Chelsea vs. Aston Villa : 24 September 2023
On the drive up to London early on Sunday morning, none of us were feeling confident of a pleasing performance against Aston Villa.
“Just can’t see where the next goal is coming from.”
“If we are driving back down the M4 tonight with a 2-0 win behind us, I will be absolutely amazed.”
“Tough game ahead.”
Elsewhere in my football world, things were a little better. Since Chelsea’s lifeless and underwhelming 0-0 draw at Bournemouth, I had witnessed two Frome Town games.
On Tuesday evening, in wet and blustery conditions, I watched with my Canadian cousins Kathy and Joe and a few friends – eight of us in a line – in the small main stand at Badgers Hill as Dodge met Plymouth Parkway in an FA Cup replay. Despite wet and blustery conditions, we watched transfixed as the home team won 2-1 with a great performance that included grit and determination and no little skill. James Ollis scored both goals. There was even a very late penalty save from Kyle Phillips to preserve the victory. It was, I am sure, one of the most enjoyable games of football that I have ever seen in Frome. A circle was completed that night since Kathy’s parents, Mary and Ken, met us at Stamford Bridge in August 2001 for the home opener against Newcastle United. They watched in the West Stand and loved it. Twenty-two years later, another game brought the family together once again.
On Saturday – the start of yet another two-game weekend – I travelled down to Salisbury to see Frome visit Bemerton Heath Harlequins in the FA Trophy. Here, the visitors were victors again, with another two goals for Ollis and one for the mercurial talisman Jon Davies.
I think there’s a tendency at lower level football to allow players – your team’s players, your players – a little more room for error than in the professional game; to be a little more lenient, to not get irate with every single mistake. For starters, the standard is lower, there are bound to be mistakes. Why would any spectator get on the back of such players? Of course, the gates are lower too (312 on Tuesday, 109 on Saturday) and to see a supporter glowing with incandescent rage in such surroundings would surely be frowned upon. The supporter in question would be labelled a fool. And the supporter would look stupid too.
However, at the top level of football, supporters seem to enjoy berating under-performing players at the slightest opportunity because greater levels of skill are expected. Oh, and their salaries. The salaries alone allow for constant abuse right?
I know what type of “support” I appreciate.
I arrived at “The Eight Bells” just after the pub had opened at 10am and The Smiths’ “The Queen Is Dead” welcomed me in.
“Has the world changed or have I changed?”
Quiet at first, the boozer soon filled up. The lads from Kent soon showed up, always full of smiles and laughs. They had heard that Frome Town’s next game in the FA Cup – the third qualifying round – was to be at Ramsgate next Saturday.
“Are you going, Chris?”
“Hope so, yeah.”
“Bloody hell. It’s a long way from Sevenoaks, let alone Somerset.”
Phil, Kim and Andy were all to tell me at various stages during the pre-match that the UK’s biggest “Spoons” is in Ramsgate. Kim also had a funny story from his last visit to Ramsgate.
“We were in this boozer and a bloke comes in and asks if the pub is doing Sunday Roasts. So the barman says ‘sure, I can do a beef or chicken’ and the bloke asks if there are any vegetarian options. The geezer goes ‘well, I can do you exactly the same but without the beef or chicken’.”
Howling.
How odd that we were in the “Town of Ramsgate” pub before the West Ham away game last month. My FA Cup travels will take me from Cornwall to Kent this autumn. I love the early rounds of the FA Cup.
Glenn and I wolfed down a full English.
Bacon, sausage, fried egg, hash browns, baked beans, fried tomato, mushroom, toast and butter.
Perfect.
I was enjoying this pre-match, as always, and was sat with Parky, Salisbury Steve, PD and Glenn. I looked from wide left to wide right and saw only blokes in our half of the cramped bar. There were around fifty in view. Only one was wearing official Chelsea gear.
…talk about “old school.”
