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Venue: Silverlake Stadium
Tuesday September 13th, 7.45pm kick-off

Conditions: Dry after a couple of days of rain
Pitch: Slippy

Attendance: 1,977 (291 away supporters)

Scorers: Sam Pearson 7 (1-0), JJ McKiernan 72 (1-1)

Bookings: 

Yeovil Town: Jamie Reckord 15, Ben Richards-Everton 22
Eastleigh: Vincent Harper 25, Ousseynou Cisse 60

Sendings off

Eastleigh: Brennan Camp 90

Referee: Paul Johnson



Yeovil Town
: (4-3-3)

Grant Smith

Morgan Williams Owen Bevan Ben Richards-Everton Jamie Reckord

Lawson D’Ath (for Jake Scrimshaw, 90) Josh Staunton Matt Worthington

Charlie Wakefield (for Alex Fisher, 76)  Malachi Linton (for Chiori Johnson, 89) Sam Pearson

Substitutes: Max Hunt, Gime Toure.

Eastleigh: McDonnell, Oyenuga (for Hesketh, 72), Camp, Cisse (for Carter, 62), Panter (for Langston, 62), Martin, Harper, McKiernan, Hill, Whitehall, Abrahams. Substitutes: Rutherford, Ebanks.

Match Report

An early goal from Sam Pearson earned Yeovil Town a point after a backs-to-the-wall performance against an Eastleigh side who did more than enough to win the game.

The on loan Bristol City winger took advantage of a mistake from goalkeeper Joe McDonnell to open the scoring after just seven minutes, but it was the home side who were completely dominant with goalkeeper Grant Smith pulling off three exceptional saves.

But, in the 77th minute on loan Watford midfielder JJ McKiernan fired home a deserved equaliser and set up a kitchen sink affair.

W*ymouth-born Brennan Camp saw red for a crunching tackle on Lawson D’Ath in added time and the visitors held on for a point.

 

First half

Chris Hargreaves made three changes from the 1-0 home defeat to York City ten days earlier and reverted to the 4-3-3 formation which saw Sam Pearson returning to the starting XI as part of a three-man forward line alongside Malachi Linton and Charlie Wakefield.

Other changes saw AFC Bournemouth loanee defender Owen Bevan replacing Max Hunt in the centre of defence while Matt Worthington who replaced Sam Perry, who was left out of the squad with the manager revealing he suffered a concussion in the York match.

After a fairly uneventful opening seven minutes, it was a howler from Eastleigh keeper Joe McDonnell which gifted the visitors a lead. Malachi Linton was alive to the error from the gloveman and teed up Sam PEARSON who did superbly to fire home an early opener.

Sam Pearson. Picture courtesy of Mike Kunz.

Six minutes later, a mistake by Josh Staunton in midfield gifted the ball to striker Tristan Abrahams, who has two goals to his name since joining from Carlisle United in the summer, but the former Glovers’ loanee fired his effort wide.

Then, three minutes later, a carbon copy error from Staunton gave Abrahams another opportunity to shoot and this time forced Grant Smith in to action.

The keeper was in action again after 20 minutes to deny Spitfires’ striker Danny Whitehall. The reaction from the home side to going behind was strong with the visitors pinned inside their own half.

Another mistake from a slip by an Eastleigh defender gave Yeovil another opportunity which saw Charlie Wakefield, back in his favoured position on the right side of attack, break through and have a shot which was blocked with Linton in a decent position.

Defender Corey Panter’s free-kick forced another fantastic stop out of Smith soon after and the ball dropped to defender Aaron Martin, who has seen service with Yeovil, but his effort was superbly blocked by visiting debutant defender Owen Bevan.

Despite the advantage, it was Eastleigh in the ascendancy with some attractive football with the pace of Abrahams a real thorn in the side of his former club.

As the game pressed towards half-time, a good spell of pressure saw an opportunity break to Malachi Linton whose effort went wide on 40 minutes.

