Friday, 18 December 2009

3:7 F.C.U.K. 17/12/09 9.15pm

WON 11-9
Matt, Leo, Alan, James, Rob, Nathan

We were almost there last time in our 6-5 defeat. We were but the bridesmaid, as a game we trailed 5-3 at half-time to level it up with barely a few minutes to go, before the crushing inevitability of being put back on the shelf. But never is there a greater truism than catching the bouquet and the consequences thereof, and so this week we finally married lady victory, threw her onto the bridal bed, put a ring on it, and declared "I'm your mister eleven, baby!" before sinking our {EDITED FOR EXPLICIT CONTENT}

With Skinner FC dominating the attacking options, it was left to Team Leo (sod your Edwards and Jacobs) to do the primary defending, and Matt to let in the long range shots.

It was cold, my car wouldn't start, and some serious hat and glove wearing was going on amongst the team, as we took on FCUK, who had a reasonable pedigree of beating teams in the lower half of the table. They were young, they had pace, and they popped the ball around along an invisible border in the final third, as we defended goal side of them like a Bengals back line.

The opposition's insistence on all out attack, exposing their inadequate keeper to some comical fumbles (and a throwout that bounced out off our front man squirming back into the net easily making Danny Dyer's Desperate Christmas Cash-In Cock-Ups), played into the hands of the Skinner machine, the eight-legged V8-engined beast finally looking like something that would give Tetsuo a problem, and less like the individual plastic components of a Constructicon Gobot. Alan and James led the front line like single moms at a River Island sale, whilst Nathan and Rob were happy to snipe targets further back - both smashing in corking long-range belters that even moving the goal back another 20 yards would have done little against. Indeed, our attacking arrogance was much in evident, with Nathan consistently laughing off the opposition's attempts to nibble at the ball, and Rob declaring he was the master of the universe, and the one time previously that his shooting was dogshit, was just that - one time.

At the back, defending was going on. It was a blur really. We were standing off the opposition a fair bit to entice their shooting (and then counter them, as is our way) but getting the short range blocks in. However the long range stuff saw Matt watching the shots sail by him into the corners. Still any game where Matt concedes less than double figures against a team above us is normally, on balance, a good match for him, and that was despite him allowing a ball to bounce in off him at his near post, and Leo toeing in (another) own goal. So really, actually, the defending from front to back was actually actually pretty good actually, with enough pace and energy in the side to turn a half-time lead, into a one goal deficit back into a two goal victory.

You know its been a long time coming for a win, when Mrs Alan tells you that her husband finally comes home beaming with happy pride, the bed springs getting a suitable workout. But like any marriage, we still need to work at it, and one night of glorious honeymoon passion, doesn't really guarantee more than a bi-monthly cop-a-feel of lady victory's amazingly w{EDITED FOR EXPLICIT CONTENT}

Thursday, 3 December 2009

3:5 Thatcher FC 3/12/09 8.30pm

LOST 6-5
Matt, Leo, Robbie, Alan, James, Nathan, Richard

Friday, 27 November 2009

26th November – Cunning Stunts – defeat 10-2

The return of the Gob

After a long lay of many months, and the associated holiday of Lungboy who confessed that he has been “sorting my shit out”, I decided that I should dust of my typewriter and actually ensure that an article was on the decidedly inactive Mollies blog.

Despite the lay off, the same old problems still affect the Mollies. All told last night was a decent defensive performance against (cue sense of déjà vu) a younger, fitter, quicker and more skilful team. And this is at the root of the continued bottom feeding of the Mollies. We are currently sat at the bottom (*alongside and unassigned team) of our division on zero points with only the upcoming two games against unassigned teams to gift us six points. It’s like Wednesday all over again.

To be fair we have played the top two teams in the last two weeks conceding 21 goals and scoring 9. The majority of the team felt that this was a good showing against two teams that on paper should have completely mugged us. The Gob would agree with this but the red marks dotting my body from being a human dart board show my wish that our marking and tackling would improve just a bit. We have had a tendency in the last couple of weeks to allow attackers to get behind us and move into the corners all unawares. This has led to a number of crosses attacking the top of the D which in previous were infrequent occurrences.

Not so much the week before, but definitely last night, we couldn’t hit a barn door in anger. We have improved our ability to hit the ball with the introduction of Rob and Nathan. Also with the return of Lungboy there was a sense of optimism that we actually our strongest side available with an ability to jeopardise the opposition goal. Strangely, with the glut of shooting ability available, we could only aim at the back board rather than the net. It was not as if the opposition keeper was brilliant (as he threw one of our two goals into his own net). Had we been only slightly more accurate the score line would likely have been much more flattering. It is positive that James has been scoring much more regularly of late but with greasy pitches for the last two weeks, long shots should have allowed a following attacker to hit a rebound or saved shot.

Also the issue of substitutions reared it ugly head once again. An apoplectic Steve chiding the rest of the team for only allowing him 4 minutes of pitch time in the first half. However, a slightly different and amused take would be that “Chopper” was defending with muscular approach employed by your average prop forward and would likely result in a sin binning. As it stands his second half performance had him crawling of the pitch on his hands and knees before coming off, but the Gob was able to see him grabbing shirts and irritating the opposition attackers with great regularity. No doubt this led to the opposition throwing the ball away on our free kick in the last minute when they were 10-2 up. Sportsmanlike indeed.

All told, we benefited from the return of Leo after a 4 week lay off. However, with only one game in December, who knows what the stamina of our band of oldish men will be like come the new year. When we no doubt play another, younger, fitter, quicker and more skilful team once again.

Thursday, 26 November 2009

3:4 Cunning Stunts 26/11/09 7pm

LOST 10-2
Matt, Leo, Steve, Alan, James, Rob, Nathan

So it's been many months since I last wrote a report. A combination of writer's block, Blockbuster DVD watching; and just a general despair at our constant defeats, nulled any enthusiasm I had for writing about our inadequacies all the time. Yeah, that's right, I got bored of slagging people off.

Times have changed and the squad has again metamorphosised into another beast of constituent parts, with Rob now a seasoned regular, Nathan a regular sessional, Richard an enthusiastic rookie, and Gareth an occasional cameo-maker. It was therefore a bizzare start to the evening to hear Matt dismay at having too many people in the squad, and his selection headaches, easily able to conjure at least nine players in the right circumstances, with feeder club Skinner FC now fully integrated into the set up.

Despite the economic crisis, as beared witness by my hometown's ex-Woolworths soon to be a f*cking 99p Store, the price of the match fee remains at a constant high, as treasurer Steve balances the books after the man-purse's recent financial beating. Old Steve Grumpton was in a tetchy mood from the off, pouring scorn on the notion of getting drunk on one's birthday, closer to death, loss of innocence and all that, and would later unleash a full on strop at the indiscliplined substituting that resulted in him playing only four minutes of the first half (by Sir Alex's stopwatch anyway), whilst others in the team were moving so lamely, that slugs could crawl up their backsides.

In the spirit of mutual respect, Matt had a pretty faultless game. Only conceding 10 goals against the top side, and making enough genuine close-range efforts, that Leo had no cause to shout obscenities at him, whilst the Molly's latest touchline totty, Mrs Matt watched on, with her handbag at the ready.

There was a minute's silence for that bloke who used to ref games, and play in games, here at Goals, which deserved the same respect as that German keeper who committed suicide by putting himself in front of a train. As Rob so eloquently put it, within ear shot of the ref, to paraphrase, "He's the guy that had an argument with his missus, and threw himself out of the car, smashing his brains in". Whilst heavily under the influence of alcohol.

We too played like our brains had been smeared all over the concrete (see the French film Dobermann for an excellent sequence where a character gets his face scraped along the road from a moving car). There is absolutely no discipline in formation. This isn't rocket science - James up front, Alan on the left, Nathan or Rob on the right to press forward from deep; Leo or Steve hanging in defence. What the f*ck Nathan or Rob are doing as last man when their goalkeeper begins their initial move bears no credibility. If they were hanging back to catch a breather, then they deserved Steve's wrath. In fairness, when Steve was at the back he was shockingly slow, getting caught out, as attackers ran in behind him, and putting in enough professional fouls to make Thierry Henry look like a saintly frog-eating onion-chomper. Like Thierry, Steve admitted that he was a bloody CHEAT.

Rob's powerful shooting was being undermined by his trigger, a left foot so repugnantly off-target, that he could dip his toe into the sea, and still miss the water. James' two-too-many-touch shooting saw him rapidly and regularly closed down, and we do seem to be the only team in this or any league, whose only option from the keeper is the long ball to the front man, off the wall. I dare us, knowing that i'm going to get the most shit from it, to short ball EVERY keeper throwout, barring the obvious direct scoring oppo.

