Bedford
Town (A) | Alfreton
Town (H) | Buxton
(H) | Leamington
(A) | Hereford
(A) | Spennymoor
Town (H)
Saturday
28 February
Chester 2 Spennymoor
Town 1
National League North
Attendance: 2,113 (60 Spennymoor) Half-time 1-1
Booked: T.Davies, Murray, Shrimpton.
Chester: B.Jones, T.Davies, Murray, Mottley-Henry,
Kelly, Shrimpton, Leigh (Weeks 79), Woods, P.Jones (White
67), Croker, K.Roberts. Subs not used: B.Davies, Woodthorpe,
Leak, I.Burgess, F.Roberts.
Spennymoor Town: James, Dyson, Beals,
Heaney (Williams 72), Taylor, Ramshaw, Sharples (Hancox
57), Broadbent (Sutcliffe 63), Hill, McKeown (Nouble 81),
Salkeld (Mondal 63). Subs not used: Johnson, Dolan.
Referee: Scott Henry.
Chester
came from behind to register a pleasing victory over Spennymoor
courtesy of a brace of goals from Fin Shrimpton as he
continued in a rich vein of scoring form.
City were behind after a couple of
early minutes. Taylor played a ball over the top for
McKeown to run on to. Jones came out of goal to meet
it. McKeown just pipped him to it and though he poked
the ball out of touch he was adjudged by the referee
to have been brought down by Jones as he did so. Moors
stalwart and captain Glen Taylor sent Jones the wrong
way from the penalty spot.
Ten minutes later City were level.
Once again Woods provided the threat as he beat his
man on the left and stroked the ball across the edge
of the penalty area to Shrimpton The City number fourteen
shot precisely past a wrong-footed James to make it
one apiece. Both sides settled into a pattern of play
which had City trying to build from the back and the
Moors looking to break with speed. Woods had a curling
shot from the left and then Pat Jones from the same
side – both efforts comfortably dealt with by
James. Following a City set piece, Moors broke with
McKeown down the right. He got the better of a challenged
from Shrimpton to cut inside and flash a shot across
goal and out of play past the far post.
Shortly after half-time Chester forged
ahead thanks to a route one approach and a superb finish.
Roberts hit the ball long for Mottley-Henry to nod it
forward. Shrimpton allowed the ball to bounce once in
front of him then, seeing the keeper off his line, lobbed
it over him and into the net from outside the penalty
area.
Mottley-Henry might have added a couple
of goals himself later as the half wore on. First Kelly
overlapped down the left and floated an inviting cross.
Mottley-Henry’s header may have been going wide
but took a deflection for a corner. Later White, on
as a substitute for the ever industrious Pat Jones,
fought tenaciously to curl a left footed cross in from
the right. This time Mottley-Henry glanced his header
wide when he seemed certain to score.
City were nearly made to pay for this
profligacy in seven minutes of stoppage time. First
Williams’ corner from the left was flicked on
to the near post before Bobby Jones gratefully saved.
Then with the last kick of the game the ball fell to
the normally reliable Taylor just inside the box but
he mis-hit a shot with his left and Jones gathered in
easily.
The 2-1 result was overshadowed by
an announcement following the game that Calum McIntyre
and the club had parted company by mutual consent. Due
to depart at the end of the season, he and the board
agreed that it was best to leave now. It added a retrospective
poignancy to the Chester manager’s coming on to
the pitch at the final whistle to applaud the fans and
receive their acclaim in return. It was a lower key
departure than anyone might have wished for but at least
Calum was able to leave with another win under his belt
and applause ringing in his ears.
Colin Mansley
League
table after Spennymoor victory
Tuesday
24 February
Hereford 5 Chester 2
National League North
Played at Sixways Stadium, Worcester
Attendance: 1,053 (170 Chester) Half-time 3-2
Booked: Woodthorpe.
