Old King’s Scholars v Old Ardinians

Arthurian League

Division 4

Saturday 13th November 2021

Kick Off 10.00 Actual 10.04

Old King’s Scholars 1 Old Ardinians 4, attendance 2

12’ 0-1

26’ 0-2

74’ 0-3 (pen)

75’ 1-3

84’ 1-4

@ King’s House Sports Ground

Riverside Drive

Chiswick

London

W4 2SP

No Admission or Programme.

I had done a game here at King’s House Sports Ground before, when I saw Old Carthusians beat Old Salopians 3-2 in an Arthurian League Premier Division match on 11th May 2017, which was played on the 3G pitch. Today’s match was on grass. Looking from the clubhouse, the 3G is to the right, with a rugby pitch running widthways in front of you. The pitch used today is beyond this, offset at an angle to the rugby, due to it being bordered by three cricket squares. I will hopefully return here for a third time, as Civil Service have their own designated pitch within the complex, which has a seated stand. It is in the far right hand corner of the complex, beyond a floodlit training area.

Today’s match was between two teams with contrasting form. King’s had only picked up one point from their opening six matches, whilst Ardinians had a 100% winning start from their three games played. When Ardinians went ahead after just twelve minutes, it looked like this might be a comfortable away win, but the scorer injured his hamstring as he put the ball in. With no substitutes available, it meant they would have to play the remainder of the game with ten men. It didn’t make any difference to the eventual outcome, but it certainly made the game more of a contest. The turning point came early in the second half, when King’s had a penalty saved when it was 0-2. If it had gone in things could have been so different. Ardinians were far too strong, even with a man short, and were well deserved winners.

It was finished by 12.38, so plenty of time to get to a second match.

Above : Ardinians make it 0-3 from the penalty spot.

Leeds Trinity University v University Hull

British Universities & Colleges Sport

Northern Conference Cup 2nd Round

Wednesday 10th November 2021

Kick Off 13.00 Actual 13.34

Leeds Trinity University 3 University Hull 1 (AET), attendance 22

23’ 0-1

81’ 1-1

93’ 2-1

113’ 3-1

@ Leeds Trinity University, 3G Pitch

Brownberrie Lane

Horsforth

Leeds

LS18 5HD

No Admission or Programme.

I had done a game here before, when I saw Trinity & All Saints College (now named Leeds Trinity University) beat University Huddersfield 3-0 on 26th October 2005, a game which was played on the pitch inside the old cinder running track, which is still there.

I chose this match today for two reasons. Firstly, it was an early kick off and secondly, if the game finished promptly, there was a chance of making it to a second game, as University Derby were kicking off at 17.00. Any chance of doubling up soon disappeared and it looked like the game here might not take place, so Derby was looking like it might become the only game today……

Hull only arrived at 12.46, but that was good compared to the Referee. He turned up at 13.19 and following a lot of faffing about, plus a minutes silence for Armistice Day, meant we finally kicked off thirty four minutes late!

The game was Tier 2 versus Tier 3, but both were evenly matched. Hull went ahead midway through the first half, against the run of play, and decided to just sit back and hope their luck would hold out. It nearly did, but the inevitable late equaliser for the home side came nine minutes from time, but rather than push for a winner, they settled for extra time. As is so often the case, a goal arrived early, when Trinity went 2-1 up just three minutes into the first period of extra time and they finally killed the game off with a third goal midway through the second period.

Three minutes into stoppage time a bad challenge by a Hull defender led to a huge melee on the touch line, which also included another of the Trinity teams who were due to have kicked off at 16.00 following this game. It ended up with two red cards for Hull and one for Trinity. The match finally finished at 16.15 and had taken 2 hours 41 minutes to reach it’s conclusion. Just the second period of extra time lasted a ridiculous 29 minutes!

The photo below shows the pitch Trinity played on back in 2005, pretty much unchanged.

West Allotment Celtic v Sunderland Ryhope Community Association

Northern League

Division 1

Tuesday 9th November 2021

Kick Off 19.30 Actual 19.31

West Allotment Celtic 1 Sunderland Ryhope Community Association 0, attendance 137 (official 125)

70’ 1-0

@ East Palmersville Sports Pavilion

Palm Court

off Great Lime Road

Palmersville

Newcastle upon Tyne

NE12 9HW

£6 Admission

£1 Programme, 20 pages.

