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Post by minstermann on Sept 7, 2024 17:33:12 GMT
Two headed goals, 1 in each half, was enought to give the Magpies 3 hard earned points, against a big pacy Hungerford side. Will Fletcher scored the first goal on 9 minutes after a mazy, dribbling run by Jez Bedford. { He was awarded MoM} Hungerford replied when the speedy Jacob Bancroft broke through on 16 minutes. Cam Munn scored the winner on 66 minutes - a loveley glancing header just inside the upright from a beauitiful cross [by who?]. It gave the Hungerford keeper no chance but he did have a good game overall to keep the score down I felt. 596 brave souls braved the rain which fell for most of the match. I did notice that one or two family supporters were searching for seats. There didnt appear to be any corporate people there and there were a lot of empty seats around the Directors box. Perhaps a third stand could be in the offing ? Selected other results Swindon 5 Poole 0 Merthyr 3 Sholing 0 AFC Totton 2 Basingstoke 2 Chertsey 3 Winchester3Dorchester 4 Frome 0 Gosport 3 Tiverton 0 We are 10th on 9 points
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Post by diddlysquat on Sept 7, 2024 19:11:48 GMT
Yes I saw a mum and daughter searching for a seat, and also a dad and daughter. I feel there should be a steward allocated to each stand who could keep his eye out for supporters like the ones mentioned and direct them to spare seats - and why couldnt the padded seats be used if there were no corporate people.
We need to encourage the occassional supporter and give them a positive experience in the hope they will become permanent fans
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Post by Jumpers for goalposts on Sept 7, 2024 20:01:55 GMT
In reply to the first post, I think the cross for the second goal was from Carmichael (doubtless the match report will confirm for sure). Two crosses almost put on the heads of the scorers!
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Post by Admin on Sept 8, 2024 8:04:56 GMT
Graham's Match Report -
Wimborne Town 2 Hungerford Town 1 - Southern League Premier South - 7 Sept 2024
A headed goal in each half by leading marksmen Will Fletcher.and Cam Munn gave Wimborne victory in this battle of two towns with identical league records.
Not surprisingly, manager Tim Sills stayed with the same starting line-up who had played so well when knocking Tiverton out of the FA Cup a week ago.
With the steady rain giving the ball a zip across the lush turf, the game burst into life from the first whistle. Matt Neale opened proceedings by stinging keeper Clarke's hands from twenty yards, while at the housing estate end left-winger Bancroft fired narrowly wide after collecting a perfectly weighted through ball. In the visitors' next attack, Josh Carmichael sprinted back to make a superb sliding tackle to deny the speedy Bancroft another opportunity. Matty Burrows free-kick from the left was met at the far post by Sam Jackson but his header had little power to bother the keeper. Then, on nine minutes, Wimborne took the lead. Harvey Wright found Jez Bedford wide on the right with a diagonal Scott Arnold would have been proud of. The winger dribbled this way and that as three defenders tried, and failed, to stop him. His dinked cross was met in the middle of the goal by Fletcher who gleefully headed home from a yard.
On the quarter-hour mark, Bedford's jinking run discombobulated more defenders, and set up Burrows for a low shot from the edge of the area which Clarke saved low down by the post. It was a crucial save, as in the next minute Hungerford equalised. Danger man Bancroft raced onto Berry-Hargreaves' defence-splitting pass down the inside-left channel and coolly slid the ball past the advancing Ross Flitney. It was entertaining, end-to-end fare: Cam Munn headed another Bedford cross over the bar; Watts' optimistic free-kick from thirty-five yards worried the watching pigeons more than Flitney; and Wright sent his grubber of a shot over the greasy ground wide of the post from an even longer distance.
Disappointingly, the last twenty minutes of the half was rather scrappy with little goalmouth action. Watts forced Flitney into a save at the near post, and the big stopper caught a corner under pressure. With rain continuing to fall, both teams wasted no time in retreating to the dressing-rooms at half-time.
The second-half also started brightly. Ben Scorey ended a slick move down the right wing with a cross, before Flitney had to tip the ball over his bar after a cross from the right led to ten seconds of pin-ball in front of him. Bedford continued to torment his defenders as he twisted and twirled with the ball seemingly tied to his boot-laces. On the hour mark, Burrows was chopped down as he dribbled across the penalty area. He took the free-kick himself from the top of the "D" only for the diving Clarke to get a touch to send the ball crashing against the bar. Pressure from The Magpies was building: Fletcher's stretch from Bedford's pass almost diverted the ball past the keeper; Munn headed Bedford's cross over.
Then, on sixty-six minutes, the hosts regained the lead. Carmichael's driven cross from wide on the right was headed just inside the far post by Munn from twelve yards. In their next attack, Burrows won a corner on the left which Jackson headed over.
Now it was Hungerford who exerted pressure. Substitute Harry Morgan half-cleared a corner; Fletcher banged the ball away; Sam Roberts stood strong and stopped a speeding attacker; Bedford was on defensive duty with a sliding tackle; Roberts bravely blocked a shot; and Billy Walker blocked their next two efforts. But Wimborne kept looking for a third: Morgan's close-range shot from Wright's header was blocked; Roberts drove down the right to cross for Fletcher; and a scintillating cross-field move ended with Joe Ryan's cross from the by-line.
As the clock ticked-over into five additional minutes, Harry Baker chased and made two tackles in midfield, and Neale book-ended the game with a shot which Clarke did well to save.
