Sunday 25 November 2018

Redhill - Kiln Brow



Redhill FC
Kiln Brow
Three Arch Road
Redhill
Surrey
RH1 5AE


Ground: 63
Date: Saturday 24th November 2018
Redhill 3-2 Hanworth Villa
Combined Counties League Premier Division
Attendance: 41 (official)

Redhill FC - History

Redhill were founded in 1894, initially only playing friendlies but eventually joining the South Suburban League in 1898. After spending one season in this league, the club moved into other local leagues for the next three years before joining the East & West Surrey League, winning the title in their first season. Then, in 1906, the club joined Division 2 of the South Eastern League and remained in it for three years, before joining Section A of the Spartan League in the 1909/10 season. The club finished 3rd and moved to the South Suburban West League the following season, again finishing 3rd before finishing as champions the following season.

From 1921 to 1923, the club competed in the London League, finishing as runners-up in their final season in the league before moving to the Athenian League. The club then remained in the league for the next 60 years, winning the title in the 1924/25 and 1983/84 seasons, but finishing bottom in the 1945/46, 1952/53, 1958/59, 1962/63, 1964/65 and 1977/78 seasons. In this time, the league grew to two divisions from 1963 until 1977, and in this time the club spent some time in both the Premier Division and Division 1. After the title win in 1984, the club made a sideways move into the London Spartan League, having been denied promotion due to the loss of their Memorial Sports Ground and due to their new Kiln Brow ground. lacking the grading required for promotion.

The club spent four seasons in the London Spartan League - the last of which saw it change name to simply the Spartan League - and finished between 2nd and 7th each time. However, after the 1987/88 season the club resigned from the league, joining Division 1 of the Sussex County League. They spent just two seasons at this level before finishing bottom and dropping into Division 2. It then took until the 1996/97 season for the club to earn promotion back to Division 1, a 3rd-place finish proving good enough for the club. 

The club then remained in Division 1 until finishing as runners-up in the 2012/13 season, which was enough to earn promotion to Division 1 South of the Isthmian League. However, the club lasted just two seasons at this level, initially finishing 3rd-from-bottom before finishing 2nd-from-bottom to be relegated back to Step 5, this time joining the Combined Counties League Premier Division. This relegation did nothing to improve the club's fortunes, and they finished 3rd-from-bottom to suffer a second consecutive relegation into Division 1. At this point though, the club stabilised and finished as runners-up to earn promotion back to the Premier Division for the 2017/18 season, which saw the club finish a respectable 6th in the league.

In the FA Cup, the club's best run saw them reach the 1st Round in the 1957/58 season, beating Horsham, Southwick, Bognor Regis Town and Tooting & Mitcham United before losing 6-1 to Norwich City at Carrow Road. In the FA Trophy, the club have never won a game and as such have never progressed beyond the Preliminary Round, but have taken their opponents to a replay in three of their four campaigns. In the FA Amateur Cup, the club made it to the semi-finals in the 1925/26 season, beating Ilford and Leyton before losing to Northern Nomads. As for the FA Vase, the club have twice progressed as far as the 4th Round, most recently in the 1981/82 season when they beat Deal Town, Burgess Hill Town, Cray Wanderers and Whitstable Town before losing to Hemel Hempstead.

My Visit

Unlike last weekend, which had been set in stone for quite some time, my destination for yesterday was undecided until Wednesday. Now, I knew for quite some time that, due to plans for next weekend (and maybe the weekend after, if I decide to go to Berkhamsted after all), I wouldn't be able to go too far out yesterday. However, with yet more strikes on South Western Railway, I wasn't really sure what options I would actually have on that front, particularly as I was slightly reluctant to head out to Berkshire/Oxfordshire again so soon (don't want to exhaust all my options over there just yet, after all).

By Wednesday though, SWR released a graphic showing the routes affected by the strikes, so at this point I looked on my Groundhopper app to find viable options, cross-referencing with the graphic and then the National Rail Journey Planner to make sure the options were viable. In the end, I found myself with three options: this, Horley Town or Farnborough. From the start though, I set this at the first choice, mainly because it was cheaper on the train than Horley, but also because I was planning to stay local on the 8th, with Farnborough as one of my options on that day if I stick with the decision to not go to Berkhamsted.

