✖ Camp Municipal de Futbol

S.D. Portmany (Ibiza)

SD Portmany were formed in 1923 and play in the Regional Preferente de Ibiza y Formentera, which is the fifth level of football in the Balearic Islands.
I wasn’t expecting to see any football while on holiday in Sant Antoni.  I was aware that the divisional play-offs take place in June, with the new season due to start in September, so they are right in the middle of the post season.
However, I still had a deak at the stadium, to take some photos and make you aware of the club, which is easy enough to find, next to the town’s bus station. So, if you're on holiday in Ibiza and you can tear yourself away from the boozer or the foam parties, then this is one of several clubs and decent grounds on the island.








✔573 Silksworth Sports Complex (3G pitch 1)

Silksworth CW 2-2 Easington CW
Pre-Season friendly
Friday 14th July 2017
Another Wearside League using temporary accommodation this summer is Silksworth Colliery Welfare. The Community Association club formed in 1998 as The Thorndale FC under the guidance of club chairman and manager Steven Smith. The club progressed from local leagues to the Durham Alliance and re-joined the Wearside League in 2007. The club called it a day in 2011 but quickly re-emerged as Silksworth Rangers in the Wearside League, before changing their name to the old Colliery Welfare handle in 2013.

New Silksworth is a former mining village in the outskirts of Sunderland. Silksworth Colliery was sunk in 1869 and attracted migrant employment from home and abroad, which saw the village population rise. The colliery closed in 1971 with all remnants of the former mining
site gone and the land converted into Silksworth Sports Complex.
The sports centre is situated off Silksworth Lane, and amongst its facilities are an athletics track arena, boating lakes, entertainment bowl, adventure playground, skateboard park, grass and two 3G football pitches and of course, the north-east’s largest artificial ski slope.
Silksworth CW faced Easington Colliery Welfare, who were playing their first pre-season friendly. The match took place on 3G pitch 1, which meant a “new tick” for my Groundhopping friends Lee & Katie, who were at the complex last weekend to see Sunderland West End v Brandon United on the neighbouring 3G pitch 2.
The “home” team got off to a great start when the Silky's Adam Storey raced through on goal and found the corner of the net with a low right foot shot. They doubled the lead when Martin Metcalf latched onto a through ball to fire home on 56 minutes, which looked to have secured victory against their Northern League opponents.
With six minutes remaining James Connor fired home a left wing cross from close range, quickly followed by a bizarre own goal which saw the number eighteen’s pass back miss the ‘keeper and instead find the corner of the net.
A good workout for both teams, and although Silksworth couldn’t hold on for the win, they will be pleased with their overall play and optimistic about the forthcoming campaign.


Matchday Stats
SCWFC (Storey 2 Metcalf 56)


ECWFC 2(Connor 84 #18 87OG
                                                                           Att.56hc

✔572 Craghead Millennium Field

Annfield Plain 1-4 Whickham
Pre-Season Friendly
Wednesday 12th July 2017


Wearside League club Annfield Plain continued their pre-season programme with the first of two “home” fixtures, four miles from Derwent Park in the former mining village of Craghead.

The village is located south-east of Stanley in County Durham, and dates back over 200 years. The Holmside Colliery in Craghead opened in 1869 and closed in 1969 with a loss of over 1600 jobs. The village once had a team in the Northern League. Craghead United were formed in 1904 and elected into the league from the Chester-le-Street District League in 1912.  The club won the Durham Amateur Cup four years in a row from 1908, but unfortunately their stay in the Northern League was brief, with just two full seasons before the club re-formed after the First World War.  Hedley Park later hosted league football again as Craghead United plied their trade in the Northern Combination, Northern Alliance, North Eastern and Durham Central Leagues.
The Craghead Millennium Field is found behind the Village Hall in the area know as The Middles. The pitch is fully enclosed and fenced on all sides, used by Craghead FC who play in the Apollo Youth League and Sunday league side Craghead Legion.


Carl Malpass put Annfield Plain one up just before half time and it was looking like that goal would prove decisive, before a late flurry from Whickham.  David Clasper headed in from a corner on 73 minutes and repeated the feat five minutes later, with Steven Aiston capitalising on a misplaced backpass in between. The Lang Jack wrapped up a decent workout with Kai Middleton added a fourth in the final minutes.

