April 2024 (Page 5)

The Football Association have revealed their latest set of Agents Fees for the Dates from 1 February 2023 to 1 February 2024 

Yeovil Town Spent £41,492 on agents during this period.

This number is up from a little over £2000 for the 12 months prior.

In contrast, the highest spenders in the National League Systen were York City who spent £128,902, Darlington spent just £900

The FA also provide a full list of the transactions which are included in this, for Yeovil they were as follows with the name of the specific agent or agency also listed;

Jordan Stevens – New Registration –  Stellar Football Limited 
Scott  Pollock –  Perm Transfer In – Sebastian Carmichael-Brown 
Callum Harriott –  New Registration –  Jack Wilson 
Matthew Worthington – New Registration  – Robert Woods 
Rhys Murphy – New Registration – Daniel Blanchett 
Jake Hyde – New Registration – Achieve Management Limited 
Alex Whittle – New Registration – Lee Philpott 
Frank Nouble – New Registration – Alexander Javdan 
Jordan Maguire-Drew – Updated Contract – Luke Guttridge 
Morgan Williams – Updated Contract – Elite Management 
Dylan Morgan – Perm Transfer In – Rhydian Thomas 
Jordan Young –  Updated Contract – Scott Dutton 

For those of you interested; the full lists can be found HERE

Yeovil Town History of Agents Fees

1st Feb ’23 – 1st Feb ’24 – £41,492
1st Feb ’22 – 31st Jan ’23 – £2,210
2nd Feb ’21 – 31st Jan ’23 – £26,834
31st Jan ’20 – 1st Feb ’21 – £1,287
1st Feb ’19 – 30th Jan ’20 – £19,387

 

 

The National League has released the following statement regarding the W*ymouth v Yeovil game which was abandoned on April 1st

The National League can confirm a decision has been reached following the abandonment of the match between Weymouth and Yeovil Town.

Following an investigation by the Football Association the League has now determined the outcome of the abandonment from the National League South fixture on April 1.

It has been decided that the game is not to be replayed, and the match has been awarded to Weymouth in accordance with League rules.

Weymouth were 1-0 in front when a medical emergency affecting a supporter occurred during the second half of the match at the Bob Lucas Stadium earlier this month.

Tables will be updated accordingly. Regulations state that while the home club are awarded three points, goals for and against are not to be added.

The most important thing here is that the lady is question is on the mend and back cheering on the Champions at Huish Park soon enough.

Yeovil Town manager Mark Cooper paid tribute to his players, the club’s supporters and chairman Martin Hellier as he tasted promotion at the first attempt with a 2-0 victory against Truro City.

The boss was soaked in champagne by his players as he gave a raft of interviews at the side of the pitch having watched the game from the stands at Gloucester City’s Tigerturf Stadium, part of a touchline ban for his recent FA charge for picking fault with a Hemel Hempstead player trying to break his son’s leg.

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Sheridan Robins after the match, he said: “It’s a fantastic achievement for the club, the owner came in and gave us a chance to put this remarkable team together and get a bit of soul and heart back in the club and we have done that. We have done that, the players have done that and it is a brilliant night for the football club and one we should enjoy.

It feels so sweet. We proved everybody wrong and we went and we enjoyed the plastic and we look forward to next season now.”

Cooper has spoken on many occasions about the desire to remove the stain of last season’s relegation to regional football during a turbulent period at the club, and admitted he always wanted to stay on to try and guide them back at the first attempt.

Asked how he felt about his decision to stay, he said: “I am delighted, but I did not have too many options, to be honest! I just felt there was the nucleus of a good team and I wanted to get rid of that relegation or make it look better on my CV.

Next up, Yeovil return to Huish Park with relegation-threatened Dartford coming to town on Saturday when the National League South trophy will be presented and the manager said he was looking forward to celebrating with the club’s supporters.

He said: “We hope to have the chairman there. He was not here tonight, he has gone away for a much deserved break, but I am buzzing for Saturday when we can have a party together with loads and loads of Yeovil fans and get that feel good factor back. We have to enjoy these moments before we start thinking about next year.

It is amazing support, for the level we are at. It should be a great football club and we want to try and build that and make it great again.

