Thursday 30 November 2017

John Deere In the Headlights... Jess McVey's new single: a poem...

John Deere, Headlighting…

The gravelly stomping beat suggests turmoil
In the singer’s mind, having driven home late 
To please and surprise her waiting guy;
 Her pleasure is garnished with lashings of thrill,
Until she discovers that he has become embroiled
With another girl on a bawdy midnight, roadie date
And thus anger and retribution begin to rise,
As the John Deere is hunted in her headlights’ eyes…

Her voice is soulful, the hurt and anger are sheer,
But shocked, he’s frozen, he needs to disappear;  
He revs his engine, rips the tractor into gear,
As the singer despises that the girl’s drinking her beer… 
The John Deere’s in the headlights, the song rocks on in the chase,
As vengeance shows hostile in her once trusting face…     

Pete Ray
November 30th 2017

Jessica McVey’s new track: ‘John Deere In the Headlights’…
   

   

WW2 GAS MASKS FOR BABIES: A POEM...

Floss And The Gas Masks For Babies…

Mrs Muggins next door to us,
Floss, she liked to be called,
Had triplets, all born within two hours.
The nurses were quite appalled.

All three were ugly, just like their mum
And loud, their cries were like shouts;
The boy grew up smelling like cabbage,
The girls both reeked of sprouts.

Once, when they were just two years of age
Floss set off to the store
To claim her rations and stand in a queue,
But her pram sagged close to the floor.

A bag, an umbrella and three baby gas-masks
Hung from the contraption on wheels;
The triplets bobbed their heads up and down
Like three identical seals.

A siren sounded: Gas Attack!
And Floss was forced into action,
She pulled on her own mask terribly quickly
Improving her looks just a fraction.

She panicked and looked at the bawling brats,
The smell of soiled nappies was acute;
She grabbed one of their masks and then her Tommy
And shoved in the wailing young brute.

She strapped him in and belted him up
Then forced in six pumps of air;
She repeated the process with Bertha and young Floss,
All done with the minimum of care.

The triplets were bellowing, taking minimal breaths,
Their nappies were gradually filling;
She hung the masks on the sides of her pram
And prayed she’d get home, “God willing…”

Big Floss unlocked her door and unclipped the babes
Then carried them into the hall;
The masks came off, they had all survived,
Despite the rather close call.

The tears still flowed but the masks lay silent,
They had done their jobs well, no doubts,
Yet when Floss removed hers there was the unmistakeable odour
Of faeces, cabbage and sprouts.

Pete Ray

The problems associated with babies’ gas masks during World War 2 on the Home Front…

Probably fortunate that they were never actually needed…

The images are from my WW2 teaching sessions in Birmingham Museum...











Tuesday 28 November 2017

CHELMSLEY TOWN 0-3 RACING CLUB WARWICK: FULL REPORT & IMAGES...

Chelmsley Mugged By The Piltdown Men

Chelmsley Town 0-3 Racing Club Warwick

This was a very odd game in that none of the two teams’ main goalscorers were on show from the start. Chelmsley’s Jemuel Mills, with 6 goals, wasn’t a starter, not even a substitute and of Warwick’s top four scorers, Sean Kavanagh and Luke Church (with 10 and 8 respectively) were missing, as was Adam Knight (7 goals) whilst Luke Cole, also with 7 for the Racers was on the replacement bench. Indeed, RCW had made a number of changes, probably with Saturday’s FA Vase game against Wisbech in mind, replacing all of the defensive four from last Saturday’s victory at Stafford Town but also drafting in Josh Cole, Josh Blake and Joe Carter. Leading scorer and Jurassic carnivore Kavanaghsaurus Rex was no doubt away hunting for prey around Warwick Racecourse, using those small clutching front limbs to claw horse-meat into his voracious jaws. This information was passed to me by a team-mate but Martin Hutchcox will remain nameless…
AS THE TOSS IS MADE, THE TWO OLD FOSSILS STRETCH THEIR LIMBS...

Chelmsley fielded a gargantuan player of their own, in Kieran Fitzgerald, a true beast with a fine touch on the ball, a deliverer of set-pieces and a guy I have watched regularly over recent years. He took five or six free-kicks from a similar inside-left channel during this encounter, around 25 to 30 yards from goal, showing just where RCW committed the majority of their fouls. Ah, fouls… A trip by Racer Paul Holland earned a caution in the early stages of this match, yet home skipper Rob Ellis crashed into an opponent wildly to earn, er, a wagging finger from the referee who was as inconsistent as Warwick’s midfielder Henry Leaver was very consistent in his footballing performance. During the second period, Racer Michael Ellis was rightly booked for an accumulation of fouls, yet home defender Lydon Weller got away with a very late challenge, as did replacement Kaine Williams, who must then have thought that old fossil Josh Blake was fair game late on as he crashed him over the touchline like a Triceratops launching a charge into an unsuspecting Iguanodon. No caution there either…
A HERD OF CHELMSLEYS...

