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Terras Storm Petrified Forest
By Matt Pitman
Monday 7th November 2005
THE smiles said it all. Martyn Harrison sprinted from the
directors box to greet Weymouth's FA Cup heroes.
As the beaming chairman embraced manager Garry Hill on the
City Ground pitch, more than 1,800 proud Terras fans celebrated
a stunning draw.
All those years of heartache and despair suddenly seemed
a long, long time ago.
In the home city of Robin Hood, the plucky non-leaguers robbed
Nottingham Forest of an easy passage
into round two.
The result was probably Weymouth's best ever and the draw,
secured by a Andy Harris bullet header, could even have been
a win.
Strange as it may seem, the visitors were the stronger side
as the tie progressed and some second-half fireworks on Guy
Fawkes Night left their illustrious opponents looking like
the no-hopers.
Had Kirk Jackson not pulled a second half header just wide,
Hill's merry men would have secured a famous giant-killing.
But with a money-spinning replay at the Wessex Stadium next
week, Gary Megson's Forest won't be relishing their trip to
the seaside.
And on this sort of form, you wouldn't bet against Weymouth
taking the scalp of the Coca Cola League One
fallen giants.
With the Dorset side playing three leagues below the former
double European Cup winners, Forest were expected to cruise
to victory.
It appeared that way when Scotland international Gary Holt
headed them into a half-time lead.
But the super Terras were not just content to enjoy the occasion
and after the interval they produced the game of their lives.
Central defenders Matt Bound and Roy O'Brien were immense
and midfield pair Harris and Shaun Wilkinson worked tirelessly.
Up front Kirk Jackson and Chukki Eribenne, who started after
Wayne Purser suffered an eye injury, gave everything for the
cause.
And keeper Jason Matthews was also a hero after a couple
of crucial stops including a superb save to deny Nicky Southall
seconds after Andy Harris' equaliser.
It was all too much for some veteran Weymouth fans who have
endured so many lows in recent years.
"Fifty years I've waited for this... Unbelievable,"
said one elderly Terras supporter watching teary-eyed as his
heroes celebrated after the final whistle.
FA Cup specialist Hill can now add Forest to the list of
league clubs embarrassed by his teams and his tactics worked
a treat.
After a slow start, the Conference South side eventually
found their feet and despite being a goal down at the break
were more than a match for Forest.
But it was the stirring second-half fight back which secured
the replay and left disillusioned home fans calling for manager
Megson's head.
With the huge travelling army of Terras fans in carnival
mood, skipper Bound set the tone with a couple of nerve-calming
towering headers early on.
Shaun Wilkinson's stretching shot went well over before the
midfielder tangled with Forest dangerman David
Johnson leaving the striker needing a head cut patching up.
Lee Elam looked the visitors best hope and it took a couple
of last-ditch tackles from huge defender Wes Morgan to deny
the talented winger.
But, as expected, it was Megson's men who fashioned the better
of the openings.
Jack Lester capitalised on Bound's slip to release Holt who
blazed his effort into the massed ranks of Terras fans.
Seconds later keeper Jason Matthews smothered well at his
near post to deny Lester who twisted and turned in the visitors
area.
With Bound and O'Brien superb, Hill's full-timers seemed
to be weathering the storm.
Weymouth enjoyed occasional forays forward and from Wilkinson's
deep free-kick, Bound's header forced home keeper Rune Pedersen
into action.
With the Terras holding firm, Forest were starting to become
frustrated, especially when Southall wildly sliced wide.
But the hosts broke the deadlock when Holt got above marker
Steve Tully to head home Southall's pinpoint right wing cross.
One goal down at the break, Weymouth fired themselves up
and came out all guns blazing.
The visitors took the game to the nervy hosts and immediately
had a shaky Forest rearguard under pressure.
Jackson, Harris and Elam combined well down the left to find
Wilkinson whose 30-yard drive flashed wide.
Some nice Elam trickery down the left won a corner in front
of the massed ranks of Terras supporters, from which under-pressure
Pedersen punched Wilkinson's delivery behind.
The resulting right-wing flag kick was another peach by Wilkinson
and there was Harris at the far post to power his header into
the roof of the net to spark wild scenes.
The City Ground hardly had time to draw breatb before Forest
nearly regained the lead.
Southall got on the end of Johnson's teasing cross to powerfully
head goalwards but somehow Matthews brilliantly dived low
to his left to claw away the effort.
The former Exeter City man was again the hero on 66 minutes
when he got down well to block at the feet of Johnson.
Matthews' saves seemed to raise the confidence of the visitors
who, for the rest of the contest, showed more ambition.
They could and probably should have gone ahead when Wilkinson
found Jackson at the far post with another superb cross.
But the former Yeovil striker, who gave as good as he got
against good friend and Forest skipper Ian Breckin, agonisingly
planted his downward header wide of Pedersen's goal.
With Hill and coach Kevin Hales bellowing instructions from
the technical area, Weymouth by now fancied a huge upset.
Forest certainly didn't do themselves any favours as loose
passes from John Thompson and Eugen Bopp nearly left the visitors
in.
Jackson fired a tough high ball wide before Elam burst his
way into the Forest area but skewed into the sidenetting.
The hosts were rattled and introduced another defender, Danny
Cullip, for winger Southall to cope with the Terras pressure.
Elam tried a spectacular 30 yard drive which went close before
Megson's outfit began pumping long balls to try and find a
late winner.
But with bodies packed in the Weymouth area, Bound and co
held firm under severe pressure.
The closest Forest came was when Lester swivelled but failed
to get a good contact on an 87th minute shot.
With away fans frantically calling for a final whistle, Weymouth
used lightning wingers Elam and Clark to relive the pressure.
A long, long two minutes of added time passed before referee
Colin Webster blew his whistle to cue wild celebrations in
the Bridgford Stand.
Even the Forest fans sportingly applauded the Terras heroes
off the pitch on what will go down as a great day in Weymouth's
history.
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