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Football: Wherever it may be

~ Laurence's football travels

Football: Wherever it may be

Tag Archives: Chris Berezai

Glaw

05 Wednesday Sep 2012

Posted by laurencereade in D

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AAFC, Andrew Thomas, Carno, Chris Berezai, Dolgellau, Glaw, Mid Wales Hop, Mid Wales League, Rain, Sion Williams, Y Marian

Monday 27th August 2012 ko 3.00pm

Mid-Wales League Division One

DOLGELLAU AAFC 2 (Williams 62 70p)

CARNO 1 (Thomas 82)

Att 206

Entry/Programme Hop Ticket

Badge £3

Sticker £2

From Welshpool we headed out due west, giving the folks at Dyffryn Banw, our third game a wave as we passed by. From there is was into the wilds of Snowdonia, and across the border from Powys to Gwynedd, and the county town of the long since abolished county of Merionethshire. There is very much the feeling of being off the beaten track here, as even the main A458 snakes its way around the mountains before dropping into Dolgellau like an asphalt waterfall.

The name of the town is pronounced “Doll geth Lee” but the spelling has only been definitively decided on recently, in 1958. In fact, the local railway station until its closure under the Beeching axe, used signs saying variously Dolgelly, Dolgelley and Dolgellau! The town has been in the past a centre for Quakerism, and in the 19th century was the centre of a minor gold rush, and to this day the Clogau St Davids mine in Bontddu, and the Gwynfynydd mine in Ganllwyd have supplied gold for many royal weddings. Rally driver Gwyndaf Evans who won the 1996 British Rally Championship hails from here which seems somehow appropriate!

Other than the appalling weather, consistent and heavy rain, I was struck by how keen the club were to make people welcome. The club have no clubhouse of their own, so the rugby club’s facilities were co-opted, and despite the local council declaring the site “open land” the area was secured with temporary fencing so as to allow a gate to be taken. When the coaches arrived, a queue quickly formed, not good in the rain, but the club quickly took the initiative and shepherded ticket holders though another entrance. An excellent bit of quick thinking, and much appreciated by all concerned.

As organiser you love it when a club reads its briefing notes, and acts on them. Here they had no board for the line-ups so copied the line-ups out and left them in the bar for people to write down. During that time Chris, the two coach drivers and I were being given packed lunches by the club as ” I bet you haven’t had time to eat.” Space was also found for Derek Coupe to sit quietly, as although his health issues seem to have been resolved, he hasn’t got all of his strength back. Small things that cost nothing, but made a fantastic impression on us all.

We were glad of the stand at the half way line, although it’s a shame it incorporates the dugouts. Without it there would have been few places to avoid a soaking, a fact that may well have affected food sales as you had to queue outside for service. That would have been fantastic on a dry day, as you could watch the game while you waited, but on a day like this queueing was a trial. As organiser there are of course two things you can’t influence, the weather and the quality of the game.

And to be honest, the entertainment wasn’t quite of the quality we’d be used to. Perhaps we’d been thoroughly spoiled previously, but for a high percentage of the game this one looked like it had “Nil-Nil written all over it. It wasn’t that either side didn’t create chances, it’s just that they found a variety of ways to spurn them. Carno will no doubt have driven back to Powys wondering how they lost this, they had far more possession, but once Sion Williams fired home to collective a sigh of relief, that lead was quickly doubled, via the penalty spot. It speaks volumes for the game that on a hop where goals positively flowed, when Carno reduced the arrears with 8 minutes left, no one expected a come-back.

For all of that, I won’t remember Dolgellau AAFC (Amateur Athletic Football Club) for the game, the ground, or even the first completely bi-lingual programme I’ve seen on a hop. No, I’ll remember Dolgellau for its wonderful hard-working band of volunteers. And for a small club there is no better advert.

A stone circle means the town has hosted a National Eisteddfod of Wales, which it did in 1949, and the youth Eisteddfod in 1960 and 1994.


Celebrating the first Dolgellau goal!!