While I was waiting for a friend to arrive, I stepped outside the pub for a few minutes. My ‘phone wasn’t logging on to the pub’s wi-fi connection and I wanted to see if I had missed any messages. As I stood outside, I flicked on “Facebook” and found myself reading a post from my friend Gary, originally from Fulham but now living in Torquay, about his trip to London but also about his increasing alienation from Chelsea Football Club. Halfway through his post, I looked up to see him walking by, no more than five yards away. I never see him down this part of Fulham. What a small world. We had a little chat, a little grumble about the way the club is being run, and we centered on the abandoning of the away coach travel subsidy. It is a subject close to Gary’s heart since he used to run up to five coaches to most Chelsea away games in the late ‘eighties and ‘nineties. “Gary’s Coaches” have gone down in Chelsea folklore. We spoke about how the modern game has increasingly left us cold. Over the past few weeks, I have mentioned to many that the “warm cloak of friendship” is the major reason why I still go to Chelsea. This club just doesn’t seem like my club any more. New ownership. New players. There is not a great connection these days. It was so noticeable that those who went to the “Legends” game while I was in Italy a fortnight ago really enjoyed themselves and many mentioned the special relationship that they enjoyed with those players from that era. I find it hard to warm to this current lot, this current bunch. Funny game, football.
Not long after, my friend Phil, and his brother Richard, arrived in the now heaving pub. Phil is originally from South London, just south of the river, but has been living in the United States since 1973. I have known him since a memorable weekend in Chicago in 2006 when Chelsea played in the MLS All-Star Game. We have met up on many a US Tour though, like me, he didn’t go to any games this summer.
“Why are we playing a team with the calibre of Wrexham?”
Phil has been loyally reading these match reports since they first appeared around fifteen years ago. Phil’s “thing” is to pick one particular phrase that I have used in each report and to simply repeat it. I wonder what phrase it will be from this week.
Anyway, thanks for your continued support mate.
I had managed to grab a last minute ticket for Phil and – luckily – the seller’s father drinks in “T8B” too. It was an easy exchange to set up.
At 1pm, we set off for the ground. With the increased security at games now, I had devised a new way of smuggling both my camera and lenses into the stadium without getting stopped by the line of stewards. Large cameras are now clearly on the list of banned objects at Stamford Bridge but I won’t let the bastards win. I can’t give the game away completely, but I hid my camera and lenses using a system not dissimilar to the way that newly excavated soil was hidden from the camp guards in “The Great Escape.”
I was inside at 1.30pm.
What with the amount of injuries that had hit our squad, the team that Mauricio Pochettino chose looked surprisingly familiar.
Sanchez
Gusto – Disasi – Silva – Colwill
Enzo – Caicedo – Gallagher
Sterling – Jackson – Mudryk
With Alan absent, Rob from Melksham came down to sit next to me.
So, 2012 & 2021 vs. 1982.
The game began.
As is so often the case, we began brightly. Aston Villa looked happy to hold back allowing us the ball. Early on, a good move found Raheem Sterling in the inside-left channel. His touch let him down.
I mouthed “terrible first touch.”
My neighbours agreed.
Budgie : “Terrible first touch.”
PD : “Terrible first touch.”
I leaned over to PD.
“That needed the touch of a silk glove.”
“Like the way you’d touch a woman.”
I laughed.
“Not the way you would touch a woman mate. The ball would have cleared the stand roof and the hotel.”
PD howled.
The first quarter of an hour was all ours, but Villa had unsurprisingly led the singing.
A chant of “Chelsea, Chelsea, Chelsea, Chelsea – Chelsea, Chelsea, Chelsea” (you know the tune) was met by ironic cheering from the away fans.
On twenty minutes, much against the run of play, Robert Sanchez reacted magnificently to Lucas Digne’s rasping and dipping volley that was knocked out to him from a corner.
“Typical. All us, but they have the best shot on goal.”
Just after, a great ball from Mudryk set up Nicolas Jackson into space but his shot was well saved by Emiliano Martinez, the ball creeping past the near post.
