Manager (Page 2)

James Plant has returned to Port Vale after picking up an injury which is expected to keep him out until his loan spell with Yeovil Town expires, according to Glovers’ boss Mark Cooper.

The 20-year-old, who has impressed since joining from the League Two high-fliers, was not in the squad for last weekend’s 3-1 home win over Braintree Town and, following a scan, is expected to be out for up to six weeks.

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Jack Killah ahead of this weekend’s trip to Hartlepool United, Cooper said: “Planty has had a scan, his injury will take him past his loan, so he is back at Port Vale. He is going to be up to six weeks, so we will have to reassess when he is fit whether they will let him come back to us on loan or permanently, which we would love.

The boss also confirmed that defender Alex Whittle, who missed last weekend’s fixture through injury, had been cleared to return to playing after a scan, but midfielder Sonny Blu Lo-Everton was still unavailable with a knee injury.

He also said that on loan Exeter City defender Ed James, who started and scored against Braintree, would be a doubt for the long trip to the North East with a hamstring injury. The teenager did play a full 90 minutes for his parent club in the Premier League Under-21s Cup on Wednesday night.

James Plant. Picture courtesy of Gary Brown

Cooper was also asked about rumours on social media that a number of players had been made available for transfer. He did not confirm or deny the rumours, but said he had to “rattle a few cages” amongst his players after the disappointing 2-1 defeat at home to local rivals W*ymouth which ended their FA Trophy campaign.

He said: “I’m really loyal to these players and give them lots of chances to play, we look after them and make sure they are well prepared. They know every detail and I love them all to bits, but I live and die by results.

When you lose to W*ymouth in the manner we did, I have to rattle a few cages. I am not saying we did or did not put anyone on the transfer list, but I had to dig a few people in the ribs to make sure we came out fighting. Did that work? We won the game, got three points and showed a real tenacity.

Whether people are on the transfer list or not, that is the club’s business, but I have said to the players that they have to keep doing whatever their job is in the team.

If I was going to move players on it would be for the right reasons, like someone not getting enough game time, like we did with Dylan (Morgan) earlier in the season. There will be other players that need games and, if we did do it, that would be the reason.

The manager said he was still looking to bring a striker to the club to take the pressure off top scorer Aaron Jarvis and Nouble, and revealed the club had tried to bring former loanee Ciaran McGuckin back to Huish Park on a permanent deal.

The Northern Ireland international scored twice in six appearances on loan from League One side Rotherham United before being recalled last month and EFL rules stipulate that he cannot return to Somerset following his recall.

Cooper added: “We would love to take Ciaran back, but he’s not available. We tried to make that a permanent deal, but he is at a really good football club and he has had some opportunities to play minutes in League One. I know the owner (Martin Hellier) would move heaven and Earth to get him back. We would love to have Ciaran back to give Jarv, Frank and all the boys who play at the top a bit of help.

Ciaran McGuckin. Picture courtesy of Gary Brown.

Yeovil make the almost 700-mile round trip to Hartlepool this weekend looking to extend their winning run in the National League Premier Division to three matches, but face a home side which is unbeaten in their last five matches

Pools sacked ex-Glovers’ boss Darren Sarll in October after just six months at the club and appointed former Cardiff City boss Lennie Lawrence in temporary charge before giving him the job until the end of the season. The 77-year-old has an impressive managerial CV, but his last frontline job was as caretaker boss at Crystal Palace in 2012.

Speaking about Lawrence, Cooper said: “Lennie Lawrence, what a career as a manager. He’s a lovely guy, he’s managed massive clubs and been a mentor for some really good managers.

He is experienced and he will have people running about for him doing coaching bits. They have some real warriors and they have every right to get results at this level, but we have won our last two league games and we want to make it three.”

There is some doubt about whether Cooper will be in the dug-out at Victoria Park having been sent off as the second half was about to get underway in the 3-1 win over Braintree last weekend. The boss said he was confident the dismissal would be overturned, so he may be allowed to feature on Saturday if an appeal is pending.

