Saturday 31 December 2011

Yaxley 1 v Irchester United 0 & Peterborough Northern Star 2 v Kings Lynn Town 2

I often get asked if I'm a Groundhopper ... and I usually categorically refute any such allegation.
However today, well ... I've been caught red handed and I'm guilty as charged innit
This morning, I gratefully rested my aching bones and weary carcass in the back seat of Mr C. Picken's auto-mobile, before heading south, down the A1, in the general direction of Peterborough.
For those of you who don't already know, Colin lives in Scotter, which is the capital city of Lincolnshire... and he's the mayor there, but doesn't wear his ceremonial garb or chains of office to go to the football very often, unless he's of a mind to show off.
Peterborough United, AKA 'The Posh', were playing away this afternoon, 'oop north in Middlesbrough.
But that was of little consequence to us, because today, our intrepid trio of thrill seekers were pushing back the boundaries and going elsewhere anyway, for a ChromaSport &Trophies United Counties Football League double header, at a couple of grounds that none of us had ever visited before.
Woo hoo!
Our itinerary for this expedition was: 1) In2itive Park, the home of Yaxley FC, followed by a mad dash across the city to 2) Peterborough Northern Star's Focus Community Centre home, 7 miles to the north in the awe-inspiringly named suburb of Dogsthorpe.
I'm indebted to Colin for inviting me along today and offering to drive, because the dislocated shoulder I suffered in the run up to Xmas, is making driving a very uncomfortable experience at present.
And until I can get my own car fixed next week (ever tried finding a garage that is open over the festive season?) I can only embark upon - "Short distance runs only mate ... and take it bloody steady!" - according to the kindly mechanic who generously donated a small portion of his Yuletide holiday to give my car a quick once over (at a price).Not that I'm trying to milk the sympathy angle here, because I know none of you really give a flying one anyway.
Saturday 31st December 2011
at In2itive Park, Leading Drove, Yaxley, PE7 3NA
United Counties League - Premier Division
Yaxley (1) 1
Ricky Hailstone 21
Irchester United (0) 0
Admission £6 Programme £1

Yaxley:
Lea Jordan, Ryan Wood, Lewis Stone, Aaron Ridout, Matt Holland, Pete Smith (Sam Bate), Paul Jones, Dan Fountain (Jones De Sousa), Sam Bettinson, Ricky Hailstone, Andy Beech (Josh Rosser)
Irchester United: 
Gavin Harding, Dean Hopewell, Joe Hopewell, Phil Lawrence (Lewis Strafford), Chris Gell, Jake Gillingwater, Liam Bright (Dave Maguire), Gary Storher, Matt White, Stuart Reid, Lee Thompson (Curtis Long)

There are 21 clubs in the UCL Premier Division.
Prior to kick-off Yaxley were sat rather uncomfortably in twentieth place, just two points above Desborough Town who have played 2 games less than the rather quaintly nicknamed 'Cuckoos'.
By comparison, this lunchtime's visitors, Wellingborough based Irchester United, are having a much better season and travelled to Yaxley today, formidably looking down on their hosts from a lofty position of 17th in the table.
How mouth watering can any prospect get, I ask you!?.
A precautionary call was made to Yaxley FC en route. to check if the game was on, given the amount of persistent rain there had been over the past couple of days. And we were cheerily informed that there was no problem whatsoever with the pitch in-spite of the overnight deluge and there wasn't any need for a pitch inspection.
I was reliably informed by fellow traveller Paul Hawkins, that this area of the country is historically known as 'The Soak'.
Well it had lived up to it's name today ... and I learnt a new and fascinating geographical fact, that will liven up many a bar room debate in the future, whenever the eight different types precipitation and their effects on the local landscape in Huntingdonshire (which is a non-metropolitan district of Cambridgeshire) happen to pop up in conversation.
They're a friendly lot in Yaxley and seemed genuinely pleased that we'd made the effort to travel any distance to watch them. For the record, it's approximately a one hundred and forty mile round trip to Yaxley from my happy abode in East Retford upon Idle and roughly one hundred and seventy miles all told from/to the Gamekeeper public house in Scotter, where Colin lives ;-)
The home side were on top in the first half, while Irchester struggled to put more than a couple of passes together.
It wasn't exactly a game for the purists, but there was plenty of effort and endeavour on display.
On ten minutes there was a hold up in play, while the ball nestled in the neat row of conifers that stands along one side of the pitch, acting as a wind break.
Thankfully a selection of match balls were available and the game could continue.
We didn't really want any more delays, the timing in between our first and second games of the afternoon was critical and depended on this one finishing on time.