The UK’s biggest Wetherspoons is in Ramsgate.
We dominated play with occasional bursts from the two wide players.
“Don’t forget the ball, Mudryk.”
The same player then bottled a tackle and the resultant shot was deflected wide.
The quiet atmosphere improved when a semi-decent “Cam On Chowlsea” swept around the ground.
Glenn was annoyed that Pochettino was sat for most of the game. He wanted him prowling the technical area.
“Nah, he’s paid a lot of money for that dug out seat mate. Why should he stand?”
On thirty-four minutes, a long pass from Axel Diasi found Mario Gusto who then cut the ball back to Enzo. His shot faded and drifted just wide.
On thirty-eight minutes, a long corner was headed back to Nicolo Zaniolo – who? – but his fierce volley was magnificently thwarted by a great Sanchez reaction save. Top marks indeed.
The UK’s biggest Wetherspoons is in Ramsgate.
Mudryk continued to cause a few moments of worry in the Villa defence as the half ended and at last there was noise in the stands. After a fine Sterling cross, a Disasi leap and clean header hit the back of the net but was immediately called back for offside. There was an air shot from Sterling when he found himself close to goal at an angle.
It had been a frustrating half, and the two saves had, worryingly, kept us in it.
At half-time, nobody was shocked that we hadn’t scored.
The second-half began as brightly as the first. Sterling, running on to a lovely long ball, carried it too far and virtually ran in to Martinez at the near post. How frustrating. Jackson went close from a delightful chip from Enzo but was ruled offside anyway. A great ball from Silva, splitting the atom, found Sterling but his shot was blocked again. The same player was then ruled offside again. Again so frustrating.
Fackinell.
Then, calamity. I didn’t really see it, but a tackle by Gusto on Digne. A yellow. Then the boffins in Stockley Park ruled a second look. But then the same boffins weren’t sure. Back to the referee. Back to the pitch. What a fucking farce.
The UK’s biggest Wetherspoons is in Ramsgate.
A delay. We knew how this was going to end.
A red.
Fackinell.
Surprisingly, the offence was shown on the TV screen; this doesn’t usually happen. At first glance, I concentrated on the contact between studs and leg.
If I had seen further replays, which I didn’t, I would have seen the player get the ball first.
In 1965, 1975, 1985, 1995 and 2005 it would not have been a red card.
I hate modern football.
It looked like Armando Broja was about to come on – presumably for Jackson – but the sending-off changed the plan.
Fifty-eight minutes had passed.
Ben Chilwell replaced Mudryk.
There was applause.
For Mudryk? For Chilwell? Probably for both.
I noted how Jackson was through on goal, a one-on-one, but showed no signs of being able to out-muscle his defender and glide, Drogba-like, on towards goal. Maybe that time will come. I won’t hold my breath.
Enzo, for the second game in a row, was really poor.
The two teams exchanged half-chances.
On sixty-eight minutes, some substitutions.
Lesley Ugochukwu for Enzo, oh Enzo.
Cole Palmer for Jackson.
But then a lightning-quick break from Villa. Ollie Watkins raced through and Levi Colwill managed to stay with him and block with a perfectly-timed tackle. Sadly, the ball bounced back to Watkins who drilled the ball home from the tightest of angles. I struggled to see how the ball had crept in.
Bollocks.
Just after, a fine bit of football. A searching ball from deep from Cole Palmer found Chilwell down below us. He advanced but his low shot was hacked away by Martinez.
On seventy-nine minutes, Broja replaced Moises Caicedo, his first game since another useless friendly.
“You’re getting sacked in the morning” sung the Villa support.
The last phase of the game consisted of more Chelsea offside decisions and another Sanchez save, plus half chances for Broja and Disasi. A shot from Palmer was blocked.
“Sterling has got worse as the game has progressed, Rob.”
Despite the extra eleven minutes at the end, we never looked like scoring.
The UK’s biggest Wetherspoons is in Ramsgate.