
On a difficult playing surface that had seen snow on it earlier in the week and heavy rain on the morning of the match, it was credit to Stamford officials and volunteers that the game was even able to go ahead in the first place.
The penalty areas and surrounds were bobbly in places and it was those that caused the two most note-worthy incidents in an otherwise fairly dour first period.
In the 14th minute, a Danny Smith shot straight at goalkeeper Matt Finlay almost caused embarrassment for the home keeper as the ball struck a huge divot in front of him and Finlay had to re-adjust quickly to gather the ball above his head as he was falling to the ground for what should have been a routine save.
Danny Bragoli had two efforts narrowly over the crossbar before Chasetown’s best chance of the half came in an inexplicable sixth minute of first half stoppage time. Smith was put through into the penalty area with a great chance to give the Scholars the lead but the ball bobbled before he hit it and eventually skied the ball well off target.
Within sixty seconds of the re-start, Smith was chopped down in the penalty area and the referee had no hesitation pointing to the spot. After a delay while Stamford players protested the decision, Simon Brown stepped up and smashed the penalty straight down the middle to give the Scholars a deserved lead.
The thickness of the post deprived Chasetown of a 2-0 lead when Jono Gould’s shot left Finlay stranded but struck the inside of the woodwork.
Stamford levelled against the run of play when a harshly awarded free-kick led to a Stamford corner. Substitute Sean Wright met the corner and his goalbound effort was almost cleared off the line by Brown, but he could only clear the ball against the post and the ball crossed the line.
Wright had only been on six minutes when he levelled the scores and was heavily involved in the ninth minute of his appearance. Wright climbed all over Nick Wellecomme inside the penalty area and the Scholars earned their second penalty kick. At first, Wright stood there as if he accepted the decision whilst his team mates protested, but then Wright made his way to the opposite edge of the penalty area to speak with Referee Mr Holmes and was awarded a straight red card, assumedly for something he said.
Brown stepped up again but this time Finlay palmed his spot-kick onto the inside of the post and, when it looked certain that Bragoil would follow up, Finlay made a second stop to deny the Chase midfielder.
Gould joined Brown and Lee Butler in the referee’s notebook for Chasetown in a second half littered with niggling fouls that the referee felt compelled to take action against.
Wellecomme was inches wide with Chasetown looking more likely to net the winner against the ten men.
Ten soon became nine for Stamford when full back Jack McGovern conceded a free kick on the Chasetown left wing and again received an instant dismissal for something he said. After another delay, substitute Paul Sullivan’s flicked header was probably goalbound but skipper Richard Teesdale made sure heading home virtually on the goal-line. The Daniels appealed for offside but the goal stood.
Sir Alex Ferguson would’ve been in heaven at the amount of stoppage time, as an incredible ten minutes was played in the second half despite no injuries requiring the physios. Some of that time would have been the delays due to the red cards and dissention from the home side but, eventually, the final whistle blew at just after 5pm to rapturous celebrations from the visiting Scholars fans and players.
Chasetown: Price, Slater, Jackson, Butler (Westwood, 59 mins), Tesfa Robinson, Teesdale, Brown (Sullivan, 86 mins), Bragoli, Wellecomme, Smith (Theo Robinson, 81 mins), Gould
Other subs: Downes, Birt (not used)