The elders of the conventions of Groundhopping pedantry (of whom there are many), would drum us out of the Tufty Club, make us stand on the naughty step and confiscate our badges, if we were to shave a couple of minutes off of either game and miss any of the action, even if it was deemed necessary to adhere to the small matter of obeying the rules of the highway code and the law of the land.
We must adhere to road safety and speed limits on the Queen's highway; but hell have no fury like some stopwatch brandishing Mr Angry character who permeate certain internet forums. But, for the record, we can keep hold of our anoraks, Thermos flasks, notepads, pens, cameras and dry pair of spare socks for a little while longer yet ... and we did it without Sat Nav guidance or the aid of potted and plotted directions from obscure Non League travel digests, handbooks and directories.
Mavericks on tour, or what!?
The other loos in the clubhouse are much nicer.
That said, I was sorely tempted to deliberately leave Yaxley's game early and then stand around in the muddy over-spill car park at Northern Star's ground until five past three, just to prove what a militant old punk and anarchist and rebel I still am.
As yet another ball went sailing over into the nearby allotments, an octogenarian local bemoaned "What a daft bugger, a simple tap out of play would've done. Knowing this ref, if we run out of balls he'll call the game off!"
Personally, without actually having a ball to use, I'm hard pushed to see how any referee in the world would've had any other alternative to be honest, but I kind of understood the gist of what he was getting at. "You wouldn't boot it over there if you had to fetch it yourself, you little twerp!"

The the referee's assistant nearest to where we were standing looked as if he might have been one of the popular Eighties pop-combo Bucks Fizz in a previous life... and he still had the immaculately styled hair to boot... this official certainly didn't let indecision take him from behind, he trusted his inner vision and didn't let others change his mind his mind.
And he was definitely spot on whenever there came a time for making his mind up.
Somebody shouted out at the official: "Are you from the land of make believe liner!? Because you look like you're that David van Day out of Bucks Fizz!"
What a pillock! I thought everybody knew that David van Day was in Guys and Doll, before leaving them, along with his band-mate (and girlfiend), the Canadian-born songstress Thereza Bazar, to form the successful duo: Dollar.
In the twenty first minute Yaxley scored the only goal of the game... and keeping with the fare on offert thus far, it was a scrappy one.
Lewis Stone drilled an in-swinging right wing corner into the mix, where it cannoned off of a couple of players, before the home side's captain Ricky Hailstone managed to nod it over the line.
Lewis Stone's dead ball prowess was at the centre of Yaxley's two other decent chances in the first half.
Another of his pinpoint corners was knocked narrowly wide by Aaron Ridout, before the Yaxley number 3 saw his free kick well saved by Gavin Harding on the stroke of half time.

After a poor showing in the first half, the Romans invaded Yaxley territory at will after the break and went about building some straight roads that led right into the heart of the home sides defence.
Lea Jordan, Yaxley's keeper, hadn't had much to do for the first 45 minutes and was so underused he would've been better employed retrieving stray balls from around the perimeter of the ground, but he earned my vote as man of the match in the second half, with a string of top class saves that without a doubt, won his side all three points today, just as much as his captain's first half goal.
Jordan was at full stretch and running backwards when he managed to tip Stuart Reid's goal-bound effort over the crossbar, it was an outstanding save.
Minutes later he managed to get enough of a touch onto a Jake Gillingwater shot to turn it against the bar.
Irchester's attacks were coming thick and fast now, Dean Hopewell was denied by Jordan (again) and so was Gary Stohrer.
"Oi! Spiderman. How long have you been a goalkeeper?" called out a jovial chap, who stood chuckling at his own witticisms throughout the game. It takes all sorts.

