All chips no pins

The blank canvas that is the fixtures and results section of the programme, capturing in two pages of A5, nine months of highs, lows and probably more lows was waiting for us at Clarence Park, as the season opened with a home game against Chippenham Town (sadly not sponsored by McCain. That’s the fries emporium not the American politician).

A little bit of the usual, ‘beginning of the season’ spring was missing from the TLF step as I made my way towards the ground. Pre-season anger and frustration at price increases had taken a bit of the shine off it all and the thought of not seeing all the usual faces was a sad one. (For the record and only time this will be mentioned here, as this is about jollity……TLF gets that the club has a conundrum re finances. TLF doesn’t think the price increases were the right solution, but confesses doesn’t know what the answer is. TLF respects the choice of both those who do attend and those who do boycott home games. TLF really doesn’t think personal abuse based on people’s position on any of this does anyone any good.)

Chippenham Town were sporting a grey kit, sort of matched TLF’s mood and as it turned out the performance on the pitch. Fortunately there were off pitch distractions.

A new regime on the beer stall. With Michael in Italy, TLF had a new boss in the form of Lord Barry of Skillet (LBS). Always tricky to get used to a new boss. They will have a different approach, you’ve got to test the boundaries and they may have different expectations and expect you to focus on your personal development.

LBS certainly runs a tight ship. A bit of what I assumed was acceptable beer stall back chat was threatened with a P45. Although interestingly he is happy to run fast and loose with his pouch (BoomBoom!) or rather his money belt as TLF was given free rein to search for pound coins. Some good teamwork though, by the middle of the first half we had certainly got the “pour a pint each without turning off the tap” down to a fine art.

And he wasn’t letting TLF play the, ”I don’t do the chip and pin machine’, card either (see what I did there?). TLF has always preferred the hard cash, nothing to go wrong with money. Apart from the odd dodgy pound coin. But once you’ve conquered the machine, there’s no looking back. TLF celebrating her first transaction like she celebrates a Saints goal (yep that’s as good as it got). The other great thing about the machine is it means I can keep my hands out of the LBS money belt.

The problems off the pitch aren’t solved by a joyful bar shift and catching up with some of your mates. But the world doesn’t half look a lot better at the end of it. TLF felt quite, well. CHIPPer.

Contactless Fox

St Albans City 0 Chippenham Town 0
Attendance: 549
Consumption: 2 Carlsberg, 1 Stella and lovely to see the return of the crusty cob behind the clubhouse bar

The new dream team

The new dream team

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En France

“There’s a few early starts. It’s gonna be mental.”
Copyright Julie Scott, describing our France itinerary. The only reason Trading Standards might want to have un mot vite with her is because you could replace ‘a few’ with ‘all’.

It wasn’t meant to be like this. TLF’s vague ramble in Bath about going to France to soak up some Women’s Worlds Cup action was forgotten for a while but then of course we got inspired by the Lionesses, the social media buzz of what an amazing thing was happening in France. All of a sudden a vague wish had been masterfully translated into action and commitment by Julie (with gratefully received logistical support provided by The Hemel Scum [THS] or his new nom de plume ‘Scott Tours’). Three days in Lyon with an early but direct Eurostar on the way out and then a chance to chill in Lyon; a bit of culture, a lot of local vin et biere, check out the local cuisine, soak up the atmosphere and try to get tickets for the final. But hey, if we didn’t, then we’d watch it in a bar.

Well the last bit turned out c’est vrai.

We didn’t plan the trip expecting Ingurland to get through to the final. Equally we didn’t think about who might get to the third place play off. In Nice.
293 miles from Lyon.
Four hours 30 mins direct on the fast train. If there are spare seats to book (there weren’t).
But we couldn’t not see Ingurland could we??????

Cross country it had to be. Scott Tours were put to work and with steam probably coming out of both his ears and his iPad, miracles were performed and the ladies were going to Nice. Via Lyon, and Valences and Nimes (day one)and Marseille (day two) and then back to Lyon (day three) via the airport. What could possibly go wrong?

