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After the euphoria of last week’s stratospheric win, Academic Services fell back to Earth with a Bowiesque crash against a team they had beaten easily in a pre-season friendly. A bewildering result for sure but more importantly a concerning performance for Manger Moore to ponder. His troops just weren’t at it and were beaten by the better team on the day.
It was a full roll call of players again complemented by the return of regular keeper Chris Awre, resplendent with fully formed beard after last week’s hibernation. As kick off approached, the HUBS team appeared complete with an entourage comprising of manager, physio, official time-keeper, a tactics board and statistician. Gulp! This lot looked serious and a vastly different proposition to the bunch of losers AS had faced in that friendly fixture. Even so, Moore had faith in last week’s heroes and went with the same starting line-up save for the return of Awre meaning Bayliss and last week’s star performer Hewett were in defence, Andrews and Sherratt formed the midfield leaving Cass to talk himself silly up front.
Hewett issued some tactical advice to the rest of the defence in the tense moments before kick off – something about tracking runners and forming triangles. The only triangles in evidence in the first 5 minutes were Bermuda-shaped as the previous week’s comfortable possession and crisp passing completely disappeared without a trace.

The HUBS tactics board in full effect
HUBS were playing a high-tempo pressing game giving the AS defence less time on the ball than Michael Owen managed in 4 seasons at Newcastle. It was this tactic that led to an error by Bayliss that saw HUBS go one-nil up. With Awre struggling to find an outlet, Bayliss dropped deep to receive the ball. A sudden cry of “Man On!”reverberated across the pitch (no doubt it was from the lips of Nigel Cass), and Bayliss was panicked into passing back to his goalkeeper. His under-hit pass allowed the onrushing opposition striker to nip in and shoot pass Awre into an unguarded net. Disaster!
However, within 2 minutes AS were level. Yet again it was that man Andrews pouncing on a loose opposition pass to saunter upfield and calmly deposit the ball into the HUBS net. So unflappable and laid back was Andrews in scoring that he made The Magic Roundabout’s Dylan look like a hyperactive 6-year old who’d eaten too many Smarties!

Paul Andrews needs to work on his goal celebration - this is rubbish!
Galvanised by the equaliser, AS put together a mouth-watering 4 man move that ended with Cass slamming a shot against the base of the post. Oooh! Close!
Half-time: Academic Services1-1 HUBS
The second half started horribly for AS as they seemed to suffer a bout of sudden collective amnesia and were playing like a team of strangers meeting for the first time at a speed dating evening. Passes went astray, possession was lost and formations crumbled. A string of corners were conceded in quick succession as AS struggled to get out of their own half.
The inevitable happened….HUBS took the lead and again it was a gift from AS. In fact it could not have been more of a gift if the defence had written a shopping list, caught the bus to town, trawled round the shops, bought, paid and wrapped it, hired a sleigh and then turned up on December the 25th in a red suit and white beard. Hewett played a suicidal pass across his own box and behind a sleeping Bayliss allowing the rotund but agile HUBS striker to stroll through and score. Oh dear! Said barrel-shaped forward was beginning to give Bayliss a torrid time with his speed and ball control. The wretched defender was turned inside out so many times that when he was finally subbed he came off with platted blood vessels.
Click below to see Bayliss being given the runaround
2-1 gave way to 3-1 and the final nail came with a literally last second goal following a cheaply conceded free kick. AS did manage a solitary second half attack that resulted in Moore firing straight at the keeper with the ball hacked off the line before Sherratt could turn in the rebound. The final whistle sounded and much debate ensued as to where it had all gone wrong but the truth was that it was a poor display all round. With a return leg against Sports Science next up, Moore has some big decisions to make and a despondent squad to rally.
Final Score: Academic Services 1-4 HUBS
How they performed:
Chris Awre: Produced his usual trick of managing to avoid any criticism despite shipping 10 goals in his last 2 appearances. Nice guys may finish last but amiable Chris is always one step ahead of the rest by ensuring he is the last person anyone would blame for yet another defeat. 6/10
Richard Bayliss: A couple of no-nonsense clearances early on gave way to being given a second half roasting by the chunky HUBS striker. Humiliated. 5/10
Alan Hewett: Big drop in performance level from last weeks MOTM.Spent most of the 2nd half on ball boy duty on the sidelines as AS resorted to hoofing clearances out of the ground 6/10
Tony Ward: Brought some stability to the defence with some sensible positional play when he replaced the floundering Bayliss. Still hasn’t learned to shoot yet as his wild 2nd half drive proved. On your bike Alan Hewett! 6/10
Wayne Thompson: Ousted from the goalkeeper’s jersey by Awre, Uncle Wayne performed with distinction in defence becoming a human wall as he repelled the HUBS invaders. If Wayne was a superhero he’d be The Thing from the Fantastic Four – “It’s Clobberin’ Time!” 7/10

Nice shorts Wayne!
Gary Thompson: After missing much of last week’s game through injury,Gary continued the theme this week by hardly getting a kick as an underused sub. Less than 5 minutes game time meant Gary was first out of the changing rooms post match with precious little need for a shower. 6/10
Carl Barrow: Acquitted himself adequately without really ever getting into the match. Has fallen foul of the squad rotation policy in recent weeks and could be part of a disgruntled queue forming outside Manager Moore’s office come the January transfer window. 6/10
Paul Andrews: A somewhat pedestrian performance from Paul despite his now customary clinically taken goal. “Stroller” Andrews can certainly walk the walk but he rather trudged his way through the game. 6/10
Nigel Cass: And now a man who knows how to talk the talk….Fast becoming the Emile Heskey of the squad – the non-scoring forward. How long can his manager keep faith with him? No doubt Nigel will be able to talk himself out of any tight spot on the subject of his (lack of) onion bag prowess. 6/10
Gary Moore: Talking of a lack of goals…Gary’s current tally for the season? ZERO (and a big fat one at that). Suffered the curse of being Manager of the Week by promptly masterminding a dreadful team performance. 6/10
Robert Sherratt: One of the few to emerge with any credit. Solid display in the middle of the park with some stout challenges and intelligent distribution. Denied a goal by a dramatic goal line clearance. Pipped Wayne Thompson to MOTM by uttering the magic phrase “WHO WANTS IT?” late doors. 7/10 Man of the Match
Click below to hear Brian Clough’s verdict on Academic Services performance:
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A week is a long time in football – last week Thierry Henry was one of the classiest acts ever to have graced the English game with a nice sideline in endorsements and TV ads. This week he’s the cheating smug git responsible for the “Hand of Frog” goal that broke Irish hearts. In a carefully worded statement, Henry claimed that “Of course the fairest solution would be to replay the game but is not in my control”….unlike the ball the other night which his hand had full control of.
Also only last week the Academic Services football team were the intramural league whipping boys, their results divining such depths of awfulness that they made JEdward look like the natural successors to the Beatles. This week they toppled the league leaders with a display that was faultless – prompting their manager Gary Moore to comment post-match that his boys were “Not a foot wrong today, the amount of effort put in was amazing.” Shucks…
After a rigorous training session on Monday complete with cones, shuttle runs and warm-up and down exercises, the AS lads assembled for the early 12.00 pm kick-off (blame the Sky cameras) with a newly discovered purpose and discipline. However the opponents were Coastal Studies, the team of unfeasibly tall god-like figures that inflicted a 7-0 mullering (© Mick McCarthy 2009) upon AS last season. Would history repeat itself or could AS defy the odds (and gods) and get a result?
Robert Sherratt confidently announced that the team could nick a 1-0 win …a bold statement with one hitch…that would involve the notching of an AS goal, something of a rare commodity this season. Indeed when Carl Barrow is your team’s joint top scorer (1 goal stats fans) then you know that you are less likely to find the onion bag than a bag -hating Alliumphobia (look it up) sufferer with an irrational fear of the cricketer Graham Onions.