Half time: Eastleigh 0 Yeovil Town 1

Second half

Smith was in action again on 52 minutes when Abrahams’ effort was turned over the bar by the keeper to add another outstanding save to a string of them.

The linesman had his flag up for a handball against the home side, but referee Paul Johnson overruled his assistant. To say that the visitors’ bench let the fourth official know their views would be a mild way of saying it.

Shortly after the hour mark, Eastleigh had two good opportunities through first substitute Charlie Carter, whose effort was blocked by Worthington, and then full-back John Oyenuga went over the bar.

Grant Smith. Picture courtesy of Mike Kunz.

The pressure that had been mounting since Yeovil took the lead continued to mount and on 70 minutes the home side’s forwards seemed to be queuing up to turn a ball across the face of goal with Ryan Hill perhaps best placed. None of them did and the ball broke to Smith.

But, the goal that had been coming finally came with 72 minutes gone. Staunton was outmuscled by on loan Watford midfielder JJ McKIERNAN who hammered an effort across the slippery surface past Smith. It was nothing more than Eastleigh deserved.

There was no drop off in intensity from the home side after their equaliser whilst Yeovil still could not get a foothold in the game. Defender Brennan Camp – who was born on a rock south of a Dorset coastal town – was the latest to have a chance as headed just over on 76 minutes.

Attacks at the other end were a case of having to take what you could find and a half chance from Pearson as the game ticked over 90 minutes – with six added on. With the home side still (yes, still) piling on the pressure, that was all Yeovil needed to hear.

With a couple of minutes of the added on time gone, Camp saw red after a crunching tackle on Lawson D’Ath which left the play-maker in a pile on the floor. Referee Paul Johnson had no hesitation in showing the card. Dirty W*ymouth…..etc.

Despite their numerical disadvantage, Jamie Reckord was well positioned to deflect a goalbound effort wide and that was (mercifully) the final opportunity for the home side.

Full time: Eastleigh 1 Yeovil Town 1

On loan AFC Bournemouth defender Owen Bevan is handed his Yeovil Town debut for tonight’s trip to Eastleigh (7.45pm kick-off).

The teenager replaces Max Hunt as one of three changes as the Glovers look to bounce back from a disappointing home defeat to York City ten days ago.

Matt Worthington returns from injury in place of Sam Perry, who is not in the squad, with on loan Bristol City player Sam Pearson replacing Alex Fisher, who is on the bench.

We’re calling this as a 4-3-3 line-up from the Glovers – we’ll see how it plays out though.

 

Yeovil Town : (4-3-3)

Grant Smith

Morgan Williams Owen Bevan  Ben Richards-Everton Jamie Reckord

Lawson D’Ath Josh Staunton Matt Worthington

Charlie Wakefield  Malachi Linton Sam Pearson

Substitutes: Max Hunt, Chiori Johnson, Gime Toure, Jake Scrimshaw, Alex Fisher

 

The dust has settled on a the August and one September fixtures and the results of the Man of the Match voting are as follows. 

Dagenham and Redbridge (H):

  1. Josh Staunton – 67% (59 votes)
  2. Alfie Pond – 44% (39 votes)
  3. Jamie Reckord 30% (26 votes)

Overall Team Performance: 5 (out of 7)
Entertainment Value: 4.4


Wealdstone (A):

  1. Alfie Pond 52% (11 votes)
  2. Alfie Pond 24% (5 votes)
  3. Jamie Reckord 29% 6 votes)

Overall Team Performance: 4.14
Entertainment Value:
3.38

 


York City (H):

  1. Grant Smith 74% (29 votes)
  2. Grant Smith 18% (7 votes)
  3. Grant Smith 21% (8 votes)

Overall Team Performance: 1.84
Entertainment Value: 2.05

Yeovil Town striker Ollie Hulbert has joined Gloucester City on a one-month loan deal, according to the National League North side.

Ollie Hulbert, centre, has appeared in pre-match warm-ups in recent weeks but is yet to make a matchday squad in the National League.

The 19-year-old is yet to appear in a matchday squad since being named as Chris Hargreaves’ first signing at Huish Park in the summer following his released by Bristol Rovers at the end of last season.

