Woodley Wanderers Scorpions 10 Wokingham & Emmbrook 4 (Mulvaney 3, Saynor)

If the dank greyness of the Berkshire lowlands could lift, temporarily, maybe we’d see a buttery cue ball moon that’s all melted off to one side as a Thunderbird moves through Winnersh Triangle under a Muscatel sky.

Having not won since December 17th, following a controversial new year promotion, Evan needed some pepping up, an infusion of emotional iron, hopes cantilevered ever higher, beyond the peaks and troughs of blood sugar and mere results, towards a genuine understanding of what it means to be alive and listening to Tom Waits.

Tom is far better placed than me to offer a gee-up, so as we clanked through the fields of Hurst we turned to his electric reflection on the stars and stripes: ‘The sun is up, the world is flat, damn good address for a rat. Smoke is blacking out the sun/at night I pray and clean my gun…Hoist that Rag.’

Evan observed that Tom had possibly been taking ‘wrong helium.’ Would Johnny Cash be better? ‘I went to sleep in Shreveport, woke up in Abilene, now I’m wondering why I’m wanted at some town halfway between.’ No. Crash Test Dummies? ‘I’ve tasted your best guacamole, siesta’d at noon in the cool of the soil…Sometimes it’s too hot for cooking.
One wants just a salad. And then comes a breeze in the evening/ men light cigars and the scent fills the air.’ Not really. He wanted ‘Now Party Anthems’, but I just couldn’t find the CD.

On The Stade de France pitch at The Goals Centre, the Woodley manager sniffed the air like an old warhorse as his team, ‘proud to be sponsored by Subway’, according to the club website, warmed up looking like mobile sandwich packets.

We hadn’t played this team before, but word on the bush telegraph was that they sought dominion over the whole of Woodley from Waingels Road to South Lake and most particularly over Emma Saynor’s Woodley Zebras, their arch-rivals, whom they wished to consign to the shade of Beechwood Avenue and the mature specimens lining it.

Far from the varlets, firkin hurlers and sourbummed coaches of Theale we lost to last week, Woodley at least offered intermittent nods to decency as they passed and moved like celtic fast food. True, their hefty keeper – stars shaven into his round head – considered it acceptable to shoot from his goal kicks, in contravention of the spirit of the game and Andre Villas Boas. True, they routinely pinched the ball whenever it was a Wokingham throw-in, but they weren’t  violent as an expression of club policy, in contrast to both Reeves Rangers and Theale who launched aerial assault after aerial assault while we tried in vain to beat them on the carpet, opting for the Schleiffen plan by pressing down the flanks while they bombarded our goalmouth from the air.

As well as Wokingham (mixed of ability, strength, gender and the extent to which their mental dolly mixtures make up a quarter) facing roughhouse tactics from the opposition, they also have to deal with a constant propensity to self destruct. The problem is, we don’t self destruct spectacularly, creating valuable collateral damage in the process, but tend to scuttle underwater quietly with a devastatingly poor back pass or catatonic roll from the ‘keeper. Not for us the moral assault of a Zidane or Cantona, the dubious blaze of glory or ‘divine wind’ of a kung-fu kick at the green mesh corralling irritating parents.

No useful point is made by a miscontrolled pass or a ball played into the path of an attacker: bland mistakes create no shrapnel, as they say, but in this instance they did put us 3-0 down within two minutes.

A period of relative stability ensued as Wokingham rallied, led by a heavily gloved, hatted and talented Connor Mulvaney who managed to forge a meandering course through the Woodley defence and fire us emphatically into contention. He’d gone for ski-gloves rather than a typical Thinsulate number. Our defence remained soft. If styles of play were  characterised as ice creams, Woodley’s would be play-doh: radioactive, luminescent, following no known recipe. Wokingham’s would be a sundae with all the jazzed-up garnish exploding on the taste buds to hide the Mr Whippy within.

