In a bid to bring some order to a group of headless chickens, Gashead Simon had invested in a whistle, which he used to good effect so as to call time on the guys playing before us. These two teams really knew how to play football, long raking passes, tracking back and no agricultural tackles while goal mouth chances were clinically dispatched. When we came on the Blues v the Different Shirts, there was shocking stuff played amongst some good things. Gashead Simon seemed to go through a spell of attempting laser-precision passes down the left wing and failing. However, his general play was represented as usual by a steely determination not to lose a tackle.
Gashead Simon was playing on the Different Shirts side, which comprised of Gashead Paul, me the Guv'nor,
Phil B. Phil the Goalie, Alex, and Nick. While the Blues had Mick K., Liam, Danny, Ian G, Alan Morg and one other. I can't remember the full teams but the Blues had one less and were the moral victors coming back from 3-1 down to gain an advantage of 5-3 before Alex and Nick dragged us back into the game to equalise. We nearly won it when a rasping shot from Alex clipped the post. He was our best player with Gashead Paul brilliant in defence. Paul made an amazing recovery to stop Liam scoring. The Celtic supporter won the first ever penalty I have seen at Coram Fields after being dragged down by Phil the Goalie. This might have been a straight red in real football. Liam dispatched the ball clinically but it went through the net and climbed over the fence into the playground next door.
Liam and Mick K. were the star players for the Blues, who were augmented at the end by a late-running Yev, who has started a new job in the City. He scored a late goal, which was chalked off since the Coram Fields Centre had called time for us to come off the pitch. This deprived Gashead Simon of using his new whistle.
Phil B.scored a wonder goal dribbling along the touchline for the Different Shirts and his
curvy corners are a wonder to behold. Although the Blues, I think, got an
easy breakaway goal from one of them. Mick K. says that the most likely
result from a corner is a goal the opposite end.
It was a shame we missed Spizz but the Bristol connection was in play with Paul and Simon, Gasheads both.
Danny and Alan Morg played a defensive role for the Blues. Obviously, the next match report will be better marked by a return of the peerless prose of Gooner Simon.
Monday, 21 October 2013
Sunday, 20 October 2013
Spizz missed the match preparing for his gig in Bristol.
A pulsating 5-5 draw last Friday at Coram Fields was missed by Spizz, who was preparing for his band's gig in Bristol the following night. Spizz and co have been writing some new material, which I think sounds pretty good.
Tuesday, 15 October 2013
Tales from the Fireside
This week’s blog comes to you through a fug of snot, tissues and empty sachets of Lemsip so apologies in advance for any errors in accuracy, grammar or typography.
Last Friday’s match was a well fought 4-4 draw. Through the
fog of my man ‘flu symptoms I believe that the two teams were as follows:
Bibs – me, David, Alex, Steve, Yev, Andy, a new bloke called
Arran (?), Spizz, Mark, Ross
Colours – Simon Gas, Paul, Danny, Dan, Ian, Nick (beard),
Liam, old(er) Phil, specialist goalkeeper Phil
The Bibs tore into a three goal lead – the first two goals
coming from Mark, who was cutting in from the wide left to great effect and the
third coming from Alex who found himself about two yards out following some
slick interplay between himself and Yev. Danny had gone close earlier,
uncharacteristically missing a free header, but all looked set fair for the
Bibs.
Dan, however, had other ideas. Chiefly through his supreme
efforts in midfield he dragged the Colours level, with one of his goals coming
from a lung bursting run down the left where he squeezed a shot in between the
last defender (me) and the goalkeeper’s near post.
Another outing for mercurial new wave icon Spizz, although
the shock-haired rock front man was a little off the pace this week, contriving
to miss a number of chances that he would usually tuck away with what they used
to call ‘great aplomb’, including one gilt-edged header which bobbled wide of
the post from a centre by myself. The Friday night multitude seem to be coming
to grips with the new head high rule and there were a number of headed efforts,
one from Ian reminiscent of Steve Bould in his pomp as he gave it the eyebrows
from a corner only to see the ball plop just over the bar.
