You know - much has been
made about our "poor start to the season". The keeper's not good enough, the
defence can't defend unless Stanton is there to do it for them, the
captain's a shadow of the player that he used to be ......
But for 120 minutes on Tuesday evening, this
side with its so called useless keeper, defence and midfield, came so very close to
putting Dale into the 3rd Round of the League Cup for the first time since
we made the final back in 1962.
And it would have been deservedly so,
because we were pretty special during this game. Ok fair enough, not special
enough to have won the game outright, but enough for the penalty shoot out
defeat to not matter one bit, as the players were applauded off the pitch
and fans trooped away from Spotland with heads held high and proud of the
effort that had been put in to this game.
We reverted to type for this game. The
wingers were back with Perkins suspended, and Peterborough had somewhat
unusually allowed Guy Branston to play in the Cup game. And in true
revolutionary style, we went at them from the kick off.
There were a couple of well known faces in
the Norwich side. Dion Dublin spearheaded their forward line, whilst former
City striker Darren Huckerby was stuck out on the left wing. And they had
former Utd player Luke Chadwick on the bench who must have undergone plastic
surgery since his days as a Chaff Idol.
We edged the first half. Actually, that's
not quite true. We were the better side throughout the first half, and by
the time we'd took the lead in the tenth minute, we'd already had 2 or 3
half chances, so it was hardly a surprise when Murray fired us into the
lead.
Dagnall had played the ball through to
Murray who was in full stretch, but he couldn't quite get there. Fortunately
for us, the Norwich player called Murray decided to help out the Rochdale
player called Murray, and as their Murray tried to slide the ball back to
keeper Marshall, it proved to be all that was required to set up Glenn
Murray who fired past Marshall to give Dale the lead.
So at this point, we were expecting to sit
back and watch Norwich finally wake up. You could be forgiven for thinking
that we'd scored too early in the game, and we'd have been better off taking
the lead in the 119th minutes as all it would do would provoke this Norwich
side into action.
But it didn't happen, and that Keith Hill
masterplan of playing rubbish at Hereford whilst the Norwich scouts were in
attendance seemed to have done the job. We were playing really well, with a
number of players having their best displays of the season, notably Ben
Muirhead who was performing like he was the headline act.
The start of the second half saw everything
change. Norwich came out all fired up and for about twenty minutes, they
looked exactly like the Championship side that they are supposed to be. In
fact, in this period of the game, they could have killed it off.
I don't know what was said to them in the
dressing room, and on the basis of their first half showing, I'm sure its
words which can't be repeated on here, but whatever it was, it worked, and
it was hardly a surprise when they equalised just five minutes or so.
And it was the old warhorse Dion Dublin who
got the goal. He's getting on a bit now, and it shows his age that I can
remember him playing for Cambridge at Spotland and squaring up to Shaun Reid
after Reidy had floored his team mate which seems at least a couple of
generations ago. But hey, time flies when you're having fun stuck in the
same old division for eternity.
The goal came from a free kick on the
Willbutts Lane side of the ground, as the Canaries attacked towards the
Pearl Street end. The ball came over, and Dublin produced a rather bizarre
way of scoring, as he fired it well out of Spencer's reach and into the
corner of the goal, much to the disgust of Spencer who'd overdosed on his
bravery pills and started laying into Doolan for not sticking with his man.
But the expected onslaught from our
visitors and the heads dropping from ourselves just did not happen. City
continued to press and they threatened on a couple of occasions, but Spencer
held strong at the back, and this proved to be their only real spell of
domination in the entire game. And like with the Stoke game, we simply
saw it out and it was almost as if it was our superior fitness was the
difference between the sides.
There were calls for Norwich's aging
defender Gary Doherty to be sent off when he pulled back Chris Dagnall
during the second half. To be fair to the referee, Doherty wasn't the last
man so it would have been difficult under the laws of the game to produce a
red, but it was a highly cynical pull back which was as professional a foul
as you see. It wasn't dangerous but it was one without the slightest attempt
to get anywhere near the ball. They call it cheating. Unless its one of your
side doing it, when its a "good foul to give away".
There were few out and out chances during
the remainder of the second half, but as the game finished, it was certainly
Dale who were having the better of things, and this was to continue
throughout extra time.
Dale continued to take the game to the
opposition, and Glenn Murray had a great chance to repeat his first half
effort, almost from an identical position. Dagnall had again threaded him
through, but this time he found Marshall too big an object to steer the ball
round, and the former Celtic keeper saved well.
Kennedy was next up to threaten the goal.
He had a long range effort which looked for all the world that it would have
ended up threatening the windscreens on Sandy Lane rather than the goal
itself, but it kept low and it took another fine save from Marshall to keep
it out.
I'll be honest and say that on the basis of
pre-season, I had doubts about Kennedy. He looked to be caught out of
position regularly and was given a torrid time by non league wingers. Since
that opening day, he's been our best and most consistent player, and on the
evidence we've seen so far, Alan Goodall going to Luton has been a very good
thing for Rochdale Football Club.
And with seconds ticking away in the second
period of injury time, for anyone old enough to have made that long trip to
Crystal Palace back in 1990, we had what I would call a Peter Ward moment.
In fact, we had two within seconds.
We were camped in the Norwich half, and a
wonderful Prendergast cross landed at the back post side of the goal, with
Dagnall and Muirhead present. Muirhead must have been about a yard out and a
practically open goal in front of him, and he put it over. It wasn't the
easiest of chances to finish the ball as he had to take it on the full
volley, but it was one which no doubt will have gone through his mind over
and over after the game.
Then just whilst we were resigning
ourselves to that being our chance and penalties were an inevitability, we
had another glorious opportunity to finish things off. Alfie, who had come
off the bench for the understandably tiring Glenn Murray, linked up really
well setting up Dagnall. It was a chance that you'd expect Dagnall to finish
7 or 8 times out of 10. This wasn't one of the 7 or 8, and the ball crept
wide
And so came the penalties. It looked pretty
clear to me that Norwich have spent a long time practising their penalties.
There was a common theme to all of them to keep them below three yards, and
it proved to be successful. Spencer didn't have a chance with any of them,
and Prendergast and Jones saw their penalties saved by the Norwich keeper
Marshall.
Prendergast and Jones can feel no shame, as
both penalties were on target and lets face it, they were up against a
keeper who has saved a penalty by Ronaldihno, though I'm sure his saves from
this game will be the first ones he tells the grand kids about.
Disappointed we may well have felt after
Jones' penalty was saved by Marshall, but that belief was back at Spotland
and it must be used as a spring board to kick start out season this weekend.
It'll all mean nothing, if we can't reproduce this on Saturday afternoon.
We're out, but we're smiling again.
Positives..... this was the Dale that we
all fell back in love with last season. Sharp, fast, flowing, attacking
football and it's difficult to live with us when we play like this. A
Championship side were holding on for long periods
Negatives.... a crowd of less than 3000 for
a game like this, with its associated history is dreadful, especially when
you consider that Norwich brought a much higher following than what you
might have expected.
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