hampton220105
www.yourcounty.co.uk |
Saturday 22nd January 2005 |
Ryman League Premier Division |
Richard Murrill reports from Westbourne Stadium |
Folkestone Invicta | 0 | |
Hampton &
Richmond Borough |
2 | Ashe (pen) 58 Godfrey 77 |
Hoare, the walk-off ref keeps quiet over his farce at Folkestone
There were unprecedented scenes at the Westbourne Stadium on Saturday
afternoon when referee Gavin Hoare sensationally walked off the pitch after just
65 minutes and appeared to have abandoned the game in front of a stunned 389
crowd.
Play eventually re-started following a delay of over ten minutes during
which the players returned to the dressing rooms and supporters remained baffled
as to what was going on.
Mr Hoare declined the opportunity to explain his actions after the game
saying only that all he had to say on the subject would be included in his
report to the F. A. But the referee is believed to have felt threatened after
being verbally barracked by supporters.
An entertaining first half was thus completely overshadowed by what
happened during the first 20 minutes of the second half.
The bizarre sequence of events which led to the game turning sour began
after 55 minutes when Invicta’s Simon Glover was booked for a foul on
Hampton’s Ryan Ashe who was then booked for retaliation.
From the subsequent free kick the game turned on what had seemed to be
an innocuous off-the-ball incident which resulted in a penalty for Hampton and a
straight red card for Invicta centre half John Guest.
The sending off and spot kick were awarded for an alleged punch in the
back of the Hampton striker by the Invicta defender, although Guest is adamant
that whilst there was a collision between the two players, no punch was thrown.
Ryan ASHE stepped up to convert the subsequent 58th minute
penalty to open the scoring.
But referee Hoare really lost any control of the game when he awarded a
questionable free kick against Micheal Everitt for a challenge on Graham Harper
after 65 minutes.
Incensed Invicta manager Neil Cugley was himself sent off and banished
to the stands for his protests and left back Paul Lamb booked for dissent. It
was at this point that the referee then spoke with the Invicta bench and then
inexplicably reduced the game to nothing more than a farce with his walk off.
“When I say that Gavin Hoare was the referee then that is all I need
to say,” said Invicta manager Cugley after the game. “Other players and
managers in Kent will know what I mean by that,” he added. “When he is the
referee you are always in for an ‘interesting’ game and this is unlike
anything I have previously seen in over 30 years in non-league football.”
Controversy seems to follow the Strood official around and this is by no
means the first time he has been involved in disputes with the Folkestone club.
During this month alone, Mr Hoare has been involved with incidents
involving two youth team officials at Invicta and only four days prior to
Saturday’s game he had sent Paul Sykes off for dissent in a Kent Senior Cup
tie away to Dartford.
In August 2000 he became the first referee to send Cugley the manager
off when he disallowed what appeared to be a perfectly legitimate goal from
James Dryden in a home game against Salisbury City.
Prior to that, Mr Hoare had left his mark on a home match against
Burnham in February 2000 when he sent three visiting players off.
On this latest occasion, the paying public felt cheated after what had
been a closely fought game with little needle or edge to it.
What had seemed like being a run-of-the-mill fixture perhaps heading
towards a goalless draw will now go down as an afternoon which will live in the
memory of all those who witnessed it. An afternoon when the actual football took
second place to the bizarre antics of the referee.
For the record, when play resumed Hampton added a second goal when
Elliott GODFREY smacked the ball in from an Allen cross in the 77th
minute.
Allen had earlier had the game’s first real chance when he shot over
from the edge of the penalty area after 19 minutes following a breakaway after
an Invicta corner at the other end.
But Invicta were close themselves after 23 minutes when James Dryden’s
header was touched onto the crossbar by goalkeeper Kieron Drake when Lamb picked
the striker out with a cross from the left and James Everitt was just unable to
force the rebound over the line at the far post.
Dryden was setting a new Invicta club record of 224 senior starting
appearances but what should have been a celebratory afternoon for the
24-year-old was overshadowed by the later events.
A Dryden shot was charged down by Orlando Jeffrey in the 35th
minute when the striker went round two defenders inside the penalty area after
receiving the ball from Lamb again.
There was further activity in the Hampton box when Glover broke after 36
minutes and a Sykes free kick from the edge of the area was touched onto the
crossbar and over for a corner by goalkeeper Drake.
Hampton had a clear chance after 40 minutes when Andy Morley was wide
with a diving header at the far post when Allen sent the ball in from the right
hand side.
The first half finished with another Invicta chance when Glover nearly
prodded the ball in from close range when Dryden nodded another Lamb cross back
across goal at the far post.
When play resumed after the second half delay it was Hampton who had all
the chances as Allen’s cross-shot came back off the top of the crossbar and
Godfrey made it 2-0.
Allen then shot wide again with another chance and Invicta centre half
Adam Flanagan blocked on the line to deny substitute Eric Kwayke when the ball
was played in from the right hand side.
By then it hardly mattered.
FOLKESTONE
INVICTA: Kessell, J. Everitt (Neilson 67 mins), Lamb, Flanagan, Guest, Lindsey,
M. Everitt, Glover (Munday 60), Dryden, Sykes, Norman. Unused subs: Walker,
Coleman, Watson.
HAMPTON
& RICHMOND: Drake, Harper, Wells, Lewington (Ulasi 83), Elverson, Jeffrey,
Inns, Godfrey, Allen (Gardner 77), Ashe (Kwayke 77), Morley.
Unused subs: Fernandes, Deegan.
Attendance:
389.