Saturday, 26 December 2020
DERBY DAY
Thursday, 24 December 2020
SUNDAY MORN CUP ACTION
20th December 2020 - Denton Town (Sunday Team) 2 v 4 Infinity Initiatives FC - My punk DIY ethos runs deep, I am keen to try and view doofers and doers where and when I can, especially if it involves noise, nature or non-league football. So, when I was invited down by the ever-amiable Rob Nicholson (Denton Town stalwart and co-organiser of the Sunday Bunch) I was intrigued and of course, convinced. When I informed the missus of the plans on the Sabbath she gave a frown but came for the crack anyway after persuasion came in the form of chocolate and cuddles. Heading out we initially got lost but soon found our way after following a suspected Denton player in his car. Down a back-passage we went (ooh sexy) and were soon pitch-side in the middle of seemingly nowhere (the match had been moved from Denton's home ground to this new area known as The King George Playing Fields in Audenshaw). The ground underfoot was stickier than the palms of Errol Flynn when locked in a wine bar and the conditions looked very much like being a great leveller for this Fred Davies Cup Tie. The teams got kitted up at the side of the pitch, were soon raring to go and the referee turned up, indulged in a quick costume change and headed into the centre circle. Denton Town were faves to win this, they were several leagues above their opponents, in a cup match though, this counts for little.
Before I commence this review I must add that the aforementioned Mr Nicholson supplied me with team line-ups and therefore the blame for any errors I will kindly leave at his doorstep - nasty hey ha, ha. If anyone wishes to complain please send gripes or death threats to the said bod - an address can be supplied via direct e-mail for a fee of £50.
At 10.30am the quagmire began to get a hammering with Denton the first team to dazzle via some slick, quick work. Chances however remained at a minimum until the home lads won a free-kick. The ball was lofted high, No 6 rose and put nut on ball and duly buried - it was all too easy and the scorer, it was suggested, should go unnamed. Denton were soon at it again, a throw in was won but the game needed pausing as some dog shit had been spied on the pitch. Enter Mr 'Poop-a-Scoop' Nicholson and his trusted hands. The defecation was bagged, the game continued, the throw led to a corner that was delivered with the guest pack just surviving.
Denton were salivating for strikes, No 18 (Will Anderson) led the next assault, the cross supplied was delectable, the finish by No 7 (Wes Higgins) though was rather crap. A similar move soon followed, a dream ball came but the attacking bod was thwarted by some concrete keeping. Keep on trying chaps.
The Infinity eventually got the measure of the match as the rain fell and the adhesive quality of the substrate grew. Despite this 2 Denton corners followed, the first ended with a shot from No 12 (Alex Bealey) deflected wide, the second was nutted off target. The guests bounced back with an onslaught of their own. No 23 (Luke Hassall) seemed to be in a position of no hope in the near corner but worked in, found the angle and executed a sublime chip over the floundering mitter - now that was a beauty although I did wonder if it was intended, either way the cat was amongst the pigeons, the pike amongst the minnows, nay the Jack Russel amongst the rats.
Denton were provoked into an immediate response. A fleet-footed passing sequence culminated in Anderson getting upended in the box and a penalty awarded. No 9 (Mark Bayley) stepped up, released the shank and struck the ball, the outcome, a ruddy awful miss. Seconds later the same player was in, duly buried but was regarded as offside - talk about crappy luck. Denton remained undeterred, they swanned forth again, Higgins fed No 8 (Ben Smith) who had a first time pop. The keeper did mighty well to keep his netting unmolested.
The half wound on, a few dire shots came and then the hosts broke with purpose. No 17 (Jack Kelly) provided a quality ball, Anderson showed willing, put in a cross with Bayley on it and burying - 2 - 1 - and thoroughly deserved. During the closing stages of the first half the leading pack produced a couple of flourishes. Kelly had a header wide and then Higgins struck a volley that was pinged behind. A corner came, Higgins had another effort, again it was wayward and then, before the final tremble of the pea, Hassall for the II team had an hopeful punt that only just dropped over the bar.
Flasks at the ready and a choccy bar to chomp, me and the missus indulged and contemplated a good half of hoofing. It was enjoyable, with plenty of good effort and all for free - plus it was all done for the love of the game, what more can anyone want?
The second period began, The Town pushed from the off, like a pregnant walrus about to drop a double-load. There was great endeavour but the birthing process gave no calf of success and we were left waiting. A local bod was now having a fire in his garden and the smoke drifting lazily by, I was hoping a stray spark would fall on the pitch and re-ignite the action, A brace of Denton corners came, the keeper punched the first away and the second was tipped over the bar after an incoming nut had made good contact. The lads from Infinity responded and had a couple of angled kicks that came to nowt and then No 34 (Danny Miller) became all inflamed, sent in a low shot the keeper pushed onto the post but the heated attacker was quick to pounce and prod home - 2 - 2 - place yer bets folks, this is going to the wire!
Denton were shocked, started to impose their will and after an angled kick that was only just dealt with another quickly followed, a foul on the edge of the box was spotted and a chance to restore the lead was given. No 11 (Gage Rothwell) took the spot kick, rifled it down the barrel, the keeper saved with solid confidence, things were still all to play for.
The action stayed fascinating, some great defending, some hard work and the odd error meant this was a captivating spectacle but not in any affected and cultured way. The guests were up for this, encouraged by much touch-line hollering and excitement. They strode forth, a liquid move saw the ball enter the opposing box, panic ensue and another penalty awarded. Miller stepped up, stroked home and the upset was on the cards.
