|
Two elbows, two Captains, and an extraordinary
two minutes.
Blyth Manager Harry Dunn gave his skipper Peter Snowdon ‘the
elbow’ at half time in the Spartans’ game against Hucknall
on Saturday, withdrawing the defender and replacing him with Steve
Birks. Almost immediately from the restart the visitors’ Captain
Ian Robinson elbowed Blyth’s Ben Christienson in the face
and was given a straight red card by referee Mr. Whitely.
Dunn commented “Peter was getting a bit exposed so I made
the switch at half time when we were two nil down.”
However even after the use of all three substitutes his side failed
to take anything from a Hucknall side sitting precariously third
from bottom of the table. “I would have been satisfied if
we could have got a point which would have helped maintain our gap
over the bottom three” he continued. “But we were awful!
“At training on Monday I tried to drum into the players the
need to play things quickly and put the opposition under pressure
but some of them have the mentality of players from lower leagues
– and everything doesn’t necessarily sink in. We also
consistently played long balls in to their penalty box which were
comfortably headed clear by the big Hucknall central defenders.
Why did we continue to do it? Why didn’t we try and get round
the back of them? “It’s common sense to me! Unfortunately
common sense is a rare commodity in some footballers.”
Rational and honest analysis of their team’s performance
is an equally rare commodity amongst most Managers but Dunn was
not ready to relent in his brutal appraisal of the current state
of affairs on the pitch at Croft Park. “We were laboured,
lacked sparkle and, basically weren’t good enough. “Take
the front three on Saturday – we needed to stretch their defence,
who weren’t the most mobile of players, but you could have
thrown a blanket over my lads, they played that close to each other!
“Take Hucknall’s goals too – for the first the
cross should have been dealt with better and for the second, even
though goalkeeper Adam Bartlett appeared to be pushed, we still
had chances to clear the ball before it eventually ended up in the
net. “What’s more some of the time we couldn’t
even pass the time of day! “I expected better from my players.”
Disappointed but not downcast Dunn retained a strong sense of purpose
“ This week I’ll be looking to bring in new blood. One
or two of the lads are struggling, others have taken their foot
off the accelerator after a good run in the new year and seem to
be thinking that they just need to sit around and wait till next
season.
“I’m looking to change that”
Fate has conspired to hinder that optimism with striker Phil Bell
likely to miss the rest of the season through injury and Robbie
Dale still struggling to return to fitness. But with former Workington
midfielder Birks being introduced gradually after not playing for
several weeks and looking like the sort of player who relishes a
battle, the return to full fitness of the exciting Andy Johnson
as well as that of Martin Houlahan after illness the there should
be no immediate cause for despair in the Blyth ranks.
|