Hereford: Richardson, Hudson, Wilcox,
Howkins, Quansah, Skinner (James 82), Donawa (Williams
82), Sohna (D’Ath 74), Martin, Daly, Munday. Subs
not used: Preston, Hamilton, Rooney, Lewis.
Chester: B.Jones, Weeks, Leak, Murray
(Leigh 61), Mottley-Henry, Kelly, Shrimpton, Woods, P.Jones,
Croker, K.Roberts (Woodthorpe 46). Subs not used: B.Davies,
I.Burgess, White, F.Roberts.
Referee: Jonathan Maskrey.
The
bright lights of the Sixways Stadium were visible from
afar as both Hereford and Chester fans approached from
distance. Problems with a waterlogged pitch have recurred
so often at Edgar Street this winter that Hereford were
obliged to seek a solution to their resulting fixture
backlog. Last Saturday they entertained Scarborough at
Redditch after making a first appearance against Darlington
at Sixways last week. A crowd of just over a thousand
– including 170 from Chester gathered to watch the
match in a novel situation. It’s a venue better
acquainted with rugby union, although Worcester City FC
have also become tenants - as the smart décor in
the bar under the visitors’ stand – proclaiming
“ Up The City!” indicated.
The
Bulls, finding themselves near the foot of the table,
were also under new management. Aaron Downes had replaced
Paul Caddis and immediately drafted in new personnel
on loan to help Hereford stabilise and get out of the
relegation places. Chester meanwhile had to cope without
the steadying influence of their new signing Tom Davies
who was absent through injury.
The Blues made a good start to the
evening with Connor Woods cutting in from the left and
firing a cross into the box. Mottley-Henry’s flick
was blocked by a defender but it came out to an unmarked
Fin Shrimpton who struck it for the opening goal after
just five minutes. Hereford were stunned by the setback
and seemed disjointed and un-used to the wide expanse
of the Sixways pitch. But on quarter of an hour they
found a way back into the game as Chester’s defence
– paralysed by hesitation – failed to deal
with a long ball and Donawa nipped in to take it around
Jones and score into an empty net.
Worse was to follow minutes later
as Skinner was allowed to come forward with the ball.
Munday made a run on the right and had time to turn
a pass across the six yard area. City’s defence
were at sixes and sevens as Daly scored with ease. It
didn’t take long for Chester to respond. A fine
pass from Weeks found Pat Jones. Mottley-Henry was prevented
from meeting his cross by Howkins who arm-wrestled him
to the ground leading to the award of a penalty. Connor
Woods converted to level the scores.
Three minutes later City were behind
yet again as Nottingham Forest loanee Cormac Daly, despite
the attention of two City defenders, got to the by-line
and pulled the ball back for the onrushing Keziah Martin
to brush past Tom Leak and score past Jones.
City emerged from the halftime break
with a different shape - Woodthorpe replaced Kevin Roberts
who became part of a back three with Croker and Leak
whilst Kelly and Woods switched to wing backs. The change
led to City dominating possession and creating a string
of chances as they hunted for another equaliser. Kelly
and Weeks both went close with shots from distance.
Pat Jones then went within millimetres of scoring when
his shot was scooped off the line by a defender and
onto the crossbar. Woods retrieved the rebound only
for Leak to put his shot comfortably over.
Hereford managed to stifle City’s
forward momentum by the increasingly common ploy of
getting the goalkeeper to go down for treatment, allowing
time for a tactical team talk from the manager. The
game became more end to end as City became increasingly
desperate. Woodthorpe’s clearance was charged
down by Donawa and Chester were fortunate to escape
as Munday shot wide. Mottley-Henry broke down the left
and cut in to shoot but could not find the power to
beat the keeper.
With fifteen minutes remaining Leigh’s
pass was cut out and Hereford broke with Martin. He
found Daly on the left. His shot was parried by Jones
but Daly scored from the rebound. Four minutes later
the game was finally put beyond Chester when Woodthorpe’s
cross field pass left Leak exposed and D’Ath stepped
in to put Munday through to score a fifth.
