Real Oviedo v F.C. Cartagena

Spain

Segunda Division

Monday 13th November 2023

Kick Off 21.00 On Time!

Real Oviedo 1 F.C Cartagena 1, attendance 12,203

2’ 0-1

90’ + 8, 1-1

@ Estadio Municipal Carlos Tartiere

Calle Isidro Langara

33013 Oviedo

€30 Admission + €2 Booking Fee, Print at Home Ticket.

It was a 3 hour drive west to Oviedo, in the region of Asturias, for tonight’s game, where 14th in the league table were hosting bottom. The stadium here has a 30,500 capacity, all seated, set out with two tiers in each stand. It was opened in 2000, replacing their former ground of the same name. Tickets were obtained online, although there would have been no problem buying on the night. Parking was once again available in the surrounding streets, although it meant a walk of around 15 minutes, which was almost double on the return, as the ground is at the foot of a very steep hill and the steps back up afterwards seemed never ending. Once back in the car, it was no more than two minutes before being on the ring road and heading back east towards Bilbao.

Cartagena got off to the perfect start, when a cross was volleyed in from the edge of the 18 yard box with just 1 minute 26 seconds on the clock. They seemed happy to try and hold out from here, rarely venturing near the Oviedo goal, a tactic that so nearly paid off. Oviedo quickly ran out of ideas and really struggled to break down the 10 man defence. They did think they’d levelled the scores just before the hour mark, but VAR said otherwise. Eight minutes into stoppage time they were awarded a penalty, this time the VAR intervening in their favour and with the last kick of the game they got an equaliser. It was 23.02 by this time. A ridiculously late finish for a midweek match. Their lacklustre display hardly warranted a point, but then again, Cartagena didn’t do too much after opening the scoring to have got anything more than a point either.

The atmosphere was pretty decent and they were whipped into quite a frenzy late on as they felt the match officials were not giving them any favourable decisions. There were repeated warnings on the big screens warning them about abusive chanting directed towards them, but it only resulted in whipping them up even more. I should imagine the atmosphere here would be great with a decent away following in place.I never noticed a single away supporter anywhere and even their goal was celebrated in complete silence. Not unexpected though, as Cartagena is 560 miles away, down in the southeast of the country.

So, this brought down the curtain on the trip to Spain. Five matches, only one 0-0 and covering just over 700 miles once picking up the hire car, having done Athletic Club Bilbao on public transport on the first night. The Tuesday lunchtime flight back to London Gatwick left a few minutes early, arriving back in Blighty around 20 minutes ahead of schedule.


Above : Oviedo score their stoppage time penalty equaliser.

Sociedad Deportiva Eibar v Albacete Balompie

Spain

Segunda Division

Sunday 12th November 2023

Kick Off 21.00 Actual 21.01

Sociedad Deportiva Eibar1 Albacete Balompie 1, attendance 4,543

10’ 1-0

67’ 1-1

@ Estadio Municipal de Ipurua

Ipurua Kalea 2

20600 Eibar

€25 Admission + €2 Booking Fee, Print at Home Ticket

No Programme.

Having had lunch in Tarazona, it was a two and a half hour drive north west, via Pamplona, to Eibar for the second game of the day. It would have been possible to squeeze a game in between the two matches, but would have left little time for eating or checking in at our hotel. In hindsight, it was the correct call to do just two games. Even arriving in Eibar well before kick off, finding any sort of parking was horrendous. It was on the third loop round the one way system that I managed to grab a place in the street. From here it was uphill all the way to the ground. Luckily, there is a system of escalators to do the work. The steep rise from town to stadium would certainly give you a good workout…..would have took it in my stride a few years ago…but, sadly, not these days!

The ground just suddenly appears in front of you, hidden from sight until you’re literally on top of it. Even the four corner floodlights don’t offer any help in locating it. Booking tickets online was not a problem. The bottom row on all four sides was more or less 100% available, with only the odd few seats elsewhere. We managed to get a couple of the furthest seats back from the pitch and even then it was only on the third row. It was a little baffling that the ground holds 8,164 all seated, but was only just over half full. There must be a lot of season ticket holders that don’t bother turning up for games? The ground is very compact and not really that great as far as getting a proper view of the action goes. The near touchline was totally obscured and looking down towards the far near corner was not helped by everyone leaning forward or standing up whenever the ball went that way as they strained for a better view. The ground was opened in 1947 and has gradually been re-developed over the years, with renovation carried out in 1989 and again in 2016, before finally reaching it’s current layout in 2019.

