Saturday, November 03, 2007

Dulwich Hamlet 1 Walton Casuals 1

Dulwich Hamlet 1 Walton Casuals 1
Ryman Isthmian League Division One South
Saturday 3rd November 2007

Dulwich’s recent run of victories came to halt yesterday as they were held to draw at Champion Hill by a resilient and resurgent Walton Casuals side whose spunky performance against one of the Division’s form sides bodes well for the battle to shake off the shackles of the relegation zone. Much water has flowed through the weir since last the two sides clashed under sodden skies in the early days of the season. Personnel changes have ripped the heart and soul from the Casuals XI that lined up on that damp August afternoon with only John Ambridge, Max Hustwick and skipper Craig Lewington starting both contests. Indeed two of their number that day now parade in Pink and Blue, though only Sol Patterson-Bohner ranged against the Stags for Dulwich with Jermaine Hinds personal commitments preventing him taking on his erstwhile teammates. Hinds was not the only absentee for the Hamlet; tyro winger Billy Chattaway’s talents had not gone unnoticed and an England Schoolboy trial enforced his absence whilst suspension left Stanley Muguo cooling his heels. The absentees meant a return to the starting XI for Gbenga Sonuga in defence whilst Faz Koroma’s performances in the Reserves perfect start to the season gained him a call up to the majors.
Walton might languish in the lower reaches of the league but someone forgot to tell them they were supposed to play the fall guy as they held the upper hand in a disjointed and bitty opening session without truly threatening a breakthrough. As autumn breezes tussled the leaves around the still verdant pitch, the curl of a luscious Woodbine drifted on Notos’ chilly breath and the mind wandered. Then a moment of bizarre controversy as lofted back pass had Shawn Beveney in hot pursuit, only for curiously tonsured custodian Craig Bradshaw to nod the ball away from the impending bulk of Beveney. Then unaccountably he tugged at Beveney with the ball far from danger. Might it have been a penalty? Referee Mr Power mused then demurred.
Four minutes later a heavy challenge wide left provided the opportunity for Gary Mabbutt (not that one!) to loft a deep free kick towards the back of the six yard box. Dulwich number one, Sheikh Ceesay, made to come then seemed stuck in a slough of indecision allowing Nana Badu to profit with a pitch perfect header across Ceesay, stood stock-still and into the back of the net.
Four minutes later Dulwich provided the perfect response as Sebastian Schoburgh, having been switch shortly previous from right to left wing, showed an electric turn of pace to leave amber shirts trailing in his slipstream. More mature than that prodigy that at turns fascinated and frustrated, Schoburgh hared into the box, but rather than shoot from an impossible angle chose instead to clip the ball back to his skipper, Beveney, who drilled the ball towards goal with such venom neither defenders nor keeper could deny its intended target.

Teams:
DHFC: Sheikh Ceesay; Gbenga Sonuga; Ricky Dobson; Benson Paka; Shayne Mangodza; Steve May; Shawn Beveney (Capt); Fasineh Koroma (Helder Valdes 72); Scott Edgar; Sol Patterson-Bohner; Sebastian Schoburgh
Substitutes not used: Meshach Nugent; Phil Williams; Michael Smith; Nej Hussein (GK)

WCFC: Craig Bradshaw; Stephen Tyson; John Ambridge; Max Hustwick; Rob Paris; Craig Lewington; Jean-Serge Musungu; Garry Mabbutt; Nana Badu; Jefferson Gowland (Kevin MacLaren 87); Lamin Ojo
Substitutes not used: Carlton Murray-Price; Chris Kiganda; Greg Ball; Rico Morris

Attendance: 303

Match Officials:
Referee: Mr Tony Power
Assistant Referees: Mr Simon Potter & Mr Roger Wells

Goalscoring
1-0 WCFC Nana Badu 26th minute
1-11 DHFC Shawn Beveney 30th minute













Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Dulwich Hamlet 2 Burgess Hill Town 1

