Awayday Review - Colchester, Layer Road Sunday, 18th Nov 2007 10:03 Sheffield to Colchester to watch Queens Park Rangers on a Wednesday night? No problem at all. 1 - The Game Sadly for Harford in his quest to impress the watching Flavio Briatore Ephraim's goal was merely an equaliser despite Rangers' early dominance. A little earlier Mark Yeates had teased Lee Camp with a deep cross and Mikele Leigertwood lived up to his unfortunate nickname with a bumbling own goal as the ball landed back at his feet off the cross bar. Even more infuriatingly for the caretaker manager Rangers allowed Kem Izzet the freedom of the penalty area to head home the hosts' second goal immediately from the kick off and then shipped a third before the break when Adam Bolder was harshly penalised for fouling Kevin Lisbie and Yeates hammered in the free kick via a deflection. After half time Rangers continued to look good going forward and Rowan Vine got a debut goal his overall performance richly deserved to halve the deficit with half an hour still to play. But the back four was in pieces and Colchester gave the impression of a side that could score at any time. Stung into life by Vine Yeates rattled the base of the post and then as the R's struggled to reorganise Clive Platt planted a header into the bottom corner for 4-2. Rangers stuck the cue on the rack at that point, knowing that any further dents in the scoreline on their behalf would only yield another response from the U's. Fantastically entertaining for those who just fancied a night at the football, frightening stuff for the travelling QPR fans. 2 - Rangers' performance 3 - Rangers' Support 4 - The Ground There isn't an unobstructed view in the place and the toilets are a disgrace to mankind. The terrace built to house the away fans is something of a miracle really as you wouldn't think that a stand built all of three feet away from the back of the net could actually offer no kind of view of that goal no matter whereabouts you stand on it. It is possible to get a better view of what's going on in that penalty area by staying in the town centre and using a short range telescope to peer in from three miles away. Those Rangers fans who paid to sit down were housed in a little shack by the corner flag which looks for all the world like somebody has stolen it from the 18h green at Wentworth. Despite all of that, as the doors swung shut on a Colchetser v QPR fixture at Layer Road for a final time I couldn't help but feel I might miss the old hell hole. Looking at the pictures of their new ground in the match programme, which didn't turn up from the printers until half time just to add to the whole Unibond League feel of the place, it looks horribly like the U's are about to curse us with another soulless, plastic out of town bowl of nothingness from next season. I mean Layer Road has a bit of something about it, a bit of character, there's something a bit special about a game under the lights here that you just don't get in a half empty Walkers Stadium. I'd hate to think we're going to have yet another trip to an out of town retail park on the calendar next season, pre match drinks in a pub with a play barn on the side, competing for parking with silly old bints going to Tesco or teenage chavs taking their pimply faced, pregnant girlfriends to see Saw 4 at the multiscreen. Football is in danger of losing its identity and while I certainly won't miss wading through an inch of piss to the toilets at half time, or not being able to see a match I've paid £18 to get into, I just know I'm going to be bored with their new place and pine a little bit for Layer Road within ten minutes of my first visit. 5 - Atmosphere 6 - Pre Match 7 - The Journey So at 1127 in the morning I jumped on board the Midland Mainline service from the steel city heading south, with no means of making the return journey after the game and no real idea of what I was going to do about that. It's the madness of a football fan. My trip down passed without event and after a few beers and a lovely plate of sausage and mash at Liverpool Street I boarded the half four One service up to Colchester. An earlier Norwich service had been cancelled so this one was pretty rammed but we managed to get seats all the same and arrived in Colchester in good time for a few more drinks before kick off. We left the pub at about 7pm with the intention of getting a taxi from the station but of course there were no cabs to be seen when we got there - it's always the way. We asked a bus driver where we might find a taxi rank and, with profits for the bloody bus company rolling round in her eyes, she told us to jump on and she'd take us "most of the way there." Half an hour of sitting in traffic later and she was telling us this was as close as the bus route went, all of three hundred yards the other side of the station and still a good 20 minutes walk to the ground. We made it in about a minute into the game which is torture to me, I can't stand to miss any of the action and I wasn't best impressed that the bloody bus driver had screwed us over. It was only when Clive Platt headed home Colchester's fourth goal