Graham Onions - insert your own gag!
However, Paul Andrews was back in the starting line-up which had a determined steeliness about it. With Chris Awre having gone into beard growing hibernation, last week’s harshly criticized Wayne Thompson once again showed the nerve to step into the goalkeeping breach. Brother Gary and Richard Bayliss were on defensive duties whilst Andrews and Sherratt supplied the midfield with quality and effort (you can work out who supplied which for yourselves surely?). Suprisingly, Manager Moore went with the talkative Nigel Cass as the lone striker (maybe hoping that making him play in isolation would reduce the chat with no-one to jabber to!).
Kick off…and immediately Andrews attempted an audacious strike on goal from the halfway line – this was new… and it proved to be a marker for the rest of the game. All of the hard work the lads had put into training was paying off – neat short passes that were finding their targets, everyone looking comfortable in possession, no panicked hoofs upfield. And then…a GOAL! A loose pass from Coastal Studies was seized upon by the leggy Robert Sherratt who went helter-skelter towards goal…but could he find a finish? Oh yes he could! A lovely side foot past the keeper into the net and an end to the jokes about the team being renamed Academic Servicesnil.
Back came the Coastal Studies giants and they immediately rattled the post (well it was a little disconcerted to say the least). But with Wayne Thompson barking out instructions to his defenders,the AS goal remained intact. Then… a setback. Gary Thompson turned his ankle when making a meaty clearing challenge and had to go off, his game cruelly over before half time. Carl Barrow sprinted on as his replacement and was immediately involved in a flash-point incident when he clattered into an opponent which left both players on the floor. There was an audible intake of breath as time stood still – would there be an angry reaction from Coastal Studies? As Harry Hill would say “FIGHT!”….but no… Carl simply shrugged and muttered ” Sorry..” and the action continued.
This was a controlled display from AS and, incongruous as it sounds, it was no surprise when they went 2-0 up. A wonderful turn by Paul Andrews from a Cass through ball and he was away down the left flank before slipping the ball under the body of the advancing keeper. 2-0! Two actual goals scored…before half time…this hadn’t happened since playing that team of girls last year! Fortunately half time was signaled before anybody became too giddy with excitement.
Click below to see Paul Andrews’ turn prior to scoring his goal:
Half-time: Academic Services 2-0 Coastal Studies
With the Coastal Studies team beginning to argue amongst themselves as to how it was possible they could be losing to Academic Services, their play became increasingly desperate in the second half. The long ball was resorted to and one such punt upfield brought about a sickening 3 man collision between Bayliss, Alan Hewett and the nippy opposition striker. Somehow all 3 managed to arrive in the same space at exactly the same time and the game was brought to a halt as the players lay prone. Despite initially seeming to be the least injured, Bayliss went onto to nurse a weeping grazed knee all weekend requiring bandage after bandage. Oh yeah…the other two were OK apparently….
Click below to see a replay of the collision:
The AS lads were continuing to play their passing game and when a cross came in from the left, Moore pirouetted in the box (ouch!) and a neat step over allowed a marauding Hewett to steal in at the far post to convert. 3-0 to the Academic Services…I’ll type that again….3-0 to the Academic Services…unbelievable!
By now the kitchen sink had been called for by Coastal Studies and, duly summoned, was flung at the AS defence with great vengeance. At the heart of that defence, Hewett was having the game of his life and threw himself into every challenge, blocking shot after shot with any part of his body that was available. When Coastal Studies did at last get past Hewett, Wayne Thompson stood firm with a number of heroic saves, and when they finally beat Thompson the post came to the rescue (well it at least asked if everyone was OK).
And then…the final whistle! A truly astounding scoreline – what an achievement! A result that is up there with some of the great upsets of all time…think Hereford,Ronnie Radford and all those parkas or Wimbledon beating Liverpool in the cup final (‘the crazy gang have beaten the culture club” and all that). This may have eclipsed them all.

