Posts Tagged ‘Alicante’

Hercules B v Atletico Saguntino, Sunday 11th January 2026, 11.30am

January 16, 2026

As it hasn’t really warmed up much Jen and I decided to have a week in Spain. The easiest option was an evening flight to Alicante from Teesside on a Friday night. The only downside was that it didn’t land until after ten and I thought it a bit late to collect a hire car and head off somewhere quieter.

Alicante itself is pretty good out of season though, warm enough for strolling about in a tee shirt and with far fewer visitors than would be around later in the year.

I was working during the week, but at the weekend we fitted a couple of walks in. The first one took us along the coast to Albufereta via a disused railway line and through some tunnels. The second one went back from the coast and up to the Sant Ferran castle. It gave us views down to the sea and also of the other castle, Santa Barbara. The second walk also incorporated a game at the Antonio Valls stadium.

The fixture was in the fifth tier between the B team of Hercules and visitors Atletico Saguntino. The hosts were mid-table with Saguntino second from top.

The area of town where the game was taking place was full of grounds. The main Hercules stadium was just across the road and there was an athletics field next door. An under-fourteen’s match was taking place nearby. There was also some other kind of indoor sports venue where the spectators were making a lot of noise. It might have been a swim meet. Perhaps with sharks or piranhas.

Jen and I arrived about five minutes before kick-off and found a spot in the main stand that was temporarily in the shade.

As well as our stand, there was another uncovered stand opposite, just slightly smaller. A few people were watching from a railing to the right where volleyball and basketball games were in progress. There was a small café with a handful of people congregated outside and a some benches that were popular, particularly the ones in the shade. I’d estimate the total crowd at about four hundred.

A fella with an impressive combover was directly in front of us. I reckon that he only had about an inch of hair remaining, but he had somehow managed to hide all evidence of hair loss. Fair play to him.

There weren’t many chances in the first half and whilst Saguntino were on top, it was goalless as the teams went off. I bought a couple of tiny empanadas from the café. They seemed to have nothing more than ketchup inside. I doubt they will catch on.

We switched to the smaller stand for the second half to try and take advantage of the shade. I’ve a feeling we nicked the spot of someone behind us in the queue for the ketchup pasties.

The visitors took the lead just after the hour when a corner led to a goalmouth scramble and an eventual poking home at the back post. Hercules applied pressure, but deep into added time they lost the ball and were hit on the break. Sagutino’s second goal confirmed the victory and after allowing the post-goal argy-bargy between the players to peter out, the ref brought matters to a conclusion without bothering to kick-off again.

Intercity v Eldense, Sunday 17th November 2019, 11.30am

March 5, 2020

Prior to moving on to Elche, Jen and I had spent four nights in Alicante. It’s somewhere that I’ve flown into before but had never stayed longer than the time it had taken to collect a hire car and head off somewhere quieter. It was ok, although I imagine that I might have been less impressed had we come at a busier time of year. In November it was quiet, warm enough to wander around in a tee-shirt and with enough tapas bars and Spanish eateries for me to forget that I was somewhere that attracts three million tourists a year.

Another advantage of visiting in November, rather than the summer is that the football season is in full swing and earlier in the week I’d noticed that a local side, Intercity, was playing its first ever Copa del Rey fixture. The 9pm kick-off didn’t tempt me away from an evening of knocking back rioja and feeding croquettas to pigeons but I made a plan to pop back for their next game the following Sunday.

Jen claimed to have better stuff to do than sit through a Group 6 game in the Tercera division but had she changed her mind would no doubt have been astonished by the quantity of cars trying to park up close to the Poliesportiu de Sant Joan more than half an hour before kick-off. I ended up leaving the hire car in a country lane a few minutes’ walk away before handing over ten euros to get in.

The cost struck me as a bit on the steep side, considering that I could have got into the second division game at Elche the night before for a similar sum.  Still, it was their first season in the fourth tier of Spanish football and few people were actually coughing up as most had season cards. It felt a bit like when the Riverside opened and people who had previously had little interest in the Boro, or even in football, were caught up in the attraction of shiny and new.

My ten euros entitled me to a backless seat bolted to concrete terracing that ran the length of one side of the pitch. It was the only area that you could watch from and part of the pitch was obscured by sections of fencing. The artificial pitch was set out not only with the markings for this game but also with a couple of five-a-side pitches. The goals from those pitches further obscured the view.

The teams entered the field to the strains of ‘The Final Countdown’ although it sounded like a re-mixed version of the tune that assaulted my ears in the eighties, making that one not such a final countdown after all. Intercity were in black and Eldense in a white kit that, quite appropriately I thought for this level, didn’t include the player’s names on their shirts.

Intercity opened the scoring after a quarter of an hour with a tremendous edge of the box volley from their left-back captain. His teammates took inspiration from his example and were soon firing in shots from distance, although without any success in the remainder of the first half.

Not long after the restart the long range shooting policy paid further dividends when a speculative welly from thirty yards was fumbled onto the post by the away keeper only for it to rebound, smack him on the back of his napper and end up in the net.

The size of the crowd continued to grow throughout the second half with a lot of people pitching up after the finish of a cross-country race next door. There were also a lot of kids kitted out in their Intercity tracksuits, perhaps having arrived straight from a game or training session of their own.

Eldense had their chances to get back into it, hitting the post and then having a penalty saved. The fourth–tier newcomers held out though before adding a last minute third goal for a score line that I thought probably flattered them.