Monday, 20 May 2013

Season Report: Stratford Athletic

On Sunday 19th May, Stratford Athletic played the final game of their first season in the Hackney & Leyton League. An emotional morning ended in a 4-1 defeat to Walthamstow Village, with Alex Bocking netting the team's last goal of the 2012/13 season. The opening day seems a lifetime ago, but it was only last September that the lads pulled on their red jerseys for the first time.

It all began with a defeat to the typically physical Walthamstow Village. Manager Mike Earll's first eleven were beaten by two quick-fire second half goals, despite playing well for the majority of the match. It was a game of positives and negatives, with Elliot Greening scoring a debut goal but Will Winthrop suffering a serious injury that would see him miss the next seven months of action.

The veteran stopper stepped into the role of Assistant Manager as the Reds picked up their first point a week later, away at Regents Park Rovers. Two stunning goals at Mabley Green were cancelled out by Ryan Bishop and Greening as Athletic celebrated their first draw of the year.

Stratford followed that up with two hard-fought victories. A 4-3 win against close rivals Shoreditch spurred the team on to a 6-5 win the very next week against Highams Park. A debut hat-trick for Tymal Mills was the highlight of the six-point fortnight.

Both the Dickie Davies and Jack Walpole Cup competitions proved too much for Earll's team as October rolled into November. A late goal saw NLM FC sneak a 1-0 win on the Marshes, while Mile End were worthy 6-3 winners at Mabley Green.

Bad weather conditions wreaked havoc on the winter fixtures, with water-logged pitches limiting Stratford to a single league fixture in November. Pete Stanley deputised in goal with Deacon out injured while Elliot Greening scored a candidate for goal of the season when his peach from the halfway line spurred Stratford on to rescue a 2-2 draw against Florist Arms. Will Pruce nodded home the dramatic late equaliser.

The Christmas period was a series of ups and downs. Athletic lost to Newham on a frozen pitch at the start of December, then beat Shoreditch 2-1 in an intense local derby at Victoria Park. Six members of the senior team then demonstrated their footballing prowess in an indoor training match in East London.  Deacon, Greening, Reece Smith, Matt Wall, Fred Stanley and Connor Venus showed the youth team how to play the Stratford way under the watchful eye of Charles Lambert. The joined the rest of the team to crash out of the Jack Morgan Cup a week later in the last game of 2012, losing 5-1 to Jay Cubed.

When they returned in the New Year, Stratford earned a resounding 5-1 win over Delta Athletic. Olly Kelly poached his first goal of the season as a skeletal team dominated their opposition. Only a week later, they lost to Angel & Crown as the gaffer was forced to shuffle the squad.

February was a busy month for the Reds, which opened with Tim Reynolds scoring a wonder goal in a 3-3 draw to Wenlock Arms. A double-header with City Flyers ended in a 5-1 loss and 3-1 win for Athletic, then they were eliminated from their final cup tournament after losing to Division Four side Maynell. Deacon then saved a penalty in Stratford's 3-1 win over Florist Arms, a game that also saw another smash-and-grab goal from Mr Kelly.

Alex Bocking snatched a late goal as Stratford beat Regents Park 1-0 in March, collecting their first clean sheet of the season in the process. Then in Easter week, they staged a famous comeback against FC Walthamstow, with Greening and Fred Stanley scoring goals to bridge a two-goal deficit.

They couldn't repeat their heroics after the Easter break however, as they lost to the same team by a single goal. In late April, Winthrop made a triumphant return to the team, keeping a clean sheet in a 2-0 win over Wenlock Arms.

Stratford finished the season with a downward spiral in May. They lost all three of their final games to Angel & Crown, Delta Athletic and Walthamstow Village. But the season has brought the team together, they have finished in the top half of the Division Three table and might be looking at a second spell in the H&L League. See you next season, maybe.

