This match
will be well-documented elsewhere so I’ll be brief(ish). A defender’s slip almost gifted Nantwich an
immediate goal and with hindsight that could have been the game’s hinge point
right there. The home side tried to
play the ball from the back, and the opening goal after six minutes was a
lovely glancing header by Liam Tomsett as he timed his run from
midfield. I was at the other end but
it looked as if Nantwich keeper Myles Boney was deceived by the bounce.
Ashton
persisted for most of the half with the methodical build-up play but it was
not always productive or fluent. It
was classic home-and-away with the home side being urged to show most
ambition but the away side always threatening a breakout. Indeed, the
visitors gradually grew in confidence and their equaliser was bundled in from
close range following a set piece. The
Ashton website gives it as an own goal for the aforementioned Tomsett. Scoring for both sides – we’ve all done it.
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Nantwich equalise |
However,
Nantwich gave away a needless freekick on the edge of the area for use of an
elbow in a challenge. Half-time managerial
team talk scripts were ripped up as Sam Sheridan scored in stoppage time.
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The winning goal |
The second
half started with a flurry of chances.
Nantwich had the ball in the net after great dribbling and a pass by
Nathan Cotterell but the flag was up for offside. Then Tomsett curled a shot narrowly wide
before Daniel Mooney’s lofted shot hit the Nantwich post and bounced across
the empty goalmouth to safety.
After that,
really clear goal chances were rare.
The two teams cancelled each other out in midfield and both defences
were well organised. Ashton played more directly and pragmatically. The keepers did
what they had to do, which wasn’t a great deal in terms of difficulty. Although another Nantwich goal would have
changed the outcome fundamentally, Ashton never really looked uncomfortable.
I’m not giving
the exact phrasing here, this is a family blog after all, but a cultural
style point goes to the Nantwich fan who told the Ashton keeper Josh
Ollerenshaw that he was “wobblier than a tap dancer’s testicle” (or words to
that effect anyway) towards the end of the first half. You don’t get that in the Premier League.
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