With all the money that has been circulating in
certain quarters of League Two over the past couple of seasons, the last
thing you'd have expected would was a top of the table clash between
Dagenham and Dale. Indeed, even those full of admiration for what John
Still has done at Dagenham over the past couple of seasons would not
have foreseen his side sitting deservedly top of the table in November.
But a top of the table clash this was, and it lived
up to every bit of its billing as both sides produced a cracking game of
football where Dale produced a victory which had looked at one point
about as likely as Adam Rundle joining Oasis after his Wonderwall
efforts on the Beeb last weekend.
The afternoon started with some head scratching
amongst the 300 strong Dale support as team news filtered through into
the "Come on Stacey" poster covered Social Club at what is known as the
London Borough of Barking and Dagenham Stadium.
Three centre halves and two full backs had fans
speculating about a possible 5-3-2 formation, especially given the
"alien formation" suggested by Hilly in the Ob on the morning of the
game. Reality was even stranger with a line up that no one on the planet
could have predicted.
We had right back Wiseman at left back, centre
half McArdle at right back, TK on the left wing, and new left wing
signing Will Atkinson out on the right wing. Add to that, two Jasons in
the middle, as Jason Taylor made his Dale debut eighteen months later
than Hillcroft wanted it to be. On the plus side, we went into this game
with the same keeper for the first time in six games.
All talk of whether this was a line up of a
genius or a madman subsided approximately two minutes into the game, as
we conceded with ease as the home side started like their lives depended
on it. This was to be no 4-0 repeat of the trip to Bournemouth.
A cross from the right wing, caused issues in
the Dale box, and arguably the home side could have been awarded a
penalty as one of their attackers found themselves pushed to the floor.
There was the briefest hint of an appeal from the home side, but not for
long as the ball bounced to Peter Gain at the back post, and his looping
header gave us no chance whatsoever, giving the Daggers the lead whilst
many Dale fans were still coming into the ground.
Unfortunately for Dale, this was merely the
opening blow for the home side, and they continued to set about us like
they were in for the kill. They played like there was more than just
three points at stake, and they wanted to put out a definitive statement
to the division that they were top on merit, with no plans to let that
leadership drop.
It was Alamo stuff, and the only positive thing
you could say was that as Dale supporters we had the best seats in the
house with pretty much all of the action taking place right in front of
us in the superb new stand. How those behind the opposing goal must have
been wanting some close up action.
Criticism of loanee keeper Tom Heaton in last
week's game with Chesterfield was deservedly forgotten about not long
after that goal, as he produced one of the saves of the season. A long
range effort saw him dive full length to tip over an effort that was
most definitely in the top corner. The shot couldn't have been placed
any better, yet still it didn't go in.
The problems kept on mounting, and even a switch
in formation to one in which players were given slightly more familiar
positions did little to stem the flow of Dagenham attacks. We had to
rely on the post as a free header bounced back off the upright. We were
living dangerously.
It could have been worse, and it was only the
excellent refereeing of Keith Stroud which prevented the home side being
awarded a penalty. An inch perfect tackle on the outstanding Benson had
hearts in the mouth, but Benson went to the floor after the tackle. Far
from the being the dive that some accused him of, but it was simply a
great tackle.
We did actually have a brief moment of potential
glory ourselves, when Chris Dagnall looked to broken free of the home
defence before slotting the ball past Tony Roberts in the Dagenham
goals, but the linesman flag had gone up early enough to prevent any
excitement in the Pondfield Road stand.
Half time brought some premature post mortems,
with many lamenting the formation that Hill had started the game with,
but in fairness even the switch to the more familiar positions did
little to change the way the half had transpired.
We had witnessed arguably one of the best halves
of football from an opposition side in many a season, and for all the
talk about how we hadn't been in the game, you have to pay full credit
to an excellent Dagenham side who could well have issued a declaration
against 95% of sides within the bottom two divisions.
But we've been here before. Does anybody still
write this Dale side off?
It seems almost Comical Jon style optimism to
take heart from the first half, but to have been so heavily outplayed
for 45 minutes yet still been in the game is something that we could
take comfort from, and it was reminiscent of last season's trip to
Shrewsbury where we also hadn't had a kick during the first half.
