Monday, March 31, 2008

L2 Mar 29th (a) W3-1 v Darlington

 


 


Game Summary:


 


Joe Colbeck was left grinning through the pain after showing Darlington the player they had helped turn him into.


City's lightning-quick winger has been bang on form in recent weeks - and was desperate to emphasise that in the north-east.


Having credited his loan spell with Darlo as the quick fix his career had needed, Colbeck aimed to make his mark.


He did that all right - and the rest. The stud marks around a rather sensitive part of his anatomy illustrated the home side's frustration at their failure to halt him.


 


City produced a powerhouse second-half display to shock promotion-chasing Darlington in appalling conditions in the north-east.


Trailing at half-time, Stuart McCall's side turned the match on its head after the break with three goals - two from former Quakers players.


Darlington took an 11th-minute lead with a Clark Keltie penalty after Barry Conlon was harshly judged to have handled in the box.


City needed only four minutes of the second half to equalise. The build-up play was superb considering the mudbath pitch and pouring rain.


Conlon deftly controlled a long ball and Peter Thorne's low cross was turned home by Tom Penford for his first senior goal.


City went in front after 63 minutes, Conlon looping home a header against his former club, and they made sure of a superb win with a third goal 11 minutes from time as Joe Colbeck burst through before coolly firing into the bottom corner against the side where he spent six weeks on loan.


Darlington's Richie Foran was shown a straight red card for a nasty lunge on Colbeck. But nothing could spoil City's day.


 


 


Stats


Soccerbase.com


Soccerway.com


 


Extra News


Six foot seven man versus sausage.


 


 


 */*


 


In this edition:


 


General Information


Match Video and Picture Links


BCFC Report


Opposition Report


Post match reaction


Other reports


Round up


 


 


 


******************************


A bit of City humour... http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/


Next game(s) :  Upcoming fixtures


 


2007/2008 fixtures now out


FL2 Table  Table


BCFC News


Must be a midlife crises - I'm on facebook !


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******************************


Match Video and Picture Links


******************************


 


Highlights (UK only) Virgin Media


BCFC Fan photos


 


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Match Stats


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Soccerbase.com


Soccerway.com


 



Darlington: 13. David Stockdale, 4. Alan White, 5. Stephen Foster, 10. Clark
Keltie, 11. Robert Purdie, 12. Julian Joachim, 18. Ben Parker, 23. Ryan
Valentine (39), 19. Craig Nelthorpe (73), 30. Richie Foran, 32. Jason
Kennedy.
Subs: 2. Neil Austin (39), 6. Ian Miller, 8. Michael Cummins (73), 15.
Przemyslaw Kazimierczak (GK), 26. Guylain Ndumbu-Nsungu.


 


Bradford C: 34. Scott Loach, 2. Darren Williams, 3. Paul Heckingbottom, 5.
David Wetherall, 6. Mark Bower, 8. Eddie Johnson, 22. Kyle Nix, 18. Tom
Penford, 15. Joe Colbeck (86), 10. Peter Thorne, 9. Barry Conlon.
Subs: 4. Paul Evans, 11. Alex Rhodes, 35. Thomas Moncur, 33. Ben Starosta
(86), 25. Luke Medley.


 


Ref: Darren Drysdale (Lincolnshire)
Red card: Darlington - Foran (83 min.)
Yellow cards:
Darlington: Nelthorpe (65 min), Foster (85).
Bradford C: Nix (88).


 


Stats: Darlington - Bradford C
Possession: 49 - 51%
Shots on target: 0 - 3
Shots off target: 14 - 6
Fouls: 12 - 10
Corners: 5 - 4


 


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BCFC Report (from the


T&A )


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Colbeck hits Darlo where it hurts
By Simon Parker


Darlington 1 City 3


 


Joe Colbeck was left grinning through the pain after showing Darlington the player they had helped turn him into.


City's lightning-quick winger has been bang on form in recent weeks - and was desperate to emphasise that in the north-east.


Having credited his loan spell with Darlo as the quick fix his career had needed, Colbeck aimed to make his mark.


He did that all right - and the rest. The stud marks around a rather sensitive part of his anatomy illustrated the home side's frustration at their failure to halt him.


Richie Foran was rightly red-carded for inflicting that wound but it was nowhere near as deep as the hurt that Colbeck had caused Darlington's promotion chances.


He had joked beforehand that Dave Penney's side would try to nobble him with a big tackle inside the first ten minutes. The comments were even pinned up in the home dressing room.


The retribution actually took 82 minutes in arriving - by which time City were cruising to another three away points.


Darlington's success this season still cannot bring in the crowds. Only 4,492 turned out, including over a thousand from Bradford, and that was still one of the Arena's bigger attendances.


No wonder there are plans afoot for a £12m hotel complex to bring in more bodies. I'm not sure about the idea of a ski-slope though; mud-wrestling would be more appropriate judging by the quagmire pitch.


