Darlington 2, York City 2 (From York Press)
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Match report: Darlington 2, York City 2
10:36am Monday 30th January 2012 in Match reports
By Dave Flett, Sports reporter
Skipper Chris Smith heads in York City’s first goal from Ashley Chambers’ 59th-minute cross at Darlington. Picture: Gordon Clayton
York City’s refusal to be beaten in 2011/12 has seen Gary Mills’ team equal a 38-year-old club record.
Saturday’s 2-2 draw at troubled Darlington was by no means a vintage display but, thanks to second-half Chris Smith and Ashley Chambers goals, it represented a tenth league game undefeated on the road – a sequence which now sits in the history books alongside that of a team with a valid claim to being recognised as the club’s finest.
Tom Johnston’s class of 1973/4 are the only other side in the Minstermen’s 90-year history to enjoy a double-figured run without losing an away league game.
That team, including the likes of Chris Jones, Graeme Crawford and Jimmy Seal, went on to set another landmark by winning promotion to the second tier of the English game and are still the only group of Bootham Crescent players to do so.
Under Mills, City continue to pursue a return to the Football League and, interestingly, both teams’ ten-game away records include three wins and seven draws.
A draw might amount to two fewer points than a win rather than just the one these days, but an ability to grind out results when not at your best remains just as important in 2012 as it was five decades ago.
The Minstermen have now lost just one of their last 19 league matches and, as they had managed against Mansfield twice over the festive period as well as at home to Solihull in the FA Trophy last month, Mills’ team managed to recover from a losing position at cash-strapped Darlington despite an indifferent display.
Just as the City chief had predicted prior to the game, Darlington were also not quite the no-hopers some might have expected considering the club’s off-field traumas.
Despite starting with five teenagers and being forced into introducing a sixth when captain Paul Arnison – one of just nine fit professionals at the club – limped out of the action before the break, the hosts quickly dispelled any hopes among the 1,300 travelling supporters that the game, still potentially the home team’s last, would be a mismatch.
Experienced campaigner Marc Bridge-Wilkinson warmed Michael Ingham’s hands after only 37 seconds while the likes of 17-year-old on-loan Sunderland ’keeper Jordan Pickford, striker-turned- centre-back Scott Harrison and well-deserved man-of-the-match winner John McReady all settled swiftly into performances that belied their birth dates.
Fielding a well-drilled 4-5-1 formation, the hosts started with greater determination than their opponents, who struggled for dominance in a congested midfield.
The visitors also persisted in attacking almost exclusively down the left flank during a first half in which play on that wing repeatedly broke down with Danny Pilkington the chief culprit, although there was a predictability about all of City’s play in the final third of the pitch where the front three’s movement lacked imagination.
As a consequence, Darlington took a deserved lead into the interval and added a second goal quickly after the break.
After Bridge-Wilkinson had fired off an early warning, Matty Blair blazed a volley high into the home end after full debutant Matthew Blinkhorn had won a header from Michael Ingham’s long goal kick.
Otherwise, the Minstermen were restricted to long-range Pilkington efforts before the break, while Dale Hopson blasted wide of Ingham’s left-hand post before the Quakers took the lead on 43 minutes.
Sloppy City failed to anticipate a short corner that saw Rob Ramshaw find Bridge-Wilkinson on the corner of the penalty box.
The former Port Vale midfielder then delivered an unchallenged cross that was turned in on the volley with a flick of his boot by an unopposed Adam Rundle eight yards from goal.
Shortly afterwards, Ryan Bowman prodded the ball across the face of Ingham’s goal after bursting through the left channel and, four minutes after the restart, Craig Liddle’s men doubled their advantage with another effort that reflected badly on the visitors.
Andre Boucaud’s stray pass was intercepted in Darlington’s half and Kris Taylor swiftly swept the ball out to the right flank, where McReady sidestepped a Daniel Parslow challenge before beating Ingham with a low shot inside his near post.
The City ’keeper then needed to be alert to save at McReady’s feet after Jon Challinor had surrendered possession to Rundle.
By this time, Chambers had been sent on as part of a double substitution that also saw Jamie Reed introduced. Boucaud, probably paying the price for his role in the hosts’ second goal, was replaced along with Pilkington as Mills opted for an adventurous 4-2-4 formation.
Ex-Leicester striker Chambers quickly made an impression, providing the 59th-minute left-wing corner that saw Smith claim his second goal in as many games. The City skipper’s downward header six yards out bounced up into Pickford’s top left-hand corner.
Just seconds later, on the hour, the Minstermen’s two replacements combined for the equaliser. Reed fed the ball to Chambers, whose angled 15-yard drive nestled in Pickford’s bottom left-hand corner.
The Quakers did not crumble, however, with Taylor lifting a 12-yard shot over following another well-rehearsed corner routine. At the other end, Pickford clawed a Paddy McLaughlin free-kick away to safety and watched Chambers curl a similar opportunity off target.
Both teams then went close to securing maximum points at the death. Harrison headed over from six yards after meeting a Rundle corner, while McLaughlin’s well-struck drive was parried brilliantly in injury time by Pickford and Smith headed over the flag kick.
Moments later, a tannoy system that had blasted out the likes of Money’s Too Tight To Mention and I’m Still Standing before the game, greeted the final whistle with the strains of Freddie Mercury.
The Show Must Go On is a sentiment that both sets of fans in Saturday’s super 6,413 crowd would have shared as Darlington hope to live to fight another day.
