Showing posts with label dagenham. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dagenham. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Defences hold firm in trapdoor tussle


This was a result that neither side wanted, but both would take. Defeat for either Plymouth Argyle or Dagenham and Redbridge would have put a sizable dent into their quest to avoid the fall off the Football League precipice, but nobody was about to relinquish any ground at Home Park.

It was a frustrating afternoon for everyone involved, the players who had been training in the hope of grasping a season changing win, and the fans, for whom the match had been billed as the biggest of the season. In hindsight, after Saturday's dour displays, it should simply have been the biggest of the season yet.

It was the home side, unbeaten in three and coming off the back of a morale boosting 4-0 win at Accrington, who edged an even first half, before running much of the second, striking the left-hand upright twice within a minute.

The game was low on quality and high on ball trajectory, containing all the hallmarks of a match between two teams fighting for their lives, a scenario that Pilgrims boss Carl Fletcher had predicted in the build up:

"We knew it was going to be scrappy," said the rookie manager. "We spoke all week that we were going to have to earn the right to play and scrap away, and that it was going to be an ugly game.

"We were well aware what was coming and that we had to be patient and, to be fair, the lads have done everything but score a goal. We had three great chances in the first half, hit the post in the twice in the second half and the keeper has pulled off a couple of saves."

But, above all, Fletcher defined the synopsis for his battling squad: "It was vital that we didn't lose; that was a big one for us."

Trepidation was the word of the day and fractured nerves were on show, Maxime Blanchard gave away an early free kick after fouling Jon Nurse 25 yards out; Matt Saunders shot from the resultant dead ball too weak to really trouble Argyle custodian Jake Cole

Nick Chadwick had the first notable effort from open play, blazing over with a sweeping shot following a low cross from the right, owing to a frustrating opening period for the bullish striker who, along with partner Alex MacDonald, found the assistant referee's flag the most challenging opponent.

The advertising hoardings behind either goal were seeing more of the ball than the keepers gloves, Greens captain Paul Wotton dragging a long range drive off target, Nurse failing to get enough purchase on his header, glancing Damien McCrory's left-wing cross wide of the goal for the Daggers.

With the break swiftly approaching, Conor Hourihane wasted the best opportunity of the lot for the Pilgrims. In a situation similar to Chadwick's early profligate strike, the Irish midfielder produced the same end result, skying the ball into the swathes of empty seats between the home and away fans, all the while under little defensive pressure.

When referee Dean Whitestone blew to resume the game, Argyle began to take the initiative. Within seconds of the restart Hourihane had another chance to put the Devon club into the lead, though his final shot was hit straight at debutant Jonathan Bond.

Brian Woodall's effort soared into his own fans at the other end, but it proved only seconds of respite as Ashley Hemmings and Robbie Williams both tried their luck for Plymouth, though their gambles did not pay off.

Each side made only two of their allotted substitutions, but it was Argyle's Luke Daley who had the biggest impact. He and Marcus Bignot attempted to work a move on the right-hand side of the penalty area, and though Dagenham broke it up, the ball squirmed into Daley's path, catching the visiting defence on the back foot and almost resulting in the lead, the wingers prod cannoning off the post.

Not 50 seconds had passed before the woodwork was rattling again. Williams, running on to a half cleared corner, could not have caught his left foot drive any sweeter, though neither could it have hit the post more emphatically.

Bond still had to be on hand to tip two further long range strikes round the post - MacDonald and Williams the players once again denied - the game finally petering out with a host of free kicks during the four minutes of stoppage time, leaving both teams frustrated, but Dagenham feeling slightly better of the two, even though they remain the team propping up the Football League.

John Still underlined Plymouth's recent results, while also sticking to his philosophy on playing the game.

"They've been on a decent run of form and they're a big club, regardless of their league position," said Still, "but we stuck at it and worked hard."

"They had two good efforts in the second half that hit the post without putting us under any sustained pressure. We never try to draw, the changes we made were to bring on attacking players. We want to remain positive."

Saturday, 29 October 2011

Rovers End Saturday Curse

Bristol Rovers won a Saturday home game for the first time in eight months, beating Dagenham & Redbridge 2-0 at the Memorial Stadium.

The visitors survived a goal mouth scramble in the opening period but could not hold out in the second, Joe Anyinsah mopping up from close range on 50 minutes before Matt Harrold scored a penalty in stoppage time.

Rovers third game in eight days saw manager Paul Buckle under pressure to set straight a run of four defeats from the last five, a segment of the fanbase already calling for his head after Tuesday's 3-0 home defeat to Port Vale.