Thursday, 11 April 2013

Stratford Survive Relegation

Stratford Athletic have avoided relegation. Highams Park Rangers and Newham Pirates have folded, which means that their remaining fixtures have been converted to automatic wins.


Manager Mike Earll has spoken of his delight at keeping Stratford away from the relegation zone in his first season in charge. The Reds, who never looked likely candidates for the drop, are nine points away from the automatic promotion slots in fourth place.

"I'm so proud," said Earll. "It's just another step on the road to cementing my legacy at the club."

The squad from the weekend was as follows: Deacon; P. Stanley, Wall, Hope, Gallie; Kelly, Wachowski (Shannon), Greening (C), Kirby; Bishop; Bocking

Assistant manager Will Winthrop made a surprise appearance on the bench after missing seven months of football. Rumours are circulating that he may be in line for a short cameo in the coming weeks.

In the short interview conducted with the gaffer during the week, he also admitted that he doesn't read the newspapers after a loss. He said: "I never read the reports after we lose, it's too hard to take." Athletic have won nine and lost only five of their 18 league matches this year.

This weekend the lads travel away to Delta Athletic, who lost 5-1 to Stratford in January. Earll was overjoyed by his side's display on that day but admits they will need to improve on their last performance if they want to repeat the strong victory. 

"We need to bounce back after Sunday," he said. "We had a lot of squad members missing from the last game so I expect a better performance this weekend."

"There were players who under-performed but also some who impressed me. We missed a lot of easy chances and can't let that happen again."

The last four matches of the season will decide the Reds' fate, and good results could see them secure fifth place with ease.

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Match Report: FC Walthamstow HOME

Stratford Athletic 2 - 2 FC Walthamstow

Sunday, 17 March 2013 - KO 11:00 - Mabley Green, Hackney

Squad (4-2-3-1): Deacon; Wachowski (Gallie), Wall, Hope, P. Stanley; Reynolds, Jones (Kelly); F. Stanley, Bishop, Greening; Bocking

Stratford Athletic pulled off a daring comeback from the brink of defeat to snatch a point at home to FC Walthamstow. A capacity crowd at Mabley Green looked on as the Reds overturned a two-goal deficit to walk away with an unlikely draw.

On a rainy day in the heart of East London, the away side started brightly. A sublime goal-line clearance from Elliot Greening was the biggest talking point of the opening exchanges. The referee had to turn to his imaginary linesmen to confirm that the ball had not crossed the line. Captain Josh Jones finally nothed his first shot on goal. He's still trailing Deacon in shots on target though.

Tom Wachowski was lost to injury after only 20 minutes, setting the stage for Mark Gallie to enter the fray. He got to work immediately, being as ginger as possible at right-back.

Chance after chance was dealt with by the Stratford back four until a lucky deflection set up their No.3 for an audacious overhead kick into the bottom corner. Deacon was wrong-footed, the defence were stunned and FCW had the lead.

At half time, the Reds didn't know how to respond. Manager Mike Earll knew he had to lift his players but they looked dejected in their sodden kits, unable to find the extra energy that could give them an advantage in the match.

Walthamstow were two goals ahead soon after the restart. A long ball into the box was nodded past the onrushing Deacon, who never saw the late runner coming.

From here it would have been easy for Athletic to give up. Any other team might throw in the towel, but not these lads. Something changed the momentum, a tackle or a shot - that is unclear - but something gave the Reds a boost. They charged onwards, finding a passion that had deserted them in the first half.

Deacon got up well to spectacularly tip a brilliant effort over the bar. The Stanley brothers patrolled each flank, centre-backs Wall and Hope were unbeatable, substitute Oliver Kelly provided a new dimension, and the others followed suit. Stratford were back.

A neat ball through from 'top boyfriend' Ryan Bishop released Fred Stanley and the rest was simple for the young striker. He tucked the ball into the corner and rallied his team back to the centre-spot.

