Littlehampton Town v Wandgas
Newhaven v Sutton Common Rovers
Peacehaven & Telscombe v Peacehaven & Telscombe
Worthing United v Mile Oak
Worthing v Watford U21s
I don't take much notice of the football when I'm at games
normally, at pre-season friendlies, the attention lowers to almost zero.
Combined with this, is that, due to a variety of reasons, friendlies kick off
at all sorts of times. Therefore, my quest today was to try and get to watch
some football at as many games as possible.
Sussex was my friend, as there were games fairly well spread
out from 1100 until 1600. When planning a days football, there can be late
changes to know kick off times and sometimes venues. However, this was like no
other. In between planning the day on Monday, and attending the games;-
- One team went bust
- Two of the teams merged
- One new club stated
- Three opposition teams dropped out
- Two changes of kick off time
- One change of venue
- One game was delayed by two hours for a combination of
reasons
All will be explained.
So it was the 0701 HST off Swindon, seen here leaving
Reading after I had alighted.
I joined the 0734 Great Western unit heading for Gatwick,
with the obligatory airport bound travellers rushing around with a huge
suitcase.
The route is known as the North Downs line, following as it
does the escarpment east of Guildford.
A well-kept secret on the line, is some trackside topiary.
Known as Arthur's seat, it was first crafted a hundred years ago in memory of a
rail worker who was struck by a train.
The mornings main activity seemed to be harvesting, with
regular bailing action being observed en-route.
Into the mini-New Street black hole that is Gatwick station,
with less than enthusiastic returning holiday makers trudging to the train. A
noticeable lack of England tops was seen, only a 1982 red away kit being
spotted.
Onwards was a rare event. A Southern train running, and
almost to time. This service is one that splits on route, the front half going
to Southampton and the rear half to Bognor.
Departing Gatwick right past the end of the runway.
My first game was an advertised 1100 kick off at
Littlehampton Town for a friendly against the Unknown Wandegas. Littlehampton's
ground is a lovely little venue near the town centre. Shared with the cricket
club it has a rickety main stand and a quaint old pavilion. Use of Google images here, so if does belong to you and there is an issue, just let me know.
However, checking Twitter, this announcement had been made
since I had last looked the previous evening.
So off to Bognor it was. This took me past the South Downs
this time….
….and Arundel castle.
I alighted at the junction station of Barnham.
With a ten-minute connection, I grabbed a bacon sandwich,
with the station cafe also selling copies of 2002/3 season Aston Villa
programmes. Obviously.
Eventually my unit for the short hop to Bognor arrived, this
being the back half of the train I had just got off, after it split at Horsham
and this half having called all shacks down the Arun valley.
Into Bognor.
The station is relatively unchanged from its Victorian
heyday, with the traditional newstand at the platform entrance.
Bognor isn't exactly a shithole, but when your population
consists mostly of retired people from Crawley, you're up against it. The
pedestrianised Main Street was like walking down the M25 but with mobility
scooters instead of cars. I headed for the sea front.
The less than enticing pier was eschewed for the mini golf.
However, it was noticeable that the holes were identical to those at Hastings.
Broken dreams.
So instead it was off to the town's only guide pub. This had
the least promising write up and of any GBG "This large town centre
Whetherspoon was previously a Sainsburys store, part of a concrete 60s retail
development at one end of the main shopping street, parking is available in the
adjacent multi-storey". It was cleared with a Hepworth - Prospect, an
Oakleaf - Donkeys Delight, and an Irving - Spinnaker.
Onward was a walk to the north of the town where the Leisure
Centre was located, being part of a school.
Littlehampton Town 6 v Wandgas 2, pre-season friendly,
attendance 7.
Littlehampton Town were formed in 1896 and played in the
West Sussex league until joining the Sussex County league in 1926. Remarkably,
they stayed in Division 1 for almost 70 seasons, before their first relegation
in 1994. During that period, they had been runners up 6 times, but eventually
won it in 1990. During that season they also got to the FA Cup first round.