But not even the boggy conditions could hold up Colbeck or his team-mates, who turned in as good a second-half performance as any this season.


Faced with such a surface, the easy option would have been to play direct and lump it long but City passed and passed; getting the ball down on the deck and looking to play their way round the home side.


The quality of their efforts drew grudging admiration from the home fans. When Colbeck gingerly left the action, it was not only the City supporters who stood to give him a rousing send-off.


City's first appearance in the top half of the table since September will have raised a cheer and a groan in the board room.


While Mark Lawn and Julian Rhodes no doubt relished watching one of League Two's big boys getting turned over, it also means the joint-chairmen now have to cough up bonus payments based on positions.


"I think Mr Rhodes and Mr Lawn will be pulling their hair out!" laughed a delighted Stuart McCall.


"But we don't want the season to just peter out. Whatever position we are, there are always things to play for.


"We've got a lot out there playing for their futures and when you get a backing like our fans away from home then you want to reward them.


"I've been pumped up for the game all week and I think you could see that the players were. And it's nice when you get the merits from such a good performance."


Darlington's problems had begun even before kick-off.


Already missing injured strikers Pawel Abbott and Tommy Wright, Guylain Ndumbu-Nsungu had to drop out from facing his recent team-mates after straining an Achilles during the warm-up.


But they were given a huge helping hand with a penalty gift after 11 minutes.


Darlington's first corner whipped off a scrum of heads and skidded up against Barry Conlon defending the back post. The contact with his hand, if any, must have been minimal but referee Darren Drysdale had a little think and then pointed to the spot.


Drysdale, as nobody needs reminding, is the guy you don't upset in the car park. Just ask Dean Windass.


And he wasted little time upsetting the entire City side and their fans behind the goal by awarding the penalty which Clark Keltie confidently fired home.


City's play did not seem unduly fazed by the early setback, although Darlington had more of the first-half chances. Alan White, Keltie and on-loan Doncaster winger Craig Nelthorpe were all close as Scott Loach looked a bit out of sorts.


But the Bantams had a great chance to level right before the break as Conlon did well to retrieve Paul Heckingbottom's throw-in and cut it back from the byline. David Wetherall was the furthest forward and stretched out with his left boot but could not keep the shot down.


It was a warning sign to Darlington and McCall's mood at half-time was upbeat despite the scoreline.


He said: "The belief was still there at half-time. There was nothing between the sides and I knew we could come back.


"But I told the lads not just to be happy with getting a point. I wanted to see if we could go back out there and win the game."


His team's response arrived within four minutes of kicking off.


Heckingbottom's long pass out of defence was superbly cushioned by Conlon, who laid it off to Peter Thorne. The striker's low cross was stepped over by Kyle Nix as it ran through for Tom Penford to control and whip in the first senior goal of his career.


It had been six years in coming but well worth the wait. Once again the coltish playmaker was pushing his credentials for another new contract - and hopefully a long overdue change of luck.


McCall's jig of delight on the touchline showed what he thought. But the manager's enthusiasm was clear by the way he spent the entire 90 minutes stood out in the teeming rain in his technical area - no Steve McClaren-style brolly for him!


Nelthorpe's miscontrol in the box denied Darlington an immediate comeback before Thorne almost fired City in front, latching on to Nix's flick-on but firing straight at the advancing David Stockdale.


If anything, the weather and pitch were getting worse. But nothing was going to dampen City's spirits as they grabbed the lead just after an hour.


The goal was similar to the one they had conceded a week before at Rotherham. Heckingbottom's free-kick from the halfway line soared deep into the penalty area and Conlon popped up above the crowd to steer it across the keeper and inside the far post.


For Conlon, who had two previous spells with Darlington, it was a sweet moment. Made all the better because he was stood on almost the same spot on the pitch where he had conceded the penalty.


Darlo launched a brief reprisal and were nearly thrown a lifeline when Penford's attempted clearance sliced Rob Purdie's cross against his own bar.


But City wrapped it up with 11 minutes left, and fittingly it was Colbeck who applied the coup de grace.


Again it was a Heckingbottom clearance that got things rolling. Conlon was the target and as the ball dropped just outside the box, there was Colbeck bustling through to seize control and fire his second goal in a week confidently into the bottom corner.


Darlington had recovered two-goal deficits in both their previous home games but there was no way back this time, especially when hot-headed Foran left them a man short in the closing stages.


The good news is that Colbeck, after singing like a Beegee for a few minutes, is fine. And hopefully ready to deliver an encore at Rochdale on Tuesday night.


 


 


 


 


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Opposition Report


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Official match report


n/a


 


 


Misc. Report(s)


http://www.rivals.net/news/pgarticle.aspx?artid=13750_3363221&id=30


(has a neat timeline of goals/subs etc)


 


Vital Football


Northern Echo - Conlon inspires Bantams


More from Rivals.net


 


 


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Post match reaction


 


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 Conlon aiming to finish on a high
By Simon Parker


Barry Conlon today pledged to finish the season with all guns blazing, even if City cannot make the play-offs.