Curtis Long sent a cross in from the right wing and it looked as though Stuart Reid must score from a header at the back post, but he headed wide when it looked harder to miss than to hit the target (see his team mates reaction above).
Right at the end of the game Lea Jordan was finally beaten, but Jake Gillingwater's free kick flew narrowly wide of the goal.
As the referee blew for full time we were already in the starting blocks next to the exit and were heading out of the car park before the first of the players had even reached the changing rooms.

At the halfway stage, Yaxley had just about deserved to be in front and Irchester United definitely deserved to be behind, because the visitors hadn't played very well at all up to that point ... to put it very mildly.
But the Romans attacked like a team possessed after the restart and if the Yaxley players got any kind of a win bonus for that result, they should all donate them to their keeper Lea Jordan.
In a nutshell, a game that had promised and delivered very little for a while, was completely transformed and ended up being quite entertaining in the end.
14 minutes later ...

Saturday 31st December 2011
at Focus Community Centre, Chesnut Avenue, Dogsthorpe
United Counties League - Premier Division
Peterborough Northern Star (0) 2
Karl Gibbs 77, John Stead 90+2 penalty
Kings Lynn Town (1) 2
Luke Thurlbourne 5, Stephen Spriggs 57

Admission £5 Programme £1 Attendance 466
Peterborough Northern Star: 
Luke McShane, Nathan Horne, Mark Cox, Dan Clements, Richard Jones, Wayne Morris, Ali Nyang, Liam Hook, Matt Cook (Karl Gibbs), Jon Stead, Addie Staffieri (Avelino Vieira)
Kings Lynn Town:
Alex Street, Ryan Fryatt, Jordan Yong, Dan Buhlemann, Stuart Wall, Rob Hughes, Stephen Spriggs (Danny White), Luke Thurlbourne, Liam Harrold (Robbie Harris), Danny Beaumont (Nelson Moreira), Jamie Thurlbourne
A top of the table clash, between 4th placed Peterborough Northern Star and the league leaders, Kings Lynn Town.
The Peterborough side, formed in 1905, have previously been called both Northern Star and Eye United, which explains why their nickname is the 'Eyes'
Town were formed in 2010 following the demise of the original Kings Lynn team, who's 130 year history stretched back as far as 1879.
The home side attacked inside the first minute and Alex Street, the Linnets keeper, was soon in action, making the first save of the game, his block ran loose to the incoming John Stead (see above) who's effort from the rebound was well off target.
The opening exchange was a wake up call for the visitors and soon the play switched ends and Luke Thurlbourne got on the end of a Stephen Spriggs cross to head home the opening goal.
From then on, it was Kings Lynn, playing today in a revolting slime green and dull grey away kit, instead of their usual rather swanky yellow and blue ensemble who had by far the better of the first half.
However to their credit, PNS didn't panic or start hitting the ball long in an effort to chase the game, when they did have the ball they kept it down and passed it around.The sizeable following from Kings Lynn, acted as a 12th man for their side, geeing up their own players while trying to unsettle the Northern Star lads and match officials.
Sadly there was a small element amongst them who's hostility overstepped the mark at times, especially with some abuse and 'wisecracks' aimed in the direction of Ali Nyang, the home side's number 7.
The competitive and combative attacking midfielder, is in effect, the engine room of the Northern Star side, but although he isn't particularly shy about making his presence felt, he was also on the receiving end of a fair bit of physical stuff too."Even if the ref can't say what you are, cos he's not allowed to be racist, Luis Suarez and John Terry would f***ing tell you!" was one of the more repeatable insults thrown in the direction of the pitch.
I hasten to add that the majority of the away support were perfectly well behaved and a credit to Kings Lynn Town.
There were a lot of Linnets fans present and the majority of them were there to watch the game and support their team.
But half a dozen or so of them revelled in the confidence highs that too much alcohol and safety in numbers numerical advantage gives big gobs and cowards, when they are afforded the shield of anonymity when hiding in a crowd.Kings Lynn, are a good side... and I'm really glad their reformation gave the original club's supporters a 'back from the dead' side a team to support, because I've always enjoyed going to games at their ground in the past, right back to the time when Peter Morris was the manager there.
However it would be easy to see how a small (but vociferous) minority could get Kings Lynn Town a bad name if the club allow them to get a foothold. I'll gladly chip in if they feel the need to hire a sniper to rid the world of these vermin. There is only one race... and that's the human race!
I feel compelled to repeat myself here however, just to emphasis a point ... it was only a few idiots indulging in the unwanted bravado crap and the over-riding majority of the Kings Lynn following are decent people who had nothing whatsoever to do with the vile taunts, other than the handful who told/asked the imbeciles to 'shut up!', or words to that effect.
My own quickly formed opinion of Ali Nyang is ... although this is the only time I've ever seen him play, if first impressions are anything to go by, I wouldn't be surprised to see him doing his stuff at an higher level than the UCL any time soon, there were some really good players on both sides, but Nyang stood out more than any of the others. He's a proper human battering ram, if I've ever seen one.
Incidentally, Stephen Spriggs, the Kings Lynn number 7, deserves a special mention for his performance today too.

