Saturday, 30 August 2025

Goring United - Sheepcot Rec


Goring United FC
Goring Social Club
Sheepcot Recreation Ground
1 High Street
Goring-on-Thames
Oxfordshire
RG8 9BA







Ground Number: 1469
Saturday 30th August 2025
Goring United 0-3 Tadley-Calleva Reserves
Thames Valley Premier










GORING  UNITED FC - A BRIEF HISTORY

After playing friendly games against various local sides for several years, Goring United FC was officially formed in 1901. Teething problems arose from the sharing of the Gardiner Recreation Ground, as they and the cricket club fought over its use. Eventually, a compromise was found, and it was a venue that they would continue to use for most of their history. Early days were spent in the Reading Temperance League until the war brought football to a halt. Three sides emerged from the conflict with one playing in the Reading Wednesday League, set up for shop workers who were forced to work Saturdays. The main side played in the Reading & District League either side of World War II. The 50s began with a star guest of honour at the club's annual dinner: Ted Drake, former Arsenal and England star, then manager of Reading FC. Like many organisations up and down the country, the football club celebrated the Queen's coronation – with a Coronation Eve dance on June 1st 1953, held in the Parish Hall. They won the Reading & District Division 4 in 1964, but struggled for players in some seasons, leading to the temporary scrapping of the reserve team.


  
By 1968, they'd reached Division 2 West, but results declined, and by the early 70s, they were back in Division 4, where they were champions again in 1976. They hardly put a foot wrong in the 1984/85 season and finished up comfortable winners of Division 3. The Chronicle of 3 May 1985 records: "Division 3 champions Goring United signed off their career in that section with a 5-1 thumping of Hurst, with goals from Kevin Wild, Liam O'Gorman, Dave Cade and Martin Turner, and at the same time brought up a ton of goals in the league." Goring won 25 out of 26 matches, a feat never seen before or since. Once promoted, the team consolidated their position in Division 2. They also won the South Oxfordshire Junior Cup in 1987, and rounded off the decade in style, brushing aside Cookham Dean Reserves in a decisive 8-0 victory, which sent them to the top of the table in December 1989.


By the summer of 1989, the Reading League, which would go on to be the modern-day Thames Valley League, was established. Goring United was a founder member, starting in Division 2 Kennet, which they would win in 1995. After three decent seasons, the side won Division 1 Kennet in 1998 and were promoted to the Premier Division. A 3rd place finish at the turn of the Millennium was the best in the club's history at that point. Goring were relegated in 2003 but bounced back immediately as runners-up behind Old Bell. Another couple of seasons were spent in the Premier Division before relegation again in 2006. They finished as Division 1 runners-up behind AFC Corinthians in 2012, which by now was a step 9 league. Relegations followed in 2013 & 2014 as the league was rebranded and reorganised. By 2014, Goring United were playing in the Thames Valley Division 2. They suffered a further relegation in 2019 to Division 3 and became a yo-yo club for a few seasons. Results over the pandemic season saw the club promoted to Division 2 where they finished as runners-up to Henley Town. Four seasons were spent in Division 1 before the club won the title last season.


Recent cup honours include the Berkshire Trophy Centre Intermediate Cup in 2004 & 2012. Goring-on-Thames (or Goring) is a village on the River Thames in South Oxfordshire and Berkshire border. It is 6 miles south of Wallingford and 8 miles north-west of Reading. It has a population of around 3,300. Most land is farmland, with woodland on the Goring Gap outcrop of the Chiltern Hills. Its riverside plain encloses the residential area, including a high street with shops, pubs and restaurants. Goring & Streatley railway station lies on the Great Western Main Line, providing trains between London, Reading, and Didcot. The village church is dedicated to St Thomas Becket with a nave that was built within 50 years of the saint's death, in the early 13th century, along with a later bell tower. Goring faces the smaller Streatley across the Thames; the two are linked by Goring and Streatley Bridge. The name Goring first appears in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Garinges, then as Garingies in a charter once held in the British Museum. It translates as "Gara's people". In the summer of 1893, Oscar Wilde stayed at Ferry House in Goring with Lord Alfred Douglas. While there, Wilde began writing his play An Ideal Husband, which includes a main character named Lord Goring. Musicians Pete Townshend and George Michael also lived in the village.


