Saturday, 18 August 2018

Frome With View - Football Can Be Cruel



I downloaded this programme (free) from the club website before travelling, but I made sure I was early enough to get this hard copy at the ground.  Call me old-fashioned.  Oh, you do already.

Hopperational Details
Date & Venue
Saturday 18th August at The Memorial Ground
Result
Hartley Wintney 2 Frome Town 1
Competition
Southern League Premier Division South (Step 3)
Hopstats
Ground 651 on my lifetime list and I am here randomishly because of this result from the Liga Nacional in Guatemala.


Pedro Samayoa’s last minute winner for Municipal over Deportivo Petapa brings me here.  A home win meant that I would have been at Dorking Wanderers and a draw would have sent me to South Shields.  The evidence is on Twitter, but I will be headed to those grounds soon enough as I close in on “The 248” (everywhere from Premier League to Step 3) with six to go.
Context
Third league game of the season for both sides.  Hartley Wintney have started with two wins, whereas Frome have one point from an opening-day draw.  The hosts have shot up from Step 5 in recent years, winning their Step 3 place through last season’s play-offs.  Frome are established in this league and had mid-table respectability last season.
In one sentence
Harsh on Frome, whose sub keeper-manager had saved a last minute penalty, but this Hartley Wintney side do not know when they are beaten.
So what?
Still very early in the season but the clubs find themselves near opposite ends of the table.  Hartley Wintney’s 100% record is good enough for second place on goal difference.  Frome Town are just outside the bottom three.
Match Report
Frome took an early lead, Matt Morris bundling the ball past home keeper Adam Desbois.  Adam is a 17-year old on Reading’s books, and he apparently missed the last game because of an England call-up.  The rest of the first half had few highlights.  There was plenty of effort and hard work from both sides, but Frome’s defence coped easily with Hartley Wintney’s attempts to draw level.  Desbois varied his distribution methods and could often be found as a sweeper-keeper nearer the halfway line than the goal-line.  He has a kick like a cannon and his was a remarkable performance for his age.  The home side tried to exploit the pace of Romari Hart and always got the ball forward quickly, but Frome’s defence was excellent and well-organised.  The home supporters called for a penalty just before the break, claiming a raised defensive hand had touched the ball.  I was not in a good position to give the neutral’s judgement.

In the second half, Frome missed a good chance (though it seemed to me that two players were offside) and then Hartley Wintney missed their best one so far as a right-wing cross from Claudio Herbert went past everyone in the area.

The hinge point of the game came with the departure due to injury of Frome keeper Darren Bechet.  The manager Dan Greaves replaced him, and thankfully for my spreadsheet, was wearing the same colours.  He couldn’t do anything about the equalising goal that came from Nicholas Ciardini as he burst through the middle of the defensive line.

Frome tried but failed to catch Desbois out of position from the restart.  The last few minutes were end-to-end entertainment as both sides went for the win, but as we entered the 90th minute an inexplicable push in the box resulted in a penalty kick for the home side.  Taken by Ciardini, it was an easy save for Greaves low to his right.


However, there was time for a cruel winning goal, again with no chance for Greaves.  Nathan Smart goes down as the home hero, gleefully scoring the winning goal in the 5th minute of stoppage time.  Joy and despair, victory and defeat.  Frome looked devastated, and who can blame them – they had led from the 12th to the 85th minute.  Even as a neutral, never leave early.

Pix
Hartley Wintney in orange.  The ground still has a Step 4 feel because the club’s promotions are as yet still ahead of their infrastructure.  Everything about the club made a good first impression, and it is to be hoped that they can find a sustainable model that will also increase their core support.  Well worth a hop in daylight hours so you can appreciate the semi-rural setting.













Goalkeeper Top Colour Stats
New this season – a pre-match prediction based only on keeper top colours as a preliminary test of the data.  Proper statistical significance test to follow in due course.  This is now based on 152 observations.

Today: Purple beats Radioactive Bile, but no clean sheet.  Bile drops one place in the table.

Pre-match Prediction based on Keeper Top Colour:
Prediction:
Home Win
Was the prediction correct?
Yes
% of correct predictions so far
86% (6 from 7)

Based on conventional 3pts for a win, 1pt for a draw, but also -1pt for a goal conceded (GC) and +5pts for a clean sheet (CS).  Colours ranked on a points per game (PPG) basis. For new readers the odd .5 was caused by a shocking half-and-half shirt and the .1 was due to a substitute goalkeeper in a different colour.  The Fire Cracker colour was confirmed with the help of the social media team at Dulux UK.  All of this arises from a comment attributed to Petr Cech that orange is the best colour for a goalkeeper because it changes the behaviour of other players around the box.  It may not be statistically significant as yet, but football coverage ignores this point as a matter of routine.


P
W
D
L
GC
CS
Pts
PPG
Red
10.0
5.0
1.0
4.0
11.0
3.0
20.0
2.000
Blue
38.1
16.0
7.0
15.1
54.0
14.0
71.0
1.864
Grey
46.5
22.0
10.0
14.5
73.5
13.0
67.5
1.452
Green
80.0
40.0
10.0
30.0
135.0
20.0
95.0
1.188
Fire Cracker
3.0
1.0
0.0
2.0
6.0
1.0
2.0
0.667
Maroon
5.0
2.0
1.0
2.0
9.0
1.0
3.0
0.600
Purple
16.0
7.0
3.0
6.0
36.0
4.0
8.0
0.500
Orange
34.5
11.0
7.0
16.5
59.5
6.0
10.5
0.304
Yellow
31.0
8.0
7.0
16.0
65.0
5.0
-9.0
-0.290
Radioactive Bile
17.0
7.0
0.0
10.0
36.0
2.0
-5.0
-0.294
Pink
16.0
5.0
5.0
6.0
31.0
1.0
-6.0
-0.375
Black
5.0
1.0
3.0
1.0
14.0
0.0
-8.0
-1.600
White
1.9
0.0
0.0
1.9
4.0
0.0
-4.0
-2.105
What Next?
Follow @GrahamYapp on Twitter!  I may try to get to either Bamber Bridge or Scarborough Athletic on Tuesday.  I will almost certainly go to Rushden & Higham v Cogenhoe for a United Counties League Cup game on Wednesday – the hosts are landlords for Step 3 AFC Rushden & Diamonds and that’s my preferred way of getting the tick.  Then I am out of circulation for a few days until a provisional planned trip to South Shields on Saturday 1 September.  If all falls into place and there is a helpful draw for the FA Cup 1st and 2nd Qualifying Rounds (8th and 22nd September) then I should be able to complete The 248 by the end of the month.


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