Free-kicks were their usual slow and painful and inaccurate nonsense. Our shooting barely troubled their keeper, and some gilt-edged chances with wide-open goals, when we did manage to fox their keeper, became guilt-ridden f*ck-ups as they went stupidly wide, or hit the bar.

Leo's return was only half a blessing, as he was getting in the interceptions, but failing to take control of the second touch, resulting in the top-heavy opposition attack still profiting from a now split-leg, static defence, summed up superbly with him edging a long pass away from a protruding attacker, only to slither it past a wrong footed Matt for his first own goal of the season.

The opposition were the usual cretins, arguing the toss on every little foul supposedly committed against them (complaints only justified against Steve), and back-heeling the ball away from our free-kick when they were 10-2 up with a minute to go. Congratulations dickwad, your mother raised you well.

There's no improvement in the way this team plays, just a random series of events that gets thrown together, that occasionally produces a positive result through sheer luck. We have so many glory hunters in a team that really, by transference, wouldn't be capable of hunting for porn on the internet. Just once, I'd like to see some positional discipline, even if it's just for the bloody kick-off. The right wing has enough space in it to the build The West Wing. Get over there.

Rant over.

Monday, 23 November 2009

Mollys In Print - Insight Magazine Oct 09

The back page of Insight magazine:








Thursday, 17 September 2009

2:6 Smoking Aces 3/9/09 8.30pm and 2:7 Itchen Beavers 10/9/09 7.00pm

vs Smoking Aces
LOST 16-7

vs Itchen Beavers
LOST 13-3
Leo, Steve, Alan, Rob, James

Skinner Productions Presents...




Friday, 28 August 2009

The Tournament - Pictorial Review 28/8/09 pt.1

I’m writing the first part of this Tournament report without the benefit or re-course to the video footage, and simply based on my re-collection (and imagination). I’m also dealing with my cut left thumb which in console gaming terms is the equivalent of an amputation; a general knackedness; and a bruised right leg that is limp-inducing. The photos can be clicked for a larger view.

Friday morning, and it was an early start for many of the squad. Steve won the prize for his 5am start to make it down to the Town Quay pick-up, where he would be joined by Matt, Alan, and honorary ‘Molly’ Alex, who’d successfully made it across from the Island on time, despite Matt’s best efforts not to remember to inform him of any details for the day.

They would make the short drive up to London Road, in the Service’s equivalent of the Millennium Falcon, a commandeered “what a heap of junk” minibus, where they were meeting up with Leo and Robbie, eating their bacon and sausage rolls, and drinking cheap-ass coffee. Robbie volunteered to take first shift on the stick, tasked with getting us to the Chiswick Ground in good time, with Matt, in the passenger seat, as navigator. How we didn’t end up driving into the Thames is a grateful mystery.


It had been hoped that Don may be able to squeeze a cheerleading trip into his busy retirement schedule of shopping and cooking, but instead we had to be our own support in the battle against other ‘Justice’ professionals.

Along the motorway up, there was the usual integrity bankrupt music oozing off the radio, and plenty of banter, taking in everything from a briefing of the actual rules of the tournament, to confirmation of the Island’s inbreeding programme. The X-Files theme tune also made its first of many appearances.

Steve’s sat-nav saw the good A.I. to lose it’s charge, just after we completed the easy part of getting off the motorway, and surprisingly there was no means of re-charging an electronic device, in a van with no air-con, no CD player, and enough foam ripped out of the seats to start your own Build-A-Bear workshop. It did reveal Steve’s sat-nav holder to have an Asian persuasion, but Matt remained focused enough to display sufficient map-reading skills to get us to the ground, but only after a scenic detour around a nearby lake, and a snoop at the posh Riverside spa and gym.

We arrived in good time with an hour and a half till our first match at 10:30am, which allowed us to get acclimatised with our surroundings, a good squizz at the pitches, the size of them, the size of the goals, the lack of noticeable grass, the windy conditions. But first a trip to the loos for an exorcism of the demon bowels. And this not being an American Pie movie, no footage of this pre-match ritual is available, despite the possibility of 2 Guys and A (Football) Cup.

Leo's Thumb Injury 28/8/09

Caused by the top of a spring water bottle

2:5 Vipers FC 27/8/09 8.30pm

LOST 8-5
Matt, Leo, Steve, Alan, Nathan, James, Rob

Saturday, 22 August 2009

2:4 Traveller's Rest 20/8/09 7.45pm

LOST 15-3
Matt, Leo, Steve, Robbie, James, Alan, Dave

Countdown To Victory 28/8 pt.2

Slowly but surely, things are coming together on the organisational front. 7am pick-up from the seaside end of town, 7.30am pickup from the other end. Minibus to be car-jacked by "Ask The Boss" Alan. Sat-Nav to be provided by shipwreck Steve. Video equipment to be provided by Leo the leerer; and the cynicism to be provided by Robbie.

The new shirts have arrived, and to many's surprise they are actually tres cool. Long-sleeved retro look, with correct sizes, and no nipple-chaffing. Good work fellas. The squad has been formally announced with the hardcore five of Matt, Leo, Steve, Alan and Robbie being joined by ringer Alex, as a late substitute for the injured Rob, the rookie Dave, and the ineligible James.

There are still some things to be sorted with Steve set to spend the kitty money on a crate of water; Robbie waiting (forever) for the Goals team to email him back about the size of the pitches to compare with the size of the Tournament pitches; and Don to show up with his sponge, magic spray, and pom-poms; and the boys to decide at what point on the day they start drowning their sorrows or toasting their efforts, with alcohol.

The football and our ability to play it still remains the most important, but there are good signs of improvement, and the matches being only of five minutes per half in length, will actually suit The Mollys, if our recent second half performances have been anything to go by.






Robbie size's up his shirt - 'X-Tent'

Saturday, 15 August 2009

Countdown To Victory 28/8 pt1.

Normally, I would expertly plan out what I write; conceive, revise and perfect my jokes; wiki double meanings; and keep my head glued to news channels for the latest topical guff. Instead I'm going to totally free-wheel this entry, literally making it up as I type, as we begin the countdown to The Molly Maguires greatest moment in their sporting history - a real live national tournament. All references to our employer and company will be excised to prevent any possible sacking, suffice to say I love my job, and my employer is a benevolent (see, not even going to check my spelling) overlord.

With Matt finally making copies of the itinery available, The Molly Maguires have been assigned to Group A, with the following first round fixtures:

10:30 vs. Sporting Abeergut (pitch 2)

11:15 vs. KP's Nuts (pitch 1)

12:00 vs. Semifinalists FC (pitch 2)

Depending on our standing after these group games, we either continue in the Tournament or go into the Shield:

Shield (for the bottom two teams):

13:45 vs. Group E team (pitch 1/2) Round 1

15:30 vs. ??? (pitch 1/2) Round 2

16:45 vs. ??? (pitch 5/6) QF

17:30 vs ??? (pitch 1/2) SF

18:00 vs. ??? (pitch 1) Final

Tournament:

14:30 vs. Group E team (pitch 1/2) Round 2

16:00 vs. ??? (pitch 1/2) Round 3

16:45 vs. ??? (pitch 1/2) QF

17:30 vs. ??? (pitch 3/4) SF

18:15 vs. ??? (pitch 4) Final

Anyone who's seen our team play, or worse still, actually played in it, will have little fear about needing to set Sky+ for any tv programme after 4pm, allowing time for the dejected drive home in a dodgy minibus.

Whilst Matt has done a primo job getting our team registered for this tournament, and secured funding for shirts, and entry fee, there is still this organisational chaos that prevades our preparations. And whilst Steve may fret about ensuring we all wear the same coloured socks, and Matt can't actually be bothered to check the package of shirts that arrived at the office, is indeed the blue shirts, with white flash, and not some bondage gear (Dodgeball reference, movie fans), some of us continue to be worried about a sense of football being the real failure.

Our last game highlighted our frailties once more - the main central problem, of which we are all guilty, is our lack of disciplined positional sense. Following the ball around with disregard for the opposition around us; our quite baffling attempts at shooting, whentheir defenders were right in front of us, our lack of tackling (seriously, if Steve needs to shout "Why are we not getting at 'em?" one more time, and therefore it follows, I have to hear him shout it, then I will conceivably top myself), our lack of picking up properly.

Hopefully a bigger pitch will give us a better discipline not to run around stupidly, to make telling passes count, and to operate in a better team spirit, because at the moment it feels like every posey bastard for themselves.

Still, can't wait.

Thursday, 13 August 2009

2:3 Leggers 13/8/09 7.00pm

LOST 12-1
Matt, Leo, Steve, Alan, James, David, Rob

Wednesday, 5 August 2009

Wednesday, 29 July 2009

Monday, 27 July 2009

Season 1 Final Statistics


Gaffer's Gob 23rd July 2009 - Solent Pirates

Today we woke up to a multiplicity of papers adorning themselves with headlines such as "Mollie's Mugged" and "Maguires Victim of Smash and Grab Raid".