On the pitch on Thursday night, goals from strikers Rhys Murphy and Alex Fisher sealed the three points which clinched the title. But, the game was not without adversity with winger Jordan Stevens coming off after just nine minutes with a reoccurrence of a hamstring injury, before Murphy limped off seven minutes later.

Cooper added: “If you had asked me which one of the player would not have broken down, it would have been Murph (Rhys Murphy) because he has trained for two weeks, he’s played decent minutes and looked really strong and then he’s just pulled it. Then Jordan Stevens again, so we had to keep a substitution back just in case. It was not great for those boys but we got it done.

Title-winning captain Matt Worthington spoke of his delight for Yeovil Town supporters after a 2-0 win over Truro City secured the National League South title and promotion at the first time of asking.

The skipper was part of the Glovers’ sides relegated from the Football League in 2019 and then during the turbulent season off-the-field last season and admitted he was thrilled to put smiles back on to fans’ faces.

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Sheridan Robins after the win in Gloucester, he said: “I never thought I would be in this situation when I first joined. To be captain of this amazing football club. It is just so emotional because I have had some bad times here, stuck with it and I am just really happy we got it done.

Last summer was very difficult and I had a decision to make whether to stay or whether it was my time to stay on and I am just so happy that I stayed. I love this club, I love the town and I am just happy I can be part of a promotion side.

It was just amazing to see everybody so happy. A lot of people have come up to me and said ‘thankyou’ because they have been through a lot at this club and they deserve some happiness and I am glad that I can be part of that happiness. It is just an amazing feeling.”

Echoing the words of his manager Mark Cooper he said he was now looking forward to being presented with the championship trophy at Huish Park on Saturday when relegation-threatened Dartford come to town in the final home fixture of the season.

Worthington, who has played more than 100 games for the club, admitted it would have been nice to have sealed it on home soil against Worthing last weekend, but was just happy to be a champion.

He said: “I have been here four or five years now and the fans have always been with us through good and bad. This season they have been unbelievable home and away. So it is just so nice to give them back something to enjoy and I hope we can all celebrate on Saturday with the trophy as well. I have dreamt about lifting the trophy for weeks! It has gone on longer than I wanted it too, we have made hard work of it but I am thankful we got the job done.

It would have been nice to have done it last Saturday with everyone there, but at the end of the day we have done it. It does not matter how we do it, we have done it and now everyone is looking forward to another game at Huish Park and we can all celebrate.

The 26-year-old also paid tribute to Cooper, adding: “He is an amazing guy, someone I am really happy to have work with. If he and Martin (Hellier, the chairman) had taken charge last season we would not have been here, there is no way that would have happened. I am just really thankful they showed faith in us this year, made me captain. I cannot talk more highly of him, he is an amazing man first and foremost but he is also an amazing coach and I am looking forward to working with him for the next few years.

We’ve only gone and done it – again! Yes, after 19 years of waiting, Yeovil Town are champions again (ole, ole).

It was a goal in each half from strikers Rhys Murphy and Alex Fisher which secured the three points against Truro City which ensured the title and promotion from the National League South at the first time of asking.

There were 1,103 Glovers in Gloucester (yes, that is where Truro play these days) from a crowd of 1,238 to see the title secured.

First half

After some uneventful if totally dominant opening few exchanges, it took Frank Nouble directness with eight minutes played to create anything like a threat in to the home side’s box. His run and cross was cleared away.

Then just a minute later came the first frustrating moment of the game as Jordan Stevens pulled up holding that hamstring again. He had to go off and was replaced by Jordan Young.

But,two minutes later Rhys Murphy was the man on the spot to put the visitors ahead, showing the predatory instincts which have made him such a deadly marksman. Sonny Blu Lo-Everton picked out Charlie Cooper on the right side and he delivered an excellent cross to find the rising MURPHY on the edge of the box to flick a header in to the net. 

Sadly, that proved to be his last action as he went down in the middle of the pitch. Of the three changes made from Saturday’s starting XI against Worthing, two of them were now back in changing rooms. Someone protect Michael Smith!

On 20 minutes, it was only goalkeeper James Hamon stood between Yeovil and a 2-0 lead pulling off a point blank save as Alex Fisher’s header from Cooper’s cross. Nouble blazed over the rebound.

