January 2022 (Page 9)

Venue: Huish Park
Saturday, January 8th, 5.45pm kick-off

Conditions: Howling wind and driving rain for the first half, but calmer and drier in the second half.
Pitch: Given the rain that had fallen on it, it performed magnificently.

Attendance: 7,818 (2,033 away supporters)

Scorers: Marcondes 19 (0-1), Marcondes 43 (0-2), Quigley 48 (1-2), Marcondes 70 (1-3)

Referee: Jeremy Simpson

Bookings:
Yeovil Town: Gorman 3, Worthington 7, Moss 35
AFC Bournemouth: Pearson 65, Rossi 90+1, Brady 90+5

 



Yeovil Town
: (4-4-2)

Dillon Barnes
Dan Moss, Max Hunt, Luke Wilkinson, Morgan Williams
Matt Worthington, Dale Gorman, Josh Staunton, Jordan Barnett
Tom Knowles, Joe Quigley

Substitutes: Charlie Wakefield (for Morgan Williams, 68), Sonny Blu Lo-Everton (for Matt Worthington, 78), Adi Yussuf (for Joe Quigley, 78), Reuben Reid (for Dale Gorman, 85), Alex Bradley, Jack Robinson, Jaheim Headley, Toby Stephens, Max Evans.

AFC Bournemouth: Nyland, Mepham, Marcondes, Lowe, Davis, Pearson, Kilkenny, Rogers, Anthony, Ibsen-Rossi, Moriah-Welsh. Substitutes: Brady (for Anthony, 64), Saydee (for Davis, 85), Camp (for Pearson, 90), Travers, Dennis, Stacey, Kelly,  Gidaree, Cook.

 


Match Report

A hat-trick from the impressive Emiliano Marcondes was enough to end Yeovil Town‘s run in the FA Cup with a youthful AFC Bournemouth side running out comfortable winners.

The Danish midfielder put away two calm finishes in an opening 45 minutes which was controlled by the visitors who knocked the ball around confidently despite howling wind and rain which lashed Huish Park.

A mistake by Cherries’ keeper Orjan Nyland handed Joe Quigley the opportunity to pull one back for Yeovil just three minutes after the restart, but a mistake by on-loan Glovers’ keeper Dillon Barnes gifted Marcondes a third in the second half.

Ian was there to watch it and – with a couple of additional bits from Dave watching on the telly – here’s how he saw the third round fixture.

 

First half

There was a big match feeling at Huish Park, and plenty of anticipation with a packed crowd of in excess of 7,000 behind the Glovers – well, presumably with the exception of the sold out away end, that is.

Despite the talk of COVID absentees, Darren Sarll welcomed back captain Luke Wilkinson and on-loan full-back Dan Moss, who missed the Torquay defeat through illness and suspension, and brought Joe Quigley up front.

We also managed to name nine substitutes, which is somewhat of a miracle considering he’d only manage four subs at points this season.

The visitors did not play a team packed with first-team regulars from their Championship table-topping side, but there were was plenty of League experience in the side in the form of midfielder Ben Pearson and forwards Jamal Lowe and Jaidon Anthony to name just three.

As the wind and rain on a miserable night battered the travelling Bournemouth supporters on the uncovered away terrace, Yeovil got off to a feisty start.

Dale Gorman picked up a booking after just three minutes for a tackle which, if it had been made at the same point in the second half, could have seen him dismissed by referee Jeremy Simpson. That said, the booking dished out for Matt Worthington four minutes later was as soft as…..Rule 1, must remember Rule 1.

An early free-kick was shot high and wide by Gorman, but Bournemouth’s quality was on show as they controlled the possession without creating much in the way of clear cut chances.

For all the tippy-tappy sideways stuff, it was a simple opener for non-stop Emiliano MARCONDES who opened the scoring. A great ball from defender Chris Mepham, a £12m signing a couple of summers ago, split the defence and Marcondes ran in between Wilkinson and Moss to slot calmly home with 19 minutes gone.