It was then just a matter of keeping an eye on the weather but, by the time yesterday came it was clear there wouldn't be many issues, though with rain forecast all day for Redhill I waited almost as long as possible before ordering my train tickets, just in case something came up late in the morning (i.e. a pitch inspection or a postponement). With this not proving to be the case, I ordered my tickets at 11:30am and was leaving the house to head towards the train station just an hour later.

After a couple of changes and a 15-minute walk to the ground, I arrived with around 35 minutes to go until kick-off, paying a rather-steep - for Step 5 at least - £8 for admission and £1 for a good programme. I then did my usual circuit of photos before sitting in the main stand awaiting kick-off, before going to the food hatch to get a photo of the team sheets and to order some chips. This meant I missed the first couple of minutes of the game while waiting for my food, but that wasn't particularly an issue. Once this was done, I took my seat back in the main stand, where I remained for the entirety of the match.


A look at the table suggested that Redhill were firm favourites going into this game, but I found it interesting that Hanworth Villa had the worst attack in the league, yet at the same time had the second-best defence despite their lowly position in the table. That had me a little wary about what was to come, and in all honesty I expected a tight game with few goals, but one that Redhill would ultimately just about edge.


Here's my report on a game that almost perfectly matched my expectations, with the only real surprise being the amount of goals in it:

The first half of this game was very slow, both teams passing the ball around well enough but taking far too long to do anything with it, allowing the opposition defence to get back and nullify the attack more often than not. The first chance of note came after 6 minutes, Redhill goalkeeper David Trivino being caught off his line and having the ball chipped over him. However, he got a hand to it to largely slow the ball's momentum, and the second Hanworth attacker scuffed his shot over the bar to waste the chance. Other than this though, Redhill had most of the play in the first half, their first chance of note coming on 17 minutes when a pass was played across the box to Steve Burford, whose shot then somehow went just inches wide of the far post. Another notable chance came for the home side on 31 minutes, an excellent free kick in the box eluding a few heads and almost finding its way into the net, but ultimately going narrowly wide. Three minutes later, with neither side particularly looking likely to break the deadlock, the referee controversially awarded Redhill a penalty for a supposed handball in the box: from my position in the stand, the decision looked slightly harsh and I was surprised the referee could see through several players to catch it, but catch it he did.

Before the penalty was taken though, Redhill's Tony Halsey and Kery Kedze got into a very heated argument about who would take the penalty, with it eventually seeming that the manager's decision was adhered to (as far as I could tell, based on gestures from the dugout and the two's acknowledgement of them) and Kery Kedze stepping up to take it. This didn't deter the striker though, and he calmly slotted the ball into the bottom corner - to Hanworth keeper Terry Buss' left - to give his side the lead (notably, despite strict words from his teammates, Halsey did not join in the celebrations). Though not strictly deserved (despite having more of the chances up to this point, I didn't think either side had done close to enough to deserve to be in front), this lead did spur the home side on a bit while somewhat damaging Hanworth's confidence, so it was unsurprising when Redhill came close to doubling their lead three minutes later: a free-kick was played into the box and fell to the unmarked Clyde Ipko Ondo, who got a shot away but ultimately put the ball over the bar. Redhill then had a few more chances before half-time, but none were particularly clear-cut and so it was unsurprising that it remained 1-0 going into half-time.

The second half began in a low-key fashion, similar to how much of the first half proceeded. However, unlike the first half, the second quickly became actively tedious as both teams started to frequently foul each other, causing the game to become extremely stop-start and lose any sense of flow it had developed. As the half progressed, the frustation of both teams was becoming more and more apparent and, on a couple of occasions, this threatened to spill over into a mass brawl, particularly after a couple of nasty tackles around the hour mark. To the referee's credit (and despite his increasing unpopularlity with players and supporters alike), he largely kept things well under control and was more than happy to explain his decisions, but I do feel he could have nipped things in the bud by giving out yellow cards more quickly. Regardless, the game moved past the hour mark without any real clear-cut chances since the start of the half, but on 66 minutes Hanworth somehow failed to equalise: there was a simple pass across the face of goal to an attacker who, despite having an open goal in front of him, hesitated on the ball and did not shoot quick enough, allowing Trivino to get a glove to it and keep it out.

