Showing posts with label West Auckland Town. Show all posts
Showing posts with label West Auckland Town. Show all posts

Sunday, 11 May 2014

Sholing McLean Up at Wembley


Hopperational details
Date & Venue
Saturday 10 May 2014 at Wembley Stadium
Result
Sholing 1 West Auckland Town 0
Competition
FA Vase – Final (Step 5)
Hopping
18th visit to the “new” Wembley and here to support Sholing FC.
Pre-match preparation
Both teams have had very heavy fixture workloads in recent times given their fixture pileups.  Sholing have taken the Wessex League title and will return to step 4 after this season of voluntary demotion (assuming they choose to do so).  West Auckland finished 5th in the Northern League.  Here are their respective routes to Wembley.

First Round:
Winchester City 0-1 Sholing
West Auckland 5-0 South Shields

Second Round:
Follands Sports 1-2 Sholing
West Auckland 1-0 Shildon

Third Round:
Reading Town 1-4 Sholing
West Auckland 2-1 Billingham Synthonia

Fourth Round:
Sholing 3-1 Hullbridge Sports
Whickham 1-3 West Auckland (aet)

Fifth Round:
Sholing 1-0 Larkhall Athletic
West Auckland 2-0 Hallen

Sixth-Round:
Sholing 1-0 Wisbech Town
Dunston UTS 0-1 West Auckland

Semi-Final:
Sholing 6-4 Eastbourne United (aggregate – 2-2 & 4-2)
West Auckland 2-1 St Andrews (aggregate – 0-0 and 2-1)

EXCLUSIVE TO MHR: Sholing FC have arrived at Wembley and places are set in the changing room.
(Pic Credit to Dave Fear of Sholing FC)

This match in one sentence
A close and often tense encounter won by a solitary goal and with the Sholing goalkeeper nominated as the official man-of-the-match.
So what?
Sholing are the first southern winners of the FA Vase for seven seasons after a period of Northern League domination.  They will be presented to the crowd at St Mary's before the Southampton v Manchester United game on Sunday.


For West Auckland, the tough experience (though still a great achievement for a step 5 club) of losing at Wembley twice in three years.
The drama unfolds
With hindsight, the first half was forgettable but I reckon that was in the plan for both sides, who paced themselves ready for a full 90 or 120 minutes.  Sholing keeper Matt Brown, or his feet anyway, were called into action after five minutes after a great through ball set John Campbell free.  Sholing’s first chance fell to Lee Wort five minutes later but this time the other keeper Jordan Nixon was able to block.  I took my scene-setter clip at around the midpoint of the first half.  The sides are “sparring” rather than beating each other up.  Sholing are in red and white.



West Auckland’s Andrew Green got the first yellow card of the day for a late tackle.  The best chance so far then fell to Sholing’s Marvin McLean who curled a shot wide when the top corner looked inviting, but West Auckland replied with chances of their own.  My second clip, just before the break, shows Brown flying across the goal to save a freekick from Rob Briggs.  0-0 at half-time



The second half was better from the start as the rain started.  Sholing made a good start territorially and a shot from distance went just wide.  Barry Mason was then denied by an instinctive save from Nixon, before Mattie Moffat shot over the bar at the other end.  Sholing’s Lewis Fennemore went in the book for a missed tackle as the ground conditions worsened with the rain and players began to tire a little.  Campbell had another half-chance and another Sholing defender, Lee Bright, saw yellow.  That tackle was late enough to be recorded on the next page of the diary.  The only goal of the game came amid sun and showers.  The credit goes to Marvin McLean but there was maybe a deflection which helped the ball to loop slowly over Nixon.  If not, it was a clever disguised chip.  1-0 after 71 mins

Let the celebrations begin!  1-0
West Auckland could have levelled immediately as a low driven cross fizzed right through the six-yard box, and Sholing looked to be rocking at the back as West Auckland were forced to press forward.  Brown removed any lingering doubt in the man-of-the-match adjudicator’s mind with a flying save followed by another at his near post, and another just to underline his contribution  This was another flyer to tip over a freekick from Steven Richardson.  Sholing sub Alex Sawyer ended up in the book and as the match entered stoppage time, West Auckland’s Brian Close was booked for a cynical foul but there was still time for them to hit the woodwork with moments to go.  So close to extra-time, but Sholing won this trophy with a sound all-round performance with no weak links and backed up with a keeper in great form.