Nothing as it turned out and no Mr TLF, turns out I didn’t need to know the French for “you are being deported.” Instead it was an epic, manic trip with my football bestie. Yes we know Ingurland lost in the 3rd place play off, but we were there, at a World Cup Final Third Play Play-Off!! We got to meet the amazing people behind the Free Lionesses Fans’ Embassy Team, who not only know their apostrophes, but also followed our epic train journey AND consistently gave the best and funniest advice to travelling Ingurland fans. And yes, it was emotional.

We met some lovely people; those supporting various teams and also those working (well generally serving us beer and fromage), the weather was tres beau, our final day in Lyon was an absolute blast; some proper time to drink beer…I mean embrace the culture. A trip to what was actually quite a decent fan park…complete with a chance meeting with an American who lives in, yes of course, St Albans and was bemused to see a Mighty Saints shirt. And if you’re going to watch a world cup final in a Scottish pub in France, occupied by wall to wall Americans (the ones who were caught on TV chanting “F8uck you Trump” at the final whistle) you may as well be wearing the oranje of the opposition.

The one lesson learned, is to always remember that if your Mr TLF (or equivalent) is a Facebook friend, and you post in a beer fuelled fashion on your timeline, he/she will know about your drunken shenanigans, before you even get home. OOPS.

Four days, eleven trains, three hotels and not much sleep later we were back in St Pancras. We bumped into a friend of mine and her young daughter, who later that day, back at home pointed to a picture of Meg Rapinoe and asked if that was her ‘mum’s football friend from France?’
Well TLF certainly ain’t going to the f8kin White House.

On y va
Le Renard Perdu

On a train

On a train


In a bar

In a bar


In a bar...

In a bar…


On a train

On a train


In ANOTHER bar

In ANOTHER bar

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For shame, TLF…..

Like a grumpy teenager, TLF is stomping up some metaphorical stairs towards the keyboard.

“TIDY UP YOUR BLOG! AND DON’T GIVE ME THAT LOOK YOUNG FOX. YOU KNOW YOU DIDN’T FINISH WITH A NICE NEAT FLOURISH AT THE END OF LAST SEASON”

I hate to say this. But it’s true. Impending big birthday party (big in both milestone and party dimensions), tired, grumpy, busy at work and as the weeks go on you really can’t be ar$ed to even waft a paw in the direction of a keyboard. And then before you know it the new season is lurking in the far corner that is the end of this week.

TLF isn’t renowned for tidiness but the guilt has well and truly set in now. A quick glance at the trusty notebook indicates that not only were there a few ideas jotted down, but in one case there was a whole epic tale scribbled down, that never made it into Calibri font size 11. Still no point in crying over spilt blogs; what we need is a whistlestop ramble to clear the decks ready for what will no doubt be another smorgasbord of footballing delights.

Last time out, it was April and TLF was bemoaning enforced football absence due to work commitments, made slightly palatable courtesy of an afternoon finish and a chance to take out football-free frustrations on a few clay pigeons. Fortunately, after that things reverted to an element of normal:

Chelmsford at home-Lovely ex colleague Sarah visits-beer stall & shop duties therefore relinquished-TLF introduced to the corner game (all put a quid in, every time there is a corner the ‘pot’ passes onto the next person in alphabetical order, whoever holds the pot at final whistle wins)-TLF embraces corner game and cheers at inappropriate moments fully focussed on following the money not the victory-TLF wins!-anguished calls for VAR due to incorrect passing of the funds-or as it is Grand National Day a stewards enquiry?-very lovely colleague (and runner up) Sarah intervenes claiming possession nine tenths of law-TLF triumphant.