Athletic's pressure was unrelenting. Chances were falling for every one. Greening might have slotted one in from the edge of the box. Kelly nodded one just north of the crossbar. Bocking tried to sneak one home from close range. And Fred Stanley brought a fine save from the keeper when he curled a close range free-kick over the opposition wall.

In the blink of an eye it all became too much for the away side. A free-kick from Bishop was whipped in from the left wing. A scramble of bodies broke out and somehow the ball ended up in the net. Replays revealed that Nathan Hope, converted to a striker in the last 15 minutes, had done enough to nudge an opponent out of sight for Greening to knock home the loose ball. It was 2-2. Job done. But the home side didn't relent.

A few moments of brave defending at the back stopped any hope of Walthamstow snatching a win, while things were heating up at the other end. Several big chances went begging before the ref called an end to proceedings.

Overall, a fine day in Stratford Athletic's short history was completed by a team who never stopped fighting. Staring defeat in the face, they showed true courage and spirit to bring themselves back into the match. It could have gone either way towards the end but the boys did well to earn a point that sees them go six points behind top spot in Division Three.

Thursday, 7 March 2013

Injury Update: Winthrop & Greening

Playing for Stratford Athletic can be dangerous, just ask those on the injury list. We did exactly that when we caught up with Will Winthrop and Elliot Greening.


Will Winthrop:

"I've got a physiotherapy session booked for my birthday. I've had surgery, the bandages are off and now it's all about the rehab. I'm working hard to get back into the squad; Walthamstow Village is my target. All I will say is; revenge is a dish best served cold.

"I was pleased to make it to the Stratford night out, celebrating Matt's birthday. However, I feel that my injury hindered me and therefore caused me to fail in my role as Assistant Manager. Without my assistance, Gaffer was seen shouting controversial chants at tube passengers, guilty of indecent exposure in Piccadilly Circus and has been accused of sexual harassment and cyber bullying after making several drunken phone calls to an unnamed female.

"Although I failed in assisting the gaffer, I'd like to think that I fulfilled my obligation to the players by assisting Matthew Wall and Darryl Kirby into a taxi. I shared a joyful bus-ride home and a delightful apple and blackberry pie with Top Boyfriend Ryan Bishop. Job done. Management."

Elliot Greening:

"I am putting my faith in club physio Tim Reynolds, who has diagnosed the injury as strained ligaments boys. Usually it takes three weeks to recover but without this weekend I should be available for selection for the FC Walthamstow game."

Sunday, 3 March 2013

Match Report: Regents Park HOME

Stratford Athletic 1 - 0 Regents Park Rovers

Sunday, 3 March 2013 - KO 10:30 - North Marsh, Hackney

Squad: Deacon; Wachowski, Wall, Hope, P. Stanley (Hauser); Kelly (Kirby), Reynolds, Jones (C), Venus; Bishop; Bocking

Stratford Athletic managed to steal all three points at home to Regents Park Rovers on Sunday, notching their second win in as many weeks.

Alex Bocking scored the only goal of a scrappy game on the marshes as he latched onto the end of a through ball from Ryan Bishop in the second half.

Chris Deacon kept Rovers at bay with two big saves in the first half while Tom Wachowski and club legend Pete Stanley (returning from injury) made crucial challenges on the wing to deny the away team any space.

Athletic showed off some of their best passing play throughout the opening period, creating space with short sharp passes in front of the Regents Park back four. Despite a few half-chances in the opening 45 minutes, nothing could break the deadlock and the teams went in level at half time.

The second half went the same way as the first, with both sides getting into a midfield battle that often ended in a long ball forward.

While Stratford continued to slowly build up their attacks, Rovers put the pressure on. They were halted by Matt Wall and Nathan Hope defending brilliantly down the middle.

The only goal of the game (that's right Stratford fans) was as 'route one' as they come. A goal-kick from Deacon was brought down by Bishop, who knocked the ball into Bocking's path and the striker finished clinically. He just got in ahead of the onrushing keeper and the ball rolled slowly over the line.

