Sunday 21 November 2021

Whittlesey Athletic - Feldale Field

Whittlesey Athletic FC
Feldale Field
Drybread Road
Whittlesey
Cambridgeshire
PE7 1YP

Official Website

Twitter

Ground: 125
Date: Saturday 20th November 2021
Whittlesey Athletic 0-0 Worcester City (7-6 on penalties)
FA Vase 2nd Round
Attendance: 314 (official)

Whittlesey Athletic - History

Whittlesey Athletic were founded in 2014 as a merger between local sides Whittlesey United (founded in 1957) and Coates Athletic (founded in 1950). The newly-merged club replaced its predecessors in the Premier Division of the Peterborough & District League and finished as runners-up in the 2015/16 season to earn promotion to Division 1 of the United Counties League.

Seven matches into their first season at this new level, the club resigned from the league after funding for the needed floodlights was withdrawn (meaning the club would face demotion at the end of the season). The following season saw the club return to the Peterborough & District League Premier Division and they gained promotion back to Division 1 of the United Counties League at the end of the 2018/19 season, this time with floodlights in place.

After both the 2019/20 and 2020/21 seasons were declared null and void due to the coronavirus pandemic, the club were transferred to Division 1 North of the Eastern Counties League for the 2021/22 season. They have made a strong start to life in their new league and currently sit in the play-off places.

The club have yet to compete in either the FA Cup or Trophy, but have competed in the FA Vase for two seasons (including this current season): in the 2020/21 season, they reached the 1st Round by beating Debenham LC before losing to Mildenhall Town; this season, they have gone one step further so far by reaching the 2nd Round, having beaten Framlingham Town and Wolverhampton Casuals prior to this tie against Worcester City.

My Visit

With Whittlesey being one of the few grounds in England's top ten tiers to be within ten miles of me, a visit here has been high on the agenda for a while now. In fact, when I looked through their fixtures at the start of the season, I'd initially put their match on this date down, though at that point it was a league fixture against Norwich CBS listed.

However, this date did clash with Yaxley's visit to Bedworth United and that was always in the back of my mind, especially with the prospect of the weather starting to turn for the worse by this point in November (Bedworth play on a 3G pitch). The other possibility I had in mind was that the FA Vase 2nd Round was going to take place on this weekend, so I wanted to keep an eye on the situation until closer to the time.

Around a month ago, I was starting to lean towards the Bedworth match, even with the logistical difficulties I'd have to work around to make it happen. However, after the previous round of the FA Vase took place on the 23rd of October, I noticed that Whittlesey had progressed again with an impressive win against Step 5 side Wolverhampton Casuals, so I kept a close eye out for the 2nd Round draw that Monday.

When the draw came out and threw out this fixture, I was very interested but still undecided due to my interest in visiting new grounds with Yaxley. So, with Bedworth playing on a 3G pitch, I decided to hold off on making my final decision until a week or so beforehand based on what the weather forecast looked like: if lots of rain was forecast, I'd play it safe and head to Bedworth, but if not I'd head to Whittlesey.

In the end, by the time last Saturday rolled around I had more or less made my decision, and Yaxley's disappointing defeat cemented my choice. With that being the case, I asked for a lift and then just kept my eyes on the weather forecast during the week in case anything suddenly changed (as is very often the case). By Friday morning, it became apparent that such concerns would be unfounded, so I got to writing up the club history after coming back from having my booster jab.


Yesterday morning, I had my usual slow start to the day, perhaps even slower than usual given that we wouldn't have to leave until around 2pm for this match. After having lunch, we ended up leaving just before 2pm and made relatively quick progress to the ground, arriving roughly 20 minutes later.

I was dropped off outside the ground and made my way in, paying £5 for admission. At this point, I had 45 minutes before kick-off, so after getting my winter gear on (it was colder than I was expecting it to be) I went about my usual circuit of photos for around 20 minutes before buying a 1/4lb cheeseburger with bacon for £4 from the tea bar.

With this in tow, I took a seat in the main stand to wait for kick-off and was pleasantly surprised to run into one of Yaxley's regular supporters in the stand. We had a bit of a chat as we waited for kick-off and as I ate my burger (which I had evidently put too much burger sauce in, given how it dripped out a couple of times onto my bag). I remained in the stand throughout the match and was fortunate that penalties were taken at that end later on.




While I wanted Whittlesey to win this fixture due to the Yaxley connections in their squad, on paper it very much looked like Worcester City were the favourites, being at a higher level in the pyramid and being on a fine run of form lately as well.




