One of the many awful things about the awful English Premier League is that it is possible to go weeks on end without a home game. It is three weeks since Ipswich played at Portman Road, and in that time the cost of the rail fare to Ipswich has increased by about four per cent. It feels so long since I last went to a match that I would believe it if someone told me that not only have the fares gone up, but electric trains have replaced steam ones too. It is with a sense of dim resignation therefore that I set out for the railway station beneath a blue, but cloud strewn sky.
Gary joins me at the first station stop after I send him instructions by text that I am sat at the back of the second, forward facing, pointy-ended carriage. The train does not seem as busy as usual as if everyone is losing interest. Descending into Ipswich through Wherstead, we spot one polar bear having a swim and another languidly strolling along like polar bears do. Arriving in Ipswich we head for âthe Arbâ via Portman Road, where Gary is handed a Panini sticker, which bizarrely features the gormless, messy-haired portrait of local ginger celebrity Ed Sheeran. I tell him he should hand it back. We pause to buy programmes (ÂŁ3.50 each) at one of the booths that look as if they should also sell ice creams. Todayâs programme has a boring picture of a footballer on the front cover, I think itâs Luke Woolfenden, but am struck by the thought that it looks a bit like Kurtan Mucklowe from TVâs This Country. Either way, the world would be a better place if the âposterâ design on the inside of the back page featuring the Cobbold Stand was the front cover of the programme. I am sure that if the poster designs had continued to be used as front covers as originally intended, Town would not be in the relegation zone. Damn you Umbro.


At âthe Arbâ, Gary buys the drinks (Lager 43 for him, Mauldonâs Suffolk Pride for me), and then Mick appears, and Gary buys him a drink too (Mauldonâs Suffolk Pride), and at Mickâs request, a packet of potato crisps (Fairfeldâs Cheese and Onion flavour). We repair to the beer garden where unusually there are plenty of vacant seats and tables, further evidence perhaps that the supposed excitement of Premier League football is wearing thin, or that itâs been so long since we had a match people thought, or hoped, the season was over. We talk of firing squads, lethal injections, the full moon over Felixstowe, Allan Hunter, kitchen tidiness and wedding anniversaries. We laugh a lot, Gary gives Mick his sticker of Ed Sheeran, Mick buys more drinks (Mauldonâs Suffolk Pride, Lager 43 and a Penderyn Welsh whisky) and we predict a 2-1 win to the Town on the understanding that we actually expect them to lose, again. Proudly, we claim the distinction of being the last Portman Road-bound drinkers to leave the pub.
In Portman Road we part ways near Sir Alf Ramseyâs statue and wonder on what far off date we will meet again for the next home match, which we think is against the Wanderers of Wolverhampton. I sense that we donât care too much about what match it will be, but are already mostly looking forward to the hour to be spent in the pub beforehand. At the back of the Alf Ramsey Stand the queues are modest in length, but I join those being ushered through the side entrance, which makes me feels like Iâm entering Studio 54 or some after hours boozer. After venting excess Suffolk Pride I am soon with Pat from Clacton, Fiona, the man from Stowmarket (Paul), ever present Phil who never misses a game, and his son Elwood. I must be early again today because Iâm here in time to witness the attempt to barbecue any stray pigeons and seagulls in front of the Cobbold Stand, and to shout out the surnames of Town players in the style of the âMagic Fansâ of St Etienne or âLes Dodgersâ of Lens as the overly enthusiastic young stadium announcer reads out the team before he finally, embarrassingly, bellows âBlue Armyâ into his microphone.
Todayâs visitors and therefore inevitable winners are Nottingham Forest, who also get first go with the ball, which they initially send only in the general direction of the goal in front of the Sir Bobby Robson stand. Sensibly, Nottingham wear all red, having only swapped their usual white shorts to avoid any hint of a colour clash, rather than donning some weird all-black or gaudily-coloured away kit which will sell well in replica versions in Myanmar, Papua New Guinea and South Korea, but is not necessary.
In the upper tier of the Cobbold stand the Nottingham fans sing incomprehensibly about their team, who hold on to possession for almost two minutes before Town get to have a go with it too, courtesy of a throw-in. âEnglandâs, Englandâs, number tenâ continue the Nottinghamians mysteriously, about a player who, unless itâs Nigel Clough, I have probably never heard of. Itâs the fourth minute and Town have a free-kick in the sort of location from which Colin Viljoen or Arnold Muhren might have easily scored in happier days, but todayâs effort only strikes the defensive wall.
âDown with the Leicester, youâre going down with the Leicesterâ chant the Nottingham lot as I fantasize about a big wheel of red cheese, whilst the words âHome of the XL vent shipping containerâ scroll their way along the front of the Sir Bobby Robson stand before disappearing into the side wall of the Planet Blue shop. Not much is happening on the pitch, but with a seemingly limitless but mostly unimaginative back catalogue of songs and chants, the Nottingham fans proceed to resurrect Tony Christieâs cheesy âRoad to Amarilloâ before hitting on the old classic âFootball in a library, do-do-doâ. The Nottingham Forest team seems fashionably short-haired, looking as if National Service didnât end in the East Midlands in 1960, like it did in the rest of Britain, but the exception is number thirty-four who resembles side-show Bob from The Simpsons, and probably has more hair on his head than all of his team mates put together; if he went to head the ball with any part of his skull but his forehead, thereâs a risk the ball would disappear.