For the last 20 minutes Stratford went all-out defensive. The urgency completely went from those in red shirts and maintaining the lead was the only priority.

Twice the away team came close. First from a long ball forward which missed their striker's head by inches before Deacon collected the ball in mid-air. The second was their best chance. A cheeky chip over the back four sent the tall forward away and, despite the protests from the static Stratford defence, he found himself one-on-one with Deacon. This time the Stratford No.1 stood firm and blocked the ball with his left leg before the Reds cleared their lines.

Manager Mike Earll introduced Darryl Kirby as a set of fresh legs before handing a debut appearance to Asa Hauser. Hauser, who wore 'SMITH' on the back of his shirt for some unknown reason (perhaps it's a nickname) was proud of his display. Earll stuck with his youth policy by bringing the attacker to the club but clearly doesn't want to rush the lad into the squad. Management.

The final whistle brought relief to the thousands of fans who stayed long after the game to chant the gaffer's name. Assistant Manager Doddsy came to face the media and thanked the fans for their loyal support.

He chuckled: "It's great to hear the fans getting behind the club. We earned our first clean sheet and I'm sure they're just as proud as we are. I hope Deacon doesn't spend that clean sheet bonus all at once."

He also spoke at length about the referee's performance.

"He was alright," admitted Winthrop.

Thursday, 28 February 2013

Match Report: Florist Arms AWAY

Florist Arms 1 - 3 Stratford Athletic

Sunday, 24 February 2013 - KO 10:30 - Victoria Park, Tower Hamlets

Squad: Deacon; Wachowski, Wall, Jones (C), Gallie (Giles); Kelly, Greening (Harris), Reynolds, Venus; Bishop; F. Stanley

Stratford Athletic picked up their sixth win of the season away to Florist Arms on Sunday; goals from Ryan Bishop, Fred Stanley and Oliver "Poacher O'Goals" Kelly were the difference.

A cagey start to the match presented each side with early half-chances but they offered up very little trouble to either keeper. Relieved Athletic No.1 Chris Deacon only just made kick-off after missing the team bus earlier that morning. He was thankful that Olly Kelly was alert when a close-range indirect free-kick clipped the sturdy winger on its way over the crossbar.

Stratford were a much more cohesive team from the start, making it easy for them to pass to one another with increased accuracy. The squad seemed to gel more effectively and soon enough had their first real opportunity. It fell to Elliot Greening, who darted in to connect with a corner, but the in-form striker headed the ball narrowly wide.

With their confidence building, and a solid foundation of passing from Connor Venus and Tim Reynolds in the middle, Stratford pushed on. And it wasn't long before Ryan Bishop had struck them into a first half lead. Captain Josh Jones knocked a long free-kick into the box, Greening headed it back across goal and there was Bishop to tuck home his fifth goal this season.

At half time manager Mike Earll was pleased to go in a goal ahead, with his lads fighting for every ball and courageously putting their bodies into tackles. Unfortunately he had to replace Greening, who picked up an ankle injury in the opening 45 minutes, with debutant Andrew Harris.

When the second half started both sides immediately knew which way the game was headed. A string of physical challenges went in from both teams, piling pressure on the referee. He took action by awarding several yellow cards as the match went on, clearly afraid to man manage the game too much.

It was the away team who took advantage of the ref's sudden strictness, earning a stonewall penalty when Fred Stanley was tackled as he went to shoot inside the area. Despite the nature of the call, the referee still consulted with his assistants before finally pointing to the spot. Full credit must go to Stanley for stepping up to convert the penalty; after a run of bad form it takes bravery to volunteer from 12 yards. He coolly slotted it into the bottom left corner for 2-0.

Then it was the home team's turn from the spot. After an unlucky hand-ball decision went against Stratford it was Deacon's turn to impress the Reds' travelling fans. He dropped to his left to palm the spot-kick wide. He wasn't done there though; moments later he tipped a wild high cross-turned-shot over the crossbar and punched the resulting corner away to safety.