When half time came, Kings Lynn hadn't managed to extend their lead, despite having had plenty of play in and around the Northern Star box and the teams went off with just a single goal separating them.
There was an amusing moment as the players were leaving the pitch for the interval break and one of them decided to have a moan at a linesman over a decision he had allegedly got wrong.
The official replied "OK mate, hands up! I made one mistake in 45 minutes, how many did you make?"
'A no show from Davros' 'lads' again'.
The Time Lords in the ground were disappointed that the Daleks
had failed to turn up for their traditional Bank Holiday punch up.
Kings Lynn ought to have extended their lead when Steve Spriggs put a cross into the path of Liam Harold, but he narrowly failed to make the slightest contact that the chance needed.
But on 57 minutes the ever lively Spriggs, took advantage of North Star's defender Mark Cox standing off him and ran through to make the score 0-2.
At this point, it looked as if Kings Lynn Town's impressive record of not having dropped a point away from home this season would remain intact.
Northern Star's manager Chris Plummer made a double substitution sending on Karl Gibbs and Avelino Vierra... and it proved to be an inspired switch.
Gibbs pulled a goal back on 77 minutes, his first strike came back to him off a defender and he calmly rolled his second past Alex Street, who seemed to be anticipating the second-half sub to belt his effort rather than place it, but precision over power won the day.
Game on!
The Peterborough side rode their luck a few minutes later, when a combination of the visitors substitutes saw Robbie Harris head a Danny White cross against the bar.

Two minutes into stoppage time, Avelino Vierra was stopped in his tracks as the hosts advanced on the visitors goal for one final push.
John Stead put the penalty kick away comfortably, even though Alex Street got a slight touch to it... and Kings Lynn's run of consecutive away wins had been halted.
But they're still unbeaten on the road in the UCL Premier Division and nailed on certs for the title.
I think it would be fair to say, that we had witnessed an apparent gap in class today, or maybe even a gulf, between games at the top and bottom of the UCL league table... and though I have nothing against Kings Lynn Town and wish them well for the future, I hope that John Stead's late, late equaliser meant that the small-minded wankers who'd been making monkey noises in Ali Nyang's direction had a miserable journey home. 

I'm looking forward to visiting a few more places that I've never been to before in 'The Soak' soon... watch this space.
Performance of the day: Mr Colin Picken, for navigating the route between Yaxley and Dogsthorpe to get us to the second game in time for kick off with two minutes to spare, ensuring that we didn't miss a single moment of the day's football.
Personally I would never have gambled on that left turn at the first traffic lights and we'd probably still be driving around Dogsthorpe now, looking in vain for the floodlights, if I was at the controls.
Good call that man!

Thursday 29 December 2011

Easington United are back!

In spite of all the rumours and speculation that have been doing the rounds on the CMFL circuit, I am happy to report that Easington United are back!
In actual fact, they hadn't even been away in the first place ... and at the current time they appear to be rebuilding and strengthening their squad for the future..
The club have NOT resigned from the CMFL North, or gone to the wall, or anything of the sort.
Reproduced here, is a truncated version of a message I received earlier today from Richard Lusmore at EUFC in response to what I wrote on this self indulgent, bullshit blog a couple of days ago, about certain stories I'd heard circulating on the CMFL gossip grapevine.
Just to quash the rumours, we have not resigned from the CML North and as yet have no intention of doing so.
As you state we've just picked up four ex-Hutton Cranswick lads and are in the process of signing three other lads in time for our return to action on 7 Jan.
So I'll look forrad to seeing you out on the Humber Riviera before the season's end.
All the best!