MY VISIT

After doing quite a bit of travelling in recent times, I was keen to keep it cheap and local this weekend. Due to the number of grounds I have covered, even step 7 games produced very few opportunities within London, my preferred option, as it is easier to access backups. Therefore, tempting options at South Leeds, Dearne & District and Thurnby Rangers would be left for another day. Around six options were whittled down to two - Richmond & Kew v Worcester Park and Canterbury City v Metrogas. With the latter having one of their Wetherspoons closed and being a more expensive trip, I decided to leave it for a while. There was a great-looking pub called The Mitre that had attracted me to Richmond and Kew, so I would be doing the bulk of the journey on the train. The only disappointment was the lack of home social media and a vague ground location on FA Full Time, but I initially decided to stick with it.


From our game at Foxton, we left at 8, with darkness soon falling. We listened to the Bromley v Wycombe Wanderers game, with the League 2 side equalising as we were on our way home. I dropped Colin off at 9.15 and got home myself at 9.30. I was just in time to watch Wycombe win on penalties and get my blog up before trying to get to sleep. It took me ages to drop off because we'd just discovered that we had lost our Knaresborough game from the Friday of our trip, and there would be all the hassle of cancelling hotels and finding a new game. Money-wise, we lost about £17 on wasted train tickets too, but those are the risks you take when groundhopping and buying advance tickets. I was knackered the following day and struggled through my shift. When I got home, I found an alternate game for both of us and then spent two hours trying to find a suitable hotel. At this late notice, options were thin on the ground, but I eventually got something sorted.


On Wednesday evening, I decided to revisit Sarratt to help Colin out. He'd got a serious case of the PuffPuffs, too lazy to walk or cycle it, despite it being a short distance. It was a terrible drive, the vile Cadent roadblockers whose roadworks take an age due to so few hours worked a week. The worst proponents of gas since Adolf Hitler quadrupled the journey time, and that was before the miles of crap country roads that it takes to reach the ground. It is a lovely ground, though, and despite Caddington having the better of the early stages, Sarratt raced into a three-goal lead including a good free kick. Caddington pulled one back after the home keeper fumbled a cross. A rocket of a strike pulled it back to 3-2 just after halftime. Caddington piled on the pressure, but Sarratt made it 4-2 on the hour. A very generous late penalty made it 5-2, but it was good entertainment for the 55 present as it finished in the dark. I went home and caught up on TV, as well as watching the end of the Grimsby Town v Manchester United game. The Mariners had led 2-0 at one point, but United grabbed two late goals. The penalty shoot-out was tense for the second night in a row. Happily, the League 2 side won, but Wycombe got a dreadful draw for their previous night's efforts, being sent to Wigan Athletic.
Thursday was a mixed day. The good news was getting a Vienna & Zagreb plan put together, hopefully involving Croatia v Gibraltar if dates fall right. The disappointing news was that my planned pub for pre-match was not doing food owing to a function. However, they were friendly and helpful, so despite a late look at Flix Buses to Sheffield & Leeds, I'd probably persist with my original plan. However, a tempting game came up after I helped out Futbology by entering the Thames Valley League fixtures. Goring United would mean a day out in Reading and their many great pubs, so I was swayed towards that, but I would decide on Friday. That day came and having checked the weather, Goring was good to go. After a gruelling few days at work, I could have done with a few drinks, but having had a shedload the previous week, I decided to be disciplined and wait until Saturday. It was a night of watching TV and doing research for this blog, with a 7.30 alarm set, which represented a 3.5-hour lay-in compared to work. I woke at 6.30 on the day of the game, having had a good eight-hour sleep. After watching YouTube, I got up, washed, dressed and had breakfast before leaving at 8. It was a good 80-minute walk to the bus station. The 9.30 bus, the 8.50 to Reading was popular, not surprising given that the £3 fare was great value, even after the government hiked fares by 50% last year. It took over 90 minutes, the only downside, but I passed the time by reading FourFourTwo and Retro Gamer on my tablet.