The Boost

05 Wednesday Sep 2012

Posted by laurencereade in W

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Tags

Chris Berezai, Chris Kamara, free kick, George Mitten, Ian Jones, Iwan Matthews, James Longford, Llansantffraid Village FC, Maesydre, Mid Wales Hop, Mid Wales League, Olver Clarke, Town, Wayne Austin, welsh premier league, Welshpool

Monday 22nd August 2012 ko 11.00am

Mid-Wales League Division One

WELSHPOOL TOWN 3 (Longford 9 I Jones 31 Mitten 39)

LLANSANTFFRAID VILLAGE 5 (Austin 11secs 25 72 Clarke 2 Matthews 40)

Att 211

Entry/Programme Hop Ticket

Badge £3

So, the final day of the Welsh hop, and the club whose game was the most difficult to schedule. With Welshpool having played in the Welsh Premier League comparatively recently, a lot of hoppers would have already visited. As organisers we knew that if the game was scheduled either at 3pm on any day, or as the last fixture many hoppers would either go elsewhere or head for home. Revisits aren’t popular, but Welshpool are members of the league, and as such deserve a decent turnout as much as anyone else.

Those who saw Welshpool struggle to take a point off Llansantffraid in the reversed fixture on last year’s hop, saw just how badly they’ve fallen from grace. Ten days before that season they’d had no players and were close to folding. It was hardly surprising that they finished rock bottom of Division One and were spared relegation only because of there was no relegation from the Cymru Alliance, the league above. That season also saw Sky TV’s Chris Kamara guesting for the club when his tv commitments allowed. It provided some much needed publicity, and Chris and I were told by the club that Kamara was “..a joy to deal with.”

Of course a town the size of Welshpool should be able to sustain a club in a far higher league. The town is situated on the River Severn, and its propensity to flood gives it its the Welsh language name Y Trallwng, meaning ‘the marshy or sinking land.’ In fact until 1835 the English name was simply “Pool,” the “Welsh-” prefix being added to avoid confusion with Poole in Dorset.

Whilst Maes Y Dre was never really up to Welsh Premier ground standards, the ground being shared with cricket, there’s a lot to like here. The most obvious is the large pitched-roof stand, although you do have to be careful how you pick your seat, some are broken, others have little leg-room, it offered plenty of cover on a wet day. The cricket pavilion balcony on an opposite corner also served useful purpose. Behind and to the left The Long Mountain (Cefn Digoll) provided a spectacular backdrop.

The club worked hard at their morning. There were bacon rolls, together with Barra Brith and Welsh cakes (The Mid Wales League took Chris’ comment that he loves Welsh cakes totally at face value – barely a club failed to have them on sale!). I enjoyed a cup of tea, before helping out with the line-ups board. Unusually I was able to grab a seat just before kick-off.

That proved to be no bad thing as Llansantffraid scored after a mere 11 seconds, Wayne Austin gliding through a space where a right back should have been to open the scoring. He set up Oliver Clarke a minute later for the second, but after that a shell-shocked Welshpool began to find their feet. James Longford reduced the arrears before Austin restored the 2 goal lead. Clearly defending was not a priority as Ian Jones scored following a corner, then George Mitten’s superb strike almost unbelievably saw Welshpool draw level. It didn’t last, as the sieve-like home defence opened up once again a minute later,  to allow Iwan Matthews a free shot to make it 3-4 at half-time.

Much as the travellers would have liked it to have been the case, a 7-goal half was never likely to be repeated, and the teams noticeably tightened things up, as the rain fell. There remained the formality of Wayne Austin completing his hat-trick which he did without a fuss, to make it clear what those present had long since known. That is had Welshpool concentrated for the first 10 minutes they may well have got something from this game. Still, unlike the evidence of their hop fixture last year, this time they do at least have something to work with. I wish them well.

Fred Flood



Welshpool’s equaliser


The Bells of Aberdovey

02 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by laurencereade in A

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Tags

Aberdovey, Aberdyfi, Andre Marsh, bells of aberdovey, Ben Richards, Chris Berezai, Daniel Thomas, Ian Lee, Llewelyn Hughes, Luke Rickard, Mid Wales Hop, Mid Wales League, Tim Holt, Zac Smith

Sunday 26th August 2012 ko 3.00pm

Mid-Wales League Division One

ABERDYFI 6 (Holt 43p 77p 90 L Rickard 46 Smith 89 B Richards 90)

BONT 5 (Marsh 18 Thomas 21 Hughes 28p 78 Lee 31)

Att 324

Entry/Programme Hop Ticket

Badge £3

From Bryncrug it didn’t take long to reach the seaside town of Aberdyfi, or Aberdovey if you’d prefer the Anglicised version. This pretty town is the southern-most point of Gwynedd and the Snowdonia National Park, and the hills at the edge of town act as a reminder of the mountains to the north and east.

The village is the subject of the folk song, “The Bells of Aberdovey,” and refers to the legend of a submerged former kingdom of Lowland Hundred beneath Cardigan Bay, and its bells which, it is said, can be heard ringing beneath the water.

