Archive for November, 2025

Middlesbrough v Ipswich Town, Friday 17th October 2025, 8pm

November 30, 2025

I wasn’t confident of getting to this game as my flight home from Lulea wasn’t scheduled to land at Teesside until 5pm. You’d think that would be sufficient, but I’ve been delayed for one reason or another on quite a few of my recent trips. In order to avoid any uncertainty about Harry being able to attend, I’d arranged with him that his Dad would use my card and take him. If I did get back in time, I’d make my own way there and just buy a ticket. Secretly I was quite happy with this arrangement as I was none too keen to stand up for ninety minutes in the South Stand after a day of travelling.

In the end, my flight landed on time, Harry’s Dad couldn’t make it anyway and so it was the now regular trio of Tom, Harry and I that went. We were early enough to call into the fanzone pre-match where Tom’s cunning plan of buying two pints to cut down on the queuing was thwarted by Harry’s equally cunning plan of drinking one of them himself. He’s a tall lad for his age, so didn’t really look out of place.

Our defeat at Portsmouth meant that we had slipped behind Coventry at the top of the table but three points in this game would take us back to the summit, at least until the following afternoon.

The previous weeks’ international duty likely impacted on selection, with Browne retaining his place alongside Hackney and with Morris starting on the bench. Nypan had made his full debut for Holland and also began on the bench with Burgzorg returning.

I was surprised that Akpom didn’t start for Ipswich but pleased that he got a decent reception when he was called upon. I doubt that he’ll ever have as successful a season as that last one that he had with us. Sometimes a player just fits right and he certainly did then.

Ipswich had brought more than two thousand fans, which is a highly commendable turnout for a Friday night game that was on TV. They probably thought they were going to have a decent time of it when they were awarded a penalty just before the break. However, a very good save from Sol Brynn was compounded by us going straight up the other end and scoring. From thinking that they would be going in at half time a goal up to actually going in a goal down must have been hard for Ipswich to take.

Former boo boy target Morgan Whittaker added a second to aid his redemption before we had to endure a nervy final fifteen after they pulled one back. On the way out we were once again able to sing ‘We are top of the league, say, we are top of the league’. It might only be for the following nineteen hours, but it’s still a good feeling.

Lulea Hockey v HC Bolzano, Tuesday 14th October 2025, 7pm

November 29, 2025

The Swedish football season is drawing to an end, with daytime temperatures in Lulea already dropping to around zero. The alternatives in the Swedish winter appear to be ice hockey, or simply ‘hockey’ over here, and basketball. I’m happy to watch most sports and had already checked to see when the fixtures coincided with my business trips.

Lulea seems to be a hockey town, rather than football, although that may very well be true of most places in Sweden. The local allegiance to the puck, rather than the ball, was strengthened by Lulea winning last season’s domestic championship. That’s an impressive feat for a small town close to the arctic circle.

The league title meant that this year Lulea would also play in the Champions League. I managed to pick up tickets online for a fixture with an Italian side at Lulea’s Coop Norbotten Arena.

The group stage of the Champions League was drawing to a close with each side needing a win to progress to the knockout rounds. The international competition isn’t as popular as the domestic league and despite the six thousand capacity arena was announced as being half-full, it seemed quieter than that.

For those of you not familiar with the format, hockey is played over three twenty-minute sessions, with an eighteen-minute break between each period. That’s pretty much the perfect timetable to punctuate the action with regular beers.

It was a close game. Lulea went two goals up but were pegged back and a late Bolzano equalizer took the game to overtime. When this happens, the teams drop from six players to four and play next goal the winner. The extra space on the ice meant that it was never likely to go too long and Lulea sealed the win just fourteen seconds after the restart. It’s not as good as football, but it’s a pleasant way to spend a winter’s evening.

Doncaster Rovers Belles v Chorley Women, Sunday 12th October 2025, 2pm

November 28, 2025

This game came about because Jen was attending a Sunday afternoon talk in Sheffield about murder. Jen and I get on great, but if ever we don’t then I doubt she would need to bother with a divorce. She knows all about which poisons are hard to detect, for example, and the multiple ways to dispose of a corpse.

As a way of keeping on her good side, the previous two days had been spent at gigs, Jeffrey Lewis in York and the Twisterella festival in Middlesbrough.

The Jeffrey Lewis gig was at The Crescent in York on the Friday evening. We stayed over on what was a busier day than it might have been due to the races being on. By the time we got to town, most of the population were staggering around pissed. Maybe there is some benefit in knowing how to feed people to pigs.

Lewis terms himself as ‘anti-folk’. I’ve no real thoughts on whether that really is a thing or not, but he put on a good show in a small venue.

Saturday was Twisterella, a music festival based mainly at Teesside University. With three stages within about twenty yards of each other it was very easy to see bands in quick succession. Some I liked, others I was less keen on, but the ones that weren’t for me provided an opportunity to go out to the terrace and catch up with people for an outdoor drink on a day when it was just warm enough to do so.

Later on, we wound our way down to Baker Street for a George Bailey pop up set at the Twisted Lip and that might have been my favourite part of the day.

My plan for occupying myself whilst Jen was doing her murdering lessons was to go to watch Sheffield Women play at their Home of Football stadium. Unfortunately, it was a fixture that had been rescheduled for some other date and neither Futbology nor I had properly checked. A quick search revealed that there weren’t any new ground options available, but there was a game at Rotherham’s old ground, Millmoor. I headed there instead.