He said: “I’m still reading through the report as to what I was meant to have done. I will respond to the FA because I think they have a couple of things wrong, but I am confident it will be overturned. If it takes me to be animated to get the players going to get three points, I will take the odd slap on the knuckles.

Yeovil Town’s Under-18s take on Weston-super-Mare in the Somerset Premier Cup. Picture courtesy of Rob Manley.

One other topic of discussion in the manager’s Thursday press conference was the club’s exit from the Somerset Men’s Premier Cup on Wednesday night. Yeovil fielded a side made up entirely of members of their Under-18s’ side which went down 1-0 to an early first half penalty from Brandon Bak, a young striker on loan from Bristol City.

Cooper, who watched the game from the Huish Park stands, said: “It was virtually impossible to play any senior players because we have game in the North in 72 hours and, if they played last night, they would not be able to train today (Thursday) and prepare for Saturday.

So we gave that game to Matt (Percival, Under-18s manager) and the youth set-up, Weston told us it would be their youth team and they went and played four or five players that are main first-team players, but (our youngsters) acquitted themselves well and a slight mistake for a penalty was the difference between the teams.

Manager Mark Cooper has said it is “time to be ruthless” with his Yeovil Town squad after they crashed out of the FA Trophy at the hands of local rivals W*ymouth.

The final whistle of the 2-1 defeat was met by a chorus of boos from the home supporters in the Huish Park crowd after a brace from former Glovers’ striker Brandon Goodship secured a famous win for the visitors.

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Mark Stillman after the match, the boss said: “We have to change some players. There are some now who have had lots of chances and are not producing, so the attacking players have to produce. They have had lots of chances and they have not taken them, so I have to try and solve that.

This year I have been really loyal to the boys, I love them to bits, but I have a job to do for the football club. That is to try and make us more efficient in front goal, from tee to green our play is really good, we get in the opposition box a lot really calmly and then the last little bit we need a bit of quality and it is not there.”

He added: “It is a really tough one to take, I am really angry with that and I have to be ruthless because that (performance) is a slight on me. We let the fans down tonight, they were brilliant and got behind the players. I always look at myself first, I tried every combination at the top of the pitch but it is time to be ruthless.

Goodship gave W*ymouth the lead with a sumptuous curling strike after just 12 minutes and despite pulling one back when Aaron Jarvis put his head in where it hurts to get an equaliser ten minutes before half-time, Goodship restored the advantage early in the second half.

Cooper brought on a number of attacking players in the form of Kofi Shaw and Dylan Morgan as Yeovil looked for an equaliser, but they never troubled visiting goalkeeper Joey Casa-Grande.

The manager said: “We should score eight goals, but that has been the story of our season, we are not ruthless enough in the final third of the pitch. We gave away two goals, but we still did enough in and around their penalty area to win three or four games but we are not ruthless enough. If we keep going like that we will win one, lose one, draw one because cannot to put teams to bed.

We are hitting people up the backside with the ball when we should be putting it on someone’s head, we are trying to have a touch inside the six-yard box when we just need to side foot it in to the goal and we are not brave enough. Jarv was brave to get his goal tonight but he should have two or three, but we should win the game tonight on territory and chances created.

Both goals we conceded were individual errors and a lack of professionalism, but that is why we are at this level because we make mistakes, me included. Fair play to W*ymouth, they set their stall out and they dug in and defended their box, but I think me, Toddy (assistant manager, Chris Todd), Weso (Head of Football Operations, Ian Weston) and the goalie coach (Matt Gould) could have played in the W*ymouth defence and kept a clean sheet tonight.

The goal tonight was Jarvis’ sixth of the season which makes him the club’s top-scorer ahead of midfielder Brett McGavin who has five. The club’s only other recognised frontman, Harvey Greenslade, joined National League South side Weston-super-Mare on loan ahead of the match.