Evan was off the pitch in the first half, having entered into intensive bargaining with Coach Peter to exempt himself from goalkeeping duties. When he entered, mummy and Iris had appeared from the mists of the Loddon to yell  inverse-invective. In Iris’s case, this ranged wildly in the space of seconds: ‘Look! There’s Evan! Number 5! Come on, Evan…Can we go home in a bit?’ As is typically the case when family and friends come to watch, their presence was talismanic and Evan was soon picking up the ball with a view to making a meaningful impression on the game, pinging off quick passes and getting into space. This tactic bore notable fruit when he eluded the Woodley defence and scored having been picked out from a long throw.

Ultimately though, it was back to the cross channel ferry bar to reflect again over coffee, bacon rolls and all sorts of vending machine nonsense on another lesson in the dark arts of success in Woodley.

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Crossflow Winds

Lost: my ball in the crossflow winds.
Collapse the tactics board
now there’s only Route One.
Let’s see where it falls.

Hope the van won’t topple outside
old Brentford dock, buffered
by all those tower blocks
we watch from the Chiswick Flyover.

We like to keep it on the floor
but modern pro zone analytics
need long range Met Office support
to tell us how to run, the heat map,

the line of lost intent, tackles
never made, runs of pointlessness,
passing brilliance. A lost game
in crossflow winds over ‘Fly KLM.’

brentford

North Sea Island Pitches

Bering strait, Labrador,
an arctic wind towards
North Sea island pitches.

Brora Rangers, aurora chances.
The time of day is unfixed
as the crescent moon and sun
together in the darkness
over Sutherland and Wick.

Further north, on Shetland,
light would seem unlikely
as ice turning to vapour
and you brave the floodlit pitches.

Later, a hint of lighter indigo,
some grey and yellow mist,
something for that wind to work with

at Aurora, Brora Rangers
(such half-time entertainment)!

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https://footballpoets.org/poems/north-sea-island-pitches/

This is about football played at a higher latitude. I recently read about Brora Rangers, one of Scotland’s most northerly clubs, and thought about the possibility of playing even further north. Shetland hosted the Island Games in 2005 which included Greenland, The Western Islands, The Falkland Islands, The Isle of Man and others. Shetland beat Guernsey 2-0 in the final.

On the Orkney Islands, they seem to have sensibly constructed a purpose built indoor stadium which holds 1600 fans.

The Quietness of the Kipper Season

Watching the sky change from Petticoat Tower,
on the top floor a widower
scans the gold of morning, hassle of twilight,
glimpses the holy land as old animosities
settle over gin and lemonade
with the old boy from the ground floor
with the frame. Past rivalries fade
as we look down on the metropolis,
running over memory’s lines and points,
distant rays lighting up Cliff’s face
at South Bermondsey after Millwall v Fulham
in February sun after the quietness
of the Kipper Season, staring down the track
following another hard-fought nil nil at The Den.

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Reeves Rangers Hoops 6 Wokingham & Emmbrook Oranges 3 (Mulvaney 2 Saynor)

Coach Peter’s claim to fame is that he scored in AFC Wimbledon’s very first match – such a brave header that he was knocked unconscious as he scored it. Though I wouldn’t quite endorse that level of bravery, the standard pep talk in the car is aimed at trying to help Evan overcome his nerves and apprehensions, particularly if he has to play in goal.

Even world class goalkeepers make mistakes and concede goals, I try to tell him. Neuer, Casillas, De Gea, Cech, Lloris…fallible individuals. Then, on Heart FM, a song by a fellow called Rag ‘n’ Bone Man came on: I’m Only Human so Don’t Blame Me. ‘That’s important for what you were saying’, reflected Evan. ‘You’re only human so accept what you are.’

This seems to have been a theme of the day, with a poorly Iris weighing in too. Two lines from Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Your Own Worst Enemy’ have been stuck in my head for a few days, but Iris doesn’t appreciate them being belted out over her scrambled eggs: ‘There’s a face you know staring back from the shop window. The condition you’re in – now you just can’t get out of this skin.’ I defy anyone not to relate to the sentiment, but Iris didn’t seem to appreciate it, turning to me and raising her finger as if I was on the wrong end of an LBW decision: ‘Stop singing in the world, OK?’

