Post-6: Soccerless Saturday

PictureMe / December 2011
Picture by Na-Yeon, a friend of Danielle’s.

I tried to play soccer on Saturday. I failed. Only two players showed up. We had lunch, instead, and went home.

I played soccer almost every Saturday between September 2011 and July 2012. We haven’t played since then.I don’t know why people stopped showing up, but I can say it was one of my favorite things to do. The players were mostly foreigners (mostly English teachers), largely British, with a few Korean regulars, too. Most of us were not very good (a few were), but no one minded. It was all in good fun, and spirits were always high: Whoever showed up would play. Sometimes it was more than 20 people, sometimes fewer than 10. Always enjoyable, to me. I have good memories of these games.

We played in the easternmost neighborhood or Incheon, called Bupyeong, at a middle school maybe halfway between the recently-opened (as of November 2012) “Samsan Gymnasium” and “Gulpo Stream” subway stations (삼산체육관역 and 굴포천역) [Map]. I walked there from my home in central Bucheon, 40 minutes away on foot, across Lake Park. Here is a map:

The red-arrow in the map is anchored on a crossroad north of where we played. Due to varying “availability” (the ancient principle of “forgiveness not permission” was followed), four or five of the schools south of this intersection were used for games at various times.

If you click on the “Satellite” version of the map and you can see a big lake to the east. That is “Sang-Dong Lake Park”. I walked through it every time I went to play soccer. My home is off to the east, not far. Seoul is off further to the east, if you zoom out.

 

Comments

  1. For some reason this post has attracted a spam attack of dozens of spam-bot comments a day. I am therefore closing comments on this post. If you must leave a comment on this, you’ll have to find another way!

  2. I’ve now deleted all the spam comments, which numbered over 150 since April 10, which all got past the spam filter. About double that didn’t make it and got spam-filtered or to the “To Approve” folder. This post got about 80% of them, but some others were also hit.

    On the positive side, this means this blog has finally entered the consciousness of the Internet, findable by spammers/spambots.

    At the old host, Weebly, there were only occasionally spam hit and runs, for some reason often from bus companies in India.

  3. I thought I’d stopped them but dozens more came in since then. I’ve been away but have now cleaned them up again. Need to get smart on comment security!

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