Matt Worthington fizzed one wide from the edge of the box with 28 minutes gone, before another nervy injury moment when Smith went down holding his hamstring. He was fine, don’t worry.

That was about as exciting as it got until we got in to first half injury time. Charlie Cooper’s blasted a free-kick in to the wall before Jake Wannell’s far post header from the resulting corner was blocked.

1-0 up at the interval and the job was half done.

Half time: Truro City 0 Yeovil Town 1

 

Second half

Shooting towards a packed away end in the second half, the Glovers continued to dominate the game without creating too much to test Hamon in the Truro goal.

But, with ten minutes of the second half gone the second goal came from a  source we have not seen recently (and I don’t mean the scorer), it was Smith who delivered a sumptuous ball from the left and Alex FISHER rose to head home. The keeper got a fingertip to it, but it was not enough to stop the ball trickling over the line.

 

From then on it was just a party in Gloucestershire as the sound of “champions again, ole, oleeee” rang around the Tigerturf Stadium. Yes, the last time was 2005, but champions is champions.

On 67 minutes, Smith had a great opportunity to go from goal creator to goal scorer. A lovely cross from Young fell to the full-back inside the box, just begging to be hit. The Northern Irishman definitely hit it, but over the bar.

Dylan Morgan replaced (title-winning) captain Matt Worthington with eight minutes remaining and Charlie Cooper lifted a free kick over the back two minutes after that, but all the masses from Somerset wanted was the final whistle.

When it sounded, fans spilled on to the pitch – we’d done it, folks, we finally, finally done it! 

Full time: Truro City 0 Yeovil Town 2


Match Details

Venue: TigerTurf Stadium, Gloucester
Date: Thursday 11th April, 7.45pm

Competition: National League South

Pitch: Plastic. Not bad for plastic, but plastic.
Conditions: Dry and relatively warm

Attendance: 1,238 (1,103 away supporters)

Scorers: Rhys Murphy 12 (1-0), Alex Fisher 50 (2-0)

Bookings:
Yeovil Town: Jordan Young 32, Sonny Blu Lo-Everton 68
Truro City: 

Referee: Ayrton Hursey

 

Yeovil Town: Joe Day, Michael Smith, Jay Foulston, Jake Wannell, Morgan Williams, Charlie Cooper, Matt Worthington, Jordan Stevens, Sonny Blu Lo-Everton, Rhys Murphy (for Alex Fisher, 16), Frank Nouble.

Substitutes: Jordan Young (for Jordan Stevens, 9), Alex Fisher (for Rhys Murphy, 16), Dylan Morgan (for Matt Worthington, 82) Brooklyn Genesini (not used), Sam Pearson (not used).

Truro City: Hamon, Melhado, Sanniola, Sanders (for Munakandafa, 62), Hinds, Kavanagh, Brett, Palfrey, Johnson-Fisher (for Yetton, 83), Buse, Law.
Substitutes (not used): Horton, Jones, Fabby.

Yeovil Town will travel to Gloucester (I’ll get to that part) to face Truro City on Thursday night, in their rearranged league fixture.

The Glovers will be finally looking to get over the line and win the league after they failed to beat Worthing in their last match. With only one point now needed to win the National League South a draw will do for the Somerset side.

The Cornwall outfit have now been advised by the league to play their remaining games at Gloucester after their back up home ground (Wordsworth Drive) is unplayable due to damage from water logging. Thursday nights game will see the White Tigers play for the second time in 24hrs, after playing Eastbourne on Wednesday.

Yeovil Town News

Manager Mark Cooper seemed irked by having to play at changed venue. He said: “At the start of the season, you are told who you have to play against and where you have to play, then when it comes to that game, they are playing at a different place at a stadium which is in a different regional league, on a different surface. I am not sure it is right, but that is the way it is and we have to obey by the National League rules.”

Cooper briefly spoke about how “we can enjoy everything that comes with (winning the league) when it is done.”

Mark Cooper before Truro

The ex-Swindon man wants to make sure his team get the performance right. He said: “That is our work for this week, keeping everyone level-headed and looking forward to Thursday. We have to be really cold and calculated, forget the noise and make sure we get a performance on the pitch.”

