Truro Capitulate
To Economical Lilywhites
Cambridge City 4
Truro City 1
Truro played very poorly for the vast majority of this game,
on a surface which left much to be desired, rarely extending Cambridge ‘keeper
Zac Barrett even to practise his yawning, although more possession for the
White Tigers in the second period at least nullified some of the previous
indolence. Wide open in centre-defence, Truro were pierced by the occasional
runs of Adam Marriott in particular during a very boring first-half, in which
young Truro loanees Mickey Parcell and Monty Berrows appeared somewhat out of
their depths. Parcell, constantly advised by his skipper Paul Kendall,
experienced a rough time and Berrows barely had a touch of the ball, before
being replaced at the break. Truro’s offense was awry, totally. Cody Cooke
battled hard enough but like Berrows, Les Afful was anonymous on the right
flank until he moved in-field for the latter stages. Dan Green netted a
surprise, but for him deserved consolation goal for the Tinmen late on but
Cambridge, without really impressing at all, simply did what they had to and
that was to expose Truro’s weaknesses, which on the day were many, score four
goals and send their fans home happy.
My first visit... |
A rising drive by Andrew Phillips for the hosts was very
wayward, but at least that lifted not only the ball but also the tedium of the
opening exchanges in the spring sunshine at Histon’s Glassworld Stadium. When
the opening goal arrived after 13 minutes, there had been nothing else of note
to mention on my Dictaphone but certainly home striker Marriott looked clever,
quick and dangerous, when he turned inside Parcell, moved across the edge of
the penalty-box, exchanged passes with Beech and drove a low shot at the
advancing Grant Fisher, who saved with his boots but with little anticipation
by Truro’s defenders, something which plagued the team for much of the
afternoon, Marriott latched onto the rebound and lashed the ball into the right
side of the net. Kendall was demonstrative on the goal-line; take a look on the
video clip…
1-0 to the Lilywhites, as the Tinmen do some marching drills... |
Marriott broke through the centre again, with Kendall and
Shane White helpless to stop him but the forward’s attempted flick over Fisher
was caught by the goalie, like he was gathering in a leaping salmon. Joe Broad,
after receiving a pass from Cody Cooke, gave the ball away and Kendall was
forced to concede a free-kick, as the hosts attacked but the free-kick came to
nought and Broad was replaced by Arran Pugh, which released White into a
midfield role. Pugh won a good number of headers for Truro and became one of
their more useful performers. Pugh defended successfully twice in succession,
before, finally, Cooke passed to Afful but the forward’s rather ambitious shot
was easily blocked by a defender, only for Parcell to rattle a right-side
centre across the goalmouth, with no red shirt visible in support. Quite
suddenly, Phillips was clear through the middle for Cambridge but he was denied
well by Fisher, who narrowed the angle and blocked the awkward striker’s low
shot. When Cooke and home defender Tom Pepper clashed heads, the remaining
players ignored them and went to the dugouts to take in liquid. It had be
Pepper and Cooke who clashed, especially with Broad been and gone, and a Fisher
in goals…
Cooke and Pepper disagree... |
...but nobody seemed particularly bothered... |
Parcell was continuing to struggle at right-back for the
guests but he stuck at his task, with encouragement from manager Steve Tully,
so experienced in that position, but soon he misjudged a long ball, Kendall and
Phillips collided and although the Cambridge man appeared to shrug off the
Truro skipper with a flailing knee perhaps, Kendall was warned by the referee…
Odd that. Afful then got back to defend for Truro but fouled Pepper
unnecessarily and Jordan Copp deflected Jack Dawkin’s free-kick towards the far
post, where Lawton’s looped, angled header caused real trouble for Fisher on
his goal-line, but somehow, like he was hauling in a mackerel, ready for
blow-torching (I ate one on Friday at the Ebrington Arms), he managed to cling
onto the ball and prevent a goal.
Arran Pugh grew into the game... |
Truro’s Warren Daw then made a run, used a heavy touch and
collided with home midfielder Adam Martin, who came off worse after a clash
which was heard at Cambridge United’s encounter with Barnet some miles away.
Parcell smacked a left-footer way over the home crossbar on a rare Truro sortie
forward but just when it seemed that Truro had reached the interval only one
goal adrift, they didn’t. Again, Truro leaked in a channel, and it all happened
so quickly; Phillips broke onto the ball at inside-left and shovelled the ball
into the penalty-box, right into the path of the supporting and combative Josh
Beech, who side-footed home easily for 2-0. Truro slumped, Cambridge probably
sniggered but Truro’s Berrows would not appear for the second period, after
Jake Ash was called off the field during the break to take the youngster’s
place.