A deft early strike by Josh Cole was followed by some huff and puff by Town, then a couple of Josh O’Grady shots and a penalty goal for the guests, won by O’Grady. ‘Tricky’ slid like a Raptor under James Sawyer’s challenge, to the defender’s horror, his face that of a Stegosaurus whose tail spikes had been roughed up and the spot-kick was duly scored by Rich Powell. The busy hosts were thus stunned just before the interval arrived. The second period was messy, error-strewn and lacked any real pattern at all, especially after a smart Joe Carter strike put the Racers 0-3 ahead, leaving Town to chew on the conciliatory titbits left behind. It was like the carcass of a Parasaurolophus had been gorged and then abandoned by a group of Allosaurs, leaving the losers to feed on the leftovers. In truth though, Chelmsley were unable to cause visiting ‘keeper Tom Cross any more trouble than a couple of falls to collect simple shots and to watch as a couple of headers flew off target.
POWELL DEMONSTATES HIS FINE IMPRESSION OF A FLAMINGO...

KICK-OFF...

The Racers raced into action like the swift-seizing Velociraptors of pre-history, with Blake having a shot blocked by the combative Sawyer and then Josh Cole leaping like a lizard at an insect but failing to get a difficult header from O’Grady’s corner on target. Josh Cole and Leaver combined smartly to win another corner, with the latter taking it on the left flank and although the trajectory was quite low, a defender appeared to misjudge the ball at the near post and the lurking Josh Cole turned it sweetly into goal from a few yards out.
A LONELY BRACHIOSAURUS SEARCHES TO SATISFY HIS HERBIVORE TENDENCIES... 

0-1: JOSH COLE...

Lewis Hudson made a fine rush from left-back for the guests but when he reached the 18 yard line the referee blew for an infringement and awarded Town a free-kick for a trip, it appeared. A fine right-side cross by O’Grady was flicked on by a defender and struck another Chelmsley player, forcing goalie James Kelly into action, swooping left to grab the deflected ball like a Pterodactyl poaching a fish. Eventually though, or ‘dreckley’, as the Cornish say, meaning later rather than not at all, Chelmsley forced themselves back into the contest and much of the credit must go to Rob Ellis and his two forwards Fitzgerald and Jamie Barrett, whose work ethic was admirable. Hudson made a saving tackle for the Racers then a couple of corners were looped in by Fitzgerald, the second of which allowed Sawyer to shoot from 17 yards but a timely block by the excellent Warwick skipper Jamie Coleman deflected the effort for another flag-kick.
THE REFEREE REMEMBERS THAT HE HADN'T USED ANY DEODORANT THIS MORNING...


Cross was cross when a cross (is that right?) saw him baulked by an attacker and lose the ball, like a Diplodocus losing a particularly juicy leaf from the upper reaches of a prehistoric tree, yet no free-kick was given. Fitzpatrick’s first inside-left channel free-kick was then taken and it was a delivery rather than a shot which bounced past the far upright, before the ‘number 10’ built like a concrete shed received a short pass from Barrett and fired a low 18 yard shot which led to a sprawl, a grasp and a grab by Cross. The initial repost by Chelmsley had been dealt with fairly comfortably, mainly due to Coleman’s control and Holland’s wholesome defending (yes, Holland marked Barrett: you couldn’t make that up, could you?) Coleman possesses an evil stare too, like that of a particularly angry lizard-hipped Spinosaurus but in fairness, he appears to be a fine character to have playing with you, rather than agin ye… 
HOLLAND LOOKS AGHAST...
Leaver’s left-side corner for the Racers was taken short to Hudson who fed O’Grady for an 18 yard first-timer which curled just past the right stick, with Kelly diving desperately. O’Grady then combined with Josh Cole to set up Blake but the Piltdown Man was beaten to the ball by the advancing Kelly, number 1… A warning was issued to Holland for a trip, O’Grady made a slick and tricky run but was blocked by the home defence and then Holland’s next trip earned him a yellow card. Having practised his inside-left free-kicking once, Fitzgerald was offered two more attempts and although Cross collected the first  (a shot)  comfortably, Sawyer rose to head the second onto the roof of the RCW net. Rob Ellis’ wild tackle went unpunished bar the concession of a free-kick which O’Grady curled only centimetres past the left upright from 25 yards, then the hosts attacked again but from a left-side corner, the Racers headed clear and Powell blocked a rebound well at the edge of his own penalty-box.
"IF YOU DON'T CAUTION ME, I'LL SEND YOU SOME AFTER-SHAVE FOR CHRISTMAS..."

