Saturday, 9 May 2026

Oldbury United - York Road


Oldbury United FC 
York Road
Oldbury
Rowley Regis 
West Midlands
B65 0RR







Ground Number: 1552
Saturday 9th May 2026
Oldbury United 1-3 Wyreley United
West Midlands (Regional) Premier








OLDBURY UNITED FC - A BRIEF HISTORY

The club was established in 1958 and was initially known as Queens Colts. They joined the Oldbury League upon formation and won Division 2 in 1962, after which they changed their name to Whiteheath United. They then had a three-season spell in the Warwickshire and West Midlands Alliance. In 1965, they merged with Oldbury Town to become Oldbury United. A year later, they joined the Worcestershire Combination, which became the Midland Football Combination. Oldbury were runners-up to Alvechurch in 1972 and Sutton Coldfield in 1979. Despite only finishing 5th in 1982, they were admitted to the Southern League - Midland Division. A 6th-place finish was a great achievement in their debut season, but this was followed by a couple of mid-table seasons before relegation in 1986.
Successful seasons followed in the West Midlands (Regional) Premier, where the club were runners-up to Atherstone United in 1987 and Tamworth in 1988. Oldbury United then won the title in 1993. A year later, they joined the Midland Alliance with mixed results. Oldbury were relegated from this league in 2009 and folded due to a legal dispute, forcing them to vacate their ground and share at Tividale. The club was briefly resurrected in 2017, playing in the WMRL D2, but folded partway through the following season. The current version of the club was established in 2022 and has seen steady progress. They were promoted from Division 2 in 2024 after a 3rd place finish. Last season, a 4th-place finish was good enough for promotion to the Premier Division at step 7 of the pyramid.


Oldbury United have played several FA Cup campaigns. Their most notable campaign came in 1986 when they beat Eastwood Hanley, Rossendale United and Buxton to set up a local derby against Halesowen Town in the 4th Qualifying Round. Despite gaining a 2-2 draw away from home, they lost the home replay 2-2. The FA Amateur Cup matched them against my own team, Wycombe Wanderers in 1971. They beat Newquay 2-1 to set up the tie, and although our local newspaper appeared to take it lightly, the Chairboys triumphed 4-0 in the 3rd Round. The FA Trophy 3rd Qualifying Round was reached in 1984. Their 1977 debut in the FA Vase was also their record progress. Ibstock Peinstone Rovers, Wigston Fields, Boldmere St Michaels, and Halesown Town were beaten before a thrilling 4-3 loss to Irthlingborough Diamonds in the 5th Round.


Local cup wins include the Walsall Senior Cup in 1983, the Staffordshire Senior Cup in 1988 and the Midland Alliance League Cup in 1989. Oldbury United have played at York Road since 1973. Floodlights were installed in 1982, with a friendly against European champions Aston Villa marking the occasion.  The club represents Oldbury, population 13,500 to 25,500 depending on what metric you use. Comedian Frank Skinner lived there as a youngster. The ground itself is in Rowley Regis, which has its own station, a Wetherspoons, several other good pubs and a population of around 50,000. The delightfully named King Cnut reigned here from 990 to 1035. In more recent times, England footballer Carlton Palmer was its most famous resident.


MY VISIT

There were around fifty options at step 7 for this weekend. My requirements for a Saturday game are for it to be on public transport unless it is two games or better. Also, a good day out that, of course, involves pubs. Thirdly, I wanted a day that was reasonably priced on public transport. This was probably the hardest aspect, as normally, it is cheaper to drive. A fourth complication was that I had custody of Colin again, but as we both liked ticking Wetherspoons, albeit with different drink requirements, that seemed like a sound bet. I had plotted all of the options onto a map to try to help. It was the last of those options, Oldbury United, that I initially favoured on Tuesday, as there was potential for up to five new Spoons, plus it looked like a great ground. I would have a further look at the Football Traveller when it came to see if there were any better options.