He is a familiar face in Gloucester where he made 32 appearances last season whilst on loan from Rovers, scoring nine goals.

In a statement posted at 2pm on Monday, Tigers’ manager Lee Mansell said: “Ollie we all know about from last season has undoubted qualities, he’s had a tough period of not getting much game time at Yeovil.

So he’s here to get himself and us back firing again, thanks to Chris Hargreaves at Yeovil for allowing us to have him.

The signing of Hulbert and Swindon Town defender Harrison Minturn has been announced by Gloucester.

Later in the day, the move was confirmed by a statement from Yeovil Town which added: “The forward has struggled with injuries since has arrival which have kept him out the Glovers’ team.

Looking to build up his fitness, Hulbert will join the National League North outfit, who he played for last season for a short period.”

Speaking a couple of weeks ago, Hargreaves revealed that Hulbert’s absence was down to an injury after he was spotted working with Scott Wickens, the club’s strength and conditioning coach, before the 2-1 defeat to Barnet at Huish Park

Hargreaves said: “We have to work out why it is happening and it may be a decision we have to make on that.

He trains well but has a slight problem in games. He is chomping at the bit, but in certain circumstances his body is letting him down.

The National League has confirmed that midweek fixtures – including Yeovil Town’s trip to Eastleigh – are to go ahead following the postponement of its weekend schedule.

The league followed the Premier League and EFL in calling off fixtures as a mark of respect to The Queen, who died on Thursday.

In a statement on Sunday, it updated: “The League can confirm that further to the announcement that the funeral for Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II will be held on Monday 19 September, National League fixtures for week commencing Monday 12 September will go ahead as scheduled.

Clubs, for all fixtures up until the funeral, will observe a one-minute silence prior to the game and will wear black armbands as a mark of respect to Her Majesty.

Following the trip to Eastleigh, the Glovers face a visit from Chesterfield  next weekend and one assumes there is no reason why that shouldn’t go ahead.

After that, Boreham Wood are the next opponents for Chris Hargreaves’ side at Huish Park on September 24th

New boy Will Dawes journey to Yeovil Town bears similarities to Tom Knowles when he first arrived at Huish Park, manager Chris Hargreaves has said.

The winger joined for an undisclosed five-figure fee from Stratford Town at the start of the month having been training at Huish Park for a period before his arrival was announced.

Speaking to our man Ben Barrett on Thursday, Hargreaves said: “Will is training hard, but there is a jump (from playing at Stratford) and we are aware of that.

There will be a bedding in process of two or three weeks to bed him in to that intensity of training every day with this group.

“But he has huge potential, very similar to Tom Knowles when he came to the club, with that untapped potential that we need to focus on when we bring players to the club.

The 22-year-old featured in every match for Stratford, who play in the Southern League Premier Division Central, two tiers below the National League, this season.

Knowles had made four first-team appearances for Cambridge United in League Two alongside a number of loan spells at non-League clubs before arriving at Yeovil in November 2020. He made his debut the day after arriving in a 3-1 home defeat to Eastleigh, but spent much of the next month as a substitute before cementing his place in the team later in the campaign.

Hargreaves suggested he sees Dawes as a player who can be developed in to a saleable asset in a similar fashion to Knowles, who was sold to League Two Walsall on the eve of the new season.

He said: “We are having to balance that desire to do something with some sustainability.

Will will not be the last player through the door who needs bedding in and developing, but we also need experience lads who will produce week in and out.

Yeovil Town’s on loan players will still have a major part to play in the club’s season, according to manager Chris Hargreaves.

The Glovers’ boss has left Bristol City goalkeeper Will Buse out of his squad for the past three games and Plymouth Argyle defender Finley Craske is yet to make the final 16.

Speaking ahead of the (now postponed) match at Woking, he told our man Ben Barrett that the situation would not continue forever.

Chris Hargreaves. Picture courtesy of Mike Kunz.

