Thursday, November 30, 2023

Watford forever: 'Rock’n’roll flamboyance meets suburban sobriety'

Despite the Warner Studios and Harry Potter World being a leading local attraction, Watford itself has not often featured as a setting for major motion pictures and the like.

But maybe that is about to change! I see that in a recent book review in The Times, Robert Crampton commented:

If John Preston hasn’t already sold the film rights to this book, he surely will soon. Watford Forever is the heartwarming story of the collaboration and friendship between English football’s oddest couple, Elton John and Graham Taylor: rock’n’roll flamboyance meets suburban sobriety in the bad old days of the 1970s. (£)

Given the public appetite for dramas based on unlikely friendships, it's a wonder no one thought of this before. 

Certainly, those of us who lived in Watford during the Graham Taylor-Elton John era could hardly help but feel that the club was achieving something special that reflected positively on the town and helped change the image of football for the better.

Wednesday, November 29, 2023

Is that a Benskins pub or am I seeing things?

Stopping in the village of Markyate just south of Dunstable at the weekend I spotted something I never thought I would see again – a Benskins pub sign.

Back in the 1980s when I first started frequenting hostelries, nearly all the pubs in Watford and indeed a wider area of Hertfordshire, where the company had bought out smaller brewers, bore the red and gold insignia of the Benskins brand. Although Benskins had been a Watford brewery, it had been taken over by Ind Coope in the 1950s, the brewery closed in 1972 and demolished in the late 1970s.

Indeed the name had already been phased out and brought back, presumably as a sop to the growth of the Campaign for Real Alea and the demand for greater choice. What passed for Benskins Best Bitter, though, was brewed in Romford not Watford and was what would now be called a session ale. It was a pretty indifferent pint, outshone by Ind Coope's stronger cask beer, Burton Ale. Unless one deliberately sought out one of the town's few Greene King or Courage pubs, or the area's only Free House up in Bushey, going out for a pint in this neck of the woods meant a limited choice of beer (Burton Ale, if you were lucky, Benskins Best, John Bull, Skol lager).

Then in the 1990s everything changed. CAMRA and beer enthusiasts generally had long lamented the way the pub trade was dominated by six big brewers who controlled what beer they could sell and at what price, freezing smaller breweries out of the marked and restricting choice for consumers. Breaking up the tied house system by restricting the number of pubs a brewery could own and permitting landlords to stock guest beers looked to be a rare positive reform from the Thatcher government.

Yet as beer writer Roger Protz explains, it didn't work out like that. In the end, new 'pubcos' took over breweries' pub portfolios, acted in just as restrictive a way and, lacking the paternalism of the breweries who at least wanted to sell beer, sold off many perfectly good pubs.

Anyway, the Benskins brand disappeared, beer and pubs alike, so it was a bit like seeing a ghost to spot the Benskins name under the sign of the Sun Inn, Markyate. I even thought for nostalgia's sake I might pop in for a pint. But it was not to be. The pub, a 16th-century listed building is now a private house, although apparently open until 2013. Even then the sign would have been the only link to Benskins, but seeing it at all was strangely pleasing.


Monday, November 27, 2023

'Big demands on our services... less and less money' Watford Mayor Peter Taylor defends local government on GB News


I suspect not many Liberal Democrat blog readers watch GB news, so although this is now nearly a week old it's still worth posting a link to Watford's excellent Elected Mayor Peter Taylor's interview on the channel from last Tuesday. This blog makes no claim to topicality anyway.

Peter rightly highlights the slashing of funding to local government at a time when its services have never been more needed. It was against the background of local authorities facing effective bankruptcy.

For what it's worth, although GB News has a terrible reputation among those outside the political right, the interviewing here - admittedly from professional broadcasters Eamonn Holmes and Isabel Webster, not any of their more controversial presenters - seemed fair-minded enough.

The item starts at 1 hour 21 minutes.


Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Coventry Rugby Club's 150th anniversary


To labour a point from my previous posts, last weekend saw me too heading on a train to a midlands city to watch a sporting event, albeit a different sport and a different city.

In the last few years, Coventry Rugby Club, under the energetic leadership of Chairman Jon Sharp, have been undergoing something of a renaissance after three decades of decline punctuated by crisis that on more than one occasion threatened to put the club out of business altogether.

The problem they face in any attempt to get back to the top of English rugby is the obstacles put in the way by the RFU and Premiership Rugby in terms of massive disparities of funding between the two leagues, unequal financial arrangements for any club that does go up, restrictive ground criteria and ever-changing rules about who is promoted. 

