Horsham's season hit a new low with a woeful performance in this
Sussex derby, going down to a third successive 5-0 loss on the road
against a club seemingly in as much turmoil as their own. Hastings
United had
won just 2 of their previous 12 league games, scoring only 9 goals in
the process, and having parted company with manager Jason Hopkinson
following their poor FA Trophy showing against Southern League
strugglers Bedfont Town the previous Saturday.
Admittedly the Hornets hardly had a record of their own of which to be proud
but, with caretaker-manager Hugo Langton having overseen a
first home win of the season against Horsham YMCA during the week,
those who travelled up from West Sussex would have done so in
expectant mood. But that confidence was shattered as early as the 6th
minute when Hastings' Kenny Pogue put the homesters ahead, a lead they
held comfortably at the break. However, it was the second half shenanigans
that would provide all the talking points.
In a crazy 90 second spell,
Helge Orome was shown a straight red for felling Jamie Crellin at a
corner and Calum McGeehan promptly followed his team-mate down the
tunnel for a foul on Pogue, an incident that enabled former Hornet Lee
Carey to double the Arrows' advantage from the penalty spot. From that
moment on, Horsham were simply overrun and were probably grateful to
escape with just a 5-0 loss, the final 3 goals coming in a 5 minute
spell between the 77th and 82nd minutes.
Illness prevents us from providing our own match report but a detailed
summary of events are shown below, with this fine report taken from
www.hastingsunitedfc.co.uk:
United put all of their recent troubles behind them with a
scintillating performance to see off Sussex rivals and fellow
managerless strugglers Horsham at the Pilot Field this afternoon, for
their first win in six league games.
Kenny Pogue scored two, and should really have helped himself to a
hat-trick, Lee Carey converted a penalty after the Hornets had two
defenders sent off in the space of ninety seconds, with Jamie Crellin
and Zac Attwood rounding off a five star display with goals in the
closing stages.
The visitors parted company with boss Justin Luchford last weekend,
following successive 5-0 cup defeats at Folkestone and Chesham, and
their defence looked as brittle as United's has so often done this
season. Even with eleven men on the pitch, Horsham appeared
ill-equipped to deal with the hosts' refreshingly adventurous 4-3-3
formation, but with nine, they were picked apart at will, and the U's
could easily have wiped out their minus ten goal difference in one go.
Having been starved of such entertainment for so long though, United
supporters are not likely to be so churlish as to criticise the
addition of a shoot on sight policy, however poorly it may have been
executed at times. In the first haf especially, wayward finishing
threatened to tarnish a terrific attacking display, but after the
interval, Hornets keeper Ken Westoby made a string of excellent saves,
ably assisted by the woodwork on two occasions, to keep the scoreline
down.
The visitors' woes seemed to have begun before United claimed a rare
early lead, Calum McGeehan sllicing a Ross Sutton cross towards his
own goal, where Westoby made a mess of a simplen enough catch,
gathering at the second attempt.
There was a helping hand element to the U's opening goal in the sixth
minute as well, Jordan Woodley and Ryan Thomson involved in a build-up
that ended with full back Helge Orome unwittingly playing the ball
across his own six yard box for Pogue to steer a low shot past the
helpless Westoby.
New loan signing Woodley enjoyed an impressive debut, largely playing
on the right hand side of an attacking trio that caused the Horsham
defence all manner of problems throughout the contest. He linked up
well with Jack Dixon, back in a full back role following the departure
of Scott Manning this week, and perhaps ought have grabbed himself a
goal with a twenty yard effort that flew straight at Westoby.
Before and after that moment, United endured a spell of wasteful
finishing, with Attwood twice, Dixon and Woodley himself all guilty of
bad misses that might have come back to haunt the hosts against better
opposition. As it was though, once lone striker Craig Davies had
volleyed an eighth minute chance over the bar, Horsham scarcely
threatened Lloyd Anderson's goal until the very closing stages, by
which point so much damage had been inflicted. Not even the occasional
threat of a Russell Eldridge set piece caused any great concern, the
former United man doing his best to rally his troops but to no avail.
It is hard to imagine there having been too many harsh words spoken
during Mark Stapley's half time team talk, but the U's still seemed to
emerge with a more purposeful attitude after the interval. Westoby's
heroic display began with a fine save to divert Pogue's shot onto a
post.
Anderson's handling was nicely secure from Ray Freeman's twenty yard
strike, Horsham at least managing a shot on target before the hour
mark, but the U's went straight down the other end and almost scored
themselves, an enterprising break by skipper Josh Jirbandey producing
an excellent cross that the stretching Woodley could not quite steer
into the gaping goal at the far post.
An already comfortable afternoon then got more relaxed still for
United in the sixty-fourth minute, with Orome leaving Crellin on the
floor following a Horsham corner, and picking up a straight red card
for his troubles, with McGeehan quickly following his defensive
colleague down the tunnel after bringing down Pogue in the area, Carey
converting the ensuing penalty to finally double the U's lead.
It then became a question of how many goals United could squeeze into
the time that remained. Pogue was again denied by Westoby in a
one-on-one situation, but the keeper was then beaten three times in
five minutes, as the hosts eventually and deservedly turned their
superiority into goals.
Pogue claimed his second with a left foot shot across Westoby from
Carey's astute pass, while a slide rule through ball by Sutton enabled
Crellin to cap a wonderful display with his first goal for the Club.
Dixon's break down the right set up Attwood for number five, a
nonchalant tap-in at the near post, and there was still time for sub
Jamal Fenelon to force the overworked Westoby into further action,
Sean Ray to see a close range header tipped onto the bar, and for
Pogue to slice the rebound wide of an open goal from barely four yards
out, as his last opportunity to grab a maiden United treble went
begging.
The visitors nearly had the final word, but Anderson got his
fingertips to Freeman's angled shot, after the striker had shown a
clean pair of heels to break clear down the left, to preserve his
first clean sheet in six starts.
Ten months ago, a 3-2 home defeat to a Horsham side that had three men
sent off in a bizarre second half cost Tony Dolby his job as United
manager. One week on from the departure of his successor, Jason
Hopkinson, and having made sure that history would not be repeated, it
can only be hoped that the U's have set themselves on the road to
recovering a season that had appeared destined for nothing but another
dreary relegation battle.
One big win against a worryingly weak Horsham side is unlikely to
convince anyone that the corner has been fully turned of course, but
Monday evening's trip to Aveley, now two places beneath the U's in the
table, presents a good chance to build on today's performance,
especially with a sequence of much tougher league fixtures to follow.