The trailing pack now looked to rebuild, a delicious ball was played into the II danger zone with the scare only quelled when the keeper dropped on the ball like a sack of grateful shit. The game soon continued and we were up the other end with a corner won. The globe was cast, a flick on came and up stepped No 18 (Connor White) to bag a bonus.
Time and indecision were now Denton Town's greatest enemy. They sprung the traps with Rothwell galloping through but being denied twice with the keeper making an outstanding double save. Onwards the black and red flow came, chances were missed with the closest a header by Rothwell that was sweetly tipped over. Soon after Rothwell was sin-binned after a II break had caused great concern but ended with a dire shot. The final effort of the game saw The Town's initial scorer have a chance to double his tally with only the mitter to beat - the shot was placed and failed to hit the strike zone - it kind of summed up The Town's day. The whistle went soon after, Man of the Match was a tough choice but the Infinity Initiative's No 1 (Victor Giminez Raventos) had a choice game, kept his side in the mix and made a series of noteworthy saves. He deserves a nod of appreciation, and of course a box of Daz Automatic - that kit was ruddy filthy.
FINAL THOUGHT - So a million miles away from the shittery of commercialised, business-soaked Premier League football, out on a field without any frills and in truth, I loved it. As in punk rock and life in general, the lower down one delves the more sober, good to honest effort and naturalness is found. Today two teams came, a handful of extras and an eager referee and contributed to some real amateur dramatics in a theatre not of dreams but of reality. Denton Town were favourites, their hopes were instantaneously tempered by an equalising playing surface and they were eventually dumped on their arses. They have more than enough in reserve though to bounce back from this, several players caught the orbs and they have many good contacts - Up the Town I say, in all their guises. Infinity Initiatives deserved this today due to sheer endeavour, great spirit and an undying work rate. After going down to an early goal they could have crumbled, not so - the gumption and belief was a joy to watch and having rode their luck they bounced back and grabbed a well-deserved win. I reckon I will check out this lot again very soon, it seems only decent. Many may frown at the levels I enjoy - each to their own I say but never underestimate the game at Level Real.
Tuesday, 22 December 2020
TON-TASTIC
19th December 2020 - Avro FC 2 v 1 Squires Gate - It seems the recent COVID attack has left me jaded and I am still not 100% with a few complaints to gripe about. Nevertheless I had a short walk with the missus before the game and turned up early at today's ground to indulge in 2 brews, a plate of chips with a barm cake and have a natter with STP Stu. The Daily Express cryptic crossword was nailed in 15 minutes and the paper scrunched up immediately after. This rag is brought now and again for the crossword only, the news is negative or nonsense and so the rest of the paper is best binned or used for arse paper just like all the rest of these publications. I may start off my own daily effort - The Daily Ringpiece - open it up and the shit spills forth - at least it would be honest. Page 3 would be a let-down but there ya go, truth over tits every time.
As time raced on Stu and myself picked a viewing point and watched the teams unwind and people shuffle into desired safety zones, the marshals were on it, there was going to be no hugging and kissing on the touchline today (thank fuck for that, some of the locals did look a little past their sell-by-date).
At the appointed time the teams took up positions under fading skies with a pseudo-Exorcist soundtrack on loop in the background - the question today was 'Who would be exorcised' and 'who would be projectile vomiting the filth of disappointment' - read on you deviant desperadoes.
The start to the game was brisk, I suspect the nipping wind up the shorts of many players was a contributing factor, there be nothing worse than an icicle on yer nob. The Squires were wide awake and showing good spunkery with a corner duly won and delivered and No 9 (Kiernan Feeney) at the back post striving to score but just earning another angled hoof. The ball came, a strong bonse cleared but the guests soon won a free-kick with No 11 (James Boyd) posting and the home No 1 (Jordan Latham) keeping an eye on the globe and catching with ease. A swift break followed, the pace was electric, one pass and a shot was the outcome, the save was solid and from the resultant corner no penetration was had (God bless the mittman's chastity belt).
The game continued with a superfluity of vim. The Gate advanced, a stunning cross-ball found No 10 (Dean Ing) who tried to turn and twat in one fluent move. Contact was made with the incoming ball but the outcome was an attempt way off target. Avro counterpunched in double-quick time, a quick assault saw No 10 (Martin Pilkington) at the apex producing an effort the mitter was forced to save. A corner came, was prodded out but immediately redelivered with a back post header gratefully grabbed by the goalie. The home lads grew in stature, exposed a moment of sugar-sweet football that culminated in a cross met by the head of No 7 (Joe Rathbone). How he didn't bag the opening goal is beyond me - it was a real let off for the battling visitors.
Now the hosts turned up the thermals but their opponents were still good value. In fact the travelling pack won the next angled hoof which was sent in low and connected with a thumping drive. A lunging tackle came and blocked what seemed destined to be a cracking strike, we were now getting to be overdue a goal. No 9 (Liam Ellis) for Avro nearly provided due service but a header and a shot soon after lacked true gumption - we stayed as we were.
The game looked set for a half-time stalemate when a peach of a ball found the Gate's Ing who tidily chested down and walloped first time - the outcome, an attempt mere inches wide. Avro had one last effort before the break, the keeper quelled any threat and so we were left to chew the bare cud.
Half-time was swift, we stayed put, the COVID marshals were pootling about, the thought of queueing for a brew was too much and besides I had a Mars Bar to deal with. With the choccy swallowed, the head still spinning due to blocked tubes and the rain now threatening I was hoping the game would pick up a level and keep my noggin chipper.