Asked whether Jarvis needed more support up front, Cooper said: “I don’t know much more help we can give him, we had five up front for the second half with lots of balls going in to the box. He scored a great goal, he was very brave, but I will say there were opportunities (for him to score more) there.

Yeovil Town boss Mark Cooper says his players want to go far in the FA Trophy this season as they take on local rivals W*ymouth at Huish Park tonight.

The rearranged third round tie, which fell foul to the conditions brought by Storm Darragh at the weekend, is the Glovers’ first in the competition which they exited in the second round last season at the hands of Torquay United.

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Mark Stillman ahead of the game, the manager said: “It’s a chance to get to Wembley and play in a major final at the national stadium and every player wants to do that in their career, so it is a competition we want to go far in.

We wanted to play on Saturday, but that is gone, so now we looking forward to tonight. We told the players to do their own bits and pieces of fitness work and be ready to go again on Monday.

Josh Sims in action. Picture courtesy of Gary Brown.

The Glovers have made one change to the starting XI from their last outing, a 2-0 National League Premier Division victory at Woking ten days ago, with Josh Sims replacing on loan Bristol Rovers’ man Kofi Shaw, who drops to the bench.

Of Sims, Cooper said: “His pedigree is far too good for our level, he is up to speed fitness-wise and he has looked good coming off the bench, but now he needs to go on and start showing it from the start.”

Before the win at Woking, Yeovil lost three consecutive league games whilst W*ymouth are without a win in their last three matches with their last victory coming in the second round of this competition when they won 3-2 at Weston-super-Mare.

Cooper said he is expecting a battle from a Terras’ side struggling in the National League South relegation zone. He said: “It was cracking atmosphere when we played here (in the National League South) last year. It chucked it down with rain, big crowd and we managed to win that night, so it should be a good atmosphere. It is a local derby and form goes out the window, it will be two teams that don’t like each other. We know we have got to run hard and win our duels and compete well.

Yeovil returned to winning ways this afternoon with a 2-0 win on the road at Woking. A thronker from Brett McGavin and a tap in from Finn Cousin-Dawson was enough against the ten-man Cardinals.

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Mark Stillman after the match, Mark Cooper said his side needed the win.

“[I’m] Delighted with the result, not so much the performance, but I understand, because we’re a bit edgy. We lost three games in a week and put ourselves under a bit of pressure. And it was just about getting a win to get us off and running again, to restore a bit of confidence.

“We were competent today. We weren’t overly effective in the last third, but we had good chances as well to win the game. But, today was just about three points. There’s loads of things we did wrong, but we had a right go. We were really organised and never really looked in danger of losing the game.

“I thought we could have been quicker with the ball, but listen, it’s tough to play against 10 men. It’s just about winning the game and we managed to do that.”

Brett McGavin’s volley got the Glovers off the mark after Jack Stretton received a red card for an elbow on Cousin-Dawson and Cooper felt his team needed some magic: “We needed a bit of magic. Once they went to 10 men, they get bodies back and we needed just a bit of magic to get us going. Brett supplied us with that. He’s scored some cracking goals this year, and that was another.”

Matt Worthington returned off the bench after picking up an injury at Tamworth and Cooper was happy to see some squad depth return.

“Because of last week, it’s been a little bit frustrating for everyone with the sendings off, and it’s really rocked to us in terms of not being able to get balanced team out. So hopefully that gives us a bit of a G up now. We’re close to getting Wannell back, Dom back, Worthy, back on the pitch today. So we’re close to getting a bit of depth back to the squad.” 

Ed James was left out of the side after his debut on Wednesday, but the manager confirmed he’d be in contention for the FA Trophy clash with W*ymouth.

Yeovil Town manager Mark Cooper has taken aim at the disciplinary system describing it as “not fit for purpose” as suspensions continue to ravage the Glovers’ defence.

The boss will have defender Finn Cousin-Dawson available for Saturday’s trip to Woking after serving a one-man ban for his red card in last weekend’s 4-0 defeat at York City, but will still be without defenders Jake Wannell and Dom Bernard.

