Sunday 5 May 2024 at Wembley
National League Playoff Final
Solihull Moors 2 Bromley 2 aet
Bromley win 4-3 on penalties
All credit to Solihull for coming
back twice with equalising goals, but in the end it was the poor quality of
their penalty kicks that mean that Bromley will join the ranks of League Two next season for the first time in their history. Michael Cheek had given Bromley the lead
just before the interval, only for Joe Sbarra to level the match just after the restart.
Cheek’s goal was disputed by Moors, who claimed a foul in the build-up. Cheek
scored his second from the spot to restore the Bromley lead, and then Jamie
Osborne equalised again with a cool finish. There were no more goals in extra
time. This match had been something of a clash of styles. Bromley could have
easily been two up before Solihull turned up. Then Moors did better by playing
the ball patiently on the ground, working their triangles. Bromley were more
dangerous in the air, and more direct. But as the end of the match drew nearer,
Bromley looked stronger and fitter. Bromley keeper Grant Smith saved Tyrese
Shade’s first penalty, Cheek scored his and then Joss Labadie missed too.
Although Moors’ keeper Nick Hayes saved from Ashley Charles it was still
advantage Bromley and it fell to skipper Byron Webster to roll a penalty in and signal the start of a promotion party.
I’m going to grumble again about an £8
A4-sized programme in a stadium limiting bag size to A4. I don’t think I have
ever paid that much for a programme and it is simply exploitation.
Tuesday 9 May 2024 at Lord’s
T20 Cricket, Oxford University v
Cambridge University
CU Women 163-4 (20 ov) beat OU Women
127-8 (20 ov) by 36 runs
OU
Men 160-5 (19.4 ov) beat CU Men 156-7 (20 ov) by 5 wkts
Cambridge
Women were put into bat and they recovered from the early loss of Alice Bebb to
post a formidable total. Issy Routledge and Ciara Boaden shared a 50
partnership. Routledge fell for 40 and Boaden was unbeaten on 77. Oxford’s
fielding was somewhat ragged under pressure with a key moment being a six that
went through the fielder’s hands on the boundary. Their bowlers had also
struggled with line early on. Hannah Sutton finished with all four Cambridge
wickets to fall, for 29 runs, but the other bowling figures all had zeroes in
the final column.
It was
not long before Oxford fell behind the required run rate and the innings was
eventually strangled. The result was never really in doubt from an early stage
although all of the top order got off the mark and into double figures. It was
Routledge’s day as she took a hat-trick and finished with a magnificent
4-0-12-4 and a hand in a run out as Oxford’s batting turned to desperate
measures. She was supported by Garima Kakkar with 2-22.
Ciara Bowden on her way to the top score. #keepertopcolourstats deemed inadmissible by the rules committee (i.e. me) |
Cambridge
men also lost the toss and were asked to bat first. They made a good start
including some sharp running between the wickets but the bowling of Oxford
captain Ben Swanson arrested the pace of progress. Zak le Riche was bowled by
the hostile pace of Justin Clarke after an opening stand of 37, and opening
partner Harry Houillon was run out for 49 as a non-striker, much to his
surprise as he jogged towards the crease. That was great work by Toby Brown in the
field. Alex Ferreira and Hari Kukreja weighed in with 22 and 32 respectively,
but they struggled to get the rate above six an over and it felt a little short of what
they would need.
Cambridge
took two Oxford wickets in the power play overs but opener George Roberts was
now joined by Justin Clarke. Roberts did most of the scoring but they were able
to accelerate and get well ahead of the rate required by the end of the tenth
over. Oxford were 98-3 compared with
Cambridge’s 74-2 at the same stage. Cambridge in the end did well to take the
game to the final over. Roberts managed to keep enough of the strike to secure
the victory, as at times his partners were becalmed at the other end. There was
a moment of hope for Cambridge when Roberts fell for 79 off 51 balls, but Josh
Royan came in to score 11, joining Max Kirby who finished with 15 off 27, with
enough bat-on-ball moments to see their team over the winning line with two
balls to spare and five wickets in hand.