Whittlesey started on the front foot and came close to opening the scoring after 8 minutes when Jack Bates almost beat Worcester keeper Jake Daniels to an aerial ball (had he done so, he'd have had a tap-in). Six minutes later, Lewis Cook spurned a golden chance for the hosts when he headed over the bar unmarked from a corner.

Worcester's first chance of note came in the 26th minute when a bobbled pass back to Whittlesey keeper Aaron Bellairs caused him to mishit his clearance straight to an attacker just outside the box. Fortunately for Bellairs, the shot ended up going narrowly wide. Twelve minutes later, Worcester went close again as a shot from the edge of the box deflected off a defender and forced Bellairs into a reactive palmed save.

In the first half, Whittlesey had done a good job of remaining compact and limiting Worcester's chances while also providing a threat on the counter and from set pieces, but the match was always going to become more stretched in the second half and Worcester started to find themselves on top, but Bellairs was in fine form to keep them at bay.

In the 64th minute, Bellairs was there again to keep Worcester out: an aerial side-foot volley looked to have caught everyone out, but he somehow got back to save it on the line. Fifteen minutes later, Bellairs denied James Douglas with another fine save from the midfielder's curled shot from the edge of the box. Towards the end of normal time, Whittlesey broke away on the counter and had a golden chance to nick it, but the shot was sent way over the bar.

With it finishing goalless in the 90 minutes, it was time for penalties. Whittlesey were going first but had their first penalty saved, while Worcester scored theirs to take the lead. However, Whittlesey were given a lifeline when they scored their second but Worcester skied theirs over the bar. Worcester then missed their fourth penalty and it looked like Whittlesey were going to progress, but they hit their fifth penalty into the crossbar and Worcester took their chance to take it to sudden death.

In sudden death, both teams scored their first three penalties to make it 6-6 from eight penalties. Then, Whittlesey scored their ninth penalty while Bellairs saved Worcester's ninth to send Whittlesey through to the 3rd Round of the FA Vase for the first time ever.



Despite the goalless scoreline, this was an entertaining if nervy cup match which Whittlesey played exactly how an underdog should play such a match: they kept things tight at the back, made use of set pieces and always tried to give Worcester something to think about on the counter. For Worcester's part, they did generally have the better of proceedings and became more threatening as the match progressed and gaps opened up, but they were either let down by their finishing or kept at bay by man-of-the-match Aaron Bellairs.

After the final penalty was taken and the celebrations began, I headed out of the ground to get picked up but took ten minutes to find the car in the dark. As a result, we didn't end up leaving until around 5:15pm, getting back into the house again twenty minutes later. It made a nice change to be back that early after how late I got back from my previous two, not least because it meant I had longer in the evening to both relax and warm myself up after an afternoon in the cold.

Overall, this was an enjoyable afternoon out at what was my most local unvisited ground in the top ten tiers of English football. I can say without a doubt that I will be back again, not least because I want to pay the Straw Bear pub a visit next time (which will mean going on the train as well).

After this, I'm aiming for three more groundhops this calendar year, but it'll be three weeks before my next one on the 11th of December. That will either be Yaxley's away league match at Spalding United or Whittlesey's next match in the FA Vase if they're drawn away at a ground I haven't visited and that I can somehow get to (I'll find out about that tomorrow). On the 18th, I'm planning one final neutral groundhop for the year, hopefully somewhere in London if my budget allows. Finally, the 27th will see me at Yaxley's away league match against Stamford.

The Ground

Feldale Field is a fairly typical Step 6 ground with just the two areas of cover. On the near side is an area of covered standing built out of scaffolding which provides standing cover for around 50 people. Directly across from this on the far side is a 50-seater stand (thankfully not the typical Arena structure). The clubhouse is positioned on the near side next to the scaffold stand.

The rest of the ground is open hard standing on all sides, though this only extends as far as the dugouts on the far side due to a lack of space. The ground is very exposed to the elements, but this does mean you get great views of the changing late-evening sky at this time of the year from the main stand.

All in all, the ground is perfectly sufficient for the club's current needs and seemed to handle the bumper crowd for this fixture very well.

Photos















Sunday 14 November 2021

Canvey Island - Park Lane

 
Canvey Island FC
Park Lane
Canvey Island
Essex
SS8 7PX

Official Website
Twitter

Ground: 124
Date: Saturday 13th November 2021
Canvey Island 6-0 Yaxley
FA Trophy 1st Round
Attendance: 452 (official)

Canvey Island - History

Canvey Island were founded in 1926 and initially played in local leagues such as the Southend & District League and Thurrock Combination League before joining the Parthenon League in 1957. After finishing bottom in their first season, their fortunes improved and they finished as runners-up in the 1959/60 season.