Dulwich Hamlet 2 Burgess Hill Town 1
Ryman Isthmian League Division One South
Tuesday 30th October 2007
Up to 10th place for the Hamlet as the regenesis of recent weeks continued apace with a ballsy, belligerent defeat of a testing Burgess Hill Town, who have long proved a fly in the ointment for previous custodians of the Hamlet hot seat. The man of the hour (and a half) was Champion Hill’s very own great Scott, Edgar that is, at last finding the net for the Hamlet with a brace of goals displaying a masterclass in the art of poaching, the first going in amongst the muck and bullets to turn home a pitch perfect cross from Jermaine Hinds, the second more vital still for it cancelled out a Burgess Hill equaliser mere moments earlier.
In light of embattled victory and gallant defeat respectively neither side saw reason for change bar an enforced one for Dulwich, Phil Williams making way for the returning Stanley Muguo who played like a man possessed. Indeed the whole Dulwich midfield engine room purred into action like a finely honed sports car, one of its number, Benson Paka, the first to threaten in a high octane start as he was found in space on the left. Cutting back in he unleashed a fierce low drive that cannoned off a defender’s legs for the corner that was to bring calamity upon the visitors. Picked out lingering on the fringes of the area, Shawn Beveney swept the ball wide to Hinds rattling up the right wing, the right back swinging the ball keenly into the jowls of the goal. Tyro Hillian custodian, Chris Winterton, wavered, Edgar did not, stretching a long limb to divert the ball past the vacillating ‘keeper and into the back of the net.
The goal was the prelude to some diverting football as, orchestrated from midfield, Dulwich sung a symphony of scintillating soccer but without the goals to build on that lead. Billy Chattaway came close to reaching the end of an Edgar header back across goal only for David Piper’s dinked header to nudge the ball off the youngster’s head as he tried to force it home at the back post. Beveney too had the chances to add to the advantage, escaping like lightning at the spearhead of a Dulwich counter only to scoop the ball over the bar when well placed. Miscommunication, over exuberance combined to rob Hamlet of a second just past the half hour when the dancing feet of Beveney slipped the ball past his marker on the edge of the six yard box. Robbed of his balance at the vital moment by the dewy turf, Beveney regained his feet but failed to notice Sol Patterson-Bohner arriving like an express train, awkwardly spooning the ball over the bar before his team-mate could dispatch a shot on goal.
A teenage tangle as Chattaway charged down Winterton as he dithered with a clearance on the edge of his area but the roll favoured the Hillian as he beat Chattaway in the chase back for the ball. For a moment Hamlet lost shape, exposed on the right they might have been punished had Matt Geard at the back stick not pummelled the ball high into the night sky for a whipped cross. The coda to half saw Burgess Hill resurgent, eager to punishment home profligacy. A midfield muddle saw the ball surrendered, Ceesay rocketing from his line to clear as a lobbed pass threatened to let in Steve Harper. The clearance went back into enemy hands, Geard sensing the chance to rifle off a stern shot on course for the top corner until Ceesay stretched to claw the ball behind for a corner.
Perhaps Dulwich had substituted the isotonic for the Horlicks at the break, but seemed sluggish in comparison to a Hillian XI who had brimstone in their belly, waylaying the Hamlet rearguard in the early exchanges. They found no give and it was left to the Hamlet, once the early stupor had drifted away to create the first true opening as the galloping Muguo, escaping right, attempted to pick out Chattaway at the back of the six yard box, only a lack of inches preventing the youngster nodding in at the far upright.
Still the goals refused to come as if a charm had been laid on Winterton’s goal. A desperate lunging tackle deflected effort from Edgar, having cut back inside his man, left Winterton flatfooted but David Piper proved his saviour once more and Chattaway's nemesis again as the defender stretched to nod the ball away for the inrushing winger. Bludgeon swapped for rapier but still Dame Fortune turned away her face as Beveney sprung the offside trap on the right wing before tucking the ball back for Muguo to hammer past a leaden footed Winterton only to look on incredulously as the ball rattled back off the inside of the upright, zipping across the face of goal before clipping the outside of the other post and away.
Having used a trio of substitutes with nearly a half hour remaining, Burgess Hill lost the industrious David Piper, a clash of heads with Edgar necessitating treatment off the field for the six minutes before he returned head bandaged, Burgess Hill depleted team found extra impetus as Hamlet took the foot off the gas. That momentum continued as ten became eleven once more. Neil Watts’ dance into the box almost bore fruit but with eight minutes left an equaliser materialised. A booming throw into the penalty area was flicked on at the near post and Dulwich defenders statuesque, Watts rumbled into to meet the ball with a fierce volley from close range that gave Ceesay not an inkling of a chance.
Heads might have dropped but Burgess Hill joy was short-lived as Dulwich crafted a second goal before two more minutes had slipped by. Substitute Sebastian Schoburgh ripped into the right flank of the Hillians’ defence, his skills unable to shake off a blocking defender but the greater maturity that he has gained since his youth team days shone through as he trolled the ball back into the path of Paka, unleashing a drilled drive on goal that Winterton could only batter down in front of him. Pouncing like a panther, Edgar shrewdly lifted the ball over the prone ‘keeper to restore the Hamlet advantage.
Not that Burgess Hill would lie down after this setback but Ceesay would prove a hero as two minutes later he produced a top drawer save to fingertip the ball away as defender turned striker Danny Gainsford met the ball with a powerful header. Clattering into the post, the brave Hamlet number one needed treatment to a sore head but recovered to see out extensive stoppage time as Dulwich made sure of a third straight triumph.

