The Cornish club's Historic 914-Mile Round Journey Creates National League History
Regarding the players, staff, and travelling supporters from the Cornish outfit, the gruelling return journey of 914 miles to face Gateshead proved bittersweet in the end. Their lengthy coach ride starting in south-west Cornwall travelling the length of England to the north-east yielded one league point plus complimentary drinks.
Truro drew the National League fixture at 2-2 at Gateshead International Stadium this past Saturday having led 2-0 in the 54th minute, in what is turning out to be a campaign defined by long travels and tireless road trips across England's highways. After goals from Dominic Johnson-Fisher and Christian Oxlade-Chamberlain, Gateshead rebounded via Adom and a 70th-minute equalizer from Nouble.
“Clubs that come down to us, most of them are flying down and staying over on the Friday, so for us to have to do it on the coach is not ideal, but because we have so many long journeys, that’s the way we have to do it.” — John Askey
Already this term Truro have made a trek to Carlisle resulting in a 3-0 loss that clocked up 878 miles. Such is the club’s relative isolation, their shortest away match is against Yeovil Town, a roughly two-and-a-half-hour drive via the A30 to Huish Park, 130 miles each way.
Unifying Impact from Extended Journeys
On Saturday the first 90 Truro fans to arrive shared a £920 bar tab, sponsored by Sky Bet, with the generous free-drinks fund equating to £1 per mile covered. Fortunately, the squad could interrupt their travel with a pause at Derby's training facility.
Even their Canadian chair, Eric Perez, accustomed to long-haul trips as he frequently flies seven hours from Toronto to London, understands the challenge facing the club he took over in 2023 with ambitions of “doing a Wrexham”.
All this time on the road has benefits too for Cornwall’s first professional football club, he believes. “It's certainly not a brief trip, It's an exceptionally long distance relatively,” Perez stated. “But what that does is galvanise our side even further – everybody spends time together, we are accustomed to journeying as a group.”
Loyal Supporters Face Long Trips
One of Truro’s stalwart supporters, John Joyce, is resigned to long days of travelling yet stays devoted, notwithstanding occasional flight issues and wearisome train treks. He calculated the recent trip at roughly £400 in costs and missed income, remarking, “I worked for Nato in the last six years of my career in the navy, and it was a shorter drive from Brussels back to Cornwall than it is from Cornwall to Gateshead.”
Reflecting on the situation, following the Carlisle expedition: “The thing that makes Truro special as a club is that the supporters get behind the team regardless of circumstances. Last term's promotion success so it was easy to get behind the players, yet the supporters rarely complain and they appreciate what the players have done.”