I’d last been inside thirty-nine years ago in our third division promotion season, although I had mooched around the outside when taking in a game at the nearby New York Stadium a couple of years ago. Rotherham moved on from Millmoor in 2013, but it seems longer, both in my memory and from the way the stadium looked.

I parked across the road from the ground, although if I’d driven on for fifty yards, I could have left the car at the ground itself. After initially just wandering in through an open door, I went back out and re-entered via a turnstile having handed over four quid. Only two stands were open. The main stand was fenced off, and it looked like seats had been removed. I don’t know whether that was just to recycle them or whether it was part of a pending demolition process.

It was like going back in time. Millmoor was quite an old-fashioned ground in the eighties and the current layer of dust across the stadium just added to the feeling that I was back in a bygone age. The only modern day quirk was a ‘No Vaping’ sign. I got chatting to a steward and he mentioned that prior to taking the job it had been fifty years since he was last inside the ground, as part of a half-time marching band.

Chorley were the better side. They took an early lead from the penalty spot and added a second before half-time. At the break I nipped out for an egg and bacon sandwich from a van before watching the second half from various vantage points in the stand along the side of the pitch. There were no more goals and Chorley took the points.

Harrogate Railway Athletic v Ilkley Town, Tuesday 7th October 2025, 7.45pm

November 22, 2025

Harrogate isn’t too far away and I’d had a trip in mind for a while. My intention had been to supplement a game with some tea and cake at Betty’s or maybe have a drink of sulfurous spa water. In the end though I didn’t bother with any of the add-ons and just drove straight to Harrogate Railway Athletic’s Station View ground for a Northern Counties East League Cup game with Ilkley Town.

The ground was buried deep inside a housing estate, and I had to do a couple of laps of the perimeter before I found the entrance. It was just as hard to find a parking space, but fortunately I made it just before kick-off.

It was five quid admission. I bought a programme and was given a team sheet. I’d estimate that there were around a hundred spectators, mainly leaning against the barrier on one side of the ground. There were a few people and a couple of spaniels on the opposite side on an elevated standing. I got myself a sausage sandwich and took up a seat in a five-row covered stand behind one of the goals.

Tony Dorigo sat a few seats along from me. A lot of the locals were pestering him, not Shearer in Newcastle levels, but enough that it would piss me off if I were him. I kept my distance. Maybe his winning goal in the Zenith Data final still rankles. Some bloke sold me a fiver’s worth of raffle tickets and then revealed that the prize was a bottle of wine. I suspect that I could have bought the prize for not much more than that.

A few kids were winding up the Ilkley keeper and earned a telling off from an old bloke who looked like he thought he was important. He threatened to have them thrown out if they crossed his path again.

It was goalless at half-time and I went for a slash. I was warned that the toilets were in a sorry state. It looked like there had been a gangland shooting in one of the cubicles, but it was nothing more than ketchup squirted from sachets all over the walls, bowl and floor.

Whilst I don’t envy whoever had to clean it up, I had a wry smile at the prospect of the officious bloke finding out. Not surprisingly there was no sign anywhere of the young kids that he had been berating earlier. It’s what kids do. I remember super glueing dead moles to the ceiling of a toilet block as a kid, as if they were defying gravity to walk around upside down. I doubt I’d do it nowadays, being a grown-up and all, particularly a grown-up without ready access to mole corpses.

There were no goals in the second half either and the tie went straight to pens. By this time, I was stood near the dugouts and overheard one of the Harrogate coaching staff asking his players ‘does anyone want to go first?’

The distinct lack of penalty planning wasn’t an issue though as Harrogate prevailed to take their place in the next round.

South Bank United v Streetlam Farmers, Sunday 5th October 2025, 10.30am

November 19, 2025

The weather had improved with Storm Amy moving on elsewhere and so I thought I’d take in a Sunday morning fixture. I’ve not really looked too much at the local Sunday League, but a quick search threw up a game in the North Riding Sunday Challenge Cup. It was between South Bank United who play in the middle tier of three in the Langbaurgh Sunday League and Streetlam Farmers who turn out in the lower of two divisions of the Hambleton Combination.

The main attraction for me was that the venue was St Peter’s Catholic College. That’s the modern name for St Peter’s School which was the alma mater of Wilf Mannion. That meant that I might be going to watch a game on a pitch that had been graced by the Golden Boy.

A fair bit of online research, more that some people might consider appropriate, led me to the conclusion that St Peter’s relocated to their current site early in the Second World War and some seven years after Wilf had left school. Oh well. There’s not much distance between the two locations though, so who knows whether he ever had a kickabout on the current pitch.

The pitch wasn’t too bad for Sunday League. There wasn’t anywhere to sit unless, like two ladies had done, you brought your own chair. The goal posts had no stanchions and there was so much net attaching tape stuck to them that it may not have been removed since Wilf’s heyday.

The players were just as you’d imagine. At least one was older than me, some were fatter, and the subs were smoking and vaping. I saw everything that I expected bar some pre-match vomiting.

It was a good-natured game, but one-sided. By the time we reached half-time, South Bank were five-nil ahead. Play resumed after a brief three-minute break, which was barely sufficient time for the lad who went for a piss in the bushes to take up his position. Streetlam had the wind behind them in the second half which made it a little more competitive but it finished up as a comprehensive nine-two win for the hosts.