Bohemians 1905 1-1 Zbrojovka Brno, Czech Liga, Dolicek, att. 4,079
I came to the attention of the ultras today, and not in a nice way. It was the second half, and I’d decided to stand on the terrace behind the goal. Heading for the more sparsely populated far side, I walked along the front and behind their cheerleader’s platform. Then, as I stood on the terrace, minding my business, supping my beer, watching the football….a yoof came up to me. ‘LGBT’ he said. I wasn’t sure whether this was a statement or question, but I knew what he was referring to. He pointed at my hat and repeated ‘LGBT’. ‘It’s a very colourful hat’ I replied, ingenuously. ‘That’s my football team’ I added, pointing at the club badge.
I wasn’t too fazed, as he’d broken the rule of combat and ceded higher ground (I was a couple of steps above him). I also overly trust my ability to avoid confrontation, or as my mate Dave says ‘you’re the only person I know who can talk himself into and out of a fight in the same sentence.’ Then his mate came and joined him. This one was dressed in all black, his face disguised by a scarf across his face, hoodie and sunglasses. Perhaps he’s famous and doesn’t want to be recognised? An older, and, crucially, BIGGER bloke stepped in to discuss matters with them in Czech. After a minute or so, the 1st lad asks me if ‘in the interests of keeping the peace would you mind removing your hat.’ It was so terribly formal I said ‘no bother, it’s not too cold’ whereupon his disguised accomplice was now insistent that I keep it on. ‘I can’t win’ I replied. Anyway, I took it off and enjoyed repartee with big bloke’s mate for the rest of the match, a Chemistry graduate from the provinces who’d adopted Bohemians. ‘I’m surprised and shocked’ he said. ‘I thought young people had more…respect.’
I’d got to Dolicek bang on kick-off time, as I messed up and went the wrong way on the tram. So much for reading the timetable. Thus, with no time to spare I paid the 300CHK for a seating ticket and went in the 1st entrance. The stand may not be too photogenic, but it provides an excellent view, as it’s quite steep. I sat about 6 rows up, but the view was still good as the stand begins at a height. To the right, behind the goal, there are no spectators, but a portacabin and cameraman up high. Opposite is the away ‘end’, 2 or 3 rows of open seating, with maybe 100 away fans today. Space is extremely tight on that side as the street lies immediately behind. That leaves the far (left) end, a large terrace with some seats bolted on the left side (which no-one sits down on). This is where the vocal element converge, though there were a few call-and-response chants from the main stand.
The first half was notable for a couple of disallowed goals. Bohemians thought they’d gone a goal up with a neat turn and shot off the far post. My chemist told me it was ruled out for handball. Who knew the Czech league had VAR? Like everywhere else, it wished it hadn’t for the 2nd disallowed goal…an absolute rocket from 25 yards by the Brno left back, which screamed into the top corner. I’ve heard a rumour VAR decided it was offside. Maybe there was a player standing ‘off’. Was he obstructing the keeper? There wasn’t a goalkeeper in the world saving that shot. Ho hum.
At half-time I visited the club shop…they had great t-shirts last time I was here…then a klobasa (sausage) and beer. I’d been eying up a ‘cigaro’, a foot long baguette with sausage, but they ran out just I should have been served. I say ‘should have been’ as 3 Glasweigans somehow inveigled their way in front of me by pushing in from the side. They seemed to want a ‘cigaro’ too, so justice was served (unlike the cigaro). Then a cheer went up. Great. Bohemians were a goal ahead. VAR didn’t rule this one out for nefarious reasons. Then I decided to go behind the goal, which I probably would have done to begin with had I arrived in good time. I did see one goal though. Brno equalised in the 70th minute and neither side looked likely to get another. Full-time came, we said our goodbyes…and a man came down several steps to shake my hand. Was it for wearing my rainbow hat? Coming to support Bohemians? Being English? He never said. He just shook my hand and returned to the throng of leavers.
The Damage:
CHK 300 ent
CHK 50 programme
CHK 45 beer (x2)
CHK 70 klobasa (sausage)
CHK 349 t-shirt
= CHK 859 (£34)
The Tunes:
Prague life, the humdrum of the streets and tram.
Showing posts with label Bohemians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bohemians. Show all posts
Sunday, 26 February 2023
Sunday, 4 August 2019
Bohemians 0-0 Viktoria Plzen, Saturday 3rd August 2019
Welcome to ... |
My unbeaten run has come to an end, and on this, a SATURDAY. After 8 consecutive days of football (9 matches) I can't manage a game on the one day devoted to it. So, how comes?
Well, I'd originally planned to see 2 games in Prague (Admira and Bohemians) but my train was late, connections missed. That put paid to Admira. But there was still Bohemians. I'd been before and was keen to renew acquaintances - Dolicek is a unique little stadium, hemmed in on all sides and restricted to a capacity of six thousand odd. Besides, Bohemians also had the coolest choice of t-shirts and I wanted another one.
The Big Match. |
It was sold out. I should have known. Limited capacity AND playing one of the Big Three. No, not Georges Clemenceau. Viktoria Plzen. But still. They NEVER sell out. The game's on telly. It's Satdy nite. It's Prague - don't people have other things to do?
I got there with about an hour and a half to kick-off, getting a tram straight there from around the corner from my hostel in the city centre. The turnstiles hadn't even opened. I even saw the Bohemians' coach drop the players off (no-one batted an eyelid; they're far too bohemian). I had a beer from a pop-up kiosk (Krusovice, v. nice). All good thus far. Then, as the turnstiles opened, I saw the sign on the wall: 'Sold Out'. It was a blow, but there it was. There's worse places to be stranded than Prague on a Satdy nite. I hopped on a tram back into town.