Ipswich win a corner and I bawl âCome On you Bluesâ with minimal accompaniment before Omari Hutchinson shoots over the cross bar. Pat is working hard taking photographs this afternoon and seems particularly interested in snapping the Nottingham number five. âMurilloâ she says. âWhat like the cherry?â I ask. Pat tells me she follows him on some social media platform or other. âOooh, heâs gorgeousâ she says. âTake a look, you might even fancy him yourselfâ. âIf you hear something that doesnât seem rightâ read the advertising screens between the tiers of the Sir Bobby Robson stand. I think of Garyâs Panini sticker, which he gave to Mick.
Over twenty minutes have gone forever, and Town arenât losing. Cruel hope and foolish optimism begin to insinuate their way into my mind. Nottingham take a corner and still itâs goalless. âCome of You Redsâ sing the occupants of one end of the Cobbold Stand. âOle. Ole. Oleâ sing the occupants of the other. The game is a third of the way to finishing goalless. âBlue and White Armyâ chant the Sir Bobby Robson standers a good two or three times and the words âHot Sausage Companyâ appear above them in bold red letters moving from left to right.
The thirty fourth minute and Nottingham earn a corner as Alex Palmerâs hacked clearance cannons off Jens Cajuste. The corner is cleared but then crossed in again, knocked down and a big bloke called Milenkovic scores. Bugger. Two minutes later Town lose possession, have no left back and Elanga sprints away with the ball down the Town left and scores. âWeâre gonna win 3-2â says Fiona. âYes, weâre going to win 3-2â I reply as convincingly as I can. Five minutes later, the ball bounces and Elanga scores again.
Pat from Clacton is going to Great Yarmouth this week for her twice-yearly week of playing whist. Sheâs hoping to win lots of money and is looking forward to seeing the sun rise over the sea from her bedroom at the Palm Court hotel. âDown with the Leicester, youâre going down with the Leicesterâ chant the Nottingham fans, but Pat wonât mind. The half ends with Kalvin Phillips shooting over the bar, two minutes of added on time and an obese woman walks up the steps from the front of the stand carrying a bottle of Coke and bag of crisps.
With the half-time break, I take a short walk to the front of the stand to speak with Ray, his son Michael and grandson Harrison. In front of us are three âtraineeâ guide dogs. âWhat do you call a group of dogs?â asks Ray. âA packâ I tell him âSo this is a pack of guide dogsâ. We go on to talk about the popular image of packs of dogs tearing other animals or even people apart, and contrast this to a pack of guide dogs who we imagine compete with one another to help people.



It’s three minutes past four when the match resumes. Town soon win a corner and Omari Hutchinson has a shot, then win another and OâShea heads over the goal. As the man from Stowmarket remarked before the game, itâs very cold today, possibly the coldest itâs been at Portman Road all season. Kalvin Phillips is the first player to be booked because fifty-four minutes have departed and itâs about time for a booking. Pat reveals that sheâs already started looking forward to eating the baked potato sheâs having for her tea. There is a half an hour left and whilst Town are having most of the possession thereâs not much going on.
The best bit of the game so far arrives when Nottinghamâs Nicolas Dominguez rolls around on the ground having committed a foul, gets up, gets booked and then hobbles about pathetically. âThereâs nothing wrong with youâ chant the Sir Bobby Robson standers to the tune of Verdiâs âLa Donna e mobileâ, which the Argentinian Dominguez will no doubt appreciate if heâs ever been to the Teatro Colon opera house in Bueno Aires.
âItâs not worth getting monkey out, is it?â asks Pat, raising the possibility of employing her masturbating monkey good luck charm to influence the result. âProbably notâ, agree Fiona and I. âHe canât perform miraclesâ says Fiona, and I suggest that weâd have the RSPCA round, especially on a day as cold as this.
Town win yet another corner, but nothing comes of it and the bloke behind me comments that âYou can make all these passes around the penalty area look good, but it donât do anything does it, fart-arsing around with it?â.  As I digest the truth of this, the excitable young stadium announcer tells us that we are 29,878 and 3,000 of us are mainly here to watch Nottingham, not Ipswich; meanwhile the Nottingham fans sing something which sounds like âWeâre eating porridgeâ, but they could be singing about Norwich. I resign myself to neither knowing nor caring, but instead enjoy the mass substitutions from both teams that greet the 80th minute.  What game-changing substitutions these prove to be as within two minutes Town are on their way to winning the second half. Presumably elated at having for once not been substituted, Jens Cajuste superbly turns and scores into the top corner of the Nottingham goal. Admittedly, just four minutes later a typical breakaway at pace allows Silva to restore the three goal lead for Nottingham, but then in one of the four minutes of added on time, substitute George Hirst rises to head into the other top corner of the Nottingham goal to win the second half for Town. Most of the home crowd have left by now, which in itself is quite satisfying because people who leave early donât deserve to experience the joy that late consolation goals bring to proper fans.
The final whistle sounds, and with my train home still twenty-five minutes away, I stay to applaud what people not prepared to wilfully disregard all that happened before four oâclock will fail to realise is a victorious Town team as they traipse off the pitch. There are now just four home games left, we’re out of the FA Cup, in the relegation zone, effectively nine points behind the team above us in the league, and Spring is in the air. Today, it still feels like Winter and I suspect it will continue to do so for another four games, whatever the weather does. Up The Town!