The big question is what led to these headlines when at half 8 last night, we took to the pitch with confidence and youthful enthusiasm granted by the youngest ever Molly line-up. This confidence transformed itself to a rare display of pace on the pitch and confident slick passing which pulled and tore the opposition defence into bad positions leaving gaps for our young up-front trio to hit shots at goal.

The ease with which we took control of the match was written large in the behaviour on an increasingly fractious opposition who pushed and clipped the heels of our players as the first half wore on. However, the trickery continued with the ball being passed between Gareth, Jason and Steve before it being fed to an unmarked James on the left who drilled the ball into the bottom right hand corner. At times, the game felt very easy with the Pirates being restricted to shots from their own half which surprisingly (given my skills are more geared towards close in blocks) left the Gaffer largely untroubled.

So then, what could conceivably lead to the aforementioned news splash?

About one minute before half time with the Mollie's sitting in a comfortable 6-2 lead, the ball came down to our right back corner and was being held up by their midfielder with Gareth attacking the ball. As can happen in these areas, it all got a bit handbaggy when their player swung an arm back and (for the sake of balanced reporting) accidentally hit Gareth in the mouth with a swinging elbow. Cue our cheerleaders shouts of anguish and Gareth and their player starting to push and swing at each other. Easily dealt with you might feel by a sin binning of the two miscreants. However, like a torpedo shot from an opposition defensive quadrant their defender runs the length of the pitch to club Wor Gareth a couple of times about the back of the head . Not Cool. This led to all players being sent off and the match being abandoned as the opposition could not play with only 3 players. A real shame in ending what had been a gilt edged Mollie's performance.

Still, no harm, we confirmed with the referee that in these situations, as we could carry on playing and were winning comfortably, the match would be awarded to us by dint of a 10-0. So then, you can imagine my annoyance after checking the website last night that the game had been awarded the other way. On ringing Goals, i was informed by the manager that it was being handled that Gareth was at fault (despite the 20 yard flying punch) and that in all likelihood, at best we could expect a score draw.

To carry on the piratical and nautical theme, i feel like someone's nicked me boat!

1:14 Solent Pirates 23/7/09 8.30pm

LOST 10-0
1.Matt 2.James 4.Steve 9.Gareth 10.Jason ???

All Gareth's fault apparently.

1:13 Shirleyshooters 16/7/09 7.45pm

LOST 8-7
1.Matt 2.James 4.Steve 5.Leo 6.Robbie 9.Gareth 10.Jason

Thirteen games down, and twelve defeats. Of those, the latest three present the most extreme of fortunes. Rarely have the fates been so fickle, throwing up carat chunks of tease over our lucky sneakers. It’s just as well we’re all going to die of swine flu, because this emotional rollercoaster is retarding me.

A rancid 17-2 defeat against a bunch of generic, non-descript, nameless nobodies. A startling 11-9 loss against the league leaders, with bonus Terry Thomas tantrum. A mind-f*ck 8-7 mugging against a re-animated corpse of an opponent.

It’s embarrassing when you’re a defender in a loss that sees seventeen goals get past you. It’s more embarrassing when you’re the only defender in that loss. It’s even more embarrassing when the two other defenders in the squad take the mick.

The simple truth is that there were many reasons for the defeat against Waterboys that weren’t simply down to Leo and Matt being less than adequate in defence. Part of the blame could be laid at the solar rayed feet of the Sun, beating us in the face, and sapping our already wastefully expended energy. The attack were less than adequate too - a real mish-mash of threat and bereft, that saw a normally graceful Gareth looking like an emu on ice, and the attacking triforce of Alan, Rob and James operating less like the Holy Trinity, and more like a lowly sin city, desperately trying to get their end away, without covering their back pocket.

Our attacking waves were more gush than tidal, with unintelligent support, and dangerously loose passing presenting the opposition with double-team counter-attacks that they rarely wasted. One can always blame the lack of an extra sub, but another guy standing in isolation in their half, failing to track back a ball they lost in the first place, was never going to benefit us. Self-flagellation wouldn’t be enough penance for the team for this poop-flavoured performance.

Last week’s defeat against the Plumbing lot was an altogether different bag of chocolate salty balls. Gareth was being fashionably late, whilst Robbie showed his missus who was boss, by begging her to let him play at the seven o’clock kick-off. Latest addition Jason was rewarded for stomaching some dreadful performances from the touchline, by getting to play alongside those dreadful performers. Sporting a Ronaldo shirt, but looking more like Federico Macheda, Jason was the key master, to Gareth’s gatekeeper (don’t worry, the gay analogies will get much worse).

With Steve joining Leo and Robbie in a defensive mind-meld, and James joining the attack, this was as close to perfection of personnel balance we could hope for. Three senior players to destroy and frustrate the opposition‘s attack; three young sprites to create against and occupy their defence.

Of course, let’s get the best thing about the match out of the way first, and that’s our mate Terry Thomas going ballistic at a mouthy Plumbing player. The game had a dark cutting edge about it, the opposition tackles flew in, pushing and shoving being the norm, Don winding up the opposition into mimicking his catchphrases (impossible to resist I know), their bitching about decisions, blaming the ref for our expert tackling and shooting, but in the end, they poked ref Terry Thomas once too often.

Now I don’t know what it’s like to get a mouthful of Terry. To get eaten out by Mr Thomas. But having laughed off the opposition’s whinging for most of the match, a shout for the ref to use his fucking eyes or do his fucking job, or something of a similar vernacular, saw the genial mild-mannered gentleman scoundrel blow his stack “WHAT DID YOU SAY TO ME?!!”, before chewing and spitting out the thoroughly deserving Plumbing player, but without a sin binning, or a lamp in the face.

The sulky boys seemed to calm down after that, but their frustration was due to our stalwart defending through the centre of the pitch, and some awesome displays of touchy-feely passing between our frontmen, that shocked our opposition into something serious approaching fear of defeat.

In the end we didn’t have enough, but we subbed properly with our seven men, we had the 2-2 balance of players on the pitch at all times, and we created chances against them, that gave our back-end a chance to breathe. We looked thoroughly within our depth, and managed to play with dignity and desire.

So for this week’s defeat against Shirley, the gaffer named an unchanged side. Both he and Leo were feeling optimistic that we could build on last week’s performance to record our second win of the campaign.

Firstly however, we were treated to a torrential downpour, and an impromptu wet t-shirt contest from a ladies team on the pitch before us. The perfect synergy of women, white t-shirts, lacy bras and wetness.

Ermm. Excuse me. See you in a few weeks. I need to rub one out.

Thursday, 9 July 2009

1:12 Tony Smith Plumbing 9/7/09 7.00pm

LOST 11-9
1.Matt 2.James 4.Steve 5.Leo 6.Robbie 9.Gareth 10.Jason

Thursday, 2 July 2009

1:11 Waterboys 2/7/09 9.15pm

LOST 17-2
1.Matt 2.James 3.Alan 5.Leo 8.Rob(1) 9.Gareth(1)

Sunday, 28 June 2009

1:10 Bitterne Park Battlers 25/6/09 7.45pm

LOST 12-6
1.Matt 2.James 3.Alan 4.Steve 5.Leo 9.Gareth

Before I begin this report, I have some bad news to tell you. Michael Jackson has died. I know this will come as a shock, and you probably won’t believe me until you see it confirmed on the news or the rest of the interwebsphere, but I thought it was right that I tell you first. It’s your reward for reading this blog. Scoop!

This report is dedicated to that man. He loved his ‘soccer‘, and was in fact a secret The Molly Maguires fan, never mind Uri and Exeter. I used to call him every four weeks or so, and update him on how we were getting on, that we kept on losing our matches, and that we were all bitching at each other, and he just kept saying to me “Oh, you guys are so funny. You just need to love each other, man, hee-hee”. He was so positive and inspirational, and he made me smile. He always asked after you guys, how was Gareth doing, had he become a man yet, was it too late?

Michael first exposed himself to me when I was about 16. Euro Disney, Paris had just opened. There he was in all his 3-D glory on the screen as Captain Eo, although my abiding memory of that epic musical sci-fi drama, was the blonde back-up dancer next to him with the 3-D multiplied by ten breasts. My smooth criminal - I beat it.

Tonight’s match followed last week’s heartbreaker of a defeat against Shake N‘ Bake. A perfectly balanced, formationally strong line-up, that had a defensive backbone stronger than a British female tennis person, and a Gareth-inspired attack of verve and nerve stronger than an insipid Gareth attack from a few weeks back. It took ages for either team to open their account (not surprising given the credit crunch, ho, ho), but two hunting probes from our boy wonder paid dividends putting us into a two goal lead, before a clearly annoyed Matt let one of their shots get the better of him, at the death of the first half, as we went into half-time 2-1 up. An exciting change of situation for once. We had defended ourselves with gusto, reducing the opposition’s shooting to long-range and high and wide off the wall. Our shots however were much more accurate, giving their stocky keeper plenty of work to do, but like the stockpiled cakes were sticking to his thighs, so was the ball, barely giving us the chance to follow shots up.

