Basingstoke
34 pts v Maidenhead 30 pts Home Oct 7th at Down Grange, Pack Lane
Report
by courtesy of Basingstoke Gazette.
TO
the delight of their players and supporters, Basingstoke pulled off a thrilling
last gasp success over Maidenhead to snatch victory and prove the character within
the side.
All those at Down Grange on Saturday were treated to a super
spectacle between two well matched sides – but it was Jim Dixon’s men who narrowly
came out on top after it seemed they had contrived to lose a game they were comfortably
on top of. Having led 20-8 midway through the first half, ’Stoke got pegged back
to 20-all and trailed 27-30 with only two minutes left on the clock. But ’Stoke
refused to lie down and when Simon Appleby broke from a scrum to intercept a loose
pass and charge 20 metres beyond a static, stretched Maidenhead, the roars were
deafening as excitement levels grew. Electing to run towards the left wing from
his central position, the openside flanker found support before he was tackled
from new centre Andrew Patrick, who continued the attack at pace and when he off-loaded
to winger Karl Buttle, the teenager evaded the challenge of his opposing number
to score. Mike Goodall duly converted with the last kick of the game to secure
’Stoke’s triumph against a side they failed to beat last season.
The feeling
of euphoria that swept the ground on the final whistle was tangible. Delighted
’Stoke director of rugby Dixon said: "It was a tough game between two very even
teams who play similar styles of rugby. I have told the boys how much they can
take from that finish as a team. We played positive rugby right to the last minute.
When we keep our heads, we’re capable of scoring tries and I felt all three of
the guys involved in the last try showed fantastic composure."
Last season,
in the corresponding fixture, Down Grange hosted a rare 15-15 tie and the script
was set to run along similar lines this time, when Rob Hawkins’ early penalty
was cancelled out by Goodall within a minute. Maidenhead went ahead 8-3 through
strong wing Stuart Mackay, who plundered his way past two missed tackles from
Myles Rutherford and Simon Buckland to score. But the ’Stoke pack, particularly
the front row – where Neil Young had his best game since returning from Reading
and forced the replacement of his opposing number, ex ’Stoke man Ash Riley – started
to impose themselves. They won numerous scrums against the head and, on 14 minutes,
’Stoke put together several phases of play where there was sufficient support
on each breakdown to see the ball pass between seven pairs of hands and Rutherford
to juggle before crossing over. Goodall converted to make it 10-8. Dave Lambert
ran nearly the full length of the pitch to score ’Stoke’s second try, again converted
by Goodall, after he was fed by man of the match Caan Childs. Goodall’s penalty
on 27 minutes put ’Stoke 20-8 up, but a lack of concentration just before the
interval saw Maidenhead’s inside centre Simon Cripps break through three tacklers
and lay off to Mackay, who once more scored in the corner. Hawkins missed the
conversion attempt.
Maidenhead dominated the early second-half exchanges
and drew level straight from the restart after more lapse defending gave outside
centre Jonny Hammond a try. A stalemate of 25 minutes play duly followed and another
draw appeared likely until Cripps scored on 67 minutes after more loose defence
from the ’Stoke backs. ’Stoke then hit back with a 73rd minute try from Andrew
Rowlands, who scampered over after a period of sustained forwards’ pressure. Goodall
converted to make it 27-25. But the fullback’s boots failed him two minutes later
when, attempting to cover Maidenhead’s Dave Johnston’s chip and charge down the
left wing, he slipped as he was poised to collect. Instead, Johnston was able
to claim the ball and score the try – which was not converted – that Maidenhead
thought had secured victory. But they had not reckoned on ’Stoke’s resilience
– and were left shell-shocked when Buttle clinched the two points with his late
score.
’Stoke: Mike Goodall; Dave Lambert, Simon Buckland, Myles Rutherford, Karl Buttle; Matt Lucas (rep Andrew Patrick 70 mins), Darren Lillywhite; Neil Young, Andrew Rowlands, Shane Murphy; Ross Stirling, Russell Northcote (rep Chris Williams 70 mins); Tom Northcote, Simon Appleby, Caan Childs. Not used: Matt Oliver.