It was a chastening defeat for City
by a team fighting against adversity on multiple fronts.
It was too much for some of the disappointed travelling
fans as they voiced their discontent at the players
as they walked across to the tunnel situated just where
the away fans were sitting. The scoreline may have been
harsh as City were in the game for all but the last
ten minutes but by then the damage had been done and
it was largely self-inflicted.
Colin Mansley
League
table after Hereford defeat
Saturday
21 February
Leamington 0 Chester
2 National League
North
Attendance: 672 Half-time 0-1
Booked: Kelly, K.Roberts, F.Roberts.
Leamington: Brearey, Meredith, Quaynor,
Glennon, Blyth, Walker Williams, Clarke (Farmer 60), Brogan,
Berridge (Pais 60), Yahaya (Tattum 75). Subs not used:
Streete, Burton, Humphries.
Chester: B.Jones, T.Davies, Murray (Weeks
70), Mottley-Henry, Kelly, Shrimpton, Leigh, Woods (Woodthorpe
90+2), P.Jones (F.Roberts 75), Croker, K.Roberts. Subs
not used: B.Davies, Leak, I.Burgess.
Referee: Jacob Viera.
As
someone who has made four visits to Leamington without
ever seeing a Chester goal, my trip to the isolated ‘Your
Co-op Community Stadium’ was a real red letter day.
It actually took only three minutes for my personal hoo-doo
to break when a deft pass from Iwan Murray found Pat Jones,
who slotted the ball past Eddie Brearey. The
bobbly pitch was not an incentive for a game of attractive
football, but Murray was a constant thorn in the side
of the hosts. Soon after the goal he linked up with
Lewis Leigh, but Brearey was able to deflect that attempt.
Brearey was also called on to make a save from Connor
Woods.
At the other end, there were slim
pickings from Leamington, with their best chance of
the first half coming from Will Glennon. His strike
from distance shot over the bar, to leave Chester sitting
in the lead as the rain started at the end of the first
half.
The second half saw Brearey save a
one-on-one from Connor Woods, but Chester were back
on top soon after that. After Murray drew a foul, the
ensuing free-kick landed well for Chester‘s man-of-the
match, Tom Davies. He produced a top drawer strike which
sailed into the top-left corner.
Leamington‘s goalkeeper
(arguably their man-of-the-match) had to make more good
saves to keep the Brakes in the match, but his side
never looked like scoring, and they were lucky to be
only 2-0 down when the referee blew for full-time.
Sue Choularton
League
table after Leamington victory
Saturday
14 February
Chester 1 Buxton 0
National League North
Attendance: 1,874 (140 Buxton) Half-time 0-0
Booked: T.Davies, Woods, Weeks, Mottley-Henry.
Chester: B.Jones, Woodthorpe, Weeks,
T.Davies, Peers (P.Jones 19), Bainbridge (Leigh 46), Murray
(Woods 64), Mottley-Henry, Kelly, Shrimpton (White 75),
Croker. Subs not used: B.Davies, Leek, I.Burgess.
Buxton: Young, Flint, Ward, Burton, Johnston
(Douglas 57), Kirby, Brennan, Willoughby, Mee (McLean
90+3), Gilsenan (Coleman 57), Robinson. Subs not used:
Truman, Hill, Bardell, Cooper.
Referee: Jake Allsopp.
A
familiar scenario was playing out at the Deva: Chester
struggled to find a way past a stubborn defence. Then
with just four minutes left on the clock (Though the stadium
clock is still out of sync and on Saturday the electronic
scoreboard also stopped working) Jaiden White’s
persistence down the right helped win a corner. Dylan
Mottley-Henry still had the energy for one more magnificent
leap and met the cross to head past Buxton’s keeper
Young into the net. It was
enough to secure the three points as City kept a clean
sheet due largely to a commanding debut appearance at
centre-back by Tom Davies, signed the previous day from
Salisbury FC. He was also involved in the game’s
other major incident after only ninety seconds. Kurt
Willoughby, returned to the Deva as Buxton’s new
centre forward. He and Davies tangled awkwardly as they
landed after an early challenge and the prone Willoughby
kicked out at his opponent hitting his standing leg.