I first visited West Allotment Celtic back on 30th October 2002, when I saw them lose 1-2 to Blyth Spartans in a Northumberland F.A. Senior Cup 1st Round match, which was played at the Blue Flames Sports Ground at Whitley Park in Benton. This is now the Northumberland F.A. ground. They left here and played at The Wheatsheaf Sports Ground in Woolsington, which I had already visited for Newcastle Blue Star 2 Chester-le-Street-Town 4, in a Northern League Division 1 match on 25th September 2001. This ground is now known as Druid Park and has had a 3G pitch installed. They have now moved here to East Palmersville Sports Pavilion, where they share the ground with Forest Hall Celtic of the Northern Alliance League.

West Allotment Celtic had been rooted to the bottom of the league table, but having won three of their last four games, they have climbed above Penrith and Bishop Auckland to now sit third bottom and tonight they were looking to win a third consecutive match. Sunderland R.C.A. came into this in tenth place.

The best way to describe this is that it was a tight affair. Neither side really got on top and it had 0-0 written all over it. The only goal of the game came twenty minutes from time, when a shot across the ‘keeper was blocked, but was followed in to finish from close range. A minute later, Celtic had a shot that came back off the inside of the post, with the ‘keeper well beaten, but that was as close as we came to getting another goal.

The win now sees Celtic move up another place in the table and having played fewer games than everyone else, a climb to mid table is well within their reach.

Hawkhurst United v Crowhurst

East Sussex League

Premier Division

Saturday 6th November 2021

Kick Off 14.00 Actual 13.57

Hawkhurst United 2 Crowhurst 7, attendance 31

6’ 0-1

28’ 1-1

31’ 1-2

40’ 2-2

43’ 2-3

49’ 2-4

63’ 2-5

64’ 2-6

90’ 2-7

@ King George V Playing Fields

The Moor

Hawkhurst

TN18 4QB

No Admission or Programme.

This was 7th versus 2nd in the league table and the last ground I hadn’t visited in the Premier Division. Crowhurst played some really good football, which was of far higher standard than you’d expect for Step 8 football. They went ahead three times in the first half to lead 2-3 at the break, in a half where Hawkhurst only had three chances, converting two of them, the second goal coming direct from a corner, in off the far post.

An early second half goal saw the visitors go 2-4 up, before they scored twice in a minute, just after the hour mark, to race into a 2-6 lead. They coasted for the rest of the game, adding a seventh goal in the last minute to round things off, a 20 yarder that gave the ‘keeper no chance.

Old Tonbridgians v Old Carthusians

Arthurian League

Premier Division

Saturday 6th November 2021

Kick Off 11.00 Actual 11.02

Old Tonbridgians 4 Old Carthusians 2, attendance 11

18’ 1-0 (pen)

29’ 2-0

32’ 3-0

50’ 4-0

78’ 4-1

84’ 4-2

@ Tonbridge School Centre

London Road

Tonbridge

TN10 3AD

No Admission or Programme.

I had previously seen Old Tonbridgians play a home game at the 3G pitch at Wrotham School, where they beat Old Salopians 1-0 in an Arthur Dunn Cup match, back on 24th February 2018. This season they are playing home matches at Tonbridge School Centre. I had seen Tonbridge School at home in an Independent Schools F.A. Cup match in 2011, which was also played here, but it was in a different part of the complex, a few hundred yards from the pitch used by Old Tonbridgians.

Today’s match was 4th versus 1st in the league table, Carthusians having a 100% winning start from their six matches played. When Tonbridgians went ahead from the penalty spot after eighteen minutes, it set the game up perfectly for the neutral. However, when they added two more goals with little more than half an hour on the clock, it was certainly not going to form. When they made it 4-0 five minutes into the second half, there was to be no comeback for the visitors, although they gave it a good go, scoring twice in the last twelve minutes, but they had left themselves with too much to do.

Woodford Town v Little Oakley

Essex Senior League

Friday 5th November 2021

Kick Off 19.45 Actual 19.49

Woodford Town 1 Little Oakley 2, attendance 242 (official)

27’ 0-1

33’ 1-1

66’ 1-2

@ Ashton Stadium

598 Chigwell Road

Woodford Green

IG8 8AA

£7 Admission

£2 Programme, 24 pages.

