Hello and a very warm welcome back to your weekly (usually)
match report and general round-up from Friday night’s goings on in Coram
Fields. Owing to overrunning building work on my house I was freed up to play
this week, which was a pleasant surprise. Here are your two teams:
Yellows: the prodigal Liam, me, Tony, Ed, Joe, Nick (sans
beard), Mario, Nick (the bearded variety), Steve
Blues: Ross, Ian Baggies, Danny, Peter, Patrick, chirpy Tom,
Alessandro (one of Mario’s mates), Mick and Simon Gas
As you can read, nine aside there. Obviously, not everyone
turned up at 7.00 pm with Mick running late, as was Peter, who seems to have a
touch of the Yevs about him insofar as timekeeping goes.
In fact Mick’s tardiness was arguably to blame for the first
goal – argued by Simon Gas in the pub, that is – as Liam marked his first game back
after his mid-season Aiton-induced break with the first of four goals. The
jinky Scotsman, put on the same team as Steve to safeguard team spirit, enjoyed
a highly fruitful partnership with Joe’s mate Nick, who is one of the more
gifted players we’ve seen grace the astro turf in recent times. Despite the
Blue team having two colossi in Peter and Patrick, it was the diminutive
triumvirate of Mario, Liam and Nick that did most of the damage for the Yellows
as the soared into a four goal lead, with Liam bagging all of them.
That’s not to say that the Yellows were dominating play –
far from it - but they struggled to get past Joe and Steve at the back who were
providing cover for sometime specialist goalkeeper Ed. However, hope was at
hand for the Blues as I took over in nets and the Yellows’ first goal soon
followed – Patrick managed to get the better of Joe in an aerial tussle and
gently slipped the ball past me and inside the near post. 4-1.
Then came the moment that the game will be remembered for.
Nick was adjudged to have handled inside the area, as the ball was blasted at
him from a distance of about three yards and he instinctively shielded his face
with his upstretched arms. I wasn’t convinced that he was inside the area, but
Nick himself called the penalty and there was little dispute – little that is
apart from Tony, who, I think it’s fair to say, went ballistic.
Tony wasn’t in the best of moods, having earlier accused the
Blues of deploying unashamedly agricultural tactics in order to take advantage
of their twin towers, i.e. Peter and Patrick, who have a collective height of
just under 654 foot. But the award of the penalty pushed the working man’s
champion into apoplexy.
Exclaiming that he ‘didn’t play with cheats’ at least three times,
Tony flung down his Yellow bib and stormed off. Despite the plaintive cries of “don’t
go!”, “we need you!” and, from Liam, “get back on the fucking pitch now!”, he loped off to the changing
rooms with an air of melancholy hanging around his hunched shoulders.
Peter duly dispatched the ensuring penalty (happily, he
placed it into the corner rather than kicking it as hard as he could at the
keeper, as I feared). 4-2. Could the Blues hold out having gone down to eight
men?
When Peter hammered the ball into the far corner from an
acute angle shortly afterwards the smart money was on a comeback of
Barcelonaesque proportions, (dodgy penalties and all). But Nick scored what
turned out to be the winning goal with a deft, calm and composed finish inside
the post to make it 5-3. Bearded Nick also thundered the crossbar with a tremendous
effort from around twenty yards and Ed had a great chance to put the game
completely out of reach but went for the wrong side of the post when one on one
with the ‘keeper. The Blues did get one more goal via Ross, who outpaced me and
Steve to run onto a through ball and poke the ball past Liam, but that was the
end of the scoring for the evening.
Final score: Yellows 5 – Blues 4
A relatively puny turn-out at the pub this week, although we
were gifted the presence of Danny for all of one ascetic lime and soda. Myself,
Ross, Simon and the Kavanaghs discussed late 80’s / early 90’s indie greats the
House of Love and comeback gigs in general, the mysterious rules of Rugby Union
and maudlin Celtic folk songs.
That’s all folks – see you Friday.
Any of you muesli munching, sandal-wearing north London ponces
who read The Guardian may have already seen this, but for those of you who take
other national titles, here’s
a great piece from former Loaded
editor James Brown about the glories of five aside football.
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