Showing posts with label Cefn Druids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cefn Druids. Show all posts

Monday 12 December 2016

Rock On - Druids Avoid Becoming Major Twits

And so to The Rock for a Welsh Cup 3rd Round match between Cefn Druids AFC and the visitors from the coast of the Vale of Glamorgan, Llantwit Major FC. It's a cup tie postponed for a week due to international call ups - Cefn Druids contributing three players to last weekend's Home Nations Futsal tournament !!

Cefn Druids, 'The Ancients', is the oldest football club in Wales. In 1872 Plasmadoc FC, founded three years earlier, became Druids (ancient mystic men of Celtic civilisation) when the various colliery and quarry teams around Ruabon and Cefn Mawr were brought together under one banner.

In 1876 the Druids entered the FA Cup - the first Welsh club to do so - and in 1877 contested the very first Welsh Cup game. The club won the Welsh Cup in three consecutive seasons between 1880 and 1882, and have won the competition 8 times in all.

The Ancients joined the first Welsh league in 1890, and in 1920 merged, first with Rhosymedre to be called Rhosymedre Druids, and then with Acrefair United in 1923 to become Druids United. Enthusiasm had waned by the 1980s as the Druids were being outstripped by local rivals Cefn Albion (established in 1967). Another merger in 1992 between these two clubs saw Cefn Druids AFC born, playing at Plaskynaston and adopting the white and black colours of the original Plasmadoc.

The club was rebranded as Flexsys Cefn Druids in 1998 and that season saw them crowned as champions of the Cymru Alliance earning promotion to the League of Wales. Subsequent sponsorship deals saw the club renamed NEWI Cefn Druids, after the North East Wales Institute of Higher Education, and then Elements Cefn Druids before reverting back to Cefn Druids in 2010.

The Ancients dropped down to the Cymru Alliance as the new 12 team Welsh Premier League was born in 2010 and moved from Plaskynaston, showing its age and now a supermarket, to The Rock. In 2012 the club were Welsh Cup runners up, reaching the final for the first time in 108 years, which brought a brief foray into Europa League football.

In 2014 Druids were promoted to the Welsh Premier League but lasted only one season before being relegated. Last season's Cymru Alliance champions Caernarfon Town were deprived of a Welsh Premier League license, as they officially did not exist as a legal entity having failed to file accounts in August 2015. In the ensuing fiasco runners up Cefn were promoted back to the Welsh Premier League.

The Druids recently made headline news when it became known the club had failed to sell a single season ticket, not helped by having to play home games for the first two months of the season at The New Saints' ground whilst their new 3G pitch was laid. Season ticket sales have 'surged' since the announcement....


Llantwit Major FC, 'The Major', was formed in 1962. A selection committee picked the team until the club joined the South Wales Amateur League in 1971. The 1980s saw three league titles and three Corinthian Cup successes but thereafter fortunes were mixed.

The visitors from the Windmill Ground were promoted to the Welsh Football League Division Three, three tiers below Druids, for the start of the 2012/13 season. They currently sit 4th (out of 16), and progress in the Cup has come with victory over Sully Sports and a giantkilling - beating Llandrindod Wells of the Cymru Alliance, two divisions above.


And so on a grey mild December afternoon Christmas shopping creates snaking lines of traffic, woeful driving and, naturally, roadworks.... Onto the M56, past the Stretton Fox, then a softly belching Stanlow before crossing the Welsh border and bypassing the floodlights of the Racecourse at Wrexham.

Left at the Ruabon Wheel and then past a caravan dealers, which appears to have sprung up amidst a forlorn and crumbling church. Right into High Street and then into Rock Road, where the Ancients' home is just beyond Rhosymedre Methodist Church, and where the road is currently blocked by two fire engines.

The Rock is reached either by a footpath up the hill or, further up, the car park off Rock Road. The stadium has literally been hewn out of the rock, with houses perched atop the precipice and looking down onto the pitch. At one end is the car park, club shop and Druids Social Club - this end also hosts, strangely, a Welsh flag with Aston Villa printed on it.....

