I’d settled
well at our new home on the Eastcourt Estate and got to know some of the local
lads through kick-abouts on Eastcourt Green. Peter Cragen and Peter Fill lived
on Lynsted Road.
Others, like Anthony Couchman and a fat kid I only knew as Tosh, lived nearby.
When
it got too dark for football outside, I played table football inside. Only I’d
moved on from this…
To
this…
With
a little help from Airfix enamels and my biased hand, this all-conquering
Manchester United side won the league once a month, every month.
Spring
was well on the way when I replaced the handlebars on my bike with fancy
cow-horn ones, bought from Braggs bicycle shop on Livingstone Road. A big improvement, I
thought.
Another
thing I bought was an England
kit. At least I bought the components; white shirt, navy shorts and white
socks. Interchanged with my old red shirt, white shorts and red socks I could
now, if I pleased, wear the colours of half the teams in the football league.
As
one door opens, another one shuts… and another door opens. Working at the
International Stores put the mockers on attending Gillingham matches on
Saturday afternoons but having a job and contributing to the family coffers
excused me from Dad’s Sunday morning boot camp. At around 10:15 I sloped off and
called at Smith’s newsagents on Beechings Way for a box of Paynes mint poppets on
my way to Beechings Green playing field for the 10:30 kick offs. I rarely saw a
boring match. Certainly nothing as boring as the Sunday morning fixtures I’d
endured in the Catholic Church across the road, but Dad no longer cracked that
whip and I was happy to leave those days behind.
Wednesday March 5th
At
Priestfield Stadium Gillingham beat Swindon 2-0 in a night match. Swindon captain Stan Harland was gracious in defeat. ‘The
best team we’ve played this season,’ he said of the Gills. Praise indeed, from
a man whose team had reached the League Cup Final and were riding high at the
top of the league.
It
was the first Gillingham match I’d seen in
while and I thoroughly enjoyed it. The win was much needed as these were
worrying times for the Gills, who’d hit the skids and were flirting with
relegation. Paul and I blamed manager Basil Hayward. Not least for having a name
like Basil.
Ten
days later, Stan Harland lifted the League Cup when Swindon
beat Arsenal on a mud bath of a pitch at Wembley. ‘Beautiful play! That is
that!’ said Brian Moore in commentary on The Big Match, when Don Rogers sealed Swindon’s victory with a third and final goal.
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