 

The bus was late but I was at the excellent Nags Head in Reading by 11.40. Three halves of new cider were sampled, the easy winner for my favourite was Nightingale Mystery Bird, a brilliant, dry and flavourful cider. Food was needed, and so I went to Biriyani Boys for Chicken Samosa, Chicken Seekh Kebab and Chilli and Coriander Naan. Not my original choice but the place across the road had no menus on display and I couldn't be arsed messing about. It'd mean a change of plan pub-wise too, as I had limited time now. The Ale was not as good as back in May, and so it was a blessing in disguise as I had a Lyme Bay Mead, which was decent if a little potent. It was a short walk to the station, but a fair old whack to the platform 12A that I needed. My food was great, although I'd have preferred a sit-down meal at the Bierhaus which had excellent last looking German food but they only opened in the evening. With the initial delay and subsequent diversion, I might be getting home an hour later than expected, though I'd play it by ear. The 13:23 to Goring and Streatley was bang on time, and I noted that Cholsey United were playing one stop down the line in the Oxfordshire Senior League, such was the geographical situation of the two clubs. We went right past Reading City FC, where Woodley United were playing Staines and Lammas in a Combined Counties D1 game. From the station, it was a short walk with me arriving ten minutes before kickoff.

 

Though primarily a Berkshire League, this Thames Valley Premier Division game featured a side from South Oxfordshire playing a side from Hampshire. Even so, such was their proximity to county borders, just under 17 miles seperated the two sides by road. Goring United had won the Thames Valley Division 1 last season. Tadley Calleva Reserves had finished 6th in this league last season with both teams playing their first league game of the season. It was an even opening but Goring missed a golden opportunity eight minutes in when they failed to capitalise on mix up in the visitors defence. An injury to the Tadley keeper resulted in a delay and an outfielder going in goal. Following this, Tadley had a good spell but didn't really threaten as slight drizzle started to fall. On a break, the stand-in keeper made a fantastic save to keep the game goalless. Tadley took the lead around five minutes before halftime, bundling home a cross. Just before the break, it was 2-0, a shot into the top of the net from just inside the area. On 49 minutes, it was 3-0, the Goring keeper could only get a hand to the shot as Tadley made it 3-0 with a low shot from around the penalty spot. That was it as far as scoring was concerned, and Goring United's debut in the Thames Valley Premier ended with a bit of a whimper.
THE GROUND

SHEEPCOT FIELD is a rather basic venue with no rail or dugouts. The pitch surround is a rope and the dugouts are just chairs. There's a hut that sells snacks and soft and hot drinks. The club is communicative on Twitter, and there is plenty of parking. Public transport-wise, Goring and Streatley station is five minutes walk away and this links the village with the likes of London, Reading and Didcot.

Tuesday, 26 August 2025

Foxton - Foxton Recration Ground


Foxton FC
Foxton Recreation Ground
Hardman Road
Foxton
Cambridgeshire 
CB22 6RY








Ground Number: 1468
Tuesday 26th August 2025
Foxton 1-3 Great Shelford
Cambridgeshire County Premier









FOXTON FC - A BRIEF HISTORY

The club was established in 1907 and soon after, joined the Cambridgeshire County League. They also played in the Foxton & District League in the 1920s before rejoining the county league. They have seen numerous successes here, including five Division 1 titles, five Premier Division A titles and the Premier Division B in 1993. They have been continuous members of the top-tier Premier Division since 2009, when they were promoted after finishing as runners-up to West Wratting in Senior Division A. Recent highlights have included 3rd place finishes in 2014 and 2022. League cup wins include the Premier League Cup in 2003, three William Cockell Cups, the Creake Shield in 1977 and the John Ablett Cup in 1995. County Cup wins include three Cliff Bullen Challenge Cups, three Lower Junior Challenge Cups, the Junior Challenge Cup in 1977 and the Cambridgeshire Watney Cup in 1986.


