovil & District League earlier this Autumn (on a vague quest to visit all the principal grounds – well, recreation park pitches in actuality :roll: ) were brought to an abrupt halt by Lockdown 2.0, time to resume the fray but with something a little different – a first venture into the Perry Street and District League, which is a feeder league for the Somerset County Division 3 (according to Wiki) and therefore at Step 11. And who could resist Merriott Rovers FB page declaration that
“The first team will return to action on Saturday December 5th. Unfortunately we have to limit the number of spectators to 4,000. The game will be followed by a substantial meal and a pint...”
Scotch egg, anyone? :lol:

The Perry Street League is a bit of an institution locally; it was formed in 1903 by Charles Edward Small, the owner of the Perry Street Lace Works, and this is commemorated by the three spools of lace depicted on the league's crest. Perry Street is an area of a village called Tatworth, near Chard – there were a lot of lace mills around there in the last century, manufacturing things like parachutes during WW2, but they are all long gone now. The name of the village apparently comes from the Old English words “tat” and “worp “meaning 'A cheerful farm'. Jolly farmers? Must be the cider …. ;)

Merriott is a village just off the A356 north of Crewkerne; I know it well as that area of South Somerset was my old stamping ground for around 20 years. In fact, one of the elders at the church we used to attend lived in a bungalow at the back of the Merriott Rovers ground – he had, in his past life, been a professional footballer with Bristol City.

The main drag is called Broadway and the recreation ground is at the top end of that street behind the village hall. There were roadworks all the way up Broadway including a peculiar set of three way traffic lights at a four way junction – going down Broadway, the lights were peculiarly absent. Perhaps the locals had nicked them? :oops: Anyway, there’s parking for around 50 cars by the recreation ground (all spaces taken today), a large wooden-clad cricket pavilion off to the right, two small wooden dugouts for the soccer pitch and what appeared to be a covered shelter (I’d hesitate to call it a stand) in the bottom corner with bench seating for about a dozen spectators, but as the local yoof were congregating there en masse, I didn’t investigate it any further. :evil:

Finally there’s quite a substantial children’s’ play area behind the bottom goal including some pretty scary elevated rope walks, an outdoor gym, and hard-standing (in the sense of a tarmac path) down one side of the pitch leading to said playground. Plenty of oak trees were lining the pitch, and they had shed their leaves all over it - at least that went some way to mitigating the otherwise muddy conditions. In fact some referees might have baulked at the waterlogged goalmouth by the car park which even a vigorous pre-match forking didn’t entirely dissipate. :shock: To complete the rural ambiance, the match was accompanied by the sounds of a strangulated cockerel (or possibly a cockerel being strangled :lol: ) from somewhere behind the pavilion.

Merriott Rovers started the game in mid-table, with Halstock firmly rooted at the bottom with nul points. They had in fact managed a draw earlier in the season, but the league point had been removed, presumably for fielding an illegible player (the usual reason at this level). Halstock’s team selection was interesting – judging by what I heard in the car park, the starting line-up was determined by who had brought a blue shirt! :?

Merriott started the match attacking down the noticeable, albeit gentle, slope and were ahead in 4m from a simple tap in following a cross from the right. They were reasonably adept at getting behind the Halstock defence; if Halstock had any strengths, they weren’t immediately obvious, although in the second half they introduced a long throw specialist who did cause a bit of confusion amongst the home team defenders, who regarded the incoming hurled ball like frightened rabbits. :oops: It was 3-0 at the interval, (the third goal a delightful 20-yard first time volley), and it could easily have been 4 or 5, especially as an all-too-casual Merriott penalty on 29m came back off the bottom of a goalpost.

One-way traffic resumed after the break with Merriott adding two more goals early in the second half, after which the game began to peter out with a rash of substitutions and two weary teams struggling on a heavy pitch. Halstock did have a greater presence up front in the second half but never looked like finding the net. It was always an entertaining game and that took the edge off a very cold Somerset afternoon.

05/12/20 - Perry Street and District League Premier Division
Merriott Rovers 5 Halstock 0
No admission or programme
Refreshments: the petrol station shop about 100 yards from the ground entrance was the nearest venue for sustenance (Ginsters tuna sandwich and milk carton £2.94)
Attendance 43. As social distancing on the touchlines was noticeably absent :roll: , it was probably a good thing the other 3,957 failed to show ....

And finally, from the town’s FB page:

We are looking for 2 extra people to make up the 6 for a helicopter trip stopping at Weston Super Mare for breakfast and then on to Bournemouth for lunch followed by a boat trip to sea in the afternoon with dinner on board and then flying back in the evening . Oh - of the 2 extra people we need , one must own a helicopter and the other must own a boat.


