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~ Laurence's football travels

Football: Wherever it may be

Daily Archives: April 14, 2012

Oft in Short Supply

14 Saturday Apr 2012

Posted by laurencereade in L

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Academy, Ayelstone, Daniel Wilks, dario gradi, FA Premier, james thornhill, Leicester City, Louis Tambini, Matt Robinson, Middlesex Road, passive aggression, Rob Paratore, Sports, Team, Watford, Youth

Friday 13th April 2012 ko 2.00pm

FA Premier Academy League Group C

LEICESTER CITY 2 (Paratore 37 Tambini 71)

WATFORD 0

Att 52 (h/c)

@ The Training Centre, Middlesex Road, Aylestone, Leicester

Entry FREE

No Programme/Team Sheet

Soup 80p

For a side in the second tier of adult football and the top one of U18’s the Leicester City Training facility is surprisingly low-key. There’s a large clubhouse which is out-of-bounds to spectators, 4 pitches, and a car park. The only clues to the money sloshing around in the top echelons of the game was the well-tended flower beds, and the helicopter parked at the far end. Perhaps that was there as an implication to the young players.

There were in fact two games taking place, both with Watford as the opposition. Lee and I parked behind the U16’s game which was annoying, as in the midst of a hail storm we’d have been perfectly happy to have watched from the car. Thankfully the weather soon abated and we strolled over to the U18’s pitch. It was simple enough to get the lineups and we settled down to watch the game.

As far as I know there are only two sides in the FA Premier Academy League never to have fielded a side in the adult Premier League, those being Crewe and the MK Dons. The first being recognition of Dario Gradi’s excellent Youth Policy at Gresty Road, the other being Dons, er, purchase of Wimbledon’s league position.

This fixture saw two Championship sides battle it out, and out first observation was the sheer number of foreign players on show. Surely the point of an academy side is to bring on HOME GROWN players? The second was how referee James Thornhill seemed to be controlling the game by a policy of passive aggression. Sadly it became all too clear why he was approaching the game in this manner. That’s because the players were hell-bent on contesting each and every decision. If ever a game was summed up by the phrase “Act like children and I’ll treat you like children,” this was it!

A nice interchange of passes between Rob Parratore and Matt Robinson saw the former do well to fire home to open the scoring, but the game soon got bogged down in dissent, and petty fouls. It would have stayed 1-0 but for an injury to visiting goalkeeper Daniel Wilks. With no specialist keeper on the bench he soldiered on to complete the fixture, but with an injured leg, he was powerless to prevent Louis Tambini’s scrambled effort from trickling over the line with three-quarters of the game gone.

Not great, and I did notice that former Northampton, Bristol Rovers and Oxford United manager Ian Atkins made his excuses and left at half time. He’d learned everything he needed to at that point. Sadly, so had everyone else, in a game where only one participant had shown any great common sense, the referee, who amazingly had managed to avoid booking anyone. Such things are oft in short supply.





One Stop From Home

14 Saturday Apr 2012

Posted by laurencereade in W

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Alex Gretton, Alveston, Chris Hands, Marc Jovanovic, Nursing Home Cup, Paul Nicholls, Redditch, Rory Milbourne, sewing needles, Stratford Alliance, Washford Lions, Washford Park

Thursday 12th April 2012 ko 6.15pm

Stratford Alliance Nursing Home Cup Quarter-Final

WASHFORD LIONS 2 (Milbourne 39 Jovanovic 62)

ALVESTON 0

Att 13 (h/c)

Entry FREE

Nothing for sale

The red sun was going down, way over the town of Redditch, famous for once being responsible for 90% of the world’s production of sewing needles. With the Halfords factory, dirty in the background, the three of us actually had a choice of games to watch. On the pitch nearer to the car park Redditch Reserves were taking on Kenilworth Town in another Stratford Alliance Cup competition. The choice of what to see proved to be an easy one when Lee carried on walking beyond Redditch’s pitch, and discovered a railed off pitch with dugouts.

It turned out that with that 100 metre walk we’d actually changed grounds, from Washford Lane to Washford Park, and stumbled upon Washford Lions’ OLD ground. They’re now using the 3G pitch at Studley FC just a short walk away, but that ground is only available on a Saturday, clearly 5-a-side takes precedence! So back home it was, and the issues with the venue became obvious very quickly. For one thing the pitch is rather bumpy, and the rail and dugouts have gaps, where presumably items have been stolen. The biggest issue though, is the sheer distance from the changing rooms, a good 300 metres, so no toilet facilities, and many parked their cars on the Studley road at the far side of the pitch and arrived already changed.

Washford have just won Division 2, so saw this fixture as a means getting an early test of the standard of play they’d encounter next season, as Alveston are still in the running to win the league. The trouble is, I’m not sure they got the test they thought they were getting. When I got the line-ups, Alveston admitted to fielding 3 youth team players, and writing this with the benefit of having their line-up for their league fixture on 23rd March vs Cubbington to hand, well there are 9 changes from that squad! Just forward Paul Nicholls and goalkeeper Alex Gretton played in both fixtures.

That may be why the game didn’t exactly catch fire, as Washford confident in their championship season always looked unlikely to lose. They had more ideas, and when Rory Milbourne gave them lead they looked utterly in control. Marc Jovanovic sealed the win mid-way into the second half it confirmed a straightforward victory.

We walked back to the car, passing the other game. That was still going with Kenilworth leading 4-2; it sounded a decent game, but I’ve no regrets for picking this game.





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