A brief resume of the Ostrich’s sporting activities over the last couple of months, which have been very much hampered by the weather and family illness
, although the bird itself has so far escaped the lurgy. Mind you, we know an awful lot of folk who have succumbed to the latest Covid variant in the last few weeks ……
From the start of December, as we all know, the weather turned particularly nasty and the cold snaps quickly led to frozen pitches and match cancellations. At the same time, SiL became very ill, initially with the flu bug, despite having had the jab, which resulted in hospitalisation (well, an overnight in A&E at Yeovil) before being sent home - only to then be hit by what we now believe was the norovirus vomiting bug, for which she was admitted a second time, this time to a ward. She was also found to have very high blood pressure, investigation of which led to the conclusion she had a long-standing defect - a heart murmur.
She was referred to a cardiologist who wanted her to have an echo-cardiogram, and in order to move it along she finished up going private
, something which I suspect we will find will be increasingly common in the future - if you can afford it. Anyway the tests were carried out, and she’s just received a “nothing to worry about, see you again in a year” letter, which was a huge relief all round
. All this kerfuffle effectively took December out of the frame for footie!
January’s problem was then heavy rain and waterlogged grounds subsequently freezing. The bird managed to get a couple of games in at Shaftesbury, who have the only 4G pitch for miles around, and it’s only been in the last few weeks that normal service has been resumed. As you must be fed up by now of reading about Shaftesbury football matches and North Dorset rugby games
, I’ll just report on a couple of the more interesting of Ossie’s ventures:
04/02/23: Vanarama National League
Yeovil Town 2 Maidstone United 2Admission: £19 (concession) for a seat in the Screwfix Stand. Car parking £3. I had expected it to be more ruinous
!
Programme: £3 - a 36pp glossy, all the basics including Maidstone players’ pen-pics but otherwise not much reading matter. That said, an improvement on the magazine-style offering they were producing pre-Covid.
Refreshments: the pasty meal deal offer inside the stadium - pasty, crisps, choc bar and drink - is now £6.50. I didn’t bother in the event, as it’s a bit of a hassle queuing up and ordering at half-time.
Attendance: 2,421 (as announced). A hundred and something away fans from Kent, good for them!
A very rare appearance at Step 1 of the Pyramid for the Ostrich today, the previous occurrence being on 8th February 2020 (Yeovil 1 Notts County 2), when I broke the habit of a lifetime and foolishly purchased an advance ticket for the Chesterfield game the following Saturday. That was postponed - the infamous Storm Dennis, you may recall - and was duly rescheduled for the end of March 2020, just in time for the blanket Covid cancellations! I never did get my money back.
No changes at Huish Park apart from (I think) the replacement of the old electronic scoreboard with a whizzy super-duper effort that at least gave the teams and also showed video highlights of the previous Tuesday’s home game against Wealdstone. They needn’t have bothered, it was one of the seven 0-0 draws Yeovil have been involved with this season
. Shame the screen wasn’t bigger; I doubt you’d get much from it if you were in the Thatchers Cider Stand at the far end.
The bottom-of-the-table visitors were Maidstone United - one of the four remaining teams I needed to see in this league, and the home team were hovering just above the relegation zone. Yeovil’s record this season - 23 goals scored in 27 games - didn’t exactly inspire confidence for a decent game
. Most people were forecasting yet another goalless draw!
What transpired was a classic game of two halves. In the first 45, Yeovil were frankly dire
. They were afraid to play the ball anything other than sideways or backwards; retaining possession at all costs was the name of the game. That got them absolutely nowhere and the crowd (certainly around me) on their backs
. It was almost a relief when Maidstone started hassling them and got hold of the ball; at least they looked positive. And the Kent side got their reward on 19m when they played in from the left, the ball was walked across the box as Yeovil seemed to terrified to clear it, and Sha’mar Lawson had the relatively simple task of rolling it into the net at the far post. Would that wake the Glovers up? No.
Continuation of the same old game plan and the team roundly booed off the park at half time. 19 year old Ipswich Town loanee Edwin Agbaje looked the best of a sorry bunch; at least he chased back and recovered his mistakes.
The second half started with Yeovil much more assertive, thanks to the introduction of veteran striker Alex Fisher up front and Chiori Johnson in midfield (plus, no doubt, the mother of all rockets up their backside during the break
). Maidstone, who had been happily timewasting from taking the lead - well, the keeper anyway, who had received a warning from the referee - changed their tactics and booted the ball over the roof of the stand three times in 10 minutes
.