The second half was just as frenetic a thriller, and having conceded the lead, eventually Leo’s close range smashed shot/tackle/interception, drew the team level to 5-5, before a jinky too many off the side wall from Steve, conceded unmarked possession to the paunchy bald guy to jab home their sixth. We tried to find the second equaliser, and despite our speed demon occupying their markers to create space for the rest of us to press forward, it never came. Our best performance in a long while, especially that first half - even Gareth said we were doing good - was unfortunately just too blue-balling.

This week, we were back to the bad old fashioned second half collapse against the team just above us. 6-4 down at half-time. 7-6 down within seven or eight minutes of the second half. 12-6 down at the end of the game. There’s some sort of psychological distortion that goes on in our heads. Many of us blamed the muggy heat, and our re-instated one substitute policy. Some would blame a systematic collapse of formation and patience - me chief culprit. Don would blame a lack of Nathan as an alternative problem maker to Gareth, and Don’s opinions are always right (eyebrow raising emoticon). I think it was a combination of all these factors -it isn‘t that black or white. But another part of me blames the absence of Robbie, and his ‘lack of babysitter’ excuse (look, Michael was having a fucking heart-attack - he just couldn’t make it).

For whatever reason, Robbie continues to have some sort of weird deal going with Mephisto, that manifests itself in conceding the fewest goals whilst he’s in defence - six in the two previous weeks, and one of those was in front of Rob, emergency keeper with no gloves. Of course we still lost those matches, but clearly Robbie’s soul wasn’t worth enough for actual victory.

We certainly proved dangerous initially, James replacing Robbie’s defensive knack, with powerful shooting attack. Alan, rib-pain free, got back on the scoring sheet with some really good power play, and Gareth flirting between defenders whilst deciding whether to stick or twist with his available attacking options. Free-kicks were all the rage as boots and shoves were being thrown around like bandwagon eulogies. James smashed in some class shots from the right wing, and Steve curled home a signature curling corker that hit the upright stanchion and went out.

Shame then, that the heat, Matt’s coincidental decision to switch ends, and a general lack of concentration conspired to rob us of any semblance of a close result, and left us finally at the bottom of the league table. Despite our appalling win-defeat ratio over recent months, it’s actually hard to remember the time when we propped up the table - we’ve always relied on drop-out teams to cover our shortcomings. Relegation truly beckons.

Enough of this negative nonsense. I need to eat. I feel like toast. With jam.

Friday, 19 June 2009

1:9 Shake n' Bake 18/6/09 7.45pm

LOST 6-5
1.Matt 3.Alan 4.Steve 5.Leo(1) 6.Robbie 9.Gareth(4)

Leo's Knee Injury 18/6/09

It's back. Inferior knee pad be damned.


1:8 Discovery Yachts FC 11/6/09

LOST 6-4
8.Rob 2.James 3.Alan 4.Steve 6.Robbie 7.Nathan 9.Gareth

Sunday, 7 June 2009

Leo's Hand Injury 4/6/09


1:7 Solent Pirates 4/6/09 9.15pm

LOST 11-7
5.Leo 2.James 3.Alan 4.Steve 7.Nathan 8.Rob 9.Gareth

Forgive me father, it’s been four games since my last confession.

In that time, the football season has ended, with Manchester United looking like foolish pub team hacks, and Newcastle United slipped out of the Premiership, with less fight than a comatose quadriplegic.

It was remise of me not to go into excruciating depth about our victory against Bartlett (now replaced/renamed by/as Waterboys). Nor was it without merit to discuss (and by that I mean, give my opinion as if fact) the causes of our defeats against Tony Smith Plumbing and the Shirleyshooters.

But, I’ll mention those games in passing, because this latest match against Solent Pirates had all the usual clichés that are now synonymous with the Molly Maguires.

It was a 9.15pm kick-off, but it was a beautifully light cool evening, perfect conditions for the team to take points from the opposition directly above us. Matt was on leave this week, abroad somewhere, which allowed an opportunity for the Molly reserve keeper, Leo, to again prove why he’s so great in goal, and why he can justify his constant baiting of the gaffer’s keeping.

With Robbie also missing from the party - beer gardens and Big Brother just too tempting at this time of year -you would’ve thought that the squad would be short of numbers, that we’d have to make do with five. Incredibly, we managed to have seven players available. Which brings me to the first topic of contention, the squad and the substitutions.

To our advantage, our squad has been blessed with the addition of two regular attendees, in the shape of Nathan v2.0 and Rob - both products of Alan’s clone factory, and the blueprint from which Skynet will produce their T-models. So for this week, and last week, we played with seven players.

Now, some of us old cheerleader Geordie blokes have advocated that a bigger match day squad, and proper substitutions will result in better fitness and more winning. Other value for money pitch-hoggers have been obstructive to such thinking. So we’ve had the opportunity to try this new system - did it work?

Last week, Don volunteered to keep together a systematic time and pairing substitution system that seemed to work pretty well, until into the second half, when some players just couldn’t cope with waiting to come off, and took it upon themselves to disrupt the plan. Of course, if you’re knackered, you should come off -perfectly the right way to do it.

The problem it then presented was individual players were leaving the field of play, and the whole pairing system collapsed. Whilst it never quite managed the unfortunate heights of Steve and Alan being our primary attackers, the times when Gareth and Nathan were on the pitch together were reduced to five minute bursts. And this was a problem.

Because, with as much unintentional disrespect to the other players on the team as I can get away with, the new Nathan can finally be the second striker that Gareth has been missing since the loss of the first Nathan. An attacking pairing to finally get their dozen goals a game, and allow the defence some relief as they occupy the opposition.

Only once has this come off, and this was in our victory against Bartlett. FLASHBACK. This win was built upon pace (note the absence of Steve and Robbie), and relentless attacking prowess. With Leo in his favoured last defender role, behind a front line of attack merchants, who nevertheless had the energy to run back to cover, we turned that team over with some scintillating pass and move. It helped of course that this was their third football game ever, and they gave away a couple of stupid penalties, ignorant of the rules. It helped that those penalties were taken in a professional, ‘best man should take it’ way. It helped we managed to score unbelievably tight angled goals through their porous keeper, and it helped that we had some formation and discipline about our system, where the object was for the team to win above any personal glory.

Such glory was a delightful bonus at the end. Don even managed to keep his told-you-so mouth shut until the car park. Self-control indeed. Yes, we enjoyed the victory, but this wasn’t a sign of things to come, more a case of what might have been.

NOW. So, what happened in this current match that managed to emulate that victory in the same way as some Britain’s Got Talent moron can emulate the sound of a saxophone? For a start the substitution system didn’t work as well this week. With Don’s forgetting to bring his Casio, we were apparently going to rely on Terry Thomas the ref (remember, the guy who actually played six-a-side with us once…?) to call the five minutes switheroos. When the opposition started to deviate from the plan, we ourselves lost track. If we can get this shit together, it will mean equal playing time, and a better distribution of energy expenditure.

But does this actual work? Leaving aside the treasurwhore’s need to get the coffers full with enough money to cover the registration fee, does the additional seventh player actually help us? Leo’s point of view, and I asked him about it, is that it actually hinders us from winning, if that‘s the whole point of the seventh man. From his own playing of the system, done right, will see him being on the pitch for ten minutes at certain points - he don’t do no ten minutes in a row. Leo is better in small bursts, like a Japanese meal, small portions, but so tasty. When he needs to come off to catch a breather, he needs to come off, because he doesn’t want to stand around sucking air up his ass whilst opposition are bearing down on him.

Back in the olden days, Gareth would rarely come off, because he was a spunky teen back then, and no one minded, because we needed the rest more than he, and he produced the goods where it mattered. Now, Gareth is expected to tow the party line like everyone else, leaving the likes of Alan and James to compensate for his absence.

Which brings me to the next topic of contention - positions. When we were short of players, the system was very clear. It didn’t necessarily work all the time, but it was Steve/Robbie at the back, Leo as right wing-back, Alan as left winger, James up front and Gareth as quarterback. Now I defy anyone to tell me, where the hell they are actually supposed to be playing. You can throw all the bullshit you like at me about being flexible and adaptable, but if you can tell me where you were supposed to be this week, then go ahead. If we’re going to float around the pitch like lost souls, then perhaps we should haunt someone in particular and do a proper man-marking job.

