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The Large One

Who's Next?
Jul 7, 2003
52,343
97.2FM
One coin, two sides...


By Tim Dudding, at Withdean

A late penalty from Rickie Lambert brought Albion's 100 per cent start to the season to an end after a 1-1 draw with Bristol Rovers this afternoon.

The Seagulls couldn't recreate the same gusto that had propelled them to victories against Crewe and Barnet, but still looked to be heading for victory after Nicky Forster had tucked away a first half penalty.

"It was disappointing to concede a late penalty, but let's not kid ourselves: we didn't play well today," Micky Adams said afterwards.

Albion weren't helped by Bristol's fairly negative start, and in the early stages the visitors looked happy to stall whenever possible. But with less than ten minutes on the clock Albion got a breakthrough. Referee Trevor Kettle decided that David Pipe had manhandled Forster, and the striker duly tucked away his third of the season from the spot.

Not the most convincing of penalty decisions, but it gave Albion a foundation to build on and with the exception of a mis-hit volley from Byron Anthony, the Seagulls were in control.

But Rovers appeared after the break in a much more positive fashion as they looked to get back into the game. Their main threat came from powerhouse Lambert, but the striker also displayed a deftness of touch as he curled a free-kick onto the Albion bar.

And when Lambert got in behind the Albion defence midway through the second period, his fierce low drive was brilliantly turned onto the upright by the faintest of touches from Michel Kuipers.

Albion were missing Glenn Murray's presence in attack and Kevin McLeod's creativity on the flank, and although Gary Hart put in a commendable performance up top, the Seagulls were lacking a cutting edge. Adams eventually pushed the irrepressible Adam Virgo forward, but it was still the visitors who looked most likely.

And, with just four minutes remaining, Rovers got their reward. Again, it was Mr Kettle at the centre of attention, this time spotting a shirt pull on Craig Disley in the area by Colin Hawkins. Lambert kept his composure and buried the penalty kick to make sure the Pirates left Sussex with a share of the booty.




By Ian Cole

Rovers picked up their first point of the season at the Withdean Stadium this afternoon after earning a 1-1 draw against Brighton & Hove Albion.

After a shaky start and a scrappy first half, the Pirates gave their hosts an absolute battering in the second half, eventually forcing a late equaliser from the penalty spot to deny the Seagulls what would have been a thoroughly undeserved win.

Nicky Forster forced an easy save from Steve Phillips early on as a series of punts forward from the long-ball specialists put the Rovers back line under some concerted pressure.

And the visitors cracked to go a goal down on just ten minutes, after a soft penalty was awarded to the home side for what was adjudged to have been a foul on Matthew Richards by David Pipe.

There were protests from the Rovers camp, but Forster showed composure and experience to keep his nerve and plant the ball home past Phillips from 12 yards.

Rovers responded with Chris Lines and Byron Anthony combining well to play in Craig Disley who couldn't quite get his shot away from ten yards, and then Richards saw a powerful effort deflected wide at the other end to win his side a corner.

Jeff Hughes and Darryl Duffy linked up well down the left before Rickie Lambert saw a rasping attempt blocked on the edge of the box, and then Lines was denied as his weak header was comfortably gathered in by Michel Kuipers.

The first half ended with Lines again involved, this time playing in Duffy whose shot on goal was deflected into the arms of a grateful Kuipers.

The second half was a far more one-sided affair than the first, with a series of attack-minded substitutions and plenty of forward play from Rovers seeing Brighton on the back foot for the majority of the 45 minutes.

Lambert rattled the Brighton crossbar with a thunderous free-kick, and the striker was unlucky again from the rebound as his volley sailed just a yard or two over the crossbar.

Another Lambert free-kick flew just past the post as Rovers continued to press, and then Steve Elliott was the next to have a pop with an ambitious volley that went well wide.

Ben Hunt came off the bench to make a positive impact on the game, and his ball into the path of Lambert saw the front man rifle a shot against the Brighton post much to the relief of a desperate home defence.

Rovers piled on the pressure as the minutes ticked by, and eventually they were rewarded for their perseverance in the closing stages.

Disley's shirt was pulled in the Brighton penalty box, and the referee showed no hesitation in pointing to the spot. Lambert stepped up to take the penalty, and his powerful kick sent Kuipers the wrong way to put his side back on level terms.