Moments later, Hanworth were made to pay for that miss as Kedze embarked on a rapid counter-attack down the left wing before twisting into the box and converting past Buss to double Redhill's lead. In the aftermath of this goal, there was some handbags off the ball between a Redhill attacker and a couple of Hanworth defenders, but this didn't descend into anything more serious. In the 75th minute, Redhill went 3-0 up: a corner was played into the box and bounced around a little, a couple of shots blocked before the ball finally fell to Jon Trotter to tap in from close range. At this point, I thought that was game over, as Hanworth had only produced a couple of notable chances and didn't really look like scoring at all, but they clearly hadn't given up as they pulled one back three minutes later: a cross was played into the box and someone had a shot saved by Trivino, but debutant William Montague was quickest to react and tapped into the net to give his side some hope. This hope was increased in the 85th minute when, after some good interplay on the edge of the box, Montague got another shot away, with a slight deflection off of a defender eluding Trivino and ensuring the ball went in. In the last minute of normal time, Hanworth were very unlucky not to equalise, a corner floated into the box and not cleared, a couple of shots then blocked by Redhill defenders before the ball once again fell to Montague, but this time his shot was just wide. It was then a matter of added time, and Redhill did well to hold out for the victory in those final few minutes.

Overall, I wouldn't necessarily say this was a good game, but it was most certainly an entertaining one in the end: the quality wasn't always great, but both teams fought hard and either could have got something out of the game. On the whole, Redhill probably deserved the win, but the massive shift in momentum late on as Hanworth attempted to make the comeback really made it feel like Hanworth deserved at least a point from the game. Based on this game alone, it's difficult to imagine that Redhill will be able to go the distance and beat Chertsey to the title and promotion, but maybe I just caught them on an off-day today (and even then, the pace they have in their attacking options made them look very threatening at times). As for Hanworth, it's clear why they struggle to score goals, but also why they generally don't concede very many either: in my opinion, if they can find a solution to their issues in front of goal (Montague looks like he could possibly be that solution, though it's probably hasty to say so after one substitute appearance), they should be able to stay up fairly comfortably despite their current lowly position in the table.





After the game, rather than returning to Earlswood (Surrey) station and waiting in the cold for around 40 minutes for my return train to arrive, I instead decided to embark on the 35-minute walk to Redhill station, in the hope that there would be an earlier train I could catch back to Guildford (this didn't prove to be the case and so I still had to wait for around 40 minutes for my train, but there were at least waiting rooms unlike at Earlswood). On this walk back, I also came to the realisation that it was this weekend 12 months ago (and, at the time of writing, exactly 365 days ago) that I first saw Redhill play, when I saw them pull off an impressive 3-1 win away at eventual runaway champions Westfield. I hadn't planned this at all, but it's certainly one hell of a coincidence that it ended up working out like that.

On the whole, this was a far better groundhop than I was expecting, with a good game, some good food and a warm welcome from the club's chairman at half-time (and some good conversations with a former referee at half-time and during much of the second half). After last week's misery at Kidlington, a day like this was much-needed and I'm glad I made the decision I did. My only complaint would be the price, as I do feel that £8 for Step 5 is too much. However, I understand that clubs need to do whatever they can to make money at this level, so I can't begrudge it too much.

Next weekend, Matt will be able to join me again and we'll be heading into London, with the plan being to tick off the Terence McMillan Stadium (with Fire United hosting Benfleet there next Saturday in Division 1 South of the Eastern Senior League), due to very strong rumours that the ground will no longer be used for football after this season. If that particular option doesn't work out for whatever reason, there are plenty of back-ups available, with the most interesting of those looking like the FA Vase 3rd Round clash between Redbridge and Chertsey Town.

The Ground

As with Kidlington's ground last week, Kiln Brow is fairly basic, with a 162-seater Arena stand providing the only covered seating at the ground. The only other cover at the ground is a small area of covered standing, the placement of which is very bizarre: rather than being directly behind the goal as you would expect, it is actually behind the corner flag on the near goal side, closest to the turnstiles.