The big Irishman conceded a top-seven slot still looks out of reach despite Saturday's superb 3-1 win at fourth-placed Darlington.


City have moved into the top half for the first time in six months and are nine points off Chesterfield in the last play-off position with two games in hand.


But Rochdale, where Stuart McCall's men go tomorrow night, have played three less than the Spireites and are only a point adrift.


Conlon reckons they are a match for any of the top teams on their day. And even if the play-offs are beyond them, the striker wants to sign off by showing promotion-winning form.


"We've got seven games left to show we're as good as these sides," he said. "We have a belief in ourselves and it's frustrating to see us only in mid-table.


"We wanted to do ourselves justice against a team in the top bunch at Darling-ton and we did that. We played some decent stuff on a bad pitch and showed the quality we have.


"Rochdale will be another tough game but I see no reason why we can't go there and come away with the same result. I fancy us against anyone in the league when we play like that.


"There's not much of a difference between us and the teams going well but they're up there and we're not so there must be some missing link."


City came from behind to stun the Quakers and make it seven points from nine since the Mansfield mishap.


Conlon headed his third goal in four starts to make up for his disputed handball which gave Darlington their penalty opener.


He added: "The ball hit me in the stomach and could have barely grazed my arm. It was never a penalty - I had the mud mark on my shirt.


"Something similar happened to one of their lads soon after and the ref said it was accidental so I felt a bit hard done by. But we showed great character to bounce back."


Tom Penford scored his first senior goal and Joe Colbeck was also on target at the club where he went on loan in October.


Penford said: "I've scored a few this year in the reserves and it's about time I netted one in the first team. You can't get any better than your first goal and I'm over the moon.


"We got the ball down and passed it well despite the surface."


 


 


 


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Other reports


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 Not really!


 


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L2 Round up


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CFML – City Forward! Mailing List


“All the news and none of the views”


Since February 1997


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Saturday, March 29, 2008

Six foot seven man versus sausage.

Harrison in tasty battle
By Simon Parker (T&A)

Six foot seven man versus sausage.
And that's a sentence I have never written before.
No, it's not on the WWE undercard at Wrestlemania this weekend - though after pitting Floyd Mayweather with a giant wrestler who could use him as a tooth pick I wouldn't put anything past them.

But this man v banger contest is taking place for real in the national fanzine awards.
Mike Harrison, the brains behind the long-running City Gent, has been short-listed in the top ten fanzine editors. The Gent itself is also among the front-runners to win the League Two award, along with independent Bantams website The Boy From Brazil. But the intriguing battle is among the cream of the fanzine editors, who include the splendidly-named Sausage presiding over Everton's effort. Harrison is suitably chuffed to make it through to the last ten.
"It's quite an achievement," he says, "but I will be disappointed if I get beaten by someone called Sausage!" All the nominations can be seen at footballfanzineawards.com

Read the City Gent by subscribing here.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

L2 Mar 24 (h) W1-0 v Chesterfield

 

Game Summary:

 

Bradford City left the last of their last chance saloons with three points that they probably didn't deserve after this entertaining clash played, for the most part, in glorious sunshine at Valley Parade.

The difference between the sides was eventually the solitary goal that took Peter Thorne's tally for the season to 12 when he rose highest to head home Ben Starosta's cross after sixteen minutes.

 

 

 */*

Next game(s) : 

 

Upcoming fixtures

 

******************************

A bit of City humour... http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/

2007/2008 fixtures now out

FL2 Table  Table

BCFC News

Must be a midlife crises - I'm on facebook !

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Match Video and Picture Links

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Highlights (UK only) Virgin Media

 

http://www.thestar.co.uk/spireites/Spireites-sunk-by-single-strike.3909434.jp

(also includes slideshow - maybe UK only)

 

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Match Stats

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Game Statistics

 

Bradford: Loach ,Starosta ,Wetherall ,Bower ,Heckingbottom ,Colbeck ,Penford ,Nix ,Rhodes (Johnson ,58 ) ,Topp (Brown ,63 ) ,Thorne (Conlon ,85)
Subs not used: Williams,O'Brien,

 

Chesterfield: Roche ,Picken ,Kovacs ,Downes ,Robertson (Moloney ,66 ) ,Lowry (Adam Smith ,58 ) ,Niven (Winter ,80 ) ,Leven ,Kerry ,Dowson ,Fletcher
Subs not used Annerson,Hartley,

Bookings: Downes ,Kovacs (Chesterfield)

 

Attendance: 13825


Referee: C Webster (Tyne & Wear)


City / Spireites

10 Goal Attempts 13
7 On Target 5
4 Corners 6
12 Fouls 16
0 Yellow Cards 2
48 % 52

Soccerbase.com

Soccerway.com

 

 

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BCFC Report (from the T&A )

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Thorne reaches magic milestone
By Simon Parker

Bradford City 1, Chesterfield 0

It will be one of those imponderable questions when the end-of-season inquests are carried out.