Its 1972 and non-league Hereford have just dumped Newcastle out of the FA cup - everyone played in black and white back then
Final Score: Academic Services 3-0 Coastal Studies
How they performed:
Wayne Thompson – Proving the “a week is a long time in football” theory single-handedly, Uncle Wayne played a blinder. Labelled a donkey last week, Thompson the younger was more feline than asinine this week, leaping like a cat to repel everything that was thrown at him. His performance may have worried the absent Chris Awre whose place is now under threat – Shilton v Clemence anyone? 8/10
Gary Thompson – Was enjoying a very steady and composed game until he injured himself in one almighty bone -shaking challenge against an opposition forward. Had to sit out the second half as the glory unfolded in front of him yet tantalizingly out of his reach – a bit like Jimmy Greaves missing out on the 1966 World Cup Final. Never mind Gaz, following in Greavsie’s footsteps has its benefits – you’ll get to grow a minging moustache in later life and have to spend years in the company of a tedious Scotsman. 7/10
Richard Bayliss – Followed his manager’s instructions to the letter by sacrificing himself to the game plan (i.e. do not under any circumstances attempt to cross the halfway line at anytime – especially if you have possession of the ball). Didn’t let anybody down. 7/10
Alan Hewett – What a week for big Al! First he turns in the performance of a lifetime with his all action display including a picture-book collection of last ditch, certain- goal saving tackles. Then he ventures up field to slot in his first goal of the season and finally his beloved Spurs only go and win 9-1! Only one complaint Al – how about letting the rest of us have a game next week! 9/10 *Man of the Match*
Tony Ward – Started on the bench but came on to replace Bayliss. Weighed in with a measured performance and a very high pass completion rate. Has committed to playing 3 times a week to improve his fitness and it showed. May need to invest in some more of those surgical knee support accessories he has taken to wearing if he insists on keeping this up! 7/10
Carl Barrow – Nearly started a riot with his first challenge that left a Coastal Studies player counting his limbs. The Portfolio Holder for Communication? It was Carl that needed a good talking to after that tackle. Settled down after that explosive start to provide some useful link-up play and diligent work down the left flank. 7/10
Nigel Cass – Ah now….here’s someone who knows all about communicating. Its the King of Chat, the Prince of Prattle , the blatherer supreme himself… heeeere’s Nigel! Playing in a more advanced role, Nigel’s job was to hold the play up until support arrived. This he did via a number of slaloming runs down the flanks heading towards the byline… until he ran out of space at which point he would turn around and come back the other way all the time shouting “WHO WANTS IT?” in a menacing tone. Never quite managed the goal his play deserved despite spurning a number of chances. 7/10
Robert Sherratt – Scorer of a marvelous goal on the break in the first half, Robert provided the initial spark that ignited belief among the AS team that anything was possible. Marked out by his flaming red hair, Robert blazed with intensity and fervour in the middle of the park for the whole game until the final whistle…. when he spontaneously combusted. 8/10
Paul Andrews – Spurred on by his girlfriend watching from the touchline (meaning the official attendance was a respectable 1), super silky Paul pulled all the strings yet again. Had possession of the ball with more frequency than Katie Price appears on the front cover of the tabloids. Span, turned and scored so quickly that the ball was in the back of the net before his opponent could shout “I’m a Celebrity get me out of here!” …. actually that’s quite a mouthful…8/10
Gary Moore – All his planning, tactics and formations worked like a dream and he basked in the glory of his (team’s) victory afterwards (we could all hear you singing in the changing room showers Gary!). Employed some reverse psychology on his squad in the run up to the game by stating his game plan was to pack the defence in order to keep the score down – a masterstroke that unseated the league leaders with a clean sheet to boot! In the words of one Mr Clough, “Lets see Don flipping Revie do that!” 9/10 *Manager of the Week*

"You've all done very well"
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Match day 4 and the AS boys were confident that they could achieve a decent result. Then they looked at the fixture list….today’s opponents were the dreaded Sports Science gang! Led by the lad with the giant afro, this lot had embarrassed the AS team 0-4 last time out with a display of powerful running and precision ball control.
But this is a new AS team with a motivated manager, team talks and training sessions – surely things would be different this time? One look at the calendar may have given an indication of how events would unfold – match day 4 fell on Friday 13th!
Bad luck and misfortune lurked ominously as the team assembled …
“Hang on…where’s Paul Andrews?” inquired an eagle-eyed Richard Bayliss. Alas their star player was once again missing and with Gary Thompson also absent (something about an appointment with a Sky engineer/TV repair man/cable guy….), some jiggery pokery was required from Manager Moore. With goalkeeper Chris Awre back from the US (the International Society of Beard Cultivators AGM apparently), the defence was completed by Richard Bayliss and Wayne Thompson. In midfield Moore plumped for the hard-running Alan Hewett with the talkative Nigel Cass for company and elected to go with the old (well nearly 40 anyway) warhorse Robert Sherratt up top.
A bright start from AS augured well as passes found their targets, the defence was standing firm and Nigel was, as ever, talking a good game – Friday the 13th be blowed! The soothsayers had spoken and all portents pointed to a positive result for Team AS.
Alas, games are determined by incidents and decisions – sometimes they go for you, sometimes they don’t and the curse of Friday the 13th struck in cruel fashion. A super through ball from Tony Ward (on for a tiring Bayliss) put Sherratt through one-on-one with the goalie. A neat feint took the speccy striker past his opponent only for the cheating swine to leg him over – PENALTY REF! For decisions to go your way however, generally you need an official present to make a decision in the first place….unfortunately, as it was Friday 13th, the ref was one Casper the Ghost and nowhere to be seen and the penalty claims fell on phantom ears.

The ref waves away AS penalty claims and gives the decision the other way!
In a double-whammy of misfortune, with the AS team still protesting, Sports Science broke downfield and crashed an unstoppable bullet past Awre to take the lead.
Half-time: Academic Services 0-1 SHES
As the teams lined up for the start of the second half more paranormal activities seemed to be afoot. Chris Awre noticed that the goal that Team AS had been attempting to breach in the first half was not properly aligned with the pitch markings! No wonder our brave heroes hadn’t been able to get a shot on target! Somebody had literally moved the goalposts! What supernatural forces could have caused this occurrence? Was there some astronomical disorientation at large? Or was it the curse of Friday the 13th again?