Bournemouth dominated the ball for long spells, leaving the Glovers with a lot of chasing to do and a midfield who had to be cautious given the early yellows. There was a third which looked soft – and even softer on the television replays – for Moss who got the ball. Referees giving decisions to bigger teams, whatever next, eh?

Anthony came close to doubling the Cherries’ lead after 23 minutes when his deep effort beat Barnes all ends up and came off the inside of the post and away.

It was the impressive MARCONDES, doubled his tally just before half-time after patient possession from Bournemouth. The attacking midfielder was played in my Anthony and drove a low powerful shot across Barnes into the far corner.

 Half time: Yeovil Town 0 AFC Bournemouth 2

Second half

The second half couldn’t have started any better for Yeovil.  Cherries’ keeper Orjan Nyland dallied on the ball and was dispossessed by a fine tackle from Tom Knowles and the ball broke to Joe QUIGLEY to put the ball into an empty net and unglue the packed Thatchers’ terrace in the 47th minute.

Joe Quigley celebrates vs Bournemouth

Yeovil’s quick start seemed to take all Bournemouth’s rhythm and it took them a while find it. When they did find it, they worked a nice opportunity for Jamal Lowe which was saved well by the leg of Barnes.

However, the on-loan keeper didn’t cover himself in glory moments later. Lowe carved himself some space inside the Yeovil 18 yard box and his shot was parried by Barnes to the feet of MARCONDES who could pick his spot to complete his hat trick.

Darren Sarll rolled the dice with ten minutes left on the clock, bringing on Sonny Blu Lo-Everton and Adi Yussuf before he added Reuben Reid. Ultimately, Bournemouth’s quality on the ball saw them through as they controlled proceedings keeping the Glovers at arm’s length.

Reid came close to adding a second with the final kick of the game. Barnett’s ball in saw Moss battle with Nyland and the ball broke to the substitute whose shot was blocked on the line by the body and arms of defender Brennan Camp. Reid grabbed the ball ready for the penalty, but referee Simpson blew the full-time whistle instead.

Yeovil can hold their heads high, Bournemouth are no slouches, and are likely to be playing Premier League football next season.

It was nice to see a good crowd at Huish Park – even the owner turned up!

Full time: Yeovil Town 1 AFC Bournemouth 3

Captain Luke Wilkinson returns to the Yeovil Town side for the FA Cup third round tie with Championship leaders AFC Bournemouth (5.45pm kick-off).

The central defender, who missed last weekend’s defeat at home to Torquay United, lines up alongside Max Hunt in the centre of defence with on-loan full-back Dan Moss returning after suspension.

Ex-Bournemouth striker Joe Quigley is the other change coming in for Adi Yussuf who drops to the substitutes’ bench.

The visitors have made ten changes from their last match with the more familiar faces being midfielder Ben Pearson, who began his career in the Manchester United academy, striker Jaidon Anthony and ex-Swansea City forward Jamal Lowe.

Yeovil Town (4-3-3): Dillon Barnes, Dan Moss, Max Hunt, Luke Wilkinson, Morgan Williams, Jordan Barnett, Dale Gorman, Josh Staunton, Matt Worthington, Tom Knowles, Joe Quigley.

Substitutes:  Max Evans, Alex Bradley, Jack Robinson, Jaheim Headley, Toby Stephens, Sonny Blu Lo-Everton, Charlie Wakefield, Reuben Reid, Adi Yussuf. 

AFC Bournemouth: Nyland, Mepham, Marcondes, Lowe, Davis, Pearson, Kilkenny, Rogers, Anthony, Ibsen-Rossi, Moriah-Welsh. Substitutes: Travers, Dennis, Stacey, Kelly, Camp, Brady, Gidaree, Cook, Saydee,

The Under-13s side representing the Yeovil Town Community Sports Trust went down to a 4-3 defeat at the Mid-Somerset Regional Talent Centre on Saturday morning.