To the city that only TLF can correctly pronounce – BATH -family is visited-park run is completed-drinking commences-we revel in the half time drinks ordering system and a fine away win. A very dubious (but cheap!) pub is visited post match and Adrian is triumphant in the meat raffle (not so much half a cow more a steak pack from Morrison’s)-another pub-another game-a less than sober TLF takes on a bloke at Connect 4-bloke’s girlfriend possibly more intense about this nail biting encounter than entire football crowd from earlier-TLF loses-possibly for best-back to pub we started in-more beer-a request at some point to turn the singing down a notch or two (oops)-TLF and Julie toil back up steep hill to very loveable B&B-while developing an unrealistic and beer-fuelled plan about going to France. Wake up-never speak of that plan again-well not for a while.

Easter – after weekend away TLF does decent thing and enters the FFZ-quality time with Mr TLF is spent-while keeping in touch with Saints’ playoff hopes via text.

Torquay at home-last game of the season-and all we need to do is beat the league champions, pray that other results go our way and will be in the play offs-as John Cleese says, “it’s the hope not the despair”-the former gets a kicking within the opening minute as Torquay take a very early lead-hope continues to fade-unlike the beer queue which is long-the TLFs are i/c the bar during the match which is good-we can see less-and once the money belt is adjusted to Mr TLF’s sylph like figure all is well-him and JJ looking after the bottles is an interesting vision-TLF warns them to play nicely and takes a small Stella break-end result is not unpredictable (the game NOT those two working together).

A week later-birthday proper-the ‘will we, won’t we’ of the play offs is over-Lesta can’t get relegated on my birthday which they really did one year-all is well in TLF world.

A week later-complete with appropriately size hangover for a 50th birthday party TLF keeps vaguely in touch with the last home game of Lesta’s season from a hot tub and hair of the dog-oh and Mr TLF-general feedback from the terraces is I was in the best place.

Goodbye 18/19 season you took a little more than you gave and broke my heart in a way I would never have expected and never want to experience again. As ever TLF will be back, in ooh about four days, for more diary juggling, football watching, beer serving, beer consuming and minor adventures.

The late late Fox

As birthday presents go, you can’t beat your very own handmade Lesta Fox and Sammy the Saint

As birthday presents go, you can’t beat your very own handmade Lesta Fox and Sammy the Saint

Posted in Match days, Very random | Comments Off on For shame, TLF…..

Tolerance (noun)

“The allowable departure from a specification or standard, considered non-harmful to the functioning of a part, process, or product over its life cycle.”

So just to be clear. TLF tolerance with regard to occupying the Football Free Zone (FFZ):
Fairly high when the lack of football falls within an allowable departure from the standard Satday. Those allowable departures would include for example theatre trip, quality time with Mr TLF, going on holiday, attendance at a music festival.
Spectacularly low when the departure from a standard Satday goes beyond aforementioned allowable departure for examp,e having to attend a work planning event on a Satday.

The only thing keeping an intolerant TLF in good humour was the thought of wielding a shotgun in the late afternoon.
At clay pigeons I hasten to add.
12-bore Fox

Only clay pigeons were harmed in the making of this photograph

Only clay pigeons were harmed in the making of this photograph

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Fez-tastic

Finally. It was going to happen. TLF had a fez and she had always been ready to use it. She might not have been first choice to be i/c the MSMS (Mighty Saints Mega Store) for the home game against Gloucester City, but she still was ready to step up, embrace her inner Mr Benn and take the opportunity.

Except most people don’t remember the shopkeeper in Mr Benn. They all thought I was getting in touch with my inner Tommy Cooper. Still as Mr TLF so graciously put it, “It suits you. It really shouldn’t but it does.”

The MSMS suited me too. Although at heart TLF will always be a pourer of beer; the maths is less complicated and no one ever asks for chips. Or hot chocolate. There was still something joyful about being in the shop. The pace is slower, the conversation more varied and surprisingly, TLF found herself enjoying the exchanges with our younger supporters. Most people who know me, know that TLF is not the most child-friendly zone. And yet a little girl disappointed that we have a run out of scarves, but buoyed by new that there will be more next season (or next term as she put it) and the little lad who didn’t want all his Saints stickers in one go, because it was nice to spread the out across the games just made even the grumpiest TLF heart melt. (JUST a little bit).

