A FISH AND CHIP FOOTBALL FEAST
To be printed in the National League South game v Eastbourne Borough Saturday 18th January 2025
It finally happened. I could tick off United along with Borough and Town to complete that unlikely Eastbourne accolade of three senior football clubs. And there used to be four (Shinewater Association since you asked). Eastbourne certainty is a bit greedy when it comes to football. And all three are on the up.
Town are not just the oldest in Eastbourne but the oldest in Sussex founded in 1881, with their listed turnstile in the more well-to-do part of town hemmed in by bowls and cricket. United have just had a million pound revamp, and well we all know about Borough. Infact the only person I knew at the Eastbourne Untied game was Andy the friendly Borough steward who seemed to be a minor celebratory and bought me a beer as he told tales of the worst behaved supporters. It certainty isn’t the Rebel Rabble. Both United and Town have an old potted footballing history against Slough when Borough was still just marsh land.
New committee, new owners, new ideas – all organisations need it from time to time or become trapped in a meat raffle mentality or just exhausted by the relentlessness of it all.
Eastbourne United's Oval ground – which apparently had been on its last legs for quite a while – has been totally rebuilt. This includes not just a new 3G pitch but also a huge revamp of the facilities inside and out, including the changing rooms, car parks and bar, entrance and clubhouse areas. They helped sort out drainage and flooding in the nearby park, and have managed to build something quirky and distinctive – they’ve even got sponsored urinals – and the clubhouse is now open to all rather than members only.
Their Chairman Matt Thompson added: “We are part of the Princes Park area that includes the Perch restaurant, Princes mini-golf, sailing and also the Park itself. Our site has been run down for too long – now we are proud of our contribution to the town & Princes Park itself.”
Teams using the new facility include: Eastbourne Rangers, Willingdon Youth , Allstar Soccer, Men Utd (Mental Health Team), Sussex Girls Teams and of course Eastbourne United.
Still its heartening to see some people, rather than celebrating what a great investment this is, have a moan up. And you can always find a Lib Dem councillor to have a moan about a football club. Local councillor Angry Fist-Waver frothed; "There's is anti social behaviour even now with just three teams playing a week. We don't think it is Eastbourne United, we think it is more likely to be the opposing teams.
“They sit on garden walls, they smoke cigarettes and flick them into the gardens. They’ve been peeing in the gardens. They even, on one occasion redistributed the dog poo from one of our dog poo containers. There has been damage to cars and sometimes loud karaoke music coming from the club. This is happening now, so what is going to happen when there are 18 teams using the club, possibly six teams at once, from nine in the morning to nine at night.
“This is going to increase parking, it is going to increase noise, it is going to increase antisocial behaviour, it is definitely going to increase pollution in terms of traffic, plastic and light pollution.”
Well quite, infact the best way to curb anti social behaviour is by having everyone locked up in their houses 24-7 rather than new community facilities where they can meet their neighbours; and anyone whose gone to County League football knows that baying hoards of away fans are always an er, problem...
Once person whose no doubt very happy is Daniel Ford who spent last season gorging himself on Eastbourne football – and I mean seriously, one-more-wafer-thin-mint gorging, with a book that's fit to burst. ‘Fish, Chips and football – a season by the seaside’ details all 103 games he went too, from park football to National League South, with an easy style full of football history and quirks. Infact I got my copy from a quirky sports memorabilia shop in Eastbourne.
As for the game, well after listening to two old blokes at the bar having the obligatory moan that Christmas goes on too long, and there’s nothing on TV (unlike when they were growing up and there was two channels).
I pop out in the cold to see a decent festive crowd of 446 snaking around the block before kick off, throwing dog poo bags around and sticking cigarette butts through peoples letterboxes. Or just standing politely in a queue. United's managers programme notes bemoans his lot ‘Work, injury, suspension, weddings, cats birthday, there’s always a forest to navigate through to try and get your best 16.” He seems to have managed it today.
I’m sure Newhaven had high hopes this season after losing in the play off final to Eastbourne Town. But a 4-1 defeat here saw their joint managers resign after 10 years and 500 games where they have transformed Newhaven into a Sussex County League (Southern Combination now) force. And it was good to hear people shout ‘come on United’ – especially as Manchester supporters think they own the copyright on that.
So if you want to feast on fish and chips and football while taking a stroll down the prom you know where to head.