But how would City have got on if Peter Thorne had begun his campaign in August rather than November?

Thorne, fresh after Saturday's breather, once again showed his worth with a textbook centre forward's header this afternoon.

It was his 150th career league goal and the 12th in a Bantams shirt - all coming in the last four months.

Every team needs a poacher and Thorne's absence from the opening quarter of the season - when he did briefly play, he was never fully fit - hit City's plans hard.

 Another six or seven games early doors might have produced another four or five goals - and maybe half a dozen extra points.

Then where might Stuart McCall's side be?

All conjecture, of course, as the Bantams continue to muddle around the middle.

The fans at least can enjoy a rare home win - only the second in six attempts.

But perhaps they should have expected it. This was the third year running that Chesterfield have left Valley Parade empty-handed - and not too many visiting sides can say that.

The Spireites have not even managed a single goal in that time. The cynics would say they are even worse on West Yorkshire soil than City!

Thorne's 16th-minute goal was reward for excellent build-up play.

Joe Colbeck charged through the middle, drawing the red shirts to him like moths to a flame, before slipping a pass to Ben Starosta.

The right back is always keen to get forward and he relished the open space created to deliver a deep cross right on to Thorne's head.

The striker's connection carried too much power for keeper Barry Roche, who could only palm it into the net.

Starosta was at it again within minutes, threading a lovely pass into the Chesterfield box between left back and centre half which was wasted by Colbeck's disappointing cut-back.

McCall had praised the desire shown at Millmoor and, watching from his lofty perch in the press box, the gaffer would have been impressed with Alex Rhodes.

The winger appeared to have lost out to Derek Niven after a surging run into the area but battled to win back possession while on the ground and drill in a cross which unfortunately caught his team-mates napping.

Chesterfield were clearly missing 25-goal hitman Jack Lester, whose broken nose from the weekend is threatening to derail their play-off push. Without him, they looked toothless for much of the first half.

Aussie defender Aaron Downes should have got more on a header at a free-kick but Chesterfield's only other effort was an off-balance lob well wide from Lloyd Kerry.

Starosta was almost operating exclusively as a right winger as City looked for that second goal. And Thorne got free out wide to whip in a dangerous ball that just eluded his target Colbeck.

City had the chance to crank up the pressure on the Chesterfield goal in time added on after Rhodes was bundled over level with the corner of the penalty area.

But the opportunity was wasted as Colbeck rolled it short for Kyle Nix, whose half-hearted shot was easily blocked.

The game had a flat feel but City were good value for their advantage.

Spireites boss Lee Richardson made his feelings on the first 45 minutes crystal clear by sending his team out well early for the second half - no doubt, with a few choice words ringing in their ears.

Chesterfield had to wake up as an attacking force and veteran battering ram Steve Fletcher tried to flex his muscles within minutes of the re-start when he launched into Loach on the end of a long cross from Gregor Robertson. Both missed it but City comfortably cleared up the potential danger.

Peter Leven, briefly a Valley Parade trialist in pre-season, launched a long throw-in into the box which was carefully cleared by David Wetherall.

Then centre back partner Mark Bower clashed with David Dowson, leaving the on-loan Sunderland striker on the floor.

Chesterfield's fans behind the goal appealed for a penalty but referee Colin Webster was unmoved.

It was a good little spell for the visitors, although still there was nothing to seriously trouble City's lead.

City nearly cashed in on the break with Willy Topp and Colbeck combining brightly to force the game's first corner.

It had taken 55 minutes but was not worth waiting for as Colbeck's kick didn't clear the first defender.

McCall, now back at ground level, made his first switch just before the hour.

Rhodes, one of three changes from Saturday, made way for Eddie Johnson as Nix shunted across to the left.

Colbeck was seeing more and more of the ball and giving marker Gregor Robertson a run for his money. And City's pacy threat increased when David Brown came on for Topp.

The Kop had woken up to provide the noisy backing which had been lacking up to that point. The volume increased as Brown's persistence kept the ball alive on the touchline and Thorne forced another corner.

A constant chorus of "Stuart McCall's Bradford Army" drummed round the ground and it did not waver as Chesterfield's attacking ambitions were twice thwarted by the imposing head of Wetherall.

Loach was finally called upon to make his first save as Dowson drove towards the near post. The keeper's block was strong and Bower got in the way of the follow-up.

The home fans kept singing from the far end as Chesterfield won back-to-back corners - and the second should have produced an equaliser for substitute Adam Smith, who scuffed over the bar from point-blank range.