Fortunately, before said organ melted too much, a group of little darlings put things on an even keel, appearing at the shop with the winning ticket for the raffle which they had ‘found on the floor’. Mostly the customer is right. But when said prize is 40% proof and the average age of the urchins is most definitely south of 18, then the customer is in for a disappointing retail experience.

And if I can only remember the ‘very safe place’ in my house where I stored the takings, maybe I’ll get asked back again.
Festive Road Fox

This.....

This…..

...not this

…not this

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Punctuality is the thief of time

Good old Oscar. Always been a BIG fan. When facing the grim realities of the number of weeks that TLF is behind with her regular dose of footballing ramblings, I turn to the big hitters for some justification and there he is, Big Oscar, as they don’t call him, coming up with a suitable one liner. And let’s not forget, “Football is all very well as a game for rough girls, but is hardly suitable for delicate boys.”
That’s double TLF brownie points as far as I am concerned.

So yes. Very late.

In fairness some were almost written and then life came between me and my keyboard plus added distractions such as being asked to write an article for the programme on International Womens’ Day which took up a fair amount of nervous energy, TLFs not being big on deadlines or indeed specified subject matter.
So here we go. A bumper crop to bring us all up to speed before I fall desperately behind again, including aforementioned programme article as I act like wot a proper writer does and ‘repackage the same content through a variety of media.’

MiB (Men in Beer)
The Mighty Saints were at home to Truro and by some mystic TLF powers, Mr TLF was once again on beer selling duty with Mr Hill.

TLF was of the view that with this extra pair of paws on tap (BOOMBOOM!) her presence behind the bar was not required. “It would be nice to watch the whole game. I’ll only be in the way. Especially as it won’t be busy.” And thus the men were left to their own beer stall devices and bearing no resemblance to Dirty Den/Frank Butcher/Grant Mitchell/Alfie Moon/Mick Carter (delete according to your peak Eastenders viewing period). Meanwhile a man in black was out on the pitch, clutching a whistle and bearing no resemblance to a man in charge of a football match.

Like the good TLF that I am, it only felt right to offer support to the bar team in advance of the half time rush. One look at their faces however and I could see that the rush had been pretty much constant and TLF’s pre-match bar traffic prediction had been about as good as the refereeing. Truro might not have brought that many fans, but the ones that had made it were VERY thirsty. A suitably guilty TLF took on bottle opening duties to help the belaugured stout yeomen of the bar…..and kept very quiet.

To be honest the slightly messy bar was a haven of quiet and order compared with the second half. I’ve never seen a referee give a red card to a substitute who was warming up before, but am guessing that once they see red, they should be beating a hasty retreat to the dressing room, not returning to the bench as the Truro player did. Equally irritating were the antics (such a 70s word) of the Truro players as they tried to run the clock down once they had the lead, through a variety of histrionics and generally niggley-ness. Hard then to feel any sympathy when the Mighty Saints popped up with a 94th minute equaliser. Mind you I know the real reason that those Truro players were on their knees; the beer was gone and so was our guest barman.

Man at work

Man at work


Cheers!
Supervisor Fox

Sisters are doing it for themselves: International Womens Day….
Back in August 2013, having just moved to this fair City, I pitched up for my first (non) League St Albans City game. I’ll let you into a secret. I was nervous. An interloper, a newbie. Years of following the Mighty Foxes, yes, but knowledge of the Mighty Saints and non-league football? ZERO. NAHDAH. And worse than that…I was a GIRL (well ok I was 43 years young). And life had taught me by then, that some of my fellow supporters (even those supporting the same team as me) were of the view us women shouldn’t be at the match. And if we were there it was because our boyfriend bought us, or we fancied the players. And please ladyeez, don’t dare offer an opinion on the formation, celebrate wildly or question the ref’s interpretation of the offside rule. And if you went on your own, well you were just WEIRD.