Matchday Stats
APFC 1(Malpass 42)
WFC 4(Clasper 73,78 Aiston 74 Middleton 87)
Att.60hc


✔571 Ainslie Park

Ronnie Swan Trophy - Day 1
Spartans 1-0 Hearts XI (noon ko)
Edinburgh City 1-1 Hibernian XI (3pm ko)
Saturday 8th July 2017

Unless you’re one of my dozen loyal readers, you’ll be surprised to learn I’ve never seen
a match at Ainslie Park. The ground opened in 2009, and ever since I’ve kept it as a “Plan B” in the event of a postponement, because of its all weather surface.
For the next three seasons Edinburgh City will be ground sharing with Spartans while Meadowbank Stadium is redeveloped, so the ground becomes one of  “The Scottish 42” I thought it was about time I finally paid a visit, especially as both resident and tenant are both playing at home on the same day.
Ainslie Park forms part of a wider development of the Spartans Community Football Academy. The 3,000 capacity stadium has a 3G pitch and a covered main stand with 504 red flip seats. The ground entrance is in the corner where a new turnstile block has recently been erected. The accommodation block has changing rooms, committee facilities and a cafe bar upstairs with a balcony view, as well as a snack bar downstairs.
There is hard standing on three sides with grass banking behind the far side goal. The Leisure Centre is next door with a full size grass pitch and 3G five-a-side pitches within the complex.

I visited City Park in the penultimate game at the ground in May 2009, which you can read about here.  Since the short move to Ainslie Park, Spartans won the East of Scotland title twice in 2009-10 and 20010-11, before becoming founder members of the Lowland League. The club had the honour of being the first champions of the new league in 2013-14.


My only visit to Meadowbank was for a Scottish Cup tie in September 2008, which you can read about here. Edinburgh City were another of the 12 founding members of the Lowland League, winning the title in 2014-15 and 2015-16. Those honours meant they qualified for the Scottish League play-off against the Highland Football League winners. In 2015 they lost out in the semi-finals to Brora Rangers, before beating Cove Rangers then East Stirlingshire in the two legged final to gain promotion to the Scottish League.


During the time of my visit to Meadowbank the future of the stadium looked ominous.  
Edinburgh Council voted to sell the land occupied by Meadowbank in March 2008 and build a smaller sports facility on east of the site, however due to a decline in property prices the proposal was put on hold. The City of Edinburgh Council started a new consultation process about its future in 2013, revealing a new planned redevelopment design, which was made public in November 2016. The demolition and reconstruction work is due to get underway sometime this year.

The Ronnie Swan Tournament is an annual pre-season event played in honour of the Spartan’s legend, who sadly passed away in 2014. Ronnie joined the club in 1951 and played throughout the 1950s and ‘60s. Over six decades he held every position possible at the club, becoming club president in 1987, a role “Mr Spartans” held with distinction for more than 30 years.
The competition first took place in 2009 to coincide with the opening of the new ground and the previous winners are Dunfermline, Hearts, Manchester United and Spartans.
Day one of this years event saw a win for Spartans over Hearts, courtesy of a penalty from Blair Atkinson just before half time, after the referee spotting a handball from the Hearts trialist.
The second game saw a good performance from Edinburgh City, taking the lead on 25 minutes with a cracking low hard drive from Craig Beattie. The Citizens had two efforts smack the crossbar and should of had the match wrapped up, until a late surge from Hibs saw Ben Stirling steer in a left wing cross with the last kick of the game.
The match then went to a penalty shoot out to decide who took the bonus point(which meant I missed the bus) and it was the Hibees who won 4-3 to pinch another point to go with the one they stole late on.

Matchday Stats
SFC 1(Atkinson 43pen) HoMFC 0
ECFC 1(Beattie 25) HFC 1 (Stirling 90+1) 3-4 pens
Att.tbc

Admission £12
Programme £2
Coffee £1.25
Macaroni pie £2
Irn Bru 80p

Day 2 results
Spartans 3-1 Hibs XI
Edinburgh City 1-5 Hearts XI
Spartans win the trophy

 #HeedHopper
Trains from Toon to Edinburgh - 0738 there and the 1900 back.

I met up with James Little and Jamie McQueen and together we watched the first of today’s games, before both of them went their separate ways. James headed off across town to Easthouses Lily, while Jamie watched Whitehill’s friendly at Heriot-Watt University. I avoided the temptation to do a double and enjoyed the second game sunbathing on the grass bank behind the goal.

Afterwards I caught the bus back into town and met James at the Bow Bar for a couple of pints, before heading home. An enjoyable start to the new campaign and hopefully the first of many good trips this season.