Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Dulwich Hamlet 0 Tooting and Mitcham United 2

Ryman Isthmian League Division One South

Tuesday 13th March 2007

Cold-bloodedly efficient, Tooting and Mitcham boosted their own promotion aspirations with a well-regimented suffocation of the Hamlet's free flowing football, whilst simultaneously pricking the hopes of their hosts of closing the gap on leaders Maidstone. Playing to the battle plan of that wily old fox Billy Smith, the grey haired general's blueprints for victory ruthlessly executed by a willing band of foot soldiers to whom flair was an anathema but success was not.

Those amongst the 400 + who arrived in expectation of a repeat of the 13 goal FA Trophy thriller would have been sorely disappointed but purists of the defensive game might have hummed in contented delight as Tooting's five man defence, swallowed whole the Hamlet's attack, whilst midfield was surrendered to the visitors, at times without a whimper.

Hamlet might have grabbed the lead before the Tooting stranglehold took hold, silky skills from Serge Musungu, dancing across the face of the penalty area, set up Mazin Ahmad for a shot low from 20 yards but gargantuan goalie Dave King swiftly got his down to the strike shovelling the ball behind for a corner. However that soon paled into insignificance as Tooting drew first blood on the quarter hour. Justyn Roberts was penalised for a late challenge, a yellow card a personal punishment but for the Hamlet worse followed as Matt York pumped the dead ball deep to the back of the six yard where Joe Vines rose high above the crowd of players to meet the ball with a thumping header that found a home in the back of the net.

Hamlet answered and it took a neat steal of the ball from the toes of Ahmad as he charged in to meet a Leigh Bremner cross, before a quick fire Bremner strike curled wide at the last after Ahmad's explosive burst through the middle had created the opening.

Amidst the artisans of Tooting, there was still space for an artist, one Ronnie Green, late of this Hamlet, but now plying his trade in the monochrome stripe of their fiercest rivals. Tricky skills blighted by a weak finish before the merest of deflections took a shot wide after he had ghosted to the edge of the area to unleash a powerful strike. 32 minutes, a Tooting corner and again the Hamlet rearguard was dwarfed by a towering header from Romald Bouadji but the Frenchman was left unfulfilled as Simon Overland flung himself to his right to batter the ball away one-handed. The big Hamlet custodian was twice more called into action before the break to prevent the Terrors adding to their lead, first battering down a fierce angled strike from Green after a long pass had picked him out loitering on the far side of the area, then smothering a ferocious bullet of a drive from Paul Vines after the bullish centre forward had stampeded away down the left wing.

Second half brought a tactical switch from the Hamlet management as Ahmad and Musungu made way for David Milton and Phil Williams but hopes that the two pacy replacements lay the foundations for a telling inject of goals soon flounder as Green gained reward for his industry. Skipper Allan McLeod's lofted cross in from the left wing should have been comfortably dealt with but a weak defensive header dropped at the feet of the lurking Green and nipped past the last defender before driving a low shot past Overland.

The vice tightened around the Hamlet. Williams danced up field, but 4 striped shirts suffocating him his final ball proved harmless. A Hamlet corner was met by Gavin Dayes, his downward header bouncing wide of King's near upright, the Tooting custodian unnerved as the ball skimped the woodwork. A quick throw found Shawn Beveney, the rare oxygen of space perhaps intoxicating his brain as the ball was larruped over the crossbar from 20 yards.

Another Hamlet corner, into a six yard box more packed than the 7:45 to London Bridge, pinged around as first attacker then defender attempted a poke goalwards or otherwise, before finding Jamie Coyle wide right, a swinging cross almost deceiving King until the giant custodian rose on tiptoes to palm the ball over the bar.

Paul Vines should have done better when Tooting exploited the gaps in defence, the ball finding Dean Hamlin alone on the right but when he supplied his striker the ball was stabbed just wide. Indeed Tooting were building on the foundation of those impassable monoliths in defence, the visitors looking the more likely to score though goalmouth threats were few. Not until the final minutes did either goal again look truly in danger when the men in Pink and Blue pitched up in the Tooting goalmouth for a corner. Again the space was limited, the ball bounced around in a crazy bagatelle but fortune favoured the defence as Coyle's attempt looped off a defender into the waiting arms of King. As he attempted to clear the ball up field, he clashed with Dayes as the Hamlet man held his ground, the incident provoking a mild confrontation, at odds with previous derby eruptions, that soon subsided and saw first Dayes, then King the recipients of the evening's final cautions.

