What
a win indeed! The required goal from Yann and what has to go down as
substitution of the season by Sir Chris (who has come in for some reasonable
criticism for changes made – and more often not made – during games). Splendid –
and when you look at the table undoubtedly timely.
Talking
of timely, I had to suffer last night the BBC’s failings. My French partner
Suzanne and at least one other Addick recently spent a happy Saturday evening
in the belief that we had beaten Birmingham at home, having relied on the Beeb
site. Suzanne and I, having consumed the marinated goat and most of the St
Joseph while glowing at the news of Kermorgant’s opener, followed the game on
the laptop and ipads (here you can’t even get Radio Five Live properly as once
they switch to live reports the service reverts to a rehash of previous items
with regular reminders that ‘due to licensing restrictions this part of the
service cannot be broadcast’). The gloom of their equaliser gave way to a mix
of admiration and concern at the brave introduction of Haynes, then the
euphoria of his immediate impact (especially with the note of Yann’s assist).
After that it was a matter of trying to while away the minutes with an
occasional nervous cigar on the balcony, anything to fast-forward my life. We
made it to the beginning of stoppage time OK, then the BBC site went completely
doolally. First it stopped updating, then reverted to pre-match comment (and
not just for our game).
It took another 20 minutes of checking other sites and frantic calls back to the UK
to confirm the outcome. Thanks BBC. Cutbacks there are a matter of concern,
given that the Beeb is indeed a treasure to be safeguarded; but if they start
screwing up Charlton coverage it’s a full-blown national disgrace. I know I
should sign up for the Charlton player, but I just can’t stand listening to
live commentary on our games. Tracking progress on a site still allows you to
take a few minutes out, so I’m just a nervous wreck through the process. Having
to listen to it going on unrelenting would lead to full breakdown.
Suzanne
had been patiently waiting for confirmation, with a couple of bits of bread and
something unspeakable. She had been (relatively) kind, selecting something
called Comte, from the Jura region. I’ll admit that it didn’t smell too bad
until you were close up and, given the circumstances, I was delighted to have
to eat it. The first impression was not awful as the bread tasted good; but
then that flavour was overpowered by a sort of slime, like someone had coated
the bread in something off the street. Just really unpleasant. So, no change on
that front – and no need to repeat the experiment for another year (or so).
It
is a daft bloody league. We now sit squarely in mid-table, only eight points
off a play-off spot (equivalent to those dropped in recent games, with the BBC
having mentioned in its pre-match notes that we have conceded more goals in
stoppage time than any other Championship side and are the only team not to
have scored one). At the same time we are conceivably just four points above
the relegation zone, were Peterborough to win their two games in hand on us
(and others currently just above them pick up points with their one). I could
never be really upset about someone giving Millwall a drubbing on their own
patch (or anywhere for that matter), or indeed be pleased that Palace beat a
team to keep them away from us. I just would feel more comfortable if three at
the bottom just gave up.
Just
a quick calculation shows how tight it is. Bristol City are bottom with 0.939
points per game, while Peterborough are effectively third-bottom with 1.065. In
the Premiership QPR are bottom having mustered just 0.654 points per game and
Reading third-bottom with 0.885. If Peterborough had that ratio in the
Premiership, they would be 15th with a five-point cushion on the bottom three.
In League One (remember that horrible place?) Portsmouth are bottom with only
0.697 points per game and Colchester third-bottom with 1.000; and in League Two
the three bottom teams are all on 1.000.
There’s
comfort in the fact that there should be sufficient bodies in the way of us and
the bottom three and that, with 13 games left for us we are only a couple of
wins from a points total that usually means safety. But if Peterborough were to
just continue their current points-per-game ratio to the end they would amass
49 points (and it’s not unreasonable to expect teams in the final stages of a
relegation fight to improve their ratios). As things stand, it is possible that
the ‘50 points for safety’ rule will not apply (but I'll be happy if it does).
Let’s
just win again on Saturday and put such idle speculation further behind us (I
shall be there, assuming my 05.50 – French time – train on Saturday morning
departs as planned and I am on it). This time around I am ready to promise that
if we do win I shall drink some wine and consume a stonkingly large takeaway
(and yes, I will probably do the same even if we don’t).
Yes, BA, the BBC is rather sluggish as times so I always use http://www.livescore.co.uk/ . The elapsed time isn't always right but the scores are more up-to-date than Auntie.
ReplyDeleteIberian Valley
Bet 365 is pretty good too. You dont have to have an account, and there's a little graphic window showing the basic ball position. The updates are probably the most accurate too.
ReplyDeleteFrench Addick
yes BBC site has got frustratingly worse, in fact a complete waste of time. Why have it at all if they cant run it.
ReplyDeletelat night I went on to the club website and followed the Twitter stream - that is free and you dont have to sign up.
Great stats and it shows just how tight the Championship is !!
ReplyDeleteThis season I have discovered that the @CAFCOfficial twitter updates and very informative, up to date and free from having to offer a 'balanced view'
ReplyDeleteYes, Twitter (using the #cafc hashtag to search) is possibly the best option for following away games if BBC etc are slow; enough of us Tweet (post) when something happens so you always know if a goal is scored or Powell has made a substitution...
ReplyDeletePedro45
We always use Sky sports website BA.
ReplyDeleteBlessed are the cheesemakers..
Pembury Addick
Guys, thanks for all the comments and suggestions. I will check them out (and really do have to move into the modern world and use Twitter etc).
ReplyDeletePA, as for 'blessed are the cheesemakers', it is a little known fact that the Monty Python team were being additionally ironic here, using a bit of French. They actually say 'blesser are the cheesemakers', which is much more accurate.
As Dave Jones pointed out this is a truly crazy division and your stats point to how tight top and bottom is. Even Cardiff look less dominant that they did a fortnight ago.
ReplyDeleteAs for following the game, CAFC Player didn't work for me yesterday and is truly a rubbish service and I have to jump on the @cafcofficial Twitter bandwagon as that is now the best way to follow the game if you either can't be there or don't want to listen to the awful radio service.
BA - had you down as a Comte fan. Next you will be telling us you can't stand Epoisse, the king of cheeses.
ReplyDeleteI will check out all the suggested options; certainly don't want a repeat of last night's BBC-inspired angst.
ReplyDeleteDave, as for something being the king of cheeses I suppose there has to be a pecking order, even for cheese (I've checked with Suzanne and she informs me it's a particularly rank one). But it's a bit like the flies having an eating contest and crowning the winner.