2-0: time for a break and to check how heavily Villa lost at Old Trafford... |
Ash also took up a midfield role and at least Green
attempted to set things in motion, with Afful more of a presence and Cooke
beginning to win some aerial challenges, yet it was a loss of possession by Ash
to Phillips which set the hosts on their first and crucial attack of the half;
Ash’s lunge at the escaping Phillips missed and although Pugh’s half-tackle
sent the ball left to Dawkin, there seemed no danger. Truro dithered however
and although Dawkin’s pass to Marriott was well defended by Green at 18 yards,
the ball broke back again to Dawkin, who beat Parcell on the outside and
crossed; there really was little danger but Ash, facing his own goal, glanced a
header gently into the far corner of his own goal and the toothless White
Tigers were beaten. From Ash’s error to Ash’s error; dust to dust…
Nobody dares to congratulate Jake Ash. 3-0... |
Phillips soon made way for Kelvin Bossman for the hosts, no
doubt signed under the Bosman ruling… The fourth goal was imminent however and
it stemmed from Dawkin’s right-wing corner; a far post header by Beech, who
outmuscled Kendall was palmed out and left by the leaping Fisher on his
goal-line but straight to Lawton, who completely missed the ball, having to
resort to passing it wide again to Dawkin. He outsmarted Green on the byeline
but with Truro’s defenders watching the proceedings, the ball rolled across the
goalmouth, evading three lurking Cambridge players, like students from Jesus
College, but it rolled off the back of a boot and back again to Lawton, in so
much space 8 yards out and he drove a low left-footer just inside the right
upright and his colleagues jumped upon him. As you do. Six Truro defenders had
twisted and turned in chaos but with a name like Jackson Ramm, shouldn’t the
Lilywhites’ right-back have rammed that one in?
4-0... Big celebrations this time... |
Kendall was cautioned for a ‘hauling down foul’, before the
hosts withdrew Ieuan Lewis and introduced Danny Kelly, then Copp was replaced
by Neil Slateford for the guests. A volley by Marriott, well wide, signalled his
departure and Robbie Burns replaced him, author of such famous poems as ‘To A
Louse’ and ‘Scots Wha Hae’… And Truro passed the ball a little more, usually
lost possession but did indeed score a smart goal. Ash fed Afful, who passed to
Slateford on the right and he centred low and left-booted for the deserving
Green to turn high past the shocked Barrett from a near-post position, 6 yards
out. No celebration, just ‘getting on with it’…
Dan Green blows his nose with a hanky he was bought for Christmas... |
The strong home skipper, defender Lee Chaffey then took
Afful out with a wild challenge but the referee allowed White to carry on and
pass the ball, which flew completely off course, to nullify any immediate
advantage, yet no free-kick was then sensibly awarded and Chaffey escaped a
booking! Poor officiating. Green then slid into a challenge for Truro, won the
ball and found himself cautioned. It’s what refs do. A moment of threat by
Bossman was controlled by the now imperious Pugh, a weak Afful shot trickled
for a few metres and the game ebbed away for Truro, as Cambridge coasted to the
end. Liam Eddy, on the bench for the visitors must have wondered whether his
busy running might have been useful for the start and he warmed down with an
interesting expression upon his healthy visage.
Cooke and Green in action... |
This was an easy victory for the hosts. It really was. They
didn’t actually have to achieve very much to clinch their success either, for
their guests, described as ‘lethargic’ by an ex-member of their staff, were too
easily brushed aside. Fisher did fine in goals, Green and Pugh worked with some
success but Cooke, wearing 11, one of his many numbers, looked wasted as a
target-man and the team lacked positivity in wide areas all through the game.
Cambridge certainly possessed a match winner in Marriott and exuded too much strength
for the Tinmen in midfield, which Truro only really checked after the interval,
when the game was virtually beyond them anyway.
Cody Cooke does his imitation of Andy Lochhead... (Villa, League Cup Final, 1971...) |
As Lilywhites’ substitute Robbie Burns would surely have
recited at the end of the game: “We beat
you for Auld Lang Syne…” How kind.
Teams:
Cambridge City: Zac Barrett, Jackson Ramm, Tom Pepper; Will
Lawton, Lee Chaffey (Capt), Josh Beech; Ieuan Lewis, Adam Martin, Andrew
Phillips, Adam Marriott, Josh Dawkin.
Subs: Kelvin Bossman, Danny Kelly, Adam Kelly, Robbie
Burns, Louis Lee.
Truro: Grant Fisher, Mickey Parcell, Warren Daw;
Paul Kendall (Capt), Shane White, Joe Broad; Dan Green, Jordan Copp, Les Afful,
Monty Berrows, Cody Cooke.
Subs: Jake Ash, Arran Pugh, Neil Slateford, Liam
Eddy.
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