Match facts
Darlington 2 (Rundle 43; McReady 49), York City 2 (Smith 59; Chambers 60)
York City: Michael Ingham 6, Jon Challinor 6, Daniel Parslow 6, Chris Smith 7, James Meredith 6, Scott Kerr 6, Andre Boucaud 6, Paddy McLaughlin 7, Matty Blair 5, Matthew Blinkhorn 5, Danny Pilkington 5.
Subs: Jamie Reed 6 (for Boucaud, 54), Ashley Chambers 6 (for Pilkington, 54), Jamal Fyfield (for Blinkhorn, 73). Not used: McGurk, Potts.
Key: 10 – Faultless; 9 – Outstanding; 8 – Excellent; 7 – Good; 6 – Average; 5 – Below par; 4 – Poor; 3 – Dud; 2 – Hopeless; 1 – Retire.
Star man: Smith – matched hosts’ commitment and led the comeback.
Darlington: Jordan Pickford, Paul Arnison (Phil Gray, 41), Scott Harrison, Kris Taylor, Aaron Brown, Dale Hopson (James Gray, 76), John McReady, Marc Bridge-Wilkinson, Rob Ramshaw, Adam Rundle, Ryan Bowman.
Subs not used: Jordan Nixon, Danny Lambert, Jamie Barton.
Booked: Ramshaw 70, Taylor 77, Harrison 90.
Shots on target: Darlington 5, City 9.
Shots off target: Darlington 6, City 5.
Corners: Darlington 5, City 13.
Fouls conceded: Darlington 12, City 10.
Offsides: Darlington 2, City 2.
Referee: Darren Handley (Bolton). Rating: showed degree of lenience that bordered on the unusually sensible. Will probably get marked down for it.
Attendance: 6,413 (1,358 City fans).
Miss of the match: Harrison’s late header could have snatched victory.
Save of the match: Teenage ’keeper Pickford denied McLaughlin twice, but injury-time stop was probably the pick.
Comments(12)
JamesHinch
says...
11:19am Mon 30 Jan 12
The Legend Of Keith
says...
11:31am Mon 30 Jan 12
Ebbsfleet will be a good distraction (and one we must look to win), but Grimsby is looking like a defining game. What are the chances of York getting the same away following to this arguably more important game for York?
Sir Alex
says...
11:39am Mon 30 Jan 12
They could be level with us by then.
Not been there for years - should be a good 'un!
Prob
says...
11:42am Mon 30 Jan 12
Think you might have that mixed up...
duffy
says...
12:02pm Mon 30 Jan 12
rogue84 wrote:Blair though had probably his worst game in a very long time and was partly at fault along with Boucade for not putting in a challenge. Pilkington huffed and puffed and put in plenty of effort but what did he really do with the ball? . I would still have only given Boucade a 4 though. He was a compleat waste of space. On that showing city should have taken the money from Fleetwood.
not sure how Blair and Pilkington got 5 out of 10 and Boucaud got 6....thought Boucs had arguably his worst game for City. granted Blair's mark could be due to a comparison with his recent displays but Pilks was our only attacking threat 1st half.
openallhours
says...
12:12pm Mon 30 Jan 12
Prob wrote:Well spotted!
"A draw might amount to two fewer points than a win rather than just the one these days,"
Think you might have that mixed up...
As much as it's been great to watch York this season, I think it's going to be a very nervy next few months. Whilst it's good to be unbeaten, too many draws (and home defeats) could cost us.
It also hasn't helped that Wrexham and Fleetwood seem to be winning every week.
Either way, City will have my full support and I'm sure every York fan will be the same regardless.
SamYCFC
says...
12:17pm Mon 30 Jan 12
YorkCityLuke
says...
1:20pm Mon 30 Jan 12
SamYCFC wrote:Why is it that you're constantly putting Parslow down? The second goal was nothing to do with him, the ball was gifted to their forward by our weak midfielding. What was he meant to do, charge in and get sent off/give away a penalty? I thought Smith/Parslow and Chambers stood out for their good performances.
Smith played well. But Parslows attempted to block there 2nd goal was a joke. Get him out of the team. Mcgurk in.
paddymacwakey
says...
3:07pm Mon 30 Jan 12
OLD - HEAD
says...
6:52pm Mon 30 Jan 12
RooBeck
says...
11:10am Tue 31 Jan 12
OLD - HEAD wrote:Yes, maybe some fresh legs needed and after long injuries, maybe Lanre Oyebanjo in the Back Four and most certainly Jason Walker as a striker will pep things up a bit because for the first hour on Saturday, we looked a bit jaded in all departments. Jon Challinor to right-sided mid-field in a 4-3-3 formation together with Kerr and MacLaughlin and have Chambers (who needs to sort out his inconsistent displays) and Blair as attacking wide men. Maybe, Jamal Fyfield to shadow and challenge James Meredith, surely he must be more at home as a left sided defender, rather than an attacking left-winger?!Unfortu
Pilkington had a poor game, I agree, but Jamal Fyefield was not a massive improvement (I see that he was not even credited with a rating, unlike the other subs). Its time to stop chopping and changing and play people in their best positions. McGurk (centre-back for Parslow) Oyebanjo (right-back) and either Challinor or Potts to replace Boucaud in mid-field, that would be my suggestion for starters.
nately, Jamie Reed to the bench because he really does try hard for the team but an in-form Walker is a must to our play-off/promotion hopes. Agree too that Smith and McGurk need to be the dominant central defensive partnership until the end of the season and between them they need to sort out some stronger communication for organising and "driving" the Back Four and keeper, esp. when defending free-kicks and corners!

rogue84 says...
10:44am Mon 30 Jan 12
granted Blair's mark could be due to a comparison with his recent displays but Pilks was our only attacking threat 1st half.