Teams:

DHFC: Simon Overland; Jason Turley; Gavin Dayes; Justyn Roberts; Jamie Coyle (Capt.); Lewis Tozer; Shawn Beveney; Kenny Beaney (Sol Pinnock 60); Leigh Bremner; Serge Musungu (David Milton HT); Mazin Ahmad (Phil Williams HT)

Substitutes not used: Nicolas Plumain; Stanley Muguo

T&MUFC: Dave King; Oliver Hunt; Dean Hamlin; Matt York; Allan McLeod; Romald Bouadji; Vernon Francis; Joe Vines; Paul Vines; Ben Abbey (Jason Pinnock 85); Ronnie Green

Substitutes not used: Eben Allen; Aaron Day; Colin Hartburn; Adam Broomhead

Attendance: 414

Officials:

Referee: Mr Steve Briffitt (Shirley)

Assistant Referees: Mr Alex Neil (Woodmansterne) & Mr Chris Phillips (Carshalton Beeches)

Goalscoring:

0-1 T&M Joe Vines 15th minute

0-2 T&M Ronnie Green 48th minute

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Dulwich Hamlet 3 Leatherhead 0

Ryman Isthmian League Division One South

Saturday 10th March 2007

Slowly but surely the promotion pack is stringing out as the title challengers look to step up the pace and make that vital break away from the peleton. Victory over a below par Leatherhead, missing the talismanic Dave Stevens, captain and leading scorer, ensuring that Dulwich kept pace with that slowly thinning promotion pack, the Tanners confidently brushed aside. Defeat for the visitors may well have provided a fatal blow to their own hopes of an invite to the play-off party but the jostling below the title race is such that clubs that might have already been dreaming of an early summer break might now find themselves making room for an extra game or two come season's end.

This was a fractious encounter, peppered by cautions and not lacking the ugly dismissal which is almost de rigueur in clashes between two sides. Both sides were missing their leading striker, albeit for differing reasons, the Hamlet's Chris Dickson rested at the request of Charlton Athletic following an impressive run out with the Addicks' Reserves in midweek that saw him bag a quick fire brace against Fulham's second string. Ah the penalties for success, the big boys climbing over the fence to scrump your finest apples. For the Tanners that former Hamlet hero, usurped King of the Hill, Stevens sat out his return to SE22 suspended. The absence of the dynamic Dickson sent a clarion call out to Serge Musungu to once again don his striker's motley, a task he took to with relish helping himself to a double late in the first half sending a happy Hamlet to the dressing rooms with a comfortable two goal advantage. Whilst Musungu was resuming goalscoring duties his role in the engine room returned to the remit of Kenny Beaney, making his reappearance after a brief sojourn with the tenants of Champion Hill, Fisher Athletic.

Exasperatingly the opening passage of play was patchy, punctuated by a plethora of frustrating felonies, primarily by the visitors as foul then free kick framed the first exchanges. Dulwich might have felt they had the better of the rare openings that materialised, the Tanners goal threatened most. Five minutes in Leigh Bremner was released into the penalty area, but forced wide by ‘keeper Paul Borg who blocked the initial attempt. The ball ran kindly for Mazin Ahmad, whose tricky charge along the back line exposed the goal but again Borg was on hand to block though a wicked rebound off the incoming Ahmad might have caused more problems but for a timely hook to safety as the ball threatened to drop for Musungu.

Lynvall Duncan's crude challenge on Ahmad in the left pocket brought him a severe talking to from the referee but more importantly gave Dulwich a dangerous free kick, lashed in by Duncan's prey, Ahmad. It took a neat header from Dean Carpenter, ducking in ahead of Bremner to nod the ball behind for a corner. On the quarter hour another Leatherhead offence saw Captain Jamie Coyle rise to meet a sweetly flighted ball in but flicking his header just wide of the target.

Referee Mr Brook finally lost patience with the niggling play of the visitors on 20 minutes when Iain Hendry found himself the first of the afternoon's plethora of cards, more for what had gone before than the offence he had just committed. Something suddenly sparked in the visitors, corners were forced and the first attempt of note from a Tanners' player but frustratingly for the pocket of travelling fans Steve Sargent lashed his opening wildly wide of the goal.

‘Keeper Borg showed prodigious juggling skills not long after as he rushed from his area to head the ball away from an inrushing Bremner before turning to hook the ball back over his head as Musungu attempted to lob the ball over him. Beaney latched on the ball, feeding the hungry Shawn Beveney wide on the right but a moment to long to control the ball and Borg was fling himself in the path of the big Guyanese's strike. Still the danger had not passed, the ball flew across the six yard box, colleted by Ahmad tight to the corner flag, corner by a pair of burly defenders but with the grace of a Nureyev he left them in his wake, dancing through the tackles along the fringes of the penalty area, lacking only the finishing touches as the final strike flew harmlessly wide of Borg's goal.

Overworked Borg was back in the thick of it again as he hacked the ball clear after Bremner had been released down the right flank but all his heroics came to naught with 8 minutes left of the half as his rearguard went absent with leave. A ball out of defence headed back over the last line of defence was allowed to drop and Musungu nipped in before Borg could arrive to coolly lift the ball over a custodian spread at his feet, watching as the ball bounced into the now unprotected net.

Half time beckoned when Hamlet produced a number 2 courtesy of the same player though the architect this time was Bremner. Scampering away down the right wing as sluggish defenders looked in vain for a flag to rescue them, Bremner lashed over a teasing cross though the corridor of uncertainty in front of Borg's goal and towards Musungu dashing in at the back stick. Sticking out a foot Musungu's touch was the perfect, if awkward looking, finish to the move and despite the best efforts of a flying Borg to keep the ball from crossing the line, the ball found its home nestling in the net.