The Damage:
nothing
The Tunes:
none
Staying at:
Mosaic House (£16)
Of course it is, dammit. |
The away side, about 6 steps high if I got in. |
Dolicek. |
Bohemians' team coach arrives. |
A queue starts forming outside Dolicek. |
Bohemians' iconic badge. |
The Main (only) Stand. |
Fans start entering. |
Wednesday, 9 August 2017
Benesov 1-5 Bohemians Prague, Tuesday 8th August 2017
Benesov 1-5 Bohemians Prague (Czech Cup 2nd Round, att. c800)
The Tunes:
Fabric 84 (Mathew Jonson)
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Welcome to ... |
While researching
which Czech cup game I fancied going to (I didn't want to be far from Prague) I
hit on Benesov, about 25 miles south.
Plus they were playing Bohemians, a side I have fondness for, based on a
previous visit to their legendary Dolicek stadium. Further digging showed Benesov was not simply
a non descript Czech town of 27000 inhabitants (even if it was). It was also the final home of Franz Ferdinand,
heir to the Austro-Hungarian empire and whose assassination sparked World War 1.
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Konopiste, home of Franz Ferdinand. |
Franz’s (we’re on first name
terms) old palace was at Konopiste, a couple of kilometres
up the hill from Benesov. I HAD to visit,
so I was there early (kick-off wasn't until 5:30). While the palace was par for the course, what
set Franz apart from the rest was his indefatigable passion for hunting. I'm sure the guide said he killed 274,000
animals. If he died at 51…and let’s say
he started at 11…that’s 40 years….that’d be nearly 7,000 per year…or 20 a
day. Surely not? Mind, the area around his palace was used for
hunting and he also managed the odd exotic specimen on trips to the likes of
India and Nepal. Anyway, many are
stuffed and hung up in a spectacular corridor of ‘prizes’. Makes me less sympathetic what Gavrilo Princip
did to him. He who lives by the sword…
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Franz's pride and joy. |
SK Benesov’s stadium
is at the bottom of the park the palace is in.
Perfect, or so I thought. What
Google didn't tell me was I have to cross a busy two lane A road, which was
hair-raising. It was very annoying knowing
I was approximately 100m from the stadium but there were no crossing points on
this road. Still you're never too old
for a game of ‘chicken’. Not nice.
At the stadium, everyone
passed through one turnstile, 100 crowns.
Bargain. There was a fair turnout
from Bohemians too, at least half the crowd.
Considering it was a 5:30 kick off, when do these Czechs knock off? I trust they start early…
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A busy main stand. |
The stadium has an
older main stand, complete with pillars tastefully painted in the home side’s
yellow and blue colours. Below is a
small terrace which curves around either end. Opposite the main stand is an
open stand, only half of which has been populated with seats. Many Bohemians,
including the ultras, chose to go this side despite the heat and having the
sun's rays in their eyes. However, it
was tight to the touchline while the main stand was some way from the pitch. Perhaps the stadium had a running track at
some point?
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Bohemians' ultras. |
I grabbed a beer and
went in the main stand, back row. I was
early enough to have the pick (most fans were milling around on the terraces). Despite the pillars, I could see both sets of
goalposts. This was handy as Bohemians
were scoring from the start.
It was 0-2 early on
and 0-3 by half-time. Probably my
favourite was when a Benesov defender kicked it off the line only for it to
rebound off his own player and into the net.
I went for a beer and klobasa (sausage),
timing it well (the queue became huge) or timing it badly (I missed the 3rd).
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Klobasa preparations. |
Second half, I
decided to walk around the stadium and sit in the sun. Turns out I wasn't the only Brit here, as I
eavesdropped on 4 Scottish lads. I
wonder if they made it to Kronopiste? They
certainly knew their stuff on stadia, but all this slowly being cooked does nothing
for me and I had to leave for the shade again - but not before the ref gave a generous
penalty to the home side. He then
ordered a retake, seemingly cos the player skied it (tho he booked the
goalkeeper for something or other). The retake was put away.
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Penalty #1. Spot the ball. |
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Penalty #2. Much better. |
The pen was no’ but a
consolation though in a 1-5 rout. The Bohemians
players then stood gracefully while their ultras serenaded them (the ultras
made noise all game, nothing from Benesov).
I shared a train carriage back to Prague with a few of them and
boisterous it was too, despite the 4 police we had for company. The train must also have returned via Bohemians
territory, as the vast majority got off the stop before the main station. A great day out!
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Gladiators, we salute you! |
The Damage:
CHK 100 ent
CHK 60 klobasa
CHK 30 beer (x2)
The Tunes:
Fabric 84 (Mathew Jonson)
Slowdive (Slowdive)
Mixmag Jul15 (Adam Beyer and Ida
Engberg)![]() |
SK Benesov panorama from the entrance. |
![]() |
SK Benesov panorama from the open side. |
![]() |
SK Benesov panorama from the Main Stand. |
![]() |
Looking towards the Main Stand. |
![]() |
Front of Main Stand. |
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The players' tunnel (the gates slide along to block spectators). |
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Bohemians come out for the warm-up. |
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The sides come out. |
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The players line up. |
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The scoreboard (if you look carefully enough). |
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The cameraman views events. |
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Making use of dead space...cars behind the goal. |
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Fans relax at half-time. |
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Bohemians on the open side. |
![]() |
The skeleton of a stand. |
![]() |
Entered by bridges... |
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This is the life...not sure about the shoes tho. |
![]() |
The terrace disappears. |
![]() |
Action in front of the Main Stand. |
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Fans up against the fence surrounding the pitch. |
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The host's bench. |
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I spy...a team coach! |
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