Benfleet v Barking

Essex Senior League

Tuesday 4th March 2025

Kick Off 19.45 Actual 19.46

Benfleet 0 Barking 5, attendance 112

2’ 0-1

24’ 0-2

28’ 0-3

45’ + 1, 0-4

53’ 0-5

@ Woodside Park

Manor Road

New Thundersley

SS7 4PA

£6 Admission

Programme available, didn’t bother buying.

I came to a game here at Woodside Park back in July 2021, when I saw Benfleet play a friendly on the second pitch. At that time, the first team were ground sharing at Canvey Island, but they’ve since brought the main pitch up to Step 5 standard. It is now fully enclosed and obviously floodlit. Spectator access is limited to three sides, with the dugouts on the far side being the out of bounds area. The entrance side, which houses the clubhouse and changing rooms, has a seated kit stand, flanked by two covered standing areas.

The pitch here suffers horrendously from poor/no drainage, despite having a side to side slope that normally helps with such problems. This was their first home game they’ve managed to play here since December 28th and only the third going back to the third week of October. I’ve already had two failed attempts to get here already this season, both times where the games were postponed following pitch inspections that were being conducted too late to still have a chance of making it for kick off, even if they had been passed as ‘on’, due to having to battle M25 roadworks around Clacket Lane Services, let alone the usual Dartford Crossing shenanigans. Anyway, on such a dry sunny day, this looked a good bet to finally go ahead. The club had replied on Twitter that this was indeed the case, although I was told by a fellow ‘hopper at the game that the Referee only actually gave it the green light just before 7 o’clock!

The match was 16th versus 4th in the league table. Barking were very impressive and went ahead after just two minutes, shooting low through a crowd of players, following the award of an indirect free kick just outside the six yard box. Benfleet had a chance to level the scores after 20 minutes, but the penalty kick was well saved by the ‘keeper, then four minutes later Barking scored their second, heading in a left wing cross at the near post. Four minutes later it was 0-3, when a ball in from the right was swept in from 10 yards.

Any chance that Benfleet might have had of getting back into it disappeared minutes later, when a foul inside the centre circle resulted in a straight red card for one of their defenders. The Barking player on the receiving end lay motionless, clearly badly injured. An ambulance was called and the players and officials left the pitch. Meanwhile, a stretcher appeared and the player was loaded and removed, before the ambulance had arrived. After a quick warm up, following a break of just over half an hour, the match resumed and the final eleven minutes of the half were played to a conclusion, with Barking making it 0-4 in added time, heading in at the far post, from a corner on the left. A truncated halftime saw the second half back underway at 21.08 and eight minutes later Barking added their fifth goal of the night, tapping in a cross from the right at the near post. They then took their foot off the pedal, content that the points were safe and the nearest they came to grabbing a sixth goal was a shot that hit the post late on.

I was very pleased to finally get this ground ticked off and the completion of Steps 1 to 6 edges a little closer. Just Truro City (Step 2), Jersey Bulls (Step 5) and Darlington Town (Step 6) to go now. I’m unlikely to manage it this season now though, as I prefer to do floodlit grounds for midweek matches, so expect that number to increase by the start of next season.

Olympique Lyonnais v Stade Brestois ‘29

France

Ligue 1

Sunday 2nd March 2025

Kick Off 15.00 On Time!

Olympique Lyonnais 2 Stade Brestois ‘29 1, attendance 47,804

15’ 0-1 (pen)

24’ 1-1

81’ 2-1

@ Groupama Stadium (Parc Olympique Lyonnais)

10 Avenue Simone Veil

69150 Decines – Charpieu

€25 Admission + €1 Booking Fee, Print at Home Ticket

No Programme.

As we were staying in Lyon, getting to today’s game should have been more straightforward than it was. With work taking place on the most direct public transport route (had an e-mail from the club informing me of this!) from the city out to the stadium, to the east of the city, it meant an alternate route was required, taking the metro Line D to Grand Blanche and then tram T5 to Eurexpo, from where free shuttle busses ran to the stadium.

The Groupama Stadium, named Parc Olympique Lyonnais prior to the sponsorship deal, is the third largest stadium in France and was opened in January 2016, with an all seated capacity of 59,186 and hosted games in that year’s European Championships as well as the 2018 U.E.F.A. Europa League Final. It replaced their former Stade de Gerland home, which is still in use for rugby union, which I had visited back in December 2013 (1-1 versus Toulouse att. 29,152 in Ligue 1) on a 3 match train trip from my then home in Brussels, taking in F.C. Nantes on the Tuesday and Stade Rennais on the Wednesday, before rounding things off here on the Thursday, followed by a ridiculously early train back to Brussels the following morning, meaning I was back at our apartment before 10.30am!