Normally record attendances are rough estimates of a crowd at floodlight
opening game against, nearly always, Plymouth Argyle or 'Graham Taylors'
Watford. However, the game against Northampton, as recently as 1990, when
Health and Safety was yet to have 'gone mad', but was still very evident,
somehow 4,000 spectators watched the game at Littlehampton, a ground with no
terracing, a 200 seater stand and hard standing on two sides only as the ground
is shared with a cricket pitch. Anyway, they have bounced between the divisions
since, but won the title again two years ago, turning down promotion with the
legendary response to the FA 'because we just don't want to'.
Wandgas. No idea. There has been a Wandgas Sports kicking no
around the Surrey Leagues (all 25 of them) for years, playing at Worcester
Park. It is a ground I've not ticked and I assume these to be the same outfit.
You often get South London sides in Sussex for pre-season as they will play a
Saturday afternoon friendly, then have a night out in Brighton. I assume this
to be the case here.
Arriving near kick off time and it as obvious this was just
a multi-use 3G pitch, with no spectator facilities. The match officials were
waiting to start the game as a Portsmouth academy training session came to an
end. From what I saw, if I was a Pompey supporter, come 2026, I wouldn't aim to
be too reliant on your youth team. No Sammy Igoes here.
Eventually the game did get underway, but it was accompanied
by an almighty downpour. I was using only my phone camera which doesn't like
too much rain, and refused to co-operate. So this is a picture of the sodden
players returning to the changing rooms at half time, with me taking advantage
of the minimum amount of shelter here.
It was time to head off to my next game, and back to the
station, which had seemed to dodged the worst of the weather.
Then it was back to Barnham.
Noticeable was the new platform edge signing. southern got a
kicking for an incident involving a person falling between the platform and
train, and being killed (of note, this was a guard worked train). One of the
observations from RAIB was that the signage only mentioned a gap, not a step.
So now the warning is very specific. Although 'gap/step' does sound like a
genre of Drum and Bass.
My next service was a very crowded Coastway service.
This took me into the cavernous Brighton station.
Southern services were being cancelled all over the place.
At least they are being creative on the phone information screens, one being
cancelled due to a 'shortage of train crew', and the next one due to a 'train
crew shortage'.
One of the casualties of Southern's emergency/permanent
timetable reduction, has been the Seaford branch, with buses replacing trains.
Happily, this is not the case at weekends, and I had a train taking me to my
next destination, Newhaven, departing from the mysteriously wooden platform 8.
Departing Brighton along the East coast way, you immediately
cross the imposing London Road viaduct, which was looking down on a very wet
Brighton, with the rain having now caught us up.
Next of note was Falmer, with the Amex stadium behind.
We trundled along, through Lewes, and into Newhaven Town.
Newhaven sits on the river Ouse, and is very much the
industrial port on the Sussex part of the South Coast. Despite not looking that
big, the cross channel ferry port for the route to Dieppe is just on the left.
Occupational determined car parking, a new one on me.
Those council public health managers with their crazy sense
of humour.
A riverside promenade has been created, ending in this
lovely seating area. However, the views over the old derelict terminal and a
scrap metal wharf, hadn't captured the public’s imagination.
I also passed on the opportunity, and instead headed towards
Newhaven fort, as below it lies the Recreation Ground home of Newhaven FC.
Newhaven 1 v Sutton Common Rovers, pre-season friendly.
Attendance 27.
Despite being a town of considerable size, Newhaven have
never amounted to much on the non-league scene. They have a long history, back
to 1889, and were founder members of the County league in 1920, but have always
spent long periods in division 2. The brightest period for the club was in the
late eighties and early nineties, when they were challenging at the top of the
Sussex County league. However, the limited facilities at the ground forced them
to spend big on one of the most hideous monstrosities in non-league, which as
good as bankrupt the club, and has never been completed to this day.
At some point in the eighties, a group of sinister
south-east Londoners got together, and decided that they were going to fuck up
the heads of anyone involved in non-league. How they went about doing this was
by setting up a series of clubs, circulating around the names of Sutton Common
and Mole Valley. At any point, there would be one, two or three clubs in
existence, but all changing their name, home ground, and kit each season, so
that even a whole season of Who do You a Think You Are? couldn't hope to solve
the genealogy of the clubs. At various points there have been predators, SCRs,
Kingfishers, Ploughs, Grapes, centre 21s, even a bloody lit ten tree. Having
said all that, the current set up with Sutton Common Rovers seems very
enthusiastic and progressive, currently ground sharing with Sutton United and
playing in the Combined Counties league. Their badge bears the motto 'Together
we will make it happen', which sounds like the chorus of a Whitesnake power
ballad.
