| Hendon found themselves second-best to a
powerful Tonbridge Angels team who having scored after just first four
minutes never really looked like relinquishing a strangle-hold on the
game. The Angels' relentless efficiency, not only with the ball but in
stopping Hendon when the Greens had possession, ensured the home side
were always second best.
James Bent’s injury at Ramsgate meant that Charlie Mapes started
in an otherwise unchanged starting line-up, though there were welcome
returns to the substitutes bench for both Sam Byfield and Danny Dyer after
absences of two months and six weeks, respectively.
The Greens’ problems started from the third minute when a poor clearance
from Richard Wilmot was brought down by Tommy Tyne, whose pass released
Carl Rook. As Hendon players vainly appealed for offside, ROOK continued
and when Wilmot came off his line, he delicately lifted the ball over
the goalkeeper.
Tonbridge played with great confidence and Ade Olorunda was not only an
excellent foil for Rook, but was a handful in his own right. However,
the real damage to Hendon was done in midfield where neither Lee O’Leary,
Mapes nor Kevin Maclaren were given any space to work. In fact, James
Burgess saw more of the ball than his three midfield colleagues and then
it was in altogether more defensive situations.
Up front, Harry Hunt and Brian Haule were well shackled by Leon Legge
and Scott Gooding, not always legally, but very efficiently. On one occasion,
when Hunt to break clear, he was pulled back by the shirt,. Tthe referee
tried to play an advantage, but when none accrued to Hendon on this occasion,
the referee could only apologise for not awarding the free-kick.
The match began to be littered with fouls and ever-growing frustration
for those concerned, except Tonbridge who were happy to let the game become
totally disjointed. That said, they were still the more likely team to
score. Wilmot saved well from Rook and then watched in relief as a deflected
effort drifted inches wide of his far post. He then had to get down smartly
an attempted clearance deflected off a blue shirt and rapidly returned
goalwards.
Hendon’s only effort of note in the first half was a snapshot from
Hunt, hit very early, but Lee Worgan cleanly caught the ball above his
head.
In the 38th minute, Craig Vargas was tripped as he brought the ball out
of defence. He tried to keep his feet but stumbled clumsily into Tyne.
How much he could have avoided contact is hard to know, but Tyne felt
it was deliberate and reacted to the contact with a slap on Vargas. Both
players recieved a caution after the referee had regained control.
Three minutes later, another lunge by Tyne, this time on O’Leary,
brought what appeared to be a final warning for Tyne, but it wasn’t
-There was still time before the break for Tyne to swing and miss with
another tackle.
For the second half, Hendon brought on Glen Garner for Vargas, with Burgess
moving to left back. The Greens started the period very well and spent
the first four minutes camped around the Tonbridge goal. They didn’t
manage any shots on target, though Legge did make one excellent block
on a Garner shot.
One of the facets of Tonbridge’s domination was the way they blocked
Jamie Turley out of the game. The loanee from Wycombe rarely got the chance
to deliver a telling ball as he had the previous week and two or three
rushed crosses sailed harmlessly out of play.
Gradually the Angels re-exerted their first-half control and it was no
surprise when they extended their advantage midway through the second
half. The attack started down the left flank, but when the ball was passed
out to the right Olorunda crossed just too high for Rook to reach. However,
Fraser Logan got to the loose ball as James Parker went out to cover the
danger. When Logan crossed to the far post, no one was around to deny
Jamie CADE a free header and he duly headed the ball into the net from
close range.
If that wasn’t the killer blow, the Angels’ third goal, four
minutes later, certainly was. It came from a Hendon corner, hit to beyond
the far post. Turley reached the ball first, heard Garner scream for the
ball and passed to him.
Unfortunately for the Greens, Phil Starkey had spotted the danger and
nipped in front of Garner. He quickly released Anthony Storey, who ran
towards the half-way line. Nobody tracked the run of CADE - indeed there
wasn't a green shirt within 15 yards of the Tonbridge player - who was
found with an inch-perfect pass and he took a few strides forward before
shooting past Wilmot.
Both teams made two changes in the final 15 minutes, Byfield and Lubo
Guentchev replacing Mapes and Turley for Hendon, while Tonbridge introduced
John Westcott for Ade Olorunda and Tim Olorunda took over from Storey.
Hendon’s packed midfield combined with Tonbridge’s comfortable
lead meant that most of the remaining action took place in the middle
of the field. But it was Hendon who had the final word, scoring an excellent
consolation goal.
Hunt chipped the ball forward and GARNER, running intelligently into space,
lost his marker. The ball sat up perfectly, but it still needed a fine
shot to score and Garner provided it, a first-time low drive that was
taken so early, Worgan never had a chance to get his feet right to save
at his near post.
Last season, Hendon scored late, and did so three times to shock the Angels.
This year the away side were mindful of this and kept possession so well
it never looked likely that history would repeat itself.
“Tonbridge deserved to win today,” admitted Hendon manager
Gary McCann. “We didn’t bring our A game today and we had
to have it against a team such as Tonbridge.”
(Report by David Ballheimer - not to be reproduced without permission from the author)
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