Once again, the period started with the SG Squad out with a flourish. They gained good territory but couldn't make any crucial breakthrough as Avro looked fairly solid at the back. The skies now became perforated and the God of Flatulence helped the watery javelins fall with spite as a real storm drenched all and sundry. In the midst of the inclement turmoil a free-kick for Avro was hammered low and hard by their No 11 (Kane Wallwork) with the keeper doing remarkably well to save at the near post. The ball wasn't cleared and fell into the land of 'Come and get it'. Pilkington for Avro was quickest to react and popped up, mopped up and opened the day's scoring.
The restart came, the weather didn't abate and neither did the action. Squires Gate had a quick thrust, the final header went shy of the target. A free-kick came the same way, the ball was blasted into the driving rain and was deflected into the keeper's arms - the guests were up against it in many ways. The home team had a solid break next, Rathbone pounced on a loose ball with a snap shot that flashed past the upright. Within seconds the globe was flying once again toward the SG strike zone, a save followed and a corner given. The ball was posted with good whip, the tip over was more than adequate. Another kick from the angle saw the ball cleared with No 4 (Kyle Jacobs) for Avro sending back a pearling shot that produced a quite outstanding save from the No 1 (Daniel Eccles). This was great action, not bad for a horrible December day that saw many underparts wither and many a knee knock.
Despite driving headlong into the murky mire and trailing by a goal the guests still gave a good account of themselves but seemed to be given an impossible task. A header came from a corner but flew over and then a rapier-like break sliced Squires Gate in two, a low cross blazed into the box, a foot was stuck out and the visitor's day had taken another turn for the worse - an own goal and now two goals down - shit happens and sometimes in great stinking heaps.
15 minutes remained on the clock, scrambling came here and there with Avro looking to kill the game in various ways. The men from Blackpool cracked on, a ball out saw No 16 (Jack Iley) find space at the angle and bulge the netting with a low driller-killer - 2 - 1 - was there a Tale of the Unexpected on the cards - cue Roald Dahl music and a dancing naked woman (well perhaps leave ya knickers on love, it is a trifle parky).
The final countdown came, Avro had a sortie with Ellis having a shot half-blocked by the keeper and an on-line clearance needed. Moments later the same player had a shot over and then, on the very death, an Avro sub had a pop to try and bag a last gasp equaliser. The chance was there, the execution was lacking, the ball flew into the night sky and the game was called to a halt.
Avro, in truth, just about deserved this but today's Man of the Match goes to No 5 (Samuel Barratt) of Squires Gate who I thought had a really strong defensive game and was mightily unlucky to be on the losing side. He kept his eye on the ball, worked mighty hard and cleared up much potential danger with a quite cool head - I reckon there are many more good performances to come from this lad - keep it up chap.
FINAL THOUGHT - On a rank day, in the midst of viral madness and with many folk out on a spending frenzy with no reason why, it was good to get away from the shittery and watch some Non-League action again. The game, as per, was competitive and exposed two teams striving to play good football and make headway in a stuttering season. Squires Gate are no mugs, battle well, have a good set-up and have many components that will cause teams undue duress. I hope to get back up their ground very soon, it has always been an enjoyable excursion especially after a morn of coastal wild-lifing followed by a seaside Ice Cream. Avro today just came and did the business. On the day they were just a tad sharper and had the roll of the ball. They are currently joint top of the league, not bad for a team who have only played 100 semi-pro games and during this game bagged their 100th home league goal. There is much promise on the horizon and great potential ready to be tapped. The next game is against Irlam, one of my fave teams and one who will certainly test the Avro mettle. The game happens on Boxing Day and I reckon if you haven't had a Turkey Leg rammed up yer arse on Christmas Day or got you pubic hair entangled in the Parson's Nose (maybe literally ya nasty swines) then you should get on the touchline and see what transpires. I have plans for a different game and hopefully can keep my jacksie un-Turkified - once the festive sherry flows though you never know - slurp, gobble, ouch!
Sunday, 13 December 2020
DENTON TAKE THE HIGH ROAD
12th December 2020 - Denton Town 3 v 0 Maine Road Reserves - After another break from football we were glad to get back at it again with a jaunt to the Wright Robinson Sports College to see a game played away from the designated home ground (due to an iffy pitch) to a nearby all-weather surface so as to keep the ball actually rolling. I arrived early, as did STP Stu - victuals and a couple of brews were had as was a wander and a watch of several junior games that were going on. What a marvellous sight to see so many young 'erberts burning up energy, enjoying the game and keeping focused - by crikey it was a busy area with the recent restrictions banished and people just cracking on - it was ruddy heart-warming to see. With several digressions had we eventually located the pitch for today's entertainment and had a chat with a few faces from here and there. The game was destined to kick-off at sometime past 2pm, and so we waited, watched, waited and...waited. To be fair when the playing surface became free both units cracked on, had a quick warm-up and were soon ready to roll. My match report hand was out of practice and I picked up the pen with hesitancy whilst hoping I would have lots to scribble about without straining the old wrist. I once knew a guy who ended up overworking the said joint and ended up having a cerebral breakdown after trying to self-abuse via a clockwork limb - tick, tock, damaged cock - not for me thank you very much.
And to the game, with the hosting unit out with a good spurt and winning an almost instantaneous gratis boot. The delivery of the sphere was more than adequate, it was just a shame to not see one or two front bods attack the ball with any great conviction. A free-kick followed the other way, the delivery was sound with the Town No 3 (Josh Stachini) glad to see his defensive header go behind for a corner. The kick was posted with good clout, No 4 (Ben Pond) popped up in free -space and somehow managed to not even hit the target - now that should have been 0-1 for sure.