Teams:
DHFC: Sheikh Ceesay; Jermaine Hinds; Ricky Dobson; Benson Paka; Shayne Mangodza; Steve May; Shawn Beveney (Capt) (Meshach Nugent 88); Stanley Muguo; Scott Edgar; Sol Patterson-Bohner (Michael Smith 76); Billy Chattaway (Sebastian Schoburgh 76)
Substitutes not used: Gbenga Sonuga, Nej Hussein (GK)

BHTFC: Chris Winterton; David Piper; Matt Piper (Jiri Dohnal 55); Nick Fogden; Danny Gainsford; Neil Watts; Steve Harper (Capt); Lloyd Cotton; Shaheen Sadough (Dan Royce 65); Jamie Howell; Matt Geard (Kenny Hewitt 63)
Substitutes not used: Simon Greatwich; Joe Bye

Attendance: 244

Officials:
Referee: Mr Tony Mason (Sidcup, Kent)
Assistant Referees: Mr Babatunde Adebayo (Bexleyheath, Kent) & Mr Keith Scudder (Gravesend, Kent)

Goalscoring
1-0 DHFC Scott Edgar 9th minute
1-1 BHTFC Neil Watts 81st minute
2-1 DHFC Scott Edgar 83rd minute

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Sittingbourne 0 Dulwich Hamlet 2

Sittingbourne 0 Dulwich Hamlet 2
Saturday 27th October 2007
Ryman League Division One South