The game turned on its head after 67m. Stones’ keeper Hadler fatally hesitated when the ball was swung right across the penalty area, and Fisher, running in, unleashed a 20 yard blockbuster which positively zinged into the roof of the net. Two minutes later, Yeovil were in front, Fisher poking in the ball from close range. Yeovil’s turn now to waste time, but justice was done in the first minute of injury time when the hard-working Jerome Binnon-Williams posted a towering header past Yeovil keeper Smith following a free-kick.
A fair result and a surprisingly entertaining game on a bitterly cold afternoon. I shall no doubt be back to Huish Park - but probably not until 2026!
The second featured game in this round up was right at the other end of the pyramid and involved the Ostrich dressing up in combat gear and shounting “Boom”!
Because the Land Warfare Centre has been a venue which has been on my bucket shop list for some time …..
18/02/23: Trowbridge & District Football League Division 2 (Step 9)
The Lodge 1 Aces FC 6No admission charge, programme or refreshments. Not even Army rations!
Attendance: 6 (and 2 dogs).
This was one of those matches where I initially had no idea which team was which - one played in red and black stripes, the other in grey and the corner flags were green!
The Land Warfare Centre ground is easy to find - take the Imber Road from the centre of Warminster over the railway bridge, follow your nose towards Salisbury Plain, and eventually you see the stylishly modern St Giles’ Garrison Church on your left hand side. Bear left past the front of the church into Elm Hill and then immediately right into a driveway (thankfully with raised and unmanned barriers) which takes you down to a small car park. There’s also plenty of parking on the driveway, but don’t get too close to the razor wire
. There’s an elderly caged artificial-surface pitch in front of you (green moss growing on the surface!), but today’s game took place on a traditional grass pitch alongside it. The cage is floodlit and the pylons were audibly clanging like church bells in the gusty breeze.
It’s actually quite a pleasant location with views of the army warfare college with its prominent clock tower in front of you and landscaped surrounds with some quite stunning fir trees to the left. To the right are army depot buildings incorporating some intricate communication devices with the prominent warning “No Loitering within 2 Metres”
(Ossie certainly didn’t, otherwise the bird might have finished up like a microwaved turkey
), a nearby windsock presumably for a helicopter landing pad, and the Iron Age Battlesbury Hillfort overlooks the lot.
The home team, The Lodge FC, something to do with a pub down in the town, started brightly but went two down in the first 15 minutes. Firstly, Lodge’s no.5 upended an opponent well inside the area for a cast-iron penalty which the opposition no.10 converted without fuss. The second goal saw the home keeper get a hand to a shot, embark on an elaborate juggling act, and finally flap the ball into his own goal
. The only other first half incident was on 38m when the home no.5 received a second yellow for bringing down an attacker from behind, and therefore an early bath!
The away side, Aces FC from Bath, were firmly in control and their third goal on 52m was a close range tap-in after confusion in the defence; a fourth goal followed a few minutes later. An Aces’ player appeared to deliver an excellent forearm chop to an opponent’s throat on 63m
, but it was clearly accidental and it wasn’t that sort of a game - although all that changed a few minutes later when a Lodge defender pulled the Aces’ no.9 backwards in the penalty area, also flooring his own keeper in the process, and then appeared to stamp on both of them
. The defender was off, reducing The Lodge to 9 men, their keeper couldn’t continue and was substituted, and the game mysteriously restarted with a free kick to the home side on the edge of the area, so I assume there must have been a prior offside
. As often happens, the 9 men then scored; a 15 yard shot on 74m, to make it 1-4.
After that, it became more or less one way traffic. The Aces no.11 received the ball unmarked 30 yards out and proceeded to run in, unchallenged, on goal. The substitute custodian came out for the 1 on 1, the attacker couldn’t make his mind up what to do, and finished up colliding with the keeper, who scrambled it clear
. A minute later, Ace’s no.15 showed him what he should have done, and sublimely lobbed the keeper from the edge of the area. It became 1-6 on 81m when the away side’s no.8 managed to lob the keeper who was rooted to the spot on his line, and the referee brought proceedings to a close a few minutes early, which nobody complained about.
Thankfully, the earlier drizzle held off for most of the match but returned with a vengeance as I headed back to the car. A highly entertaining game all round!