He said: “We haven’t got an under-23s group but we do have a lot of young players and sometimes we are tapping in to even younger players to make up 11-v-11 games in training.

But, when we have a couple of injuries, it soon turns in to a smaller squad and this is sometimes a problem with under-23s players and we won’t be the only club experiencing that.

I hope we’ve got the balance right but it can’t continue where nobody gets a look in, I understand that, and that won’t be the case.” 

Of Buse, who joined just over a month ago, the manager said the lack of substitutes and substitutions available in a National League match and the form of number one Grant Smith was keeping him out.

He said: “Will is highly competitive and he wants to play, he came in to battle for that number one jersey and that’s what any keeper wants.

But, Grant Smith is pulling off saves, he’s competent, his talking, his distribution’s positive, so at the moment Will has to be patient.

The reason he’s not been on the bench is that we have five subs, three changes and we’ve gone on the premise we might need an extra attacking player on the bench because of injury.”

Earlier in the week, Plymouth Argyle boss Steven Schumacher said he would like to see  Craske playing games at Huish Park – but said he trusted Hargreaves with the 19-year-old’s development.

The Glovers’ boss said: “He’s had a lot of players in front of him because everyone became fit and there was an opportunity to bring players in that we hadn’t had before.

That meant he was further down the pecking order. Does that mean he’s not a good player? Absolutely not, he’s a fantastic footballer with an unbelievable attitude who trains brilliantly.

Other loanees winger Sam Pearson and midfielder Sam Perry, on loan from Bristol City and Walsall respectively, have featured along with Bolton Wanderers striker Matt Grivosti, who returned to his parent club after two substitute appearances.

Alfie Pond. Picture courtesy of Mike Kunz.

Defender Alfie Pond played twice in a loan spell from Exeter City before it was cut short by his move to Premier League Wolves on transfer deadline day.

Hargreaves revealed that conversations had taken place to try and get the 19-year-old back after he impressed in clean sheet performances against Dagenham & Redbridge and Wealdstone.

He said: “I thought because of his performances there was a chance he could have left, but I didn’t think it was going to happen on Transfer Deadline Day as it did.

There was a conversation (with Wolves) about his loan continuing but it was felt being around our first team and transitioning to their under-23s would have been more beneficial to the player.

It was a shame because he was showing glimpses of the player he can be, but we wish him the best for the future.”

The other loan player on the books at Huish Park currently is AFC Bournemouth youth team captain defender Owen Bevan who was named on the bench in the 1-0 home defeat to York City last weekend, but did not feature.

Yeovil Town‘s trip to Woking has been postponed as a mark of respect following the death of The Queen on Thursday.

However, a statement from the National League confirming the postponement of the full schedule of fixtures for the weekend suggests next Tuesday’s trip to Eastleigh will still go ahead.

It added that no sporting events would be permitted on the day of The Queen’s funeral which is presently expected to be Monday, September 19.

In a statement on Friday, the National League said: “Further to this morning’s statement by Debbie Hewitt, chair of The Football Association, all National League System, FA Trophy, and grassroots fixtures scheduled for this weekend will not take place as a mark of respect. The Queen was the FA’s patron, and Prince William is its President.

At this moment National League fixtures will go ahead as planned from Monday 12 September onwards although we understand no sporting event of any kind will be permitted on the day of The Queen’s funeral.

The decision to postpone this weekend’s fixtures is taken in line with guidance from the FA in consultation with the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS). The League fully supports this stance.

Earlier in the day the DCMS had said there was “no obligation to cancel or postpone events and sporting fixtures, or close entertainment venues during the National Mourning period.” However, soon after the Premier League and EFL both confirmed they were cancelling their weekend fixture schedules – with the National League following suit.

Yeovil Town Under-18s‘ fixture at Salisbury City has also been postponed with the South West Counties Youth League calling off its schedule, along with the opening weekend of the Junior Premier League where a number of age group teams represent the Yeovil Town Community Sports Trust.

There are no details about what happens to match tickets for those who bought them for the trip to Woking – but we would expect such information to appear in the fullness of time.

