Much of my childhood was spent playing football whenever possible the whole year round, in all weathers and for as many hours as my parents would allow.
I
wasn’t fussy who I played with or where for that matter.
We
would play with any size ball and use jumpers for goal posts, and we would play
for hours.
Having
said that I would play anywhere and with anyone I still had a favorite venue
and a favorite bunch of fellow footie fanatics.
The
venue in question was the park bordering St Michaels terrace in north London in
the shadow of Alexandra palace.
The
park had roads bordering on three sides and the railway line on the fourth.
The
top road was St Michaels Terrace with the Starting Gate pub at the main road
end, a small parade of local shops and a row of terraced houses.
To
the left was the main wood green to Muswell hill road so the pitches stopped
well short of that side and the bottom road led to bounds green and to the
right was a wooded area which separated the park from the railway.
The
park had at its center a man-made semi-circular hill with a small round hill its
peak was adorned by a weather worn totem pole and around this center piece were
our three improvised pitches which we rotated depending on the weather
conditions.
The
pitches were arranged as follows.
A,
the top pitch which ran parallel to St Michaels terrace and was as the name
suggests the highest of the three and subsequently the most used.
B,
the bottom pitch which ran parallel to the first pitch and again as the name
suggests was the lowest and least used although was a favorite summer pitch due
to the shade from the trees on three sides.
C,
the third pitch ran from top to bottom parallel to the railway and was referred
to by the grownups as the safe pitch as even the most wayward shot had little
chance of reaching a road.
The
most hardened footballers amongst us played all year round regardless of the
weather with the exception of a two- or three-week period in the summer when we
had to bow to pressure from the less committed participants who wanted to have
a cricket season.
The
hard core of the St Michael Terracers apart from myself were The Neal brothers
Dave, Ken and Michael, Brian Gallagher who was also a distance runner, Lois
Deeks, who lived in Palace Gates road, Richard and Clifford Morgan, Mick, whose
surname escapes me, who was a Chelsea supporter and Colin, whose surname also
eludes me, was our best goalie until his untimely transfer to Diss.
On
Sunday afternoons we were normally joined by some of the parents the most regular
oldies being Mr. Neal and Mr. Morgan and you would have expected a rise in good
behavior and a reduction of bad language but normally the reverse was true.
We
also had an almost endless list of transient players who used to turn up
periodically.
It
broke my heart when we moved away from North London the five years, I spent
with the Terracers have never been bested.
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