The Colours’ superb come back appeared complete when they
took a four-three lead, only for Steve to restore parity with a driven shot
that had him commentating on his own finishing. Four apiece it ended, although
Simon Gas was accused of blowing up too soon to settle for a draw, much the
chagrin of the Bibs in particular, who felt that momentum was on their
side. Probably the right result, in all
honesty and as Simon remarked those playing on after the declaration of
full-time were reminiscent of Japanese soldiers emerging from the jungles of
South East Asia in the 1950’s still believing the war to be on.
And so to the Skinners Arms where we managed to catch the
back-end of the first half of the England game and the entire second half,
which was the one with all the goals in. A reasonably good turn out this week,
no doubt helped by the added incentive of the World Cup qualifier. Despite
Ian’s misgivings about Roy Hodgson’s ability to select an attacking side I
thought that picking Andros Townsend was a bold move and one that clearly paid
off. The Scottish landlord’s Highland yell when Montenegro scored was soon
silenced by England’s third goal. The most notable incident from the pub this
week was my inadvertent theft of Ian’s pint – I’d bought a pint of something
called Fireside which on reflection should have been thrown there, while Ian
had ordered the altogether more palatable Haka.
There’ll be more tasting notes from me in a couple of weeks
as I am going to see former Smith’s guitarist Johnny Marr on Friday. Play up
and play the game.
Tuesday, 8 October 2013
The Blue Ninja
The nights are drawing in and the weeks are hurtling toward
the inevitable onset of Winter, but the air around Coram Fields remains balmy
and the turn out for each Friday night is as plentiful as the leaves starting
to fall from the trees.
But enough of the pseudo-poetic Autumnal preamble and on
with the football. This week Simon Gas once more pre-selected two teams, albeit
featuring two teams both with himself in. A somewhat schizophrenic choice, you
might say.
The aforementioned teams were as follows:
Bibs – me, Alex, Danny, Simon Ink, goalkeeping Phil, Paul,
Ross, Kiwi Nick (eventually), Tony
Colours – Simon Gas, Steve, Andy, Kiwi Nick, old Phil, Alan,
Liam, the even later than usual Yev, Paul’s mate Paul
For the first time in the 2013/14 season the game was won by
the odd goal – the odd goal in seven, to be precise.
Alex scored the opener in typically swashbuckling fashion,
beating three or four players before slamming the ball into the bottom right
hand corner - a goal that he seems to score every week. Paul, who spent the
majority of the game lurking quite literally in the shadows like a
bespectacled, blue-bibbed ninja, got the Bibs’ second goal following Alex’s
closing down of Andy in goal. The ball broke to the edge of the area where Paul
suddenly materialised, wraith-like, and methodically larruped the ball home.
On the score sheet for the Colours was Alan, clad in green
and white hoops like his celtic (note the absence of a capital letter there)
team-mate Liam, who was wearing a, err, Celtic shirt. (That’s why grammar
matters, kids). One of his goals came via a blocked tackle that deflected in –
Alan knows how his other finish came.
With the scores level at three apiece, (©Tony Gubba), enter the beast from the east, Yev (initially in goal). As the Bibs’ legs were getting steadily heavier in the unseasonably muggy night air the prospect of the Colours having a man extra and that man being Yev prompted a rare moment of pragmatism and Kiwi Nick switched sides to help shore up the Bibs defence. The winning goal came from Simon Ink – 4-3 it finished, and we all trudged back to the upstairs deluxe changing rooms, complete with roaring radiator.
A veritable bumper crowd at the Skinners Arms this week,
with topics under consideration including the moral vacuum that is FIFA and in
particular the 2022 Qatar World Cup, mobile phone contracts, the woes of
Sheffield United and lovebites. Nothing if not dull, eh?
Tuesday, 1 October 2013
Friday night takes to the skies
There could
have been any number of titles for this week’s match report: ‘Reach for the stars’; ‘Aerial bombardment’;
‘Simon gives us the heads up’ (actually that’s better than the one I went for);
‘Airborne means playing more’, etc. etc.