However, barely five minutes passed before the referee was pointing to the spot again. This time Tom Wachowski was adjudged to have brought down the opposition's frontman. The Polish defender was booked for dissent following the decision. The same taker stepped up for the second kick. Deacon guessed correctly once again and flung himself to his right, but the ball dipped wildly and he didn't get enough of a touch on it to keep it out. He was furious at himself for conceding a penalty that he nearly reached.

With their goal, Florist Arms picked up their game but so did Stratford, and the intensity of the match had tempers flaring all over the park. Brilliantly, Matt Wall and Josh Jones remained calm throughout; dealing with everything they had thrown at them with ease.

There were one or two scares but both goalkeeper and defenders protected the lead solidly. This set the stage for an unlikely winner from the poacher of goals himself; Olly Kelly. After some neat play on the edge of the box the ball found its way into Kelly and he smashed home from a few yards out.

It was a deserved win for a team that have had a reasonable start to 2013. Solid defensive work from every member of the back four, a cohesive midfield and a reliable attack made the difference this week.

Speaking after the game, gaffer Mike Earll said: "That was a great win, we held our heads high right to the end and deserved the points. I think everyone did their jobs out there. We can all be proud of that display.

"I was pleased with the two new boys; Gilesy and Harrisy. They came on and added something to the game, which I'm really happy about."

Next for Athletic is Regents Park Rovers, who picked up a 2-2 draw on their own turf at the start of the season. They arrive on the South Marshes on the back of a 1-1 draw with the Fire Penguins, and sit seven points behind Stratford in Division Three.

Thursday, 21 February 2013

Maynell Reaction and Florist Preview

Last weekend's fixture with Maynell brought with it a lot of negatives. Tempers flared, player communication broke down and Veno scored another goal. But from the ashes of defeat Stratford always seem to rise with the flaming energy of a phoenix. This weekend the team travel to Victoria Park to take on Florist Arms; a team they could only draw with at home earlier this season.

This is a preview from the players' point-of-view:

Connor Venus scored his second goal in as many games with a cheeky lob over the keeper in the second half. Just as the team stumbles, Venus has hit a hot streak.

"It was a great honour to score my second goal for Stratford. At the time I thought it might have given us the momentum to turn the game around, even if it was a bit lucky.

"Overall, I don't think we had much luck in front of goal. I think the passing wasn't really cohesive and as a team we didn't take charge out on the pitch. We gave them too much time and that let us down. There was a lack of communication between the back four and the front six, so overall it was quite poor.

"We need to stop going into games with the wrong mentality. We think the football will be too easy and that's what lets us down. We only ever seem to wake up when we go a goal down and that needs to change."

Elliot Greening uncharacteristically missed a penalty that could have sustained the Stratford momentum after Connor's goal. For someone who relies on consistency it was clearly a blow to his confidence.

"I didn't feel confident about taking the penalty, and I felt like I'd let everyone down when I missed it.

"A lot of things went wrong last weekend. In general, we aren't really clinical enough and don't execute when we need to. If we want to win games we need to start each game with as much energy as possible, not wait to get into it halfway through.

"We need a reaction this week. I think we just need to put in as much effort in as we can. If the technical side isn't there then at least give us some effort. The spine of the team will be crucial in making the difference."

Josh Jones redeemed his armband for the game but couldn't prevent four goals going in. Given that he is highly critical of himself anyway, the last loss was just another learning experience for the Athletic captain.

"I think the first half was really awful. We picked it up a bit in the second period but no one played well in the first. It was lucky that we were only three down when the whistle went.

"We didn't play our best last time against Florist but nicked a late goal. We need to be a lot better next time. I'm not sure that their league position does them justice, considering how they played against us.

"I expect us to play a lot better. I fancy us to take all three points. We're very inconsistent but always manage to bounce back after a run of bad form."