This cartel approach appears to continue despite the contraction of top level rugby to just 10 clubs after the collapse of Worcester, Wasps and London Irish. It seems a strange approach for a governing body to put every barrier in the way of a sport's expansion as a spectator attraction and effectively to insist that fully professional rugby should only take place at five venues in England each weekend, but there you go.

This year Coventry celebrate their 150th anniversary and doing so positively. Rather than lament the fact that the central funding has been slashed by the rugby authorities in recent years, Cov have set out their own route to sustainable professional rugby with an ambitious statement by the Chairman about the club's future, launch of a fundraising campaign to widen access to sport in the city and the rather moving video (link above) which includes footage of past club achievements and historic images of the city. The club has also taken a leading role in ensuring Championship clubs are increasingly speaking up for themselves rather than suffering in silence.

I was one of 3,417 spectators watching Cov's impressive win over Doncaster Knights on Saturday. It is more fun now being a Cov supporter than it has been for an awful long time. But more than that I hope this may be the start of clubs below the Premiership shaping their own future.

Thursday, November 16, 2023

'Deep in my heart I know I love chips'

To conclude my BS Johnson experience, and for the benefit of anyone wanting to discover his work, here are a few more things, particularly about The unfortunates, which I did find a haunting and powerful book. If it becomes available online at something less than the lowest price I've so far found online of £46.11, I'll buy a copy.

1. It is one of the novels featured on BBC Sounds' Exploding Library series, the half-hour episode presented by the comedian Rob Auton. A bit self-consciously wacky for me maybe, but still was an interesting and enjoyable listen. The series also features another of my favourite novels Nights at the circus by Angela Carter. 


2. On Youtube there is Johnson's film about the novel, originally broadcast in 1969 as part of BBC Arts' Release series. It includes footage of him vising Nottingham and showing the orginal book in a box. If the book is timeless the film is very much of its time.

3. Out of curiosity, I have tried to use football scores to track down the date of Johnson's original Nottingham visit that inspired the novel. There is a reference to checking the West Brom v Chelsea score, a match also taking place that day, and to Chelsea having won 3-1 at 'The Bridge' that season. The only season I could find with this result was 1963-64, which seems about right. But Nottingham Forest weren't playing at home on the day of the West Brom v Chelsea game that season, while Chelsea's home match against West Brom was later than the away one. Surely Johnson, that stickler for truth, can't have invented football scores? At the very least, mystery unresolved.

4. The unfortunates includes a lament about the inadequacies of English football stadiums: '...so piecemeal... never designed as a whole' and commenting that 'the directors and owners... let the men on the terraces, their chief supporters, the sixpences of the masses, stand out in all weathers' and charge extra for 'corrugated iron sheds'. Myself, I used to have a soft spot for piecemeal grounds with corrugated iron sheds, but in the light of the tragedies at football grounds that happened in the subsequent quarter century, one must conclude that Johnson was ahead of his time on that point.

5. Lastly, whatever the challenges of reading BS Johnson, one line in The unfortunates I can definitely identify with. Contemplating what to order for lunch the protagonist muses: 'Deep in my heart I know I love chips.' He surely wasn't making that up.

Sunday, November 12, 2023

Chased by the ghost of BS Johnson?

AS I POST this, tomorrow
marks the 50th anniversary of the tragic suicide at the age of 40 of the novelist, poet and filmmaker BS Johnson, perhaps best known today for his darkly humorous novel Christie Malry’s own double entry, published a few months before his death.

In this long and no doubt self-indulgent post, which I hope one or two people may fight their way through, I describe how he has kept cropping up in my own life, leading to a curiosity about his work that only in the last few weeks have I satisfied by reading any of it.

For a short but intense period of a few months in the mid-1980s Watford Central Library became something of a home from home for me. I had reached the age of 18 and messed up my schooling leading to an enforced gap year while I tried to get life and education back on track. It felt as though I had squandered my opportunities. So added to an already difficult home situation was a sense of being in disgrace. The library was a refuge.

While trying to sort myself out, I had discovered that other people, the kind that passed their exams and went to university, read proper books, novels and the like. Until then my own reading had consisted mainly of the following: books about rugby; books about pop music; true crime books (influenced by my grandmother) and humorous compilations that were often spin-offs from TV and radio programmes, often received by one family member or another as Christmas presents.