Other than this, the rest of the ground is open hard standing, but there is plenty of room to expand should that prove necessary in the future (although, given that the ground has met Step 4 grading requirements in the past, I would imagine that would only be necessary if the club rose to Step 3). The ground has an overall capacity of 2,000, with a record attendance of 1,200 for a game against Crystal Palace in 1989.

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Sunday 18 November 2018

Kidlington - Yarnton Road



Kidlington FC
Yarnton Road
Kidlington
Oxfordshire
OX5 1AT


Ground: 62
Date: Saturday 17th November 2018
Kidlington 6-1 Yaxley
Southern League Division 1 Central
Attendance: 50 (official)

Kidlington FC - History

Kidlington were founded in 1909, initially playing in village leagues before joining the Oxford City Junior League after World War 2. In 1951, the club moved up to the Oxfordshire Senior League and finished as champions in the 1952/53 season, before moving up to the Hellenic League in 1954 and being placed in its Premier Division when a second division was added in 1956. In the 1961/62 season, the club finished second-from-bottom and were relegated to Division 1, remaining at this level for two seasons before earning promotion back to the Premier Division.

Relegation back to Division 1 occurred again after just two seasons and, after league reorganisation in the 1971/72 season, the club were placed in Division 1B, before Division 1 reverted back to the one division for the following season. It then took until the 1978/79 season for the club to earn promotion back to the Premier Division, a runners-up finish once again sufficient. However, the club only lasted three seasons in the Premier Division before being relegated back to Division 1 again.

The club then spent the next two decades in Division 1, moving into Division 1 West when Division 1 was further regionalised in the 2000/01 season. Eventually, the club finished 3rd in Division 1 West in the 2004/05 season, and this was enough to earn promotion back to the Premier Division for the first time in 23 years. The club then spent the next decade in the Premier Division before winning the title in the 2015/16 season to earn promotion to Step 4 for the first time. The club were then placed in Division 1 Central of the Southern League and finished 12th, before being transferred to Division 1 West the following season and again finishing 12th. At the start of this season, the club were transferred back to Division 1 Central again.

In the FA Cup, the club have twice progressed as far as the 2nd Qualifying Round: in the 2015/16 season, they beat Ascot United, Chertsey Town and Godalming Town before losing to Gloucester City; in the 2017/18 season, the club beat Wantage Town and St. Margaretsbury before losing to Paulton Rovers. In the FA Trophy, the club won for the first (and currently only) time in the competition in the 2017/18 season to reach the 1st Qualifying Round, beating Winchester City before losing to Slough Town. As for the FA Vase, the club made it all the way to the Quarter Finals in the 2015/16 season, beating Ashford Town (Middlesex), Deal Town, Thame United, Knaphill and Cleethorpes Town before losing in a replay to Bowers & Pitsea.

My Visit

With this being one of the grounds that I could feasibly access from University for a Yaxley away game, my visit was inevitable and set in stone as soon as the fixture list was released and, to make matters even better, it fell at a time when continuing strikes on South Western Railway meant that my easiest option was to head out west towards Reading and Oxford. It was then just a matter of if Matt would be able to join me or not; when we had talked about it when we were last at a game together, he expected he would be free, but perhaps inevitably he ended up bogged down by coursework by the time it came around, so I would be on my own again.

With the ground being pretty far away from the nearest station (35 minutes away from Oxford Parkway station, according to Google Maps at least), I was keeping an eye on the weather to decide whether I'd take the bus or just walk to the ground on the day, as I knew the bus stopped right outside the ground. Ultimately, when yesterday came around it was bright and sunny, so I had no qualms walking to the ground once I eventually reached Oxford Parkway.

I left the house at 11:35am, my train leaving Guildford half an hour later (incidentally, roughly around the same time the Supporters' Coach would have been beginning its journey down from Yaxley), arriving in Oxford Parkway at around 1:50pm after a couple of changes. From there, it was a straightforward 25-minute walk to the ground (so my concerns about possibly needing to use the bus ultimately proved unnecessary).

