"As for Maidenhead, the conga (which was amusing) aside, some of the oddest chants I've ever heard at a football match" ~ localboy86, Apr. 2015

Monday, 22 April 2024

Away Day Diary: Chesterfield 3-2 Maidenhead United (20/04/24)

Fancy Dresslemania XXII


Cheers from me and Macleod (M) as I nursed an ill-advised pint of bread-and-butter-pudding-flavoured ale in the Maiden's Head before our safety-securing come-from-behind win over Gateshead (which prompted lusty karaoke celebrations in the Portland Arms, reminiscent of the sing-song we enjoyed in the Schooner after surviving, despite a heavy defeat vs the Heed, on the final day of last season) as a legendary and long-standing Magpies supporter announced that he would be in costume for the first time at Fancy Dresslemania XXII because he "felt silly wearing everyday clothes" at the Gateshead International Stadium – proof that after more than twenty annual instalments, only interrupted (temporarily) by the COVID-19 pandemic, the tradition is as strong as it has ever been; further demonstrated by the sheer number of costume-clad MUFC fans who travelled on Saturday to the b2net Proact Technique SMH Group Stadium by car, supporters' coach, and train (Alf Garnett, Megatron, and Beetlejuice Humbug Macleod were among those on the 07:26 from Maidenhead, after a lift to the station from Wonka Taxis)

Hike in glorious sunshine along the Cuckoo Way, following a McDonald's breakfast at King's Cross and an uneventful train journey (Megatron spent much of it trying and failing to locate the puncture affecting his inflatable gun; topics of discussion included favourite Prodigy songs); then it was time for a swift pre-match pint and some photos with other assembled fancy dressers in the Lock-Keeper (Brewer's Fayre; needs must) before the 12:15 kick-off

Excellent vocal support from the travelling horde, but the Magpies looked dead and buried at half-time ("We're only here for the biscuits"); it seemed we played 4-1-4-1, with Casey Pettit fighting a lonely and losing battle in midfield, and it looked like we would be on the receiving end of a cricket score

Superb scenes would follow, however, as two goals in as many minutes from Tristan Abrahams and Kevin Lokko drew us level shortly after the break; we were suddenly all over them like a rash, and the runaway league champions were rattled (they did, TBF, wrestle back some control – hitting the bar and having a goal disallowed for offside)

The attendance was 10,108 (a stadium record) with plenty of bandwagon-jumping glory hunters among the home support, so the 168 away fans (including ex-Magpie Paul Dadson and son dressed as the 118 118 guys) had no trouble collectively handling: (1) a couple of Neanderthals sat near the divide ("What's it like to have no teeth?!") and (2) Mr Potato Head, who would later join us for a post-match photo in the pub!

Eventually, the home fans made themselves heard as Ollie Banks scored with a late, long-range effort; however, after a goalmouth scramble featuring a Maidenhead player inadvertently blocking his teammate's shot, it then required a tremendous save from the Spireites' keeper for them to take all three points (probably for the best, I mean, imagine the carnage if we'd scored a 93rd-minute equaliser!)

Reece Smith ("He's one of our own") got a notable post-match ovation from the travelling support – all the MUFC players got one, and deservedly so, but Smith (and Alan Massey) in particular; Casey Pettit has been a revelation – to the extent that we might struggle to keep hold of him (though I hope we can) – but it is a travesty of 'M People over Blur for the Mercury Music Prize in 1994' proportions, IMO, that the ex-Luton Town man beat Reece to the Supporters' Player of the Year award (Smith deserves a move to an EFL club, although, as with Pettit, I hope he stays)

Feet aching – not just mine – after the lengthy and, at times, steep walk to the Neptune, but worth it in the end; a top-tier pub and it was a lot of fun sitting out the back in the sunshine – albeit with the previously impressive view now blocked by a fence – supping on their reasonably-priced, extensive range of alcoholic beverages (as Wonka fretted about train cancellations)

Into the nearby SPAR for a supermarket sweep before a relatively leisurely walk back to the station to catch the 18:49 train; Megatron – arch villain that he is – got told off by a policeman at King's Cross for cartoonishly pretending to machine-gun people with his now significantly droopy weapon (jobsworth-voice: "Imagine if they were partially sighted and didn't realise it was an inflatable" *rolls eyes*)

Everyone – well, not everyone, but a load of us – headed, upon arrival in Maidenhead, to the Portland; good, of course, albeit not as spontaneously brilliant as the previous week's post-Gateshead celebrations (Megatron put his name down to do Push It by Salt-N-Pepa on karaoke, but was overlooked ... which, again, was probably for the best)

Lying if I said that I didn't have a headache on Sunday (there's footage of me fumbling for my front door key at 4am – whoever invented the Ring doorbell should be hung, drawn, and quartered); then again, if you don't have a hangover after a 'safe from relegation and playing in front of ten thousand people' fancy dress away day, are you even alive?!

Despite some distressing off-field happenings, this has been a decent season on the pitch, beyond simply achieving the goal of staying up – in previous campaigns, our form at York Road has been a lifeline, and we've often had to rely on scraps away from home (e.g. in 2021/22, we went from Halifax on the opening day until King's Lynn at the end of February without an away win), yet this year we've had a talented if threadbare group of players (with, for too long, one glaring positional weakness) and have enjoyed several memorable victories (both home *and* away) such as Dorking (twice), at Weston in the FA Cup (setting up a tie vs a League One club), Solihull (twice), Oxford City (A), Altrincham (A), thumping Aldershot on Good Friday, coming from two-down to beat Eastleigh, and only our second win (in eight attempts) vs Gateshead; I readily admit to thinking we were goners after losing at Rochdale (three consecutive away defeats, vs mid-table opponents, by a combined score of 9-2), as I couldn't see us turning things around in the remaining games, but, thankfully, I was very wrong! (Reminder to self: never doubt Alan Dev.) 'Til August, when we go again – still in the promised land, aka the National League!


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