I was trying to get away from these and read some real literature, of which there was much to be found in Watford Central Library. So when I discovered a volume in there entitled Aren’t you rather young to be writing your memoirs? I didn’t even take it down from the shelf, let alone note the name of the author. Its seemingly whimsical title smacked of light-hearted Radio 4 programmes. I could imagine someone like Robert Robinson asking the question in a jovial way of someone like Nigel Rees. It sounded like the sort of thing I might once have devoured but now wanted to escape.

It took a couple of years to realise my mistake. Having had some success at my educational rehabilitation, I found myself spending a lot of time in the University of Leicester Library, occasionally reading books for my course, more often enjoying the other treasures to be found there. These included bound volumes of back copies of the New Statesman in which I found the columns of Auberon Waugh written during his brief sojourn at the Staggers between 1973 and 1975.

In one untypically poignant column, Waugh described how three times that year he had had to recall articles he had submitted to different publications because the person they were written about had suddenly died. The third of these, BS Johnson, he described as ‘by far the saddest’. It turned out that Waugh had been writing about Johnson’s collection Aren’t you rather young to be writing your memoirs?, which he described as a ‘serious tract’ containing an ‘impassioned plea for the experimental novelist’.

So the author of Aren’t you rather young?’ was not a lesser known panel game host but a SERIOUS PERSON. Apparently Johnson argued that film and television could tell stories better than print so novels should ‘concentrate on thought processes.’ In the light of the conclusion I had jumped to, it seemed almost spooky that Waugh owned to having included a review of the book in a list of ‘Christmas “funnies”’ encouraging Johnson to ‘recognise his genius as primarily humorous’, hence why he needed to recall the article on learning of his subject’s suicide.

Waugh tended to disparage any literature that took itself too seriously. Yet amid his negative remarks about experimental literature, he described Johnson’s novel Christie Malry’s own double entry as a masterpiece and suggested that he had been a witting or unwitting influence on Martin Amis’s first novel, which had been published that year. So, curiosity piqued, I added BS Johnson to my ever-growing mental list of authors to read.

Yet it could wait. Looking him up in reference books I discovered a bit more. Coming from an upper-working/lower-middle class background in West London, Johnson had done a variety of jobs before studying English Literature at King’s College London and becoming a writer. In line with his belief that the narrative function of the novel had been eclipsed, he experimented with its form, including its physical characteristics. His second Albert Angelo set out parts of the text in columns with holes cut out in the pages readers to see what happens later in the story.

The Unfortunates was published in 27 loose sections that could be read in any order. In House Mother Normal several elderly residents of a sheltered home, with differing levels of lucidity, related an evening’s events each from a different perspective. The protagonist of Christie Malry’s own double entry applied the principles of double-entry bookkeeping to his own life, finding ever more extreme ways of exacting recompense for perceived wrongs done to him, culminating in poisoning the London water supply.

For me the problem was that reading such stuff seemed too much like hard work. If I was going to turn my attention to books that required work, then I should go for ones that actually were – those required for my studies. Other reading should be for pleasure and BS Johnson’s oeuvre didn't sound like it would be that.

So he dropped down my list, but from time to time kept calling. Some years later I discovered that a film had been released of Christie Malry’s own double entry with a soundtrack by one of my favourite artistes, Luke Haines, former leader of The Auteurs. I bought the CD and could maybe have watched the film. But in a busy life my wife and I try to make watching movies a joint activity and this requires compromise. Strangely, the moment for saying ‘Let’s spend our Saturday evening together watching a film about a man who murders thousands of people by poisoning the water supply, based on a novel by an author who committed suicide a few months after publishing it’ never arrived.

Then I noticed that the novelist Jonathan Coe had written a biography of Johnson, Like a fiery elephant (he being a notoriously big and volatile man) and I read the usually glowing reviews with a certain smug self-satisfaction that I had at least heard of this ‘forgotten’ writer and knew something about him. But it would have felt odd to read a biography of a literary figure whose work I hadn’t ever opened so I let that go by. At the time I was combining work with serving as a councillor and studying for a research degree. Reading books I didn’t need to was a pleasure that had to be deferred.

A couple of years later I downloaded (legally of course) an album by indie-rock band the Pernice Brothers and was surprised to see it included a song called BS Johnson, which in two-and-a-half minutes summed up pretty well the author’s life and oeuvre:

Write a book of leaves shuffled by the wind
Two unbound lives, orderless and grim…

…You were dead by forty-two
There'd be no rigid form for you

For the reasons mentioned above, for many years, and indeed decades, reading BS Johnson seemed to be something to be done sometime in the future.