We overloaded the middle third of the pitch (the midfield), and seemed to overcommit into their third when we had possession of the ball, without putting enough pressure on them, to prevent pacey counter attacks. Gareth was again trying bulldoze his way through all of their outfield players from his own corner flag, but constantly came up short; Alan disappeared like a French metal tube in the sky, and Steve wanted so much time on the ball, the opposition kept kicking him to see if he’d fallen asleep standing up.

FLASHBACK. Our defeat against Tony Smith Plumbing was perhaps the most disappointing ’if only’ moment of the season so far. Again, the team had Leo flying solo at the back, supported by Alan (and by supported I mean the first to commiserate when Leo couldn’t physically cover the man with the ball, the shallow pass AND the untracked runner, and Matt got exposed to simple passing shots). But that defeat held a number of tactical whims, the first of which was Matt running (quicker than walking, so technically true) to the far end to avoid the sun in his eyes for the first half. With a real sense of menace, and verbal abuse, we kept the league leaders down to a 4-2 score line at half time, with our boys doing themselves proud against a team, whose strengths are clearly built from the back, with a proper decent keeper.

However, the loss of Nathan at half-time with a some sort of girly leg/knee injury screwed up any chance of us making them think twice about which of our playmakers they were going to mark. Rob came on to deputise, like replacing Top Cat with Deputy Dawg, but unfortunately our fight back fell flat on it’s arse. Well actually, nothing unfortunate about it, we weren’t very good after that, and although the ref probably robbed us of at least one goal, by failing to make a small vertical downward stroke in his little book after we’d scored, we lacked a cutting edge.

NOW. Which again brings us to the current match and another second half of such epic proportions. Now I’m writing the conclusion of this report several weeks after the event, but if my adamantium-bullet-in-the-head memory doesn’t deceive me, we were actually leading at half-time. Leo had delivered for the most part on his sexy-fast distribution claims, and had managed fingertips on all three shots that had bazooka-ed past him, but a slight bruising to his right thumb made him question his ability to continue. He mulled it over for a minute, but recalled his conversation with Alan in the bar beforehand, and talk that James could easily take over in goal if needed - even do a half each. With these lies ringing in my brain, I passed the gloves to James in the hope of a Susan Boyle style revelation. Worst. Decision. Ever.

James was not good in goal, and followed in the lowly gloves of some non-lamented predecessors. A performance summed up entirely by a snapshot moment where a short tussle going on in our corner, found the opposition sneak free and toe a near-post effort past James, whilst he was leaning back on the goal bar, elbows up, like he was leaning back on a pub bar, bottoms up.

5-4 up at half-time, turned into something much, much worse, and if I were Simon Cowell, I’d be ranting some more, before shooting 6-yr old singers in the face. But I’ll leave it there, except to say that James emotional response to stress needs some work. Bawling at the opposition, to your own detriment, because of some shady goings on, or subbing yourself in a sulk, because your own team-mate gives you a verbal pasting, is not conducive to good team ethics. Rather to follow the example of his fellow players when retribution is justified - Steve hacking players down, and proclaiming innocence; Gareth just running people into the walls and floors with him; Robbie patronisingly telling the opposition to calm down; or Leo, being sarky, whilst running away.

I end the report here, because no sucker is actually going to read this last bit, as I’ve taken too long to finish it. I can’t help it if writing about defeats is like scooping my hands into dog poo, and describing how it smells.

1:6 Shirleyshooters 28/5/09 8.30pm

LOST 9-4
1.Matt 2.James 3.Alan 4.Steve 5.Leo 7.Nathan 9.Gareth

Friday, 22 May 2009

1:5 Tony Smith Plumbing 21/5/09 7.45pm

LOST 13-5
1.Matt 2.James 3.Alan 5.Leo 7.Nathan 8.Rob 9.Gareth

Thursday, 14 May 2009

Leo's Hand Injury 14/5/09


1:4 Bartlett 14/5/09 7.00pm

WON 14-6
1.Matt 2.James(2) 3.Alan(1) 5.Leo 7.Nathan(6) 9.Gareth(5)

Tuesday, 12 May 2009

Blast From The Past - Southampton vs. Portsmouth

Date: 19/11/05 Time: 11:00am
Location: Vida, Southampton
Line-up: Matt, Pete, Leo, Robbie, Dean, Gareth, Steve
Final Score: 8-8

“Sure as I know anything, I know this - I aim to misbehave.”

So West Ham United FC are relegated from the Premiership with eight games of the 2005-6 season still to play, and Harry Redknapp is sacked from Southampton FC, to be replaced by, of all people, Terry Venables. Hardly a prophetic vision of a future to come, but instead the ludicrous statistical juggle of numbers in a cheating b*stard PC sim that is Football Manager 2006 (For the uninitiated, PC stands for Personal Computer, and sim stands for simpleton).

Such relegation consequences forced me to start the game again, and thus putting this match report low down my priority list below ‘do nothing but breathe’. However, benefiting from the participants’ vague recollection of events and time elapsed, this author is free to digress wildly and to make sh*t up, without fear of challenge. This report is purely from a Southampton POV, unquestionably biased, and always right.

The pr****ion/n****nal o*****er management* (delete as bothered) acolytes of Southampton and Portsmouth converged on the frost covered artificial pitch of the loss-making VIDA company, to do battle with a rival hostility, that only South American soccer could measure up to (a pitch invading Brummie gesticulating at a Villa keeper seems a bit tame in comparison). Such a competitive edge would ultimately be curtailed by Widow Twanky with a whistle, as the match descended into some sort of pre-determined diplomatic exercise. Life’s a pitch then you draw.

A match, years in the making, in danger of living up to the all-expenses spared hype of a single e-mail announcement, billed as the ultimate in pantomime, with guest appearances from Ro-land of Grange Hill fame (the ringer from Basingstoke) and Gareth, the apparently newly anointed Case Administrator/Trainee* (delete as better lie).

Southampton sported a plethora of touchline totty in the form of Jon, Jo, and Steve’s wife and daughter, backed up with a trio of up and coming youth players. The incentive was clearly there to ram some of that Spirit of the South baloney straight down the gullets of the scuzzwozzers of Portsmouth.

The nine strong squad of Pompey, with an equally large entourage had arrived seriously early for this humdinger, playing themselves into match fitness with a half hour prologue to the main event. Home team Southampton, meanwhile, can usually be relied upon to have a slow trickle of players, with Pete making his usual post kick-off arrival. Knowing too much about an opposing team had never really been of great benefit to the currently defunct Molly Maguires, but the seven Southampton representatives, veterans of a year’s worth of edgy competitive football, would surely be too much for their uglier counterparts.

With one of our own donning the metaphorical referee’s shirt, expectations were high of at least a fair contest, if not one tilted slightly in our favour. Alas the referee may as well have been holding his johnson out there, for all the correct attention he paid to the action.

With a solid rotating system of personnel, Southampton had the necessary defensive and attacking quality to win this inaugural south coast derby, and started and finished the first half easily the superior. Leo, fully demonstrating his rehabilitation from defensive brinkman to offensive midfield, lashed home the first from a smooth pass into uncharted Pompey waters on the right wing.

Then someone from Southampton swore. Used an expletive. Said a rude word. On a football pitch. Instantly bringing the game into disrepute, and the very columns of our national sport crashing down in a rubble of shame. The referee had no hesitation in pointing to the spot, waving away protests that the swearing had taken place outside the semi-circled box, and that he was a f*cking idiot. No warning, no caution, no sin-bin. Matt dived the right way but the resulting penalty shot was too accurate for him to claw away, and the scores were artificially levelled as a consequence of an atrocious decision beyond the ambit of the referee’s jurisdiction.

With Popeye and Bluto forming a useful partnership in the heart of defence, Leo and Gareth were providing the necessary cutting edge up front, ably supported by Pete’s deft dribbling and Dean’s numbers making up. Alas Gareth had taken too much to heart the pre-match instruction to “play good, but not that good” (for fear of exposing his ring). His shooting was wayward and lacking in the usual positional accuracy, but still Southampton were doing enough to maintain a suitably tight grip on proceedings.

Throughout the match, Portsmouth were easily Southampton’s match in the physical battles (except for the wet dishcloth in the West Ham away kit). Cheating like something that cheats for a living whilst also cheating in its spare time, Portsmouth used every conceivable shoulder barge, back push, elbow nudge, shirt pull, foot trip in a desperate bid to tip the scales that weighed heavy in skill against them. Of course like all good fouling teams, they were quick as liquid crap to whinge when said same punishment was returned at them with ironic hypocrisy. Unfortunately only Steve possessed the body strength to knock flying his assailants, landing in crumpled heaps on the floor, as Steve, the gentlest of gentlemen, appeared to all and sundry, to be our designated hardman. Pete also did his best to mix it up, but his body checking was unsuitably unsubtle. One observing wag was quick to note that for an ex-player quick to shout down referees and players for such unsporting conduct as physical contact, the referee’s lack of “hand’s down” calls was perplexingly impotent.