From here the Blue clad team moved on and adapted to the pace set. A lovely chip pass finalised a quick move with No 7 (Mauro Mendez) unfortunate to be denied at the last. Not long after and the same hustling component was battling away like a ferret with a freshly grabbed rabbit and after losing possession duly regained it and walloped, The shot was wide of the mark however and we stayed free of mesh bulging action.
The game exuded good balance, it was, so far at least, a competitive contest liable to go any way. The Dentoidians strode forth next, the move was pure liquid gold but a last ditch tackle by a defensive bod was equal to the task and straight from the top drawer labelled 'bloody marvellous' (just next to the pictures of yours truly in a Mankini by the way). A follow-up pop at goal came within the twitch of a clergyman's rectum (I do need to stop watching 'Songs of Praise') with No 9 (Brad McLaughlin) the executioner and No 1 (Ethan Handley) of the Road the bloke with the safe gloves.
Animation levels grew, the hosts came on. Mendez provided choice service for No 10 (Shaquille Lewys) to touch on and No 11 (Harry Rowan) to recklessly blaze over. Again the red shirted squad pushed with Lewys receiving the ball only a couple of feet out and somehow managing to fluff his shot and not even trouble the mittman - that was a stinker.
More chances arose, space was appearing in many zones, all that was needed now was a few players to don their sharp-shooting, real darn' tootin' striking boots. The tide eventually began to flow the way of the home team with Mendez having a golden chance to bury but lacking that decisive touch. Rowan cut a swathe soon after, the peg was swung and the ball flew towards the strike zone with accuracy levels high. The underside of the bar was clattered and the ball was cleared, a few shouts claimed it had crossed the line, I for one didn't think so but reckoned the effort did deserve a goal.
With the chill rising off the pitch, Denton turned up the thermals on it. Lewys had a pop, again the keeper answered all questions asked. Lewys began a new mission next, he barged like a rhino through a shop of porcelain vibrators (oh what quivering chaos) and the visiting defence trembled but offered little in the way of an orgasmic response. The rampaging brute was unceremoniously tumbled, the referee pointed to the spot and McLaughlin buried with complete simplicity - it had been coming.
The half now advanced to the break with haste, things were still competitive but the Road were on a knife edge. They nearly fell further behind when a Denton free-kick was hammered into the wall, the follow up shot by Stachini forced the the mitter to save and spill and Lewys had a golden moment to bury. The attempt was truly awful and it was the last scrawling my pen was to do during this first period.
The half time break was brief, as was my excursion to some nearby trees to expel the golden liquid. It was too nippy to indulge in some exhibitionist piddling so it was a case of produce, point, piss and put away - I am sure many locals were extremely grateful for the lack of pecker action.
Half two and The Road pushed from the off. The Denton keeper was caught playing silly buggers and going on a roam. A cross eventually came and No 11 (Zaid Baroudi) had a close-in header and the gloved fellow redeemed himself with a high quality save, 2 corners followed, Denton stayed safe.
Both teams kept things flowing in an open game but genuine chances were a rare commodity and when any side trespassed into a situation of danger the end result was some very poor decision making. The Town eventually applied some consistent pressure with their opponents forced into a position that was holding little threat. A corner came, was half-cleared with No 8 (Aaron Clayton) running in and booming the underside of the bar with a quite rasping shot. Again the referee said 'no goal', by heck was there going to be a twist in the tail of this game after all?
Denton carried on undeterred by their misfortune, McLaughlin produced a neat turn and twat with the ball palmed behind for a corner. The angled crack came low and hard, a touch came but again couldn't find the target. Onwards the team on top came, Maine Road were now in scamper mode and just hoping for any morsel of salvation. Suddenly the Blues failed to clear, Mendez collected, cracked one forth and into the net - 2 - 0 and for what I had witnessed thus far, it looked as though the game was done.
Primarily the traffic was now one way. Clayton for the Town had a shot on the turn that saw the keeper produce a dazzling save and then Mendez put a cross in that No 9 McLaughlin could only put over the bar. A couple of corners followed within minutes, the first was shite, the second met by the cranium of Lewys who was denied by an on-line block. The closing stages came, the Heavens darkened and rain loomed. Denton Town were looking to seal matters and thought they had done so when a fluent move was finalised by Lewys - alas the referee said no goal.
The icing on the cake eventually came with Lewys in the mix again. The said player shot, a save came but McLaughlin was quick to react and fed on the scraps like a shithouse rat on a turd. The globe was fired home, thank you very much and after Mendez had one last effort go close that was that and we were left to contemplate a fairly routine win. Man of the Match today goes to Denton Town's No 4 (Cole McGrath), a sincere calm rock at the rear who offered little in the way of chances to the opposing force and who exposed some great defensive composure when the need arose. When a team has such a reliable force at the back confidence surges throughout - it is a simple equation.
FINAL THOUGHT - A lovely journey out to a heartland of encouraging football mania for all ages - we need more places like this to keep folks focused and active. The game today, in retrospect, saw one team destined for promotion and one team in real need of some new thinking and on pitch purpose. Maine Road competed in parts but during the final third of the game looked a team out of ideas and set up without a hope of scoring. This surprised me, as the club from where they come are always worthy of time and have a good footballing ethos. What I saw today has me considering if this lot are faves for the drop, and if so, where do they go from here. There are many good components in the team though, it is just a case of getting them playing as one complete force.