After arriving back from AFC Shirley, I discovered that Colin had left one of his bags in my car. That boy really has the brain of a rocking horse, as at the start of the journey, he left his phone on my car roof. About the third or fourth time, he's done it, before remembering when we had started our journey. One pleasing result of the day was that Hearts had beaten Rangers to stay top of the Scottish Premiership. It's been 41 years since someone other than the Old Firm won it and 61 years since the Tynecastle club last won it. I have no foot in any camp in Scotland, but it's nice to see a change. Tuesday was my day off and was the usual chilled day. It was disappointing to have no midweek football, though. I started to finalise my plans on Thursday. When I checked the fare, it was a disgraceful £40 return, so I was only going to do it if Colin came along with his railcard. It was shocking that it was cheaper to drive solo, and it sums up this ridiculous country pretty well, where trying to do the right thing by keeping cars off the road is punished. But that is where Twitter came in useful. A helpful person informed me that I could get off a stop early and save £6 with the price looking a lot fairer that way. Friday was more work, but also a few drinks in the evening and a lot of enjoyable research into the club's history.
It had only been three drinks on Friday night, but it was strong stuff so I went to bed around 10 in a relaxed mood. I was in bed by 9.30 and, disappointingly, woke up at my normal work time. It was a few hours of watching YouTube and having breakfast before leaving at 7.50. Colin insisted on walking down with me, so I only got to listen to my podcasts for ten minutes. We were there at 9.15 and got our return tickets to Rowley Regis for £22.55 with Colin's disabled Railcard. It is frustrating that I can't get one for myself, up to 21 and old folks I understand, but offering after that and not including everyone smacks of discrimination to me. We were in Solihull at 10.55 and walked the ten minutes to the Spoons. A strange town, from what we saw, with just a parade of shops, but pleasant and some interesting food options. Wetherspoons 512 was the White Swan, where a breakfast muffin, black pudding, energy drink and a pint of Old Rosie was £7.18. From there, we managed to get an earlier train, despite Colin's dawdling. We were in Rowley Regis at 12.15 but had to wait 25 minutes for a bus due to traffic. Colin got his free, for me it was a return ticket for £5.20. The money was well spent. Roberto's Bar was supposed to be a bonus but it turned out to be fantastic with an incredible range of cider. I shall 100% be returning at some point in the future and it took the place as pub of the season for me. From there, to Wetherspoons The William Shenstone. This did for chicken Jalfrezi, chips and Aspalls for £6.50. From there, a bus to the ground, where it was £5 entry and £4 for a bottle of Thatchers Gold. I then met some lovely people who read my blog. My mission is to record memories and get people visiting new places, so I was glad that the latter had occurred. 

Oldbury United were in 8th and had won 13, drawn 7 and lost 12. Form was patchy; they had lost 2-1 to Wrens Nest on Tuesday and 3-2 in the reverse fixture recently.  But discounting those results, they'd won seven in a row. Wyreley were four places lower in 12th and had won 12, drawn 6 and lost 13. They were in worse form; their win in the corresponding game was their only victory in ten games. The hosts took the lead on 13 minutes, following up a parried shot. Both sides had chances, but I was fairly pissed by this point, as opportunities to visit great pubs do not come along that often. Colin had a snooze in the second half, disappearing, his head down as I sobered up. The away side had come back to win 3-1 by now, with some well-taken goals. It was deserved on the balance of play as the hosts lost their way. From there, it was a lengthy 25-minute walk to the out-of-town Wetherspoons. Colin was urgent to get home despite winning 2-0 on the day off.s the lucky boy, a black dragon and some wings did me. Colin had to wait for his due to some error, his usual sense of entitlement coming to the fore. I myself was in a good mood as we headed for a well-timed connection back home.

 

THE GROUND 

YORK ROAD is an excellent facility with cover on three sides. It could probably be a step 3 ground with little adjustment. It's located around 15 - 20 minutes from the station and the same from the Wetherspoons on the edge of town. A small range of drinks is available at the ground, but not food. 

Monday, 4 May 2026

AFC Shirley - Mansel Park


AFC Shirley
Evenlode Road
Millbrook
Southampton 
SO16 9RS









Ground Number: 1551
Monday 4th May 2026
AFC Shirley 3-0 Southsea Sports
Hampshire Premier FL Senior





AFC SHIRLEY - A BRIEF HISTORY 

AFC Shirley is one of the newest clubs in football, having been formed as recently as 2021. They played Sunday football at first. In their debut season, they finished as runners-up to Hamble Spitfires in the Southampton Sunday League Division 5. That got them promoted to Division 3, where they finished behind Butlocks Heath in 2023. They finally won the Division 2 title in 2024, as well as a couple of league cups in those last two seasons. They made the switch to Saturday football in 2024 and were Southampton Football League champions. This earned them promotion to the Hampshire Premier League - Senior Division at step 7 of the non-league pyramid.


Shirley is a broad district and a former village on the western side of Southampton. It has a population of around 15,000. Shirley's main roles are retail and residential. It is the most important suburban shopping area in the west of the city. Shirley is separated from Highfield by Southampton Common, a large green public space. The place-name Shirley commonly means "bright clearing", from the Old English very similarly pronounced scir (bright) and leah (cleared land in a wood). Mansel Park, where they play, is in nearby Millbrook and was Millbrook's former home before they moved to Test Park.