Leo completed his first-half hat-trick with a velocity-engorged strike from the half way line, through every outfield player between him and the opposition goal, as Southampton edged some distance in front, despite a blatant penalty against Portsmouth being inexplicably ignored, as their Little Man keeper contrived to save a quartet of rebounding shots from the Southampton frontline, before cheating his hands outside his area, to thieve the ball into his deceiving arms, whilst the referee stood silent like a mug.

As the first half was drawing to a close, the referee was desperate to know when he’d actually kicked off the match, and how long each half was because he didn’t appear to know himself - the sun had gone behind a cloud rendering his dial next to useless. Little wonder then that a slipshod approach to the rules of the game had thus far been demonstrated. The Southampton players were therefore quick to remind the referee of the correct score, on the off chance the ref’s abacus had broken.

There was time for Gareth to shoot and score direct from kick-off, something that Dean attempted throughout the second half with the copy quality of a dirty ten-fold dot matrix facsimile. And time for Portsmouth to reduce the deficit further, as Southampton still ended the first half 4-2 to the good, and looking comfortable. After a nostalgic half-time team talk from Jon, now an officially diagnosed cripple, there were no fears that Southampton could not see this match out to a bragging rights victory.With their Little Man keeper now an outfield player, and a potent threat with his left peg, and Portsmouth happy to rotate men between the sticks, they came back into the match with suitable vengeance. Confident passing had been surprisingly in abundance from the Southampton players, with some crisp swift two touch manoeuvres, and good link-up play initially dominating proceedings. The second half however saw the available time and space curtailed, as Portsmouth started to occupy our defenders more, getting forward with alarming regularity.

A useful close range brace from Pete, and one each from Leo and Dean in the second half, saw Southampton maintain the gap, but Portsmouth slowly turned their possession into more accurate shooting, and traded goal-scoring blows, as our tiredness and sloppy structure let them get the best of our keeper. A ‘seen-it-all-before’ ricochet off Matt which crept over the line, and a bludgeon from distance that left him rooted to the spot, would’ve disappointed the Southampton keeper as much as his team-mates, as his reaction skills were again called into question.

The added dimension of Little Man in the Portsmouth attack, started to produce some frustrating panic-defending, and rash challenges from Southampton that again saw many a man hit the deck. With the ref seemingly unable to see beyond the end of his nose, it was left to the players themselves to shout the odds. With Leo slashing thorough a poorly-judged tackle from behind, he received a somewhat patronising verbal tirade, about the game being a friendly, from the dirtiest player on the pitch. Very satisfying then to see said player later pole-axed, and limped off, when Bruiser Broughton walloped into him, with all the grace of a dump truck.

With Southampton 8-6 up, time seemed to exponentially increase to allow Portsmouth the fighting chance to pull back the deficit. With the referee having already received a righteous rebuke from Robbie about his inability to blow the f*cking whistle when a foul was committed, especially by the ruffians of Portsmouth, it was little wonder that the match that should’ve ended five minutes ago, was still going on. And so the enemy pressed on with nothing to lose, grabbing their seventh and then their eighth goal, as Southampton’s concentration levels appeared to evaporate. With cunning, the final whistle blew (with only half a blow, and indicatively amateurish) direct from the last kick-off, and a game that had Southampton leading throughout was cruelly exposed for the hoax it had become.

Still, the match ended with a modicum of positivity. Southampton looked comfortable in their passing and their rotation of players around their formation, and for all the hype and slam on the pitch, no-one held any grudges as the players left the field of play. The true footballing cliché is that you barely remember the referee’s involvement in a football match when he’s had a good game, made the right decisions, and the football has spoken for itself. How much football did you read about in the above report?

Goal Scorers: Leo 4, Gareth 1, Pete 2, Dean 1

Thursday, 7 May 2009

1:3 Bitterne Park Battlers 7/5/09 9.15pm

LOST 11-6
1.Matt 2.James 3.Alan 6.Robbie 8.Rob 9.Gareth

Thursday, 30 April 2009

1:2 Shake n'Bake 30/4/09 8.30pm

LOST 12-5
1.Matt 3.Alan (1) 4.Steve 5.Leo (1) 6.Robbie 8.Rob (3)

I was sat in the cinema last week, and contemplating what would happen if someone came crashing through the doors coughing and spluttering over everyone, shouting “I’ve got the swine flu, die you fuckers”. I wanted to know what would’ve happened in that confined area; whether there would be mass panic and trampling for the exit, whether the Cineworld staff would have the speed to shut tight the doors and quarantine us infected; whether the carrier would’ve got his head kicked in. Then X-Men Origins: Wolverine started, and I fell asleep.

Playing for The Mollys is like some surreal dream. Only we can make a song and dance out of playing football. Only we can make drama queens out of adult males. Only we can turn a 5-5 draw into a 12-5 defeat in the space of ten minutes.

With the addition of Rob, in another useful cameo appearance, to a stilted line-up, Matt for the first time in ages (if ever) was actually our youngest Molly player tonight, and against a team of youths, for whom Shake N Bake is probably a reference first heard in Talladega Nights, whilst for the Molly team, many probably actually bought the crispy skin coating product.

First things first, and Steve once again handed out his 9p bottles of energised tastes-like-fruit coloured water, in the hope that such nutrients would improve our performance, short of knocking out our opponents by throwing them fully loaded at their heads. We were assigned pitch 5 - the graveyard, and it gave us an excuse to watch the pretty girls playing football on that pitch, with accomplished effort. I’ll hold onto my piece as a refrain from sexual innuendo, but query this - why do the biffers always play in goal? Why do girls always seem to have an extra stage between pulling their leg back, and kicking the ball? There’s a weird extra stutter - it can’t just be me, someone else must notice it…..

Once we got on the pitch, Steve was scared witless by the prospect of having to wear the red bibs. Deep in his psyche is a war wound or a childhood horror about this. Best not open that can of worms. With bibs duly donned, one of me looked svelte. Some of us looked like we were wearing boob tubes. Others of us looked like we were wearing bras. Even so, the hideousness of Matt’s latest keeper’s jersey - green and black - won the most needed visit from Gok’s Fashion Fix.

We started the game really well. We were focussed in our ambition, our formation and our tactics - Rob and Alan would do all the running, and the rest of us would prattle around a little bit. We scored first, as Alan carved himself a beautiful opening, taking one touch to drag him back inside from the outside right, smashing home a sensational barnstormer.

They scored in reply, before Leo then got a lucky loose ball off the back wall, actually controlled it first, before smashing it into all four angles of the far post with Torres-like precision. The opposition then got a couple more to take the first half into a 3-2 deficit to the Mollys.

The opposition came across as fairly decent young lads, with a perchance for disliking our somewhat more rough-house, manly tactics in levering them off the ball, or just kicking them in the foot, or just running straight into them. We’d like to think this a deliberate attempt to rough them up a bit, and not our general inadequacies at winning the ball back. They played with a very obvious pass-and-go triangles style, that was easily met by hard-working, never isolated, four man wall of red bibs, propelling away all invaders. Although I think Matt let another goal slip softly under his bollocks (it happens every week now, it deserves it’s own weekly show on ITV2, right after Celebrity Juice), he was having a pretty good half, and his short and long distribution was as well as his limited options allowed him.

Up front, there was no less effort from the Skinner brothers, running dead into the left channel, the right channel, and at least two other channels that quantum physics has yet to discover. At the back, Robbie and Steve were doing their usual facing up to the opposition, hoping they didn’t run fast at them, whilst Leo was marking space, in the useful way, dropping into holes to intercept passes from.

Half-time. Lots of civilised, genuine praise for effort. But as we were losing we should’ve had the right to choose whether to change ends, and we didn’t want to. The opposition of five, weren’t particularly happy with us subbing on their ball, when their keeper had possession, nor having to cover the oncoming sub who could position himself straight into a dangerous position (we were kicking towards the door, radio listeners). So the ref made us swap, under the pretence that a floodlight was out in their corner, and it wouldn’t be fair for them to continue with that disadvantage. Seriously, even me just relaying this information makes me sound like a bullshitter.

Second half, and Rob came into his own, taking off his shirt and just wearing his bib, in the closest approximation we’ve had to bringing sexy back. Rob took the game to the younglings, grabbing a hat-trick, including a beautiful isolated turn on a central through ball straight from Matt’s throw out (yeah, I know, that happens so rarely, it deserves it’s own annual national holiday day), and taking a penalty with a cheeky two stutters, and then one step forward, that the ref called good, after their keeper slid out of his box. Matt would get away with something similar, like he does every week, but he was in the dark corner of the pitch.