The spooky goalposts that Chris Awre noticed were out of (cosmic) alignment
With the goalposts shifted back into position, the second half began. The next goal would be crucial. If it went to Academic Services it was game on but a second Sports Science goal would almost certainly seal another defeat. Which way would it go? …..Obviously it went to Sports Science (come on what did you expect?) and from then on in it was to be a damage limitation exercise.
Despite constant rolling substitutes, Team AS began to visibly tire and with their resistant weak the goals started to flow. 0-2 quickly became 0-3 and then 0-4 with Sports Science displaying some unnaturally precise finishes from tight angles with the shots flying in to the only places in Chris Awre’s net that he could not reach.
And then….a spirited fight back from Academic Services. A beautiful 3-man move beginning with an accurate pass from Bayliss to Cass, a wonderful shimmy and cross from the verbose midfielder which arrived straight onto the boot of Robert Sherratt. BANG! Wait for net to ripple….GOAL! But no…yet again the curse of Friday the 13th saw fit to smite Academic Services as the flight of the ball abnormally changed direction mid -air and smacked against the right-hand post and away to safety.
Click below to witness Robert Sherratt’s goal-bound shot being kept out by paranormal forces
Knowing that there goal was now protected by mysterious forces beyond scientific explanation, the SHES team could afford to throw men forward and a further two goals flew in late doors and the 6-0 rout was complete.
Yet again, Academic Services had fallen to another damaging defeat – surely they are due a change of luck? Next game? Coastal Studies and crucially it will not be played on Friday the 13th.
Full time: Academic Services 0-6 SHES
How they performed:
Chris Awre – How often does a keeper let in 6 and get a good review? Bizarrely Chris seems to defy all known football logic here but it would be a harsh critic who blamed him for the scoreline. Solid in the first half, the team’s capitulation after the break left him sorely exposed – ooh painful! 6/10
Wayne Thompson – With elder sibling Gary indisposed, it was time for Uncle Wayne to step out of his brother’s shadow and prove himself as the footballer he undoubtedly believes himself to be. Wayne fancies himself as a ball-playing hard man….I wonder if the record books will agree…let’s see …(sound of pages being flicked)…Wayne Thompson…Wayne Thompson…no they don’t agree…there’s just a picture of a donkey. 6/10
Robert Sherratt – Denied a stone wall penalty in the first half and also a certain goal by mystic forces in the second, Robert will consider himself persecuted by the curse of Friday the 13th. Apparently there is a word for the phobia of Friday the 13th ….paraskevidekatriaphobia. There is a also a word for the phenomenon of hitting the post from 2 yards out when it seems easier to score than miss…crapness 6/10
Gary Moore – And so the goal drought continues….Gary’s eye for the onion bag seems to have been affected by his dual player manager role – men and multi-tasking and all that. Maybe he should clone himself – seems to have worked for “JEdward”. 6/10
Tony Ward – Showed some incisive passing but was struck down by the curse of Friday 13th when, confronted with no option to pass in a tight corner was heard to shout “You all disappeared boys” – spooky! 6/10
Richard Bayliss – Produced a couple of timely clearances and well executed tackles but a lack of fitness told late on as he was increasingly stranded out of position as AS pressed for a consolation goal. Don’t check out your Prozone stats Richard – you’ll only upset yourself. 6/10
Alan Hewett – This man does not know when to stop – would gladly play next week’s fixture as soon as this one had finished. If he was a song he’d be “O Superman” by Laurie Anderson – you feel like it will never ever stop. Maybe Al has Kryptonite for breakfast? 7/10
Nigel Cass – Another garrulous display from Nigel – with his incessant talking he’s becoming a pest (© Chas ‘n’ Dave 1980) – for the opposition of course! 6/10
Carl Barrow – Started on the bench but was chomping at the bit to get involved. Threw himself into every tackle when he did get on and showed some intelligent possession of the ball. Pushing for a starting place next week? 7/10
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Academic Services? Whither the mighty Bookworms of last season’s daring exploits? You may well ask …apparently certain people thought bookworms wasn’t a fitting name anymore (admittedly it isn’t a name to strike fear into the hearts of opponents) and with many of the original players missing it was felt that it could reflect the new team. Hang on…original players missing ? New team?
Yes…its true the Bookworms…sigh…Academic Services have a host of new faces for the new season (more of them later) but for now a moment of contemplation to recognise those heroes of yesteryear who failed to make it into this brave new world ..Simon Lamb, Big John Higham, Pengfei Xue….your like may never be seen again (hopefully not …they were pants ….)
And so to the new breed…after a very encouraging 4-1 win in a friendly against the Business School the previous week and rumours of a proper kit and even sponsorship being secured, there was a distinctly professional feel to the team for the first league game of the season.
Did I say “team”? Make that “squad” as an unprecedented multitude of 11 players assembled for the traditional pre-match “kickabout”* Those mathematicians amongst you will have immediately spotted a problem here…11 into 6 does not go. To rectify this a policy of “rolling substitutions” was put forward to ensure everyone got a game.
The new squad assembles
Despite the plethora of new faces there was some continuity with Chris Awre regaining his place as goalkeeper from last season’s stand-in Wayne Thompson, a familiar strike force of Robert Sherratt and Gary “Goals” Moore and Mr Reliable Ponytail himself Gary Thompson acting as the destroyer in defence. The starting 6 line-up was completed by new boys Rob Dent, a busy, tough tackling ball player and Tony Ward an experienced journeyman (well he is 44!) with coaching credentials to boot.
And so to the action… a cautious opening gave way to sustained possession by Estates who were starting to flex their muscles and Chris Awre was called upon to produce some inspired (i.e. lucky) reaction saves on numerous occasions. The rulebook was called for after the Estates giant goalkeeper unilaterally decided he was allowed to play “rush”goalie**. With no rulebook forthcoming (t’was ever thus), the Estates goalkeeper began to run rings around the bamboozled Academic Services team who soon found themselves 2 goals down as half-time approached.
If anything the constant changing of the team brought about by the rolling substitutes policy seemed to be having a destabilising effect on the AS boys with the line-up changing more times than the Sugababes in a revolving door contest. It brought to mind the old adage that if you own a spade and you change the handle and then have to replace the blade is it the same spade? (What? Philosophy ed). Back in the thick of it, the AS lads were wishing they had shovels of their own to dig some holes to hide in.