All this occurred under the gaze of referee Jake Allsopp
who flourished the red card and brought the unfortunate
Willoughby’s appearance to a premature end.
Chester almost made the numerical
advantage tell immediately as Mottley-Henry’s
snatched shot beat the keeper but passed just the wrong
side of the post. Shortly after this Peers came close
to scoring but suffered injury as a Buxton defender
made a goal-saving block tackle. Peers had to retire
on eighteen minutes meaning both sides were without
an obvious centre forward.
The visitors adjusted well and settled
into a defensive shape which restricted City and refused
to allow them to play the ball through the lines. They
offered attacking threat too with the pacy Johnston
seeing a lot of the ball down the right. Noticeably
Tom Davies won virtually all of the aerial battles at
the back and marshalled the line to good effect.
Lewis Leigh replaced Bainbridge after
the break as City sought to inject more energy into
their play. Further substitutions Woods, and White also
added impetus as Buxton began to tire. Chester’s
persevering play tried the patience of many in the crowd
as they urged the players forward but in the end those
who remained were rewarded by Mottley-Henry’s
decisive salmon-esque leap for the winner. Pat Jones
had a good effort to try to double the lead and City
survived a latest of late flurries as Buxton countered
deep into stoppage time. Kelly and Croker between them
mopped up the danger.
Colin Mansley
League
table after Buxton victory
Tuesday
10 February
Chester 2 Alfreton Town
2 National League
North
Attendance: 1,374 (21 Alfreton) Half-time 2-1
Booked: Croker.
Chester: B.Jones, Woodthorpe, Weeks,
Leak, Murray (Mottley-Henry 71), Kelly (Peers 71), Shrimpton,
Leigh, Woods (White 81), P.Jones, Croker. Subs not used:
B.Davies, Peers, Bainbridge, Mottley-Henry, I.Burgess,
F.Roberts.
Alfreton Town: Burgoyne, Newall, Cummings,
Hunt, Perritt, Wallace (Newell 59), McDonagh (McCann 63),
Lund, Salmon (Dodoo 84), Ayres, Ligendza. Subs not used:
Wright.
Referee: Robert Claussen.
Chester
once again infuriated both manager and supporters by the
fragility of their defending as they were held to a draw
by struggling Alfreton. Cal
McIntye raised eyebrows with his team selection which
had no recognised striker on the pitch but four (Peers,
Fin Roberts, Dylan Mottley-Henry, White) on the bench.
At times it seemed that Iwan Murray was in the closest
proximity to a central attacking role but – given
the height advantage of Alfreton’s two centre
halves it was not an equal contest. Murray, along with
Woods and Jones were busy around the box when Chester
did get the ball forward but they struggled to create
clear openings.
Getting the ball forward was also
problematic in the early part of the game. Chester tried
their patient build-up play form the back but were often
stymied by Alfreton’s pressing in midfield and
the visitors were able to overturn possession often.
Ayres tested Bobby Jones with a shot from distance –
the Chester ‘keeper was forced to tip it over
for a corner. As the Reds forced more corners they exerted
intense pressure on the City defence. Chester looked
jittery and it came as no surprise when the visitors
used their intimidating height advantage to take the
lead after half an hour. A corner to the far post was
headed back across, Jones parried the next header up
in the air and Ayres won the aerial battle to nod in
the rebound on the goal line.
The Blues replied by putting on possession
base pressure themselves. Shrimpton finished a promising
move by shooting from the edge of the area. Harry Burgoyne
in the Alfreton goal was forced to concede a corner.
Then came City’s equaliser. Croker headed down
for Shrimpton to hook the bouncing ball into the net.
City kept their attacking momentum and when Woods was
tripped in the box he stepped up himself to send Burgoyne
the wrong way and give Chester the lead at half time.