We’d got it to 5-5 with relative ease, but then our usual can of faults reared their ugly heads out of the woodwork. As we tired, our hitherto excellently balanced formation took a nosedive, with Alan and Rob dropping deeper, we were getting schooled in constant attack waves, which forced Leo higher up the pitch, and even onto the dreaded left wing, in an attempt to keep the opposition busy.

They instead changed tactics completely, running straight at us, forcing us to not to tackle and foul them whilst they then siphoned the ball wide for close range shooting against Matt. As we were too deep, we were static in our defending, and their individual dribbling skill was smashing straight through our too straight back line. When they pulled ahead 8-5, we abandoned all hope ye who entered here, and went on some suicidal rampage up top, our attacks breaking down so swiftly, without occupying their keeper, that they countered us in numbers, overlapping us in a devastating spell of five goals in barely the last four minutes, most of which put Matt one on one against the striker, and Matt failing that particular task.

So a respectable majority performance was sullied by a shabbily naïve last few minutes. The story of The Molly Maguires. Still we had fun….

I write this report a week after the event and with the benefit of hindsight. Or is it foresight? If I know something now, that I didn’t know then, but am writing from a past perspective…I should write an episode of Lost. Hopes are high, for me anyway, that the squad numbers can return to a more manageable level once again, with the threat of the return of Molly stalwarts such as the Boy Wonder, the Water Carrier and the Silver Fox. Am I still asleep? Is this X-Men Origins: Wolverine?

Thursday, 23 April 2009

1:1 Discovery Yachts FC 23/4/09 7.45pm

LOST 11-2
1.Matt 3.Alan 4.Steve 5.Leo 6.Robbie 7.Nathan (2)

“We are ready for the siege. We are armed up to the teeth”

The day the football died. The day Southampton FC spun off into the financial abyss and League One oblivion, never to return.

For The Molly Maguires however, this was a new beginning, a new day of the week, and new challenges.

New challenges, like finding a gawd damn parking space - in a disabled bay, on a grass verge, on a petrol station forecourt. Like not passing comment on Alan’s black and white goatee - ask him to pucker up and you’d be looking at a badger’s bum. Like not laughing at Matt’s bumblebee costume, worn for comedic effect, or to draw goal shot fire; a living breathing Simpsons’ character - the ’bumble’ true enough. Like integrating another new member of Alan’s extended genepool, freshly cloned, youthful and pacey. Like getting used to seeing tight cycle short on leggy girls, and the peek of bra straps, other than those belonging to Matt.

In football terms however, it was same shit, different day.

With James still suffering whiplash from the British version of Speed - brakeless double-decker mounting pavements at 25mph for 100 yards- he was nevertheless an excited spectator alongside a ‘ready if needed’ Rob.

Having abandoned Wednesdays, for the greater likelihood of having to play opposition every week, the chance to gawp at footballing ladies, to boost squad numbers, to watch Champions’ League matches uninterrupted, we were in uncharted territory, with every team a mystery to solve. Our first opponents were less like the retired yacht builders Steve had hoped for, and more like spunky cabin boys.

So we tried to implement a better tactical system that would play better to individual strengths; Leo’s intercepting skills, Robbie’s foot first tackling and blocking; Steve’s long-sighted short-range passing; Alan’s incessant running, and Nathan v2.0’s aggression and smash-shooting.

Playing the game in daylight and being able to see our team mates was an obvious bonus. However, a soft referee and some tetchy initial coming togethers sparked off a few bruising running battles. The Mollys played a quasi-defensive formation that drew fire toward Matt’s goal, but enabled us attempts at the counter-attack. Unfotunately those attempts were insipid and androgynous.

Long story short: Alan held the ball up well as our escape-route frontman, but his soft n’ slow lay-offs produced little crunch and deserved even less credit. Steve produced another inspired one-two passing move that saw him bundle his way through the centre midfield, but his resulting shot was tame and claimed. Leo played his sweeper role well for much of the match, until an obvious failing of the team playing too deep and producing little bite in attack saw him press further forward, isolating himself from his team-mates, who will remain nameless, incapable of playing accurate passes from the back.

From the back, Robbie was incapable of playing passes accurately, getting his foot caught under the ball and being turned over too regularly. The defence’s tackling was up to snuff, but, again, -broken record- Matt’s rushing the edge of the D didn’t help him with the angled corner drives. Nathan appeared to have no faith in his own passing ability or running at defenders from deep, as the inordinate amount of back passing to Matt was eventually punished with a penalty awarded against us, and duly dispatched. Practising saving those will be needed for the August tournament, believe me. Alan’s shooting was haphazardly off the mark, Leo’s shooting was straight at their goalie. Only Nathan had the gumption to drill past the Yachts’ admittedly half-decent keeper.

At half-time we were 4-1 down, and Steve suggested tactical changes. Leo disagreed, believing we could build on our efforts and pull the deficiet back. We lost the second half 7-1. Go figure. There was little positive to take away from this match. We looked out of our depth, against fitter, faster opposition, and these guys weren’t even that good. Robbie continues to show me his bruises like they’re medals of valour, but even his brick wall defending won’t save us from a succession of defeats this season.

Thursday, 16 April 2009

Wednesdays: Seasons 1-10: Final Player Stats

*Accurate only to the data available


Wednesday, 15 April 2009

10:3 SEC 15/4/09 9:15pm

Won 10-0

By default

Wednesday, 8 April 2009

10:2 Athletico Becks 8/4/09 8:30pm

LOST 2-10
Matt, Leo, Steve1, Robbie, Alan, James1

“Opinions are like arseholes. Everybody’s got one.”

First things first. Cards on the table. I hold myself partially responsible for the resignation of two players in the history of The Molly Maguires - our bald-headed Sweden top wearing winger, who was caricatured as an aggressive skinhead; and Mr Chucklesworth, who was described as a shit keeper. So I know how to dish out criticism to such an extent, that no matter how much you didn’t really mean it, that you were being light-hearted, that you were just exaggerating characteristics for comedic effect, someone can take it personally, and be offended. Therefore, by the same token, I can tell the difference between constructive criticism, and malicious bile-spewing vitriol.

Of the current squad, and yes, we still have enough players for that word to be used, only myself and Robbie have been there from the start. The Molly Maguires, stupid oversized green polyester shirts and all, were formed because a bunch of work colleagues, and relatives of work colleagues, enjoyed playing the odd bi-annual kick about at the Institute, or at St Mary’s, and wanted it more regularly. We wanted to play football. That’s it. There was no grand scheme about climbing onto podiums. No thoughts about shiny medals. Quite frankly we were not good enough for that. Our first season at Vida saw us shoved incongruously into the top division, where for seven games straight, we got decimated, or as that dickhead Alan Pardew would say we got “raped” several times over - a particular low point being an 18-0 hammering. We should have packed up then.

Instead we stuck it out. We played for many seasons, experienced various highs and lows, played with some really good players, and some not so good - Gareth‘s ‘keeps goal with his feet’ friend; Jesus-look-a-like ‘one to ten’ Ben; and the mythical Mr X. Never once did we step onto the pitch with the intention of losing. Not once did I deliberately let some chav punk-ass pass me without attempting to proverbially ‘punch his clock‘ in the tackle.

I don’t remember the defeats. I only remember the sweet victories. The awesome 7-1 shutout against Park FC; the amazing last minute winner (by me of course) to beat Benfica Chicken Tikka 5-4; and our first ever league victory against Roystone Rangers 8-5. I don’t like losing, but some teams are just better than us. I don’t like losing, but I still sleep sound at night. I know, as the ultimate critic, whether I did my best. And whether everyone else who played did the same. You don’t have to accept my match rating of 2/5 for your shitty performance, but if you really hold my opinion in such high regard, maybe you should go kill yourself because I’m telling you to.

We’ve had this ‘crisis’ before, and it wasn’t even a crisis back then. but that man Hatton’s project, was clear even back then. Our previous gaffer cited the basic principles of why the team was formed in the first place, to play football and to enjoy it. Of course, part of the fun is winning, and it shouldn’t be suggested we don’t try to achieve that. Otherwise, we’d all just stand around like bollards, hoping someone would reverse into us.

We disbanded the team once before, for over a year, because of injuries and lack of enthusiasm; lack of players; and because we took it too seriously for a meagre status. Downloading Flo Rida’s latest album illegally does not make me a hip-hop record producer. Kicking a football about on a synthetic pitch doesn't make me Pele. We are just a bunch of guys who get together to play competitive matches of football for the fun of making that last second block, making that diving save, smashing that goal in from the half-way line, putting a opposition player onto his arse. All of which contributes to us trying to win the game.

The team has to evolve to accommodate the personnel; the loss of big lugs like Mike and Adam; the poisoned chalice position of the second striker; the lack of permanent reinforcements. We can’t have three at the back in the hope that we can bore opposition into submission. If the criteria for playing for this team was based on skill alone, we would cease to exist. If the criteria for supporting a team was based on winning alone, then no-one would support Newcastle United.