It was a warning sign for the Bantams, whose advantage was starting to look precarious. It had been seven games since the last clean sheet at home, a run stretching back to January 12.

Bower was starting to tire in the closing stages, understandably as he played his second game in three days after so long out.

But Fletcher brushed him off to make room for an effort from the edge of the box which cleared the bar.

Bower then launched a clearing header forward that was missed by two Chesterfield players and dropped straight at the feet of the dimunitive Brown.

Downes, perhaps undone by the striker's low centre of gravity, immediately bundled him over and was rightly booked.

Nix's free-kick was deflected just wide but Chesterfield responded instantly as Starosta was caught out by Dowson.

The right back did not see Dowson closing him down and turned straight into trouble but was baled out by Loach, who turned the resulting shot across goal and away.

Brown won another free-kick on the break to lift the pressure and Thorne nearly earned City some breathing space when the ball broke to him ten yards out but his firm shot was well parried by Roche.

Thorne went off to a standing ovation with five minutes to go and replacement Barry Conlon almost scored with his first touch, heading over from the penalty spot.

But Conlon was trumped straight away by Chesterfield's newly-arrived sub Jamie Winter, whose 25-yard belter was arrowing for the top corner until Loach flew across his goal to tip it clear.

Loach was into the action again to beat away Smith's cross as the four minutes of added time began with another melee.

Even the keeper appeared in the box for a corner as Chesterfield desperately pushed for an equaliser.

The visitors must have regretted their lack of conviction in the first 45 minutes.

But the game ended with City on the attack and, for once, the supporters went home happy.

 

 

 

 

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Opposition Report

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Official match report

 

Lee Richardson was forced into two changes and elected to make a third, to the line-up that beat Accrington on Saturday. Jack Lester's broken nose we knew about, but Jamie Ward's absence, with a tight hamstring, took everyone by surprise. David Dowson and Steve Fletcher thus started up front. Gregor Robertson moved from left midfield to left back, replacing Peter Hartley, who dropped to the bench. Adam Smith and Brendan Moloney were welcome additions to the substitute strength.

Chesterfield made a decent, measured start. Fletch found Dowson with a knock-down on 3 and he worked it towards Picken, but the ball was cleared. Picken was involved in getting the ball into the Bradford box on 6, but Weatherall cleared. Chesterfield looked the more comfortable side in the first ten minutes.

City's first effort came from Thorne, on 13, but it didn't trouble Roche in the visitors' net. Thorne was more accurate on 15, though, getting on the end of Starosa's cross to plant a free header past Roche, despite the keeper getting a hand to it. 1-0 City.

Having taken the lead City relaxed, and played the better football, looking to increase their lead against a Spireites side that seemed to lose its shape a little. Chesterfield clawed their way back into the game, at least in terms of share of play, thanks to determined work by Kerry, particularly.

Niven crossed on 36 after Dowson worked the ball wide well, but Fletcher was unable to make firm contact at the far post. City broke with Topp, but Niven was on hand to clear the danger.

Colbeck took a short free kick to Nix as stoppage time commenced but the end product was poor, and the free kick was wasted. The game was becoming drab as Bradford, in command, lacked the quality to build on their lead in a convincing manner, and Chesterfield lacked the impetus, organisation and width to mount a convincing comeback.

Both sides were probably grateful for the half-time break.

Chesterfield tried to press after the re-start. A Lowry shot was unfortunately blocked by Dowson; Robertson skied a cross but the City goalkeeper flapped under pressure, almost letting Fletcher in.Dowson broke into the penalty area but was baulked by an outstretched arm after flicking ball over a defender- the referee declined to award a penalty.

Topp got as far as the Spireites six-yard box but was stopped by Niven, at the expense of the game's first corner, on 55. Nix went through on Dowson, who seemed to have been identified as the principal threat by the City team.

Adam Smith replaced Jamie Lowry on 57, while City brought Eddie Johnson on for Rhodes. David Brown replaced Topp on 63. Brown beat Downes and crossed to Thorne, whose effort cannoned off Kovacs for a corner, which Downes cleared.

Moloney replaced Robertson on 66. City brought everyone back to defend a free kick which Kerry took on 67, but his effort came back off the wall. Dowson got a shot away on 68 but Loach saved; Leven look poised to pick up the afters but Kerry came in front of him. The ball was cleared and Kovacs was booked for a foul on Starosa.

Smith's cross to Fletcher was cleared for a corner which Kerry took on 70. Johnson headed it away for another; Kerry took that and it fell to Smith, who knocked it over from only a couple of yards with the goal at his mercy. The Spireites were unquestionably brighter and were having the greater share of the ball - with men absent up front, though, would they be able to conjure an equaliser?