The entrance was cheery with two young girls on the gate,
the £2 entry being the only enforced charge of the day, but I was very happy to
give it.
The game was originally advertised as a double header with
the reserve teams, kicking off at 1400 and 1600 respectively. However, the
reserves game dropped out, but this kick off remained at 1400, conveniently for
me.
On my last visit to the ground, an evening game before an
overnight sailing across to France, the ground was in a sorry state. It was
pleasing to see that a lot of work had been done.
The main stand still stood, looking as brutal as it ever
had. Still no attempt has been made to move the changing rooms or social club
over, these instead occupying some ramshackle huts in the corner by the
entrance. However, whereas before it looked decaying, the stand has been tidied
up and window and doors secured.
The most notable change is that it is now actually in use
for seating, a lower tier in place and stairways added at each end to access
the upper stand.
The players tunnel has become the mower store.
Trying to walk round the pitch was all a bit krypton factor
assault course, traipsing through undergrowth...
....hurdling rubbish bins....
.....and limboing under guy ropes as the pitch side
railings were being used to hold the perimeter fence up.
Further seating had been added with temporary terracing at
both ends. Why this is, I don't know. Either it was a quick fix to satisfy the
ground graders, or an opportunity arose to acquire some seating. I would tend
towards the latter because, much as most non-league grounds in London have some
remnant from the Olympic aquatic arena, when Brighton vacated the Withdean, the
Sussex league teams were locust like in devouring the temporary stands for
their own use.
It doesn't matter how many proper seats there are in a
ground, if there is a pile of bricks or a wooden bench, someone will always
occupy that instead. Also, it does look like the bloke is chained to the
floodlight, but there is a @nonleaguedogs on the end of the lead.
I was one of the very few to make use of this new seating,
as I had spotted my second @keepers_towels of the season.
Rather more bizarrely, at the other end, the away keeper, as
well as having no towel, wore a short sleeved Christiano Ronaldo Real Madrid
shirt. The crazy world of non-league.
One last look across the ground to the docks. By the end of
the game, the ferry had docked in the background.
After a very enjoyable period watching the game, it was time
for me to head off, this time the bus being my chosen mode.
Out of Newhaven, we immediately climbed onto the cliff tops.
I alighted at the appropriately named Seaview part of
Peacehaven.
My destination was Peacehaven and Telscombe. Despite having
been here before, I had always thought they were called Peacehaven and
Templecombe, so I learnt something today, though probably not something to
change my life too drastically. That aside, this is one of the most bizarre
games I been to.
Reason 1. The club went bust on Monday night. For reasons I'll
come on to, the club was heavily in debt and was therefore wound up at the AGM.
However, move forward two days to Wednesday night, and a meeting is called to
set up a new club, Peacehaven and Telscombe community Football Club, to take on
all the old clubs assets, but not the debts. Huzzah!
Reason 2. This was meant to be another double header, with
Hellenic league Highmoor Ibis providing the first and reserve team opposition.
However, they dropped out of both games yesterday evening, with various rumours
circulating as to why (new club not sanctioned by FA, cancelled during week due
to uncertainty, Highmoor in shit themselves). Rather than go without a fixture,
instead it was decided that Peacehaven and Telscombe would have a 'competitive
in-house' game.
So basically, a new club, that formed on Wednesday, using
everything from a club that ceased to be on Monday, was playing its first ever
game, against itself? Makes the Ronaldho keepers top seem normal.
Peacehaven & Telscombe ? V Peacehaven & Telscombe ?,
pre-season friendly, att 130.
The cub was formed in the 1920s with the merger of
Peacehaven Rangers and Telscombe Tye. They played in the Brighton leagues
before climbing up to the Sussex county league in the late sixties, going on to
become a force with five championship wins. However, by 2005 they found
themselves in the third division. This resulted in a rapid rise up the leagues,
winning their sixth title and moving up to the Isthmian, with promotion to the
premier at the first attempt. However, decline has been just as rapid, being
relegated straight away and then coming bottom of division 1 last season. I
have no idea who (if anyone) was funding this, but it appears to have come to
an abrupt halt, hence the winding up during the week. The new club are fan
owned, with a target of 40k of share purchase being achieved.