Denton Town roll on, today wasn't the most convincing performance despite the score-line but these are the games that are crucial and when numerous chances are missed, the floodgates remain closed and fluency is lacking the fact that 3 points are still bagged shows there are many depths to this team and things are looking mighty bright. The only worry is the end decision making and the lack of assassins marksmanship. Chances, when arising, need to be buried as some teams will be less forgiving and take true advantage of any let off. Today Denton got off lightly, if they come up against a more clinical side they could be punished and punished hard. Having said all this though I am still sanguine in my belief that the team will rise to the next level - as ever, watch this space or even better still...get on the touchline.
Sunday, 6 December 2020
HERE WE GO AGAIN
5th December 2020 - Bolton County 1 v 2 Stockport Georgians - The first match viewed after another COVID based interruption. In the interim, myself and my good lady fell foul to the pesky virus and are still feeling a bit off, work has cracked on as normal and I have made good headway on many fronts especially during the isolation period. A few mates have also been infected, a few conspiracy theorists fallen out with and some good eggs embraced for what they are. It has been a testing time for all as the government play human chess instead of trying to have empathy and understand that people are not guinea pigs. I could rant and rave but, like I say, I am still a little under the weather.
The day today was used well, up and out for a walk, a few fungi and birds were seen, the sky shone blue and the chill was decent enough and only forced me to water 2 standing trees with my golden yellow fluid. The best fungus found was one that feeds on caterpillars and pupae - Cordyceps militaris no less, a species that may one day mutate and take a liking for people - now there is a scary thought. A nip to the toilet for a quick whizz and an undercarriage covered in fruiting structures - very nasty.
After the walk a 30 minute journey was made to today's chosen ground where STP Stu and his good lady awaited with warming brews - what stars. Natters had, Mrs STP buggered off and we took up our viewing positions. The air was now holding a distinctive nip, we were hoping for some thermal radiance from a game that looked a real close call - here is what happened.
At 2pm the ball got rolling and a Kestrel hunted nearby, but which of the on-field predators would be the first to bag some prey or in fact, a goal? The opening sequences were fairly balanced but were nearly swung one way when a Georgians long ball saw No 9 (Joe Bevan) collect and dart and get tumbled in the box. Any contact was minimal, penalty claims rent the air from several regions but the referee stayed cool and waved play on. The guests followed up this moment with a foray forth that bore fruit in the form of a free-kick. The delivery by No 7 (Kyle Wych) was neat but no takers arrived and the home lads cleared their flustered ranks.
We were soon racing away up the other end with No 11 (Maz Shereen) out wide, cutting in and squeezing in a low grass cutter that needed hoofing off the line. In response the visitors strung together a quick 3 pass sequence from back to front with Bevan the apical component and having a low shot. The ball had good impetus, the keeper looked beat and indeed was, but the ball rolled the wrong side of the upright and the chance went down in the file of near misses.
From here the home team warmed up, gained a good period of possession with Shereen a permanent arse pain. The said player eventually received, put in a good cross that was just a little too pace-laden for the attacking bods. The globe was retrieved, played back, Shereen was on it again and from range let fly a beauty. The contact between boot and sphere was perfect with the outcome a top corner finish to salivate over (or indeed use as masturbation material if you are that way inclined, mucky git). It was a stunning opener - now then Stockport Georgians, what have ye got?
The game advanced, the guests were getting caught offside a little too often and in too much of a rush for their own good. Bolton were battling well, won a corner after much fuss regarding an offside call. The shouters and doubters were told to be quiet, the ball was delivered with No 4 (John Smally) nutting over. The trailing pack tried to react with two efforts by No 10 (George Blackwell) bearing no success. A free-kick hit the wall, a shot soon after was deflected wide and the corner dealt with - the County were standing firm.
The half wound down, efforts on goal came and went with Bolton's No 9 (Tom Axon-Smith) coming close when surprised by a ball at the back post that he just couldn't manage to bumble home. No 8 (Will Wareing) for the Georgians had a deflected dig that the keeper held well and Blackwell tried his luck again but the ball just had a tad too much uplift. Eventually the half ended - it was a good encounter so far and all set up for a ding-dong second period.
A piddle was needed for the swift interval, I was reluctant to part with the last warmth in my carcass, I knew I should have brought a few elastic bands and a wine cork. Back to the touchline slightly dithered and without time to fart the teams were back at it. (To note, I was in no way prone to flatulating as I had not eaten anything wind-inducing of late but I want folk to know that if I was expelling warm gases from my ring-piece all the locals would be invited to warm their hands on the expulsions - I just think it the Christian thing to do).
Half two, the Stockport set up was out with their tails now wagging. Pressure mounted but the hosts found respite with a quick burst. Alas the advances fizzled, the guests broke with a hat-trick of quick passes down the flank. Bevan was the last man in receipt, the head went down and goal was spied. The shot came, was thoughtfully placed and the meshing bulged, 1 - 1 - the perfect response after the break. Seconds later an attack saw Bevan felled in the box, shouts went up for a spot kick, the man in black ignored all. A shot came as play continued, the keeper tipped over and a corner kick was requested, again the man in the middle refused to agree, or was his hearing playing up - I suggest a lug trumpet.
A certain friskiness now crept into proceedings, Axon-Smith for Bolton was sent to the sin bin to repent of his misdemeanours and as his side went down to 10 man status they did well to gain a greater foothold and dig mighty deep. The numerically challenged pack won a corner, the ball went in and out, No 6 (Josh Evans) had a crack from distance - the outcome, a car in the parking area was now sporting an ugly round mark.