They have played at the village recreation ground since the 1950s, having previously played on various farmers' fields. It is a well-renowned surface with the groundsman winning awards in 2003 & 2020. Foxton is a small village in South Cambridgeshire. It has several well-preserved fifteenth- and sixteenth-century houses, and a thirteenth-century church dedicated to St Laurence. It has a population of around 1,200. The parish itself was formed over the medieval period and is bounded on the north by the River Cam and on the north-east and southwest by the Hoffer and Shepreth brooks. Its south-east boundary follows an ancient road that runs north-east from Fowlmere, known as the Mareway from the 14th century (now the B1368), and further west by an earthwork known as Grim's ditch or Thriplow bank. There is not a huge amount in the village aside from a village shop and a pub, but it does have a railway station on the main line from Cambridge to London.

MY VISIT

This game was only decided upon on Sunday by virtue of it being the closest game to home. It also excited Colin as he had been there to see their cricket team in the National Village Cricket Cup. This is a nationwide cricket competition that is played on Sunday and is restricted to one village per area. It's the sort of thing that I'd consider doing if I didn't have to work on that day to ensure that I get Saturdays off. I am not a huge cricket fan, but I do like visiting random places, which obviously ties in very well with Groundhopping. We would be joined by fellow hopper Daniel, born in Chelmsford but now living in Braintree, as it was also his closest game.
From our final game of the West Lancashire Hop, we headed home. It was a journey where the M6 was the M6 with around 30 minutes of delay around the Stoke area, but not terrible overall. Colin slept the whole of it, aside from two brief awakenings. Firstly, to open a can of Tango to drink and then again 20 minutes later when it fell out of his hand and soaked his lap. He had been a mixture of good company and a bit of a pain, and as usual, all the driving and hard work was down to me. He did at least pay half of the costs, but it would be nice to be ferried around on a hop for once by another driver. There was a brief snag as I was hoping to fill up with petrol at my local garage, but they had run out of unleaded.
I was back at 8.30, rather sunburnt and with a lot to catch up on. I had a few pints to end my time off work and was looking forward to four days of abstinence after having plenty in the last few days. I also got my blogs up, although I thought I would leave it until the following day to research Foxton's history for this blog. Tuesday came, and I woke at 7.30. After a freshen up and breakfast, I did my usual walk to Wycombe and back. I spent the afternoon at home, researching today's blog and catching up with things. I left at 3.40. My local garage still had no petrol, despite often being a late-night saviour, so I went to Tesco instead. Colin was ready and waiting but slept the entire journey. It was a trip beset by traffic; thankfully, we didn't need the M1, which had a two-hour delay. We were there at 5.45 and I walked to the corner shop with Colin. I then went back and met the Essex contingent and ate my chicken and sausages that I brought with me.

 

Just one game had been played in the league, with Foxton beating Comberton United 2-0 and Great Shelford winning 3-1 at Hardwick. It was an even opening but Great Shelford took the lead after ten minutes, heading home a cross. The visitors dominated from here on, and they doubled their lead on 15 minutes, capitalising on poor marking to fire home. Foxton had a brief good spell, but Great Shelford made it 3-0 on 32 minutes with a rocket from outside the area. On 43 minutes, Foxton pulled one back, heading home a right-sided cross from around six yards. The second half saw Foxton have lots of possession but not really threaten. There was a healthy attendance of 96 at the game and the scorers were named as Mason Newman (2) and Jay Downham-Flood for Great Shelford and Thomas Blake for Foxton.

