Wednesday, 8 April 2026

Orwell - Eternit Sports & Social Club


Orwell FC
Eternit Sports & Social Club
Whaddon Road
Meldreth
Royston 
SG8 5RL









Ground Number: 1541
Wednesday 8th April 2026
Orwell 1-3 Over Sports
Cambridgeshire County Premier







ORWELL FC - A BRIEF HISTORY

The club was established in 1920, although it had played friendlies before and after the First World War. They joined the Foxton & District League and won the title four times before they joined the Cambridgeshire League in 1929. They won the Division 3 title in 1931 before they were placed in the top-tier League 1 for the following season. Their next league honour was winning the Cambridgeshire League Division 1 in 1958, losing just three times all season. By now, this was the second tier but Orwell would last for four seasons in the top division before relegation in 1962. They even dropped down to the third tier in 1965, but bounced back as runners-up the following season. The 1970s saw the club's fortunes fade, and they remained in the lower divisions for many years. In 2007, they went down to Division 4A, which was at the sixth tier of the Cambridgeshire County League, step 12 of non-league or the sixteenth tier of English Football overall. They finished 9th twice, then 5th before winning the title in 2011. This kick-started a revival, and a third-place finish in 2012 was good enough for promotion from Division 3A. In 2013, Orwell finished as runners-up to Ashdon Villa in Division 2A for another promotion. The club made it four promotions in a row as they finished as Division 1A runners-up to Barrington in 2014. The following season saw a 3rd place finish in the Senior B division, but in 2016, they finished bottom of the other regional league at that level, Senior A. Despite this, they remained in the division. They stabilised at the level, with a series of decent finishes before they won the title in 2025. This earned them promotion to the top tier for the first time in 63 years, where they are currently fighting relegation.


Mr H G Peters was President of the club from its formation in 1920 to when he died in 1966. He provided the original pitch on which to play – and allowed the club to build dressing rooms and toilets, until the venue was replaced by the Recreation Ground. Sid Miller was one of the original founders of the club and was also the first club captain; he remained a Life Vice President until he died. The Recreation Ground was their home for many years, but after promotion to the Senior Division, they had to move to the Meldreth Recreation Ground (around four miles from Orwell) as the pitch at their home venue was too small. Following their promotion to the Premier Division, they moved again to the Eternit Sports & Social Club, again in Meldreth, to satisfy ground grading regulations. In terms of local cups, the club has won six Foster Cups, the Gransden Cup and the Royston Hospital Cup in 1929, the Cambridgeshire Junior Cup in 1938, the Willingham Cup in 1947, the Milton Cup in 1958, and the Bambridge Cup in 1966.


Orwell is a rural village outside Cambridge. It has a population of around 1,000. The Prime Meridian passes the eastern edge of Orwell. The village of Orwell grew around the well that gave it its name, and the Roman road that runs to Cambridge runs alongside the village. Listed in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Ordeuuella. The village's name means "spring by a pointed hill". The oldest surviving houses in the village date from the 16th century, although the village church dates back to around 1150. The parish's main commercial activity has always been agriculture, though a coprolite mine opened for a brief period at the end of the 19th century, and a brewery. There were two pubs listed in the village in 1756, rising to seven by 1882. By 1936, there were still six, but by 1970, only The Chequers remained. It remains the village's only pub.


The club currently plays in the village of Meldreth, which has a population of around 1,800. A large Bronze Age hoard was found near Meldreth railway station in the nineteenth century, which is now in the collections of the British Museum. The village, once famous for its fruit production, is now home to many commuters who work in Cambridge and London. Orchards still exist in Meldreth, and locally grown fruits and vegetables are sold in the village, most notably the Meldreth greengage. The village retains its own railway station, which opened in 1851. In 2001, local celebrations marked the 150th anniversary of Meldreth railway station, which serves the residents of Meldreth and the neighbouring village of Melbourn. Trains from the station run to Cambridge and London King's Cross. The prime meridian runs through the village. A stone marker was erected near the western end of Fenny Lane and unveiled in December 1999 by the Astronomer Royal, Sir Martin Rees.