Today we were up against another incarnation of Reeves Rangers, the Wokingham club founded by a man called Terry with a penchant for the hooped brethren from Shepherd’s Bush. Their website explains that ‘Terry’s creativity slipped into overdrive! At the time, Terry was living in Reeves Way in Wokingham and was also a lifelong fan of QPR. Combining the two, he came up with the name Reeves Rangers FC and thus the club was born.‘ Fair play.

As you may know, the prospect of playing and losing against a team modelled on QPR is not a thrilling one for a Fulham fan. QPR fans cherish the notion that they are ‘real’ people: more real than the average football fan. As a result of being real, they make their language and attitude extra salty. They drink their half-time beer with authenticity, before returning genuinely to their seats to watch the second half with honesty before going home in a legit manner,  whereas we do so superficially.

Furthermore, their team today – the ‘Hoops’ – contained a classic ‘rubber-inner’, a boy from Evan’s school who would delight in mouthing off about a win.

In a minor blizzard, a very well dressed but perma-crocked Coach Michael addressed me in broad scouse: ‘Can you run the warm-up, Alex. I’ve done me knee. It was ruined anyway. I’ve ‘ad five operations on ih.’ What he also had was a ludicrously big blue and white (BLUE & WHITE!) golfing umbrella.  ‘What the hell is that umbrella, Mike?’  It was so outrageous that part way through the second half, the league chairman cottoned on to it, strode across the pitch and ordered an immediate collapse. Quite right too.

The first half began in a welcome state of equilibrium. In fact, having managed to weather the first five seconds (Wokingham & Emmbrook are notoriously catatonic starters of games), we even took the lead after Connor despatched a rebound from close range. Reeves rallied and managed to score from a tight angle from their next attack, then a misplaced pass in midfield led to a well taken second. To round the first half off, a Wokingham defender scored with a glancing header past his own keeper: Evan.

To be fair to Evan, as a human being he prevented two goals prior to this by running out and challenging the attackers in one-on-one situations. The own goal was absolutely unstoppable, sadly.

In the second half Evan was on the pitch and economical in possession, invariably controlling the ball before switching the play or rolling it down the line. Unfortunately, Wokingham were caught out twice in defensive positions, but at 5-1 the game still didn’t feel entirely over. Connor scored a very good goal, cutting in from the left and firing across the goalie before Evan, this time an attacker in a one-on-one, ran through and hit a right foot shot across the keeper and into the far bottom-left corner with great technique. The Hoops also showed some great skill and thwarted our comeback by strong midfield play, adding another goal to make the final score 6-3.

Evan’s comment after the game was ‘I did what I could, dad.’ I was really pleased he’d found some perspective, but he still had to face his friend and nemesis after the game who grinned at him and said ‘We won!’

Well Evan scored and you didn’t, I thought. Why is silence so often described as ‘dignified’? And are you really on the moral high ground or some kind of superior conversational plane if you say nothing in response to gloating?  Evan must have read my mind. ‘I scored and you didn’t’, he replied. The little upstart wandered off but they were still friends. ‘Well done for being positive about your own game. It might have been better just to say “well played” and move on, but actually there wasn’t a lot wrong with you saying your bit there. Well done.’ He can be the Archbishop of Canterbury when he’s older, if he likes. Sometimes I think if someone has a little pop at you then it’s good to have a little pop back – just to keep it real.

 

 

 

Reeves Rangers Blues 8 Wokingham & Emmbrook 6 (Mulvaney 3, Saynor, Parry, Sexton)

In crisp late winter sunshine, we rushed across Hurst and Winnersh with secret knowledge of byroads and a dim view of the moral high ground occupied by slow moving land cruisers and ladies out for a morning hack.

Passing the horses, we were on the verge of Lines Road and of missing kick-off having lost all sense of past and present in the restorative steam baths of Emmbrook, only managing to leave the house at 11:08 for an 11:30 kick-off.