And then O’Grady did what O’Grady does: he cut inside from the right-wing, across a defender, in this case Sawyer, who challenged the tricky chap and thought he’d won the ball but O’Grady tumbled like a shoebill stork thrashing itself into an African pond after a lungfish and the official signalled a penalty. Powell stepped forward and left-footed the ball just to the right of Kelly, who had fallen to his left and just prior to the interval, the Racers were 0-2 ahead. A late Town corner and also a free-kick were defended by RCW and Hudson was responsible for the final clearance, as the half ended.
0-2...

ASSIST BY 7, GOAL BY 10...

The interval saw the Town replacements warming up with gnashing teeth and sharpened claws, whilst the spare Racers were, er, standing chatting about pre-history, the art of the Pre-Raphaelites and the early 1960s music of the REAL Piltdown Men, whose tracks were entitled ‘Fossil Rock’, ‘Piltdown Rides Again’, ‘McDonald’s Cave’, ‘Big Lizzard’, ‘Bubbles In the Tar’, ‘Gargantua’, Flint Stomp’ and the unforgettable ‘Brontosaurus Stomp’, amongst others. Yeah, really…
LOOKING BEHIND THE 'GRANDSTAND' AT THE CLUBHOUSE... 

HALF 2 BEGINS...

Holland sliced a Fitzgerald free-kick wide of his own goal at the start of period two and the rugged Matt Kent nodded the subsequent corner by the very same Fitzgerald off target beyond the left upright but following a dithering, unkempt and careless beginning to the half, the visitors suddenly moved forth and netted a third and decisive goal. O’Grady threatened on the right, Michael Ellis fed the ball inside to Leaver and his typically measured pass into the penalty-area was seized upon by Carter in a flash and he swiftly turned to lash a 10 yard left-booter low into the left side of the net.

KENT & POWELL...

0-3 & CARTER THE SCORER...

O’Grady, fossilising on the right-flank through a lack of service, was replaced by Luke Cole whose expression was that of a rather displeased Pteranodon and when Josh Cole was knocked to the ground injured and sat distraught on the 4G carpet, Luke decided to pass to Josh, a kindly if unwise decision… Ryan Billington duly replaced the hurt Josh Cole, Michael Ellis received his deserved caution and Chelmsley added more chaos to the disjointed proceedings by replacing Fitzgerald and the lively Barrett with James Taylor (wasn’t he married to Carly Simon? Whatever, James, ‘You’ve Got A Friend’…) and the robust Williams.
LUKE COLE PASSES TO JOSH COLE'S ARSE...

It really did appear that the Racers simply wanted to get a shower and return home by this point and Town did at least manage to regain some pride and muster some limited offense despite the continuing scrappy nature of the half. The influential Town midfielder Adam Keeley beat Holland in the air to glance a free-kick wide of the right stick and then after Blake nearly reached a clever through pass by Luke Cole, a low Williams shot trickled to Cross who fell upon it like his Christmas turkey was attempting an escape. Michael Ellis was replaced by Racer Jack Taylor, so the two number 14s were on the pitch together and actually both named J. Taylor. Chelmsley also introduced Joe Parke, I believe, although in the dim light, it was tough not only to spot his number but also that of the replaced player.
"SORRY MATE, I THOUGHT YOU WERE DUMMYING A DEFENDER..."

As Warwick clenched their teeth, set their frowns and clawed their arms like clones of Kavanaghsaurus Rex in grim determination, they kept Town’s late flurries at bay. Weller and Williams dished out their two naughty fouls without recrimination, then after Coleman had dived to head away a Rob Ellis drive, Blake was derailed by Williams’ flying assault, James Taylor slid a good scoring chance left to right across the face of the RCW goal and finally, following some decent passing, Keeley summed up his team’s evening by slicing his left foot shot way off target as the game edged to a close. 
"IN MY DREAM, KAVANAGH WAS THIS TALL BUT WITH GIGANTIC CLAWS..."

BLAKE PLACES A HAND TOWARDS THE COLES...

I liked Rob Ellis’ contribution for Town, as well as Keeley’s, although Fitzgerald was always willing alongside Barrett and Nick Ellis battled until the end. James Sawyer was an influential defender, supported well by Weller and the powerful Kent. Warwick were best served by Coleman and Holland in defence, plus the attacking Hudson, although Josh Cole settled in well in midfield and his astute passing and vision brought something different to his team. O’Grady was a rare threat, Powell was often quiet but Leaver was the thread which held his team together going forward…
SPECTATORS? BARELY ANY...