The action went from one end to the other - akin to a glutton with a bad case of vomiting and diarrhoea. No 2 (Liam Short) for the home lads had a pop, the keeper dealt with it all too easily and then the visitors broke and won an angled hoof. The ball entered the box, a header came, whose bonse it was was anyone's guess. A moment of terse panic was finalised with the ball bobbling over the line - who scored it I have no idea - I may need to do some on-line investigations.
With time now galloping by the leading unit looked to kill time whilst the team in deficit strove to summon a chance. The clock was unforgiving and raced on with the outcome being that we stayed as we were with little else to report. This had been a good tussle, a fair result would have been a draw but there ya go, this hoofing lark is never one to play fair. Man of the Match today goes to Stockport Georgians No 5 (Jamie Pickering) who I considered to be a monolith at the back, an immovable force who read the game mighty well and snuffed out the oncoming danger time and time again - strong stuff indeed.
With the game done we headed home, perished but happy with a good Non-League spectacle. Need I say, we will be back.
FINAL THOUGHT - After one match planned, called off, alternative arrangements made and then scuppered, things turned out mighty sweet in the end with a good day out watching two closely matched sides. Bolton County are a tough nut to crack and really made their opponents work for the win. They have a fine back line, a really competitive battling midfield and some pace up front with a willingness to chase a lost cause. I can't see why this lot will finish out of the top six, the qualities are there, all that is needed is a doggedness to stick at the task when results don't run their way - I hope to catch these on their travels next time, should be interesting. Stockport Georgians are top of the Premier League and today showed tough resilience and a desire to work from the trenches to turn around a 1 goal deficit and gain the win. The defence is well drilled, work as one and make a foundation on which the rest of the team can confidently build. Bevan up front is a menace and looks likely to bag a scrotum full of goals this season and several of his counterparts look liable to get a good fill too. A foolish man would bet against the SG Squad from winning the league but one never knows. All it takes is a lack of confidence, an assassination attempt on the manager or an outbreak of nob pox in the Stockport Borough and the team could be struggling. As a Stockport residence myself I hope the latter-mentioned plague of the privates doesn't manifest itself, I have only just recovered from the last bout which I believe I caught balancing a Wood Blewit on my willy - I should know better but alas, I don't!
Friday, 6 November 2020
AND BEFORE THE BLIP
4th November 2020 - Cheadle Town 3 v 1 Cheadle Heath Nomads - The last match for a while, the reason, because we have fucked up the planet, fallen victim to idiocy and proved, in many ways, we deserve nowt less. Harsh, think about it, a twat at the helm at No 10, a couple of twats battling it out in America for more control and a world full of people making heroes, chasing the coin and just going with a flow of utter wankery. In between the lockdown lunacy litter has been dropped, people have consumed like nutcases and no real lesson has been learned - get back to zero ya buggers.
As per, simplicity dictates this end, I seek out things DIY and approachable and do what I do. If football, for instance, was best likened to many countenances then the premier league would be a flimsy glamour pageant with mugs on show comparable to the likes of Rylan Clark-Neal, Tom Jones and Donatella Versace - utterly unreal, affected and drastically processed. The Non-League game is more like a Butlins's Beauty Contest with an array of fizzogs comparable to Hilda Baker, Mo Moreland of the Roly Poly's and Bella Emberg - far more real, natural and a trifle warted - do ya get my drift?
So, after a day of patchwork labour I had a chill at home and then headed out for a date with Lowbrow Linda the Footballing Lady of Honesty. The temptress of hoofing promised me a good kick about and much mesh bulging action (hot damn brother). I am a faithful man but this soccer siren has a strong pull and so I was a willing victim for another 90 minutes of red hot action. On the touchline was STP Stu, another hopeless pervert to the golden game, please give us and many others your sympathy, yanking the plank over old copies 'Match' and 'Hotspur' is not the same.
So worked up and ready, positions taken and at 7.45pm the moves were made and this is how things panned out.
The Nomads opened their night's account with some steady passing primarily within the rear ranks. Several crosses were had at the opposite end of the pitch with several Town players having to put bonse on ball to ease any potential danger. No 11 (Jack McConnell) had an early pop deflected over with the corner about as threatening as a man with a gun-shaped blancmange. The hosts eventually grew into the game and as ever, No 9 (Pat Davin) was a notable menace. The said player did have a dig, the shot was low and firm but the visiting No 1 (Joel Torrance) spread his legs quicker than Joan Collins in a stud farm and saved well. This was a good lively game.
A free-kick for the hosts followed, the mittman rose, dropped and caused a moments panic. The Nomads survived by the skin of their scrotums and tried to recompose themselves by striking the ball this way and that. Soon after the aforementioned scrotal sacs were withering in fear once more as Davin probed in the angle, neatly negotiated space, beat two players and laid the ball on a plate for No 11 (Enock Amankwaa) to slap home. The shot, from all of 3 feet out, was ballooned into the misted night sky - it was, what is known in the trade as, 'a shock laden shitter'.
The game rolled on, Davin was slipped through next, the guest keeper slipped on to his arse, a shot was released with the gloved gent somehow regaining his feet and making a more than adequate stop. From the resultant corner bugger all was had and the Nomads quickly released the escape valve. McConnell scampered as though there was a plate of fish and chips awaiting at the other end of the pitch. Alas the player was distracted by the imaginary delicacies and duly over-salivated and saw his shot deflected wide. Again the angled kick was poor - work on the training ground needed methinks (and a bit more salt on the chips please).