The defeat in the Junior Premier League Under-13s Knock-Out Cup despite goals from Henry Lant, Moss Jackson-Collis and Harry Crittenden

The fixtures for the Trust’s Under-11s, Under-14s, Under-15s and Under-16s in the Junior Premier League, and the Under-18s trip to Bath City in the South West Counties Youth League all fell foul to the bad weather.

The weekend’s bad weather has led to the postponement of almost every youth team match.

Yeovil Town Under-18s match at Bath City in the South West Counties Youth League was postponed due to a waterlogged pitch.

Only the Under-13s representing the Yeovil Town Community Sports Trust are in action when they travel to the Mid-Somerset Regional Talent Centre in the Junior Premier League Under-13s Knock-Out Cup.

The fixtures for the Trust’s Under-11s, Under-14s, Under-15s and Under-16s have all fallen foul to the weather.

Dale Gorman scores his penalty vs Weymouth
Credit: Weymouth Flickr

Yeovil Town midfielder Dale Gorman has been speaking ahead of the Glovers’ FA Cup tie vs Bournemouth and says that a quick start could be a good way to get at their Championship opponents.

We look to start every game fast, and that’s been key to our success recently.”

Yeovil have scored a divisional best six goals in the National League this season, conceding just one in the league during the opening 15 minutes of games so far, whilst the Cherries are yet to find the net away from home in the first quarter of an hour on in the 2nd tier.

“It might be a bit different (vs Bournemouth) with the way they set up, we don’t know that until we encounter it tomorrow, but look, it’s something that we’ve talked about and something we’ve got into a routine of doing over the past two or three months”

“So, we will be looking to start fast tomorrow and be focused and be ready to do our jobs”

Yeovil have scored a divisional best six goals in the National League this season, conceding just one in the league during the opening 15 minutes of game, 

Gorman said that returning to working under Darren Sarll means he’s now enjoying his football again and is proud to play for a ‘great club‘ like Yeovil.

Manager Darren Sarll has promised “surprises” in the Yeovil Town side he puts out to face AFC Bournemouth in the FA Cup third round on Saturday.

The Glovers’ camp have been struck down by COVID-19 this week which left the boss with just 12 players to choose from on Thursday, but the boss said the situation was changing daily.

He also revealed that former Bournemouth midfielder Matt Worthington and defender Morgan Williams both suffered knocks which saw them go off in the 2-1 defeat against Torquay United last weekend.

Sarll said: “I thought at one stage we may not be able to play the game just because of sheer numbers (of players we had unavailable).

“I’m coming back to a place where COVID has been present and I’m putting myself at risk every day, if I take this home to my two children and my wife, they are at risk.

“That doesn’t seem to be top of anyone’s agenda. I’m not sulking, those are just the facts, we are getting on with it.

“Outside the Premier League, there doesn’t seem to be any process around these decisions – play the game or get out of the competition.”

On Worthington and Williams, he added: “Williams will be touch and go, Worthington is probably stronger in terms of what we has been able to do this week.

“Then without naming individuals, there’s those who have suffered with illness this week, they have to take a different place depending where they are with their recovery.


“There will be surprises in the line up and the surprises will only be because of the illness that has been in the camp this week.”

There was no specific reference to captain Luke Wilkinson who missed the Torquay defeat having returned a positive lateral flow test ahead of the fixture – so it appears we may have to wait and see which Yeovil Town team makes the team-sheet come 4.45pm on Saturday.

In other news from the weekly pre-match press conference, the manager said:

  • It sounds like the boss will not be getting caught up in the romance of the FA Cup saying his side could not afford to be distracted by “all that mumbo-jumbo.”
    He added: “We have to play every kick and every moment being focused and concentrated and we have to see it through until whatever minute it takes.
    “I have been fortunate this is not my first time playing a team from the Championship in round three, and you can get ahead of yourself and thinking about the potential outcomes of the game.
    “We have just got to get to minute one and try to get through to minute two with a focus which is unparalleled to what we normally do because we are playing such a great side.” 
  • It seems unlikely there will be any further loan signings at coming in with the saying the only additions he would require need finances he does not have access too.
    He said: “The best loans we have had here are Remeao Hutton who was 100% supported by Birmingham, and Jimmy Smith, who we paid our way for because he was that good.
    “So if you want those players who will make an immediate impact like Jimmy did you have to have the resources available and at the moment I don’t think they are available.
    The club currently has its full quota of loanees in goalkeeper Dillon Barnes, defenders Dan Moss (Millwall), Jack Robinson (Middlesbrough) and Jaheim Headley (Huddersfield Town) and forward Sonny Blu Lo-Everton.
    Sarll reiterated that he would be “delighted” to keep two out of the three of Moss, Robinson and Lo-Everton.
  • There was praise for Jaheim Headley who the manager said only missed out on the defeat to Torquay due to the late absence of Luke Wilkinson.
    Sarll said: “Jaheim Headley has been brilliant since he joined us. He was very unfortunate to miss out on the squad (against Torquay) which was only because Wilkinson’s situation.
    “His attitude has been fabulous and he’s a real credit to Huddersfield, I don’t see too many young men behaving in the way he has this week.”

 

COVID-19 has swept through AFC Bournemouth over the last couple of weeks leaving manager Scott Parker with limited options for the trip to Huish Park – albeit probably not as limited as his opposite number, Darren Sarll.

The bout of the virus saw the Cherries’ opening Championship fixture of 2022 postponed on January 3 meaning they have not played since the 3-0 home win over Cardiff City on December 30.

Speaking before the weekend, Parker said he expects to use the depth of his squad: “I want to stay in this competition, get through to the next round and win this game, but with the climate of where we are (with COVID) there’s no doubt we will be using the squad.

“That is because those players deserve an opportunity and because of where we are in terms of COVID cases and injuries as well.

“We are going to need to be sensible and use the squad sensibly.”

Highly-rated defender Lloyd Kelly and young keeper Will Dennis were the players first diagnosed with the virus and both have now served their isolation periods.

Defender Jordan Zemura had been due to link up with the Zimbabwe squad for their African Cup of Nations campaign, but media reports suggest he did not make the trip as he was isolating.

The main aim to win promotion back to the Premier League seems likely to have a greater say over the strength of the Cherries’ side on display and it seems unlikely their bigger names will feature in the FA Cup.

The smart money is on the likes of striker Dominic Solanke, the £17m signing from Liverpool, highly-rated midfielder Philip Billing or Jeff Lerma will feature – but don’t rule out them being on the bench.

However, Parker has placed faith in products of the club’s prolific academy this season and the likes of Jaidon Anthony, who Yeovil fans will remember impressing in a pre-season friendly at Huish Park in September 2020, Irish midfielder Gavin Kilkenny and defender Zeno Ibsen-Rossi all featuring this season.

It seems more likely that some of these young talents will be among those on show for the Red Button cameras this weekend.

There’s probably not a huge amount we can tell from the appearance of a side made up of the club’s under-18s and development squad members in the Hampshire Senior Cup in midweek.

They lost 1-0 at Southern League side Farnborough Town with defender Ibsen-Rossi and Gloverscast legend (well, to Ben at least) striker Euan Pollock all in action.

If you haven’t listened to it yet, catch our chat with Cherries YouTuber Craig on the latest edition of the podcast – listen here.


FROM THE MANAGER

Bournemouth manager Scott Parker has told his players they need to arrive at Huish Park ready to put in a performance or risk becoming another victim of the Yeovil Town’s FA Cup giant-killing record books:

He told the club’s official website: “If there’s one thing the FA Cup does bring, no matter how many teams are in between you and the opposition, it’s all irrelevant.

“This is what makes this Cup special, it brings really strange results and sometimes well deserved results, so the one thing we need to understand is we have to go there with the right attitude.

“We need to understand what this competition can bring and put in a performance, if we don’t, it will be a tough day for us.


TEAM NEWS

Even if some of the Bournemouth bigger names seem likely to be rested, there are a number of players returning from injury who will be familiar faces from the Cherries’ Premier League era who could well feature at Huish Park.