Speaking on Friday ahead of the trip to Surrey, Cooper revealed that the Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL), the body representing referees, had told the club Bernard’s red in the York defeat should only have been a yellow card, as an FA disciplinary panel upheld the decision to send the player off.

He told BBC Somerset’s Jack Killah: “Every manager will tell you they raised concerns about the system for a long period of time with the games being front loaded. We saw again (in the 1-0 home defeat to Barnet on) Wednesday night that the amount of times we have had players booked and the opposition haven’t is a lot! We had two players booked against Barnet and I still trying to work out what they were for. I can see that the players are a little bit hesitant to go in for any contact because they think they will get booked.

Dom Bernard got sent off at York which we appealed, but the FA upheld the red card. That appeal is heard by three ex-players, no referees. On that panel were two centre halves from the 1980s that would have spent the majority of time kicking lumps out of centre forwards, but they chose to uphold the red card. At the end of every game I have to fill in a report on the referee, his performance, key incidents, and we get feedback from the PGMOL.

The feedback came back from them to say Dom Bernard’s sending off should have been a yellow card, but the FA has upheld the red card! The whole system is not fit for purpose. We can’t change it, referees have a tough job but I just think they are struggling for the quality of referees. I think it is disrespectful that it is a full-time professional league and we have part-time referees, and until that changes I think you will get performances like we have recently. It is something the PGMOL needs to look at, it is not fair to the referees.

Finn Cousin-Dawson will be available for the trip to Woking on Saturday. Picture courtesy of Gary Brown.

The defeat at home to Barnet on Wednesday saw the Glovers go 1-0 down to a goal from Yeovil-born Ryan Glover after just ten minutes of a first half performance the manager described as “passive.” A much improved second half display saw them pull level through Port Vale loanee James Plant before a Danny Collinge goal with seven minutes remaining saw the visitors take the three points.

Even after falling behind a second time, there was still time for refereeing drama as referee Andrew Humphries denied on loan defender Ed James a penalty after his leg was swept from underneath him inside the box with the final action of the match. That means Yeovil have picked up just two points for their nine games against the National League Premier’s top ten teams, with second-placed Forest Green Rovers the only team in the top ten they are yet to face.

Cooper said: “We have lost three games. If you take the Halifax game, one moment of unprofessionalism costs us the goal, but after that we should murder Halifax with a really good performance. The York game is a bit of an anomaly, we commit hara-kiri in the first ten minutes and we had two players sent off. Then the other night (against Barnet) it is another really tight game against the team which is top of the league, which we should get something out of.

If we start talking about ripping everything up and doing something different because we have lost a game, the players will ask where the consistency is. The issue we have is the suspensions because on Wednesday night three of our front line defenders are suspended which is going to impact us for another couple of games because our left-sided defender (Jake Wannell) that starts so many attacks is going to miss the next two games.

Matt Worthington. Picture courtesy of Gary Brown.

However, the manager is hoping to have captain Matt Worthington back to face Woking, having missed the last five matches with an ankle injury sustained in the goalless draw at Tamworth at the end of October.

He said: “We are hopeful Matt could be involved in the squad tomorrow, so that would be a good boost for us. We have to take in to account we played on Wednesday night, so there are one or two who may struggle to play Wednesday-Saturday. We will have a look this (Friday) morning and see who is fresh and see who we can put out there. We have some players who we have to look after if they play twice in that period of time that are injury risks, so we do not want to set them back six weeks or so.

Yeovil Town manager Mark Cooper was a man of few words when he spoke to BBC Somerset reporter Jack Killah ahead of tonight’s home match with Barnet at Huish Park.

Here’s a summary of what he said…..

On the response to Saturday’s 4-0 defeat at York City….

The game was over after ten minutes (following the dismissal of defender Finn Cousin-Dawson), you just have to wipe your mouth and get on with it. It’s just one of those things, you just have to move on to the next one.

On the loan signing of defender Ed James on loan from Exeter City….