MY VISIT

It was that part of the season where clubs without floodlights played games in midweek. This was usually a week or so after the clocks went forward, but there had already been a fair few games, especially in the Craven League, which had started the day after the time change. I'd have to wait a while longer, though, and was initially planning to go to New Romney v Hawkinge on Thursday. However, when I checked, it was a fair distance, and I'd found a far closer option in Orwell v Over Sports. It all depended on whether fellow Hopper Colin could make it through, so I didn't decide either way until Tuesday night. Colin was on board with us going to Orwell, which was a far nicer journey. It would also save me money. An excellent history site aided research into the club, especially the early years. The FA Full Time site was actually decent for once, going all the way back to 2006 and retaining the results from the two pandemic seasons. I was reminded that this game would make the 25th anniversary of Wycombe playing Liverpool at Villa Park in the FA Cup semi-final. What a day, but quite a contrast between venues a quarter of a century apart. I doubt I'd have contemplated visiting a ground this basic five years ago, let alone 25 years ago. But now, I embrace the madness and probably enjoy step 7 as much as anything these days.
After my long weekend, I got over seven hours of sleep on Monday night, a decent amount for me. It took me a couple of hours to get up and ready, but I did my usual walk to Wycombe & back, over ten miles in all. It was probably undone by having a Wispa, a Belgian Bun, and a can of Irn Bru, though. I did at least have a fairly healthy lunch of chicken & salad wrap. In the evening, I made my 42nd visit to Holmer Green to see them beat Staines & Lammas 2-0, creating a club record nine wins in a row in the process. Wednesday was an early start for work, and I was glad to finish at 11 and top up with petrol for tonight. Lunchtime brought the news that Hillingdon Borough had decided to call it a day, after thirty-six years. The vague statement gave people just three days' notice for people to visit and pay their tributes. After a few hours at home, researching the club history, I left at 3.15., I picked Colin up 15 minutes later. It was the hottest day of the year, and having had a busy day, Colin slept for the entire journey. We were in Royston at 5, and it was a nice town, with free parking after 3 pm. From there, we walked the five minutes to Wetherspoons 499, The Manor House. It was pizza Wednesday, so I went for spicy chicken pizza with a passion fruit cooler for just over £7, a bargain. With it being busy due to the weather, service was not the quickest. In fact, 15 minutes for drinks, 30 minutes for food, so I was glad I allowed lots of time. Colin, as usual, avoided the deal nights, paying full price for his chicken and having garlic bread on the side. He took an age to eat it, so we only had ten minutes before kickoff after a ten-minute drive.

 

Orwell were in 13th place and had won eight, drawn one and lost thirteen so far. They had one win in seven, which came a couple of games ago when they won 2-0 at Comberton. In their last game, they lost 7-0 at Newmarket Town Reserves. Over Sports were in 6th and had won thirteen, drawn six and lost six. They hadn't won in three, but gained a respectable 1-1 draw against West Wratting last time out. The visitors were by far the better side, taking the lead after four minutes, a well-worked move leading to a low shot from fifteen yards into the bottom right-hand corner. After wasting several chances, they went 2-0 up after 15 minutes, another low shot this time from a long throw. Orwell started to have some chances around the half hour, coming close a couple of times. On 35 minutes, it was 3-0, the keeper could only palm the ball out for the Over Sports man to finish from close range. A header from a corner five minutes later was disallowed as the one-way traffic continued. The second half was more muted. Over Sports hit the woodwork twice, and Orwell fashioned a couple of half-chances. They had their keeper to thank for some excellent saves, which kept the score respectable. They got their reward on 88 minutes, drilling low into the bottom left to make it 3-1. It had been a pleasant evening in warm sunshine, hopefully more to come.
THE GROUND

ETERNIT SPORTS & SOCIAL CLUB is part of a huge complex with lots of parking. The main feature is a decent bar, which sometimes does food. There are dugouts on the other pitches, but not on the one that was used on my visit. It is also linked by buses, albeit with a bit of a walk. Though it is basic at the moment, there is a lot os space and potential to improve.

Monday, 6 April 2026

Redcar Athletic - Green Lane


Redcar Athletic FC 
Green Lane
Redcar 
North Yorkshire
TS10 3RW

07854 935380







Ground Number: 1540
Monday 6th April 2026
Redcar Athletic 2-1 Bridlington Town
NPL D1 East










REDCAR ATHLETIC FC - A BRIEF HISTORY

The club was established in 1993 and was initially known as TEESSIDE ATHLETIC. For the first 12 years of their history, they were competitive in the Teeside League, but never won a title. In 2005, they made the step up to the Wearside League, changing their name to REDCAR ATHLETIC in 2010. They were runners-up to Stockton Town in 2016 and Jarrow in 2017 before winning the title in 2018. This earned them promotion to the Northern League D2, where they finished 7th in their debut season. Results over the two pandemic seasons saw the club promoted to Division 1. Redcar won the title last season, sealing promotion to the NPL D1 East, where they were crowned champions this season.


