November 2022 (Page 7)

Venue: Huish Park
Tuesday 8th November, 7.45pm kick-off

Conditions: Wet and windy
Pitch: Slippery

Attendance: 1,906

Scorers: None

Bookings:

Yeovil Town: Bevan 42, Reckord 64, Oluwaborie 90+4
Maidenhead United: Asare 45, Beckwith 67, Adams 90+3

Referee: Robert Massey-Ellis


Yeovil Town (4-3-3):

Substitutes: Andrew Oluwabori (for Ewan Clark, 60), Gime Toure (for Georgiou, 84), Chiori Johnson, Ollie Hulbert, Malachi Linton.

Maidenhead United: Gyollai, Ferdinand, Asare, Massey, Nathaniel-George (for Clifton 90+3), Acquah, Arthur (for Keetch, 54), Smith (for McCoulsky, 87), Beckwith, Adams, Clerima. Substitutes (not used): Odutayo, Andre.

Match Report.

Yeovil Town’s ninth draw of the National League season was enough to move them out of the National League relegation zone in Mark Cooper’s first home game in charge.

But, more tellingly, it was also the eighth time this season that the Glovers have drawn a blank in front of goal and a failure to do much to force the Maidenhead United goalkeeper in to action was plain for all to see.

There was an improvement – if you set the bar at the last time out against Aldershot Town in Chris Hargreaves’ final match – especially when debutant Andrew Oluwaborie came on after an hour, but it still was not enough.

 

First half

On loan Leyton Orient winger Anthony Georgiou was handed a debut and fellow wideman Andrew Oluwaborie, signed just hours before kick-off from Peterborough United, was named on the bench as the Glovers set up with a three-man forward line in a bid to improve their record as the National League’s lowest scorers.

However, there was no place in the squad for Will Buse, Morgan Williams, Sam Perry, Lawson D’Ath, Charlie Wakefield or Jake Scrimshaw. Signs of changes being rung by Mark Cooper?

The first meaningful chance saw Kane Ferdinand take advantage of a Max Hunt error to test Grant Smith with an effort from the edge of the box and moments later another effort skidded off the slippery surface to force the keeper to awkwardly turn it wide.

But chances were at a premium in the opening 45 minutes. Jamie Andrews, starting his second match since joining on loan from West Bromwich Albion, was a bright spark on a damp night, he kept his head up and seemed a creative force in midfield.

As the half came towards an end, Owen Bevan was lucky to escape with just a yellow after a two-footed tackle on Ferdinand – call that one an ‘orange’ card with referee Robert Massey-Ellis perhaps given him credit

The best chance of the game so far fell to Emile Acquah as the game crept in to injury time. The striker’s effort shot took a ricochet off someone and forced Smith in to a fine stop to turn it over the bar.

We look better than we did last time out against Aldershot Town, but that isn’t saying much. Not much to warm you on a miserable evening.

Half time: Yeovil Town 0 Maidenhead United 0

Second half

To say the second half started in similar fashion to the end of the first would be an understatement. Ferdinand brought a stop out of Smith on 57 minutes but that was probably about as ‘exciting’ as it got….and I use exciting in the loosest possible sense of the word.

Perhaps recognising the risk of hypothermia setting in for those in the Thatcher’s Stand, Yeovil manager Mark Cooper introduced Andrew Oluwabori in place of Ewan Clark, who had a bright first half but again took some heavy knocks.

The change brought the impact it was seeking with Oluwabori added attacking impetus and sparking fellow debutant Georgiou into bombing forward.

A couple of dangerous balls in to the box from Georgiou were turned aside first by Josh Staunton and then from Max Hunt, but neither forced Daniel Gyollai in to a stop.

The keeper was called in to action on 71 minutes when Oluwabori found Alex Fisher who flicked the ball towards goal but was denied by Gyollai. A shot on target, folks!

Max Hunt put a header wide four minutes later, but that was honestly about as near as we came to mustering a meaningful shot on target.

The statistics speak for themselves – two shots on target and two shots off target in 90 minutes of football.

We’re out of the bottom four at the expense of Scunthorpe United who take on Wrexham on Wednesday night, but beyond that positives are hard to come by.

Full time: Yeovil Town 0 Maidenhead United 0

Chris Hargreaves said he will learn from the experienced of his disappointing spell as manager of Yeovil Town.

The former boss has issued a statement through the League Managers’ Association saying he was “hugely disappointed” to have been sacked after picking up just two wins in three months in charge.

The statement in full reads:

I would like to start by thanking the staff and players for their efforts and support during my time at Yeovil Town.

I was extremely proud to be given the opportunity to manage the club and naturally I am hugely disappointed to have left. In my short tenure, I believe that many of the team’s performances this season should have contributed to a higher points total and that this would have improved as the season progressed. We were competitive against some of the teams with the highest budgets in the league and on many occasions, showed huge potential.

The experience, while disappointing, is something I will learn from. I am keen to get back on the grass and will be doing everything I can to ensure that my next job is the right one for me to achieve success for a club.

I wish the board, supporters and everyone at Yeovil Town FC the very best for this season and beyond. I sincerely hope that they can achieve their objectives in the near future.

New signing Anthony Georgiou is handed an immediate debut as Yeovil Town go in search of three points against Maidenhead United at Huish Park tonight (7.45pm kick-off).

The Cypriot winger lines up in a three-man frontman led by Alex Fisher and supported by fellow loanee Ewan Clark with captain Josh Staunton, fellow loanee Jamie Andrews and Matt Worthington in midfield in a 4-3-3 formation.

Fellow new boy Andrew Oluwabori, who joined on loan from Peterborough United ahead of kick-off, is one of four forwards named on the bench with Ollie HulbertGime Toure and Malachi Linton.

 

 

Substitues: Chiori Johnson, Gime Toure, Ollie Hulbert, Malachi Linton, Andrew Oluwabori.

 

 

Yeovil Town made Peterborough United youngster Andrew Oluwabori their second winger to arrive at the club in 24 hours.

The 21-year-old’s arrival was announced ahead of the home match with Maidenhead United which he will be available for selection for alongside Anthony Georgiou, who joined from Leyton Orient on Monday.

Oluwabori, who has joined until 7th January making him available for ten matches (assuming it’s up to and including the 7th and a trip to Wrexham), spent the start of the season on loan at National League North side Kettering Town, scoring four times in ten appearances.

He becomes the seventh loanee at Huish Park joining Georgiou, Jamie Andrews, Sam Perry, Ewan Clark, Owen Bevan and Will Buse, if we assume that Sam Pearson’s stint in Somerset has ended after his return to Bristol City which was billed as “temporary” at the time.

Announcing the signing, the Glovers said: “Described as a front-foot winger, Andrew spent his early years in the academy at Huddersfield Town. He departed the Terriers prior to the 21/22 season and was picked up by Peterborough in September 2021.

He made three substitute appearances in two-and-a-half months on loan at Boreham Wood last season.

Yeovil Town have announced the short term signing of Anthony Georgiou, on loan from Leyton Orient.

Georgiou is a Cypriot international winger who was on the books of Tottenham through the youth ranks making a number of first team appearances for Spurs in pre season games.

He has also spent time on loan in the EFL.

Speaking to the Club’s YouTube channel, Georgiou said he was happy to be at Yeovil and getting going.

“The gaffer was really positive talking about me, and that’s what you want, to feel wanted somewhere, it’s a good thing to have.”

“As an attacking player, you want to get on the ball and create and that’s what my job is to do here.”

He describes himself as “mainly a winger” but says he wants to create and score some goals… which is absolutely fine by us!

Welcome to Somerset, Anthony!

Ollie Haste in action for Truro City. Picture courtesy of Cameron Weldon/Truro City FC.

Let’s keep this one quick.

With neither Yeovil Town or Plymouth Parkway in action on Saturday, the only contracted Glover in action was Ollie Haste, and even he had to wait for his chance.

Truro gave North Shields a bit of a thrashing winning 6-0, but Haste had to wait 70 minutes to get on the pitch.

The Glovers’ defender replaced Shane White with the score at 3-0 before the White Tigers rattled three more goals in.

Nice work, Ollie.

Everyone remembers their first match don’t they? I do. It wasn’t a big Hollywood clash, we’re not talking Arsenal, Liverpool or Manchester United in the FA Cup. It turns out I didn’t need the show, the crowd or the pizzazz to get me hooked on green and white

On the 18th of July 1998 I stepped foot into Huish Park for the first time to watch a match. (I’d been dragged to the car boot sale in the car park plenty of times) Fresh off the back of France ’98 my interest in football was a critical mass and with no Zizou to watch, and my first heartbreak of an England penalty loss (cheers Becks), I needed something to fill the void.

Recognising my unhealthy enthusiasm for he beautiful game, my Grandad decided to give me a taste of real football. Yeovil were heading into their second season in the Vauxhall Conference under Colin Lippiatt and the game my Grandad felt was the one to whet my appetite was a pre-season friendly against Swindon Town.

We took up our seats in the then (always?) Bartlett Stand, in Block H for a summer’s afternoon of entertainment. Iffy Onura gave Swindon the lead, and from our vantage point and my inexperienced eyes, I was adamant it didn’t go in – it hit the advertising boards behind the goal and hit the back of the net. I was wrong on that, not for the last time.

My first taste of celebrating a Yeovil goal was an own goal. The Swindon right back has comfortable possession, and decided to knock it back to his goalkeeper. Unfortunately for him, he got a little bit too much on it and it went all the way over the keeper and into the net – up the might Glovers. And that was that for the game.

In hindsight, what a dull game to kick off supporting a club that’s taken up an unhealthy amount of time, money and commitment in life. My first taste of Yeovil wasn’t Fergie circling Huish Park in a chopper. It wasn’t Ian Wright scoring a hattrick. It wasn’t Nathan Smith wiping out Alexis Sanchez. It wasn’t Ed Upson heading us to Wembley. It wasn’t anything memorable in our history. We conceded first and our equaliser wasn’t even scored by someone in green – perhaps a perfect initiation for a life spent supporting Yeovil.

And you know what? I wouldn’t change it. Yeovil Town vs Swindon in July ’98 was a game that changed my life and shaped a future of supporting Yeovil Town FC.

It might be a blank weekend for the Yeovil Town first team and Under-18s but there will be six teams turning out in green and white this weekend.

The club’s age group sides, who play as part of the Yeovil Town Community Sports Trust, are all in Junior Premier League action on Saturday.

The Under-13s, Under-14s, Under-15s and Under-16s are all playing against opposition from Weston-super-Mare, whilst the Under-12s face Cirencester Town and the Under-11s face the South Gloucestershire Regional Talent Centre.

As well as its Junior Premier League teams, the Trust runs a number of Talent ID Centres and Mini Glovers sessions for children as young as three years old.

To find out more about their work, visit their website – here.

Midfielder Callum Rowe has left Yeovil Town following the expiry of the short-term contract when he joined at the end of August.

The 23-year-old was brought to Huish Park by former manager Chris Hargreaves and made his debut coming off the bench in the Glovers’ first win of the season, the 1-0 victory over Dagenham & Redbridge a few days after his arrival.

But, having come off the bench in the Bank Holiday Monday draw at Wealdstone, the former Aston Villa youngster suffered an injury which kept him out until he was given his first start in the ill-fated FA Cup fourth qualifying round replay at Taunton Town.

His last game came in the 2-0 home defeat to Aldershot Town which proved to be Hargreaves’ last in charge of the club.

Go well in the future, Callum.


Edit to say Callum Rowe has now since joined Salisbury FC and was part of their squad on Saturday