Within two minutes of the second half
City had frittered away that goal advantage by conceding
the most slovenly of goals. A long free kick forward
from deep within Alfreton territory was flicked on once
then again before Cummings had the ball at his feet
and was allowed to pick his spot to shoot and score
before any attendant Chester defenders could get a challenge
in.
As Cal McIntyre stated in his post-match
interview “You cannot consistently be having to
score two or three goals to win a home game”.
Chester had made it so difficult for themselves to win
this game. They certainly tried and easily had the lion’s
share of possession and inventiveness around the Alfreton
box. The closest thing to a winner was Leak heading
Shrimpton’s cross against the cross bar with fifteen
minutes to go. Forwards Peers and Mottley-Henry were
introduced to the action and Jaiden White also emerged
for his home debut but all to no avail as the game petered
out for a draw. Whilst Alfreton momentarily threatened
to snatch another goal from a long throw or a corner
– they seemed content with their point on the
road. Chester, on the other hand. Were frustrated at
home and failed to build decisively on the three points
they snatched from the jaws of defeat at Bedford.
Colin Mansley
League
table after Alfreton draw
Saturday
7 February
Bedford Town 1 Chester
2 National League North
Attendance: 1,132 (215 Chester) Half-time 1-0
Booked: Kelly, Leigh, Shrimpton, Woods.
Bedford Town: Luthra, Castiglione, Taylor,
Gyamfi, Marsh, Doherty, Sandiford, Cole, J.Brown (Moncur
62), Maja (Blackman 71), Phillips (Siziba 84). Subs not
used: Mensah, Patmore, Payne, Ebanks.
Chester: B.Jones, Kelly-Evans (Mottley-Henry
80), Leak, Peers (Weeks 54), Murray (White 73), Kelly,
Shrimpton, Leigh, P.Jones, Croker, F.Roberts (Woods 73).
Subs not used: B.Davies, Woodthorpe, I.Burgess.
Referee: Harry Warner.
Chester’s
first visit to Bedford Town’s New Eyrie ground was
memorable for all sorts of reasons – principally
two late goals from Phil Croker and Fin Shrimpton that
earned the Blues a much-needed three points. The
215 travelling Chester fans had to enter the ground
via a tight, old-fashioned, turnstile which the steward
proudly told us was a relic from Millwall’s original
Den and only in use because this was a rare segregated
game.
The Chester support was no doubt boosted
by the draw of a new ground and the day's attendance
of 1,132 was Bedford’s highest attendance of the
season so far. It was the travelling supporters who
were rewarded for their journeys with an exciting eight-minute
finale, and those two amazing goals.
It was Chester who had the game’s
first opportunity with a blocked shot from Croker, followed
by a Pat Jones strike going wide. The Blues continued
to press, with a Tom Peers volley going over the bar.
The game changed after that positive
opening spell, after a corner to Bedford. The home side
had a free header from the corner, which was nodded
to Josh Catiglione who had no problem heading into the
net, past Bobby Jones, on the 31st minute.
Both sides had further chances in
the rest of the first half, with the closest opportunity
coming from Fin Roberts whose curling shot was cleared
behind for a corner.
The second half saw Chester continue
to press for an equaliser in front of their travelling
army gathered behind the goal, with Peers beating his
marker but failing to find the target.
Pat Jones continued to be a real dangerman,
but a couple of fizzing crosses couldn’t find
the boot of a team-mate. And it was Fin Shrimpton who
was the goal provider on the 87th minute when his high
ball into the area was headed home by Croker.
Soon after it was Shrimpton's turn
to send the away fans delirious when a shot parried by
Bedford goalkeeper Rohan Luthra fell into his path. He
hit the ball powerfully into the net to put Chester ahead
on the 95th minute. There was no time for Bedford to come
back at that stage and Chester and their fans were left
enjoying the late drama when the whistle was blown just
moments afterwards.
Sue Choularton
League
table after Bedford victory
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