The popular side supports a refreshment bar and a very tidy main covered all seated stand with the black and white seats patterned to spell out CDFC. At the far end is a solitary steward with his pedal cycle, behind which are fields where an onlooker has precariously perched himself on top of some rocks for a free view. Across the way is the sheer rock face in front of which is a tarmac walkway and brick built dugouts bisected by a two tier open press box/ photographers platform.


After a minute's silence in honour of Chapocoense and Druids' player Adam Eden's father who passed away this week, we are underway with the Ancients in black and white, and the Major in change all red. The Llantwit Major contingent, with a 300 mile round trip, occupy the front row of the main stand for 'their cup final'.

The underdogs are not overawed and shape the better early chances. Robert Jones is just wide from a free kick, and Glyndwr Davies heads the resulting corner over when he should have done better. Druids have plenty of the ball but struggle to create openings; Jordan Harper charges down Jack Lansdown's clearance but the ball runs wide, and Fisnik Hajdari's long range effort sails over.

Half time sees the game goalless and with little indication of a three league gulf between the two sides. Much merriment at the break too that Bala's game at Airbus was postponed shortly before kick off due to a 'hazardous floodlight', and much berating of the referee by Llantwit fans 'because he's from North Wales'.

The second half is far more open as the Druids, no doubt following a half time haranguing, begin more positively and are helped by an early goal. Harper is felled in the area and Mike Pritchard squeezes the penalty inside Lansdown's right hand post. Six minutes later the ball falls to Corey Roper whose shot seems to be going wide until it is deflected by a Llantwit leg inside the near post to make it 2-0 to the Ancients.

The play becomes end to end with the Druids looking the likelier to add to their advantage - Steve Blenkinsop skying over from a parried shot. But there is no further score and, as the rain sheets down, the Major are denied a consolation as sub Luke Cox sees his shot saved by the onrushing Michael Jones in injury time - in truth the first save Jones has had to make….

Tuesday 30 August 2016

No Magic From The Druids - A Match Already Consigned To Ancients History...

And so to The Rock for a Welsh Premier League match between last season's two promoted teams, Cefn Druids AFC and Cardiff Metropolitan University FC.

Cefn Druids, 'The Ancients', is the oldest football club in Wales. In 1872 Plasmadoc FC, founded three years earlier, became Druids (ancient mystic men of Celtic civilisation) when the various colliery and quarry teams around Ruabon and Cefn Mawr were brought together under one banner.

 

In 1876 the Druids entered the FA Cup - the first Welsh club to do so - and in 1877 contested the very first Welsh Cup game. The club won the Welsh Cup in three consecutive seasons between 1880 and 1882, and have won the competition 8 times in all.

 

The Ancients joined the first Welsh league in 1890, and in 1920 merged, first with Rhosymedre to be called Rhosymedre Druids, and then with Acrefair United in 1923 to become Druids United. Enthusiasm had waned by the 1980s as the Druids were being outstripped by local rivals Cefn Albion (established in 1967). Another merger in 1992 between these two clubs saw Cefn Druids AFC born, playing at Plaskynaston and adopting the white and black colours of the original Plasmadoc.

 

The club was rebranded as Flexsys Cefn Druids in 1998 and that season saw them crowned as champions of the Cymru Alliance earning promotion to the League of Wales. Subsequent sponsorship deals saw the club renamed NEWI Cefn Druids, after the North East Wales Institute of Higher Education, and then Elements Cefn Druids before reverting back to Cefn Druids in 2010.

 

The Ancients dropped down to the Cymru Alliance as the new 12 team Welsh Premier League was born in 2010 and moved from Plaskynaston, showing its age and now a supermarket, to The Rock. In 2012 the club were Welsh Cup runners up, reaching the final for the first time in 108 years, which brought a brief foray into Europa League football.