The Estates goalkeeper surveys the damage his outfield expolits had wrought
Halftime: Academic Services 0 – 2 Estates
The second half saw a much improved performance from AS. Despite going 0-3 down early on, a number of chances were created and spurned. The main culprit was Tony Ward who twice failed to put away one-on-one chances and also screwed a shot wide from an admittedly wide angle.
When the breakthrough finally arrived it came from an unlikely source. Following good work by Rob Dent who rode a number of opposition challenges, the ball broke for Carl Barrow, a man as likely to score a goal as Alex Ferguson is likely to say “Och aye, the ref today was as fit as a butcher’s dog ye ken”. With the goalkeeper stranded by the deflection off Rob Dent, an unmanned open goal loomed large in front of Carl. As his AS team-mates held their breath, Carl managed to overcome his natural instincts to spoon the ball over the bar and cooly side-footed home from close range. Game on!
Game over…as the Estates man-mountain goalkeeper calmly strode forward once more, nonchalantly swotting the AS boys aside as if they were irritating midges and planted a stunning volley inside Chris Awre’s near post.
Click below to see the Estates goalkeeper scoring…
And that was that…a beating for sure but the AS lads showed distinct promise in the second half especially. Maybe it won’t be such a long season after all…
Full-time: Academic Services 1-4 Estates
* Kickabout = 10 outfield players attempting to take Chris Awre’s head off by crashing in as many shots as possible as hard as possible.
** Rush goalie = when a goalkeeper is allowed outside of his designated area to play outfield – in the world of 6-a-side football this phenomenon is also known as CHEATING!
How they performed
Chris Awre – The bearded wonder pulled off a string of saves in the first half to keep his team in the game. Needs to learn to shout at his defence a bit more – not something that will come naturally as he is well known for being softly-spoken. SPEAK UP CHRIS! 6/10
Gary Thompson – Displayed great commitment to the cause by playing whilst he was actually on holiday. Roared on by his young son, Gary employed his usual “if it moves, kick it” approach to the game. Left at half-time when Thompson junior reminded him that Mum would be wondering where they were. 6/10
Wayne Thompson – “Uncle” Wayne’s main contribution to the afternoon was escorting his nephew to the 3G pitch after the youngster got fed up waiting for Dad to get changed. 5/10
Robert Sherratt – Unaccustomed to not playing every minute as he usually does, Robert struggled to hit his stride..and when he did the stride hit back as he seemed to spend most of the game writhing around on the floor trying to get the ball from under his feet. Produced one desperate lunging stab at goal following up a Tony Ward thwarted effort but it drifted wide of the mark… disappointing. 5/10
Gary Moore – Quiet game from last year’s top goalscorer. A one season wonder? Has more work than Phil Brown to do in the restoring reputations stakes. 5/10
Rob Dent – Promising debut that featured a crunching early challenge that Alan Hansen would no doubt have described as an old-fashioned tackle from behind like they used to do in the good old days when they played proper football…or something. 7/10
Tony Ward – Marked his debut by wearing a Mark Knopfler-esque bandanna. Wasted a glorious one-on one chance late on with a finish that was “so far away” and will surely prompt Tony into some “private investigations” as to how he failed to score. Generally solid performance. 6/10
Richard Bayliss – 100 % pass completion rate including one sumptuous through ball that put Tony Ward in one -on one with the keeper. Neat, tidy and effective display 7/10
Alan Hewett – Another of the new lads with a reputation of having a “good engine” (basically he will run all day for a lump of sugar). Put in a good shift on the right hand side culminating in one arrowing cross which flashed across the Estates area causing a trail of panic in its wake… mainly from the AS boys who had never seen such a thing before and were clueless as to what to do with it. 6/10
Nigel Cass – Enthusiastic performer. Always talking (“Nigel wants it” may become a catchphrase), Nigel sought to bring professionalism to the team as was demonstrated by his rousing “come on lads lets get organised ” pre-match exhortation…which was quickly followed by him wondering off down the sidelines fiddling with his shorts in a little world of his own. 6/10
Carl Barrow – Contrary to rumour, Carl proved he did in fact have the technical ability to hit a cow’s backside with a banjo by conjuring up a brilliant 1 yard finish to score from an open goal. 7/10
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Players
Gary Thompson
Gary and Wayne model Bookworms new away kit
Appearances: 9
Position: Defender
Goals: 0
Comment: In Herge’s “Adventures of Tin Tin”, the detectives Thomson and Thompson can only be differentiated by the size of their moustaches. No such problems for the Bookworms own Thompsons as neither sports facial hair (we’re not counting Gary’s stubble!). Elder brother Gary, does favour a ponytail though. However, if his inspiration was the “divine ponytail” that was Italian hero Roberto Baggio, he was more David Seaman – a gruff Yorkshire man with a daft haircut who discovered he was a better ice skater than footballer. Fancy having a go at “Dancing on Ice” next year Gaz?
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Wayne Thompson

Probably more painful than Wayne's "hurty" knee injuries
Appearances: 8
Position: Defender / Goalkeeper
Goals: 0
Comment: Football has a rich history of outfield players acting as emergency goalkeepers. Think Niall Quinn saving a penalty for Man City in 1991 and Vinnie Jones donning the gloves heroically for Wimbledon back in the day. Mr Jones of course was infamous for his hard man persona, being sent off 12 times in his career, and squeezing Gazza’s crown jewels. Wayne’s “tough guy” image on the other hand, amounted to showing everybody where he had grazed his knee after every game. A “hurty” knee can be a serious injury apparently….A steady season for Wayne the younger culminating in good work between the sticks late doors (or something).
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Chris Awre

Its a sweaty business saving penalties apparently
Appearances: 6
Position: Goalkeeper
Goals: 0
Comment: That rarest of breeds – a bearded goalkeeper. Not since the days of Dickie Guy – Wimbledon’s 1975 FA cup hero who famously saved a Peter Lorimer penalty – has the species been sighted. Eerily echoing his beard-sake, Chris saved a penalty in the 3-0 victory of Union All stars. “The goalkeepers fear of the penalty?” No way! Chris put in a performance worthy of Albert Camus. Existential dude!
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Richard Bayliss

"Big" Sam Allardyce does his best Richard Bayliss impression
Appearances: 9
Position: Utility
Goals: 1
Comment: Despite being the eldest member of the squad, Richard was an ever-present appearing in all 9 of the Bookworms fixtures. Although he rarely completed the full 90 minutes (well…the full 26 minutes to be exact), often coming on as a substitute or being subbed himself, he was the very definition of ” stalwart”. Actually the definition of stalwart includes the words “beefy”, “hefty” and “stout”…hmm…we’ll go for “veteran” instead shall we? Let’s not encourage the “Big” Sam Allardyce comparisons eh? A contender for “Player of the Season”? Few who witnessed his last minute winner versus SFC would disagree.
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Robert Sherratt

Robert misses yet another game after failing to escape from a meeting with Richard Heseltine
Appearances: 6
Position: Forward
Goals: 1
Comment: His season blighted by injury and unmissable meetings, Robert never quite fulfilled his potential as a marauding forward. Despite registering just one solitary goal, it was not due to a lack of minutes in the pitch – when he did play Robert downright refused to ever be subbed. Talk about stubborn – Robert was more persistent than Man City’s pursuit of John Terry!
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Gary Moore

Gary found combining a career in football with one as a rock star problematic - well where do you put your plectrum when wearing a football strip?
Appearances: 9
Position: Forward
Goals: 6
Comment: Hey come on – 6 goals in 9 games – that’s a ratio any statistician would get their modes and medians in a muddle over. Easily the most prolific Bookworm in front of goal – his crowning glory being the hat-trick he bagged against Union All Stars. In fact, you could say he was “over the hills and far away” the best striker in the team….or… he was “out in the field” of his own…or…this man could make an”empty room” look full of goals (please stop – Music ed)
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John Higham