In light of the previous two defeats Buckle reverted to a 4-4-2 formation, giving Mustapha Carayol his first start since October 1st, playing on the left wing, with Anyinsah stationed on the opposite flank.

From the off it was the home side who had their foot on the gas, Harrold heading a Matt Gill corner wide before Scott McGleish suffered the same fate from a Craig Stanley cross.

Rovers captain Gill then found himself with a yard of space in the penalty area, defying the tight angle and forcing Dagenham goalkeeper Chris Lewington into a sharp save.

The away side, managed by former Rovers assistant John Still, were hanging on by a thread, Scott McGleish's centre finding Anyinsah, whose shot was kept out, the rebound falling kindly for Gill. After the captain's effort was blocked by the desperate Dagenham bodies Carayol had one final chance to turn the ball in, but there was a visiting body in the way once more.

Though Rovers had the better of the first half exchanges there were few moments of quality, Dagenham's line-up looking bereft of any confidence, though that was not to be unexpected, the Essex club having lost their last four League 2 games.

What ever words of wisdom cane from Still had little effect on his squad as Rovers came out and scored within five minutes of the restart. Stanley was allowed space to run down the right hand side and found McGleish with a cross, Lewington keeping out the veteran forwards header, parrying straight into the path of Anyinsah who blasted his volley into the goal.

Seven minutes later the lead could have been doubled, Stanley again the man to break from midfield and whip the ball in, though Harrold's header ricocheted off the inside of the post to allow the Daggers to clear.

A Cian Bolger slip allowed substitute Brian Woodall to run in behind the Rovers defence, though his burst was ended prematurely by an emphatic sliding challenge from Danny Woodards, hurtling back to prevent the forward from getting a clear shot on goal.

Damien McCrory had to be on hand to clear a Carayol strike off the line, though the home crowd weren't to be denied a second goal for long. Abu Ogogo hauled down Harrold shirt first in the penalty area and referee Mark Heywood pointed straight to the spot. The former Shrewsbury man picked himself up to convert, push Rovers up to 15th in the table and lift the mood on the unnervingly tense terraces.

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

Mystic Mousse Predicts


No matter how many times fellow fans tell you football is unpredictable we still think we know the game better than anyone else, even The Lord himself.

And so with five games left in Bristol Rovers agonising struggle to avoid the drop down from League 1 I thought I'd take some time to have a go at the BBC predictor for the division, these are my results.

When I started I believed that Plymouth and Swindon were already down so the final two relegation places were going to be filled by two out of Rovers, Tranmere, Dagenham & Redbridge, Notts County and Walsall so those are the sides I began focusing on with the table currently looking like this.

18 Tranmere P40 Pts 46
19 Dagenham P41 Pts 44
20 Walsall P41 Pts 43
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21 Rovers P41 Pts 43
22 County P40 Pts 42
23 Swindon P41 Pts 38

Saturday April 16th

A bad weekend for everyone involved, aside from Tranmere that is. They face a key fixture with Dagenham that could either send the Birkenhead side far away from the pack or see the Daggers move one win away from the fifty point mark. As it goes I thought that Dagenham would come out on top, Saturday saw them secure a simple 3-1 win over fellow strugglers Notts County and on Tuesday they suffered a harrowing 4-3 loss to league leaders Brighton, that result securing the Seagulls promotion.

I also had Rovers down to lose 2-0 to Southampton, and that's probably being kind. Even though the Pirates had been in good form prior to their defeat to Exeter at the weekend the manner of the performances have been none to impressive and they are likely to get punished by a Saints team that threaten from anywhere on the pitch.

Table
18 Dagenham P42 Pts 47 W1-0 Tranmere
19 Tranmere P41 Pts 46 L0-1 Dagenham
20 Walsall P42 Pts 43 L3-1 Brighton
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21 Rovers P42 Pts 43 L0-2 Southampton
22 County P41 Pts 42 L0-1 Bournemouth

Tuesday April 19th

Tranmere are involved in another crunch relegation tussle, this time with Notts County. Martin Allen was recently appointed as gaffer at County, their board getting rid of Paul Ince and taking one last throw of the dice on the Mad Dog. Allen was at Barnet for under a month before taking the County hotseat, winning two and drawing one game to give a side who looked almost dead and buried at the foot of League 2 a fighting chance of staying up and I can see a nine game losing streak coming to an end for his new side, gaining a point in a 1-1 draw, taking them back above the Gas on goal difference.