Maybe I was hanging out at the wrong football grounds, but my debut at Clarence Park, proved my fears to be utterly unfounded. All I have ever experienced with the Mighty Saints is a massive welcome and a huge sense of community and inclusivity. Of course we disagree about the things that football fans always disagree about – but we are all allowed to; male or female; we can have a view.

I’m lucky of course; I happen to have met and made friends with some of the best female supporters I know. There is Sarah, whose first Saints game was at the age of 14 away at Bristol in the FA Cup. She went with her Dad and all the stats show that a parent taking you to a match is how 51% of female football fans got into the beautiful game. Then Julie, a Liverpool fan who graced Clarence Park with her presence the same year because the Reds weren’t playing. Now a dedicated home and away-er and occasional operator of turnstiles. And Donna, a Watford fan since 1982 and since 2015 a home and away regular. And finally Helen, a regular at Clarence Park since 1996 when she brought her German pen pal and was hooked. She is passing it on too – with young son Jack resplendent in his first City shirt this season.

There are others too – women who I might not have a beer with, but who always smile and say hello…even when we are both freaked out at seeing each other out of context; somewhere other than a football ground.

A football club can be at the heart of its community and to do that to the best of its ability it needs to embrace the diversity of that community. 36% of our Young Saints are girls, and yet only 5% of our season ticket holders are female. Let’s talk to each other, make each other feel welcome and keep that 36% coming back as they grow up to be the Sarahs, Donnas, Julies and Helens of this world. Although if they could all support Lesta City too that would be marvellous.
25% of the Saintettes

New openings
The impending arrival of Dulwich, renowned for being both thirsty and with less distance to travel bring greater in number that your Turos et al, meant it was to be all hands to the beer stall. Preparation for this kind of match doesn’t start on the Satday morning, oh no. TLF was out midweek in search of a bottle opener upgrade, having decreed the sharing of one prehistoric specimen between three bar staff was not conducive to effective customer service, protection of hands or bar staff bonhomie. Fortunately, the hard work paid off and TLF was armed with a beer spanner of superior quality. Sadly though not armed with a Mr TLF who was benched with a man lurgy of some description. We were rescued by Red Julie who did the decent thing and stepped into the Mr TLF gap left behind the bar. Good job too as a crowd of over 1000 means running the Three Brewers bar is, well, a Three Person job.

Even with an extra barrel ordered in, we were all out of draft before half time had even arrived, and so the beer spanner made its long awaited debut. Different class. Showed those bottle tops who was boss and out his predecessors to shame.

Behold, the holy bottle opener

Behold, the holy bottle opener

The only fly in the beer ointment? TLF was running a half marathon the next day and so was 100% beer seller with not even a hint of a being a beer consumer. Athletes do sometimes have to make big sacrifices.

Mo Fox

Mugged off
It is with great regret that we have to announce that Chez TLF has suffered a small casualty on the hot beverage container front as the status of Mr TLF’s mug plumbs to new depths.

Previously the mug had been the victim of some spectacularly cack-handed washing up, leading to an unfortunate period where new damage to the mug was believed to have a bearing on the success of various football teams, which culminated in being threatened by a shot gun. Sadly after a period of counselling, things haven’t got any better for the mug, like a leaky defence, it can no longer contain what’s thrown, well poured, into it.

Not fit for purpose

Not fit for purpose

There are very few places for a mug to go in this situation. Like a player who has lost that yard of pace or a manager who cannot adapt their once innovative approach it is time to find a new role. Pundit? Physio? Something completely away from the game?
The options for a leaky mugs are limited. But when you are commemorative, you’ll be looked after, even if your future is pen, not tea shaped.
The Mug Rescuer

A new purpose in life

A new purpose in life

Posted in Football deprived, Match days, Very random | Comments Off on Punctuality is the thief of time

A football free hat trick

Part 1. Snow joke
TLF was torn. On the one hand, TLF is a big fan of snow. On the other, rather like King Lear, TLF was ready to rage at the weather Gods. Mr TLF all signed up for a stint on the beer stall (with or without his knowledge I don’t think is particularly relevant to my line of defence m’lud) and then the game is called off. A real ale retail opportunity denied and brownie points earned by default. He expressed his significant disappointment, but methinks Mr TLF protesteth too much.
An unplanned spare Satday? How do we cope? TLF seeks respite in baking while Mr TLF goes a bit weird in M&S and is suckered into a very odd beverage purchase. A G&T tea, with ‘edible gold leaf. Tasted as bad as it sounds.

