Hereford
FC, fresh from doing what they needed to do against Farsley in Buxton last
Saturday, face a much more challenging opponent this Saturday in the form of
promotion-chasing Chester. It looks to be a much more ‘proper’ game than a lot
of the dross that will be served up in the division above this weekend. Yes
Maidenhead vs Tamworth, I’m looking at you.
A
pessimist may point to the last big home game that Edgar Street hosted this
season, Kidderminster on Boxing Day, and worry. An optimist may think it
impossible for the same flat performance to be dredged up for this, especially
with so much at stake. I’m with the optimists.
It
took Chester manager Calum McIntyre a few months to find a successful starting
XI this season, but once he did they flew up the table and up until recently
were top. Not a huge surprise perhaps as you’d expect Chester to be up their
challenging as one of the bigger clubs in the division.
They forked out the princely sum of £12,500 for
Connor Woods from Warrington in January. Since signing he’s scored precisely no
goals, so princely sum or not, he’s been about as useful as Prince Andrew for
them so far. He was an unused substitute last Saturday when they drew 1-1 at
home to Curzon Ashton. They also had fellow strikers Kurt Willoughby and Dan
Turner on the bench for that game, so maybe they have slightly deeper
pockets than Hereford despite there being similarities between the two clubs.
Willoughby
was one of the division’s top scorers two seasons ago, earning him a move to
Oldham. He hasn’t had the same success in this second spell at Chester though,
a season-long loan from the Latics, with just five goals in 33 games.
They
lost star player Charlie Caton to Accrington in January, and that has coincided
with their recent slight dip. That Curzon game petered out to something of a nothingness after half-time, with the second half played out between two teams who have possibly (hopefully) passed
their seasonal sell-by date, although Curzon did edge past Needham Market on
Tuesday. Chester have won four and drawn four of their last ten – far from
shabby but it’s form that’s seen them slip from the top of the table to fourth,
five points above Hereford.
The
player who has been scoring their goals this season is Tom Peers, with 17. The
striker started his career at Chester before taking in a host of clubs in the
northwest, returning to the Deva two seasons ago from Macclesfield.
Ex-Bulls
Mitch Hancox and Ben Pollock were recruited in the summer, although Hancox
promptly moved on again in January, to Spennymoor, with Pollock following him
to the same club in February.
Declan
Weeks is as ever the fulcrum of the team, and if he can be nullified the likes
of Peers will be starved of opportunities.
The
Blues are typically very, very good defensively at the Deva, and true to form
this season they’ve conceded fewer goals than anyone at home, but away they’re
really quite leaky, having let in more goals than anyone in the division on
their travels apart from South Shields, outside the bottom five. Visiting
defenders can no longer coast through games at Edgar Street in the way they’ve
been able to do depressingly often in the past, now that Remaye Campbell is
giving them something to think about. If Chester do have a weakness away from
home, which they very much seem to have, Remaye will exploit it. If they try to
rip his shirt to shreds or give him a friendly strangle, hopefully the ref will
see it and brandish an early yellow card or two.
Hereford
loanee Kieran Coates left Chester last summer having spent a couple of years
there, and will presumably be well up for this as a result. The signing of
Coates hot on the heels of the arrival of Omari Sterling-James offers more
evidence that the Hereford board and manager aren’t content to sit on their
hands and hope for the best in terms of play-off qualification. Coates looks to
be a player who will add the same sort of quality as OSJ has at the other end
of the pitch, and their presence makes the squad look more competitive against
the likes of Chester than was previously the case.
If
the Bulls do make the play-offs these clubs could be seeing each other again in
a few short weeks, so this could be a useful exercise in sizing up the
opposition for that. However, that’s all a long, long way into the future in
terms of any number of variables still to come before the regular season
finishes, so I’ll stop right there with that nonsense.
The
visitors will of course be up for this more than if it was someone a bit
boring, but given their away record, and the wobbles they’ve experienced
lately, it’s utterly winnable if the hosts go into it with the sort of confident
mindset that saw them win impressively against Curzon Ashton two weeks ago.
COYW