The last time we can recall the death of a member of the Royal Family leading to a cancellation was the funeral of Princess Diana in 1997 when we made a long trip to Halifax Town (before they were FC Halifax) on a Friday night to avoid the clash with the funeral on the Saturday.

On today’s Gloverscast we talk about the sad news of Marcus Stewart’s diagnosis and the disgraceful abuse which emerged from the defeat against York.

We also welcome Roger Pipe and Barrie David from the Glovers Trust for an update on the Trust’s activities in recent months and what’s ahead.

Should this weekend’s fixtures go ahead, we’ve also spoken to Jacob from the Cardinals 1887 blog about Woking’s season so far under Darren Sarll…

Yeovil Town manager Chris Hargreaves has said it is “business as usual” for the club’s Head of Player Development Marcus Stewart after his diagnosis with Motor Neurone Disease.

The Glovers’ boss said the former striker had been at Huish Park to speak with the club’s players ahead of the weekend’s trip to Woking and paid tribute to his “inner desire” and offered his “unwavering support.

Stewart made the announcement following a year of testing and he and his wife have launched a campaign to raise money to support research in to the condition which affects the nervous system.

Marcus Stewart. Photo courtesy of Mike Kunz

Speaking to BBC Somerset’s Sheridan Robins on Thursday, Hargreaves said: “It’s a shock to everybody, he’s held in such high regard in football and at this club.

We will be there with Marcus with absolute unwavering support. What Marcus wants to do is be with the players, enjoy coaching and that is what we want.

He had a good chat with players this week and said he is right behind them, he wants to be with them because football is his love along with spending time with his family.

Asked about the former player who he brought in to his coaching staff on a part-time basis after his appointment to the job in the summer, Hargreaves spoke of his inner strength.

He added: “Across the years, Marcus and I have wanted to win at tiddlywinks, head tennis or whatever it was and that is what took Marcus to the top.

He will be fighting as he did as a player, you don’t get to the level he without being tough. You don’t have to be the biggest or the strongest, but you do have to have that inner desire and he’s got that.

I have the utmost respect for Marcus on and off the field and that’s why he’s here. We’re all there for him.

He’s turning up at this club and it’s business as usual for him, he turned up this morning and he wants the best for the players and he’s trying to get the best out of them, as we all are.”

 


Hargreaves said he had spoken to the club’s players following the start of an investigation in to racial abuse directed at York City striker Lennell John-Lewis in last weekend’s 1-0 defeat at Huish Park.

He said the club had “zero tolerance” against any form of discrimination and said the punishment to anyone found guilty of the abuse would face “severe” punishment.

The boss added: “We have zero tolerance for any form of discrimination. I have spoken to the players this week, we stand together as a group.

Punishment will be severe and there needs to be ongoing education. There is a police investigation with the FA and the club which I can’t comment on further. But, we stand together with zero tolerance.


Looking ahead of Saturday’s trip to face Woking on Saturday, Hargreaves said that he was hopeful midfielder Matt Worthington would recover from an injury.

Matt Worthington. Picture courtesy of Mike Kunz.

The former AFC Bournemouth man missed the defeat to York City  and the boss said he was one of a number of doubts in his squad.

He said: “Matt will hopefully be in contention along with a couple of others who have slight injury niggles.

We had to change a few things last week having lost Matt and that meant we lost some consistency, but if you are that player coming in, you have to step up.

There remains opportunities and I want players to show that they want to keep the shirt, that’s the most important thing on Saturday.

If they leave the field on Saturday, they leave it having given everything.


Hargreaves added that his players knew what to expect from their opponents at the weekend with former Glovers’ boss Darren Sarll taking charge of the Cards.

It is expected that ex-players central defender Luke Wilkinson and full-back Dan Moss will both be in the starting line-up at the Kingfield.

Hargreaves said: “With the ex-players in the Woking side there may be some with a point to prove, and some of our players might have the same against a former manager.

I get on well with Darren, we have come across each other plenty of times and we have that mutual respect, but come Saturday we both want to win.