Sunday, 13 January 2013

Match Report: Angel & Crown AWAY

Angel & Crown 5 - 3 Stratford Athletic

Sunday, 13 January 2013 - KO 10:30 - Mabley Green, Hackney

Squad: Deacon; Gallie, Jones (C), Wall, Wachowski; P. Stanley, Greening, Reynolds, Kelly; Bocking; F. Stanley

Stratford Athletic fell to a crushing 5-3 defeat to Angel & Crown FC, at Mabley Green on Sunday. Elliot Greening (2) and Alex Bocking scored the goals for the Reds.

Stratford were without Ryan Bishop, who informed the gaffer that he'd be absent from the match a few minutes before kick-off. This forced manager Mike Earll to adjust his side with Bocking filling the gap left by Bishop. With the home team in red, Athletic were in their white away strip.

Greening got his side off to the best possible start. A superb free-kick from Josh Jones found the Welshman in the box and he powered a header into the top corner. Then Fred Stanley missed a chance.

The home side fought back, using their long-ball game to get behind the back four. The equaliser came from a run down the left flank, a cut inside and a smash across the six-yard box. Chris Deacon got his foot to the cross but it rebounded back into the net off the unlucky Matt Wall. Then Fred Stanley missed a chance.

The second home goal was down to one loss of concentration. Tim Reynolds, who worked hard all game, tried to return a pass from Mark Gallie at right-back but it was too strong and looped over the back four. The Angel forward brought the ball across the box an unleashed a powerful effort at goal. With Josh Jones in front of Deacon he couldn't see the ball until it was too late. 2-2. Then Fred Stanley missed a chance.

The second Stratford goal came from a neat turn by Bocking. On the edge of the box he cut on to his right foot and struck a shot neatly into the top corner. Then Fred Stanley missed a chance.

At half time the teams were level, with every hope of stealing the game in the second 45 minutes.
Greening came up trumps once again, scoring in the opening moments of the second half. As the ball was pulled back across the box from the right, Greening took aim and placed it into the far left corner.

Angel & Crown's third goal was almost too easy. The ball was sent long over the top, Deacon had stayed back in the hope his defenders would win the header. Up against a big centre-forward, the back four were doomed. He knocked it on for a teammate and immediately Deacon knew his naïvety had cost him dearly. By not closing the gap to his back four he had allowed the room for a second runner. He rounded Deacon, knocked it home and Josh Jones couldn't quite stop it on the line.

The fourth goal was scored from a corner. Angel's midfielder bundled the ball home after the ball had evaded both Tom Wachowski's jump and Deacon's attempted punch.

The fifth was inevitable. With the energy levels dropping rapidly, Stratford were exposed more and more at the back. A ball through to the right winger had enough pace on it to see him through on goal, and he easily finished it across the goalkeeper.

There was a late scuffle between a few players and several chance went begging for Angel before the end. Deacon saved a few but many were blasted wide or over. At full time Stratford were a thoroughly worn and beaten team. 5-3.

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Quick Q&A: Olly Kelly

Sometimes you come across a player with so much skill and presence on a football field that he'll make the game look easy. Sometimes he'll make it look so easy that it's actually hard. Sometimes he'll look so good, he'll appear to be playing crap. Olly Kelly notched his first goal for Stratford Athletic last weekend, a real poacher's effort from about a yard away from the goalline. These are his thoughts following that performance:

How did it feel to get your first Stratford goal?

I think the whole squad has felt this one coming since my first pre-season goal and it was a dream come true to see one of my hard-worked efforts hit the back of the net for the team I've been a lifelong fan of.

What were you thinking as the ball came towards you?

Well, as Elliot recovered the ball, I was thinking "come on, welsh wonder, give it Kells!" He considered it, before deciding that he'd have a go himself. Shockingly the goal machine ploughed the ball into the keeper. Before I knew it, my head was screaming "F***, Big K Fizzle, Don't cock it up!" But it was then that the spirit of my great footballing ancestor, Poacher O'Goals rose up inside me, helping me to bang in the header.