In 1963, the club transferred to Division 1 of the London League, which became the Greater London League a year later. After winning both Division 1 and the League Cup in the 1967/68 and 1968/69 seasons, the Greater London League merged with the Metropolitan League and the club were placed in the newly-formed Division 1 of the Metropolitan-London League. In 1975, this league merged with the Spartan League, but the club instead decided to join the Essex Senior League.

The club remained in this league for almost twenty years, first finishing as runners-up in the 1978/79 season before winning the title for the first time in the 1986/87 season. The title was won again in the 1992/93 season and the club moved up to Division 3 of the Isthmian League two seasons later. At this point, progress up the pyramid was quick as the club finished as Division 3 runners-up to earn an immediate promotion to Division 2 and then winning the title at the first attempt to earn promotion to Division 1.

The club finished third-from-bottom in their first season in Division 1 and were relegated straight back to Division 2, but they won the title at the first attempt again to immediately return to Division 1. The 1998/99 season saw the club win the Division 1 title at the first attempt to earn promotion to the Premier Division for the first time.

After finishing 5th in their first season at this level, the club finished as runners-up for three seasons running before finally winning the title in the 2003/04 season and earning promotion to the Conference National in the process. The club spent two seasons at this level before taking voluntary demotion to the Isthmian League Division 1 North for the 2006/07 season. In the 2007/08 season, the club finished 5th and won promotion to the Premier Division through the play-offs, beating AFC Sudbury in the semi-finals and then Redbridge in the final.

The club spent a decade back in the Premier Division, recording a highest finish of 6th in the 2010/11 season before being relegated back to Division 1 North at the end of the 2016/17 season. They came close to bouncing straight back up in the 2017/18 season, but they lost to Haringey Borough in the play-off final after beating Bowers & Pitsea in the semi-finals. The club have remained in Division 1 North ever since.

The club's best FA Cup run came in the 2001/02 season when they reached the 3rd Round, beating Somersett Ambury V & E, Halesowen Town, Stafford Rangers, Wigan Athletic and Northampton Town before losing to Burnley. They also made it to the 2nd Round last season and in the 2000/01 season, and they have also reached the 1st Round on three other occasions.

The club won the FA Trophy in the 2000/01 season, beating Harlow Town, Northwood, Bilston Town, Stevenage Borough, Telford United and Chester City before beating Forest Green Rovers 1-0 in the final. They were also losing finalists in the 2003/04 season, losing 2-3 to Hednesford Town. As for the FA Vase, the club reached the semi-finals in the 1992/93 season, beating Peterborough City, Wroxham, Sudbury Town, King's Lynn, Harefield United, Clevedon Town and Bilston Town before losing 1-2 to Tiverton Town over two legs.

My Visit

After Yaxley's surprise but well-deserved victory over Lowestoft Town in the previous round of the FA Trophy, I was intrigued to see what the draw for the 1st Round would give us, not least because getting that far put us one round away from when the National League North and South teams (most notably Chester, Darlington, Hereford and York City) enter the competition.
As such, I was hoping for a draw that would give us the best possible chance of progressing and getting one of those ties.

On the Monday after the Lowestoft match, I eagerly awaited the draw to be announced and checked in on it as I was having lunch and saw that we had been drawn away at Canvey Island, rather than being drawn against one of the northern teams as I was expecting. After the draw released, the first thing I did was have a quick look at how Canvey were faring in their league, becoming slightly concerned about our chances upon seeing that they were both top and unbeaten in the league.

After that, it was then just a matter of waiting for confirmation that we would be putting a coach on again, as I was expecting to be the case. While I waited to hear anything on that front, I spent last Friday to Sunday down in Gravesend seeing some friends from University. I'd initially hoped to get a match in at Punjab United while I was down there, but I ultimately opted against doing so to stay with my friends instead; the football's not going anywhere, so I'm sure another chance to get there will arise in time.

In any event, confirmation of the coach came through on Sunday morning and I got myself a seat booked immediately. After that, there was little else to do but wait for the week to progress and keep an eye on the weather just to be safe. I did my usual pre-match research on Friday morning and got the club's history written up for the blog. Then, yesterday morning I woke up at around 8:30am and got my bag packed after having breakfast and getting dressed.

We left the house just before 10:30am and I was dropped off at our ground a few minutes later to get on the coach. The coach was busier than I've ever seen it be (including a fair few unfamiliar faces) and we left the ground at around 10:50am. I spent the journey there playing Pokemon Shield on my Switch and that made the time go by very quickly.