We have known about him for a while. We have got a good relationship with Exeter and we had to act fast. He is really local so it worked out well.

The formation for tonight..

It is a back five. We are playing 3-4-3 like we usually do. Alex Whittle will play left-sided centre back of a back three.

Tonight’s opponents Barnet…

They are really good to watch, very expansive, very well-coached, I’m looking forward to it. They will finish in the top three.

What do we need to do tonight?….

Be aggressive, on the front foot, ask questions of them.

Frank Nouble’s return to the starting XI….

It’s not just Frank (that needs a goal), we have got three or four players in there that need to step up a little bit and I am sure Frank will tonight.

Yeovil boss Mark Cooper spoke to BBC Somerset’s commentator Chris Sykes following the 4-0 loss at York. The boss described the afternoon as ‘wasted’ and that he’d need to sign a couple of centre halves before the visit of Barnet on Wednesday. Here’s the transcript of the conversation. You can listen here at 38:50.

CS: A difficult afternoon. Mark. What your initial thoughts off the back of that?

MC: Yeah, the game’s over as a contest after 10 minutes with the sending off and then the goal – game’s over. So yeah, then it was just a long afternoon. We can’t make that mistake at the back, you know, we’ve got a centre half trying to Cruyff turn on the edge of his own box. Compounds it by getting sent off, and then they scored for the free kick. Game over. So it was an afternoon wasted. It was a trip wasted. Our chairman paid for us to stay in a lovely hotel last night. Supporters, 340, or whatever of them, traveled untold miles in horrendous weather and we played a 10 minute game, and the rest was just a waste.

CS: Is that kind of the point you’ve made to the players, after about fans making the trip?

MC: Our fans always make the trip. So we, we know we’ve got brilliant fan. I’m about more disappointed with the discipline and decision making of some in some key areas. You know, that’s two more defenders sent off today. We’ve already lost Jake Wannell. You know, the players know that we’re struggling for defenders, and then one of them gets sent off in the last minute with a ridiculous tackle, which probably is yellow, but referee can’t wait to send him off. But for me, that’s just ridiculous decision making.

CS: Ultimately, he’s put himself in that position when you’re whether it’s yellow or red. He still put himself in position when he didn’t need to?

MC: The ref was only gonna book green shirts today, he was never going to book reds. But he [Bernard] still shouldn’t put him, if he knows that as well, he shouldn’t put himself in that position. The game’s over. No point making that tackle. So the discipline is something that I have to address, because that’s too many now.

CS: The fact that it now has left you very short in defense ahead of, ahead of the next few matches.

MC: Yeah, we have to go and sign. We have to go and sign a couple of players, because we’ve only got Morgan Williams. He’s the only centre half. So yeah, we’ll have to go and sign a couple of centre halves before Wednesday.

CS: How frustrating is it for you as a manager when you when you know you’re in the situation, the team knows in situation without Jake Wannell, and then two more get sent off. How frustrating is that it’s

MC: It’s just the level we’re at. Players make more bad decisions than the level above that and level above that. When we have our best defensive unit on the pitch, we don’t concede. So when we don’t have that on we’re in trouble.

CS: In terms of the you obviously went one nil down, down to 10 men very early on. What did you make of your side and the reaction to that throughout the first half

MC: Yeah. But then we the goalie throws one in. Ollie’s been fantastic, but he had one of those games today which keepers do. You, he’s thrown the second one in, it’s definitely game over then, because you’re playing against a good team that’s possession based. I said at halftime to the players, I take 4-0 now, so we got away with it.

CS: And you know, another game against a tough opponent, again, Barnet, coming on Wednesday. You know, where does this kind of leave you?

MC: Good game for us. Good game. We know we have to be at it, otherwise we’ll get turned over. I’ve just asked the players now, like, they just need a bit of honesty, a little bit of humility. And people to put their hand up, and say I’ve let the club down today, and we need a response. So as a staff we”l certainly be doing that. I’ve just asked the players there, that we need a little bit of honesty after that game. And it’s not about, ‘well, it wasn’t me, it was somebody else’. Everybody’s got to have luck in the mirror today and say we need to be better than that.