Never leave a man unattended in M&S. He will purchase nonsense

Never leave a man unattended in M&S. He will purchase nonsense

Part 2. The joy of text?
At least this Satday was planned. Lesta’s home game moved for the footballing TV Gods and a previously agreed eschewing (BOOM!) of an away game. Lunch, further progress through the Sopranos box set (YES, alright…but when we come late to ‘a thing’ we like to come really late) and regular text updates from designated text monitors at both games were the agenda of the day.

You’d think it would be the latter that was to be the cause of most angst. But the DVD player did its best to get in on the act; having a minor breakdown in the middle of an attempted hit on our eponymous hero (Tony Soprano, not Mr TLF). TLF was of course tempted to ‘hit’ the DVD player but went for the more usual repair technique Chez TLF – swearing at the inanimate object. More swearing at inanimate objects was to follow as my phone informed me that the Mighty Saints had conceded FIVE and Lesta THREE. The DVD player did at least start working again, I wasn’t so reassured about my football teams.

Part 3. Up for the Cup
In a spectacularly barren footballing spell, TLF finds herself going for a hat-trick of football free Satdays, eschewing (BOOM!) an away trip to Wealdstone in the interests of accumulating brownie points that can be converted into a long distance awayday (well at least further than Ruislip). There was not even a Lesta game to consider, Lesta having absented themselves from the FA Cup, following defeat by the mighty (ahem) Newport. Not that I have anything against Newport, who did the decent thing on this particularly Satday by scoring in the 88th minute against Manchester City to secure the TLF’s joint bet of a City win with both teams to score. “Diolch,” as they say in Wales.

If there is no football, there has to be a boozy lunch, which was preceded by a trip to the St Albans Museum to see their Board Games exhibition. Turns out there is a way Lesta might one day win the FA Cup after all…

The magic of the Cup

The magic of the Cup

Posted in Football deprived | Comments Off on A football free hat trick

It’s not you. It’s me. Actually, it is you

This isn’t easy to say.

I don’t want to hurt your feelings, but I have to be honest.

I can’t be with you anymore.

I know you will be hurt and shocked. You will say that you can change, but the reality is that things have been getting a little frayed round the edges for a while now.

We have had some great times and I hope that when the pain has subsided you can look back on those with happiness. Every important event of the last few years, you have been with me, not always there in the limelight, sometimes quietly in the background, but still always there; doing what you do best.

And often in those murky, unsteady moments when I might have lost my way, you were always there for me, making sure I got home safe, long after others more fickle than you; the Thameslink season ticket, the jacket; had abandoned me.

It’s been a blast. But we both have to accept that we have reached a point where there are irreconcilable or more likely unrepairable differences and we both have to move on.

Split up

Split up

In the market for a key ring Fox

Posted in Very random | Comments Off on It’s not you. It’s me. Actually, it is you

Blonde on Blonde

If two’s a company and three’s a crowd, then we had a ‘crowd of beer’ on the outdoor ‘local ale stall run by volunteers’ (copyright M. Hill) for the home game against as we like to say high-flying Woking. Our Three Brewers regulars; Classic and Golden Ale were on this chilly Satday accompanied by Blonde.
YES. I know.
Blonde.

Thanks Three Brewers. You can imagine the day of punning highlights (BOOMBOOM!) that awaited those of us on pint pulling duty.