Redcar Athletic had their best FA Cup run this season, beating North Ferriby & Guisborough Town before losing 5-2 at Pickering Town in the 2nd Qualifying Round. Last season saw their best FA Vase run as they beat West Auckland Town, Prudhoe YCS & Whickham before a 2-1 loss against North Shields in the 3rd Round.  Local cup wins include two Monkwearmouth Cups, the Shipowners Cup in 2009, the Wearside League Cup in 2007 and the Total Sport Alan Hood Memorial Cup in 2017. Their record home attendance of 1,781 came against Hartlepool United for a pre-season friendly in July 2023.


The seaside town of Redcar has a population of 37,000 and is located around seven miles from Middlesbrough. It is a destination for holidaymakers, although not as much as it was in its heyday. There was also a steelworks in the town before a decline in the value of steel meant that it was closed. The town is also home to a running club, a cricket club and a rugby club. There's also Redcar Town FC, who are doing very well in the Northern League D2. Famous people from the town include the footballer David Wheater.


MY VISIT

In terms of the Northern Hop, had I stuck to the original schedule, it would have been five visits. For four of them, I was either unwilling or unable to find an alternative, but for the final game of the hop at Sunderland West End, I was able to switch it out for one of the three clubs I needed at step 4, the others being Ashington & Jersey Bulls. I was not quite able to match some other hoppers, such as QPR's Tony Incenzo, who had completed the top ten levels at Fulwood Amateurs today, but I was quite proud that I was down to 55 to complete the same feat. Quite a few hoppers had drifted to other games, so I was pleased when the official hop Twitter announced that the crowd was 475. The club was resigning from the Northern League at the end of the season due to a failure to attract fans, so it was nice to see them get a good send-off.

 

From our game at Jarrow, it was a slow getaway thanks to the roads not being used to the volume of traffic. We stopped at ASDA in Boldon to get enough petrol to get us home. From there, it was an hour to Redcar with a ten-minute wait at a level crossing near the ground. Parking was £2 in the spacious car park. Entry was a reasonable £10. I went into the shop, although it was a bit chaotic as they had not originally intended to open. No prices were on display, and it was exact cash only. I got myself a warm-up top from the sale rail for a fiver. From there, it was food; a double nacho cheeseburger was very filling at £8. I wasn't intending on a pint, but with limited soft drinks, I got a pint of Thatchers Gold for a fiver and went outside. The hosts were given a guard of honour onto the pitch to celebrate them being champions.
Redcar Athletic had already sealed the title and were a remarkable twenty-five games unbeaten. Bridlington were in 11th, but were six games unbeaten. Bridlington edged the game and went ahead at 25 minutes, Joe Pratley from 25 yards, following up a free kick and shooting past the flailing keeper. They were only ahead for a minute as Adam Boyes followed up a keeper's parry to equalise. Just before halftime, the champions took the lead, a penalty from Louis Johnson. Redcar were dominating by now and had a couple of goals disallowed.

 

We made a pretty hasty exit, as it was a 4.5-hour drive home. I'd have liked to have seen the trophy lift and celebrations, but I was all footballed out by now. There was disappointing news from back home - Wycombe had surrendered a 1-0 lead at home to Bradford City to lose 2-1. We listened to the fallout from this on our local radio station, stopping briefly for a drink for hydration at a petrol station. At 6, we switched to Greatest Hits Radio for the long journey home. I'd have liked to have listened to an audiobook to help the journey pass, but a talkative Colin remained awake for the whole journey. I dropped him off at 9.05 and, due to him taking a while to get his stuff out of the car, was back home by 9.25. I had a huge amount of admin to catch up on, and I helped this pass with half a cider and a bottle of Kriek Beer. It had been a boozy weekend due to my chilling once we'd got back to the hotel. It had also been an enjoyable time, despite four distant revisits. Sunday was the runt of the litter with no new grounds, but I still got something out of the day. All in all, tickets, hotels and car costs had come in at £235, though I'd spent a lot more on food and drink.
THE GROUND

GREEN LANE has seen a lot of development in a short space of time, and as a result, it is the standard array of metal stands added as they've gone up the leagues. There are around 200 seats and 300 standing under cover. The rest of the ground is open. The bar offers a reasonable range with great service, and the food is filling. The club shop has a reasonable range. The car park is spacious, but the ground is quite a way out of town.