18 Dagenham P42 Pts 47
19 Tranmere P41 Pts 47 D1-1 Notts County
20 Walsall P42 Pts 43
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21 County P42 Pts 43 D1-1 Tranmere
22 Rovers P42 Pts 43

Friday April 22nd and Saturday April 23rd

Dagenham and Tranmere play Friday and earn a point apiece against Plymouth and Hartlepool respectively. Walsall and County both lose, though the match between Notts and Swindon is one of the most difficult to predict and the win for the Wiltshire side gives them a fighting chance of staying up, making it one of the biggest fixtures of the relegation battle, while Rovers pick up a point that takes them out of the drop zone against Charlton

18 Dagenham P43 Pts 48 D1-1 Plymouth
19 Tranmere P43 Pts 48 D1-1 Hartlepool
20 Rovers P43 Pts 44 D2-2 Charlton
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21 County P43 Pts 43 L2-1 Swindon
22 Walsall P43 Pts 43 L1-0 Sheff Weds

Monday April 25th

Easter Monday sees Rovers pick up a 1-0 victory over an off-colour Bournemouth side, their first win at Dean Court since February 2001. Dagenham and Tranmere both lose but still look fairly safe, both needing a win in one of their last two games to secure League 1 status for another season but County and Walsall look in a bad way after both lose. Swindon must win their last two and hope Rovers fail each time to stay up.

18 Dagenham P44 Pts 48 L3-0 Huddersfield
19 Tranmere P44 Pts 48 L2-1 Exeter
20 Rovers P44 Pts 47 W1-0 Bournemouth
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21 County P44 Pts 44 D0-0 Brentford
22 Walsall P44 Pts 44 D1-1 Oldham

Saturday April 30th

The Gas are still looking over their shoulders after a 2-1 defeat at the hand of Sheffield Wednesday but know that a point against Colchester on the last day would see them stay up. Dagenham claim a hame win against Carlisle to confirm their survival and as Walsall and Notts County also lose Tranmere will definately be a League 1 club next season. Swindon pick up a win over Oldham to move above Walsall.

18 Dagenham P45 Pts 51 W1-0 Carlisle
19 Tranmere P45 Pts 48 L1-0 Leyton Orient
20 Rovers P45 Pts 47 L2-1 Sheffield Wednesday
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21 County P45 Pts 44 L1-0 MK Dons
22 Swindon P45 Pts 44 W1-0 Oldham
23 Walsall P45 Pts 44 L2-1 Charlton

Saturday May 7th

A midweek 4-2 win against Plymouth meant that Southampton had secured promotion to the Championship.

Only one of the three teams on 44 points troubles Rovers, namely Swindon Town whose upturn in fortunes came just too late, Rovers taking the point they need to survive at Colchester to send their barmy army of travelling support home happy, Swindon's joy following their win over Tranmere being shortlived. County and Walsall lose again, not that that would have troubled the gleeful Pirates.

Brighton fail to reach the 100 point mark, finishing on 98 and Bournemouth draw with Rochdale to stay in the final play-off spot.

18 Dagenham P46 Pts 51 L0-2 Peterborough
19 Tranmere P46 Pts 48 L0-1 Swindon
20 Rovers P46 Pts 48 D2-2 Colchester
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21 Swindon P46 Pts 47 W1-0 Tranmere
22 County P46 Pts 44 L0-2 Brighton
23 Walsall P46 Pts 44 L0-1 Southampton

My results will most likely finish way off as some teams will pick up unexpected results that nobody could foresee. The last few seasons have seen teams need at least 50 points to stay up so my view of Swindon ending on 47 is very low. I have also predicted just a single win for Rovers when, in the most likely circumstances, they will need to win at least two more and get a point from somewhere else.

The last day fixtures do Rovers some favours with Dagenham having to face off with Peterborough, Walsall playing Southampton and Notts County up against Brighton in their final games a visit to a Colchester team firmly rooted in a mid-table position doesn't look as bad as it could for the Gas.

Indeed, Rovers final five games aren't as daunting as they looked at the start of the season. Southampton will undoubtedly be tough to beat and a point at St Mary's would be a superb result for a side that look decidedly dodgy, but after that comes Charlton who have dropped to 12th after a poor run and Bournemouth who, as mentioned earlier, are having a dreadful time of late. Sheffield Wednesday have struggled since beating the Gas 6-2 in December and should not be feared in front of a full house for the final game of the season at the Memorial Stadium before the trip to Essex.

Notts County are the team that could cause problems. Under Paul Ince they looked shot of confidence and, falling quickly, dead certs for the drop but Martin Allen will give them one last hope, a boost that could not have come any later and fray the nerves of the teams just above them.

So the key is to not lose heart, anything is possible and this last hour or so spent typing in results and writing up this blog has most likely been wasted, but nevertheless, it's wasted some time before the Tottenham V Real Madrid match this evening, not that that will be able to compare to the last five games of Rovers season.