This is the first in an occasional series where I attempt to find
places in London where you can drink cans of beer for free and not
feel like an outcast from society or a bench hugging homeless person.
Everyone knows London is an expensive place to live and drink and I
believe if I find nice ways round this (so not sitting at home,
alone, watching films and drinking cans of cooking lager like a one
Man Behaving Badly) it is my duty to share my findings with the two
readers of this blog. I'll receive your thanks in the guise of a four
pack of London's Pride, it's really not a problem though, someone's
got to do it. It may as well be me.
Yorkshire taking on the dodo |
It's a little known fact (as no-one cares) that during County
Championship cricket matches (that's the four day stuff which if you
believed the papers are only attended by three OAP's and a dog. Which
is patently untrue, especially when Yorkshire come to town; there are
three OAP's, a dog and me.*) after the tea break they open up
the gates for any riff raff to come in and watch the last session for
free. That's basically £5.33 of cricket that you get for free at
Lords. (A days ticket is £16 for the mathematically challenged.)
Cherie Blairs Mouth |
It is Middlesex County Cricket Club who play their home games at The
Home Of Cricket (that's what Lords calls itself, the pompous twat)
but it isn't actually a county, it isn't actually anything so I feel
they're cheating a bit. Middlesex the county was abolished on April
1st 1965 so not only do they not exist any more, they seem to have
been a victim of an Aprils fools joke that went horribly wrong as
people actually believed it resulting in bureaucrats actually wiping
the county off the register. How unfortunate. They really must have a
major complex about this and constantly question who they are all the
time (easy answer: they are no-one) and to combat this identity
crisis they seem to have developed a player called Adam London to
give them some sense of belonging somewhere. If the grounds in London
and they have a player called London surely that's where they belong
right? Me thinks they're trying a tad too hard. They should just give
up and realise they don't exist, it's obvious, it says so on
Wikipedia. Bearing this in mind my home county of Yorkshire, (who
were playing Middlesex at Lords hence my attendance and this blog)
the biggest and best county in the whole land, couldn't possibly lose
to somewhere which basically isn't real. The match wasn't really
Davis versus Goliath, it was Goliath versus the dodo. Those dodo's do
look like menacing fuckers though, I've seen one in the Horniman museum. A lot was at stake.**
The Champagne Bar didn't open when Yorkshire came to town. Wonder why. |
Anyway as I say they open up the gates usually a bit after tea which
usually ends at about 4pm and you can get in most areas of the ground
(if you've got a tie, jacket and a members card for any county you
can get into all areas except the corporate boxes) and the stewards
don't treat you like a piece of white dog shit that you don't see any
more because our great nations street cleaners are so efficient, so
you can actually talk to them like human beings and if in the
unlikely event they do question you just say you want a look around.
They even called me 'Sir' on all four days I was there. The main up
shot of the stewards being okay and treating their patrons as normal
people is they don't check your bags so even though the County
Championship rules say you can only bring in four cans of beer per
person you can actually bring in as many as your bag can carry. I
recommend going down to Millets and buying an 80 litre hiking
rucksack.
A Bowler |
If you do decide to go to Lords for a final session to have some cans
you must adhere to certain cricket etiquette; don't stand up or walk
around in the middle of an over, turn your mobile phone to silent,
don't smoke in the stands, clap when you can (I'm not getting into
the intricacies of clapping etiquette here, it'll take my whole life)
and be kind to all follow watchers of the real beautiful game. But
one of the main things is to keep your ears ready to overhear old
people imparting wisdom to each other, they're very wise, have lived
at least two thirds of their lives and know their shit, they will
teach you a thing or two. On this occasion I've heard a woman wax
lyrical about how obituaries are the only bit of the paper she reads
and a man in his sixties banging on about banging whores in Thailand.
We live in a truly wondrous world.
The Full Toss Bar. Add your own amusing caption. |
The other main thing, the most important aspect about going to the
cricket that you must understand is the lunch box. Believe me, the
non assuming packed lunch hasn't been this important since you went
to Lightwater Valley or Alton Towers on a school trip. The cricket
lunch box can be a wonderful thing and if you take it seriously there
are a few rules you should follow. First of all being out in the open
air all day means you'll feel constantly hungry and in need of snacks
throughout the day so pack enough. I usually take two full lunches, a
breakfast and then various pork based nibbles for a full day but if
you're only going for the two hours after tea one lunch and some
nibbles should be sufficient enough for you.
You should have staples of your lunch box; some fruit, a sandwich,
crisps, a Gold Bar, (your chocolate based confectionery should always
be a Gold Bar, cricket has delusions of grandeur; so should you) and
the aforementioned pork based snacks. Once you have your staples it's
time to have your fun and turn a run of the mill packed lunch into a
cricket themed packed lunch. Here's what you need to do; first, think
about your teams opposition, this will determine the rest of your
lunch box or indeed what flavour/ fillings your staples will be. You
must base your food from the county your team is playing, for example
if you're playing Leicestershire you'll need a Melton Mowbray pork
pie, if it's Gloucestershire you are up against your sarnie should
contain Gloucester cheese, if your county is playing Somerset you
should have a cider (or ten) in your box (or your new 80 litre bag
from Millets). Once you've got that out of the way check the team
sheet of the opposition; if they have an Indian international playing
include a Bhaji, if they have a West Indian include rice and peas and
so on. The possibilities are almost endless.
Lords Toilets; luxury |
For me this match threw up Middlesex, a place which I hope I firmly
established earlier doesn't exist and as the dodo in the Horniman
museum is obviously only a model reproduction of what one may have
looked like I couldn't steal it and use it's centuries old meat for a
sandwich so I focused on Yorkshire. I made a few Wensleydale cheese
sandwiches, packed some ham from a Yorkshire pig, sweated some
Harrogate sausages with red onion and wrapped them in Yorkshire
puddings and brought some Gold Bars. Always the Gold Bars. I also
bought a bottle of Magnum*** as Middlesex had West Indian Corey
Collymore playing for them. Please, please, please take the cricket
lunch box seriously.
Even if you can't be bothered packing your own lunch box I recommend
going to Lords for some cans at the end of the day.**** It'll be the
nicest, most majestic, elegant place you can drink cans for free
without feeling like a tramp. The toilets are worth it on their own,
trust me.
Note for Yorkshire fans: Yorkshire won by 10 wickets, this is the
best and most confident Yorkshire team I've seen in the eight or so
years I've been watching Championship cricket regularly and weather
permitting, I think we'll win the title this year.
*Not actually true, County Championship matches are quite well
attended and you get less twonks who only go to matches where they
can decipher the opposition (so they can shout abuse at them) by the
colour of the shirt they're wearing.
**Actually hardly anything was; it was a cricket match.
***Not really, cricket is no place for insanity in a bottle.
****I actually recommend going for the full day, or more specifically
for all four days of a County Championship game so that you can
appreciate the ebb and flow of a proper cricket match. £16 (or £5
for the final day) for seven hours entertainment isn't much at all
and it is worth it.
You are taking to this blog lark like a Scottish alcoholic to Buckfast. Question: Where do the minor counties team play their home matches?
ReplyDeleteThey play all over; they usually pick a ground nearish to the county they're playing in the pro40 matches but think they have a proper base down south somewhere. Also, interestingly the Netherlands played some home games in Cornwall this year to try get some English supporters
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