The Penrhos Field is on the main road in town, and is close to the railway station. There’s not much in the way of facilities, just the one viewable side, and a couple of bus shelters for cover. What makes the place is the hilly backdrop with its pastel-coloured houses complete with one resident watching the game through binoculars! Continue reading →

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Stop me and buy one

02 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by laurencereade in T

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Ben Holt, Bible, BOW STREET, Bryncrug, Chris Berezai, coastal defences, delicious honey, GroundhopUK, Halo, Ice Cream, Mark Edmondson, Mary Jones, Mid Wales Hop, Mid Wales League, Paul Grant, Tywyn

Sunday 26th August 2012 ko 11.30am

Mid-Wales League Division One

TYWYN/BRYNCRUG 4 (Edmondson 27 Holt 42 54 Grant 44p)

BOW STREET 0

Att 267

Entry/Programme Hop Ticket

Badge £3

Ice Cream £1

Sunday beckoned, and its a factor of the longer hops that you inevitably feel slightly more tired than the day before. Not great when there’s two full days’ hopping left! Still, the weather was glorious, and there was a happy hubbub on my coach as Alan left Newtown and headed west to the Gwynedd coast.

Perhaps it was fortune, or Minsterley Coaches supplying the perfect man for the job, but I soon spotted that Alan wasn’t bothering with either a map or sat-nav. I asked if he was happy where he was going, and he said,”

“Absolutely! I’ve played at most of these grounds, I’m just trying to remember whether this one’s on the left or right side of the road!”

Now, just for the record, it was on the right, and Alan had guessed correctly, so we pulled into Cae Chwarae in plenty of time to meet the club officials and see what was on offer.

Nowadays Tywyn is a tourist haven, but in 1990 a high tide and rough seas caused the town’s flood defences to be breached.  4 square miles of land was flooded, affecting 2,800 properties and causing areas of the resort to be evacuated. The coastal defences have since been reconstructed and significantly enhanced as a result.

Even though the football club plays a mile or two north at Bryncrug (pronounced Brin-creeg) its Tywyn that provides the identity, and a particularly delicious honey flavoured ice cream that sold very well for £1. Bryncrug’s history is a little more puritan, being where Mary Jones settled after famously walking barefoot for 25 miles from Llanfihangel-y-Pennant to Bala, in order to buy a bible.

Referee Mark Farington seemed totally unconcerned as he let Chris jot down the line-ups to put on our new whiteboard. I got the distinct impression that he’d have approached the game the same if there’d had been 20, 200, or 20,000 present.

I had just enough time to explore my surroundings before kick-off; there’s only 2 sides available for viewing, and a steward assiduously patrolled behind a goal lacking a rail. There’s a small 50 seat stand set at an angle to the pitch, that had its view impeded by the sheer number of hoppers present. I didn’t get to see much of the game during the first half, what with chatting with Paul from the North-West Counties League, and to club officials, and doing the crowd count. The warm weather made for a pleasant morning’s viewing, and everything was going swimmingly.

Still, I did get to see Bow Street have a goal disallowed for a dubious looking offside, before Tywyn took the game by the scruff of the neck. Mark Edmondson’s strike gave them the lead and two goals just before half-time ended Bow Street’s interest in the tie.

After the break I did get to see more of the game, and Paul Tolchard very kindly helped me to fill in the gaps. The law of sod, of course means that the bit you can see is never as good as the bit you missed!

Captain Matthew Jones was clearly leading from the front and Tywyn clearly decided to tighten up and defend what they’d got. Bow Street tried hard but found no answer to some stout defending, and you wondered at what point they would over-commit themselves.

Unfortunately for them that happened within 10 minutes of the restart, Ben Holt taking advantage of some slack defending. The remainder of the game saw Tywyn dominating and it always looked inevitable that our little run of both teams scoring would end.

Near the end I spied Taunton-based Martin Bamforth looking rather nonplussed, I asked why, and he revealed why. He’d won a spoon on the club’s tombola, but wondered he he needed to enter again to win the knife and fork!

Trying not to laugh, I found Alan and Clive, as they’d had to a park up a short distance from the ground and gathered everyone for the short trip south to Aberdyfi. The day was shaping up nicely.