Here's the clip from the closing stages which shows how close West Auckland came to getting a shot at extra time.  Final score 1-0



Joy and despair in equal measure:



Classy from West as they watch the rest of the presentation
 

Ground Pix




Match Pix



Huddle Stats

Nothing to report today.

Goalkeeper Top Colour Stats
Green for Sholing beat Blue for West Auckland.

2013-14 Summary so far:
3pts for a win, 1pt for a draw, -1pt for a goal conceded and +5pts for a clean sheet

P
W
D
L
GA
(-1 each)
CS
(5 each)
Pts
Pts per Game
Purple
1
1
0
0
0
1
8
8.00
Grey
12
7
2
3
13
5
35
2.92
Red
3
2
0
1
3
1
8
2.67
Green
12
6
1
5
16
3
18
1.50
Yellow
5
1
2
2
9
1
1
0.20
Orange
3
1
1
1
6
0
-2
-0.67
Radioactive Bile
3
1
0
2
6
0
-3
-1.00
Pink
7
1
3
3
16
0
-10
-1.43
Blue
4
0
1
3
7
0
-6
-1.50
What Next?
Watch @GrahamYapp on Twitter for details!



Sunday, 19 February 2012

Hawayday at the Bay








Hopperational details
Date & Venue
Saturday 18 February 2012 at Hillheads
Result
Whitley Bay 1 West Auckland Town 2
Competition
FA Vase Round 5 – a tie between two teams from the step 5 Northern League Division One
Hopping
I am here because I rolled a six.  See last post.  This is within the bounds of normal behaviour for a human being if you ask me.  Venue #451 on the lifetime list.
This match in one sentence
The holders go out in a game that had drama at each end and tension in between, as a late equaliser was wiped out by an even later winner.
So what?
West Auckland go into the last eight, where they will be at home to either Billingham Synthonia or Bournemouth.  Whitley Bay will be, as they say, concentrating on the league
Something random

Far and away the best random notice I have ever seen at a football ground, anywhere.
The drama unfolds
This is a game that has already been well covered, so I am sticking to the spirit and form of this blog and writing from my original notes and impressions, before reading others’ accounts.  Honest.

As I headed north on Saturday morning, the Twittersphere spluttered into operation and the locals were warned of my impending arrival.  And so it was that I was welcomed by @HuddoHudson, @NewcastleDavey and @sheeshkebab among others for some pre-match prattle in The Last Orders, across the road from the ground.  They filled in some of the gaps in my northern league knowledge and were splendid hosts for the day as I embedded myself in the Bell-Enders.  Loved the old-school bell and rattles of the long-standing Bay supporters.

As usual, I recorded a “scene-setter” clip after about ten minutes or so, standing in the bright but cold sunshine behind the goal.  Bay are in blue.  The clip ended with the referee’s whistle for a foul, and I pressed stop before the implications became clear.  The game was not to restart until 3.50pm, some thirty-five minutes later, and from a purely selfish point of view after such a long drive I was relieved that it restarted at all.



All I can say is that my immediate impression was that the Whitley Bay player was over-stretching for a ball that the wind was taking away from him, and the wind was a factor in his mistiming.  It didn’t look like malicious intent, and the reactions of the other players were horror at the injury more than anger towards the perpetrator.  I now know that the tackler was Lee Paul Scroggins, and the injured party was Alex Francis.  It was clear within seconds even to us behind the goal that this was a serious injury.  The ambulance came on to the pitch and it took some time to stabilise Francis before moving him.


It gradually became clear that the game would continue, and at 3.50pm the red card was shown to Scroggins, over half an hour after the event, which was astonishing in itself.  Whitley Bay made a substitution, either tactical or because the player concerned was too distressed to continue, and the rest of the half was played out in a surreal atmosphere – the police arrived as tensions were mounting.