 

In 2014 Druids were promoted to the Welsh Premier League but lasted only one season before being relegated. Last season's Cymru Alliance champions Caernarfon Town were deprived of a Welsh Premier League license, as they officially did not exist as a legal entity having failed to file accounts in August 2015. In the ensuing fiasco runners up Cefn were promoted back to the Welsh Premier League.



The visitors, 'The Archers' of Cardiff Metropolitan University FC, were formed from a series of mergers and name changes.

 

It all started with Lake United renaming themselves AFC Cardiff in 1984. In 1990 the club was taken over by Sully FC to form Inter Cardiff FC, which became Inter CableTel AFC in 1996. This club represented Wales in the old UEFA Cup three times, including playing Celtic in the 1997/98 season.

 

In 2000 a merger with UWIC (University of Wales Institute, Cardiff) produced UWIC Inter Cardiff which became Cardiff Metropolitan University FC in 2012. The Archers, or unofficially known as The International, The Sheep (!) or The Div's (Car-DIFF), then won three promotions in four seasons to reach the Welsh Premier League.



Setting out, it's past the giant carved wooden eagle at the dental practice on Manchester Road and then through Altrincham town centre with its £16,000 4 metre monolith aka vanity project that tells us Altrincham has been a market town since 1290, complete with spelling mistake.....

 

Then on to the M56 with Bank Holiday and Creamfields traffic before a becalmed Stanlow refinery - the wind turbines seem to have multiplied but still aren't working ! ! Skirting the Welsh border, I pull off into the village of Rhosymedre and drive up to The Rock, standing imperiously above the village, and it's closed.... A quick peek through the locked gates reveals a pitch that looks like rubble - the Druids' new synthetic pitch has yet to be laid down.



So it's nine miles down the A5, avoiding the flat bed truck carrying a tractor and towing a caravan which is causing chaos !! Over the Llangollen Canal, past Artillery Business Park and down Burma Road to The Venue at Park Hall, home of The New Saints. Disappointingly the former Grandad's Cafe advertising 'Ugly Staff, Beautiful Food' is now just Cafe L

 

The Venue at Park Hall, just outside Oswestry is a ten pin bowling and gym complex with a hospitality suite that leads through to a large balcony and seats overlooking the half way line. Next to it is a poor neighbour stand that covers the rest of the touchline, but the Black Hawk Laser Games behind it looks enticing....

 

At the far end is another stand that begins at the corner flag, continues behind the goal and then stops rather abruptly at the 18 yard line. Bizarrely, opposite the main stand, there is a further narrow mini grandstand that houses the press box on the second tier, the subs' benches on the first tier and the technical area on the ground and, er, that's it. The rest of the ground is flanked by trees - we are in the countryside after all !

 

The Ancients are in black and white stripes, their keeper in electric orange. The visitors, managed by Professor Robyn Jones, are in all maroon with a seagull on their badge, a throwback to the Sully connection - their nickname was 'The Seagulls'.

 

The first half is frankly a disappointment - and that's an understatement. The Druids' Aaron Bowen has the best chance, set free but with a slight tug from Met's captain Bradley Woolridge, shoots wastefully wide. Debutant Ashley Ruane has a shot deflected wide for the home side, whilst Cardiff, despite the promptings and pace of Charlie Corsby and Eliot Evans, barely create a half chance. And so 'After a goalless first half, the half time score is nil-nil' (courtesy Brian Moore).

 

The second half is marginally less frustrating. Ruane draws a good save from Met keeper Will Fuller and then substitute Adam Roscrow enters the fray for the Archers - which means the away side's 11 players on the pitch are wearing numbers 1 to 11.

 

The visitors show why they have yet to score this season as, having carved out the best opportunity of the game, a goalmouth scramble sees three powderpuff efforts cleared off the line with the goal gaping. Ben Bowler's 35 yard effort is tipped over as Cardiff look the more likely, with Druids only mustering a wild swipe over the bar in response. Ultimately though the game fizzles out having never really caught light and the match finishes goalless.

 

Very much a case of little ado about nothing nothing...... J

 

Less than 24 hours later The New Saints hosted Rhyl – the final result a 10-0 home victory……..

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