Match Report

Salisbury
2
Hendon
2
Date:
Saturday 19 September 2020
Competition:
Southern League Premier Division South
Attendance:
524
Venue:
Salisbury

Match Report

For the second season running Hendon belied their fairly average status and opened their Southern League campaign with a hard fought and deserved point from a tricky looking game on the road, this time denying Steve Claridge’s Salisbury side three points with a strong showing in the final quarter of the match.

There were Hendon league debuts for Dwade James and Jayden Clarke – the latter the one change from the London Senior Cup winning XI as he replaced Samrai Gebrai – and there were welcome returns for Joe White and Liam Brooks amongst the substitutes.

The Greens couldn’t have made a worse start as they fell behind inside 50 seconds. A loose pass inside the Salisbury half saw the Whites move the ball forward with purpose. Dominic Jefferies outfought Tommy Brewer down the right-hand side and cut the ball back adroitly to the penalty spot where Marvin Brooks, who scored at SJP last season for Poole, swept the ball superbly first time into the top corner of the net to give the hosts the lead.

For the next twenty minutes or so, aside from the occasional sporadic raid down the left by Shaun Lucien, the Greens were at sixes and sevens – sometimes eights – defensively as it looked as though their hosts would overwhelm them. Jonathan North made the first of four splendid saves to deny Brooks a second around the quarter hour mark before the Greens found themselves on terms in sensational style.

The ball broke for Sam Corcoran inside the centre circle and looking up, no more than a pace inside the Salisbury half, he spotted Liam Armstrong just outside his penalty area. The chip from the Hendon midfielder had the Salisbury goalkeeper backpedalling like a hamster stuck in reverse as it sailed over his head, under the crossbar and into the net – joined by the crumpled Armstrong a split second later.

It was yet another impudent piece of skill and remarkable vision from Corcoran, whose two Hendon goals have come from a combined yardage in excess of 100 yards. Having come close to executing the same move a fortnight before against St Albans, this was no fluke.

The goal settled the Greens down somewhat although the Whites continued to have the better of the chances. North made a fine save with strong hands low to his left to repel Lewis Benson’s free kick and he then denied his former Wealdstone team-mate Dan Fitchett with a more comfortable stop after the Salisbury striker had stretched well to get his header on target.

The early running after the break was once again made by the hosts and the early chances fell to the Whites. Former Dorchester winger Antonio Diaz was denied by another very good North save and then Brooks again tested North with a powerful drive that the goalkeeper was more than equal to once again. Lucien did force Armstrong to his knees with a low curler at the other end but the Bristol Rovers loanee showed safe handling to hold the ball.

The hosts went ahead again on the hour mark when Benson’s corner kick dropped in the heart of the Hendon 6-yard box and Lucas Perry, at full stretch, could only divert his clearance beyond the startled North and into the bottom corner.

Immediately Joe White entered the fray for Clarke and within five minutes Luca Allinson and Liam Brooks came on for Corcoran and the ever-willing but largely isolated Dwade James. The move transformed the Greens as an attacking force, moved them 20 yards further up the pitch as White and Brooks really began to trouble the two home centre-halves.

They had almost linked up a couple of times before Brooks harried Charlie Kennedy into a hurried header back to Armstrong. Once again, the goalkeeper’s starting position could be queried as he was a couple of yards outside his penalty area. Had he been behind his 18-yard line it was a simple claim but as he couldn’t handle the ball, he tied himself into all sorts of contortions trying to deal with the bouncing ball. White was onto it like a whippet, dispossessed the goalkeeper before finding Brooks who kept his head to plant the ball beyond the desperately covering defender.

Hendon enjoyed their best spell of the game and twice came close to one-on-one situations, only to be denied by tight – but correct – flags from the assistant. Diaz went close in stoppage time when he planted his far-post header wide of the upright when he probably should have hit the target and with just seconds remaining White worked himself half a yard for a shot at goal but was denied by a splendid covering challenge by Kennedy.

Having come off a two-hour test on Monday evening against Brentford’s B team, once again Lee Allinson’s Hendon side showed themselves full of character and resolve to win the club’s first ever point at the Raymond McEnhill Stadium.

Hendon

1
Jonathan North
2
Simeon Olarerin
3
Lucas Perry
4
Kieron Forbes
5
Tommy Brewer
6
Eddie Oshodi
7
Shaun Lucien
8
Solomon Sambou
9
Dwade James
10
Sam Corcoran
11
Jayden Clarke
12
Joe Howe
14
Joe White
15
Liam Brooks
16
Luca Allinson

Match Events

Marvin Brooks
1''
21''
Sam Corcoran
61''
Joe White replaced Jayden Clarke
65''
Luca Allinson replaced Sam Corcoran
65''
Liam Brooks replaced Dwade James
71''
Liam Brooks
Warren Bentley replaced Dan Fitchett
86''
Darren Mullings replaced Dominic Jefferies
86''

Salisbury

1
Liam Armstrong
2
Elliott Wheeler
3
Joshua Somerton
4
Oliver Knowles
5
Samuel Roberts
6
Charlie Kennedy
7
Lewis Benson
8
Dominic Jefferies
9
Dan Fitchett
11
Antonio Diaz
19
Marvin Brooks
12
Warren Bentley
14
Harry Baker
15
Charlie Davis
16
Jack Ball
17
Darren Mullings