Thursday 29th December 2011 - Live at the Harworth Pavilion


HARWORTH PAVILION PRESENTS ...
Music Quiz in The Pavilion Thursday 29th December 8pm start. £2 per person including food. There are cash prizes and the music quiz will followed by bingo.

All welcome, the Harworth Pavilion is on Scrooby Road, Bircotes, North Notts, DN11 8AD.
It's adjacent to Harworth Colliery Institute FC, a location that just might be (ever so slightly) familiar to regular readers of this humble blog, as I occasionally give HCIFC a small amount of completely unbiased coverage every now and then.

Wednesday 28 December 2011

Glapwell 1 v Harworth Colliery Institute 3 - CMFL North

Wednesday 28th December 2011, at Hall Corner
Central Midlands Football League North
Glapwell (1) 1
Jordan Johnson 21
Harworth Colliery Institute (0) 3
Kev Shelley 46, 73, Tom Pick 72
Admission £2.50 inc. programme
Attendance "Hmm, round about 60 or so", an estimate from a gentleman who is the authority on all things CMFL, so that'll do for me.
Glapwell

Weather report:
Strong winds, with occasional attempted rain showers.
However the rain did not amount to much because it was too damn windy.
Travel report:
Approach Glapwell via the more sheltered back roads.
A combination of strong gusts of wind and high sided vehicles have made things a bit dicey on the M1, to say the least.
Harworth CI

Harworth weathered some early pressure, as Glapwell started strongly with the wind behind their backs, but in spite of a few half chances, it was the visitors who had the first clear shot on goal when Tom Pick fired narrowly wide on 10 minutes.
The howling wind made keeping the ball down and playing passing football difficult at times.
Chris Belshaw's corner after 17 minutes, hung in the air for so long, the Glapwell keeper Craig Payne, had time to take two attempts to hold onto it.
Mark Latham did well to get down to a Josh Parfitt effort on 20 minutes and turned it away at the expense of a corner.
Richard Preston hit the resultant flag kick towards the back stick, where it went through to Jordan Johnson who fired the home side ahead.
The wind was dictating that all corner kicks would be destined for the far post.
On the balance of play, Glapwell were just about shading the game at this point.
The Harworth right back David Cornthwaite made a surging run down the flank on the half hour, but his pass through the channels towards Tom Pick and Kev Shelley, who had both timed their runs to beat the offside flag, was intercepted just in the nick of time and Glapwell cleared their lines.
With half time approaching, Glapwell's centre forward Josh Parfitt politely removed himself from the field of play, where he proceeded to, not to put too fine a point on it, chuck his ring up.
Possibly he was suffering from a bug and running about in the blustery conditions didn't agree with him, or he might just have over indulged just as much as the rest of us have over Xmas.
He returned to the fray just in time to see Kev Shelley hold off his marker, but have his shot on goal blocked at the other end of the pitch.
Half time - Glapwell 1 v Harworth CI 0
A minute in to the second half, the ball sat up nicely twenty yards out for Kev Shelley.
The prolific Harworth striker buried the ball past the despairing reach of Craig Payne, who didn't get anywhere near it.
Glapwell attacked again and Harworth conceded a free kick about thirty yards out, the home side continued to play and scored, but it was ruled out and the ball was brought back for the free kick.
Depending on which way your allegiances sway at this point (and I'm completely neutral ... sort of), either, i) the referee could've and maybe should've, played the advantage and in not doing so he denied Glapwell a goal, or ii) if the Harworth defence and keeper hadn't played to the whistle and stopped, they would still have been in a position to prevent a goal anyway.
In Rob Hornby's 'unbiased' blog report, see here:
http://aroundthegrounds2011-12.blogspot.com/2011/12/alls-well-for-harworth.html
he describes the incident as 'the turning point of the game'.
In my 'unbiased' blog report, I'm going to contradict him and say, half time was the turning point of the game, Harworth dominated the second half and the incident was a lesson for the home side about playing to the whistle.
Harworth secretary Simon Stones knocked out a few tunes
and entertained us in the bar
before the game