Recently, though, I have begun to feel that future has arrived. I’m in my late 50s. When my father, a fellow bibliophile, died three years ago I worked out that if I live to be the same age as him and manage to read on average a book a week, that would mean 1,000 more books, which will be a fraction of those I would like to read. I’m already falling well behind target.

So now is the time to start reading the books I’ve always said I’d read and the sad anniversary of Johnson’s death brought him to mind. So in the last few weeks I have read:

The unfortunates (the ‘book of leaves shuffled by the wind’)

Christie Malry’s own double entry

Aren’t you rather young to be writing your memoirs? (at least the ‘impassioned’ introduction and the short story from which the volume gets its title and one or two of the other pieces inlcuded)

Like a fiery elephant: the story of BS Johnson by Jonathan Coe

What have I made of it? I’m no Eng. Lit. critic so I don’t attempt any detailed exegesis, merely the observations of a casual reader, but here goes.

Like so many things in life, it was not as hard as I feared. No long, opaque, incomprehensible passages. Johnson wanted to see authors ‘writing like it mattered, as though they meant it, and as though they meant it to matter’ and his own work certainly demonstrates that.

In The unfortunates the protagonist visits a midlands city (clearly Nottingham) to report on a football match and while doing so remembers the illness and death of a friend who had lived there. By any standards it is a powerful piece of writing, the events of the journey interspersed with a portrayal of the effects of cancer on the sufferer and their family and friends. Johnson was also a keen student of architecture and this shows in his descriptive writing, whether of Southwell Minster or the lions in Nottingham’s Old Market Square, all together with a funny account of the main character composing a match report of a rather dull football match.

The book’s presentation in loose leaf sections contained in a box may seem like a gimmick, but was justified by Johnson as demonstrating the randomness of memory. Which may be logical enough, but leaves the reader (or at least this one) fretting after borrowing the book from the library as to whether all the sections are there at the start, whether they are all still there or if one has gone astray, does the introduction by Jonathan Coe count as one of the sections or is that extra and if I’ve lost one how much will it cost to buy the library a replacement copy? And in the end, couldn’t he have just published it as one book with an instruction that all but the first and last bits can be read in any order the reader chooses?

Although more novella than novel (23,000 words) Christie Malry’s own double entry has been hailed as a masterpiece and deserves this status. It’s a very funny book, its humour very dark, and with a vivid portrayal of London in the 1970s. The story is of an accountancy worker applying the principles of double-entry bookkeeping to his own life, a series of slights against him by individuals or society requiring ever more extreme ways of exacting payback, culminating in the aforementioned mass poisoning. The use of graphic features, in this case mocked-up ‘moral’ double entry ledgers to illustrate the plot was another innovation even if I can’t suppress a scowl at the largest debit owed being £311,398 for ‘Socialism not given a chance’. How long have socialists been saying that no real-life government, however much it proclaims its socialism, is ‘truly socialist’ and why has it proved impossible for nominally socialist governments to give socialism a chance? But I digress.

It's a bit sad though to say that the best thing I’ve read on my BS Johnson adventure has not been one of his own books but Jonathan Coe’s biography. I see from the cover it was shortlisted for the 2005 Samuel Johnson prize for non-fiction and in my view it should have won, an argument I might be better qualified to make if only I had read any of the other shortlisted books.

While Johnson might turn in his grave (if he hadn’t been cremated) at being biographised by a conventional narrative storyteller novelist, what really makes Like a fiery elephant such a success is that it nods to Johnson by putting his writings at the centre of the narrative (each section starts with a passage of Johnson’s writing) with an ongoing thread of authorial intrusion so that it’s not just a biography but a book about writing a biography. It is very much a warts-and-all portrait that gives a clear sense of this brilliant, tortured, misguided and ultimately tragic figure. I would go so far as to say that this is Coe’s best book, if only I had managed to read the others (they are on my list).

To me the tragedy of BS Johnson is the way he stubbornly channelled his remarkable talent up an obvious dead end (‘telling stories is telling lies’). Among the observations from Coe’s interviewees is that Johnson managed to emerge from a humanities degree having learned not how to think, as is supposed to be the point, but rather having adopted one particular thought about the nature of writing that he would never let go of. Another comments that while he wanted to be the greatest novelist of his era, he was intimidated by the Oxbridge varsity novel tradition and so tried to redefine the rules so as to compete on a non-narrative, ultra-realist field where he could be the champion.