Striker Junior Stanislas is a doubt with a shoulder injury and was subbed on and off again after just 14 minutes on the pitch in the win at Cardiff in the last outing.

Manager Scott Parker said he was seeing a specialist about the injury this week, so his presence will depend on the outcome of that appointment.

The boss also said Republic of Ireland winger Robbie Brady winger was back in training this week, adding: “We’ll have to assess whether this weekend is too soon for Robbie or not.

Midfielder Ben Pearson (ankle) was an unused substitute in South Wales and has not featured since the start of December, while Lewis Cook is expected to continue his comeback after a rupturing knee ligaments last season, so both could get minutes at the weekend.

Goalkeeper Orjan Nyland, who joined on a free from Norwich City in the summer, could get a start in goal, but it seems likely that the match will have a youthful feel.

Unlikely to appear are new signings defenders Ethan Laird, who has signed on loan from Manchester United, and James Hill, a £1m addition from League One Fleetwood Town, who both arrived this week.

Parker said: “We need to work out where they both are physically, we need to tread carefully around that.

“There’s going to be some work with them around the way we play, the boys we have with us now have worked tirelessly over the last six months and they’re well drilled to understand the game model.

“So, these two new lads are going to need a speedy lesson.

 


FOOT IN BOTH CAMPS

In the Yeovil Town camp, midfielder Matt Worthington and striker Joe Quigley are both products of the Dean Court academy.

Quigley, who was born in the New Forest, spent eight years on the South Coast having started in the academy as an 11-year-old before going on to make eight separate loan spells before being released in 2018.

Worthington joined Bournemouth in 2011 having been in the youth team set-up at both Portsmouth and Southampton and made a Premier League appearance on the final day of the 2016-17 season.

  • Alex Dobre – Bournemouth (2016-20), Yeovil Town (2019 – loan)
  • Jordan Green – Bournemouth (2015-17), Yeovil Town (2017-19)
  • Sam Surridge – Bournemouth (2015-21), Yeovil Town (2017-18 – loan)
  • Matt Butcher – Bournemouth (2015-20), Yeovil Town (2016-17 – loan)
  • Brandon Goodship – Bournemouth (2013-17), Yeovil Town (2017 – loan)
  • Danny Seaborne – Bournemouth (2013 – loan), Yeovil Town (2013-14)
  • Ben Whitfield – Bournemouth (2014-18), Yeovil Town (2016-17 – loan)
  • Wes Fogden – Bournemouth (2011-14), Yeovil Town (2015-16)
  • Shaun MacDonald – Yeovil Town (2009-11 – five loan spells), Bournemouth (2011-16)
  • Asmir Begovic – Yeovil Town (2008 – loan), Bournemouth (2017-21)
  • Marc Wilson – Yeovil Town (2007 – loan), Bournemouth (2007 – loan, 2016-17)
  • Simon Weatherstone – Yeovil Town (2004), Bournemouth (2014-21 – first-team coach)
  • Martin Cranie – Bournemouth (2004), Yeovil Town (2006-07 – loan)
  • James Hayter – Bournemouth (1997-07), Yeovil Town (2012-15)

Come the end of this season, there are just two Yeovil Town players still in contract.

Let that one sink in for a minute. We could legitimately be left with defender Morgan Williams and striker Joe Quigley by the time we reach the end of the current campaign.

Now we are into 2022, the situation becomes even more hairy with the possibility of clubs sniffing around some of our crown jewels with the form of Charlie Wakefield, Tom Knowles, and others unlikely to have gone unnoticed.

Even manager Darren Sarll only has six months left on his contract and, in the words of the manager himself last week, it’s down to “a level of uncertainty” which hangs over Huish Park.

The uncertainty exists because of the off-the-field situation with a ‘will they-won’t they?’ situation around a possible takeover.

Assuming the situation is not resolved between the submission and publication of this column, we will be just shy of four calendar weeks since the expiry of a seven-day deadline to complete a deal was set by chairman and owner Scott Priestnall.

For supporters that is frustrating and concerning, but let’s take a step back and think about what it means for those people employed by the club.

The vast majority of players and coaching staff are without any certainty. As Darren Sarll said last week: “Do I have to tell the people living in my house to find somewhere else to live? Do I have to start looking for new schools for my children?”

And it’s not just those involved on the pitch, there is an ever decreasing number of people employed to ensure the off-the-field operations at the club as well – what of their futures?

For many of us, football is a passion, but for many others it is literally their lives.

For their sakes as well as ours, let’s hope the “level of uncertainty” which has hung over our club for months does not remain much longer.cts

On today’s episode of the Gloverscast, Ben, Dave and Ian revisit Torquay and chat about this weekends FA Cup match against Bournemouth. We talk to Craig from UTCIAD about The Cherries’ preparation for Saturday, plus there’s a brand new quiz!

Thanks for listening!


Remember to add Gloverscast.co.uk to your favourites and check the website daily for the latest news from Huish Park.

Follow us on Twitter and Facebook, enjoy some retro content on Instagram. Leave us a review and share the pod with a pal.

WANT TO ADVERTISE ON THE GLOVERSCAST? Send us an email for our rate card.

If you want to take part in the quiz, have an idea for the website or just want to send us a message, email ian@gloverscast.co.uk

Yeovil Town 4 Shrewsbury Town 2 – Monday 3rd January 2005

Yeovil’s second year in League Two, 2004/05, was certainly not straightforward and was a rollercoaster of a season. It ended in success, but it was so tight at the top that it sometimes seemed like the Glovers would miss out on promotion altogether as they battled it out with Scunthorpe, Southend, Swansea and Macclesfield for three automatic promotion places.

The New Year’s fixture at home to Shrewsbury encapsulated the entire Yeovil season in one game – early promise, a setback mostly of their own making followed by a flurry of goals and ultimately, victory. You got to experience all the emotions in a very short space of time in 2004/05.

Pre-season optimism was high, having only just missed out on the playoffs by goal difference in their debut season, with a 74 point haul that would see the Glovers comfortably in the playoffs in most if not all previous seasons. In the end, they missed out on goal difference after winning 3-2 at Lincoln, and had the critical game on the last day between Mansfield and Northampton gone any way other than a late Northampton victory, Yeovil would have been in the hat. And that was after an inconsistent season, certainly not without its disappointments and harsh lessons, but still almost ending with the playoffs. If the majority of the team could be kept together with a few key additions then surely a more sustained promotion challenge was certainly a possibility. The obvious deficiencies in the squad – the lack of a 20-goal striker or a dominant target man, a left winger or a left back who wasn’t a centre half playing out of position, were all addressed with the arrivals of Phil Jevons, Bartosz Tarachulski, Adrian Caceres (and later, Andrejs Stolcers) and Michael Rose. Some of our established Conference players like Kirk Jackson, Adam Stansfield, Nick Crittenden and Abdou El Kholti all departed but that seemed to be the manager’s choice – none of the core of the team were swept up by other clubs as Weale, Skiverton, Lockwood, Miles, Way, Johnson, Williams and Gall all remained and we welcomed Scott Guyett, who had just won the Conference with Chester.

Ambitions took a dent in August, as hopes of a first day win in the Greater Manchester area for the second season in a row at Bury (just down the road from the first ever league game, at Rochdale) were squashed despite taking a 1-0 half time lead through Caceres, as Yeovil were brushed aside in the second half thanks mostly to a young striker called David Nugent.

Performances gradually improved, and Yeovil went top of the league in September with a 2-1 win at Shrewsbury, courtesy of goals from Johnson and Tarachulski. Results after that stuttered though, as it was followed by run of six games without a win as the Glovers dropped out of the playoff places into 8th. A 4-1 win at home to Chester signalled another recovery, as Yeovil turned things around slowly at first – a late 1-0 win at Wycombe, a late draw snatched at Darlington – but they eventually gathered momentum and went on a run of 13 wins in 15 league and cup games, including an incredible nine wins in a row in December and January. In this spell, Yeovil could not stop scoring but rarely kept clean sheets either, conceding 19 goals and scoring 41 – more the entirety of the 2007/08 season in just over two months. As momentum increased, there was a sense that no matter how many the opposition scored, Yeovil would just score more, as they went on a run of 3-2, 4-1, 5-3, 2-0, 4-2 and 3-0. In fact in eight of those 15 games, Yeovil had either conceded an equaliser or gone behind. We couldn’t really shut out games, it wasn’t what we did. Over Christmas though we were in an incredible run of goalscoring form – going 1-0 down against Cheltenham but winning 4-1, 2-0 down at Cambridge but scoring five second half goals to win 5-3, and coming back from 2-1 down with ten men against Shrewsbury. Arguably the best result of the lot (and one of the only clean sheets) was the 2-0 win at Swansea on New Year’s Day, in the last game played between the two sides at the Vetch, in front of over 11,000 including around 1,000 Yeovil fans. Swansea had been top earlier in the season and gone into the game in 3rd, but a team containing Lee Trundle, Andy Robinson, Paul Conner and Roberto Martinez could not break through the Glovers’ back line as late goals from Stolcers and Jevons nicked the points. That was possibly the moment that Yeovil really showed their mettle as title contenders, usually free-flowing but also showing that when it really came down to the wire, they could keep it tight if they needed to. They just chose not to most of the time, playing 2-4-4 (or 2-2-6) instead.

Just two days after Swansea came the visit of struggling Shrewsbury, who on paper looked like an easy three points although it did not turn out that way. Darren Way gave the home side the lead with a deflected long range shot in the first half, but all the drama was saved for the second half. Shrewsbury equalised through a debatable penalty in the 64th minute, before Colin Miles was sent off for one of the clearest red cards you will ever see after 72 minutes (surprisingly for his fearsome reputation Miles was only sent off on one other occasion, at Telford in 2002, but he certainly did like to collect yellow cards like they were Panini stickers)

Things went from bad to worse as just two minutes later, a swift Shrewsbury counter-attack saw them take the lead through David Edwards. They could not hold onto their numerical advantage though, as future Glover Luke Rodgers let his team down by tussling with Lindegaard on the touchline, and getting his side reduced to ten men just four minutes after Miles had been sent off. Paul Terry equalised with a header on 78 minutes, and in case you are losing track that’s three goals and two red cards in 14 minutes.

Yeovil were in the ascendency and on 84 minutes took the lead through an Adrian Caceres we’ll be generous and call it ‘shot’, although he possibly didn’t know much about it, Gall’s cross sort of hit him and went in. Although he was not the biggest hit at Yeovil, making only seven league starts before being shipped out on loan in his one and only season, he was in the right place at the right time for a crucial goal. Interestingly, by the time Guyett, Tarachulski and Jevons had been replaced by Reed, Davies and Caceres, Yeovil must have lost a combined two feet in height, and in addition to Lindegaard, Way, Stolcers and Gall already on the pitch probably represented one of the shortest teams of all time, even with Lee Johnson absent. With Miles off, Weale and Skiverton would have been the only players left on the pitch even close to six foot. It’s a good job Shrewsbury didn’t notice that and start lumping balls into the box. In the 89th minute Caceres then turned provider for Kevin Gall to sprint clear and wrap up the points.

Crucially, as good as Yeovil’s Christmas had been, leaders Scunthorpe’s was bad. Seven points clear on 18th December, they gained only two points from their four festive fixtures and Yeovil’s win over Shrewsbury saw them go top of League Two again after seven league wins in a row. On this occasion they would hold on to top spot for much longer, although there was still plenty of drama still to come in the season.

Team that day: Chris Weale, Andy Lindegaard, Terry Skiverton, Scott Guyett (sub. Stephen Reed 66), Colin Miles, Darren Way, Paul Terry, Andrejs Stolcers, Kevin Gall, Bartosz Tarachulski (sub. Adrian Caceres 77), Phil Jevons (sub. Arron Davies 66). Subs not used: Steve Collis, Nicholas Mirza.