A frantic five minutes opened the second half. Musungu almost repaid the favour to Bremner but his pull back was too far behind his strike partner. Leatherhead might well have had a penalty as the ball bounced up against the hand of Gavin Dayes but went unnoticed by the man in black. Borg again proved his defence's only lifeline, first bravely smothering the ball at the feet of Bremner then battering the ball over the crossbar from point blank range after Ahmad had led the defence a merry dance once more.

Time for an injection of something, anything, for the lacklustre Tanners so on came Julien Thompson for James Greenaway, the replacement almost having an instant effect as he set up a shooting chance for Gavin Bolger 18 yards out but his stabbed attempt had neither the power nor the direction to beat Simon Overland guarding the Dulwich net. Not so Borg who had to be on his toes to hack the ball away from Bremner moments later as Musungu slipped the ball through to him.

A caution for Bolger as he cynically tripped Lewis Tozer became the precursor to the descent of the red mist upon Champion Hill. Matches between these two protagonists are seldom without their flashpoints and this afternoon was little exception as Stewart Holmes took great exception to the close attentions of Bremner, turning on his persecutor and flinging him to the floor, the testosterone boiling to the surface as the two sets of players squared up to one another. When at last the dust had settled Holmes participation was at an end, a red card flourished soon to be followed by a yellow for Bremner for his part in proceedings. A quick conversation between assistant and referee and Tanners coach Steve Wood too was dispatched from the arena.

Against ten men one might have expected Hamlet to up the tempo and polish off their decimated opponents, but though Musungu was millimetres away from connecting with a neatly chipped in ball from Ahmad, closest in the aftermath of the dismissal was Scott Bennetts, hooking the ball goalwards after a free kick had been headed across to him, only to find Dulwich's Goliath of the Goalmouth, Overland waiting at his right-hand upright to pluck the ball out of the ether.

Not till the final minutes did the passion reignite, Borg denied first Ahmad then Beveney with smart blocks at their feet before substitute defender Danny Lavender ventured upfield for a Tanners' free kick, latching on to a half-clearance but volleying the ball tamely wide of the upright. With Leatherhead anxiously awaiting relief from Mr Brook's whistle, Coyle iced the cake whilst Ahmad plopped the cherry on top as goal number 3 arrived four minutes into stoppage time. Tyro substitute David Milton was played in denied by Borg working overtime as he spread himself to block the ball at Milton's feet, only for it to run kindly into the path of skipper Coyle who glanced up and picked out Ahmad at the back of the box, the cross a work of perfection met firmly by the head of Ahmad outjumping taller defenders, the ball firmly planted in the back of the net.

The result leaves Dulwich still in third place as both leaders Maidstone and second Hastings United won 3-1 at Molesey and home to Fleet respectively. A Ryan Hayes hat trick keeps Dartford fourth but none of the next five managed victories, Tooting denied a victory at Dover by a Tommy Tyne penalty, Met Police beaten at Cray, Fleet downed at the Pilot Field, Hastings, and you know the Leatherhead result. Those results awakened play-off hopes for dark horses Horsham YMCA, 4-1 destroyers of a Corinthian-Casuals side, rock bottom and with four players suspended for the trip to Sussex. The battle at the bottom saw Ashford drive another nail in the coffin of Godalming despite a late rally from the G's, the Nuts'n'Bolts o'erleaping their relegation rivals.

Teams:

DHFC: Simon Overland; Jason Turley; Gavin Dayes (Stanley Muguo 77); Justyn Richards; Jamie Coyle (Capt); Lewis Tozer; Shawn Beveney; Kenny Beaney; Leigh Bremner (David Milton 85); Serge Musungu (Sol Pinnock 85); Mazin Ahmad

Substitutes not used: Phil Williams; Nicolas Plumain

Cautions: Leigh Bremner 62; Kenny Beaney 65

LFC: Paul Borg; Jamie Beer; Dean Carpenter (Danny Lavender HT); Lynvall Duncan; Iain Hendry; Stewart Holmes; Steve Sargent; James Greenaway (Julien Thompson 53); Marc Charles-Smith; Gavin Bolger; Scott Bennetts (Joe Sheerin 81)

Substitutes not used: Paul Sears; Mark Harper

Cautions: Iain Hendry 20; Gavin Bolger 61; Joe Sheerin 90+1

Dismissals: Stewart Holmes (Violent Conduct 62)

Attendance: 338

Officials:

Referee: Mr Carl Brook (St Leonards-on-Sea, East Sussex)

Assistant Referees: Mr Michael Webb (Woking, Surrey) & Mr David Moran (Aldershot, Hampshire)

Goalscoring:

1-0 DHFC Serge Musungu (37th minute)

2-0 DHFC Serge Musungu (45th minute)

3-0 DHFC Mazin Ahmad (90th minute (4th minute of stoppage time))