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So the Easter weekend provided a
rollercoaster of emotions, with heartbreak at Kidderminster and elation against
Merthyr, which at least made a change from unremitting misery.
Now that the elation has worn off a bit,
eroded slightly perhaps by the irritation that most of the other strugglers
also won on Easter Monday, the scale of the task in front of the Bulls over the
next two-and-a-half weeks comes back into sharp focus.
That task continues on Wednesday as
Hereford travel to Merseyside for a plastic-pitch encounter with Crosby’s
Marine FC.
They really must win this before two
huge six-pointers against Bedford and Oxford. Having lost seven in a row,
winning the last seven to round off the season would be quite a stylish way to
get out of the hole they’re in. As unlikely as that winning run sounds,
unfortunately they’ll only get out of that hole if they do that or something
not far off it. 51ish was, not so long ago, looking like a points total that
could be enough. It no longer does, with Bedford and Oxford both making bold
moves towards safety. One tiny chink of light is the late arrival to the
relegation party of Curzon Ashton. If the Bulls can win this game, the only
National League North game being played in midweek, they’re four points behind the
Nash having played two games fewer. All they can do is keep winning
football matches.
Marine had an excellent start to the
season and spent a long time in the play-off positions. They’ve slipped to
mid-table now, partly due to going very deep in the FA Trophy, losing in the
semi-finals. Despite winning on Monday, 2-1 at home to Chorley, and like
Hereford having games in hand, they’re unlikely to claw their way back into
those play-off positions by the end of the season. That’s something Hereford
have to use to their advantage.
They took a
while to acclimatise to the National League North last season following
promotion, and looked way off it at Edgar Street in terms of quality (not much)
and naivity (loads), but quickly turned things around and finished 19 points
clear of the drop in losing just two of their last ten games. There’s very
little chance of them exhibiting any of that naivity here having really kicked
on since then, while Hereford have very much gone backwards over the course of
the season as a whole.
Bobby Grant
is their manager, and is something of a ‘Mr Marine’ having also played for and
captained the club.
Their big threat
is left winger Fin Sinclair-Smith, who scored at the weekend to take his
seasonal tally to ten. Joseph James will hopefully have recovered from the
knock he picked up on Monday to enable him to look after the ex-Radcliffe man.
Centre forward George Newell seems to have inherited some of his father Mike’s
attributes as a typical English centre forward and target man, but has only
managed six goals.
Aaron Downes
can’t afford to be cagey, and will presumably go again with George Munday and
Mikey Lane up front. The latter suggested when interviewed following his
man-of-the-match display on Monday that a repeat of the first half against
Merthyr could ‘blow Marine out of the water’. I might ask him to start writing
the titles for these previews.
Freddy Willcox
and Harrison Sohna should again occupy the central midfield positions, offering
plenty in the middle of the park with skillsets that complement each other very
well.
Behind them,
Kyle Howkins and Matt Preston will be keen to oversee another clean sheet here
as the Hereford defence is finally showing signs of organised resistance, as
well as silky finishing at the other end.
The Merthyr
manager said after Monday’s match:
"They were
physically bigger, stronger in winning duels in that first half. They ran all
over us, which is really disappointing to see."
This is
precisely what’s happened to Hereford again and again this season. Telford have
done it, Kings Lynn have done it, Chorley have done it…and that’s just a
handful of examples of how the team has been absolutely bullied at home, let
alone away. And that deliberately ignores the better-funded sides who have ‘run
all over us’ (I was going to say ‘bigger clubs’ but they're absolutely not). It’s been awful, but if we’re finally biting back,
great. It's just that it might be a bit too late.
I was trying to
explain to someone over Easter how a club paying thousands and thousands of
pounds to managers and players courtesy of a huge bounty that comes through the
turnstiles every fortnight could possibly be relegated to the seventh level of
football in England. I failed.
Hereford have to
win again. If they don’t it’s virtually all over. At least that keeps things
simple.
COYW