The Wikipedia entry gives this overview of who you can
expect to meet at the ground.
The ascent into the Isthmian, brought with it ground grading
requirements.
In the county league, the club survived just with this
covered extension from the club house. The DMAHWLP were very much in evidence.
On the farside, a multi section Atcost stand has been built,
somewhat spooling the open views to the South Downs that have always been a
feature of the ground.
Behind each goal, stands are present. This one offering some
alternative cover, but no signs of the Hillbillies.
Not sure if this one is in the process of construction or
dereliction.
Hilarious signage opportunities. It would have been even
more hilarious if the play would actually have gone to this side of the pitch
in the ten minutes I was waiting by the sign, so I could have got it as an
action shot.
It was soon time to depart, back onto a Brighton and Hove
coaster service.
This took us right along the famous white cliffs.
France was just about visible.
My intention on reaching Brighton was to get cheese.
However, the excellent Brighton cheese shop appears to have closed, replaced by
another appallingly punning hairdressers.
So it was back to the station, with its grand facade full of
stag and hen parties, and British Transport Police.
For another packed East Coastway service....
....across to Lancing.
Worthing United 3 v Mile Oak 3, (Mile Oak won 3-4 on
penalties). Grimbles and Snoobs memorial cup.
The match was being played in memory of Matthew Grimstone
and Jacob Schilt. These were Worthing United players who were on their way to a
game last August when their car was hit by debris from a crashed jet which had
been performing at the adjacent Shoreham air show.
An earlier game had taken place between friends of the two
players, this game then followed, being the two clubs they were associated
with.
Matthew Grimstone had played much of his time at Mile Oak,
though at the time, both players were with Worthing United. Grimstone was also
part of the ground staff at Brighton and Hove Albion.
Worthing United were formed in 1952 as Wigmore Athletic,
named after a pub in the town. They immediately joined the Sussex County
league, and were uneventful before merging with Southdown in the mid-eighties
to form United. Since then, they have bobbed around the various divisions, but
won division 2 in 2014, meaning they were in the premier division of the new
Southern Combination.
Mile Oak and is a northern suburb of Portslade, to the west
of Brighton. The football club was formed in 1960 and played in the Brighton
league until the 1980s when promotion through the then combination took them to
the County league. They have played there rather uneventfully since, and are
currently in the Southern Combination division one.
The game was well attended, with entry by donation, the
proceeds being split between two charities that the two players had previously
represented. I decided I'd give whatever the highest away ticket price was in
the Championship. I'd made this promise without knowing about Sheffield
Wednesday's pricing structure. Still, a promise is a promise.
The game was actually being played at Culver Road, home of
Lancing FC.
The ground however, is actually owned by the Sussex FA.
Increasingly, cash rich county FAs (you know, the ones who moan about the lack
of funding at grassroots level) are buying a non-league ground and using it as
their headquarters. More often than not, they will add a very opulent stand,
with masterful hospitality facilities and bars, but about three rows of
ordinary spectator seating, which probably fits in with their view of how football
should be.
The Sussex FA were forerunners in this, buying Lancing's
ground in the early eighties. They immediately built an office complex
alongside the main stand, which meant you couldn't see a quarter of the pitch.
Speaking of the main stand, this was a wonderful old construction, that always
looked like it was only a good sea wind from being blown down. However, it
survived for over half a century until being replaced 10 years ago.
This was my first visit to the ground since the stand had
been replaced. It is fair to say that the replacement offers more function
wise, with dressing rooms, social club and refreshment facilities, along with a
decent bank of seating. Much better than a normal FA provided facility, but
lacking the appeal of its predecessor.
The pitch has also been replaced with a 3G offering, the
garish pitch side markings coming straight from the sides of Peter Wrights
head.
On the far touchline, is another backdrop of the South
Downs, but far less impressive than Peacehaven.
The second @keepers_towel of the day.....
....and then the third.
Both teams appeared to have been working on visionary
through balls in the close season. The snag is that these were actually from
defenders attempting back passes. After a scramble at the Mile Oak end, the
rather colossal number 23, threaded this back pass, through four defenders, for
the striker to run onto, but was unable to beat the keeper.
However, Worthing went straight up the other end and did
score.