It's a little known fact that "Big" John is made entirely from pipe cleaners
Appearances: 7
Position: Midfield
Goals: 2
Comment: In many ways the Paul Daniels of the squad, “Big” John has that special knack of being able to conjure up something out of nothing. Two goal star against the Law School and provider of exquisite technique with his Van Basten like volley in the final game of the season, “Big” John is an enigma. He doesn’t look like he should be able to play football, yet somehow he does.
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Pengfei Xue

Pengfei means business - actually it means "flight of the roc" the bird of legend (Translation ed)
Appearances: 5
Position: Defender
Goals: 0
Comment: Possessor of perhaps the hardest shot in the squad, what he lacked in finesse Pengfei made up for in commitment. Generally operating in defence, Pengfei had that ability to run straight through an opponent taking ball, man, shirt, boots and anything else that got in his way with him. This all-action style occasionally meant Pengfei would run out of puff before the end but he remains the Bookworms’ own little magic dragon.
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Paul Andrews

Real "Paul of the Bookworms" stuff doesn't have quite the same ring to it
Appearances: 2
Position: Wherever he wanted to play
Goals:1
Comment: Bookworms’ very own Roy of the Rovers, Paul was head and shoulders above the rest of his team-mates. Unfortunately, so sporadic were his appearances that they began to believe that, like Roy Race, he was also a fictional character. Did he really exist or had they just dreamed of having such a quality player in their ranks?
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Carl Barrow

A life spent in the Shadows had aged Carl prematurely
Appearances: 2
Position: Lead guitar … sorry … Forward (for what it was worth)
Goals: 0
Comment: Carl remained very much on the periphery of the Bookworms squad with only 2 appearances – in fact so much was he destined to spend his life in the shadows he may as well have called himself Hank and be done with it!
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Simon Lamb

Simon's younger brother hated having to wear his sibling's hand-me-downs
Appearances: 7
Position: Defender
Goals: 0
Comment: Poor old Simon! His gentle demeanour and impeccable manners meant he was always going to come up short in the rough and tumble of 6-a-side. With his youthful boyish looks, Simon has the countenance of the Milky Bar Kid’s elder brother. Unfortunately for Simon, he never lived up to the legendary advert’s rhyming couplet ..”The Milky Bar kid is strong and tough, and only the best is good enough…” generally being as useful in defence as the proverbial chocolate teapot. ————————————————————————————————
MATCHES
Fri Feb 20 Bookworms 0-4 SHES (Sports Science)
Kick off 12.40
Match Report
After the opening match against Sabbaticals had been cancelled due to snow, this became the first game of the season and it was a fearful eyeopener for the Bookworms. If this was the standard, our brave lads could be in big trouble. A desperate rearguard kept the score to 0-1 at halftime after which the floodgates opened. SHES took complete control orchestrated by the lad with the giant afro.
Goalscorer: Never even got in their half

All hands to the pumps for the overworked Bookworms defence
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Fri Mar 06 Bookworms 1 – 7 SFC (Sports Centre Staff)
Kick off 12.40
Match Report
Hopes were raised when the SFC team appeared to have 2 players approaching retirement age in their ranks but a 1-0 half time lead supplied by A.N Other (somebody’s mate who’s name is lost in the mists of time) proved to be a false dawn. A second -half trouncing including well taken goals by both pensioners taught the Bookworms a valuable lesson – something to do with respect and elders apparently.
Goalscorer: A N Other

Believe it or not this guy was Man of the Match!
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Fri Mar 13 Bookworms 2 – 4 IECS/HIFI (Coastal Studies)
Kick off 12.40
Match Report
Not as close as it sounded in truth – a last minute Gary Moore strike lending the score a respectable sheen. Let’s be honest, Bookworms could have had Mr. Sheen himself applying muscle power and elbow grease in midfield and it still wouldn’t have glossed over the result.
Goalscorers: Robert Sherratt, Gary Moore

Mr Sheen seen polishing the Bookworms sub's bench
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Fri Mar 20 Bookworms 3 – 0 Union All Stars
Kick off 12.40
Match Report
This is why we love football! Just when you think there are no upsets left in this grand old game that has been so undermined by money, greed and the “top four” clubs, along comes a result like this! Gary Moore’s hat-trick was sublime and Chris Awre saved a penalty to give the Bookworms their only clean sheet of the season – but this was a team effort and the lads celebrated as if they had won the World Cup at the final whistle. Men that had only ever nodded at each other whilst passing on the stairs on the way to the staff room were suddenly embracing like long lost brothers…a truly beautiful moment in a season of heartache.
Goalscorers: Gary Moore (hat-trick)
Click below to see Chris Awre’s penalty save
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Fri 17 Apr Bookworms 1- 3 Law School
Kick off 12.40
Match Report
The first appearance of the season of Paul Andrews had Bookworms fans everywhere (somewhere? anywhere?) dreaming of a second win on the spin as Paul slotted in a late equalizer to set up a potentially barn-storming finish. Unfortunately the barn burnt down and the Bookworms succumbed to 2 injury time goals that left them staring at the ashes of another defeat.
Goalscorer: Paul Andrews

New signing Paul Andrews is unveiled prior to kick off
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Fri Apr 24 Bookworms 2 – 3 Law School
Kick off 12.40
Match Report
A scratch bookworms side missing notably Paul Andrews and Robert Sherrat very nearly pulled off a shock result after being outplayed for most of the game. This was all about “Big” John Higham who simply refused to be beaten. Previous appearances had failed to hint at the naked goal power of the man as he came up with two strikes from nowhere to give the Law School an uncomfortable last few minutes. This guy does not know when to stop!….what?.. oh yeah… the final whistle does the trick usually.
Goalscorers: John Higham (2)

"Big" John Higham - told you he doesn't know when to stop!
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Fri May 01 Bookworms 3-2 SFC
Kick off 12.00
Match Report
The game of the season – this match had everything including for once the right result! Drama? Check! Goals? Just count ’em! (Err… so that’s 5 then – Maths Ed) Last minute heroes? Shucks… you don’t need me to say his name do you? And before you cynics pipe up with “Yes but weren’t you playing a bunch of girls?”, you are referred to that old football adage that you can only beat the team that’s put in front of you. And anyway, those girls were really good……
Goalscorers: Gary Moore (2), Richard Bayliss

An SFC striker on the charge - Bookworms defenders are noticeably absent.
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Fri May 08 Bookworms 0 – 7 IECS/HIFI
Kick off 12.00
Match Report
(in a Norwegian accent)…” Agnes Cuming… Sir Andrew Motion… Sir Brynmor Jones… Philip Larkin… Dr Richard Heseltine…can you hear me? Dr Richard Heseltine your boys took a hell of a beating! ”
Goalscorers: Yeah right!
Click below to hear the original Norwegian commentator rant
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Fri May 22 Bookworms 0-1 Union All stars
Kick off 12.40
Match Report
Think of footballing heartache and what images come to mind? Gazza’s tears in 1990? Gareth Southgate’s crest-fallen face in 1996? Strike these images from your mind’s eye for they have been replaced by the look of pure agony and injustice etched on the face of everyone of those heroic Bookworms players after this result!
Goalscorers: Coulda, woulda, shoulda!