As for the match, it was 4th versus 17th in the league table. Eibar took an early lead, when a break down the right was played into the box first time and finished at the near post. They were well on top, but lacked any real cutting edge up front. They had the chance to double their lead a couple of minutes before halftime, but they saw a penalty saved by the visiting ‘keeper, diving towards the corner, but saving with his trailing leg. Albacete were much better in the second half and it came as no surprise when they equalised with just over twenty minutes left, finishing with a 25 yard angled shot into the far top corner, which the ‘keeper got a hand to, but couldn’t keep out. At least the 75-80 away fans will have felt the effort of making the 400 mile journey north was worth it, despite the game not finishing until 22.57!

Tonight’s match brought up the half century of grounds I’ve now seen a game at in Spain.

Sociedad Deportiva Tarazona v Club Deportivo Teruel

Spain

R.F.E.F. Primera Division

Grupo 1

Sunday 12th November 2023

Kick Off 12.00 Actual 12.03

Sociedad Deportiva Tarazona 0 Club Deportivo Teruel 0, attendance 800

@ Estadio Municipal de Tarazona

Avenida de la Paz

50500 Tarazona

€20 Admission

No Programme.

It was a 1 hour 20 minute drive south from Pamplona to Tarazona, in the region of Aragon, for this game in the third level of Spanish football. Once again no problem with parking in the surrounding streets. The ground is floodlit and has a 702 seat stand on one side, with cover stretching from one 18 yard box to the other on the opposite side, although standing is at one level for the entirety. There is access behind each goal too, one with a couple of steps of terracing and viewing from the top of the bank at the same end. There was a small refreshment bar, but it was located at the rear of the stand, so not really of use whilst the game was in progress.

The game was a real relegation battle, as fourth bottom hosted bottom of the table. Tarazona had only managed one win and four draws from their opening eleven games, whilst Teruel hadn’t won at all, but had managed to draw six of their eleven played so far. I didn’t expect much of a game, but didn’t expect it to be as bad as this. I would expect both these sides to struggle to survive at Step 6 in England. They were absolutely dire. I don’t recall anything like a goal opportunity being produced by either side. It felt more like an endurance test than a football match. At least Teruel will have been happy picking up a point though, as it got them off the foot of the table, climbing up two places!

Above : The match poster obtained from a shop doorway after the match.

Club Atletico Osasuna v Union Deportiva Las Palmas

Spain

La Liga

Saturday 11th November 2023

Kick Off 18.30 On Time!

Club Atletico Osasuna 1 Union Deportiva Las Palmas 1, attendance 20,125

70’ 0-1

73’ 1-1

@ Estadio El Sadar

Calle del Sadar

31006 Pamplona

€50 Admission + €2 Booking Fee, Print at Home Ticket

No Programme.

This morning started off with a €3 bus ride from a couple of hundred yards away from our hotel, in order to pick up a hire car from Bilbao Airport. Today would see a drive south of about 1 hour 50 minutes, to the town of Pamplona, in the Navarre region, to see another top division game. Pamplona is probably more famous for the ‘Running of the Bulls’ festival that takes place over a week of July each year, where people basically run around the city streets being chased by a bull, rather than it’s football team Club Atletico Osasuna, who celebrated their centenary four years ago, which has included four Segunda Division titles and twice being Spanish Cup (Copa del Rey) runners-up, in 2005 and again last season. Their home is at the Estadio El Sadar, opened in 1967 and now modernised to hold a 23,516 all-seated capacity. It is very compact. The crowd are right on top of the action and it generated a good atmosphere. The very small corner section for away fans was almost full, although I suspect many of them now live on the mainland, rather than having travelled from the Canary Islands (the club are from the island of Gran Canaria) and there were plenty of away colours openly displayed around other sections of the ground too, without a hint of trouble. Car parking was plentiful in the surrounding streets (free after 2pm on a Saturday apparently) and we managed to bag a space less than ten minutes walk from the stadium.

The match itself was a mid-table clash, with12th hosting 10th. Not too much in the way of goalmouth action. Both teams seemed content with faffing about in the centre of the pitch. Plenty of short passes, but achieving little, other than keeping the possession percentages high! The only real thing of note in the first half was an Osasuna header tipped round the post seven minutes before halftime. At least the game opened up second half and Las Palmas broke the deadlock with twenty minutes left, cutting in from the left before curling a shot into the far top corner from just inside the angle of the 18 yard box. Their lead only lasted three minutes though, Osasuna drawing level when a cross from the right was finished with a stooping header from six yards out at the near post. Both teams seemed to settle for a point each from here, protecting what they had, rather than trying to grab a winning goal.

Athletic Club Bilbao v Real Club Celta Vigo

Spain

La Liga

Friday 10th November 2023

Kick Off 21.00 Actual 21.01

Athletic Club Bilbao 4 Real Club Celta Vigo 3, attendance 44,435

25’ 0-1

37’ 1-1

41’ 1-2

45’ + 5, 2-2

51’ 3-2

65’ 3-3

90’ + 8, 4-3 (pen)

@ Estadio San Mames

Calle Rafael Moreno “Pitxitxi”

48013 Bilbao

€80 Admission + €2.50 booking fee, Print at Home Ticket

No Programme.