Olympique Lyonnais only won their first Ligue 1 title in 2002, which triggered a remarkable run of seven consecutive titles, but they’ve yet to add to that since. They’ve also won the Coupe de France five times and have twice reached the semi-finals of the U.E.F.A. Champions League. Qualification for European football is a regular occurrence these days and they came into this sitting sixth in the league table, whilst Stade Brestois were three places below them, struggling to match their feat of last season, in which they qualified for the Champions League, but having made the play off round following the league stage, found themselves paired with fellow French side Paris Saint-Germain, who hammered them 10-0 on aggregate!

Brest got off to a perfect start today, scoring with a V.A.R. awarded penalty after fifteen minutes, although it only took Lyon nine minutes to draw level, when a through ball was dinked over the ‘keeper from the corner of the six yard box by Alexandre Lacazette (ex Arsenal). Brest thought they’d edged back in front in the final minute of the first half, but the goal was ruled out for offside. Both sides went for the win in the second half and following a build up of pressure, it finally went the way of the hosts with nine minutes left, when Lacazette scored his second goal of the game, touching in a cross from the right at the near post that found the far corner of the net. Unlike yesterday, where Nice appeared to have no supporters whatsoever at Saint-Etienne, at least there were 70 away supporters following Brest today, although they probably hadn’t travelled all the way from Normandy, some 430 miles to the west.

After the game, the organisation in queuing for the shuttle busses back to the tram connection was superbly run, and even better, our bus back to Eurexpo dropped us off with a wait of under five minutes for the next tram to depart (only three an hour according to the timetable) back towards the city.

Association Sportive Saint-Etienne v Olympique Gymnaste Club Nice

France

Ligue 1

Saturday 1st March 2025

Kick Off 17.00 On Time!

Association Sportive Saint-Etienne 1 Olympique Gymnaste Club Nice 3, attendance 30,070

10’ 0-1

32’ 1-1

50’ 1-2

70’ 1-3

@ Stade Geoffroy-Guichard

14 Rue Paul et Pierre Guichard

42000 Saint-Etienne

€33 Admission + €1 Booking Fee, Print at Home Ticket.

No Programme.

A late decision, with flights and hotel not booked until Thursday evening, saw us on the 0820 EasyJet flight yesterday morning from London Gatwick to Lyon-Saint Exupery Airport, in the Auvergne-Rhone-Alps region of France, for a short break based in the city of Lyon. For today’s game it was a 55 minute train ride south-west from Lyon to Saint-Etienne Chateaucreux station, which cost €27.60 return, with a 25 minute walk to the stadium from there.

Stade Geoffroy-Guichard, named after the founder of the Casino retail group, who purchased the land it occupies, was built in 1930, opening the following year, undergoing a number of renovations over the intervening years and now has an all seated capacity of 41,965. It has hosted games in the European Championships (1984 and 2016) and World Cup (1998), as well as games in the 2024 Summer Olympics football tournament and 2023 Rugby Union World Cup.

Saint-Etienne have won 10 Ligue 1 titles and are six times Coupe de France winners, but their glory days were back in the 1960’s and 1970’s, a period that also saw them reach the 1976 European Cup Final, where they lost to Bayern Munchen. They are struggling to avoid relegation this season, coming into this third bottom in the league table, one above the automatic drop zone, whilst today’s visitors Nice are very much in the running for a Champions League place, sitting third in the table, just three points adrift of second placed Olympique Marseille, but both well adrift of leaders Paris Saint-Germain.

Nice were ahead after just ten minutes, when a cross from the right was met with a first time shot, that was initially saved by the ‘keeper, but followed in with a header that went in off the underside of the crossbar. The goal was greeted by near silence. The visitors section of the stadium was completely empty and there was no evidence of them having any support in the home areas either. Saint-Etienne equalised just after the half hour mark, when the ball was worked in from the right, before being pulled back across the six yard box and easily finished from eight yards out. The home fans were absolutely superb, creating one of the best atmospheres I’ve witnessed anywhere, even after going behind so early and their backing for the team was relentless, despite them not having too much to cheer, as Nice looked far more dangerous and were producing the better goal scoring chances. Nice were back in front five minutes into the second half, when a corner from the right was touched in at the near post. Twenty minutes from the end they added a third goal, when a ball across the 18 yard box was finished first time into the bottom corner and they also hit the crossbar late on following a quick breakaway, as they cruised to an easy win, with the hosts never really looking like getting back into it. Even worse for them, Le Havre won tonight, which saw them climb out of the bottom two, leaving Saint-Etienne in their place.

After the game it was an easy walk back to the station, in plenty of time to catch the 20.03 train back to Lyon.