:D
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Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby cromwell » 06 Dec 2020, 11:08

:lol: :lol:
Indeed! Always nice to know someone with a helicopter.
Fielding a ringer? Naughty naughty. It happens all the time though.
I hope the cockerel is OK!
Great report Os, entertaining as always.
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Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby Kaz » 06 Dec 2020, 14:02

Tatting is also an old name for lacemaking Ossie! ;) Good to have your roving reports back! :D :D
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Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby TheOstrich » 06 Dec 2020, 16:40

Kaz wrote:Tatting is also an old name for lacemaking Ossie!


That's interesting, Kaz, I didn't know that. There's a Wiki article here if others are interested:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tatting
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Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby TheOstrich » 06 Dec 2020, 16:43

cromwell wrote::I hope the cockerel is OK!


Personally, I'd have been quite happy to strangle the damned thing myself - it was a flippin' intrusive noise all through the first half. :twisted:
Ossie wouldn't have approved, though ..... :lol:
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Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby JoM » 06 Dec 2020, 16:59

Glad to be back, I bet Ossie!

We’ve had emails about the possibility of 2000 being allowed in for Man Utd v Leeds on the 20th, providing Manchester is moved out of Tier 3 before then. Season ticket holders can apply from Friday and if it can go ahead then a ballot will be held but the postcodes of the 2000 picked out will be checked to ensure that everyone is in Tier 1 or 2. We’ll apply, but even if Manchester moves down a tier I can’t see the same happening here but they’ve said that people who apply but don’t get drawn out will have priority for future games.
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Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby Workingman » 06 Dec 2020, 18:11

Well done and thanks to the journalistic Ostrich.

In the rag trade (tailoring) there were tatter men who collected the off-cuts from the cutting room floor. Locally rag-and-bone men were also called tatter men.

I also believe that worp is also used in some dialects as an alternative verb of 'to throw' - as in chuck, lob, lug, toss....

Jo, G my n-d-n works for Leeds UNITED and they are hatching a plan to take a karaoke machine and BIG speakers to play MOT on a loop just to even things up! We'll see. It is a shame the old rivalry cannot be revived and played in front of a bigger crowd with some away support. It's not as if Old Trafford is postage stamp size, is it?
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Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby TheOstrich » 06 Dec 2020, 18:47

Locally rag-and-bone men were also called tatter men.


Interestingly, yes, same in Birmingham where I grew up - yet the online dictionaries I looked the word up in don't seem to recognise that as a definition.

Season ticket holders can apply from Friday and if it can go ahead then a ballot will be held ....


Different clubs have slightly differently variations. I've seen a reference somewhere that one club (Brentford? Cambridge United?) were saying season ticket holders only, but you were prioritised based on how long you had been a ticket holder - longest first, naturally. If you were lucky and got a ticket for "Game 1", then you went to the back of the queue for "Game 2". The club said season ticket holders would probably get an offer to purchase once every 5 games. It might have been Brentford, thinking about it, because it's their first matches at a brand new stadium, so a huge amount of interest.

Good luck, anyway! :)
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Re: They Thought it was All Over ..... But Maybe It Isn't!

Postby TheOstrich » 12 Dec 2020, 22:55

12/12/20 - A phone call from Master O. He has been given the green light to resume work from Sunday 20th December, so he wants to come down a visit us for a few days next week. And he wants a proper celebratory Christmas Dinner laid on …. :D

“Oh blinkin’ heck :o ,” groans Mrs O as I relay the message.
“The full works, I’m afraid,” I sympathise. “That’s stuffin’ balls, bread sauce, roast parsnips, Auntie Betty’s, pigs in blankets and devils on horseback.”
“Devils on what??”
“Something to do with prunes, I think,” I say, racking the few brains I have left.
Out with the trusty copy of Mrs. Beaton ….there’s something about them on Page 421.
“He can stuff his own balls,” mutters Mrs O darkly. :(
At which point I add: “And he said how about a gammon joint on the following day …” before retiring rapidly. :lol:

So Ossie is despatched midweek to the town to see what festive delights he can source. And as usual, he finishes up in the local Polish Community Shop. It’s a strange, dark place :shock: , crammed to the rafters with serried ranks of bottles, tins and jars, all of which have incomprehensible labels. Now I work on a simple principle: if it’s authentic Polish fayre, it has to have a “Z” in it. :geek: And when it comes to the crunch, the more “Z”s the merrier! So here’s the Ostrich’s Simple Guide to Polish Food:

If it’s in a tall jar and has white stuff in it, it’s sauerkraut.
If it’s in a squat jar and has purple stuff in it, it’s beetroot.
If it’s in a tin, it’s probably fish, but the jury’s out.
And if it doesn’t have a “Z” in it, it’s Bombale which is a small doughnut filled with cheese curd, except you can’t taste the cheese curd. :evil:

So, armed with a tall jar of Kapusta Kiszona, a squat jar of Buraczki Zasmazane (3 “Z”s! :Hi: ), and about a dozen Bombales, I head for the fruit and deli counter. The fruit is always amazing - the eating apples are at least twice the size of a supermarket Braeburn, but I have no idea what the variety is. And the deli is packed with link after link of Polish sausage. Now I am a connoisseur of Polish sausage. Again, I have no idea what each one is, but I can categorise them perfectly by colour. There’s brown, dark brown, very dark brown, and black. I always choose the black ….. :mrgreen:

So to Saturday, and a match, for once, in my home county. Now the Dorset League has, in its infinite wisdom, decided to suspend games in all 4 of their leagues until 9th January, despite the fact we’re only in Tier 2, and most other local County leagues resumed playing straight after Lockdown 2.0 on 5th December. The Dorset FA (a separate organisation) have, however, scheduled the first two rounds of their County Cup fixtures in December, despite the fact that I thought they’d taken a decision a long time back to scrap these competitions for the 2020/21 season. There’s the Senior Cup, the Intermediate Cup, the Junior Cup and the Minor Cup, (which I assume must be the size of an egg cup :lol: ). So a trawl of their (confusing) website revealed a number of interesting possibilities, and when Drimpton confirmed late Friday night on their FB page that their game at Shillingstone was going ahead, that’s the one I headed for. 8-)

Shillingstone is a long straggly village on the A357 a few miles north of Blandford Forum. The football ground is on the Rec which is at the southern end of the village, up Hine Town Lane. It’s an open, spacious venue with a neat-looking brick-built cricket pavilion slap in the middle of the campus; the village cricket pitch lies on the south side of it whilst the soccer pitch occupies on the north side. Next to the pavilion is a similarly-sized wooden building with a single door and no windows, the purpose of which was not immediately apparent :shock: . Behind the Rec runs the old Somerset & Dorset railway line (Bournemouth to Bath) which is now a cycle way and appeared well-used this afternoon, and beyond that there’s fine views rising up to Hambledon Hill.

I usually try to find something positive to say about the matches I attend, but occasionally I’m left struggling – and this game, between the Dorset League Division 4 hosts and their Perry Street League Division 3 opponents (Step 12 v Step 14), was one such occasion. Far too many misplaced passes, little creativity and some wild attempts at shooting characterised a match which in all fairness should have ended the 90 minutes at 0-0, but quite unexpectedly failed to do so by virtue of two simple headed goals in the last three minutes. On a very chilly day, it was a blessed relief to escape the purgatory of extra time! ;)

On the plus side, we did have two excellent keepers (never a dodgy custodian around when you need one :shock: ), and a referee who kept the game flowing (although a little less leniency in the penalty area would have been welcome). Standout player for me was probably Drimpton’s no.11, Tim Hussey, who at least got some decent shots on target in the first half, and Drimpton just about had the better of the play overall, but on the other hand they were guilty of the Miss of the Match on 62m when a cross into the box saw their no.16 completely miss the ball in front of goal, and their no.7, next in line, promptly hit it over the bar :roll: . Let’s just say not a game to live long in the memory.

Given it was a 1:30 p.m. kick off, home by 4:00 despite having to follow a number of cyclists wearing reindeer antlers and towing a small cart, and then running into the remains of the local hunt – ambling horses, stern-looking riders and Landrovers with horse-boxes all over the road :( . At least my return journey was quicker than that of a fellow Bournemouth-based groundhopper I know who also turned up at the match – he found himself irredeemably gridlocked in the tiny car-park at the end of the match; I’d had the foresight to park in the road outside the ground! :D

Dorset County FA Minor Cup Round 2
Shillingstone 0 Drimpton 2
No admission, programme or refreshments. There was a Co-op in the village, but right up the other end so I didn’t bother.
Attendance 25

And finally from the town’s FB page:
I am relocating from Poole. Flat is on the market, looking to move too Gillingham / Shaftesbury. Any areas to avoid or to concentrate on?


Responses ranged from the erudite ....
A friendly town with a tremendous number of clubs, societies and charities to join and a community owned leisure centre to be proud of with excellent footpaths and walking groups to suit all abilities. You just have to avoid engaging with dyspeptic characters on facebook.

.... to the succinct:
Do yourself a favour and stay in Poole fella ... Trust me.


:mrgreen:
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