that thoughts even turned to my return trip home. You can get as far as Derby or Doncaster on the fast trains north from London after 11pm but that might have been tight and at the end of the day what can Derby and Doncaster offer me between the hours of 2am and 5am on a weekday morning? Not much, and I speak from experience. I had been offered a room at a friend's house in Langley but getting there from Colchester on the trains after 10pm isn't the barrel of laughs you might expect. It would certainly require a sprint to Colchester station, a trip of unprecedented speed on the circle line from Liverpool Street and another dash to the last train from Paddington and even then you've got to get over the embarrassment of meeting your friend's family for the first time by waking them up knocking on their door at half one in the morning. I did consider finding a pub with a late license in Colchester, getting myself nicely drunk and then kipping at Colchester railway station until the first train left in the morning. I don't know Colchester that well though and wasn't overly confident of finding a "late license" in quite the same way I can do in London or Sheffield. In London it's possible to still be supping at 4am but I'd be surprised if you can do that anywhere in Colchester without frequenting one of those clubs where David Brent and Finchy hang out in The Office. My other idea to head back to London, stay in a pub until they threw me out and then spend the early hours of the morning walking around our fantastic city seeing it with nobody around. I had this idealised, romantic view of me being all alone outside St Pauls or walking down by the river and looking at London in a whole new light. The weather was kind and I was actually quite up for it, once in a lifetime sort of thing. But then I started to think of all the things that could go wrong, the middle London isn't really the place to be by yourself at four in the morning with an enticing back pack slung over your shoulder. Best case scenario some pissed up nobody stumbles out of a doorway and pukes on your shoes and you have to spend the next 18 hours smelling of reconstituted blue WKD until you can get home and change. Worst case scenario the police fish your corpse out of the river down by tower bridge the following day and the post mortem reveals you'd been brutally arse raped before drowning. It was at that moment, as I was getting the "you've been a stupid idiot coming this far with no way back" sweats that Dave Thomas, of AKUTR's fame, strode into view and offered me a lift home. Proper home, right to my door. Still clinging to my romantic view of Trafalgar Square at four in the morning I said I'd think about it but almost as soon as the words had left my lips another image of the river police poking at my battered and violated corpse with a wooden stick flashed before my eyes and before I knew it I was in the back of Dave's car, safe, warm and on my way home. We dropped Dave Anderson off near Kettering and after a greasy burger, and bizarre incident with a car door and some torn ligaments in Dave's hand, we pitched up in Sheffield at a little after two in the morning. Massive thanks to the two Dave's for getting me out of a hole all of my own making. I note with some trepidation that we have a similarly inaccessible trip to Cardiff after Christmas, maybe I'll have come to my senses before then. Wouldn't bet on it though. It's great fun really. 8 - Police and Stewards When I did finally make it to Layer Road I was first sent to the wrong turnstile by a steward after he read my ticket incorrectly. After somebody who knew what they were doing then sent me back to where I'd gone originally the same steward decided that I should swap tickets with the man standing behind me in the line so that he could go in with his mates and they wouldn't get sperated. I initially went along with this but after the swap the steward then looked at my new ticket and confirmed that I'd have to go back down the road to the turnstile he'd sent me to incorrectly the first time around and enter there. The game had already kicked off by this stage so I lost it a bit in a Bazil Fawlty style rant, demanded my ticket back from the man that had swapped with me, told the steward he was a silly, incompetent, old fart and pushed my way through the turnstile and onto the terrace. I apologise to the QPR fan who wanted to swap tickets with me for some inexplicable reason if I was rude, but it's a brave man who gets between me and QPR when the match has kicked off. Inside the stewards threw one QPR fan out at half time, I'm not sure if it was the same QPR fan who hurled the barrier and gesticulated angrily to the referee from the side of the pitch about the suspicious positioning of the ball for the corner that led to the first Colchester goal but if it was he can have few complaints. Overall not bad, but a needless pain in the arse outside beforehand. Total - 44/80 Photo: Action Images Please report offensive, libellous or inappropriate posts by using the links provided.
You need to login in order to post your comments |
Queens Park Rangers Polls[ Vote here ] |