Striker Rhys Murphy spoke openly about the teams current mindset. He said: “You just have to keep going, nothing is given to you in life, you have to take it.

“We are still in a fantastic position. We have to dust ourselves down and to have that resilience is crucial, so we go again.”

Rhys Murphy.

Injury wise for the Glovers, Jordan Stevens is back in contention after short spell on the sidelines. Full-Back Michael Smith is back in training. However, Jahmari Clarke and Will Dawes are both out for the season. Jake Hyde is ruled out due to 3G pitch.

TruroCity FC Team News

Truro boss Paul Wotton was keen to keep his side encouraged in the lead up to a busy week. He said: “I’ve told the boys don’t worry about it, keep believing, there is six games to go. Every points a prisoner.”

Truro City manager Paul Wotton.

Players To Watch

Centre Forward Andrew Neal is the White Tigers biggest threat having scored 12 goals this season. “Rocky” as he is known has been prolific in goal scoring for the majority of his career. Before his first spell at Truro, Neal scored 60 goals for Bodmin Town. Having spent two season in Cornwalls only city, the forward left for Taunton where he scored 42 goals across two campaigns. Then in 2020 he rejoined the White Tigers.

Tyler Harvey is another name to look out for with the forward/attacking midfielder contributing 10 goals in 30 games. Harvey started his career the other side of the Cornish border at Plymouth Argyle where he made 5o appearances. The front man is well thought of at Truro having been the clubs top scorer in both the 21/22 and 22/23 seasons.

Crossing Paths

Matt Buse will be a familiar name to fans with the Truro midfielder the older brother of current Glovers keeper Will Buse. Buse had stint as trials in the summer with the Yeovil but was not successful in getting a contract, like his brother he was also born and raised in the Town.

Matt Buse.
Picture courtesy of Iain Morland.

The White Tigers boss Paul Wotton played 45 games across a loan spell then permanent transfer between 2010-2012 for the Glovers. Playing as a Centre-Back/Defensive midfielder Wotton was very much a leader on the pitch having joined form Championship side Southampton.

Ryan Law is another name in the Truro ranks who once plied his trade in South Somerset. The fullback spent the back end of last season on loan from Plymouth at Hush Park.

 

Yeovil Town striker Rhys Murphy has no doubts about his quality from the penalty spot despite missing from 12 yards in the 3-1 home defeat to Worthing at the weekend.

The frontman saw his 50th minute effort saved by visiting keeper Ollie Wright in front of a packed Huish Park, but said he would be confident in his own ability if the opportunity arose against Truro City on Thursday night.

The Glovers need just one point in the match played at Gloucester City to secure the National League South title and an instant return to the National League Premier.

Speaking on Monday, Murphy said: “My hand will be up. If we decide to go with someone else, no problem at all, but I will not shy away from it. I have missed penalties before. I banked on going left, I was going left anyway even though I have not all season, and I was banking on the keeper doing his due diligence. I spoke to him after the game and he said he had not been given any details of previous penalties!

So, it was not to be, but I will be there for the next one if called upon. If it goes to somebody else, no problem at all because as long as we get the result that is the main thing. It is the team that comes first.

There is no point quitting now, is there?! If you miss a penalty, you get on with it. If you lose a game, you get on with it and go again. Thankfully we have an opportunity to go again in a few days. I am not going to hide now. Like the manager has been saying all along, it is another game and we treat it as such, look at their strengths and weaknesses and focus on what we bring and go about winning the game. We will continue as we have been all season.

Goooooooo-oooh no! 📸 Gary Brown

Having pulled a goal back through strike partner Alex Fisher with seven minutes remaining, Murphy looked to have got the equaliser which had sealed the title seconds after news filtered through that Slough Town had levelled against second-placed Chelmsford City – only for the linesman’s flag to rule it out.

But, Murphy revealed that none of the players were aware of results elsewhere when the ball hit the back of the next. He said: “In the moment I remember it going in and thinking we needed another one because going in to the game we needed a win, so in that moment I was just think ‘let’s get the ball back and get going again.’ Normally you have an inkling that it is a tight one but I was not expecting the flag at all and watching it back it is tough to see. I might be biased, but to me it looks like I am onside by the centre half and the full back. It is disappointing but it is what it is and we will go again.