 

THE GROUND

FOXTON RECREATION GROUND is a basic but pleasant setup. A fairly standard village green, which also has space for cricket and bowls, there is also a village hall that sells tea, coffee and snacks and has various memorabilia on the walls. There is a small car park and plenty of street parking. A few minutes' walk away are a pub that sells food and a Premier convenience store in what is a pleasant village. 

Monday, 25 August 2025

Tempest United - The Famous Shed


Tempest United Football Club
Tempest Rd
Bolton
Greater Manchester
BL6 4HL

01942 811938








Ground Number: 1467
Monday 25th August 2025
Temprest United 3-2 Rossendale
West Lancashire League Premier









TEMPEST UNITED FC - A BRIEF HISTORY

The club was originally established in 1946 and existed as a nomadic club for a few years before disbanding. In 1959, they were established permanently when the local council purchased some allotment land to create a sports field. The early years saw little success and basic facilities for the long-serving committee. However, the 1980s saw them push on, having sold some of the land they acquired from the council for housing, and this allowed them to build a clubhouse and changing rooms.


They saw some success in the Bolton Combination before joining the West Lancashire League in 1992. In 1996, they finished in 3rd place behind Lansill and Kirkham & Wesham to earn promotion to Division 1, but only stayed up for one season. Division 2 was renamed Division 1 in 1998, in line with the current system. A 2nd place finish behind Blackpool Wren Rovers in 2001 saw another promotion to the top tier, but again it would only be for a single season. Tempest won the Division 1 title in 2009, and this time, their stay would last for longer. They still struggled, though and went down again in 2014. A runners-up spot behind Turton saw them promoted again in 2016, and they've been in the Premier Division ever since. Tempest were far more successful this time and last season were West Lancashire League Champions for the first time.

 

MY VISIT

It was only a short walk from the previous game at CMB to get to Tempest. Despite this, the 8-minute walk was too far for Daniel, so Richard and Andrew agreed to go to Northwich Victoria to save his legs. The ground was as busy as the last, the club pulling out all the stops to provide food, drink and merch for the hoppers. I opted for a reusable cup, a bottle of Magners and a burger from the local butcher. There was a good atmosphere, and the ground was packed due to the 2.5-sided nature of the venue. The hard work paid off for the club as they attracted the biggest crowd of the hop as 470 turned up. Quite a few locals were present too, and they were surprised by how many turned up.
Last season's champions, Tempest United, were in 10th, having won three and lost three of their games so far. They'd won their last two, including a 4-0 win over Coppull United last midweek. Rossendale were in 14th, having won one, drawn one and lost four. On Tuesday, they had lost 2-0 at Haslingden St Mary's. Tempest took the lead after 20 seconds, a cross from the left was only partially cleared and Firth followed up from close range. On nine minutes, it was all square, a low cross from the right was nearly finished from ten yards by Wylie. Rossendale took the lead on 21 minutes, a mix-up in defence allowed Foster to slot home a loose ball. Pendlebury equalised on 28 minutes from a penalty awarded for handball. The game slowed down after that due to the heat. Around five minutes from time, Nathan Monson struck the winner for Tempest from the edge of the area. The keeper could only get a touch on it as the score went to 3-2.
That was the last game of what had been an excellent hop and it gave me the appetite to see more of what this league has to offer. The league representative reckoned that each club made a good few grand. Certainly, it was a testament to some extremely hard-working volunteers and the league for taking the initiative to organise the hop. Also, to all those at Groundhop UK for putting together the package and making it as easy as possible for the hoppers. There were plenty of winners, and although there had to be a bit of compromise from everyone, it was a great weekend.

THE GROUND

THE FAMOUS SHED is a compact ground that has only two and a half sides available to fans. The best view is from the raised patio at the front of the bar, where pretty much everything went on. Here and in the bar, a great range of food was available as well as a decent range of food and drink. Parking was quite limited, but cooperation with CMB down the road meant that it was not a problem.