Upon arrival, I paid £4 for admission and £1.50 for a decent programme before doing my usual circuit of photos ahead of kick-off. Once I was done, some other Yaxley fans had arrived and I waited for kick-off with them behind the near goal, moving towards whichever side was Yaxley's right-wing when we were attacking (in the expectation of seeing Matt Sparrow perform his usual magic).


The table left no room for doubt that this was already a relegation six-pointer, but with how poor Kidlington had been in the league up until this point, I was expecting that we would be able to win, although I was perhaps slightly overconfident about our chances.


Even this morning, I'm still too annoyed with how bad we were to give an actual match report, so here's a brief summary of the goals from what I was able to see of them:

18 mins: Anaclet Odhiambo scored from a free header to give Kidlington the lead
31 mins: Odhiambo scored again, a through ball splitting our high defensive line and leaving him one-on-one with Ollie Sutton, who he just had to round to score
33 mins: Mark Janes scored for Kidlington, our defence completely disappearing and giving him an easy finish
39 mins: Dan Cotton pulled one back for us direct from a free-kick from the edge of the box
66 mins: Odhiambo completed his hat-trick after our defence let the ball bounce from a corner, and he simply had to head in from close range
73 mins: Elliott Osborne-Ricketts was able to get a shot away and score because our defence once again disappeared entirely
89 mins: Joey Cowlishaw scored from close range as our defence didn't even attempt to do anything to stop it




So, on the whole, an absolutely disastrous day from a Yaxley perspective, in what was undoubtedly the worst performance I've ever seen from us. There can be no excuses for this nightmare of a game, as the collective lack of responsibility or fight was alarming and unacceptable, even more so after such a commendable performance against Bromsgrove a couple of weeks ago. I want to remain confident about our survival chances, I really do, but such a bad performance (and already the fifth time in all competitions this season that we've conceded six or more goals) it's very hard to see any cause for optimism at all. 

In fact, I was thinking of going to our away game at Berkhamsted in a few weeks, but after this I'm not sure I'm interested in wasting close to £30 when it's very likely that a performance like that will be my reward (especially in the build-up to Christmas, which would likely mean I'd not be able to afford it even if I actually wanted to go still).

That being said, credit where credit's due: Kidlington played at a high intensity with a strong desire and it paid off massively, especially as they never let off even when it was long-since clear that the game was won. They'll almost certainly be able to stay up based on that, but I just hope we aren't the ones to take their place in the bottom two.

As for what's next, I'm not entirely sure. There are still strikes on SWR next Saturday, so I will still be limited in where I can go. Henley Town vs Twyford & Ruscombe in the Thames Valley Premier League Division 3 is appealing as a cheap way to tick off a former Hellenic League ground, but it depends on if I can be bothered to drop down to the 14th tier or not, which will likely depend upon which routes are effected by the strikes (which will in turn influence where locally I can actually go).

The Ground

Yarnton Road is likely one of the more basic Step 4 grounds, with a standard 100-seater Arena stand providing the only seating at the ground. There is also a covered Arena terrace behind the near goal, and next to the main stand is an additional area of covered standing. Other than this, the rest of the ground is open hard standing, with the only other feature of note being that there is a fence on both sides of the hard standing behind the far goal (one between it and the pitch, and the other between it and the training area behind).

In other words, it's pretty much the bare minimum required for this level of football, but there is nothing wrong with that really: it's more than enough for the crowds Kidlington get, after all. The ground has an overall capacity of 1,500, with a record attendance of 2,000 for a friendly against a Showbiz XI back in 1973 (presumably before more modern safety requirements lowered the capacity).

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Sunday 4 November 2018

Bromsgrove Sporting - Victoria Ground



Bromsgrove Sporting FC
Victoria Ground
Birmingham Road
Bromsgrove
Worcestershire
B61 0DR


Ground: 61
Date: Saturday 3rd November 2018
Bromsgrove Sporting 2-1 Yaxley
Southern League Division 1 Central
Attendance: 748 (official)

Bromsgrove Sporting FC - History

Bromsgrove Sporting were founded in 2009, initially as a supporters' consortium which intended to buy Bromsgrove Rovers to save them from administration. However, when a new owner was found for Rovers soon after, the consortium decided to create a new club instead. In June 2010, the club gained the lease to the ground and were initially going to allow Rovers to play their home games there too. However, Rovers were expelled from the Southern League and folded, giving Sporting the sole use of the ground.