Just over two hours later, we arrived at the ground and got off the coach. Before going into the boardroom, I spent 15-20 minutes doing my circuit of photos around the empty ground before heading into the boardroom for a cup of tea and some biscuits. I then remained in here with our other club officials until around ten minutes before kick-off, at which point I headed out and found a seat in the stand with some of our other supporters.

At half-time, I headed back into a much-busier boardroom for another cup of tea, some sausage rolls and a couple more biscuits, before heading back outside shortly after the second half got underway. For the second half, we moved to some seats at the other end of the stand.




Even before knowing just how many players we had missing for this fixture, I had less hope of getting something out of this match than I did our match against Lowestoft in the previous round: no matter the level, playing a team in such good form is a very different prospect to playing against a struggling, out-of-form team.


Canvey Island took an early lead in this tie, Matthew Price scoring from the penalty spot in the 7th minute. Four minutes later, they doubled their lead as Conor Huble received the ball on the edge of the box and calmly placed a shot beyond Aaron Butcher in the Yaxley goal. After this, Canvey Island continued to dominate, playing the ball at pace both on the ground and in the air, and it felt like they would score every time they got forward.

The third goal came in the 22nd minute when Price was left unmarked inside the box for a free header. Thirteen minutes later, Canvey Island scored their fourth as Evans Kouassi finished off a rapid counter-attacking move. At the other end, Yaxley’s only shot in the first half was a hopeful effort from John-Paul Duncliffe from outside the box.

In the second half, Canvey Island eased off somewhat but still remained firmly in control, though Yaxley were able to carve out a few half chances here and there: these primarily stemmed from the hard work of winger Lewis Baughan, although keeper Bobby Mason was rarely troubled. The home side eventually added a fifth in the 74th minute when Harrison Chatting converted from close range. The sixth and final goal came seven minutes later as Callum Fitzer held the ball up inside the box before turning and shooting past Butcher.




To put things simply, I have to give credit where it is undoubtedly due: Canvey Island were far too good for us (depleted squad or not, I think they'd have beaten us) and dominated from start to finish. I was impressed with their pace across the park and their flexibility in approach: they were more than happy to alternate between playing a quick passing game on the floor and punting the ball forwards depending on the situation, and we simply could not handle it. They are comfortably the best side I've seen us play this season and I will be very surprised if they aren't promoted to Step 3 at the end of the season. For us, this was a disappointing end to our cup run, but we can be proud of having got this far and can now focus on our battle to stay up in the league.

After the full-time whistle blew, we headed back into the boardroom for one last cup of tea and some more biscuits, before heading into the spacious bar as we waited to leave. Eventually, we left the ground not long after 6pm and it was much quieter on the coach than it was after the Lowestoft victory. Having brought my laptop with me, I spent some time sorting out my photos and getting my match report written up before going back to Pokemon Shield again.

On the way, we stopped at some services again somewhere near Bishop's Stortford, and I got off to go to the toilet and pick up a small snack meal from KFC to tide me over until I got home. In the end, we got back to the Yaxley ground just before 9pm and I was back in the house ten minutes later, getting in a quick shower before relaxing for the rest of the evening.

Next week will be my first neutral groundhop in around a month, as I'll be heading to Whittlesey Athletic (my nearest unvisited ground in the top ten levels of English football) for their big FA Vase 2nd Round match against Worcester City. Beyond that, I've got two more Yaxley away matches planned before the New Year (our December visits to Spalding United and Stamford) and I think I'll try to fit in another neutral groundhop on the 18th of December: that'll either take me to Blackstones, Boston Town or somewhere in London, depending what my budget allows for after Christmas shopping is sorted.

The Ground

Park Lane is a characterful ground with some form of football furniture on all four sides and with everything in the club's blue and yellow colours. The ground's most impressive feature is the extensive uncovered terracing behind the near goal: this extends the full length of the pitch and provides great elevated views of both the pitch and the nearby Thames Estuary. There is also a small amount of uncovered terracing behind the far goal in two separate areas (one consisting of two steps and the other consisting of three).

The only seated cover at the ground is a long, shallow stand on the near side that extends most of the length of the pitch. This contains 500 seats and views are decent, though people walking in front of the stand to get to the nearby tea bar for food and drink means that your view is regularly obscured if you sit in there. Directly across from this is two small areas of covered standing, one on each side of the dugouts.

The ground is more than good enough for Step 4 and would probably be good enough for Step 2 should the club ever climb above Step 3 again. The official capacity is 4,100 and the record attendance at the ground was 3,553 for an Isthmian League match against Aldershot Town in the 2002/03 season. The ground is also currently shared by Step 6 side Benfleet.

Photos