Roberts reaches a half-century with a push to off |
Saturday
11 May 2024 at Wembley
Non-League
Finals Day
FA
Vase : Romford 3 Great Wakering Rovers 0
FA
Trophy : Solihull Moors 2 Gateshead 2 aet
Gateshead
win 5-4 on penalties
This
event suffers from the usual between-match imprisonment and it felt somewhat
flat in the concourses at times compared with other years. The proportion of
fans staying to watch both games seems to have declined. I was particularly
irritated today at being asked to make a move (from the Moors section) even
before the FA Trophy had been presented to Gateshead. That is culturally wrong
and very disappointing. I politely declined and nothing came of it. I’ve given
up on bemoaning the existence of popcorn, candy floss and pic n’mix, partly
because I couldn’t seriously recommend the pies as the traditional football
fare. I will, however, give credit as due for a sensible double programme at a fair price of £5.
But I
digress. On the pitch, Romford (in blue) looked the more likely to score. It took 37
minutes for Great Wakering to have a real sniff in the opposing penalty area.
It remained scoreless at half-time. Hassan Nalbant’s composed left-foot finish
opened the scoring for Romford after 52 minutes, and it was soon followed by a
second. Great Wakering were appealing for a penalty. On the resulting break,
Sam Deering scored after Finlay Dorrell’s shot had been saved. The destination
of the Vase was never really threatened after that point and eventually Nalbant
would get his second goal in stoppage time. This was another very neat finish,
a curling shot with the outside of the foot.
The FA
Trophy final came down to penalties, and the deja-vu for Solihull must have
been overpowering. You have to feel for Moors keeper Nick Hayes. He saved three
spot-kicks and ended up on the losing side, and that must be very rare indeed.
Tyrese Shade and Joss Labadie were given redemption chances after last week’s
misses – and they both missed again. Gateshead’s Dajaune Brown finally sealed
the win, and would have been very relieved to do so. The game had finished 1-1
after 90 minutes and then 2-2 after extra time. Regan Booty had given Gateshead
the lead in first-half stoppage time, but Solihull again showed resilience when
their equaliser came from frontman Mark Beck with 20 minutes left. This was a
brave diving header from Joe Newton’s cross. Beck then scored from the spot in
the first period of extra time only for Brown to redeem himself after a couple
of missed chances with a goal timed at 111 minutes. Penalties were inevitable
after that, but don’t mention the word anywhere near Solihull any time soon.
Brown’s winner was the end of the ninth round of penalties. Cruel game,
sometimes. The video clip below is Beck's penalty for the short-lived Solihull lead. Gateshead are in white.
The four sporting confrontations so far this week gave a chance to play at one of the world’s great sporting venues to some lesser-known players, or those at the start of their sporting lives. The Wembley events are great days out (mostly) for the fans of the clubs that don’t get to play there so often. I may have seen an international cricketer or two learning their craft at Lord’s. Time will tell, but first we had two big name clubs back at Wembley. Having said that, whoever wins this next match will make club history.
Sunday
12 May 2024 at Wembley
Women’s
FA Cup Final
Manchester
United 4 Tottenham Hotspur 0
This
game has had lots of coverage elsewhere. Beth England was to hit the bar in the
second half but that was one of the few bright spots for Spurs. Manchester
United had looked the better side from the start, but the timing of Ella
Toone’s magnificent run and curling shot could not have been better, coming
just before the interval. Rachel William’s headed second was from the textbook
– she had had a near-miss in the early minutes, and then Lucia Garcia was
gifted a third by a misplaced pass from Becky Spencer in the Spurs goal. Garcia
would add her second, thanks to a neat assist from Millie Turner, before United
rang the changes by bringing on their classy substitutes including Melvine
Malard & Nikita Parris with no noticeable loss of dominance. Mary Earps in
the United goal had very little to do other than breathe a sigh of relief when
England’s header hit the woodwork. Now both of these sides will indirectly
decide the destination of this season’s WSL title in the week ahead. Chelsea
play Spurs on Wednesday and United next weekend and will need to win both.
So, that's 37 games at the "new" Wembley for me, spread over 33 visits because of the four double-headers. This
week has seen the keepertopcolourstats database and table arrive at 301
matches, so it is time for me to learn how to do a Kruskal-Wallis One-Way
Analysis of Variance test. This may take me a while! Solihull’s results were
against the trend, Romford’s and Manchester United’s went to form. The table is
here, and That Was The Week That Was. Thank you for your interest.
Any of my readers know how to do one of these? Image credit: Wikipedia |