At least the Bookworms didn't cry like this big girl's blouse
And so it all came down to this…a match between two teams that was as pointless as a shin-kicking contest between two one-legged men with the prize of a pair of Doc Martens for the winner (and as attractive to watch some may say). And yet….
…these guys were operating in the eye of the hurricane and when you’re in it every pass, every lunge, every moment is loaded with meaning and consequence. Yes the Bookworms’ season had been strewn with disappointments and disaster but here was one last opportunity to prove their worth on the only stage that matters – the 3G pitch (the one in the extreme left hand corner that borders Inglemire Road).
In the pre-match build-up the sense of togetherness was palpable – Thompson twin Wayne even offered to share his locker with Bayliss – an indication of how far these guys would go for each other. With belief and purpose the players assembled – buoyed by the knowledge that they had destroyed their opponents 3-0 in their last meeting. Then the news came that the brave Bookworms had dreaded: ” The All stars have drafted in some new players for this one” proclaimed Gary Thompson. For “new players” read “ringers”….a collective gulp was audible from the Bookworms.
But two can play at that game as Gary Moore announced that his mate Paul would be playing for the Bookworms. Paul had not been seen since the 3-1 defeat to IECS/HIFI on 13th March and had been a goalscorer and star player on that day and now he was back! Alas as kick off approached there was no sign of Paul and with the All Stars keen to start the Bookworms (with Simon Lamb gone into hiding for fear of another 4/10 rating) lined up thus:
- Goalkeper: Wayne “Shilton” Thompson
- Right defence: Richard Bayliss
- Left defence: Gary Thompson
- Midfield: “Big” John Higham
- Forward: Gary Moore
- Forward: Robert Sherrat
As for the opposition they looked purposeful and were led by a skipper who bore an uncanny resemblance to Grange Hill’s Trevor Cleaver – a carrot-topped Arsenal supporting bully who developed an alcohol problem in series 12. He wore the legend “Horatio” on his shirt but did he have the “Nelson touch” -the ability to inspire and bring out the best in his men? If inspire means dispute every decision and berate your team-mates with expletives at every juncture then yes this man did have the “Nelson touch” – he was also a Napoleonic bore.

The Union All Stars captain
And so to the action – the Bookworms were looking tight at the back with Wayne Thompson displaying a new found authority and confidence between the posts. Gary Thompson looked his usual solid self and Richard Bayliss at last had found a position on the pitch he felt comfortable in with some timely interceptions and accurate ball distribution. Up front Gary Moore looked lively but “Big” John Higham had taken up a position far too deep which Robert Sherrat was quick to point out.
As a stalemate broke out, Paul Andrews finally arrived and Gary Thompson was the unlucky man to make way with Robert Sherrat dropping deep to fill in at the back. It was clear immediately that Paul was a class act and the Bookworms looked to give him possession at every opportunity. With Paul’s confidence on the ball and his seemingly telepathic appreciation of where Gary Moore would be, the chances started to mount. Moore went close twice and then when a pile-driver was spilt by the keeper “Big” John Higham could only scuff the rebound straight back into his grateful arms. A corner landed at the feet of Bayliss in the box but the ball came at him too quickly (is this scientifically possible? – Physics ed) and the chance was gone.
At the other end the All Stars huffed and puffed but they could not blow down the door which Wayne Thompson was keeping under lock and key masterfully (who needs Chris Awre anyway?). Robert Sherrat then treated the crowd (some bloke and his girlfriend) to a display of twinkle-toed ball control which outfoxed the three All Stars players surrounding him before playing in Gary Moore but yet again the chance was not converted.
Half- time : Bookworms 0 Union All Stars 0
The Bookworms were in good heart as the second half started. The only change saw Bayliss give way to allow Gary Thompson back into the action. The break had done nothing to disrupt the flow of chances with Bookworms laying siege to the All Stars ramparts. Surely a break through was imminent?
Gary Moore was repeatedly thwarted by the opposition goalkeeper who was enjoying the game of his life. With Paul Andrews prompting and probing, the All Stars defence was at breaking point . Chance after chance came, had a look, decided it had something better to do that afternoon and went. The All stars resorted to parking the proverbial bus in front of goal resulting in numerous penalty box scrambles.

The horror as another chance goes begging for Bookworms
This was like England v Poland in 1973 all over again, the game when Brian Clough famously called the Polish keeper a clown but who withstood wave after wave of English attacks to dump us out of the World cup. This game also had a clown – this one though was not Polish but playing for Union All Stars. Yes, Trevor Cleaver was at it again constantly moaning and barking out instructions to anyone who would listen. This was a man so convinced of his own ability he would make Ben from “The Apprentice” look like someone who had failed an audition to play himself in a film of his own life story.
At the other end Thompson twin Wayne was directing his troops with a military precision that would not have looked out of place in the Battle of Trafalgar. When brother Gary’s tendons finally collapsed, Bayliss re-entered the field of play and immediately robbed an advancing All Stars forward and strode majestically upfield. With the opposition backing off, Bayliss played a swift one-two with Andrews and advanced further into opposition territory. It was at this point that Bayliss suddenly remembered who he was (i.e. an ageing Sam Allardyce lookalike and definitely not Nicolas Anelka) and instead of calmly side-footing a shot to the keepers left, panicked hysterically and crashed a shot wide of the post.

Bayliss pictured seconds after missing that chance
With full time approaching and the tension-o-meter cranked up to unbearable, “Big” John Higham produced a piece of individual skill that left all who witnessed it awestruck in admiration. As a chipped pass upfield descended from the sky, “Big” John swiveled his body shape, let the ball drop over his shoulder and produced a thunderous Van Basten-like volley that screamed towards the net. “This one’s in for sure!!” nobody in the crowd shouted aloud in a Roy of the Rovers fashion but the shot curled wide and away taking with it Bookworms’ dreams of glory.