MY VISIT

The midweek games were really starting to dry up now, what with leagues packing up early for the summer. Though it was just the dregs now, there were still some decent options. This was mainly due to the Bank Holiday, with most of the Tuesday games shifted back to take advantage of the privilege of many being off. I was quite lucky in that respect. Although I had to work, I could get out at 12. This still gave me a wide variety of games and was, in some ways, better than an evening game for getting home after. Three main options would, all being well, allow a meal at a new Wetherspoons and a ground with a decent railed pitch. They were AFC Shirley v Southsea Sports, Henbury & Rockleaze v Tewkesbury Town and Sharpness v Tytherington Rocks. There were also four backups, should we need them.


From our game at Great Bentley, I drove Colin & I home. It showed how my style of groundhopping had changed. When I went to Riverside abck in 2014, I was most disappointed to have travelled all that way on the hop and seen such a basic ground.  Whilst Great Bentley was far nicer in terms of clubhouse, it was still a very basic pitch that was packed away after each game, turning back into a village green. I dropped Colin off at 10 and was home 15 minutes later. Rather than do my blog, I got straight into bed and was asleep around 11. It took me a while to get going after less than five hours of sleep, but I got through a busy day at work. I got a better night's sleep on Thursday ahead of another busy Friday. A few drinks were had in the evening, though nothing serious. I opted for a walk instead to clear my head. After an OK night's sleep, I walked down Wycombe with Colin.

 

It was a pint and breakfast muffin in Wetherspoons with Colin, a pint at the Rose and Crown, chips from a new takeaway and a can from Tesco. Then, half an hour wait to buy two shirts and a hat for £55 in the Wycombe end-of-season sale. Not the biggest bargain, but you take what you can get. The game itself started well, 2-2 within the opening 25 minutes. But then illness in the away end stopped the game for ten minutes and took the sting out of it. I'd lost interest, but the main thing was, the person concerned appeared to be on the mend. There was a great twist at the end as academy player Micah Olabiyi got ahead of the defence and kept a cool head to slot past the keeper for the winner in injury time, on his debut too. I went home via Lidl and Wetherspoons for a pint. I was home at 8.30 and in bed two hours later. After my revisit to Westfield the next day, I drove Colin & I home, getting home around 6.30. I had pasta for dinner and updated my blog for Westfield, as well as started this one. The aim was for a 9 PM bedtime with my early alarm.
In the end, though I did get to bed just after 9, it took me another 90 minutes to drop off. The 3.50 alarm went off, ready for seven hours of purgatory at work. I only used to have to work three bank holidays and would have got time and a half for it. But that all changed thanks to fire and rehire. This was one of the ones I'd have volunteered to do, so it was only the lesser monetary value I was suffering on this occasion. Though the people were fine, it was not nice, with the entirety of the local old folks home and creche emptied into the store on top of the normal customers. A supermarket was not how I'd spend my Bank Holiday, but each to their own. I left promptly at 12 and met Colin. He was on time, very quiet for once and slept for most of the journey. It was a nice journey too, Via Reading and Basingstoke and down the M3. We were at Wetherspoons in Shirley at 1.35. The Bright Water Inn was number 511 for me. I had Chicken Jalfrezi, chips and Monster Ultra Rosa for £8.22. After that, we popped over to Lidl as we'd used their car park. A fudge brownie and some fresh still lemonade were purchased before the ten-minute drive to the ground. I parked in a side road and walked across to the pitch.
 

Both teams were playing their final games of the season. AFC Shirley were 3rd and had won 17, drawn 3 and lost 9. They'd won their last six, including a 4-1 win over Crofton Saints in their last game. Southsea Sports were in 14th and had won 9, drawn 3 and lost 9. They'd lost their last couple, including a 1-0 loss against Hook in their last game. The first half was quite dull, Shirley having a lot of possession against a resolute Southsea defence. Both sides had chances in the second half, most notably Southsea, who forced the home keeper into a good save from a header on 57 minutes. Finally on 65 minutes, there was a goal. The well-organised visiting defence was finally cracked when substitute Jack Ormison sneaked in to stab home a low cross from within the six-yard box. It was 2-0 on 74 minutes, Craig Hunt's cross going straight in, although there were claims of a foul on the keeper. Another substitute, Alex Kim, got the third in injury time, advancing down the right and shooting across the face of the goal into the bottom left corner. We left straight away, but there was around half an hour's delay on the way back. Firstly on the dip near Winchester on the M3, then on the entirety of the M25 from the M3 to the M40 junctions. Annoying, but nothing unusual for a bank Holiday. I dropped Colin off at 7 and was in at 7.15. Looking on Twitter, it appeared as if Southsea Sports had deliberately flooded the away dressing room. After battling so hard on the pitch, it showed a total lack of class and respect for their hosts.


THE GROUND

MANSEL PARK is a great setup for step 7. The pitch is fully railed, and there is a club building housing dressing rooms and occasional refreshments. The pitch has hard standing on one side. There is also the Saints Pub opposite, but I didn't check it out. Parking is restricted to street parking, and buses run nearby.