Disley headed over from a Stuart Campbell corner as Rovers pressed for a late winner, and Andrew Whing enjoyed a rare Brighton chance on goal with a right-footed attempt that flew over. The final whistle signalled the end of the game, with both sides pleased with the result for very different reasons.

Brighton had survived a second half onslaught without losing the game, while Rovers had rescued a draw from what looked like a likely loss with just five minutes of the match remaining. Plenty of positives for Rovers, and plenty more things to build on as the season continues to unfold over the opening few weeks.
 




Questions

Habitual User
Oct 18, 2006
25,906
Worthing
Both reports say that Rovers got a deserved equaliser. A point was the least they deserved.
 


Gully

Monkey in a seagull suit.
Apr 24, 2004
16,812
Way out west
Indeed, compare and contrast the game I saw yesterday with how the Beeb reported it...

Forest Green 1-0 Crawley Town

Andrew Mangan's 82nd-minute strike gave Forest Green a victory.

Crawley barely threatened before Simon Weatherstone twice came close to putting them ahead.

Mangan missed a penalty but the Rovers striker responded in the best possible fashion by firing home from six yards a minute later.

Kaid Mohamed almost added a second with four minutes remaining, and Forest Green held on comfortably to claim the three points.

In the game I watched, Andy Mangan scored immediately following the penalty save, the keeper parried the ball and it landed conveniently at his feet as he advanced towards the goal barely two seconds later...not sure what happened in the rest of that minute!

As you correctly say, two sides to every story.
 


As Questions said.

Just a footnote, but if this was in the Prem, the ref would probably NOT give a penalty just to even matters up for a "deserving" side - they could be peppering the leading team and battering them all afternoon, but no ball in the net = no points for them.
This was clearly a 1st Division ref, and suchlike can be swayed to make it 'nice' for the "deserving".

It's true that Rovers had earned a point, but that was not a penalty by any means.
We should know not to enable a ref to 'make nice', as they should never have got the ball into that position in the first place.
Whichever of our defenders was weak when they had the opportunity to clear it, is culpable for lrtting the wolf in at the door.
 








Fixtures

New member
Aug 12, 2007
267
As Questions said.

Just a footnote, but if this was in the Prem, the ref would probably NOT give a penalty just to even matters up for a "deserving" side - they could be peppering the leading team and battering them all afternoon, but no ball in the net = no points for them.
This was clearly a 1st Division ref, and suchlike can be swayed to make it 'nice' for the "deserving".

It's true that Rovers had earned a point, but that was not a penalty by any means.
We should know not to enable a ref to 'make nice', as they should never have got the ball into that position in the first place.
Whichever of our defenders was weak when they had the opportunity to clear it, is culpable for lrtting the wolf in at the door.

I thought you were a steward. If so, what were you doing watching the game?

NMH OUT!
 








The Large One

Who's Next?
Jul 7, 2003
52,343
97.2FM
What I meant by highlighting this was some of the uses of language in their article.

I don't recall Bristol Rovers giving us an 'absolute battering', like Kuipers was clawing away shot after shot, or Elphick getting skinned etc. Nor was there an 'onslaught'. Yeah, we were shite in the second half, but mainly going forward. Defensively, I thought we were pretty sound - generally.

It's phrases like 'easy save' from Forster, kind of belittling his attempt on goal. Actually, I thought their keeper did pretty well.

I know he's writing for his home crowd, but I don't think his version of events quite rang true.
 


I thought you were a steward. If so, what were you doing watching the game?

NMH OUT!

We are under strict instructions - alright, so we have a little advice - to be aware of what is happening in the match, as it effects what goes on in the stands.

We may even occasionally get called upon to steward players and club staff, or protect referees and match officials! (I'd like to have twisted the refs ARM off!)(wait, no, I didn't say that...I am a professional person....must take a lie down).

The referee was a wanker though.
 


Conkers

Well-known member
Jan 11, 2006
4,637
Haywards Heath
It's also interesting that Brizzle considered our penalty to be "soft" and that their penalty seemed to be stone wall. I have watched their penalty numerous times now and it was so so soft. Not even their own players were appealing for it!
Our penalty on the other hand, even from H block looked fairly obvious, more of a shirt pulling than for Brizzles penalty.
Saying that, Rovers deserved that point and it was probably a fair result.
 


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