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Who's worcester?
by Steve Dadd & Pete Pavey
10th November 2002
After the clear the air "meet the
manager" session Thursday last, the supporters' view
was that we lacked muscle in midfield and someone up front.
Under fire boss Geoff Butler responded by snapping up former
Exeter hard man Danny Bailey and striker Sean Adamson.
On a bowling green pitch, Weymouth nearly shot themselves
in the foot in front of vociferous local support. Matthews
and Alex Browne left the ball for each other and Adam Wilde
slipped in, but shot wide. From that point on Weymouth enjoyed
the lion's share of the possession through what had previously
been lacking, passion and determination.
Hutchinson fired in a screamer with less than 5 on the clock
that inched wide as the Terras took control. Weymouth’s new
found aggression was evident as Rawlinson was booked on nine
minutes by the pernickety
Mr. Newell.
Matthews was called to earn his crust on the quarter hour
to deny Darren Middleton with a full length save. Further
enthusiasm was rewarded with a booking for Simon Browne on
19 minutes.
With 25 minutes on the clock, Weymouth had a glorious chance
to go ahead when the hard working Phillips sent in a cross
that beat Keeper Danny McDonnell. However, Matt Hale at the
far post blasted wide when scoring was easier. Phillips, working
his butt off, made another dashing bye-line run down the right
flank, his cross to the penalty spot was met by Tully and
Hutchinson, both failed to control with their feet and Hutchie's
handiwork was penalised by the ref.
The lively Middleton worked himself into space on the left
flank, Holmes met his cross, but Matthews was up to the task
and saved brilliantly.
Weymouth continued to push and harry the league leaders, but
with little goal scoring chances for the remainder of the
half.
So at half time the score was:
Weymouth 0 Worcester City 0
The bruised Rawlinson was replaced by Mark Robinson for the
restart.
An Ian Hutchinson corner was met by the ascending head of
the inspirational Waldock but the ball flashed wide.
Julian Charles, who was quiet in the first half, was a revelation
in the second. He turned his marker inside out on the right
flank and, from 20 yards, sent a dipping shot just over the
bar.
Worcester tried to get themselves into the game on 58 minutes,
Holmes raced onto a long punt upfield, but his thunderous
shot was blazed well wide.
This was a rejuvenated Terras side with no quarter being given
and the Terras faithful responded positively.
Although the Terras controlled the game, the table toppers
showed that they were a potent strike force when for ten minutes
or so they took the game to their hosts.
A Steve Tulley cross was headed well by Charles straight at
the keeper on 70 minutes. Waldock and the Browne brothers
had a never say die attitude in defence as they kept Worcester
at bay and, with Matthews on top form, there was no way that
the visitors would score today.
Charles beat Paul Carty for pace out on the right after being
set up intelligently by Bailey, he cut in and let fly but
again was wide of the target.
Lee Phillips was the next to beat the visitors' offside trap,
beating his man he was hauled to the ground, but Mr. Newell
was not in a mood to appease the Terras.
Sean Adamson replaced Julian Charles on 77 minutes just to
freshen things up and his first touch of the ball was a header
from 18 yards that was well held by the keeper.
With Weymouth’s constant harrying, Worcester had to be quick
and this was noticeable in the amount of sliced shots and
clearances that they produced, none more so than on 85 minutes
when Carl Healy nearly hit the corner flag when he realised
that half a ton of prime Dorset beef was converging on him.
Adamson failed miserably one minute later when, after a great
Tully cross he drifted in at the far post to head weakly wide.
Worcester should have bagged all the points at the death but
for a great cover tackle by Alex Browne and another brilliant
save by Matthews that earned him the man of the match award
from the sponsors.
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