Day 186 ~ From Munich to Wembley to see Harry Kane's 100th cap.
Another crack of dawn start in Munich to get the airport to catch our flight to Gatwick started smoothly enough but at Karlsplatz station we had problems buying a ticket and choosing which S-Bahn train to get on. The arrivals list kept changing every few minutes as to which of two trains to the airport was coming first. In the end Leb asked a couple who were obviously going to the airport for their advice. Too easy.
Then, going through passport control at the airport we were told by two border police that for US and Australian citizens the 90-day Shengen limit is reset if you leave the area for even one full day. What!? If so, why is that not clear on any web site - especially the Australian one? Leb tried to find this on the web to confirm that it is the case but it doesn't seem to exist. If it's true I wouldn't have had to change the itinerary twice and this side trip back to blighty wouldn't have been necessary. You kind of have to trust border police but why isn't this documented somewhere?
Anyway, the EasyJet flight was... easy, and we arrived in typically grey and colder Gatwick. At least it wasn't raining. Train to Clapham Junction and then onto Kew Bridge and our 66th accommodation at the Travelodge here.
After a wonderful relax it was time for me to set off again. Strangely, the idea of going to Wembley to watch the UEFA Nations League Group B tie between England and Finland didn't appeal to my darling, so I caught thr 267 bus on my own. A quick change to the 440 and I was excited as an eight year old on Christmas morning. Two and a half hours before kick off, plenty time to find a good old British Fish and Chip shop and a decent pub near the Mecca of tootball, and then take my seat in time to watch the beautiful Finnish national anthem (and, ok, if we have to, the most dreadful English one.)
Almost immediately a few Finns got on the bus including one guy who had flown from Luxembourg this morning to be here. I couldn't help pointing out that I could beat that!
What could possibly go wrong?
London rush hour traffic.
One and a half hours later the bus was stopping and starting, rolling a few metres, and then stopping again as we crawled towards the north circular road.
Sod it.
Time to get off and walk. With about an hour to go before kick off, I strode off into the increasing drizzle towards the beckoning sight of that amazing Wembley arch. I passed scores of kebab places, curry houses, pizza parlours but not one proper chippy. I did pass a couple of pubs that looked half decent but I was determined not to miss "Maamme" the national anthem of Finland.
https://youtu.be/PX7cPorwX5M?si=lMUuuSVcDnm_G6DSBeer could wait.
As I got closer, the rush of a big crowd got ever greater. It's one of life's great pleasures, I think, to attend a big match and even though many are cynical and skeptical about the UEFA Nations League, the match still attracted over 70,000 fans.
I took my seat high in the heavens of the magnificent new Wembley Stadium (it is still new to me anyway) just two rows from the very back near the half way line. Maamme did not disappoint and soon Harry Kane's 100th appearance for England was under way. Predictably, Finland parked two buses, hoping to keep the score respectable and they succeeded. England, to be fair, always looked dangerous and Grealish and Gordon were constant threats down the left. Finland managed to create a couple of chances too, keeping it interesting. Harry Kane had a goal ruled out for off side so the teams went in at half time with the score 0-0. It frustrated me that so many fans seemed so bored that they started making and throwing paper airplanes. When one or two landed on the pitch, they got a roar as big as some of the nice interplay England were doing on the pitch.
Anyway, after a disgusting "chicken tenders and chips" ($19 aud) and a decent pale ale ($15 aud), I climbed back up the mountain to my seat in the gods for the second half. Kane got the great goal that he deserved, and then another, to give England a comfortable 2-0 win to top the group. (We are going up... I said wearegoingup!)
Walking back through the massive crowd I bumped into some Finland fans and congratulated their team on a strong performance, their country on joining NATO ("we know a bit about Russia" they said) and their lovely, lovely anthem.
When I got back to the 440 bus stop I met the other Finnish guy who I'd met earlier. He'd been waiting ten minutes already and eventually decided to catch the No 18 instead. This bus was going to Euston so not for me. After waiting 40 minutes, another three 18s went past another couple of 92s but not one 440. Damn.
Earlier, I did pass by the the Wembley train station but the queue was huge and, in any case, heading to Central London not Kew. So that wasn't really an option.
Struggling to remember as much of the London transport system as I could (no mobile SIM this time) I decided to walk back as far as I could until I saw one of the "every twenty minutes" 440s the bus stop schedule promised.
Eventually I saw one speed off into the the distance as I turned the corner by Stonebridge Park station. I decided to go into the station and ask for advice. It was here that I found the answer to the missing 440 mystery: Apparently they sometimes change the route when there's a big match at Wembley. If only I'd known that an hour earlier. Anyway, the very helpful lady recommended me to "take the train to Willesden Junction and change to the overground service to Gunnersbury and then walk from there." I followed these wise words and finally got back here at 12:30, cold (wearing four layers) and with aching feet.
... And that's why I luv football!!
Having just woken up here to a nice sunny day we listened to the Trump/Harris debate with horror. As usual the orange-faced crook just lied without push back, butted in at will and the so-called moderators did nothing and, truth be told, neither did Harris.
One example... for two minutes Trump was given the floor to rant on about how Victor Orban thinks he's great but no-one made the point that he's one of the two leaders in the EU who are Putin poodles and wannabe dictators like Trump.
Having just been to Dachau and seen the result of one lying psychopath, the last thing we needed was to see another on his way to power.
Suddenly depressed again by this and by how bloody expensive London is. $50 aud to go to and from Wembley from Kew last night... 5.8 miles away.