Hungerford were just four points away from a play-off spot last season, so this was a good bench-mark for Tim's team who, to a man, played really well. Roberts and Wright were solid in defence; Carmichael was immense and Neale non-stop in midfield; Fletcher gave his all for the cause; and Bedford lit up a gloomy afternoon. The win lifts us to tenth in the table.
Wimborne: Flitney, Scorey, Roberts, Wright, Jackson, Carmichael (Walker 84), Neale, Bedford (Baker 78), Burrows (Ryan 78), Munn (Morgan 70), Fletcher (Cocklin 90+3)
Attendance: 596
Match stats:
Magpies/Crusaders
Goal attempts on target 7/4 Goal attempts off target 7/2 Goal attempts blocked 2/4 Corners 5/6 Fouls conceded 9/11 Offside 0/4 Cards 1Y/1Y
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Post by magpiesgraham on Sept 8, 2024 8:36:24 GMT
What a wonderful facility our electronic scoreboard is. And well done to the guys for now having the clock continuing in the time added on at the end of the game. We're one the few clubs doing that. At yesterday's game, when there was 5 minutes added on, a number of spectators near me became quite agitated when the clock ticked past 95 minutes. Denis had correctly announced: "The referee has indicated that there will be a minimum of 5 additional minutes." The word "minimum" is crucial. The ref is likely to extend that time for a whole raft of reasons: injury, substitutions (we brought Connor on at 93 mins), deliberate time-wasting, Flitney's clearance hitting a passing pigeon which is killed and falls on the lineo knocking him out, etc.
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Post by newmagpie on Sept 8, 2024 11:55:55 GMT
A good team performance against a good side, which included one of the best displays I have seen by an opposition keeper. He kept the score down and the result closer than it probably should have been, the fact that he was their man of the match tells the tale.
The only downside for me was the quality of refereeing again, there was simply no consistency and he seemingly got the simple decisions wrong. It isn't just us, I see Killick is bemoaning the ref they had yesterday too, surely the Southern League need to look at this!?
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Post by bezza on Sept 8, 2024 15:43:30 GMT
That was a really important win against a solid mid table or slightly better than mid table side (finished 8th in 23/24). For me it shows we deserve our place in this new league. Played good football and deserved to win. So, we're 10th after some difficult fixtures and another one coming up on tuesday. As I said the other week, compare us to how frome town are doing and you'll see we've started very decently. Hopefully if we carry on like this some of the fair weather wimborne fans from last season will return to the fold. But I guess 596 on a foul day with only a fairly small away support included isn't bad.
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Post by thereisnoplanb on Sept 8, 2024 16:05:46 GMT
There is not yet any report in the Echo of the game. The Poole report was in the Echo first thing this morning. This was a comment by 'blackand white'.
"There was a Southern League Premier game on the Echo's doorstep. But I cant find anything about it in the paper at the time of writing. It was Wimborne Town's 2-1 win over Hungerford Town. Why have the Echo not reported on that on a day when AFCB were not playing ? Whats going on ? Reporting on a Poole 5-0 loss 70 miles away doesnt make sense. This was a great opportunity to promote non league football. Where is Jack Tanner these days ? Have the Echo fallen out with Wimborne Town FC ?"
Also I see that Wyatt Homes name is plastered all over the place following the renaming of the Stadium. Also David Wyatt is now on the BoD. It's rumoured the deal is Wyatts have given 25k per annum for the next 3 years. Surprised at this considering the problem with drainage which no one seemed to take responsibility for. Guilty conscience perhaps ?
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Post by newmagpie on Sept 9, 2024 8:32:38 GMT
There is not yet any report in the Echo of the game. The Poole report was in the Echo first thing this morning. This was a comment by 'blackand white'. "There was a Southern League Premier game on the Echo's doorstep. But I cant find anything about it in the paper at the time of writing. It was Wimborne Town's 2-1 win over Hungerford Town. Why have the Echo not reported on that on a day when AFCB were not playing ? Whats going on ? Reporting on a Poole 5-0 loss 70 miles away doesnt make sense. This was a great opportunity to promote non league football. Where is Jack Tanner these days ? Have the Echo fallen out with Wimborne Town FC ?" Also I see that Wyatt Homes name is plastered all over the place following the renaming of the Stadium. Also David Wyatt is now on the BoD. It's rumoured the deal is Wyatts have given 25k per annum for the next 3 years. Surprised at this considering the problem with drainage which no one seemed to take responsibility for. Guilty conscience perhaps ? I seem to recall that Echo Sports lost a couple of reporters recently so maybe they haven't got the manpower to cover everything now, but I agree, you would have thought they would have covered a local home game rather than an away game, so perhaps they have their favourites! With regards to the Wyatt Homes sponsorship, just because we have had drainage issues, it doesn't mean that it was their fault, they would have built it in accordance with someone else's design, so perhaps the design was wrong!?
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Post by magpiesgraham on Sept 9, 2024 10:13:56 GMT
When I send my match report to Kyran (for the Club website), and Chris (Admin for this Forum) I also send it to 2 contacts at the Echo. As you rightly say, Jack Tanner is no longer there. My Hungerford report was sent at 9pm on Saturday.
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Post by bezza on Sept 9, 2024 20:17:27 GMT
A frustrating recurring theme in local media. Radio Solent similarly always favour bashley over wimborne.....
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spurs
Full Member
Posts: 42
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Post by spurs on Sept 10, 2024 16:32:56 GMT
Obviously not read today’s echo!!
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Post by newmagpie on Sept 10, 2024 17:25:23 GMT
Obviously not read today’s echo!! Better late than never I guess! 🤣
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