The Anonymous Widower

Who’s Going to be the Next Chelski Manager?

Chelski seem to be trying hard to prove the old adage that money can’t buy success, especially after their defeat by Everton in the cup yesterday.

I can’t see Carlo Ancelotti surviving very long, unless Chelski win the Champions League. But remember the year ends in one!

February 20, 2011 Posted by | Sport | , | Leave a comment

Another One-one Draw for Ipswich

Town played well today and I’ll let their manager, Paul Jewell, do the talking.

We were terrific and it was the best performance football wise since I have been here.  Passed well and created chances.  Drury outstanding debut.

Roll on the Rangers on Tuesday.

February 19, 2011 Posted by | Sport | , | Leave a comment

Hurrying to Portman Road

The weather today was awful and I didn’t take my time or any detours from the station to Portman Road. I also needed the toilet urgently.  But at least the latter are very good compared to some grounds I’ve visited.

February 19, 2011 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

Inter-University Pole Dancing Competition

This has just been covered on the BBC. Although the venue wasn’t announced.  Was that for the obvious reason?

The student interviewed said it was a great way to get fit and loose a bit of weight.  So perhaps instead of counting calories, we should all dance, with or without poles.

February 19, 2011 Posted by | News, Sport | , | 1 Comment

I’ve Only Got a Gammy Left Hand!

My left hand is getting better, but I still have a degree of pain and lack of control in it, because of the stroke. But then Sarah Storey doesn’t have one at all.

But that didn’t stop her winning gold in the cycling at Manchester last night.

I think it decided what event I want to see in the cycling at the 2012 Olympics.

I’ve now registered for tickets.

If I do get to go, I’ll cycle there along the Regent’s Canal or through the parks.  I may take the second option, as I can’t swim.

February 19, 2011 Posted by | Health, Sport | , , | 1 Comment

Surprising Barnsley

Some of the places I’ve visited on my travels like Scunthorpe and Middlesbrough could not be described as places that make the most of what they’ve got.

What I would find, as I went north on my train from St. Pancras, I did not know.

I actually travelled north with three young Millwall supporters, who were supporting their team at Sheffield.  When I said, that I’d had a stroke, one of them said his brother had too.  At just 16 too! So we can’t all be too careful, can we?

But the Interchange  station at Barnsley was a surprise.

Barnsley Interchange

Very often, stations are badly designed and in the wrong place in the town, with poor interchanges to other modes of transport.

Cambridge is a classic example, in that it’s some way from the city centre, the buses to get aren’t obvious and also for the amount of trains that call at it, it isn’t big enough. I suspect too, that the ill-fated busway will have a terrible interchange, when surely one of the reasons for the busway, should have been to get passengers to the trains. But trains and buses operate under different budgets and compete with each other, when they should be complimentary.

There is no such problem in Barnsley in that the station lies alongside the town centre and contains not only the train station, but the bus station as well. The football ground, Oakwell, is a ten minute walk the other way.

Barnsley Signs

Signage, as so often could be better and more numerous, but then it’s difficult to miss Oakwell. But at least in Barnsley the signage is there, which can’t be said for Edinburgh, which is supposed to be a tourist destination.

You actually walk up a hill to the ground and then approach it downhill, through what is a grassed car park.

Walking Down to Oakwell

In some ways the approach is more like one you find at small non-league stadia, rather than one that incoprates 23,000 spectators.

The football was a bit disappointing in that Ipswich gave away a winning lead in the last minute.

But all-in-all, it was a good day out!  I felt especially good as I walked up the hill towards the station without a hint of being out of breath.  Perhaps it was the sun, that we’d enjoyed all day.

February 13, 2011 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Living on a 30 Bus

One of my friends has commented that I always seem to be on a 30 bus.  It’s just that it’s so useful to get to and from the Angel, Islington, Kings Cross, St. Pancras, Euston and the Selfridges end of Oxford Street, especially as the stop is just around the corner and has one of those displays which tell which buses will arrive soon.

Yesterday on my trip to see Ipswich at Barnsley, the journey didn’t start with a small step, but it started and finished on a 30 bus.

A 30 bus was involved in the London bombings and 13 passengers tragically died in Tavistock Square. But it isn’t the only tragedy connected with the route.