Despite the disappointment, Murphy said that his team-mate’s sole focus is on getting the result they need to secure the title against a Truro City which face three games in one week due to their inability to play a home fixture this season.

He said: “You just have to keep going, nothing is given to you in life, you have to take it. Coming on was pleasing to make a positive impact and if that penalty had gone in it is a different moment and could have swung the momentum. But we still managed to get the two ‘goals’ over the line and, with other results, that would have been enough. Unfortunately the moment for the fans was taken from them which is gutting but thankfully we have an opportunity to win the league on Thursday.

We have proven all season that we are a strong side and we can come back from adversity and that is the plan on Thursday night.

We are still in a fantastic position. Obviously it was gutting how things ended up at the weekend, but we have to dust ourselves down and to have that resilience is crucial, so we go again. We have proven all season that we are a strong side and we can come back from adversity and that is the plan on Thursday night.

If you ask me now, I don’t care who scores on Thursday. It could be a 0-0 and that would get the job done! Everyone’s sole aim is to get the result we need, no-one is thinking it must be them for personal glory, everyone wants to do their job and do it well. If you score that is great, but we will be celebrating as a team come the final whistle.” If we get the result, of course, Rhys!

Murphy returned to the club in the summer following his release by League Two Southend United, the club he joined following the end of his of his two-season spell at Huish Park in 2021. During that time he was part of the side which missed out in the National League Premier play-offs, losing in the eliminator to Barnet in front of an empty stadium during the COVID-curtailed 2019-2020 campaign.

Rhys Murphy scored 34 goals in his first spell with the club. Picture courtesy of Mike Kunz.

He admits securing promotion this season would right that wrong, the striker said: “You will go down as part of the history of the club. Someone told me it is 19 years since we won the league, so that would be a great achievement and everyone is dying to do that. It has been a tricky few years and I like to think this could be the start of something, getting this club back to the Football League. In my first spell we came close and fell short and you almost felt something was happening then, so to come back and be part of something like this would be something I would be incredibly proud of.

It has been a really good year so far. There’s been positive feelings ever since I walked back through the door and that comes from the top of the club. The fans have been brilliant, as have the fans and the management. It filters down and the energy and the positivity around the club has been really good. It’s been a good place to come to work and we are in a great position to go and win the league on Thursday night. I am gutted the fans were robbed of that on the weekend, but we still have a great opportunity.

The length of his contract was not announced when the 33-year-old returned to Somerset in June, but he says he would love to still be at Huish Park next season.

He said: “I would love to be here next year if wanted. We will have to sit down and discuss it but I have loved my time here and I definitely want to be here again next season. But, let’s get the season done first and get those medals around our next and then we can all sit down and talk about personal matters. I am thoroughly enjoying my time here, it has been a really frustrating couple of months not being able to play, but the guys have done brilliantly every year. I am hearing there are a huge amount of fans travelling on Thursday again, so let’s hope we can put on a performance for them.

Mark Cooper is trying to block out the noise of expectation that Yeovil Town could be National League South champions with a draw against Truro City on Thursday night.

The Glovers missed the opportunity to seal the title as they lost 3-1 at home to Worthing in front of another bumper crowd at Huish Park on Saturday, but know just one point will be enough to seal it in Gloucester this week.

He revealed that midfielder Jordan Stevens would be available for that match and said he was keeping a watching brief on influential full-back Michael Smith, who is back in training. But, he confirmed the season is over for both Will Dawes and on-loan striker Jahmari Clarke due to injury.

Speaking on Monday, Cooper said: “The occasion got to some of our players and some of our best performers did not have their best games on Saturday, that is pressure. As much as I try and dampen that down, it will be built up in to ‘this has to be’ and we have to make sure we drill in to the players what happens on Saturday can happen.

So let’s get the performance right first and then the rest will happen. That is our work for this week, keeping everyone level-headed and looking forward to Thursday. We have to be really cold and calculated, forget the noise and make sure we get a performance on the pitch.

We can enjoy everything that comes with (winning the league) when it is done. We know the fans are with us and we have to make sure we give them the performance, we have to focus on our performance and give them everything.