With 5 minutes left on the timepiece the Nomads cultivated one last flourish. McConnell had another pop with the globe skewing well away from the target zone. As luck would have it the spinning sphere landed at the feet of No 6 (Ashley Crank) who buried without fuss - now where did that come from?
The final sequences of the period were ragged in the extreme and as both teams wandered off for the break we wondered which way this one would finish with the guests somehow in the position of ascendancy.
Myself and Stu stayed put for half-time and chatted with the Nomad's ex-manager Andy Gray. Andy was still as keen as ever, supportive of his side but not eager to plunge back into the managerial position as yet. Myself and Stu are thinking of setting up a new team called Covid Utd where all player's will be riddled with viruses and other ailments therefore guaranteeing opponents will socially distance and allow us to bag many goals. If we can make sure our leprosy suffering frontman Carl Crumble can stay in one piece before the season starts Mr Gray may be appointed as the new manager (rubber gloves will be provided and of course a needle and thread in case Mr Crumble's nob falls off).
And back to the game. A tepid start was eventually warmed up with a Town advancement. Davin flicked on with his glabrous belfry, a pass saw the player receive once more, put in a sharp cross that saw an upending in the box. A lifeline was dangled, the home team were given a spot kick which Davin drilled down the middle to level the score - was this the start of the comeback trail?
Next action and a Town free-kick entered the box, chaos ensued, pinball was played out, the Nomads were lucky to get out of a very tricky situation. Again the home lads progressed, No 8 (Matthew Russell) who had been given space aplenty all night came on, put a cross in that resulted in a superb defensive header but the ball dropped into a position of peril and was pounced upon by No 14 (Max Greenhalgh) who gave his side a deserved lead. This was the turn-around complete, now Nomads what have ye got?
In the squint of a psychopaths leery eye the guests were soon racing away. A placed pass saw No 7 (Kyle Foley) appear and be in a position to level the score. The keeper left his line and spread himself well, the save was better than perhaps initially deemed. The Town now had to indulge in a spot of net-protection, they did it well and eventually latched on to a stray ball, One pass, two pass and bang, Amankwaa had brought up the home team's third out of nothing, I felt as though that was that and it proved to be the case. The Nomads struggled and strained like a constipated Hippo, one cross came and caused a terse episode of havoc but the front players reacted as quick as dung beetles stuck in some rather tacky defecation - the chance went begging. The game dissolved, the hosts killed time, the referee decided enough was enough. Man of the Match goes to Cheadle Town's No 8 (Matthew Russell) who was a dynamic force of encouragement, as steady as a rock and a man who was always in space and being an eternal option. Enjoy the break fella.
And homewards, into the mist for a time to catch up on other fronts - it will happen, tis no time to be idle and contemplate one's arse-crack although the old posterial pubes do need a trim.
FINAL THOUGHTS - a good night out again, fine company and a decent match viewed and by heck, the weather was fine and dandy. Cheadle Heath Nomads have had a decent run and yet have come unstuck during their last two matches. The reasons - well, from my touchline perspective there is too much time spent dawdling at the back, limited options when surging and just a little lack of mithering when the opponents are on the ball. Before the season started things were not looking great for the Nomads, now they are a whole lot brighter, the recent two blips are best forgotten, there is time now to reflect and crack on. Cheadle Town looked to have better prospects before the campaign began, in fairness they have still not got fully flowing and have struggled to find true balance. They have some good components in the mix though but need to push on when the league recommences. Ambition is still high but they are in a tough league and could be the ultimate underachievers. They deserved the win tonight and this could be the start of a good roll - tis a ruddy shame things are on hold again but there ya go, the titties are tough and if we don't crack on with a bit more sense they will be mighty rough too. As per, tis onwards, sidewards and a few angles thrown in here - until next time - up the underdogs!
Sunday, 1 November 2020
WIN WIN AND A WIND IN THE WILLYS
31st October 2020 - Winnington Avenue 94 6 v 2 Newton Athletic - We may be facing another lockdown due to that fat lump of lard who has been given the role of PM (how the Hell did that happen)? I am not going to get down by this impending bout of insanity, you see in the main people reap what they sow and I am making sure I sow wildflowers and positive vibes instead of ego claptrap and self-indulgent spores of shittery - here is my latest report. The weather turned foul during the morn, as windy as the bean-eating cowboys whose Saddles were Blazing and as damp as the brow of Donald Trump when asked to decipher the meaning of 'truth'. Undeterred we cracked the whip and did our chores, prepared for the football fix and headed out with brollies packed and in my case, a pair or Larry Luvlumps Latex Undies protecting the nether regions. We arrived nearly 2 hours before kick-off, anyone turning up wearing a syrup or with an allergic reaction to enthusiasm had my deepest sympathy - this wasn't the place for such folk. There was a breeze whipping early on whilst we had a wander and found several species of fungi, it was good to see Lactarius blennius still holding on.
Back at the car park we met STP Stu, entered the main ground and spent an idle hour nattering and watching the teams get set up. The referee kindly provided me with teamsheets and I was set to scribble a report. This is the textual twaddle I came up with.
The home team made the greater proportion of early running with much urgency and pressurising passing the result. No 11 (Steven Warburton) was a constant release valve and provided many crosses at the end of his scampering runs. One early delivery found the cranium of No 10 (Thomas Sneyd) who could only nut wide - it was a chance. The guests certainly needed to relax and get a grip on the game and this was reemphasised when WA94 came forth again with No 8 (Joshua Mainwaring) firing firmly, the keeper blocking but allowing No 9 (Joseph Lanceley) to waltz in and tap home to bag the all important first goal.