A solid performance on the brickfields of Kent as the resurgence of Dulwich continued apace, another pretender to promotion seen off by late goals once their attacking threat had been snuffed out by the Hamlet’s resilient defence. Having slipped adrift of the leading pack as manager Craig Edwards rebuilt Dulwich in his own image, Hamlet have picked their way upwards and though they still reside in the wrong half of the table, the play-off places lie tantalisingly within grasp, a mere five points away.
Within Stanley Muguo detained in traffic, the management needed a quick reshuffle with Billy Chattaway called up to the starting line-up in the only change from an the initial XI that had seen off the threat of Tooting a week earlier. The right of defence had a slightly incongruous look though with Steve May in the shadow of his gargantuan right back Jermaine Hinds, the pair having shuffled positions in the early stages of the Imperial Fields triumph. If it ain’t broke don’t fix it! For their part the goal-shy Brickies found themselves shorn of on-loan striker Stuart Vahid, whose early season tour of North Kent, had ended in midweek with his recall to Ramsgate, though at least they could once again call upon the services of leading scorer Bradley Spice and influential midfield playmaker Kieran Marsh, who had begun to mine a rich vein of goalscoring form before injury curtailed his influence.
Leaden skies foretelling a primeval winter glowered down upon ramshackle Bourne Park and the early football was as grey as the elements. First threat from the hosts after five minutes as Steve Hafner wheedled his way into the Hamlet box, a sharp shot from a tight angle battered down by Sheikh Ceesay, alert at the near post, and away for a corner off Shayne Mangodza. 12 minutes had passed before Dulwich posed their first threat of note. A clumsy challenge 25 yards out presented Dulwich with a free kick, one from which skipper Shawn Beveney masterfully curled the ball over the Brick wall but too close to ‘keeper Jamie Riley who adeptly plucked the ball out of the air beneath his crossbar. Soon Sittingbourne replied as Anthony Hogg got himself into a good position only to dribble a volley straight at waiting Ceesay.
A shapeless, ragbag of a half ensued as the midfield morass sucked up the ball. When tested defence proved themselves impassable and it was left to speculative and the hopeful to provide the scant entertainment of the half. Benson Paka’s mazy dribble deserved better than a swirling drive from distance that was always, always curling wide of Riley’s net.
As the interval drew closer a rare break for the beleaguered ‘Bourne attackers as a brace of chances in quick succession presented themselves, lifting the locals’ spirits, only for off-key finishing to rapidly dampen them. 39 minutes and a goal kick was headed back behind the Hamlet defence, the Spice boy sneaking in behind Ricky Dobson, caught on the hop, but the angle was aside the Brickies’ striker as the shot rolled across the face of Ceesay’s goal. Moments later and with Dulwich massed on their right flank to repel a Sittingbourne incursion down the wing they left their opposite flank exposed, an almost fatal error as the ball was swung across the park to Mitchell Sherwood. To the Hamlet’s relief Sherwood opted not to attack the goal but instead opted for the spectacular a potent volley from distance never accurate enough to test Ceesay. A purple patch for the hosts continued as Marsh attempted to lob the ball over Ceesay but to no avail. All too soon for the hosts a blast of Mr Meilack’s whistle for half-time curtailed this renaissance, allowing Dulwich the breathing space to regroup and retaliate. Retaliate they did. Barely had the curtain raised on the second half, than the ball was crashed into the side netting though the reactions of some participants on the pitch suggested to those still supping the last dregs of the half-time pint that Dulwich had opened the scoring.
Industry still outweighed invention, tempo adagio, artistry absent. Dulwich were the more incisive but chances still remained at a premium. The ubiquitous Beveney, revelling in his recent rebirth as player and skipper, had the best of them, a back post header powerful but off the mark soon supplemented by a ferocious drive from an acute angle that might have skittled the travelling hoard but for the timely intervention of the side netting.
Phil Williams, the speed streak in his tonsure redundant today, made way for the mercurial Sebastian Schoburgh but the wing wizard could make little inroads in the home defence, not that he was alone in his frustration. Ceesay was barely roused from his reveries, Tristan Knowles attempting to give the Hamlet ‘keeper something to do with a mighty strike from miles out, but swirling high, wide and harmless. Riley too had little to do bar plucking the ball from the head of Scott Edgar as Schoburgh lashed in a tempting cross from hard left.
The weak winter sun had now penetrated that grey blanket of heaven and loath to leave with merely a point, the management brought out the last of the substitutes for the Hamlet as Edgar and Sol Patterson-Bohner were replaced by Meshach Nugent and newcomer Michael Smith respectively, the latter lately joined on loan from the tenants Fisher. Perhaps the change did Dulwich good, an extra burst of impetus from the switch, for three minutes later the barriers to goal were at last thrown down and from an unlikely source, defender Hinds. As Pink and Blue shirts packed into the Bourne box, a Hamlet corner was swung in. The battering rams failed to make the initial breakthrough but as the red and black rearguard peeled back as the ball dropped the foot of Hinds a ballista, as a golden drive scattered the last remnants of defence, the merest of deflections sending the ball scudding under the desperate dive of Riley.
Last chance saloon for the Brickies as every last card was played in a vain attempt to grab an equaliser, a trio of subs on in the wake of the goal, one of whose number, James Gregory, caused a frisson amongst the Hamlet support as he whipped a ball into the box from wide left. However Dulwich were not going to surrender that hard-won lead easily and rugged defending gave little succour to the Sittingbourne attackers. Having drunk from the cup of success, Dulwich wanted further sustenance; both Beveney and Nugent testing Riley, at last earning his corn. The best was saved to last, port and cigars to end a meal that satisfying more than sustaining and served up by the recidivist Schoburgh, determined to end the game with a flourish. A strong run took the fleet-footed Schoburgh to the brink of the box but faced with a wall of Brickies’ defenders, the call went out to head for the corner flag to waste away the final few seconds. For a second this seemed the plan but then in a flash of Pink and Blue, Schoburgh spun away from the shackles of his markers, darted into the box then sprung his arrow with a shot rifled across the face of a bemused Riley and into the far top corner of the net.

SFC: Jamie Riley; Tristan Knowles; Joe Dowley (Capt); Paul Ainsworth; James Campbell; Kieran Marsh; Steve Hafner (Hicham Akhazzan 83); Anthony Hogg; Bradley Spice (Dave Norris ?); Charlie Glyde (James Gregory 83); Mitchell Sherwood; Substitutes not used: Toby Ashmore; Bradley Ashmore

DHFC: Sheikh Ceesay; Jermaine Hinds; Ricky Dobson; Benson Paka; Shayne Mangodza; Steve May; Shawn Beveney (Capt); Phil Williams (Sebastian Schoburgh 68); Scott Edgar (Meshach Nugent 79); Sol Patterson-Bohner (Michael Smith 79); Billy Chattaway
Substitutes not used: Stanley Muguo; Nej Hussein (GK)

Attendance: 158

Match Officials:
Referee: Mr Frank Meilack (Ticehurst)
Assistant Referees: Mr J Gooding (Ashford) & Mr S Harding (Waderslade)

Goalscoring:
1-0 DHFC Jermaine Hinds 81st minute
2-0 DHFC Sebastian Schoburgh 90th minute (+3)