CS: Is there kind of a feeling of obviously bad results there, but generally speaking, it’s just one?

MC: Not really no, because we wasted an opportunity last week to get three points. With this game in mind it put us in a real position to attack this game. And last Saturday has put us in the difficult position now where we’ve come to York and got beat and now we got to play at the top team in Barnet so players have to respond.

Yeovil Town manager Mark Cooper has said that whilst he is disappointed to not have defender Jake Wannell’s red card overturned he has said that the team have enough to cover his absence for this weekend’s trip to high-flying York City.

Wannell was given his second red card of the season late in the 1-0 defeat at home to FC Halifax Town last weekend for an alleged stamp on visiting defender Will Smith. The Glovers provided video evidence which Cooper said after the incident he felt would vindicate his player, but the dismissal has been upheld.

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Jack Killah on Thursday ahead of the trip to York, Cooper confirmed centre-half Morgan Williams will be available after serving his own  ban. The boss also has  Dom Bernard following suspension, the former Forest Green Rovers player was on the bench last weekend.

“It doesn’t surprise me that [the appeal] was rejected, apparently the footage we supplied wasn’t clear enough, the linesman can see from 70 yards away that it was a stamp, but the panel can’t see clearly on the footage that there is no stamp, I mean, I can see there isn’t a stamp. 

“Jake just tries to release his leg, the lad has got hold of his leg, Jake tries to release it, not one of the Halifax players appeals, not one, and they’re five yards away and that’s always the biggest clue, if they appeal and not one person appealed. 

“So, yeah, they have gone on a linesman 70 yards away, I can see on the footage there’s no stamp, but the FA can’t. It’s four games, we can’t do anything about it, the FA Trophy counts as one but we’ve got Morgan Williams coming back in, we’ve got Dom Bernard as well, so we’re covered.”

Jake Wannell cannot believe his eyes. Picture courtesy of Gary Brown.

Midfielder  Charlie Cooper is back in the fold after a one-match ban of his own. Combined with Matt Worthington’s return to full training means that only young midfielder Caleb Hughes, who is yet to appear since his arrival at Huish Park, remains on the physio’s table.

“You want as many good players, who are experienced at the level, you want as many of those available as you can. Losing Jake, it’s good that we’ve got Morgs coming in now and Charlie coming in gives us some competition in the middle.”

“[Worthington] is back in today with the group and we’ll see how he goes, Caleb Hughes picked up a hamstring injury last week and won’t be available for a while.”

Finn Cousin-Dawson Picture courtesy of Gary Brown.

With the defence chopping and changing recently, one of the stand-out performers has been former Bradford City defender, Finn Cousin-Dawson. Cooper spoke of how he’s taken his time to get going, but is now in the swing of things at Huish Park.

“I’m not one for talking about individuals, because you’re setting someone up for a fall, all the players are playing really well. Finn had a difficult start, he’s come to a different part of the country, a different way of doing things, the way football is, you’re expected to hit the ground running and play in a new environment and be a ten out of ten [ed. we assume he means seven out of seven]. Sometimes it takes time, 

“Finn has started to find his feet and the way that we train, the way that we play, he knows exactly what he has to do in that back line and full credit to him.”

Looking ahead to the weekend, Mark Cooper said Saturday’s clash with York has the potential to be two similar styles and two entertaining sides going head to head. 

“[They’re a] Good team, very well coached. Adam (Hinshelwood, the York City manager) and his team, you can tell have been left to get on with just coaching the team and they’ve put their own stamp on it and brought their own players in, how they work – they want the ball all of the time, they’re good. Exactly like we do, we want the ball, so hopefully it’s a really good game of football.

“We don’t want it to be end-to-end, we want it all at one end, but there’s two parts to football, you have to be really good when you don’t have the ball and have to be really good when you do have the ball.  It’s got the makings of a good game.”