I came to a friendly at Ashton Playing Fields (a 2-2 draw between Epping Town and Jolof Sports), which is behind the stadium pitch, back on 1st August 2020, which was the first day back for non-League football following the first COVID-19 shutdown. I walked across the pitch in the middle of the athletics track and couldn’t believe how poor a state it was in and it is remarkable how good it looked tonight. The only addition here since then is the kit stand, which is set back and too low to give a decent view. It is particularly bad here though, as apart from the 8 lane track, there are also the long/triple jump pits to look across as well.

It was hard to enjoy the match, as you are too far away from the action and it feels like you’re not really a part of it and it doesn’t help that you can’t really hear the shout of the players. There is no atmosphere, unless you count the annoying gaggle with a drum, who took over one end of the stand. It was interesting to see on Twitter that they were hoping to get a 500 crowd tonight! They actually announced there were 242 there, but there were no more than 180 present.

Little Oakley went in front just before the half hour mark, with a lob over the ‘keeper from well outside the box. Woodford levelled six minutes later with an effort into the bottom corner from twenty yards. The winner came for the visitors midway through the second half, the player cutting in from the left before shooting low into the bottom corner.

University Greenwich v University Essex 2nds

British Universities & Colleges Sport

South Eastern Division 4C

Wednesday 3rd November 2021

Kick Off 14.00 Actual 14.01

University Greenwich 3 University Essex 2nds 4, attendance 8

13’ 0-1

19’ 1-1

29’ 1-2

53’ 1-3

57’ 1-4

74’ 2-4

77’ 3-4 (pen)

@ University of Greenwich Avery Hill Campus, 3G Pitch

Avery Hill Road

Avery Hill

London

SE9 2UG

No Admission or Programme.

Despite being a 3G cage, it didn’t feel like one. Perhaps it was due to it also having a rugby pitch also marked out, so there was a fair gap between the goal ends and the fences. There was also around 6 yards from the near touch line to the spectator barrier and coupled with the fact that the spare goals were put away into areas behind the barrier, then it actually gave good sight lines along the full pitch length. If only all caged pitches were designed like this.

Essex were the better side throughout and two late goals for Greenwich made it look far closer than it really was. After going 1-2 up, Essex hit both the post and crossbar, and once 1-4 ahead, had another effort off the woodwork

A mass brawl three minutes into stoppage time saw Greenwich end the game with ten men (both teams could easily have lost two players each) and three minutes later Essex also had a man sent off, this time for picking up a second yellow card.

Burscough v Northwich Victoria

North West Counties League

Premier Division

Tuesday 2nd November 2021

Kick Off 19.45 Actual 19.44

Burscough 2 Northwich Victoria 0, attendance 131 (official)

37’ 1-0

87’ 2-0

@ The Community Ground

Bobby Langton Way

Burscough

L40 0SW

£6 Admission

£2 Programme, 28 pages.

I had visited Victoria Park, the former home of Burscough, back on 28th November 1994, when I saw them lose 1-4 to Atherton Laburnum Rovers in a Lancashire F.A. Trophy 1st Round match. The ground was in Mart Lane, only one hundred yards from the new ground and already replaced by a new housing estate. I don’t remember much about the ground, but it couldn’t have been anything like the soulless place that they now call home.

The new ground is dreadful. To say it is basic, considering it hosts Step 5 football, is an understatement, but this is the type of ground synonymous with the North West Counties League these days. There is just a kit stand, oddly offset from the halfway line, and a few portacabins. The other three sides are just mounds of mud. I suppose you could say it’s a work in progress, evidenced by the JCB digger in the corner of the ground. The only catering is from a mobile food wagon, which was quite slow for service, but of decent quality and was reasonably priced.

The game itself was a good contest, between two mid table teams, as 8th hosted 11th in the league table. Burscough went ahead eight minutes before halftime, somewhat against the run of play, a shot on the turn from the angle of the box finding the bottom corner of the net. The second half wasn’t as good as the first and Northwich never looked like getting an equaliser. When they had a player red carded with thirteen minutes left, their chances of getting anything from the game were gone. Burscough pushed forward trying to kill the game off. They had two efforts, one off each post, that could have sealed it, before finally making it 2-0 with three minutes left, an angled shot that the ‘keeper got a hand to, but couldn’t keep it out.

It was good to see another accurate attendance declared. My headcount being just one fewer than the official total.

Above : whose idea was it to have a ‘no go’ area to prevent spectators using the rail.