For the club's first season (the 2010/11 season), they entered Division 2 of the Midland Combination League, finishing 3rd to earn promotion to Division 1. A 3rd-place finish in Division 1 the following season was once again enough to earn promotion, this time to the Premier Division. The club finished 6th in their first season at this level, before finishing as runners-up the following season.

In the 2014/15 season, the Midland Combination League merged with the Midland Alliance to form the Midland Football League, with the club placed in Division 1. The club finished as runners-up for two seasons running before winning the title in the 2016/17 season to earn promotion to the Premier Division. The club then went on to win the Premier Division title last season to earn promotion to Division 1 Central of the Southern League.

In the FA Cup, the club have reached the Preliminary Round in each of their five campaigns, but never progressed beyond it; this season, they suffered a 4-3 loss away at Alvechurch. The club competed in the FA Trophy for the first time this season, but they lost 3-1 at home against Corby Town in the Extra Preliminary Round. As for the FA Vase, the club's best run came in the 2016/17 season when they reached the Semi-Finals, beating Ellistown & Ibstock United, Tipton Town, Cadbury Athletic, Lichfield City, Nuneaton Griff, Sun Sports, Bristol Manor Farm and Buckland Athletic before losing to Cleethorpes Town over two legs.

My Visit

As soon as it became clear that Yaxley would be in the same league as Bromsgrove Sporting this season, I was desperately hoping that the fixture list would make it possible for me to visit the ground, as it had been on my radar for quite some time. As such, I was quite disappointed to see this game in early November, but I then remembered that I get a week off from University at the start of November and, fortunately enough, this worked out perfectly for getting to this game.

The only obstacle between then and now was the recent issues surrounding our (Yaxley's) FA Trophy game against Kidsgrove Athletic, which was postponed because of an FA investigation that seemed to drag on and on, to the point that I assumed that the conclusion would see our tie for that round replacing this game instead. However, it became apparent earlier in the week that this would not be the case, even though it didn't become clear what outcome the FA investigation had reached until Friday night (Kidsgrove kicked out for fielding an ineligible player two rounds running, with Wisbech reinstated and Yaxley heading there on Tuesday night to decide who hosts Ramsbottom United next Saturday).

I left the house yesterday morning at around 10:20am, arriving at our ground half an hour later and waited for the arrival of the Supporters' Coach. Eventually, this arrived just after 11am and, upon doing so, the players, supporters and club officials got on the coach as it headed out. Considering that it was on the other side of Birmingham, the journey to Bromsgrove was actually surprisingly easy, as we avoided the main roads near and into Birmingham and as such didn't get caught up in traffic.

Once we got into Bromsgrove at 1pm, we got a little lost as the coach tried to find the ground, eventually doing so after ten minutes and then getting off to allow the coach driver to be directed to somewhere to park. After paying £6 admission and £2 for a programme, I was in the ground with just under 2 hours to go until kick-off. While this wasn't particularly ideal (mainly due to how cold and windy it was), it did have the positive of meaning I could get all of my photos of the ground well before the crowd started pouring in as I knew it eventually would (the official attendance ended up being 748).

Taking photos occupied me for about 20 or so minutes, after which I attempted to hold out until 2pm before getting some food. Ultimately, I failed due to the cold and bought myself a hot dog and some chips to warm me up. Both were pretty good by football food standards, and after this it was just a matter of waiting until the teams were announced and the game kicked off. When it eventually did, I initially moved to in front of the bar where a couple of other Yaxley fans were, but we soon moved to behind the goal due to how limited the views were from in front of the bar. Near half-time, we moved again to the far side, and for the second half we moved to the other side of the main stand, where we remained for the entirety of the second half.



The table left no room for doubt about just how difficult this fixture was going to be for us, but I was slightly optimistic due to Bromsgrove's recent drubbings against Corby and Bedford. Because of that, it seemed like as good a time as any for us to be playing them, and I saw no reason why we couldn't get a result out of the game.


