Showing posts with label Northern Prem D1W. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Northern Prem D1W. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 September 2024

Racing Stumble at the Last

 

The programme front cover shows Tyler Hollyoake (2006-24) and there was a minute of silence in his memory before kickoff.

Hopperational Details

Date & Venue

Saturday 7 September 2024 at Townsend Meadow, Hampton Road

Result

Racing Club Warwick 2 Hanley Town 3

Competition

FA Trophy 1st Round Qualifying

Hopstats

Ground 792 on my lifetime list and a return to a truly random decision-making process involving an octahedral die and a 1990s coin ...

 


Context

Two Step 4 sides but from different divisions within the Northern Premier League. Hanley Town play in the West division whereas Warwick are in the Midland. A knockout game may be a welcome break for the sides – neither has started particularly well in the league. I learned from some friendly home supporters (thanks, gents!) that a certain Callum Carsley was absent from the side due to supporting his dad Lee’s big day with England in Dublin. RCW are up to Step 4 this season after promotion from the United Counties League.

Match Report

As a passing neutral, I don’t enjoy one-sided games very much, so this was right at the other end of the dramatic scale. I try to think about the hinge point of each game, and generally speaking, the later it is the better. I don’t think I’ll see many with later dramas than this, with ex-Stoke and ex-Blues defender Ryan Shotton scoring in the 88th minute from a set piece. The Hanley player-manager put his side into the lead for the first time in the game.

The score had been 1-1 at the break. A somewhat tetchy start as both sides tested out the officials resulted in Warwick taking a 10th minute lead. Josh McKenzie had an easy close-range finish after Hanley keeper Adam Whitehouse could not hold on to a driven low cross. It would have taken McKenzie’s mind off his early yellow card.

Ryan Shotton about to do managerial things to support his keeper

Another EFL veteran, Tom Pope (ex-Port Vale for example) levelled just five minutes later from the penalty spot. This was a disputed penalty given for dangerous play, a raised defensive foot getting too close to a somewhat stooping attacking head giving plenty of room for debate. I wasn’t close enough to make any other comment other than the ref won’t be getting Christmas cards with a Warwick postmark, but he was almost certainly technically correct under current guidance for referees. Whether the bounce height off a 3G surface is a factor in this is also a point of discussion.

 

Tom Pope makes it 1-1 from the spot

The rest of the first half was pretty even, with defences holding firm. There were lots of aerial battles and the biggest goal threats came from set pieces, with both sides having plenty of height both at the back and the front. A Pope header had hit the bar.

Hanley got on top, territorially at least, after the interval but Warwick looked dangerous on the break. They had wasted one such chance with a one-on-one before they took the lead, with 75 minutes gone. The perseverance of James Hancocks on the Warwick left flank allowed him to set up Archie Hamp in plenty of space. By this stage both sides had hit the proverbial woodwork again.

Hanley did not fold and their second equaliser came on 86 minutes through Brandon Newell, assisted by Pope, and then came Shotton’s late, late intervention to put Hanley into the next round. As I say, great for the passing neutral with an interest in #keepertopcolourstats, but gutting for the hosts. One enjoyable feature was watching how the ex-EFL veterans managed themselves through a full ninety minutes. As a veteran myself, in a different field of course, respect is what I say!

 

Pix

RC Warwick in gold and black.

 

 





Not sure whether this arty attempt worked but you can decide


Goalkeeper Top Colour Stats Update

The background to this, and the latest keeper top colour league table, is here on this dedicated page.

Today Green loses to Red. No clean sheets. No change in the colour league positions since last week.




Pre-match Prediction based on Keeper Top Colour:

Prediction:

Away Win

Was the prediction correct?

Yes

% of correct predictions so far

49% (84 from 171)

 

What Next?

A last-minute decision next Friday, probably. I'm on Threads (grahamyapp) with the tumbleweed rather than in the toxic cesspit of Twitter these days.

By the way …

The four fish on the Icelandic coin are capelin, and the non-fish side represents the four traditional protector spirits of Iceland – a giant, a bull, an eagle and a dragon. I picked up this coin on a 1996 visit that included KA Akureyri v Fram Reykjavik which was my first game outside England and sits in position 41 on my lifetime ground list.

 

Monday, 8 January 2024

Five-One to the Albions

  



Hopperational Details

Dates & Venues

Saturday 6 January 2024 at The Vestacare Stadium

Sunday 7 January 2024 at The Hawthorns

Results

Avro FC 0 Witton Albion 1

West Bromwich Albion 4 Aldershot Town 1

Competition

Sat: Northern Premier League D1 West (Step 4)

Sun: FA Cup Round 3

Hopstats

Saturday finds me at ground 773 on the lifetime list, and here because Avro made an early Game On declaration giving me enough time to make the journey north. Mind you, I needn’t have worried – this is a 3G surface. Sunday is a rite-of-passage game for the Yapps. I take over the Grandad role (which means a pocket full of half-time sweets) and join my son and grandson for the latter’s first-ever game. Three generations staying true to the family roots.