I had visited the original Estadio San Mames back in October 2011, when Athletic Club drew 2-2 versus S.V. Salzburg in a U.E.F.A. Europa League Group match in front of a crowd of 25,000. Since then a new 53,289 capacity stadium has been built, slightly offset from the original footprint, where there is no pitch overlap, but one goal end is on top of what would have been part of the old ground, hence the ground opening in September 2013 with just three new sides built. The last remaining part of the original structure was then knocked down to enable stadium completion. It is a sight to behold. The stadium is easily reached, having its own station on the Bilbao city metro system, unsurprisingly called “San Mames”.

The atmosphere was superb and it has to be said, the view here is superb, even if it is very expensive for the pleasure! We were unable to get two adjacent tickets, but had managed to get a pair just two seats apart and when the two locals who had the two between us arrived for the game, they offered to shuffle across after sussing out the English accents! It was a surprise to see the official attendance announced was only around 44,500 as there were not many seats available to purchase around a week before the game. There was no way there were almost 9,000 empty seats. I would have said maybe 1,500 to two thousand, if that. Even the away section looked well populated.

The match was 5th versus 18th in the league table and was absolutely superb to watch from start to finish. Celta Vigo, who are managed by Rafael Benitez (ex Valencia, Real Madrid, Liverpool, Everton, Chelsea and Newcastle United boss) looked a very good side. They certainly didn’t play like a team sitting third from bottom. If they hadn’t resorted to the all too usual (amongst so many foreign teams) diving/cheating and time wasting in the last fifteen minutes, then they could have won it. They had an early goal disallowed for offside, but did open the scoring with a 20 yard shot that went in off the far post after twenty five minutes. Athletic equalised eight minutes before halftime, hooking in at the far post, after a cross from the left wasn’t cut out, but Celta Vigo were back ahead within four minutes, punishing a poor clearance from a free kick with a first time shot into the bottom corner from just outside the D. Athletic Club made it 2-2, touching in a left wing cross at the near post, in the fifth minute of stoppage time at the end of the first half

Athletic Club went in front six minutes into the second half, tapping in from close range, after an angled shot had been saved by the ‘keeper. Celta thought they’d levelled the scores with twenty five minutes left, but the effort was ruled out for offside, but it was only a matter of seconds before they did make it 3-3, breaking quickly down the right and playing the ball across to finish unmarked at the far post. Seven minutes later they had the chance to regain the lead, but a penalty, awarded by VAR for a handball offence, was saved by the ‘keeper. Eight minutes into stoppage time there was another penalty awarded, again for handball, but this time in favour of the hosts and it was put away to give them all three points. The final whistle then blew, dead on eleven o’clock!

Our early morning Vueling flight out from London Gatwick to Bilbao this morning managed to land slightly ahead of schedule, despite departing about fifteen minutes late, leaving plenty of time in Bilbao pre-match and even better, the hotel was only about five minutes walk from the stadium, which was clearly visible from our tenth floor room!


S.S.B. Unity v Sompting

Brighton, Worthing & District League

Saturday 4th November 2023

Kick Off 15.00 Actual 15.07

S.S.B. Unity 0 Sompting 4 (Abandoned 31 mins, Referee abused), attendance 6

6’ 0-1

18’ 0-2

28’ 0-3

31’ 0-4

@ Stanley Deason Leisure Centre, 3G Pitch

120 Wilson Avenue

Brighton

BN2 5PB

No Admission or Programme.

Today was another step towards my aim to see a first team match played on every ground in Sussex. This is not the normal home of S.S.B. Unity, but the game was switched to here late in the week. It is one of 2 artificial pitches here at Stanley Deason Leisure Centre (the other being for hockey) and is the further (lower) of the two from the building/car park. Both are dug into the hillside, running end on to each other, with decent views from above the near goal end out over the city to the sea. The spectator viewing area actually runs along the full length of one side, with the only thing hampering the view being that the two teams ‘benches’ set themselves up on this side too, rather than on the opposite touchline, although it was hardly a problem with such a sparse crowd.

The match was 5th versus 8th in the league table. Sompting took an early lead, following in after an initial shot had come back off the far post. The second goal came after being played through one on one with the ‘keeper. The home linesman flagged for offside, but was correctly overruled by the Referee, who allowed the goal. Number three arrived on twenty eight minutes, squeezing a shot in at the near post from a break down the right. Three minutes later it was 0-4, again the linesman (a change from the earlier one) flagged for offside, but once again it was (correctly in my opinion) overruled and the goal was awarded. The home team and ‘bench’ ran towards the Referee, surrounding him just outside the centre circle. There was plenty of shouting, followed by a bit of jostling and pushing. Seconds later the Referee abandoned the game!