Once in Woodley, you realise you’re in an extraterritorial realm: the zone of the hobbler. If you take any turn from Loddon Bridge Road, be prepared to wait indefinitely for people who limp and drift across their chosen terrain with laboured obliviousness rather than the mildly festive spirits of weekenders on a gentle trip upriver to the salt-vapour frames or the 5-a-side pitches of Woodlands Avenue.

You’ll have to wait between empty pavements behind a driver who’s stopped at a zebra crossing out of sheer respect for the stripes. Be prepared to witness universal accommodation of a limp jaywalker’s right to roam in whatever pattern they please. So pervasive is the general slowness and sense of ‘giving way’ that a post-match  trip to the precinct can feel liberating. You can have a free coffee, if you’ve remembered your MyWaitrose card, and wander around the flower stalls, Labour stands and well stocked charity shops with a sense of total freedom.

Chatting to Coach Peter about what differentiates an excellent, potentially top level player from a merely good one, he concluded the following, based on his own playing experience against West Ham, Wimbledon and the rest: ‘Communication and time. Not, primarily, skill on the ball.’ Excellent players are able to see the whole picture of what’s happening in the game and can therefore speak intelligently to teammates. As a result, they and their team seem to have time on the ball, even in difficult situations. The difficult thing, according to Danny Murphy, isn’t playing the pass, but seeing it in the first place. Similarly, keeping things Irish-Liverpudlian, Ronnie Whelan is an advocate of waiting on the ball, believing that passing without thought is the primary weakness of average players. As for a voice from the capital, Teddy Sheringham was happy to stand still, even at the risk of looking lazy. Too many players run into a good position, only to run out of it again in the next moment – they don’t want to be accused of lack of industry.

In practice, it would be difficult to adopt these principles against the agrarian style of Reeves Rangers Blues who, in our previous meeting, seemed to think ‘have a crack, son’ was a reasonable instruction to a goalkeeper, despite an edict from the league chairman that teams must retreat to the halfway line to enable the opposition to pass the ball along the ground from a goal-kick, thus enriching their development as footballers.

I’m not the only parent who finds it difficult to speak about this team without anger welling up inside, so we tried to watch the game with a degree of detachment and resignation. Their managers have perhaps stood at the crossroads and looked, following the ancient path worn by a certain Premier League manager from Newport: ‘Tony played for Bournemouth in defence but now his playing career is in the past tense…Tony was a man of great ambition so he hung up his boots for a managerial position. He introduced the tactic of simultaneous fouling which he watches from the sidelines in his baseball cap scowling.’

Amazingly, though, Wokingham were so fluid and fast-moving in attack that by half-time it was 5-2, with goals conceded due to aberrations of the upstairs kind rather than ungovernable play from Reeves Rangers. After about a minute and a half, Evan scored with an unstoppable piledriver and the score was already 2-2. In typical buccaneering style, Connor then scored from all angles to execute a brilliant hat-trick, including one of the best goals we’ve witnessed after one touch passes from Evan and Josh led to a thunderbolt from the left wing.

The ref denied us a penalty at a crucial point in the game, using the phrase ‘natural body shape’ to validate the handball. This was despite the later award of a penalty to Reeves Rangers. Are we now to assume, then, that this was the result of an ‘unnatural body shape’ from our defender? Ultimately, we weren’t quite adept enough at understanding how to counteract an attritional style which included total disregard for our goalkeeper’s space. Despite some almost implausibly good play, and the very best of efforts,  we were left to look towards our sabbath loaves and salted beef without the point(s) our fluent football seemed to deserve.

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silesian

 

 

Silverware and Crow’s Feet

Managers go: migrate with phantoms
of the present on staircases in frames.
Who stops on the turn and sees the lifting?
Silverware and crow’s feet.

People come and go. Hotel rooms,
breakfast, silence in the lift.
Just standing. Black and white pictures,
complicated meanings. We stood

and looked, tried to prise a story
from the image, but couldn’t stand
for long enough to be the true eccentric.
Too self-conscious to go to ground

and lie on that great underlay
while guests pass, up and down,
and we watch. Just biographer-

Clough on paper, Shankly writing
with kindness to strangers. Truth
and fiction in the pictures.