If ever you needed evidence to back up why making
the lower divisions regional is a very bad idea, then we had it again
here. In a short space of time, we've had trips to Accrington and
Morecambe, and whilst there were clearly more travelling supporters for
these games, they lacked any sort of derby feel to it completely.
Changes were the order of the day in the Dale side. Dagnall was brought
back in place of the now departed Jordan Rhodes, Joe Thompson was given
a first league start of the season ahead of Will Buckley and Scott
Wiseman was given the nod at right back ahead of Marcus Holness who had
to make do with a spot on the bench.
Wearing our yellow away kit of last season for seemingly no reason
whatsoever unless the terms of the Nike deal now insist on a new kit for
every single game, Dale were roared on by just under a thousand fans
braving the wintry weather, the car park potholes and the risk of the
longest turnstile queues this side of the Deva Stadium.
First half was a good half from our own point of view. The new
footballing buzz word seems to be about playing ugly, and it wouldn't
have been an unfair comment to chuck our way. Don't get me wrong, we
hadn't transformed ourselves into a side looking like John Beck had been
given the managerial hotseat, but we seemed to be a bit more practical
about our play.
And it worked for us, as we comfortably ran the show in the first
half. It might not have been as free flowing football as it could have
been (though the slippy pitch and conditions would have to take some of
the blame for that), but we were certainly in control of the game,
providing a number of chances at the right end.
Tom Kennedy had our first proper effort of the game. He took a free
kick which seemed like it was only in shooting territory if your surname
was O'Shaunessy. Nevertheless, he had a crack catching the one man wall
before spiralling narrowly past the Morecambe keeper's post.
But the deserved goal came. Joe Thompson followed a deep cross from
the left hand side and dinked it over the keeper's head. And just for
good measure, as the ball was set to cross the line, Dagnall came in to
steal the goal off JT by hammering the ball over the line from three
inches out. Insert Scouse stereotype gag here.
It seemed a little harsh for Dagnall to "do a Nugent" and grab the
goalscoring glory off Thompson, but when the day comes that a striker
doesn't want to be the goalscorer then it'll be time to drop him.
And it was the Morecambe keeper Roche who kept his side in the
contest with a stunning triple save. Jonah had forced the first save
before a couple of efforts from Lee Thorpe. A second goal seemed an
inevitability at this time. How we were wishing it had been Paddy Roche
and not his namesake Barry in between the sticks at this point.
Half time came and went. This week's ridiculous half time competition
involved a tannoyman who seemingly knew every Morecambe supporter by
name invite someone out of the crowd to find a key which opens a box. A
bit like "Deal or No Deal" where you can't always open the box. After
our own half time draw, and last week's "Win a door" shenanigans at
Lincoln, I am now completely convinced the Football League are running
an internal competition to see who can come out with the worst idea
possible.
General consensus at half time was that we were doing well, and we
were a little unfortunate not to have increased our lead beyond the
slender one goal lead that we had. It hadn't come across as being
slender, such was our dominance and given that we'd limited the home
side to only one effort which came close to resembling a chance, there
didn't seem to be the same fear that we'd concede like we've done so
easily this season.
So of course, we shouldn't have been surprised at all to see the
Shrimps level things up within the opening couple of minutes of the
second half starting. Without wanting to sound overly mathematical, but
we're conceding a very high percentage of the chances that we are
offering the opposition, and this was as frustrating as any of the
others have been given how easy we made it for our opponents. A cross
came over and was met by Morecambe's teenage striker Taylor who was
completely unmarked allowing him to head home with ease.
And that goal just seemed to deflate everything. Morecambe didn't see
it as an opportunity to go on and win the game, and we just seemed to
adopt a "here we go again" attitude as if we could see the writing on
the wall.
We had opportunities to regain our lead, but we perhaps didn't play
with the same urgency that we had at Lincoln to win the game. Perhaps
understandable given the length of the game still to play, but we just
didn't seem the same after. To describe us as "going through the
motions" would be wrong, and unfair as there was no lack of effort, but
it was as if we didn't really believe that we'd have it in us to go one
and win the game despite long periods pressing the Morecambe defence.
Will Buckley came on for Rundle and did his best to conjure something
up. He again proved himself to be the luckiest footballer in the world,
as the ball always seems to ricochet off him into the best possible
position. He tried to add to his tally of won penalties, but despite the
best efforts of those in the away end, the shout was rightly turned down
by the referee.
Alfie came close after a deflected shot suddenly became a better and
better chance as it looped down towards the cross bar. It initially
looked like easy pickings for Roche, but in the end, he was forced into
making a good save and tipping it over for a what must have been our
47th corner of the game.
But you know what we're like at corners.
So we had to settle for a point. Trooping out of the away terrace,
"two points dropped" must have been muttered around 937 times. Perhaps
the Play Off hangover that gets banded about season after season is the
insistence to compare everything with the previous season. It's
inevitable that will happen, as we're hardly going to compare this
season with Graham Barrow's 97-98 campaign.
Each passing game seems to make our spectacles even more rose
coloured, as we look back at how things went right last season, whilst
they're not doing this season, completely forgetting that this time last
season, we were having exactly the same conversations about the season
before. Murray's been found out, our central midfield duo aren't
clicking, Jonah needs dropping, we're conceding too many goals, main
striker out injured and we don't even know what a clean sheet looks like
etc.
I hope we've not reached the stage yet where a point away from home
is being viewed as a bad result. Yes, we're coming away from games with
a viewpoint that we should have gained more, which is perhaps more than
we could have argued for at this time last year, but surely that's an
indication that we're playing better than the comparative time of the
season.
Early days yet.
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