Before taking up beer serving duties though there was the small matter of a TLF trip to the City megastore. TLF and Julie yet again victims of what can only be described as retail grooming. Innocent souls lured in by explicit merchandise images shared on social media. The sheen of the new Mighty Saints winter coat, resplendent with yellow lining was more than they could resist; they were like the proverbial putty in the shopkeeper’s hands.

Sale complete (and new coat safely stowed away for fear of beer spillage) it was time for TLF to deal with the slings and arrows of blonde jokes while also meeting the beer demands of a decent sized (as in there were a lot of them, rather than a comment on their shapes; there will be no body fascism here) and clearly thirsty crowd.

Selling beer on a warm summery day is fun. Selling beer on a cold day, well TLF was thinking she could take it or leave it. You can’t really wear gloves to serve beer al fresco, and the resulting cold fingers mean that operating tight and uncooperative beer taps or opening 9 (nine) bottles of lager and fashioning a tray to carry them for some thirsty Dutchmen (oh yes that’s Clarence Park; an international destination) isn’t too pleasant on the poorly circulated TLF paws. But surprisingly enough blonde jokes can warm a TLF’s cockles (“I fancy a blonde” notwithstanding), as can the warmth of newcomers being delighted to see local ales on sale and meeting a fellow, local Lesta sufferer.

TLF i/c ale

TLF i/c ale

It turns out that gentlemen do prefer blondes; the first beer to sell out before half time had even arrived. Even TLF had tried a cheeky couple of small blondes (see they’ve got me at it now) and I’m normally a lager girl.

The lager girl even got to watch some football with the troops. Sadly no winner but a cracking penalty save from Deano meant a more than deserved draw against the second placed team in the league.

Walking home, with hands finally defrosted, TLF couldn’t stop smiling. A decent result and some great company and chat. Blondes really do have more fun.

Legally blonde Fox

My bestest football ladies

My bestest football ladies

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“The journey not the destination matters” TS Elliot

“You and your rag tag bunch of questers on the p1ss in concrete country.”

That’s what I like about Mr TLF. Always there with the bon mots to wish me well on my journey as I leave early for an away football trip with the Mighty Saints. I’m sure he didn’t mean it, it was just an expression of angst at the thought of how much he was going to miss me.

Anyway we weren’t a ragtag blahblah. We were the Dartford Seven and after some good natured debate about who appeared in the film not quite of the same name we were the Magnificent Dartford Seven. The debate was resolved not by us but by several fellow passengers on the 09.27 from St Albans, who clearly couldn’t bear the level of ignorance any longer and chipped in with the correct answers. Who needs google when you’ve got a Thameslink train carriage?

We were following the non-logical route to Dartford via the slippery slope of innuendo, which certainly set the tone for the conversation during the day. Non-logical to Trainline and to several of our company but logical for an Adrian Magical Mystery Tour. And very impressive it was too. By the time we arrived at our destination, Princes Park, home of Dartford we had breakfasted, taken in three hostelries (a fourth having been discarded as a local informed us it was ‘poncey’) and done our Village People thing outside the Dartford YMCA. And no one had been to Fortnum and Mason. Honest.

Euston

Euston


Waterloo

Waterloo


Dartford

Dartford


Sort of Village People

Sort of Village People

TS Eliot experienced failed marriages and nervous disorders. Must have been a football fan. We were all suffering from some kind of disorder as we watched the Mighty Saints come from a goal down twice only to lose, conceding the winner in the 88th minute. Their keeper did make some decent saves but even that seemed a bit cruel; he managed to miss his water bottle completely when he went to pick it up at half time. We did not make a big thing of it. Honest. Nor was there any talk of pitch encroachment in the second half; the bolt on that gate was just very loose, that’s all. Honest.

The only thing left to do was head back to London, via a wake for the brother of 1/7th of the MDS. An honour to be asked and possibly a beer too far for TLF.

I think TS (as his friends didn’t call him) would have enjoyed the day out. Probably though a bit less Wasteland and a bit more Wasted.

Rag Tag Fox

In the verb sense, obviously not the adjective

In the verb sense, obviously not the adjective

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