Context

Avro are performing very well in their first Step 4 season but maybe of late have struggled to convert draws to wins. Witton Albion are mid-table. West Bromwich Albion are in the Championship play-off positions but are likely to field a side of squad players for the FA Cup game against National League Aldershot. Aldershot have seen off Lewes, Swindon Town and Stockport County in earlier rounds. The Swindon game was a remarkable 7-4 scoreline, with the Shots having been 7-0 up.

In One Sentence Each

Witton Albion edged a very close encounter with a first-half goal, but were pushed to the end.

West Bromwich Albion had a comfortable win built on two early goals, Aldershot’s consolation coming at the very end of stoppage time.

So What?

Avro drop to 5th but remain in the play-off places. Witton are three points behind, in 9th. WBA will await the fourth-round draw and Aldershot will concentrate on the FA Trophy in the first instance with a trip to Bishop’s Stortford next weekend.

Match Report : Avro v Witton

The only goal of the game came after 14 minutes. It was a really good finish by Harry Brazel. The ball sat up nicely for a first time low shot into the left corner. These two evenly-matched and well-organised sides then largely cancelled each other out. Witton’s keeper Ollie Martin made one block with his foot and his opposite number James Coates prevented a second Witton goal with a spectacular flying save as the first half ended.

The second half started with chances at either end, but gradually Avro’s urgency started to dominate. Witton looked very solid in defence until 69 minutes had passed when Martin made the first of two exceptional saves in quick succession. This was a diving stop with a strong left arm. Avro continued to get the ball into the area and there were a couple of games of pinball which could easily have produced the equaliser. With eight minutes to go the floodlights went out and I wondered whether I would end up having to make this long journey again. My personal groundhopping rules have not yet been tested with an abandonment! Fortunately, illumination was soon restored, the Avro pressure was renewed and the Witton defences did enough. This was a very hard-earned three points for the visitors.

Ground Pix

The Vestacare Stadium has a good deal of character about it, with various types of locations for watching the game. Watch the potholes in the car park if you are coming for an evening game in the dark, though!

 






Match Pix

 Avro in the black and blue stripes.











Match Report : WBA v Aldershot

This game has been well-covered in the mainstream media so I will merely add that the main interest was in the promising performances of a number of young debutants and squad players. The result wasn’t really in doubt once the Baggies were three up after half an hour. Tom Fellows on the right flank had been doing most of the damage, albeit in lots of space that he was allowed by the defence. The first goal was a peach of a finish from Nathaniel Chalobah. The second was a gift for Jovan Malcolm, and the third was a powerful instinctive finish from an inadvertent loose ball by Daryl Dike. This was Dike’s return from serious injury and he did not reappear for the second half. The visiting fans, not unreasonably it has to be said, gleefully gave us a rendition of, “Is this a Library?”.

Fellows had to wait until the 88th minute before getting his name on the scoresheet and there was still time for a consolation for Aldershot’s Ollie Bray which took a bit of gloss off the result. Much of the game was played at training ground pace, and Albion conceded a fair bit of possession in the second half, playing on the break. Caleb Taylor looked comfortable on the right side of the back three in his second appearance, and there were five WBA debutants all told. The only one who won’t want to see the highlights again is Layton Love, who skied a good chance when through on the break. Job done, though, and we were at pains to point out to my grandson that … It. Is. Not. Always. Like. This. At. The. Albion.

Ground Pix

 

Tony Brown, Albion legend of 60s & 70s


Boiler Man, current Albion legend. Or laughing stock.

Fair play to Aldershot who filled the Smethwick End with 5700 fans




Match Pix

Aldershot in red.


Goalkeeper Top Colour Stats Update

Usually accompanied by a pre-match prediction on Threads just before kickoff. Working towards being able to compute a respectable test of statistical significance, it looks like an Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) test will be appropriate. The full keeper top performance table from my last 289 matches is here, on this separate page, and I’ll organise the test when we reach 300 pieces of evidence.

This weekend Pink lost to Yellow on Saturday and Grey beat Green on Sunday.

Pre-match Prediction based on Keeper Top Colour:

Predictions:

Home Win & Home Win

Was the prediction correct?

No (Sat) & Yes (Sun)

% of correct predictions so far

48% (69 from 144)


What Next?

