Tuesday 18 August 2015

Hallen Earth


Gloucestershirev v Surrey

Hallen v Hamworthy United

A train west to Bristol Parkway, then a bus down to the Gloucester Road.

Royal London One-Day Cup
Surrey 291 for 8, Gloucestershire 279 all out, Surrey win by 12 runs

Both teams had already qualified for the quarter finals so this was a bit of a dead game. However, as Surrey had stayed over after playing Somerset yesterday, they still had a lot of their first team.

 V 

Opportunity was taken to sit in a different part of the ground, this time in the temporary seats under the new stand, affording a different view of procedures.



The ground is handy for the range of shops on Gloucester Road, which means cans of Wiper and Drew from Brewers Droop, and a decent selection of cheese from the butchers.



Who also supplied a black pudding Scotch egg.



During the lunch break, on to the Annexe, the acceptable part of the Sportsman, and GBG.



After some early wickets, Surrey scored well in the middle of their innings, primarily through the three wicket keepers they had playing. Glous made a good effort of chasing, but lost too many wickets, mainly to the emerging Curran brothers, so left too much to do for the lower order in the last few overs.



Multi bus move across Bristol to Hallen on the western fringes of the city, for an FA cup replay against Wessex league Hamworthy, a suburb of Poole.

Been to the ground in the early 1990s when they were Lawrence Weston Hallen. The old entrance no longer leads to the ground…



….and the previous palatial spectator facilities are no longer in use, as the pitch has moved.



A treck around half the village eventually found the new entrance.



Hallen 0 v Hamworthy United 1

The Emirates FA Cup Qualifying - Extra Preliminary Round



Hallen were established in 1949 as Lawrence Weston Athletic, playing in the Bristol and District League and then the Bristol Premier Combination.  In 1979, they moved to Hallen, changing their name to Lawrence Weston Hallen and moving up to the Gloucestershire County League in 1987. In 1992 they joined the Hellenic League before switching across to the Western League, by now just called Hallen.  They are currently having a ding-dong with the Parish Council who are trying to evict the club.



Hamworthy were formed in 1926 becoming founding members of the Dorset Combination league in 1957. They merged with the wonderfully named Trinidad Old Boys in 1971 to form Hamworthy United. They were champions of the renamed Dorset Premier League in 2003 and 2004, which earned promotion to the Wessex League, where they have remained in the Premier division.



In a positive development, the club house had no lager on tap, obviously catering for local demand with three of the four taps being Thatchers.



Amidst the usual team ictures through the ages, was also an interesting montage of the stand being built.



To add to the interest, there was a very eclectic display of pennants. Topical ones such as the one from the original game from Saturday…



….but then Real Madrid and Man Utd nestling as equals with Plymouth Parkway, Exmouth Town, Fawley, Corsham and Brislington…



…Juventus, Roma, and the 2004 Champions League Semi Finals, on a par with Porthleven and Brigg Town...



….Pershore Town, Maldon Town and Bristol St Valier equal to Aberdeen’s early 80s double.  Notice the quality wiring.



Into the ground and completely different to when I was last here. A seated stand on one side, and covered steps at the far end.



The Corsham players were all warming up in orange t-shirts with the ubiquitous ‘keep calm’ slogan…



…but further examination showed it to be about a local testicular cancer charity.



Worlds worst spelling of any word, ever.



Good to get in the first of the season of another non-league mainstay; the double decker shipping container store rooms.



Cover at the far end, sorry, the MB Frames Enclosure…



…was obviously obtained straight from it’s use as a bus shelter, as it still had perch seats.



Main stand has been seen in many guises, but it has always retained the name of one of the clubs key officials in the 1980s/1990s.



Club name is tucked away inside, in an unreadable yellow on brick.



Teams came out and went through a lengthy hand shaking ceremony.



After the toss, the teams changed ends, which led to more hand shaking.



Pretty even game, not many chances.



Hallen had a huge shirt sponsor, akin to a French league shirt.



As the game drew on, Hallen conceded an own goal mid way through the second half. Proved to be the only goal of the game as the sun set over the wind turbines and pylons of Hallen Marsh, once home to Britains largest fertilizer production plant.



Buses had stopped running from the village, so had to walk back to Cribbs Causeway, for a bus to Temple Meads for the train back to Swindon. At Temple Meads, it seems these fuckers are making an appearance again.





No comments:

Post a Comment