But the key
fact is this: as of Friday 27th September 2013 the Coram Fields
Football Association are playing football above head height - not just from
corners, but from throw-ons (I know, I know), passes between players and hoofed
clearances. The only concession to the ancien
regime is that goalkeepers must still keep their throws and goalkicks under
head height to prevent the games descending into a sort of Bobby Gould tribute
act.
Key to this
decision was Simon’s understandable reluctance to spend ten minutes of every
Friday evening being moaned out for making a judgement on whether or not a ball
had passed over head height. When you consider that I am around 5 foot 7 (on a
good day) and people like Ian are nearer 6 foot 5 you can understand why the
over heads rule caused so much contention. But not any more.
So, rule
changes aside, how did the game go, you ask? Well, I’ll tell you. For a start,
the mercurial post-punk legend and “Spike Milligan of Punk” (Paul Morley) made
an all too rare appearance. He was part of the team that ended up on the wrong
end of an 8-3 shellacking, although that doesn’t do the game justice.
The two
teams went as thus –
Bibs: me, David, Alex, Ian West Brom, Phil, Spizz,
Nick (beard), Simon Ink
Colours: Simon Gas, Danny, Ian Arsenal, Yev,
Liam, Andy, Ross, Steve, the prodigal Tony
The more
mathematically minded among you will have spotted that the Colours had a one
man advantage – sadly, the majority of the players on the Bibs’ team can’t
count. Thus, when the Colours took a 4-1 lead Simon Gas offered to give the
Bibs another player (Andy, in this instance), only for the outraged Bibs to
furiously refuse such a slight on their skill and work ethic. To be fair, I
realised that we were a man short from the off, but such was the determination
amongst the Bibs to get back on terms with the players we had that I went along
with the consensus. That indignation at Simon Gas’s gentlemanly offer had much
to do with the paucity of ‘defending’ that ushered in those four goals – no
shape at the back, a man over (funny that) and some hara-kari style play that
made it all too easy for the Bibs.
The real
story of the game was that despite having a potent strike force in Spizz and
Phil aside from the midfield tour de
force that is Alex, there wasn’t enough legs in midfield for the Bibs to
combat the combined merits of Danny-Liam-Steve-Ross and Tony, who combined youthful
running with some finishing from Yev that wasn’t so much clinical, as akin to
that of a vivisectionist.
And yet
despite the final result the score stood at 4-3 for around twenty minutes. Although
Spizz grabbed the opener with a characteristic finish which took him past the
last defender and somewhat more scenically around the ‘keeper, he struggled to
get any more, with Steve, Danny and Simon Gas all proving too much for the admittedly reduced ranks of
the Bibs to get through. Alex got one of his traditional Roy of the Rovers
goals, beating everyone on the pitch before burying the ball unerringly in the
corner, and I’m guessing that Phil got the other Bibs goal.
I think that
Yev must have plundered at least five of the Colours efforts, nearly all of
which came from the Colours making better use of the new overhead rule and
getting the ball to him early and quickly. Which is a nice way of saying that he
was goal hanging, something that even Spizz had the temerity to comment on, the
pink teapot on his metaphorical football kit rapidly turning into the darkest
shade of black. The one goal Yev scored that definitely did not come via goal
hanging saw him receive the ball in midfield and accelerate past the hapless
defender (me) to run full pelt down the
left and smash the ball past Alex at the near post. He was injured mind you,
(Alex, not Yev), having been given a dead leg by Steve.
Ah, Steve. Despite
this characteristically muscular intervention from the sometime Scotsman, Steve
displayed admirable restraint in not launching the ball into the stratosphere
every time danger lurked, much to the surprise of Ian, who had suggested a new
measurement of distance, with one Aiton = one quarter of the pitch. Just one of
his clearances measured more than two Aitons, although how Steve will respond
if his team are leading by the odd goal with mere minutes left on the clock
remains to be seen.
And so to
the pub, where Liam, Spizz, Simon, me, Ian, Yev, Tony and Simon Ink all
repaired. I spent most of the evening discussing all things Arsenal FC with
Ian, which is a very pleasurable thing to do at the moment. Not sure what everyone else talked about, but
it may well have been the sultry American barmaid.
Until
Friday...
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