Martin and his spoon

The Tywyn public address system



 

 

Bibliophile

02 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by laurencereade in H

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

baked potatoes, Book Town, Bronllys, Chris Berezai, film braveheart, Gavin Perry, groundhopping, GroundhopUK, Hay on Wye, Hay St Marys, Kevin Jones, Lee Brooks, Mid Wales Hop, Mid Wales League, Mid Wales South, real ales, Steve Goodwin, Talgarth, Town

Saturday 25th August 2012 ko 7.30pm

Mid-Wales League Division 2

HAY ST MARYS 3 (K Jones 26 Goodwin 44p 49)

TALGARTH TOWN 2 (Perry 7 Brooks 87)

Att 317

Entry/Programme Hop Ticket

Badge £3

A quirk of the journey from Presteigne to Hay-on-Wye, is that you spend the vast majority of it in England, ducking back across the Wye only to enter this pretty bibliophile town. That’s right, Hay is Wales’ book town, the English and Scottish equivalents being Sedbergh and Wigtown. It is Hay though which started the practice, although there’s more to the place than just the 30 or so second hand bookshops.

There’s two castles, which as the border has moved over the centuries, have frequently changed hands. The town only really settled down when Wales was taken over by King Edward I Longshanks Continue reading →

Festival

02 Sunday Sep 2012

Posted by laurencereade in P

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Tags

Adriano Girolami, anglo saxon, Chris Berezai, Danny Evans, Jordan McQueen, Lee Davies, Liam Jones, Llanandras, Mid Wales Hop, Mid Wales League, Presteigne, Rhosgoch, Roberts Christian, Trefor Lloyd, welsh cup

Saturday 25th August 2012 ko 4.30pm

Mid-Wales League Division 2

PRESTEIGNE ST ANDREWS 5 (Crow 7 Girolami 9 Roberts 18 56 D Evans 65)

RHOSGOCH RANGERS 5 (T Lloyd 24 Doman 45 L Davies 50 McQueen 78 L Jones 90)

Att 260

Entry/Programme Hop Ticket

Badge £1

Pint Glass £2

The small town of Presteigne is close to the border with England, and these days is very much a gateway to the Principality. Its name in Welsh is Llanandras which gives the ground its name, and the most notable building is the local church of St Andrew, which contains Anglo-Saxon elements. It’s the church that spawned the club, and gives it its suffix. Land owned by Captain Lewis RN was used to hold first Italian and then German POW’s during the Second World War and this land is now Llanandras Park.

It’s a set-up clearly capable of staging football at far higher level than the club’s lowly position. In fact Presteigne were scheduled to be on the very Mid-Wales hop, but an away draw at Ammanford in the Welsh cup put paid to any notion Continue reading →

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Above & Beyond

30 Thursday Aug 2012

Posted by laurencereade in N

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Callum Matthews, Carl Price, Chris Berezai, Clun, CPD, GroundhopUK, Jamie Layton-Morris, Mid Wales Hop, Mid Wales South, New Radnor, Newcastle, Owain Glyndŵr, radnor castle, Radnor Valley, School Lane, Scott Oxford

Saturday 25th August 2012 ko 1.45pm

Mid-Wales South League

RADNOR VALLEY 2 (Layton-Morris 33 Matthews 41)

NEWCASTLE 3 (Oxford 22 26 Price 47)

Att 212

Entry/ Programme by Hop Ticket

Badge £3

Another first for the hop on this game, the first ever international! New Radnor may be a mere 16 miles from Newcastle-on-Clun, but the latter is on Shropshire, England, and the club plays in Wales by convenience. That convenience doesn’t look all that convenient as Newcastle won the league last season but were refused promotion to to the Mid Wales League….because they’re English! Continue reading →

Steamed Up!

29 Wednesday Aug 2012

Posted by laurencereade in L

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Abermule, Chris Berezai, Chris Gethin, David Anthony, dolforwyn hall hotel, Geraint Jones, groundhop, GroundhopUK, Llanfair United, Mid Wales League, Mount Field, narrow gauge line, newtown station, standard gauge, Welsh hop

Friday 24th August 2012 ko 6.30pm

Mid-Wales League Division 2

LLANFAIR UNITED 4 (G Jones 13 80 Gethin 24 74)

ABERMULE 1 (Anthony 31)

Att 261

I should start by declaring an interest in the next 11 articles. The Welsh Hop is organised by GroundhopUK and I am Chris Berezai’s deputy. So what you read will be very much from the perspective of the organiser!

In this case it meant being at the hop base, The Dolforwyn Hall Hotel, near Newtown, around 11am. That’s been the hop’s home for the last 3 years, this year sadly being the last, as we’ve run out of clubs in the Mid-Wales League! Still this year’s event was a good chance to go out with a bang, and with a record number of pre-booked tickets sold, and a second coach in operation for the first time, we were good to go. Continue reading →

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