Fletcher shot over the bar on 75. Downes was harshly booked for a foul on Brown after the diminutive chap was knocked off the ball by a bigger man. Nix took the free kick but the shot struck Downes and went out for a corner. Dowson broke through on 78 but Loach pulled off a great save to deny him, at the expense of a corner. Chesterfield kept the ball from the clearance and Kerry shot narrowly wide.

Winter replaced Niven on 80. Brown tumbled under a Kerry challenge to win a free kick on 81. The free kick came to Thorne who shot well, but Roche equalled it with a fine save. Conlon replace Thorne on 86 and headed over the bar almost immediately. Winter fired a fine shot at the Bradford goal but Loch pulled off another top-class save to preserve City's lead. Straight away Winter was back at the other end to deny Brown. Leven fed Kerry who shot, but Loach had a more comfortable time with this effort. A fine Smith cross was cleared, and City were left hanging on by their knicker elastic as Smith and Winter both put in balls that were cleared frantically. Roche came up for a corner on 91. As the four minutes of added time unfolded, though, City were able to slow it down enough to halt Chesterfield's momentum

 

 

Misc. Report(s)

http://www.thestar.co.uk/spireites/Spireites-sunk-by-single-strike.3909434.jp

(also includes slideshow - maybe UK only)

 

http://www.thestar.co.uk/spireites/How-did-we-miss-all.3913159.jp

 

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Post match reaction

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Other reports

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From the Yorkshire Post

Bradford City 1 Chesterfield 0: Bradford owe debt to inspired Loach

Bradford city goalkeeper Scott Loach pulled off two stunning saves to frustrate play-off chasers Chesterfield and earn a much-needed home win for Stuart McCall's side.

City went ahead in the first half thanks to Peter Thorne's 12th goal of the season, but they were under the cosh for much of the second period and the visitors must be wondering how they did not find a way through.

McCall rang the changes after City's hard-fought draw at Rotherham and his fresh line-up bossed the game early on.

Winger Joe Colbeck posed plenty of problems with his pace and when he picked out overlapping full-back Ben Sarosta after 15 minutes he supplied a superb cross for Thorne to power in his header from six yards out.

But City failed to make the most of their early dominance and after the interval the visitors came out determined to get back into the contest.

Lively Chesterfield striker David Dowson went down under a challenge from Mark Bower, but referee Colin Webster waved away the penalty appeals and Loach, who had flapped at a couple of crosses, made amends when he blocked another effort from Dowson at his near post.

Twenty minutes from time City had a real let-off when Lloyd Kerry's corner beat everybody only for Adam Smith to scoop the ball over the bar.

Starosta blotted his copybook when his slip allowed Dowson a clear run-in on goal, but Loach came to his rescue with a smart one-handed save, before blocking Jamie Winter's 25-yard shot.

 

 

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Other news

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Tom Penford

Thorne to begin contract talks  

 

 

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CFML – City Forward! Mailing List

“All the news and none of the views”

Since February 1997

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Monday, March 24, 2008

L2 Mar 22nd (a) D1-1 v Rotherham United

 

 

Game Summary:

 

Omar Daley was sent off as a chilly Yorkshire derby finished all square at Millmoor.

 Barry Conlon should have given City the lead in the first half but they went in front within two minutes of the re-start with Joe Colbeck's fourth goal of the season. The winger slipped the ball inside to Tom Penford and then raced on to his flighted return to drill home off the inside of the far post.

And they should have gone 2-0 up after 62 minutes. But Kyle Nix somehow managed to stab the ball straight at keeper Andy Warrington from three yards out with the goal at his mercy.

Rotherham seized on that let-off and were level soon after.

The home side, playing their first game since being docked ten points for going into administration, tried to make their extra man advantage count in the closing stages. Mark Hudson went close with a volley in stoppage time but City hung on to protect their point.

  

 */*

Next game(s) : 

 

Upcoming fixtures

 

******************************

A bit of City humour... http://texasbantam.blogspot.com/

2007/2008 fixtures now out

FL2 Table  Table

BCFC News

Must be a midlife crises - I'm on facebook !

******************************

 

 

******************************

Match Video and Picture Links

******************************

 

Highlights (UK only) Virgin Media

BCFC Link

 

******************************

Match Stats

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 Rotherham: Warrington, Tonge (Taylor 83), Mills, Coughlan, Joseph, Yates (Green 67), Danny Harrison, Hudson, Peter Holmes, O'Grady, Derek Holmes (Newsham 61).
Subs Not Used: Cann, Ross.

Booked: Mills.

Goals: O'Grady 65.

 

Bradford: Loach, Williams (Starosta 90), Wetherall, Bower, Heckingbottom, Colbeck, Johnson, Penford, Nix, Daley, Conlon (Thorne 83).
Subs Not Used: Evans, Rhodes, Topp.

Sent Off: Daley (71).

Goals: Colbeck 48.

 

Att: 4,157

Ref: Mike Thorpe (Suffolk).

 

Game Statistics

Millers / Bantams
18 Goal Attempts 14
10 On Target 10
27 Crosses 14
7 Corners 2
3 Offside 5
12 Fouls 10
1 Yellow Cards 0
0 Red Cards 1
53 % 47

Soccerbase.com

Soccerway.com

 

 

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BCFC Report (from the

T&A )

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City defiant after Daley dismissal
By Simon Parker
Rotherham 1, City 1

Sequels are never the same. Just think of Jaws 4, High School Musical 2, Police Academy 7... None of them were a patch on the original.

Last month's pulsating cracker at Valley Parade was always going to be an impossible act to follow but City left snowy/sunny/windy south Yorkshire (all four seasons of weather was crammed into 90 minutes) knowing they had done a decent job.

All right, it wasn't three points - which it could and would have been if Kyle Nix had not contrived to somehow miss from three yards - but they had at least made a point following their manager's rollicking after last week's miserable effort against Mansfield.

For one game, at least, the players were back in Stuart McCall's good books. Let's hope that it is still the case come 5pm today.

On the afternoon nominated by the fans to celebrate David Wetherall's contribution to the cause, City rolled up their sleeves and battled in the manner we have come to expect from the skipper.

 None more so than for the final 20 minutes, when they were down to ten men after Omar Daley was given his marching orders.

It was hard to see what exactly took place between the Jamaican and Rotherham centre half Graham Coughlan. Even McCall, just a few yards from the incident in the away dugout, did his best Arsene Wenger impression and said he was oblivious.

Coughlan cleared a ball as Daley went into the challenge and ended up on the floor. There was a brief melee as players from both sides converged on the scene, before referee Mike Thorpe pulled out a red card.

After a string of sub-par displays, Daley had looked up for it in a strike role alongside Barry Conlon, with his pace causing the Millers backline a real problem. That made his early exit even more frustrating.

But at least this time there was no late Rotherham winner to leave City empty-handed. That would have been harsh on a side showing four changes from Mansfield.

In an ideal world, McCall would have been tempted to replace the lot of them but, with one eye on today's Chesterfield clash, he shuffled it about to give a chance to the likes of Tom Penford and long-term absentee Mark Bower.

They both rewarded him with real commitment; Penford, in particular, catching the eye with his roving runs from box to box in centre midfield.

It is games like this which remind you what a talent he can be. It's just a pity that we have been given such fleeting glimpses down the years.

Penford's partnership with Eddie Johnson certainly enjoyed the upper hand on their Rotherham counterparts - and the 23-year-old was at the heart of City's goal.

Joe Colbeck, a lively and bright presence on the right flank, slipped the ball inside to Penford and then bombed towards the box. The flighted return pass was right on the button and Colbeck needed only one touch to steady himself before shooting across keeper Andy Warrington and in off the far post.

It was Colbeck's fourth City goal of the campaign and sixth overall. Now it is surely time that he breaks his duck at home.

What made it ten times worse for the Rotherham faithful was that their own right winger Jamie Yates had been in an identical situation in the first half but he mistakenly went for the near post and simply dragged his shot into the side-netting.

Team-mate Derek Holmes, unmarked six yards out, was particularly unimpressed as he stood there pleading for a pass.

That was one of two big chances in the opening 45 minutes; the other fell to Barry Conlon.

When Penford's blocked shot squirted to him by the penalty spot, Conlon should have been celebrating his third goal in as many games. Rotherham froze for offside, which gave the Irishman time to take aim, but Warrington made a decent block and the opportunity was gone.

Conlon led the line well and his hold-up play was good all afternoon but once again his finishing was called into question.

Having enjoyed the bulk of the first-half possession without creating too much else, you feared that City might live to regret it - but within two minutes of the restart, Colbeck was galloping inside left back Marc Joseph and the deadlock had been broken.

The game opened up as Scott Loach beat away Chris O'Grady's low effort, then Daley's quick feet worked space to test Warrington at the other end.

But City, again backed by a noisy away following, had their tails up and, while Rotherham rocked, they should have delivered a knock-out blow.

Nix found Daley and then set off for the six-yard box to take the low cross that the winger drilled in. Warrington was on the floor as the goal loomed large but Nix unbelievably slid the ball parallel with the goalline and straight into the keeper's grateful grasp.

It was a miss just as embarrassing as Peter Thorne's in the first encounter between the sides and the scorn poured down from the home fans behind that goal. It must have been even more painful for Nix, who grew up and still lives around the Rotherham area.

His punishment was doubled when Rotherham inevitably hit back with an equaliser two minutes later.

It was a poor goal to concede. Joseph's free-kick just over the halfway line caught the gusty wind and drifted on into the City box, where O'Grady slipped in behind Bower to stab home from close range.

It should have been the keeper's ball and Loach was quick to apologise to his frustrated defence.