This was going to be the last game of the day, but idle
perusing of Twitter, revealed this.
So off it was, passed what at first glance was a very
suspect outlet....
....but in reality, turned out marginally better.
Back to Lancing station...
....and onward to Worthing.
There is a strict rule in Worthing that any time a group of
more than 8 adult males are present in the same place, they are obliged to form
a non-league football club. Thus the town has Worthing FC, Worthing United,
Worthing Town and Worthing Social, of the Isthmian, Southern Combination
Premier, Brighton 1 and Brighton Premier, respectively. My original itinerary
had United at the game I just attended, FC had a friendly against Watford U21s
but this was at 1500, so it was the pick of Town or Social.
However, in more exiting mid-week developments, after long
existences, the latter two clubs merged, and moved their game to 1500 on a
playing field some way distant from any station. Oh Sussex football, why do you
make things so difficult for me, although fair play to the inane transport
planning for the traffic hold ups that game me this bonus game.
Worthing 2 v Watford U21s 0, Pre-season friendly. Att 336
Worthing FC are the premier team in the town. They are the
oldest, being formed in 1886, playing in the West Susses league, before joining
the Sussex county in the 1920s. The switch was due to a rule change which
Worthing didn't like. This led to their nickname changing from the previous
'Mackerelmen' to 'the Rebels'. Given the choice between a tasty sounding Dagon,
or someone who gets arsey about small print, I know which name I would rather
have. As well as the ground, the club had been bequeathed massive amounts of
land around it, which they were able to sell off bit by bit. This income gave
them the opportunity to set their sights higher, and Straight after world war
2, they joined the London based Corinthian league, which developed through the
Athenian, into the Isthmian by the late 1970s. They have stayed there ever
since, currently residing in a long spell in division 1 south due to fluffing
the play offs at such a rate to rival Reading. However, this was finally broken
this season when they beat Faversham in the final to get promotion.
Watford had somehow managed to get promoted to, play a whole
season in, and stay up, in the Premier League, without anyone noticing,
primarily me. As to the rest of their history; allotment end, Elton John,
Iveco, hornets, Graham Taylor, dodgy Italians, John Barnes, 1984 cup final,
Loctite, blah blah blah.
All the land around the ground has long been sold off,
including the training ground, and the stadium finds itself tightly hemmed in
by post war development.
Dominating the ground is the main stand. This used to be a
smaller wooden affair. However, in early May 1985, the stand caught fire.
Luckily, no one got caught in the blaze, but the stand was completely gutted.
The poignancy of the date is that it was the week before the Bradford fire. The
replacement was this imposing structure, which is currently going through a
refurb, hence only the back row of seats was in place.
On the far touchline is a small cover, constructed by the
firm who built on the large training ground.
There is cover behind each goal, the near end is more
popular as it also houses the supporters club.
Worthing's local rivals are Bognor Regis, aka the rocks.
There were a couple of things to acknowledge this. Firstly, a banner behind the
goal. It reads "I'd rather be a rebel than a rock", which is all a
bit ‘bears beats battle star galatica’.
Secondly, some retro graffiti. No idea when it dates from,
but I hope it is the mid-70s, as firstly, fair play to preserving it that long,
and secondly, to have written this since then would just be embarrassing.
I had chance to walk round the ground, but on reaching the
near end, Worthing scored from a free kick to make it 2-0.
However, the scorer remained on the floor, and the physio
was called for. This remained the case, with more equipment and personnel being
called for. After a 20-minute delay, an ambulance arrived. Checking train
times, there was shortly a direct service to Gatwick, which I headed off to.
This seemed to be the right choice as some time after, it was announced that
the game was abandoned. I don't think this was out of any harrowing mindset, as
the incident looked innocuous and the players were just stood around the pitch
looking bored, more so that the game was now about two hours late.
I headed back to the station for my train.
On the journey we passed Shoreham airfield, where the air show
was based that the plane had crashed at.
Further up the line at Three Bridges, we passed the new
Thameslink depot with the new trains awaiting entry into service. These will
eventually form a 2 minute headway service through central London.
Into Gatwick, with the airport still busy.
I changed for a North Downs service back to Reading, and
onto a Bristol bound HST as far as Swindon. Leaving Didcot, the sun provided a
fitting end of day backdrop across South Oxfordshire.