The home team remained in total command, almost like a teenage Hitler playing with his set of toy soldiers - 'Zee vill submit you Schweinhunds'. A free-kick came next, surprise, surprise it was for the resident team. The delivery was decent, No 4 (Ben Lambert) appeared with the ball on the line and pulled off the impossible by completely missing the target zone, as in the words of Paul Daniels when he actually cut a woman in half by mistake 'now that's tragic'.
From nothing Newton Athletic advanced with the apex of the move coming via No 11 (Ben Woodman) who fired and made the keeper earn his crust. Two corners followed, the first saw the hosts lucky to survive, the second needed nutting off the line and clearing. The ball was soon redelivered, No 6 (Adam Pownall) was clattered, the outcome, a penalty kick. No 9 (Dan Christian) stepped up, stroked the ball home with consummate ease - the game was now all square, what a ruddy shocker!
The restart came, WA94 strung together several passes, Lanceley provided a swift cross, Sneyd put in a header, 2 - 1 - one could almost here Newton Athetic's erections of success immediately deflate - it wasn't a pleasant sound - flaccid-tastic!
The game now settled, both teams battled well until Lambert for the home lads struck a beauty of a pass with the outside of his foot, Warburton crossed first time and No 14 (Joel Hind) put the ball into the net - a superb example of keeping things simple, effective and stunning. Newton Athletic stuttered along trying to snatch a goal back, a high ball saw No 10 (Lewis Davenport) collect and release but the kinetic energy transmitted to the globe was minimal. The keeper easily held whilst scratching his arse with one hand and contemplating what he was having for tea following this kick-about. Newton remained undeterred, 2 corners and 2 shots came, no joy was had but this was better. Suddenly Davenport for the visitors had a pop from distance, the ball flew straight and true and disappointingly rattled the underside of the bar, the player deserved so much more.
The last gasps saw a corner for Newton, the ball entered the box, much panic ensued. Within the melee of sweating bods and swinging legs was the Athletic's No 5 (Sam Morgan) who stayed composed and slotted home - what a good way to finish the half.
The break was brief, I took a quick wander to expel liquid gold and returned to the viewing spot to have a drink from the flask and snaffle a choccy bar. Initially this game looked as though it would be one way traffic, full marks to the travelling pack for making this a contest.
Half two commenced. Lanceley for the Avenue had a weak header, the Atheltic came close when a cross nearly caused an own goal, this game was still up for grabs. As Newton dashed and darted a defensive error came and Warburton profited and neatly rounded the keeper. The goal gaped like the rear orifice of a bloke awaiting a prostate inspection, all the striker had to do was penetrate and feel the gland of triumph - alas is was not to be, the target zone remained unpenetrated, the upright was clattered, any doctor carrying out the same mistake would surely be jailed, the player needs a talking to.
The competition was still tight, the next goal could lead to so much excitement. Newton's Christian had an attempt on goal but the shot lacked 'oomph'. Winnington responded, No 7 (Sam Didsbury) blazed a cross across the face of goal and soon after Warburton had a decent dig that needed pushing behind for the corner. The angled kick came, the keeper was left flapping like a cockerel with a 3-pin plug up its jacksie, No 5 (Liam Baker) was at the back post and bumbled the ball home in unorthodox fashion - 4 - 2 - the exact score I had predicted before the game.
With a prediction on the line the minutes passed away but Winnington were hungry for more with several shots coming and a bullet header needed gloved assistance to see it over the bar. Newton were still looking to get back into this one. A low ball came, No 17 (Ross Kelman) swivelled quicker than the eyes of a porn addict when confronted with a 4-tittied woman. The release that followed was on target, the save was spot on. With the scoreline looking set the hosts dashed, a delivery came and Duffy finished without fuss. My prediction was pissed on, the game was finished as a contest and a few droplets of rain now started to fall from the sky. Soon after Warburton had a other chance to increase the lead and bag a goal, the keeper produced a fine save. Didsbury was the next player to progress, the ball was played to Duffy, a severe twatting followed, 6 - 2 it was - icing on the cake methinks.
The game now wound down, no team came close to further bulging of the net, the referee duly blew, what complaints could we have. 8 goals, plenty of action, a few fungi and a couple of Buzzards came and said hello too. Man of the Match was a tricky choice, I thought No 16 (Ross Collins) was very effective for the Winny Warriors and exuded loads of energy, displayed a quick footballing brain and was forever in the action. For the time allowed the stint was effective, that is all one can ask.
As we drove home the Heavens opened and we listened to some obscure DIY music. We like to keep all things earthy and real - you know the script - Non-League, Nature and Noise - simple.
FINAL THOUGHT - A new ground visited in the Cheshire League and some fine action had. To be fair a place to get a brew and some snacks wouldn't have gone amiss and somewhere to rest the tired buttocks is always a nice option. These minor niggles shouldn't detract from a decent trip out that saw Newton Athletic get turned over but still produce enough to give them hope for the future. They battled 'til the end, fed on the odd scrap dropped and showed some good movement at times. Their No 11 (Ben Woodman) was a tricky player and their No 14 (Tom Lane) ran his conkers into the ground and was deserved of something better - I hope to catch this lot again mighty soon. Winnington today though, were very much the better team and played with great authority and much silky smooth attention. From a critical standpoint many chances were wasted, they had a period when they seemed to switch off and at times they were a bit loose on the ball but hey, overall this was an impressive performance that could have attained a goal tally of double figures. The next time I see these guys will be hopefully when they play my local team Denton Town - this should be a real test for both units - I may need to dose up on Bromide to keep the excitement levels down!