Kyle Hayes, the Bay keeper, saved superbly from Adam Nichols as Town really should have taken the lead.  Then Mark Bell in the other goal went down, rolling in agony after being caught by Paul Chow, but no card was shown.  Within seconds, Bay’s Chris Fawcett was also needing treatment – in that instance I thought I saw a deliberate kick that the officials missed, but I’m not certain who did it.  It was all getting rather niggly.  There was time for Nichols to send in one dangerous cross for Town, and for Bay to go close (McFarlane, I think) with a shot just over.  0-0 at half-time



Whitley Bay started the second half on the front foot and here is the first of several decent saves from Bell, after 48 minutes.



Both goalkeepers were busy, in fact.  Bay certainly looked dangerous as they came forward but there was also palpable anxiety whenever Town got the ball.  Their wide players were finding plenty of space against ten men and there was one other occasion when a shot went straight at Hayes rather than into the net.  It remained tense and we checked the programme to see whether extra time was playable today.  Scores of phone calls were made to the Wives of Whitley Bay making apologies for lateness.  Here’s another clip.



Town had another chance, with the ball being cleared off the line, it appeared, after a moment of goalmouth chaos, but we resigned ourselves to extra time until … well, Wow, what an ending.  That is, if you are a neutral or from West Auckland.

With one minute of normal time to go, Matthew Moffat connected with a corner and he headed in.  0-1

Then this …



Great work by Robbie Dale to fashion the chance for Paul Robinson to score.  1-1

My final clip is the “if only” moment for the Bay...



… because, at 5.26pm, in the 6th minute of stoppage time, a cross-shot at the other end was knocked back and it fell to Michael Rae who smacked it into the roof of the net.  Final Score 1-2

There was a stunned silence, a moment of anger and frustration, and then the home supporters cheered their team, who had lost an FA Vase tie for the first time in four seasons.  For this hopper, it was both a sadness and a privilege to see the run end – I’ve seen them win on the road and twice at Wembley – but now West Auckland fly the Northern League flag for at least one more round, and I hope more supporters will turn up to see it.  They are a resilient side and all eyes will now be on them.  They won both league fixtures too, and should not be underestimated.  The Northern League supplied five of the last sixteen and will have two or three of the last eight in this year’s competition.
One day it would have to end like this.  It's nature's way.
Man-of-the-Match
Robbie Dale (Bay) and Adam Nichols (Town) caught the eye in midfield, and both keepers did well – and on balance I am giving the nod to Mark Bell as I am a lapsed part-time associate member of the goalkeepers’ union.
A snippet from the programme
Bay Watch (Love it!) is a very professionally-produced programme which, for those in the know, clearly shows @damon_th of therealfacup celebrating wildly at Wembley during the Bay’s last win.  There is a whole page devoted to “Whitley’s 5th round drama” which prophetically concludes:

“Today is the seventh time that Whitley have reached this stage of the competition.  On three previous occasions, extra time has been required and twice the tie has gone to a replay.  There have been penalties, sendings-off and last-gasp equalisers.  What drama will today’s game bring?”

The article covers, among others, the home draw against Brigg Town in 2001-2.  “It looked all over for Whitley until Ian Chandler (now Bay manager) sent the fans wild when he scored a dramatic 119th minute equaliser.”  They went on to win the replay and the trophy.  Lee Paul Scroggins had a happier day to some extent in 2002-3 where he scored Bay’s goal in a 5th round home defeat by Oadby Town.   
What I learned today
On a bright sunny day, it is possible to remove one layer of clothing at Hillheads and attend the match with nine rather than the recommended ten.


STOP PRESS: Michael (see below) and others have pointed out to me that I have used the Sunderland pronounciation of "Haway" and therefore I am like that secret agent in 'Allo 'Allo who has irritable vowel syndrome.  So, listen, and I will say this only once, it should indeed have been "Howay" for the authentic Tyneside feel and I mode a mustook.  I feel so sully, but I have lawned something useful!
What Next?
As readers will know by now, forward planning is not a strength but I am certainly eyeing up the Bournemouth v Billingham Synthonia replay next Saturday.