The second half began with the appearance of
Will Buckley, who came on to replace Rory McArdle as we went with the
most orthodox 4-4-2 that we could during the afternoon. Whether it was
Will, or the half time inspiration, but it took around thirty second to
realise that we would not be seeing a re-enactment of the first half,
and the home side had a game on their hands.
It might not have been a case of throwing the
kitchen sink back at them, but for once we were retaining possession in
the Dagenham half and they had something to think about. Buckley,
despite recent injury issues, was causing them problems and looked to be
our most likely outlet during the afternoon.
Bit by bit, we were starting to take control of
the game, and whilst the home side continued to look dangerous, things
were starting to go our way with our midfield finally getting to grips
with the game. New signing Jason Taylor who had looked a bit of a
passenger in the first half was starting to become the dominant force
with a mixture of tackling and passing that impressed, and he certainly
wasn't afraid to get stuck in when need be.
The first real sign that we could obtain
something from this game came following the introduction of Kallum
Higginbotham. Higgy has been something of a forgotten man at Spotland,
and he's never really shown anything like the form he did when he first
burst onto the scene two years ago. But this afternoon was his
afternoon.
His low cross from the right was blocked by
Daggers keeper Tony Roberts with the ball bouncing on to the arm of
Dagenham defender Scott Doe with the away support howling for a penalty.
Not to be outdone, it was that man Higgy doing
it again. Perhaps that penalty shout had given him a renewed confidence,
or perhaps he was buoyed by memories of his wonder goal for Dale here
two years previously, but whatever it was, it worked as he played with a
desire to make things happen.
Picking the ball up in the Dagenham box, he
shrugged off his marker and with the first sniff of a shot, his low
drive nestled beautifully into the back of the net to provide the first
stranger hugging moment of the afternoon.
At times like this, it would be perfectly
understandable for thoughts to turn to a possible Dale victory. We had
the home side on the back foot and we had all the belief. But there was
no such thoughts this time. There wasn't enough time to do so, because
one minute thirty seconds later we were winning.
A cross from the left this time, with TK the
provider and a flick on from Chris Dagnall to a pouncing Craig Dawson at
the back post to make it five goals to the ever growing list of plaudits
for the teenage defender who was more bothered about basketball a couple
of years back.
We've talked about the Joey T story as being the
stuff of dreams, but with Dawson we have a young lad who only eighteen
months ago was mobbing the likes of Dagnall, Kennedy, McArdle as one of
those on the pitch celebrating the Darlington play off victory. They are
now his team mates. There'll be a book written about these Hillcroft
days eventually.
Fifteen minutes to go? Could we hold on? Could
we snatch a third to secure a win? Could results change elsewhere to put
us top of the league? Questions, questions, questions, but a complete
set of different questions than those being asked at half time.
If anything, we were the more likely of the two
sides to add to their tally, as with Buckley ghosting through their
defence, we were taking advantage of the gaps that were now appearing,
and it took a good save by Tony Roberts to prevent a long range effort
from our ginger midfielder Jason going in. Yes, I don't know which one
it was.
For me, the comeback was summed up a couple of
minutes from time, when Will Buckley ran into trouble into the home
side's box. As the Daggers launched a counter attack, it was our very
own Daggers who ran fully thirty yards to break down the attack right in
front of the dugouts. The resultant throw in immediately came to
nothing. We are all defenders, we are all attackers.
The home side huffed and they puffed, but
despite a lovely move which resulted in the freshest of fresh air shots,
with the ensuing hilarity even seeing one home supporter ejected from
the terraces.
And it wasn't just the home supporters
struggling to cope with the dynamic Dale comeback, as the home side's
second half sub Wes Thomas had a plot losing moment with a challenge on
Dagnall well over the ball that left our Scouse frontman poleaxed on the
floor for a couple of minutes before forcing him off. With the referee
closer to the challenge than the ball was, there was never going to be
anything other than a red card for the challenge.
That challenge meant that the four minutes of
added on time was closer to eight minutes by the time the referee called
an end to things, and aside from a couple of worrying set pieces in
dangerous areas, Heaton wasn't troubled during that time and we held on
for another three points on the road for our patched up side, putting an
end to the home side's unbeaten home record in the process.
So departing loanees, key injuries, players
meeting each other in the warm up to games, suspensions, massive switch
rounds during the game, and a 45 minute head start given to the
opposition, and you still can't hold this Dale side back.
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