Yeovil Town manager Mark Cooper has said the club will appeal against the red card which saw defender Jake Wannell dismissed late in a 1-0 home defeat to FC Halifax Town today.

The Glovers boss was confident the decision would be rescinded on appeal following an off-the-ball incident where visiting defender Will Smith accused Wannell of stamping on him.

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Jack Killah after the game, Cooper said: “The linesman on the dug-out side of the pitch is 70 yards away, but he tells the referee he has seen a stamp and the referee is ten yards away. 70 yards away, through bodies and the linesman says he has seen a clear stamp. If he can see that from 70 yards away, he should be in the military as a sniper, not a linesman.

I have seen it back, the Halifax player grabs Jake Wannell’s leg and he has nowhere to put his foot, Wannell turns round to run away and takes a natural step. It will be rescinded on Monday, it was never a stamp.

The game was settled by a strike from the edge of the box from the visitors’ Florent Hoti after 57 minutes prompting the manager in to a double substitution with Michael Smith and Josh Sims both coming on nine minutes after going behind.

That led to a strong last half-an-hour from Yeovil which saw Sims twice go close and Pedro Borges force a fine stop out of Sam Johnson in the Halifax goal.

Cooper said he believed striker Aaron Jarvis was denied “a blatant penalty” during one of the periods of pressure, but said his side were too slow with the ball until the changes were made.

He said: “We did not move the ball quick enough at the back, our centre halves did not move forward with the ball, they were too happy to not take a risk with it which allowed them to get bodies back. We were a bit negative with our press in the first half, we let them bring the ball to the halfway line which was not the plan.

We had to make some changes and the boys that came on were very good. The effort was terrific, we created loads of chances, the only problem is that on too many occasions this season we have not been ruthless enough to finish the game off. Even with ten men we should score.

The result saw Yeovil slip out of the National League Premier Division play-off places as Halifax leap-frogged them in to seventh place. The Glovers travel to league leaders York City next weekend.

Cooper said: “That will be a totally different game, York will try and be on the front foot. That means there will be more space, it is chalk and cheese. Halifax have done a good job on us today, they were really organised, got bodies behind the ball and a cheap goal from our point of view. We just have to make sure we are quicker with the ball.

Yeovil Town manager Mark Cooper wants striker Aaron Jarvis to continue his run of impressive goal-scoring form as he returns to the starting line-up against FC Halifax Town today.

The former Torquay United striker is one of two changes to the side which won 1-0 away at Southend United seven days ago with Brett McGavin, who was on the bench in Essex, replacing the suspended Charlie Cooper in midfield.

Jarvis has got three goals in his last three matches including a double last time out at Huish Park when Yeovil ran out comfortable 3-1 winners against Maidenhead United.

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Jack Killah ahead of the match, Mark Cooper said: “We want him to hit the ground running and get back to where he was before the suspension. Brett starts again after missing out with illness last weekend and Sonny (Blu Lo-Everton) comes in for Charlie Cooper. Josh (Sims) has had a couple of training sessions, but he is still not 100% so he is one of the six subs along with Michael Smith.”

Exeter City loanee Pedro Borges impressed playing right wing-back at Southend last weekend and the boss said he has no doubt about the 19-year-old’s ability to cause problems.

He added: “The way we ask our wing-backs to play they are more or less wide midfield players, which is something he is accustomed to. Pedro has energy and physicality so if he brings us that, he has a chance to play well.”

Today’s fixture sees two of the National League Premier Division’s best defences go up against each other. The visitors have conceded 16 in their 17 league matches this season, whilst Yeovil have let in just 15 goals in the same amount of games.

Cooper said: “They are very resolute, well-structured with a lot of energy in the team. I say it every week, but every game is really difficult and sometimes you need a bit of luck. We have put a good run together and I said (in the pre-match press conference) on Thursday we have earned the fans getting behind us. We have played some good stuff and looked a decent team, so hopefully they can get behind us from the start and we can give them something to keep shouting about.