Having said all that, our last match, against the Sniffers, and the witty observations or critical assessments or personal attacks that followed masked the most important thing about it. That yes, I gave my best effort. That I believe that others give their best effort. I have been present for 99% of the games we have ever played. I have reported on almost as many. I have seen it with my eyes, standing out there in the cold and rain. I pass judgement on a player’s commitment to the team, over several games. If a person is not committed to the team, they don’t come back.

Even more most importantly, Leo scored a goal that proved he had the desire to win, as he smashed a shot too straight against the wall, then got to the re-bound first to hit another shot at the keeper, before getting his left foot around the ball, hitting the keeper, and him squirming it over the line, for a goal after his third attempt. Best effort duly made.

As for the other players, mistakes were made - James needed to focus on winning the ball, and not crying to the ref every time he got knocked off, because unless he’s sent crashing into the wall, the ref’s view of his petulant backchat will cost us sooner rather than later. Alan needed to avoid doing that weird Peter Crouch thing, of missing a shot, and then raising his eyes skyward, whilst the ball is still in play, and the action is happening behind his back. And Matt needed to stop letting through balls parallel to his goal run straight through his D to an opposing player to side foot a simple angled shot.

We showed in the second half that our heads would not drop, as has happened in the past, and we bossed that second half with better grit and tactical astuteness, winning that second 20 minutes without any shadows of doubt.

I agree with much of what the gaffer said about that match, and so it’s clear, he wasn’t “self-appointed“, he was press-gang volunteered because no-one else wanted to do it, and he’s done a pretty damn good job since, fighting absenteeism, temper tantrums and budget control, with real leadership, even if his goalkeeping itself has shown a noticeable recent decline.

And so to this evening and our first PG-rated performance (post-Gareth) against Athletico Becks, a team against whom we’ve had the full gamut of performances and results.

We walked onto that pitch determined to lose by as many goals as humanly possible without actually sticking the shots past Matt ourselves. We wanted to pay our eight quid to stand around like dummies getting butt-fucked by younger opposition, whilst a thrilling Liverpool-Chelsea quarter-final was showing in the bar. Steve couldn’t shut up about his lucky spinning shot that squirmed under their keeper’s body, and proclaimed himself the greatest goalscorer we’ve ever seen. Alan never strayed beyond the halfway line, literally linking hands with Steve, Leo and Robbie in a four man defensive line, whilst our patronising lip service to retard rights wandered around grateful that he was allowed to be among normal people. At the final whistle, we hoped the opposition would look longingly into our dead eyes as they shook our hands in pathetic pity. We trudged off that pitch having thoroughly enjoyed losing by just an eight goal margin.

All of which of course is bullshit. Except Matt throwing the ball into his own net to gift the opposition a goal. And my shouting to Matt that he was playing crap after he’d let in the fourth consecutive angled drive from the left wing without diving for it was the least he deserved.

Okay we got the tactics completely wrong. In the first half we played a certain way, and didn’t succeed, losing 7-1. In the second half, we changed the way we played, and got it a bit better right, losing 3-1. So what happened?

Our personnel dictated our tactics. Our personnel weren’t up for meeting the targets of those tactics. With Robbie rightly anchored at the back of the outfield, he nevertheless lacks the necessary speed to sweep up overlapping runners, and needs someone to either chase into the corner, or to drop onto the D whilst he goes forward to cut down the angle. In the first half, this was largely a task assigned to Steve, a player who goes from full tank of energy to a full tank of empty in double quick time.

Unfortunately through constant badgering about how old he is and therefore how he shouldn’t be anywhere near the opposition’s goal edge, and perhaps a dip in confidence brought about by his everday injury, Steve has dropped into a deep defensive position which quite frankly is a waste of his best asset - his sharp tackling. In midfield, his winning of the ball can set up counter-attacks against outnumbered opposition. In defence, his tackles come too late, and do nothing for us proactively. The number of times in the last few weeks that Steve has frustratingly cursed aloud the team’s inability to tackle or close down dribblers is down to the simple fact he’s out of his natural position and not doing that shit himself.

To push forward Steve is to bring back Leo. Robbie and Leo can work much better in tandem in defence, and on tonight’s showing the lynchpin needs to start taking back his sweeper role. In the first half Leo was playing right wingback with limited success. He was too far forward to reach Matt’s distance-lacking throwouts, and too tightly marked to get away from his marker. The simple fact is Leo has no attacking skills unless the ball is presented in front of him and he’s running at speed onto it. Without Gareth driving through the centre to create space and opportunities, Leo looks exactly like the first-touch long shot chancer he is.

In attack we had Alan and James, but where normally they would be linking up to better effect, there was a severe lack of understanding between them. Even with Alan offering himself for a drop ball back down the line, James was hitting impossible angle shots that never troubled the keeper. The key to our attacking success is how this new strike partnership play off each other, because they’re all we got, so they need to start playing tighter to each other, and be each other’s first option every time.

James wasn’t doing enough to stay close enough to their last defender, when they had possession, to be able to cut off that back line supply line. He should’ve been subtly dropping off their last defender only when we regained possession of the ball, in a way only the sadly deceased (well, he may as well be) Nathan seemed capable of doing. Otherwise, James was just waiting for a long counter ball from Matt that never came, or a high up tackle and pass from Steve, that also never came.

And Alan unfortunately found the going way too tough, frequently crowded out, despite seemingly operating on both wings throughout the game. Shots were very few and far between in the first half, with only Leo trying to smash shots at their keeper, whilst clipping in the odd kick at opposition heels and shins, James contriving to hit the post from a cross D pass, and finally Steve squirming in a spinning shot to give us our only first half damage.

As mentioned earlier, Matt let in a succession of angled drives from the left wing, all similar, all probably from the tall blue eyed blonde. Either the defence weren’t threatening the shot enough, or Matt’s ground diving skills have taken a nose dive into swill. The gaffer is still not showing enough good recent form for me to suggest anything but perhaps some Ferguson-like complacency is going on.

The second half was better and the reason why, was because Leo dropped into defence, and we pushed Steve further forward. This worked better because Leo had the pace to last second challenge almost every shot on the edge of the D in the hope of putting the strikers off, and even get some useful interceptions. This allowed Steve and Robbie to get the first kick bite of the tackle cherry, with Leo covering if they failed. The difference was much more noticeable as the panicked shots from Athletico Becks were more high and over than before.

Leo could also put his long passing off the walls to better use, setting a passing move off that resulted in James or possibly Alan stroking home a simple second goal. Our other tactic from an attacking perspective was an epic fail. But at least we tried it and persevered with it - the long throw from Matt to James EVERY. SINGLE. TIME. It only worked in the sense that James almost always got the first touch on it - he just couldn’t do anything with it; back to goal, he didn’t possess the skills to turn and shoot and had no oncoming support to lay off to. He needs to be utilised in the same way Nobby was, and actually have him take the ball on the halfway line, rather than so trapped in the opposition’s corner.

So with a hardcore survivor rate of just six players after our very own anoncalypse, we need to adjust the way we play, and in an ironic twist, the man who preached that Steve and Alan should play in defence, has, in a roundabout way, forced the team to play them further forward in order to get the defence back up to snuff. We need to attack and defend as a unit like we’re all attached to a big ole rope, a basketball formation like Hodgson advocates at Fulham, or like a Saw V deathtrap if you need imaginary pressure. I personally learnt a lot about how we can and how we should play from this game, and as chief tactician I will be looking for some implementation. It’s time we went back to the old school, when we knew what our best positions were, and we played them.

On more positive notes, several future prospects are in hand that make the future of The Molly Maguires that little bit brighter. There’s the national “employer’s” tournament in August in London, with Matt seeking approval from our overlord and master, and Steve seeking sponsorship from a coffee shop he frequents whilst leering at girls in summer skirts, or celeb-spotting David Gest, whilst fending off the attentions of a manic bag lady. Put that in your advertising slogan.

There’s the upcoming Southampton vs. Portsmouth III : The Revenging, when our colleagues in Pompey will be looking to avenge their humiliating whitewash defeat on their own turf in November 07. C’mon Hatton, take that fragile ankle out for one last suffering.

And finally, because Robbie bitched and moaned about it so much, we move back to Thursday evening, on the promise of more regular attendance from our stalwart defender, and the chance of Dan coming back to bulk up the numbers and to cadge for photography and window glazing business.

Playing for this team is never dull that’s for certain. And so, I leave you with a quote from a great black American philosopher - “When the sun shines, we’ll shine together. Know that I’ll be here forever. Said I’d always be your friend. Took an oath, I’m a stick it out till the end. Now that it’s raining more than ever, know that we’ll still have each other. You can stand under my umbrella. You can stand under my umbrella.”