So The Piltdown Men ride again, on to a clash with Wisbech United from the United Counties Premier Division in the FA Vase, minus the cup-tied Coleman and O’Grady but other players will return to the line-up, including Kavanagh, the Tyrannosaurus Rex lookalike and leading scorer for the Racers…

Me? I stomped away, Brontosaurus-like…

It’s what I do.

TEAMS:

CHELMSLEY TOWN:
JAMES KELLY, LIAM NORRIS, MATT KENT, JAMES SAWYER, LYDON WELLER, NICK ELLIS, ADAM KEELEY, ROB ELLIS (CAPT), JAMIE BARRETT, KIERAN FITZGERALD, SAM SADLER.
SUBS:
HARRY SWEENEY, JAMES TAYLOR, JOE PARKE, KAINE WILLIAMS, DAN EGEGE.

RACING CLUB WARWICK:
TOM CROSS, MICHAEL ELLIS, LEWIS HUDSON, PAUL HOLLAND, JAMIE COLEMAN (CAPT), JOSH COLE, JOSH O’GRADY, HENRY LEAVER, JOSH BLAKE, RICH POWELL, JOE CARTER.
SUBS:
RYAN BILLINGTON, JACK TAYLOR, MARTIN HUTCHCOX, LUKE COLE, MARTIN SLEVIN.


  

CHELMSLEY TOWN 0-3 RACING CLUB WARWICK: LINK TO THE VIDEO HIGHLIGHTS...


PACK MEADOW IN NOVEMBER...

THE BODGING WAS SO COLD THAT HIS BROCKS STIFFENED UP...

LEAVES ON THE 4G...

BANNER HUNG BY FANS OF KCIWRAW BULC GNICAR...
IS THIS A POLISH OUTFIT?

LOOKS LIKE SOMEONE PEED ON THE CHALK LINES INSTEAD...

PACK MEADOW: LAND OF THE VERTICAL POLES...

THE SPOOKY MOON SPIED UPON THE MATCH...

REPLACEMENT RACERS WARM UP THEIR, ER, VOICES...

A COUPLE OF OLD FOSSILS ROCK ON...

Monday 27 November 2017

AFC BINLEY'S EDWIN GREAVES COMMENTS ON HIS TEAM'S HARD FOUGHT WIN v COVENTRY PLUMBING...



"Coventry Plumbing got the game underway and played with the confidence of a side that had only been beaten once in the league.


They forced us to defend well but at this stage they did not trouble Ryan Oldham in goal.


Our first offensive threat came from an 11th minute Travis Smallwood corner which saw a Fabian Spence header cleared off the goal-line.


In the 12th minute Cov Plumbing had a great chance to score when a throw into the box beat everyone and somehow with the goal empty, a Plumbing player hit the crossbar and the ball bounced clear.


After that let-off we started to play a bit better and became more of an attacking threat as we started to take control of the midfield area.


In the 17th minute we were awarded a free-kick which Travis Smallwood took, the delivery caused indecision in the Plumbing defence and a deflection gave Dave Allen no chance: 0-1.


In the 30th minute Plumbing were denied again when a long range shot was saved by Ryan Oldham.


We doubled our lead in the 42nd minute when another Travis Smallwood free-kick found Steven Young, who bundled the ball over the line: 0-2."


Half-time: 0-2.

"The  second-half saw Plumbing improve on their first half showing and they put us under a lot more pressure, forcing Ryan Oldham into more action.


While we defended well, in a 20 minute spell Plumbing forced four clear-cut chances, denied only by a mixture of good saves from Ryan Oldham or poor finishing.


As Plumbing attacked in numbers and spaces started to appear we were able to catch them on the break but Dave Allen was very quick to deny us any clear-cut opportunities.


The half finished as it started with Plumbing attacking and us defending well."

Full-time: 
Coventry Plumbing 0-2 AFC Binley.


In summing up this game:


"This was always going to be a tough afternoon for us against a side who had previously beaten us 3-1 earlier in the season and who before today had only lost one previous league game.


We scored from 2 set-pieces and didn't work Dave Allen too much over 90 minutes; however we got our noses in front and defended for our lives.


Plumbing will probably be wondering how they didn't get something out of this game and on another day they would have.


However the defence to a man put in their best performance of the season so far and when they were beaten, Ryan Oldham was there to back them up.


At times it wasn't pretty to watch but the lads dug deep and got the job done.


We have now played 12 league games, so we are now half-way through our season, with 8 wins, 2 draws and 2 defeats and we find ourselves 2nd in the league and in a good position to push on.

Another plus point on the day was that the Reserve Team won 6-2 away to KD Sporting.

Up next for us is a home game against Hawkesmill Sports Reserves."

Edwin Greaves 

AFC Binley