What did you make of the club's first big win?

The first big win was a real morale boost for the club, and it was a rare game when everyone played to a high standard. The team have really given me a home, and it was amazing to be a part of the first convincing win of the season.

Can we expect more goals from Olly Kelly this season?

I reckon so, with quality delivery coming from the squad, everyone is in with a place on the goal tally. I've just got to get myself the ball and let my instincts do the rest.

Cheers Olly.

Sunday, 6 January 2013

Match Report: Delta Athletic HOME

Stratford Athletic 5 - 1 Delta Athletic

Sunday, 6 January 2013 - KO 10:30 - South Marsh, Hackney

Squad: Deacon; Gallie, Jones, Wall, Wachowski; P. Stanley, Reynolds, Greening, Kelly; Bishop; F. Stanley

Stratford Athletic cruised to a convincing 5-1 victory over Delta Athletic on Sunday.

Goals from Elliot Greening (2), Ryan Bishop (2) and Olly Kelly - yes, Oliver Kelly - were enough to see off their Division 3 neighbours.

On an overcast day in East London Stratford were down to a skeletal squad as manager Mike Earll set out a 4-4-1-1.

Pete Stanley and Olly Kelly were pushed into midfield as Josh Jones returned to captain the side in the back four. Ryan Bishop swapped his usual job on the left wing to sit behind Fred Stanley in attack.

Both clubs started well, with the Reds looking most likely to grab an opener through Greening. The Welshman scuffed his early chance though, and Delta were let off.

Chris Deacon in the home goal was able to deny the opposition on two close occasions in the first half, and the visitors also clipped the post.
But with a better system of passing in place, and a lack of squabbling saw the Stratford boys create chance after chance.

It soon paid off, as a throw on the left from Tom Wachowski bounced through to Ryan Bishop in front of goal and the little man did the rest. He pulled off a neat first time finish and slid the ball under the keeper.

The crowd were on their feet for Mr Kelly for most if the afternoon, who was wowing his audience with sublime footwork down the left. He could've opened the scoring himself after bamboozling his defender with a quick drop of the shoulder but couldn't find space for a shot.

Fred Stanley was released a few times in the first 45 minutes and really should have done better with his weak effort at the goalkeeper. A goalkeeper who, it must be said, was in fine form. He pulled off one or two stunning stops to keep Stratford's score low.

But the pressure continued to mount and five minutes from the break the Reds had a second. Elliot Greening hammered home a volley from 25 yards that creeped inside the left post. It was a speculative effort, but one typical of his class this season. Credit must go to Mark Gallie, who had cleared his lines well when the ball looped up off a defender for Greening to hit.

With half time looming the stripes had one last chance to pull a goal back. A rocket unleashed from the right wing that was heading right for the top corner was acrobatically turned away by Deacon.

Manager Earll was really pleased with his side as they returned to the dressing rooms. He encouraged his players to press on and make this game one to remember. The message obviously hit the right spot, as Stratford flew out of the blocks after the restart.

Chance after chance fell their way. Terrific efforts from Mark Gallie kept the left winger at bay. While Matt Wall and Josh Jones were bravely putting themselves about.
Tom Wachowski was allowed so much room on the left that he could join the attack.

As the partnership between Greening and Tim Reynolds flourished in the centre of the park, Fred Stanley was played in countless times. Still the striker couldn't find the net.

His brother Pete, club legend, was having a similarly frustrating day in midfield. Wound up by countless wrong decisions and some late tackles Pete squared up to his marker, forcing the referee to lecture him and Jones.

The third goal was Bishop's second. Another fine finish from the Luton lad, brought about by some brilliance on the right by Fred Stanley. He beat his man for pace then cut inside and flicked the ball back to Bishop under pressure. As the ball came back to him on the edge of the box, he put his head down and drove the ball sweetly into the bottom left corner, away from the stranded keeper.