“Big” John Higham goes oh so close!
And so it came to pass that in the final minute of this epic engagement the Bookworms were to succumb to the classic sucker punch. As the seconds ticked away an All Stars forward pounced on a loose ball and from a full 25 yards out produced an outrageously flukey toe-poke that flew into the only part of Wayne Thompson’s net that he could not reach. As the Bookworms sank to their knees the All Stars scorer performed that annoying “come hither” beckoning-hand goal celebration to rub salt in the wound.
There was still time for one last forage upfield from Bookworms but again a sharp drive from Andrews was blocked at the death. Some bloke (and his girlfriend) decided time was up and blew the final whistle (well.. he did that cross armed “its all over” gesture that so annoyed Alex Ferguson recently) and the game was up – Bookworms incredibly, tragically and heartbreakingly had been beaten.
Full time: Bookworms 0 Union All Stars 1
How they performed:
Wayne Thompson – what a performance from the younger Thompson twin! Commanding, assured and crucially the only one who fancied going in goals – a towering display. Unlucky to be beaten late on – did not deserve to be on the losing side. 8/10
Gary Thompson – the very definition of solid – go on look up “solid” in the Collins dictionary and there’s a picture of Gary (actually it says “consisting of matter all through” but we get the idea – ed) 7/10
Richard Bayliss – one of his best performances of the season. Showed great discipline in defence whilst also producing some silky touches of the ball further upfield. Would have to spend 7 years living in Finland, qualify for dual nationality and change his name to Jari Litmanen before he could claim to have a finish in him though.7/10
Paul Andrews – otherwise known as Gary Moore’s mate. If only he had been available for the Bookworms throughout the season. This man does not know when to stop and drove his team forward until the very end. A touch of class. 9/10
“Big” John Higham – found his feet after a shaky start and produced a stunning volley late on that deserved to win any game . Had it gone in he would have hung up his boots there and then John said afterwards – thankfully for Bookworms retirement will have to wait a while yet 7/10
Gary Moore – the master of the mazy dribble. His slaloming runs would have caused any connoisseur of the game to drool and slaver at his skills – his finishing was drivel though. 7/10
Robert Sherrat –Big Bob put a good shift in for the team. Showed excellent tactical nous by dropping to defence when Andrews arrived and also when spotting Higham was doing a Noam Chomsky by being too deep. 7/10
Filed under: Uncategorized
After a spirited display against the Law School last week, the Bookworms lads took to the 3G pitch looking for only their second win of the season. Having lost 7-1 to the Sports Centre team in their last meeting, Bookworms were dealt an immediate blow by the news that regular goalkeeper Chris Awre was unavailable due to a 2.00 pm meeting! Who would take his place in between the sticks? Cometh the hour cometh the Lamb: Simon Lamb stepped into the breach. That sorted, the usual “who’s starting?” debate ensued with Thompson twin Wayne starting on the bench due to a hurty knee
With kick off approaching however, there was no sign of the Sports Centre team. Scared of the mighty Bookworms? Unlikely – the truth was they were struggling to find a team and in the end a scratch team including 3 women (one of whom had never played football before and had to be cajoled by her team mates to play) took to the field.
Starting with Robert Sherrat (just back from injury) and leading scorer Gary Moore up front with last week’s 2 goal hero Big John Higham in the hole a strong looking Bookworms team was completed with Thompson twin Gary and utility man (i.e he’s played in every position and is no good in any of them) Richard Bayliss at the back.
Two minutes and two clinical strikes from Gary Moore later and the bookworms were two up and cruising – but thoughts of an easy win were cruelly exposed as it became apparent that the ladies on the pitch were not there to make up the numbers. The blond left winger would give Usain Bolt a decent race and began to give Bayliss a torrid time. The two ladies in the middle quickly showed some nice touches and it was no surprise that a well taken snapshot by their captain brought the Sports Centre back into it.
This was followed by a disastrous handling error from replacement goalkeeper Lamb who allowed a speculative 20 yarder to slip through his fingers and into the net. Thompson twin Gary gave way to his brother Wayne who was soon in the thick of it breaking up a Sports centre attack and with a quickstep and sidekick strode down the pitch. “Into the gap” Big John Higham cried and Wayne found him with a nicely weighted ball but Big John could not repeat last weeks heroics and the chance went begging. With that someone decided it was half time and the action was halted.
Simon Lamb’s confidence had been shattered by his first half error and demanded someone else go in goal. Thompson twin Wayne somewhat reluctantly stepped up and Simon moved to the right of defence. Big John Higham had run his legs off and sat out the 2nd half with Gary Thompson returned to the left back position.
A first for the Bookworms was then announced when Gary Moore came up with an actual “tactic” for the second half – he would man mark the Sports Centre captain and best player with Robert Sherrat and Richard Bayliss taking up the front two roles. This plan however was quickly dashed when team Sports Centre started with their captain in goals for the second half. As a result, Bookworms returned to their usual kick and rush/ hit it and hope / anywhere will do principles and the action began.
Chances came and went at both ends – a rather hopeful penalty appeal by Sports Centre went unheard by the non-existent ref whilst Gary Moore wasted a one-on -one when he allowed himself to be caught by the three chasing Sports centre women players.
Tension now crept in with one mistake likely to cost the game. The play swung out to the left, Gary Moore hooked a cross in that travelled all the way through to Bayliss on the far right who showed good close control by bringing it down in one movement and slipping a pass through to Robert Sherrat. The tall striker’s effort was blocked but the ball came loose to Bayliss in the area who produced an exquisite toe-poke to score in the top left corner. The net rippled, the onion bag was filled and Bookworms had the lead with one minute to go. One late cross into the Bookworms area caused momentary concern but Thompson twin Wayne stood firm. Final whistle – game over – the Bookworms had their win.
How they performed:
Simion Lamb – proved being tall is no indicator of goalkeeping prowess. Looked more comfortable in second half hoofing the ball away anytime it came near (him) 5/10
Wayne Thompson – was pleased with his customary graze on his knee and also kept a clean sheet when reverting to goalkeeper in the second half. 7/10
Gary Thompson – no nonsense performance at the back from the pony-tailed player manager 6/10
John Higham – only had one sniff of a chance before substituting himself at half time. Looked very tall throughout though. 5/10
Gary Moore – took his two goals well but his reluctance to pass unless he really has to frustrated in the second half. 7/10
Robert Sherratt – looked a bit rusty on his return from injury but never stopped running – useful if you are playing football. 6/10
Richard Bayliss – converted to striker at half time to save him from the speed of the opposition winger. Made numerous intelligent runs in to the box only for the ball to go somewhere else. Sumptuous finish for his first goal for …..a very long time. 8/10