Jordan Stevens will be available for Thursday’s match. Picture courtesy of Gary Brown.

On Saturday, Smith and striker Jake Hyde, who has not featured this year, were involved in the pre-match warm-ups. But Cooper confirmed there was the potential for Stevens to return having been withdrawn late in the first half in the abandoned match at W*ymouth on Easter Monday.

The manager said: “Jordan Stevens came off as a precaution with a tight hamstring at W*ymouth. With his history we had to be careful with him and he was not right for Saturday. He is such an explosive player and we can’t take any risks, but he will come back in to the squad on Thursday. Jahmari Clarke is out for the season with a big strain on his thigh muscle. Michael Smith trained again today, so we will see how he is on Wednesday.

On Hyde, he added: “Jake is back in training, he will not play on 3G, so that rules him out of Thursday.

Truro, managed by ex-Glovers’ midfielder Paul Wotton, have two more matches to play before the Glovers come to town (well, the City of Gloucester) on Thursday night. They host Torquay United on Monday night before facing Eastbourne Borough on Wednesday night, just 24 hours before Yeovil’s visit.

The match will be played on another artificial surface with the Cornish side having to travel almost 200 miles from their home town to get their fixtures played after making the decision (which looked ridiculous then and even more so now) to ground share at Taunton at the start of February.

Cooper said: “We will train on Wednesday on the 3G at Huish Park. At the start of the season, you are told who you have to play against and where you have to play and then when it comes to that game, they are playing at a different place at a stadium which is in a different regional league, on a different surface. I am not sure it is right, but that is the way it is and we have to obey by the National League rules.”

The boss said he would be attending the match against Torquay, adding: “They have a really tough schedule with the travelling as well – fans, players, staff. It is a tough ask for them, but they are doing it quite well.

The moment that could have been. Picture by Gary Brown.

Last weekend, the Glovers found themselves 2-0 down at half-time as Worthing marksman Ollie Pearce netted from the penalty spot before Brad Dolaghan added a second after a defensive mistake. Glovers’ substitute Rhys Murphy then saw his 50th-minute penalty saved, before Alex Fisher pulled one back with seven minutes remaining.

The breathless encounter then almost served up a fairytale ending as Murphy ran clear to lift the ball over Worthing keeper Ollie Wright just seconds after news came through that second-placed Chelmsford City had conceded against Slough Town, meaning a draw would have been enough to win the title. Sadly, the linesman’s flag had other ideas. Pearce then wrapped up the win with his second with the final kick of the game.

Asked about the game on Monday, Cooper said: “I thought we played well and could have been two or three-nil up before they even got out of their half. When you look back at the game, key moments went against us. I am not sure it is a penalty, the second goal was a mistake and a bit of a killer, and the third goal they catch us on the break. But in between that we felt in control of the game, but we just did not get it right at key moments. It would have been a fairytale at the end, wouldn’t it? But it just was not to be.

For me, the penalty (miss from Murphy) was the defining moment. If that goes in, we win the game, because we would have had the momentum. That took the wind out of our sails, but we then score and I thought their goalkeeper should have been sent off when he rushed out of the penalty area, blatant handball and pulled the ball away from Murphy and a foul was given against Murphy after that. When we got the goal, we thought that with the amount of pressure we are putting on we were going to create a chance and we had a couple of great chances.

Picture courtesy of Gary Brown.

On the offside decision, he added: “I have seen it back numerous times and I don’t think it is offside, with a game of this magnitude with what is at stake, you have to be really sure if you are going to flag. If you are not sure, the advantage should go with the forward. It was as if it was not meant to be our day.

Despite his penalty miss, the manager has no doubts about Murphy, he said: “When we put the squad together we wanted characters who could deal with high pressure situations, because we have had lots of them because of the size of the club at this level. Murph is a great character, the players love him, he’s great in the changing room and he is just another experienced player we know is not phased by playing in front of big crowds. He will be frustrated he missed the penalty, but penalties get missed. That’s the way it is.

Asked whether the striker could start on Thursday, he added: “It’s a fine balance between making sure we do not injure them again with three games to go. As desperate as we are to play them, we are mindful there is a timeframe from the specialists that says if you start him, there is a risk.”