Sunday 25 September 2022

My Tavistock Tick as They Clock Up a Trophy Win

Front cover of e-programme (sent by email on request as a pdf file)

Hopperational Details

Date & Venue

Saturday 25 September 2022 at Langsford Park

Result

Tavistock 1 Didcot Town 0

Competition

FA Trophy 2nd Qualifying Round

Hopstats

Ground 758 on the lifetime list. Nothing random this time, I just wanted to make this long journey (the longest on my priority list) on a weekend with decent weather.

Context

Tavistock joined my priority list on their promotion from Step 5 last season as Western League champions. Both of these teams are going well in different divisions of the Southern League, and in this competition both needed penalties in rearranged midweek ties in the last round. Tavistock won at Kidlington, and Didcot saw off Hamworthy United at home.

In One Sentence

Tavistock created the clearer chances and deserved the win, but the result was always in doubt.

So What?

The usual cliché about Tavistock being in the hat for the next round and Didcot going home with nothing. No, sorry, that’s Weakest Link. I meant concentrating on the league.

Pre-match Entertainment

Not much time. It was very frustrating to get caught up in car park gridlock after a 5-hr drive, albeit a very scenically rewarding one past Stonehenge and along the edge of Dartmoor. So I just had time for a short walk around the pannier market and the Butcher’s Hall market. This town is well worth a visit. There’s a lot of history, a lovely atmosphere and some interesting architecture, as you would expect from a World Heritage site. 

 


Match Report

Just as in several recent games for me, the two teams largely cancelled each other out in the opening stages. I think it reflects how strong and well-organised teams at Step 4 tend to be these days. I had just noted that Didcot were very marginally looking stronger when Tavistock took the lead a few minutes before the break. They broke from midfield, straight down the centre, and with the defence backing off the ball was played unselfishly to Iestyn Harris who completed a textbook dink finish.

Before half-time, Tavistock had also hit the post and clipped the bar, but they also survived a huge shout for handball. I was at the other end (what’s new?) so can’t shed any light, but there were significant remonstrations from Didcot staff towards the officials, who delayed their walk off the field at half-time.

In the second half, Tavistock hit the post again, but there had also been a couple of goal-line clearances needed in order to hold the lead. There was another excellent penalty claim for the visitors, this time at my end, and they had every right to feel aggrieved over that one. Didcot never gave up, but didn’t really have a cutting edge in attack. I felt that the closing moments lacked some of the frantic excitement and panic that you often see in knockout football when there is only one goal in it. I hope one day I’ll see a goalkeeper score a last-minute equaliser. I’d also written down, “This will be 1-1 or 2-0” earlier. What do I know?

Another 5hrs later my 500-mile round trip was complete, and I live to tell the tale. Don't get me started about the current standard of driving on England's motorways, and the terrible standards of their service stations.

Match Pix

 


 

 


 

Ground Pix

There must be a story behind the four figurines that sit on the rail in front of the main stand, and I’m sorry that I can’t share it. I’ll edit this if someone lets me know. Other than that, nice location, sunny day, good facilities, decent car park. Nice ground making the transition to this level. Those 'hoppers who insist on a traditional printed programme are missing out.

 




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 259 matches is here, on this separate page.

Today sees a classic Grey beating a rare White. White 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

45% (51 from 114)

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! My priorities this season are Plymouth Parkway (another long trip to the wild west!) and eighteen Step 4 grounds all over the country. The first is to re-complete my “everything down to Step 3” list, as they were promoted last season from Step 4 before I could visit.

 

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