That said, though Rob will always unintentionally be (slightly) less unbiased towards clubs based within his beloved Mansfield/Derbyshire border axis, the same allegation could also be levelled at me regarding clubs that frequent the infinitely superior North Notts/South Yorks corridor.
In Glapwell and Harworth, you'd be hard pushed to find two clubs who fit that borderline criteria any better, so we'll just have to agree to disagree on this one and in the spirit of reconciliation I offer Mr Hornby the following compromise ...
"Sit down and shut up man!
The referee is always right ... ALWAYS!"
And for the record, if you play on after the whistle has sounded, ignoring the referee and then stick the ball in the back of the net, it could, in the eyes of a less lenient official, applying the letter of the law, be construed as a bookable offence.
Yeah, Harworth got (very slightly) lucky and Glapwell have a (very slight) case for feeling aggrieved, but these things balance themselves out ;-)
Tom Pick had a chance to put the visitors in front, but after doing the hard work put his chance high and wide.
Play switched back towards the clubhouse end and Jordan Jackson very narrowly beat the offside trap (see how these things even out in the end!?), but Mark Latham saved well.
On 72 minutes Tom Pick completely miscued his shot in front of goal, as the ever worsening wind began to make any attempt to control the ball more and more difficult.
A benevolent defender had exactly the same problem mastering the conditions and miss-hit his attempted clearance straight back into the path of Pick, who found the target at the second time of asking.
Within a minute, Chris Belshaw had sent Kev Shelley free with a defence splitting pass and the Harworth marksman scored his second goal of the night.
Craig Anderson fired over as the visitors looked to finish the game off, but by now the ball resembled a balloon blowing about in the wind at times.
Glapwell Ultras

In the words of Rob Hornby, a person I never (even slightly) disagree with, the game was "a bit one sided this half."
But Glapwell staged a late rally; Ross Murcott shot wide from long range and right at the death Mark Statham pulled off a great one handed save from one of the Glapwell subs.
The final whistle sounded and from my completely neutral vantage point (I was honestly only wearing a Harworth scarf to keep the wind out), I think I can say, without fear of contradiction, that the mighty Harworth Colliery Institute were worthy winners by a mile and a half ;-)
OK, in fairness, well done to both sides for putting on such an intriguing and highly entertaining game on a night when it had looked as if the only winner was going to be the atrocious weather.
The final word (as anyone who's ever met the old chatterbox would expect) goes to Rob Hornby.
He's collecting for charity at the games he attends this season, so please give generously if you see him on your travels.
Here are the details of his fund-raising effort from his 'Around the grounds 2011-12' blog.
Good luck Rob :-)
For the season 2011-12, I have decided to sponsor myself 25p a goal, towards new equipment in the Neurology Department at the Queens Medicial Centre Hospital in Nottingham.
Dr Whiteley is a top Epilepsy Doctor and has cared for me for over 21 years and though there is no cure for me, as I have 3 Grand Mal Fits a week, I feel it is a worth while cause.
Anyone who would like to kindly make a donation can please contact me and I will put your name on the left side of the blog and I will be then handing the final cheque over around May 2012.

Catch up with Rob Hornby in the near future at:
7th Jan: Nottingham United v FC 05 Bilsthorpe
14th Jan: Clifton FC v Kimberley Town
21st Jan: Thoresby CW v Ollerton Town
28th Jan: Real United v Newark Town
... and don't forget to ask him about details of this years CMFL Groundhop Bonanza event.