Unsure because we are in the weather-dependent segment of the season. I have to be in the Midlands again next weekend and will look to pick off another one of my 21 target Step 4 grounds if I can. My next chance to tick off Plymouth Parkway to complete Step 3 is not until the following week.

Sunday, 2 October 2022

Hillmen Avengers

Hopperational Details

Date & Venue

Saturday 1 October 2022 at Surrey Street

Result

Glossop North End 2 Ramsbottom United 1

Competition

Northern Premier League Division One West (Step 4)

Hopstats

Ground #759 on the lifetime list and I am here pragmatically rather than randomly because I am trying to get a few long journeys done from my priority list, before the weather worsens and fuel reaches the same price per litre as other pricey liquids such as Chanel No 5 perfume or Hewlett-Packard magenta printer ink.

Context

Glossop (aka The Hillmen) are doing much better in the league than Ramsbottom, but Ramsbottom knocked Glossop out of the FA Trophy last month. See what I did there with the blogpost title? Both sides conceded four goals in home defeats last time out – the hosts against Hanley Town in midweek and the visitors in the subsequent round of the FA Trophy at home to Clitheroe.

In One Sentence

A strong start to the second half in difficult conditions was enough to win the game for Glossop.

So What?

The sides finish the day in 7th and 19th (of 20) places in the division. Glossop are one of six teams separated only by goal difference, four points off the lead. Ramsbottom are three points above the last-placed team.

Pre-match Entertainment

No spare time today before kickoff, but I had chosen the scenic route across the A628/A616 into Derbyshire. I’ve never seen those reservoirs so low.

Match Report

Ramsbottom took the lead with an early penalty, converted by Michael Fitzgerald. It was given when the home keeper and one defender jumped for the ball with one attacker. It looked fairly innocuous to me from a distance and was the first of several disputed decisions in the game. However, I wasn’t as close as the referee, of course.

Glossop equalised before half-time. A shot was blocked but came back to Louis White, and his low shot back across the keeper nestled in the far right corner. Ramsbottom could have retaken the lead soon enough. A bouncing ball through the middle fell nicely for James Murphy. He rounded the keeper but was forced wide and by then excellent positioning by Ekow Coker allowed him to clear off the line. So, level at the break with all to play for, as they say.

Glossop took command of the second half and started to use the breezy conditions to their advantage. Ram’s keeper Charlie Monks produced a flying one-handed tip-over to keep out a long-range shot, but the winning goal came before too long from a viciously inswinging corner. Monks missed his punch and the ball pinged around for a moment before being touched in from close range by Harry Freedman. This pic shows the development of the crucial chaotic moment.

With about twenty minutes to go, it was now about game management. Ramsbottom would need to commit forward, and conditions favoured fast breaks. For this neutral observer, the game rather fizzled out. The game had become increasingly niggly, and eventually in the dying moments something happened in the visitors’ penalty area which led to an old-fashioned bundle. The ref and assistants waited patiently for the rutting to stop before administering a flurry of yellow cards. Not long after the re-start, Coker picked up a red card and Glossop saw out the last few moments with ten men.

A small amount of water, or maybe expensive isotonic fluid, who knows, was thrown towards a spectator as the players left the field, in response to some verbal provocation, and of course the officials received their traditional “welcome” as they followed. I headed for the return drive through the High Peak in the remaining sunshine of the day.

Other Match Pix

Glossop in Blue.
 
 




Ground Pix

Some of the best surroundings on the Step 4 circuit. This is a neat and tidy ground with decent facilities for this level, and a bit of a slope to add character.

 







 

Goalkeeper Top Colour Stats Update

Usually accompanied by a pre-match prediction on Twitter just before kickoff. Working towards being able to compute a respectable statistical significance test by the end of the season. The full keeper top performance table from my last 260 matches is here, on this separate page.

Pre-match Prediction based on Keeper Top Colour:

Today, Yellow meets Green, and the win is enough to lift Yellow off the bottom of the table. No clean sheets.

Prediction:

Away Win

Was the prediction correct?

No

% of correct predictions so far

44% (51 from 115)

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. The odd decimal places were caused either by undeniable half-and-half tops or lower league sub keepers 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 (and supported by anonymous scientists of some description) that orange is the best colour for a goalkeeper because it changes the behaviour of other players around the box. It is supposedly because of an innate primeval human reaction to the colour and the colour “spreads” more in the vision of a striker at the key moment of decision. Genius or garbage? The evidence is gathering here, and is leaning towards the latter.

What Next?

Follow @GrahamYapp on Twitter! I am planning to take in the three Saturday games of the Southern Counties East League Hop next week before returning to the priority list.