|
Sturminster Marshall 1
Cranborne 2
Paul
Maitland, Ryan Mole, Craig MacLeod, Dan Haysom, Lloyd Bird, Sam Mason, Phil
Sweetland, Graham Duff, Rob Morley, Mark Henson, Dan Lane, Matt Saunders, Fedja
Selimovic, Matt Lambert
Stur
scorer: Fedja Selimovic.
Stur star
man: Dan Haysom
In very windy conditions at Churchill Close both teams
found it difficult to control the ball and this ultimately led to a very scrappy
game.
The referee booked a Cranborne player after about five
minutes and the yellow card was to make a regular appearance during the course
of the game. A Cranborne defender went straight through Mark Henson from behind
and kicked him straight up in the air. The ref, much to the bemusement of all
present, awarded a free kick to Cranborne and waved a card in the general
direction of the incident. It took a while for the disbelieving onlookers to
realise that it was actually Henson who had been booked – this particular
onlooker still finds it difficult to believe.
Stur had the strong wind at their backs in the first
half and began to dominate territorially. However, that territorial advantage
did not produce a goal. Four gilt edged chances went begging before the break
and so the game remained goalless as the sides left the pitch for the half time
break.
The opening goal was bizarre. On the hour mark, Craig
MacLeod hit a long back pass to his goalkeeper. The wind seemed to catch the
ball and when it bounced it seemed to shoot forward and past Paul Maitland and
into the back of the net. Stur were still trying to recover their composure when
Cranborne scored their second goal a few minutes after the first. A corner was
only half cleared and Graham Antell stabbed the ball home.
Stur
seemed to wake up after this and began to push forward in an attempt to rescue
something from the game. Substitute Fedja Selimovic looked lively and five
minutes from time scored a tremendous individual goal to reduce the arrears.
Picking the ball up wide on the left he advanced into the box and went past
three defenders before placing the ball past the Cranborne keeper. Unfortunately
for Stur it was too little, too late.
|