Here's my report on a game that was engaging but, from a Yaxley perspective, was ultimately frustrating as a poor refereeing decision turned the game and virtually cost us the point we deserved:

We took the lead after 4 minutes, a through ball reaching Dan Cotton who chipped over Bromsgrove keeper Dan Crane to score. However, this lead only lasted 12 minutes, as Jason Cowley rode the tackle of Josh Pike, cut inside and took a curling shot from the edge of the box, which then appeared to take a slight deflection on its way in. Chances then came and went for both teams, but the only other notable incident of the half was Kyle Nolan being forced off with an injury, Sam Spencer returning from injury and slotting into defence, with Charley Sanders then moving forwards into the attack. This was fortunate in that it gave Spencer some much-needed game time, but was mostly unfortunate as Nolan had been playing excellently in the first half hour and had been integral to a lot of our good midfield play. 1-1 at half-time.

Ten minutes into the second half, the controversial penalty decision that turned the game was awarded: a scuffed clearance set Richard Gregory through on goal from Bromsgrove and Dan Cotton tussled with him to try and stop him, but Gregory went over and, after considerable deliberation with his assistant, the referee gave the penalty. Admittedly, I could not tell from where I was standing whether Gregory had gone over in the box or not, but what I do know for certain is that the tussling and pulling started well outside the box, so if a foul was given it should have been a free kick not a penalty (perhaps unsurprisingly though, the referee caved to the pressure of the home crowd). Regardless, Gregory converted from the spot to give the home side the lead. In the next ten minutes, Bromsgrove's Charlie Dowd received two yellows and was sent off for twice hacking down Matt Sparrow from behind: this gave us the impetus to lay siege to the Bromsgrove goal, but it simply didn't fall for us and we couldn't score. The closest we came was a Charley Sanders header that rattled off the post and an audacious volley from him that went just wide, but it ultimately wasn't to be.

This was another frustrating result for us, as we did not deserve to lose and definitely deserved at least a point, but ended up missing out because of a poor decision from the referee. In fact, this was one of the best performances I've seen us put in all season as we played at a pace and intensity we've not often managed before: this side has improved massively since the defeat to Bedford back in August, and results are going to improve because of that (we'll certainly have to beat Kidlington in a couple of weeks though, just to make sure they don't narrow the gap on us).




Going into this groundhop as an away fan, I have to confess that I did have some reservations, especially after what I saw when Bromsgrove visited Thatcham in the FA Vase last season (I felt a little nervous after celebrating our goal early on, at least). However, I am pleased to say that there were no issues whatsoever, and in fact the hospitality we received was impeccable and the atmosphere intense yet friendly throughout. So, while they may have a few fans who cause issues sometimes, that is absolutely not representative of their fans as a whole, and most definitely not representative of their club officials at all. Some delightfully friendly people involved at Bromsgrove, and I wish them all the best for the rest of the season (the reverse fixture notwithstanding, of course).

With Yaxley set to be at home next Saturday, my next groundhop is now two weeks away and, so long as the weather holds up, it will see me paying a visit to Kidlington for Yaxley's away game there (as that's one of the ones I can access via the train from University).


The Ground

The Victoria Ground is a remarkable one for Step 4, no doubt because of its past use at Step 1 during the high years of Bromsgrove Rovers. The imposing main stand provides seating for around 400 people, most of which is elevated high above the pitch. Other than this, there's an impressive covered terrace behind the far goal, which I imagine could hold around 1,000 people. There's then an uncovered terrace behind the near goal, which could hold a few hundred people, and there's a small area of cover on the near side as well. In terms of football furniture, this should be good enough or almost good enough for Step 2 I would assume, but apparently Bromsgrove are one of the clubs who currently fall foul of the changing room rules that the FA recently reiterated (so that could prove quite the hindrance until it's resolved).

The rest of the ground is open hard standing, and it has an overall capacity of 3,500 (this used to be 4,800, but this was apparently restricted in 2017 (presumably for health and safety reasons). The record attendance for a Sporting game at the ground was 3,349 for the first leg of the FA Vase semi-final against Cleethorpes Town in 2017. At the time of my visit, the ground was also shared by Worcester City, but they have since moved into a new ground of their own back in Worcester itself.


Photos