Memorial Garden at Highbury Corner

This picture shows the memorial garden at Highbury Corner.  The plaque commemorates the 26 people who died in a V1 attack on June 27th, 1944.

But the route isn’t all about sadness, as at Islington Green, you pass the statue of Hugh Myddelton, one of those who shaped our city.

Statue of Hugh Myddelton on Islington Green

Every time, you use water in the city, there is a chance that some of that water has arrived courtesy of the New River; Myddelton’s project from the early seventeenth century that transformed London’s water supply.

From the Angel, I then travelled down Pentonville Road to Kings Cross, getting off just before the station and crossing the maze of roads into Kings Cross.

Arriving at Kings Cross on a 30 Bus

Hopefully, when they create the new public square in front of King’s Cross station they’ll make this pedestrian access a lot better.

At least though work inside the station seems to be progressing well, with the pedestrian bridge and the associated lifts seeming to be taking shape under a newly restored roof. 

Coming home too, I was lucky in that I walked through the station after buying a Cod Mornay for my supper from Marks and Spencer in St. Pancras and had to wait just two minutes before a 30 bus appeared to take me home.

 

 

February 13, 2011 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

There’s Only One F in Shefki

The news this morning is that one-time Ipswich favourite, Shefki Kuqi, has joined Newcastle until the end of the season.

February 10, 2011 Posted by | Sport | , , | Leave a comment

West Ham Appear to Have Got the Use of the Olympic Stadium

But the arguments will continue, as I indicated here. I said this in an e-mail to BBC Breakfast.

I’ve watched football in Moscow and it didn’t work there.

 But as we have some of the best architects in the world and engineering and methods are getting better all the time, I’m sure that we can come up with a well-executed British compromise, of which we can all be proud.

Every difficulty should be looked upon as an opportunity, not a defeat.

February 10, 2011 Posted by | News, Sport | , , | Leave a comment

The Gluten-Free Championship

i have been perhaps a bit hard on Barnsley, but how do all the other towns with clubs in the Championship stack up?

Here’s a list based on the current clubs in the Championship.

  • Barnsley – I’ll post after Saturday, Not heard from the club about their executive catering. I’ve since found they do.
  • Bristol City – Judging by the map, it would appear that there are many restaurants, including a Carluccio’s,  within walking distance of the station and the ground.
  • Burnley – I’ll be going on the second of March, so will report later.
  • Cardiff –
  • Crystal Palace – Restaurants including Carluccio’s on the way down
  • Coventry – Nothing I can find except Pizza Express in the city centre. I must admit last time I went, Coventry was shut.
  • Derby –
  • Doncaster –
  • Hull –
  • Ipswich – Pizza Express, Loch Fyne and a couple of good Indians. Gluten-Free Meals Available in stadium restaurants
  • Leeds –
  • Leicester –
  • Middlesbrough – Nothing I saw, but I ate with friends
  • Millwall – Restaurants including Carluccio’s on the way down
  • Norwich –
  • Nottingham – I have found an excellent French bistro in the city.
  • Portsmouth – There appeared to be nothing around the football club.
  • Preston –
  • QPR – Restaurants including Carluccio’s on the way over
  • Reading –
  • Scunthorpe – A gluten-free-free town
  • Sheffield United – I’ve had a gluten-free meal before the match in a Greek cafe.
  • Swansea –
  • Watford –

I could add a few notes.

  1. I have eaten in football club restaurants before and like racecourse catering, they are expensive for what they are. I had one good meal in the main restaurant at Ipswich Town, but that was not football-related. So on balance, I will avoid them, unless I’m entertaining a friend or client.
  2. I’ve never yet found anything gluten-free in the normal catering outlets at a football ground, except perhaps Coca-Cola and coffee.  It should be stated here, that Wembley is particularly unfriendly, which is a complete disgrace for England’s premier stadium.
  3. Carluccio’s is expanding and provides a gluten-free menu in all of their outlets. There are places too, with Pizza Express, where a gluten-free salad can usually be obtained.
  4. I should also add that some stadia like, Ipswich, Norwich, Burnley, Crystal Palace and others, are close to open spaces, rivers or canals, where you can sit and have a proper picnic.

But as you can see, the standard in some places just about scores zero out of ten.

February 8, 2011 Posted by | Food, Sport, Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment