Reaction to the Worksop game

Sunday, 25 August 2013

To describe Saturday's 3-3 draw at home to Worksop as a game full of incident would be to vastly understate it.

It had goals, some excellent football, controversy aplenty added to a sprinkle of magic.

"We were superb," enthused Blyth manager Tom Wade. "We dominated the game and should have hammered them. We could have scored ten! We had so much pressure and created so many chances-good one and half ones."

It took Worksop going ahead on 19 minutes to really spark the Spartans into life.

"Yes, we upped our tempo after that. We'd been a bit quiet till then but once we got going we looked a top side," said Wade.

A Robbie Dale free kick brought the sides level at the break. Joe Kendrick's penalty put Blyth ahead after the restart kick-starting a period of thrilling attacking football by the home side.

"In all my time as a manager I've never seen so many chances created. We threw everything at them but they defended well, said Wade.

Arron Wearmouth put the Spartans further ahead but the visitors struck twice late on to secure a draw.

"The game lasts 90 minutes, or more in the case of Saturday," said Wade. "Worksop are a good side and their manager will be proud of them. Having said that we have to be able to finish teams off.

"With hindsight I may not have made the three substitutions which I did in the final 15 minutes or so. But Arron was injured, Daniel Maguire was hurt and I needed to rest Matty Wade's legs. It's also hard for the lads coming off the bench to get straight in to the match and perform."

Some of the officiating was interesting to say the least and stirred the crowd's emotions.

"Overall the atmosphere was excellent," said the Blyth boss. "The fans rallied round the lads. Both the supporters and the players learned a lot from the experience. Some of the fans left frustrated but they must believe that the players and management were frustrated too."

Monday sees the Spartans on the road to play Stocksbridge Park Steels, and Wade can't wait.
"I want my players to be annoyed after the Worksop result. I'm buzzing for Monday's fixture!"

Although there were superb performances from across the team at the weekend that of Daniel Maguire particularly caught the eye.

'Nipper' as he is known put on a show which, if this had been the Middle Ages, would have seen him tried as a sorcerer and burnt at the stake. His wizardry was audacious and his running seemed to cast spells over the Worksop defence who were left in his thrall. How he managed to escape from scenarios where he was hemmed in by the goal line on one side, the touch line on the other and two burly defenders cutting off any other means of break-out would have Harry Houdini scratching his chin bemusedly. But this was no illusion. This was simply stunning.