Both sides were going for a winner and City could have been back in front from their next attack. Again it was Nix cutting into range but his shot with his unfavoured right foot carried over the bar.

Then Daley was sent off and City had to resort to plan B, ensuring they held on to what they had.

Bower was running on empty but kept getting his head on every high ball; Wetherall stood strong alongside him; the full backs timed their tackles well and made sure Rotherham did not get round the side.

Paul Heckingbottom produced a great smothering tackle as Coughlan prepared to pull the trigger and Joseph's delicate chip cleared the bar.

But it had been much better from City. Then again, it usually is away from home. Over to you at Valley Parade!

 

 

 

 

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Opposition Report

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Official match report

n/a

 

 

Misc. Report(s)

Vital Football

Millers Mad  

 

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Post match reaction

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 All change for Bantams
By Simon Parker

Willy Topp will make his first start for seven games this afternoon as Stuart McCall again rings the City changes.

The Chilean, still looking to open his scoring account, is likely to partner Peter Thorne up front against Chesterfield.

McCall was pleased with his side's battling display which earned a point at Rotherham on Saturday but he had already told the squad there will be different faces on duty at Valley Parade with two matches in the space of three days.

Alex Rhodes could also come back into midfield but McCall has some thinking to do at the back. On-loan Fulham centre half TJ Moncur missed Millmoor through personal reasons and it is doubtful he will be in the right frame of mind to play. Mark Bower, who made his first appearance for three months in south Yorkshire, may struggle to play again so quickly.

Darren Williams was in for treatment yesterday for a bang on the calf and is another doubt.

McCall said: "We can freshen the team up middle to front but we are struggling a bit defensively. We've got a few knocks and it's tough but that's the same for every team playing back-to-back games.

 "The boys worked ever so hard on Saturday. They realised they let everyone down last week against Mansfield and gave the right response.

"I sensed there was a steely determination in the dressing room and they carried that out for the 90 minutes on the pitch.

"We more than matched a good Rotherham side and could have come away with more.

"Now we need to do that for the rest of the season. It's no good battling like that and then not performing properly today - we need to back it up, as we've been saying all season."

Omar Daley, who flew off to Jamaica on international duty yesterday, begins a three-match ban after his Rotherham dismissal. The winger was shown a straight red for a clash with home defender Graham Coughlan.

Rotherham boss Mark Robins claimed Daley kicked Coughlan while he was on the ground. McCall will review the video before deciding what punishment to dish out.

He admitted: "It happened right near to me but whether I was turning round to make a substitution or telling somebody to warm up, I just didn't see a thing.

"Omar says it was a tangle and their boy put his knee up. But speaking to their lad after the game, he was saying Omar had been stupid."

But City will not have to face Chesterfield danger man Jack Lester. The prolific former Nottingham Forest striker, who McCall rates the best in the division, badly broke his nose in their 4-2 comeback win over Accrington and could be out for three weeks.

 

 

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Other reports

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BRADFORD CITY: Conlon admits fans deserve better
Yorkshire Post

 By Daniel Houlker
Bradford City striker Barry Conlon admits the fans deserve better than the inconsistent performances they have been served up recently.

The Bantams have had an indifferent season since their relegation to Coca-Cola League Two and currently lie in 13th spot, 10 points adrift of the play-off places.

With City failing to string together a solid run of results, and recent home defeats coming at the hands of Dagenham and Redbridge and most recently Mansfield, Conlon says his side now owe it to the fans to start delivering.

He said: "I'm disappointed and so are all the lads.

"We let ourselves down in the game against Mansfield and it's hard on the fans when we perform like that.

"Our home form has been inconsistent all season and the fans deserve a lot better."

Conlon also went on to praise the fans for their support this season.

"The fans have been brilliant all season, not only at home, but at away games too," he added.

Having taken just three points out of a possible 15 in their last five home games, City fans have been left worried that the season could well fall short of the play-off mark.

Conlon made the short trip north to make Bradford his 12th career club from Mansfield last summer on a one-year contract.

Having had a mixed start to his career at Bradford, the powerful Irish striker has found the net twice in as many games, taking his tally to six for the season.

And Conlon said the players remained optimistic about the upcoming games.

"We don't feel any pressure," he said. "We'll get ourselves back up after the Mansfield game.

"We've got a good bunch of lads here and we've had a good week in training.

"We are all confident in our ability and always go into games believing we can beat anyone."

The Bantams still have hopes of making the play-offs this season.

Despite languishing those 10 points off the pace, City have two games in hand on many of the fellow hopefuls around them.

With nine of the last 10 games being against teams above themselves, City have the chance to take points off fellow promotion- chasers.

Though Conlon refuses to be drawn into the possibility of cementing a play-off place.

City will just try to win every game and see where it gets them.

He said: "We need to get more consistent. You're only as good as your last game.

"We're just taking one game at a time and hopefully we can string a good run of results together."
 

 

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L2 Round up

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