As well as the two novels described above, I also read Aren’t you rather young to be writing your memoirs? or at least parts of this collection of his shorter writings. The eponymous short story, with its gunfight-but-not-quite narrative is rather funny. The ‘impassioned’ introduction less so, but worth reading because it prompted me to think about why Johnson was wrong, why narrative novels still sell and his own belief about the future of fiction was a cul-de-sac. Jonathan Coe comments that Johnson did not see himself as a niche writer but could not understand why his approach was not seen as mainstream. Indeed his regular firing of literary agents and fights with publishers demonstrated an unshakeably conviction that his books should be bestsellers and it was only their ineptitude and laziness that prevented this.

On this point Auberon Waugh’s comment seems most perceptive:

He argued convincingly enough that the narrative function of the novel has been overtaken by cinema and television; that the novel should therefore concentrate on thought processes; nothing could be more relevant than the thought processes of a novelist in sitting down to write a novel; how puzzling it is that few people want to read the product of such correct reasoning.

Jonathan Coe’s point in rebuttal of the notion that ‘telling stories is telling lies’ is that fiction involves a compact between author and reader – both parties know what is going on so no lies involved.

For my own part, back in the day when I was supposing Johnson to be a humorous lightweight, I was pondering whether to study History or Eng Lit. at university, opting in the end for the former, lest the latter spoil my enjoyment of reading fiction.

I learned that writing history too involves making choices about how to present a particular event or theme, selections as to what material to include and what to omit. Indeed in the year of Johnson’s death the American historian Hayden White wrote his seminal book Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-century Europe about how historians organise their narration events into a coherent story. One doesn’t have to be a total relativist to be aware that even when relating true events one may be telling a story.

Reading two of Johnson’s books more than 50 years after they were published, I didn’t find them that innovative or experimental. The use, for example, of authorial intervention to make clear this was a work of fiction not real life, were used by Johnson’s contemporaries David Lodge and Malcolm Bradbury even as they wrote conventional, narrative, varsity (albeit non-Oxbridge) novels. Yet they did this in a playful, postmodern way rather than with Johnson’s gritty deference to Beckett and Joyce.

One wishes he had thought better of his desperate choice, made 50 years ago now to this day. To have achieved the acceptance he craved he would have surely had to shift his thinking and emerged from a dead channel into the mainstream. I was struck by reading that Johnson rejected the cultural changes of the 1960s, flower power and hippiedom not being for him. It put me in mind of another Johnson, Paul, the former New Statesman editor, who while still a socialist wrote of ‘The menace of Beatlism’ before going over to full-blooded Thatcherism. Might BSJ have followed that route too?

We can’t know about that nor how he might have developed as a novelist had he lived. My own BS Johnson odyssey is at an end. There are so many books to read, I’ve done my bit in turning from more pressing things to read a novelist whose works are now mostly out of print and who killed himself 50 years ago. So I’m not doing Trawl or House mother normal. Yet it has been a rewarding experience, enough to make me write this excessively long blog post. It shares with Johnson’s work one thing: that rather fewer people will read it than the effort put in feels like it warrants. I hope you are the person who reached the end and decided to read one of BS Johnson’s books as a result.

Sunday, November 05, 2023

At the Old Crows' show



When I first started listening to music anything that could be called country was deemed beyond the pale by turns atavistic, insincere, schmaltzy. Exceptions might be made for Bob Dylan’s Nashville Skyline or The Byrds’ Sweetheart of the Rodeo but that was rock musicians doing country not the dreaded country music itself.

Despite successive attempts over the decades to make country cool through labels such as new countrycowpunkalt-countryAmericana or whatever, and Dolly Parton becoming an international treasure, I still feel that to tell someone I’m going to a concert by a country artist is to invite an expression on face somewhere between puzzlement and disapproval.

This could be even more so with Old Crow Medicine Show, who are best described as a modern version of an old-time string band and are often cited as an inspiration for the much-derided Mumford and Sons.

In reality they are miles away from any twee version of country music, the dark lyrical themes of many of their songs being very much of the present day, even though the reverence for traditional forms is very real.

The Old Crows were in fine fettle last Monday, and having expanded to a seven-piece band with drummer and keyboardist, have evolved beyond their initial neo-traditionalist style.

They also epitomised something I have noticed more and more in recent years that bands are no longer too cool to recognise that they are providing entertainment and putting on a show. Back in the day niceties like speaking to the audience and thanking them at the end were the exception rather than the rule, perhaps because tours were done under sufferance to promote records rather than now as the main way of making a living by playing music.