Greening was the source of the fourth goal. Choosing to shoot on his left from the edge of the box, the ball ricocheted in amongst the bodies and popped up in front of Kelly. With a mighty leap (hop) he powered the ball (it came off his face) into the back of the net and ran to his teammates in celebration. The fans went mad, there was a slight pitch invasion, but the stewards sorted it out.

The final home goal was Greening's 10th of the season. Another superb ball over the top from Reynolds set the Welshman on his way down the middle. One-on-one with the keeper he shaped to shoot bottom right, and instead neatly placed it into the left corner.

The away team did manage a consolation to strip Deacon of his first league clean sheet. But replays revealed that the striker had been at least a yard offside and the official hadn't spotted it. He tucked home the goal after being clear of the back four, illegally.

They could've had an identical second as once again the official missed the striker lurking in an offside position. This time Deacon blocked the fierce shot at close range.

Victory was sealed by the full time whistle, music to the ears of Stratford fans around the ground. They start 2013 in superb style, notching up their biggest win of the season and hopping up the table in the process.

Be sure to tune into Absolute Ballsocks this week to hear more (and I mean loads more) about Olly Kelly's goal.

Saturday, 5 January 2013

Interview: Happy New Year from the Gaffer

It's that time of year again. Christmas is over, festive celebrations have ceased for another 12 months and it's back to the training ground for Stratford Athletic. It's only right that the first interview of 2013 go to the gaffer himself, so here are his thoughts on tables, transfers and training.

New Year, same manager. What can we expect from Mike Earll in 2013?

Happy new year all! You can expect to see a new and improved Mike Earll in 2013. Looking back on the first half of the season there are things we could all improve on and I’m no different, 2012 made me learn a few things about management and my team. I feel I have grown as a manager since my appointment in the summer and I hope to continue building my legacy throughout 2013.

It's fair to say it wasn't the best ending to 2012, but the team could move up to fourth with a win on Sunday. How important would victory be?

Yes 2012 couldn’t have ended any worse for us but I see that game as a one off, getting a win would be nice to erase the memory of that 5-0 thrashing that was given to us just before Christmas. Victory is vital if we want to be challenging the top 4 rather than just sitting in the middle of the division. We need to win and start the year as we mean to go on!

As the transfer window opens again, will it be hard to hold onto Elliot 'Boyo' Greening after his goalscoring form in 2012?

I cannot wait till the transfer window is shut and all this speculation stops. Ellsy has been a key player for us in 2012 providing many stand out performances not only with his goals but his all round play, but as he’s top scorer of our division we have to accept there will be other clubs interested in him. Also it’ll be hard to keep other players like Fred Stanley. I heard that a div 4 team are interested but I think it’s important to keep a big squad so we need to keep our back up players like Fred.

This year could see the return of Will Winthrop between the sticks, if he's available would you consider rotation for the cup?

Will is a bottler, I can’t see him making a return to the first team fold. The latest news from talking to him the other day is that he’s too scared he might bruise his knee again. Also I want to keep a bit of continuity and our present keeper has been on a great run of form so I have no reason to rotate at the moment.

Club legend Paul Nicolaou has promised to make an appearance in the Director's box this year, would that be your proudest day in charge?

Welcoming a legend like Mr Nicolaou back will be a great honour for myself and the team, it's people like him that make this club special. I would be so proud if on that day I could deliver him a victory to make his appearance worthwhile and memorable for him. He was also a mentor to me in my early days at the club, I don’t think I would have got this team’s first victory without his influence.

There were rumours that double-header games would start soon, are you a fan of these ties?

I don’t think anybody is a fan of double headers, I would rather avoid this type of situation if I’m honest. If it does come down to this though we will be prepared. Hopefully we can have a large squad that day and we can do some rotation during the ties to get the best out of the team. This is why it’s important to keep my back up players like Fred in the club as I previously mentioned.

The fans are expecting big things from 2013, are you the right man for the job?

Yes.

Thanks boss.