Tuesday 27 December 2011

Yorkshire Main 5 v Bentley Colliery 1 - CMFL North


Yes, oh yes!
I treated my passengers to a Johnny Cash selection on the car stereo en route to Edlington ... those lucky swines don't know they're born!
Our select band of travellers today consisted of: two Mansfield Town supporters, one Frickley Athletic fan, a guy from Chesterfield (who hastens to add he just lives there, but isn't actually from that neck of the woods ... every few minutes) and a sad git who has a subscription to Guinea Pig fanciers magazine, it takes all sorts.
Tuesday 27th December 2011, at Edlington Lane
Central Midlands Football League North
Yorkshire Main (0) 5
Lee Isaac, Leon Osborne 2, Lee Atkinson 2
Bentley Colliery (0) 1
Brad Sykes
Admission £3 inc. programme
Attendance 50 (ish) it fluctuated from time to time
In the south west corner of Doncaster, deep in the heart of Edlington, Yorkshire Main, sat 3rd in the table prior to kick off, today welcomed ... from the north west quarter of 'Donny', just 6 miles away, 11th placed Bentley Colliery, from err, Bentley.Bentley showed (but only in sporadic bursts) what they are capable of during the first half.
But they were unable to sustain any kind of rhythm, while their hosts took control of the game and set about creating chance after chance.
For a while home side were camped in and around the visitors goal area and Bentley should be grateful that 'Main' seemed to be tripping over the tent pegs and guide ropes at critical moments, or maybe their vision was impaired, because their eyes were stinging from the smoke wafting across from the 'camp fire' over near the fence by the touch line on the right wing???
They certainly faired better after they changed ends at half time.
I couldn't quite put my finger on the aroma of whatever it was that was burning and creating the smoke cloud, but I was reliably informed during the course of the afternoon, that it was "fuggin' top grade skunk mate", by a very cheerful, red faced teenager who appeared to be wearing his clothes inside out and back to front ... maybe that's all the rage these days and I'm just an old codger who's not 'with it' any more. But he looked liked he'd got dressed in the dark or when he was stoned to me ... and he wasn't alone in that.
I like 'Edlo', but, being 'blunt', some of the locals have got a funny way of going about things ... they're all harmless and perpetually friendly enough though, for some reason.
Back on topic ... despite their dominance, Yorkshire Main had nothing to show for their efforts at the half way stage as both sides went in goalless at the break.
A couple of minutes after the restart, Lee Isaac finally broke the deadlock and 'Main' were ahead.
Initially it looked as though he was going to slip just as he was about to shoot, but he regained his balance and scored never the less ... perhaps it was a cunning ploy to wrong foot the visitors keeper all along.
Within 10 minutes Leon Osbourne had doubled that lead and on 70 minutes Atkinson finished neatly from 12 yards out to give the home side a three goal cushion.
On 75 minutes, Sykes pulled a goal back for Bentley, when a free kick from out on the right wing found him unmarked just to the left of the penalty spot and he drilled the ball home.
The home side almost found themselves hanging on for the three points, when another Bentley effort was cleared off the line ... but then 'Main' turned the screw and put the game out of the visitors reach.
With 7 minutes (approx) to go Leon Osbourne smashed the ball against the Bentley crossbar with so much force it's probably still rattling now the ground's been locked up and everybody has gone home ... but a couple of minutes later, he went for precision rather than power and lobbed the Bentley keeper in a one on one race for the ball on the edge of the box to make 4-1.
There was a goalmouth scramble in the visitors box in the last couple of minutes and Atkinson managed to get a touch on the ball and put it into the back of the net.
It wasn't as neat as his first goal, but they all count and it sealed the victory that keeps Yorkshire Main within one point of the league leaders Clipstone Welfare who also won today, 5-2 at home to FC05 Bilsthorpe.
Dronfield Town and Westella & Willerby, the other teams in the top four both drew their away games today, at Parkhouse and Kinsley Boys respectively.Transport complications permitting - i.e. if there are any local garages open over this festive lazy week - I'll be taking in some more Central Midlands Football League (North) action in the near future too.
I heard a rumour at Yorkshire Main today that Easington United have resigned from the CMFL (North), but as of yet I don't know if there is any truth in it, or if the so called 'well informed' sources who quite often circulate these kind of stories for whatever reason motivates them, have been on the Sherry over Xmas.
It seems a bit odd if there is anything in the rumours, because Easington have only recently signed four new players following the sad demise of Hutton Cranswick United.
I hope the 'East Enders' are staying on board because I'm looking forward to another trip out there soon.
Either way, best wishes to everybody at EUFC and I hope all is well at Low Farm.

Note, the players names in the above post were provided by reliable sources at Yorkshire Main FC and Bentley Colliery FC, the times however, are rough estimates that I got from a crap Ben Sherman watch that came to me via a very cheap and very unreliable source.
The A1 southbound was clear, a rarity if ever there was one and we got home in next to no time. On our way out, I could've sworn I saw these guys having a sing song in the Yorkshire Main Community Centre car park, though I could've been imagining it