So today it’s not uncommon to have jokes, anecdotes and banter, and the Old Crows’ leader Ketch Secor is a natural frontman, regaling the audience with stories about the band’s previous visits to the United Kingdon. As one for whom the Eventim Apollo will always be the Hammersmith Odeon I was pleased to hear him refer to it as such also.

So farewell then, Worthington White Shield

Despite being a cask beer drinker since the 1980s, until very recently I have held off joining the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA). There are a few reasons for this, but the main one was disagreement with certain of CAMRA’s policy positions, including a sense it that was overly purist and that it was silly to make a fetish of the means of dispense rather than the quality of the beer.

With hindsight this wasn’t very logical. If disagreement with some of an organisation’s policies was an impediment to joining, I would never have signed up to the Liberal party back in the day nor have spent much of the last four decades campaigning for the Lib Dems and serving as a councillor.

Anyway, having gathered that CAMRA had adopted a more broadminded approach, this year I did join and have received the first copy of the excellent Beer magazine that is a benefit of membership.

It brings the sad news, however, that the famous Worthington White Shield pale ale is being discontinued by its owner Molson Coors.

Back in the day, White Shield was celebrated as the one bottle-conditioned beer on general sale – even if it was not easy to find. I learned about it because it had been adopted as a favoured beer by the rugby club where my dad played. On one occasion he turned up just as the delivery driver arrived and was told that the club was the largest customer in the country for White Shield. The second biggest was a hotel in Devon where club’s players stayed on their Easter tour.

Over the years whenever I’ve seen White Shield on sale, I’ve never failed to buy a bottle or two. Yet in truth it was more its uniqueness as real ale in a bottle that made me buy rather than anything exceptional about the taste – nice enough though it was. It was always a rare find, never properly promoted, each time it seemed to have been brewed at a different location and its specialness was reduced with the explosion of craft and micro breweries, many of which sell live beer in bottles.

Still, it is sad to see it go and if it really is not to be revived the CAMRA article is a worthy obituary.

Wednesday, November 01, 2023

I still love the moment when the floodlights come on

Action from Coventry's Butts Park Arena
on Saturday.



Despite my lack of enthusiasm about the Rugby World Cup final, there was no shortage of sport to interest me over the weekend.

Indeed there was a rare treat on offer. When we lived in Kincardineshire in the 1970s my father used to take me to see Montrose FC, our nearest professional football club - usually evening matches because he played rugby on a Saturday afternoon. I look back fondly on winter nights standing on the terrace with the ground illuminated by floodlights.

While I always look out for their results on a Saturday and often watch match highlights on Montrose FCTV, I have been deprived of opportunities to see them in the last 47 years since we moved to Hertfordshire. Admittedly when Rangers hit a spot of bother a few years ago and were demoted to Division Two, both their away games at Links Park were shown on Sky TV. I feared, though, that the day might never come again. Yet there, on the BBC Alba schedule for last Saturday, was Montrose v Hamilton Academical. 

This would normally have been the highlight of my sporting weekend, indeed maybe my sporting year. But I had tickets to be elsewhere, in the city of my birth, watching Coventry Rugby Club v Caldy. 'Cov' were my second great sporting enthusiasm - when we visited my grandparents in Coventry I would occasionally get to see a game at their old Coundon Road ground. Cov were one of a relatively small number of rugby clubs with floodlights installed at their ground and I always looked forward to that moment in an afternoon game in winter when the lights came on in the gloaming.

Back in those days both Cov and Montrose were on something of a high, the former one of the giants of the game with a team full of internationals, the latter for all that they were a part-time club in a small town finished one spot off promotion to the Scottish Premier League in 1976.

I've always had this worry that it was when I started supporting them that things began to go wrong. Since then both have endured more lows than highs, Cov nearly going out of business twice and having a long stint in the third tier of English rugby, Montrose coming within 90 minutes of dropping out of the Scottish leagues altogether.

For both clubs, though, things have been going better in recent seasons. Montrose have climbed back up to Scottish League One. Cov finished third in the English Championship and even beat the mighty Saracens (albeit shorn of their star internationals) in a cup game earlier this season.

In the end, it was no bad thing to be at Coventry's Butts Park Arena on Saturday rather than in front of the TV. After a sluggish start, Cov went on to an impressive win, whereas Montrose lost out 3-0 to a full-time professional Hamilton side.

A 4pm kick-off for the Cov game meant this was the first weekend of the season where the floodlights were switched on at half-time and somehow for me this remains a magical moment. It also brings back memories of my father and maternal grandfather who first took me to see live sport, but who are no longer here.