Crawley Down Gatwick 2 Newhaven 2, SCFL Premier Division match #2, Tuesday 12th August 2025
As was the case last year, Newhaven’s first away match of
the season was away to Crawley Down Gatwick on a Tuesday evening.
And, just like 12-months ago, the Dockers travelled north
having won their opening home league match by two goals to one, but having
tasted defeat in the FA Cup. Although these matches had been played in a
different order and the performance in the cup had been wildly different (for the better) this season.
Early last August, we had been on the wrong end of a seven-goal thriller in this fixture, but the Newhaven faithful were hoping that this time around we could start the league campaign with two victories for the first time in what seems like forever.
In the early stages last night there was little on show to
hint that we’d be seeing seven goals on this occasion.
The opening 20 minutes can be filed non-descript at
best, with an early Lee Robinson header over the bar all that either side was
able to muster by way of chances.
Thankfully, on the 20-minute mark, the game did start to
open up and opportunities finally started to arrive.
Unfortunately for us, the first two of these went Crawley
Down’s way; one of which they managed to score.
Barely a minute after Roman Chiosa had made a good save to keep
us level, Sam Clements was afforded too much time on the edge of the area and
he dispatched the ball into the corner of the net to give the hosts the lead.
The goal came right before a drink’s break, which may well
have done us a huge favour, as the Dockers emerged from the mini-interval a
different team.
Twice, Robinson missed good opportunities from close range;
one which hit the post, one which was well saved by the Crawley Down keeper.
Dexter Lambert then forced the Crawley Down stopper into another
good save, with Robinson only able to poke the rebound wide, before Lambert again went close with a half-volley that flew wide.
The pressure was building and, on 44 minutes, we were
afforded the ideal opportunity to level when Robinson was brought down in the
area to give us a penalty. Robbo himself stepped up to take it, but for the
second time this season he was unsuccessful from the spot as his effort was
saved.
However, just as it appeared as though Newhaven would go into
half-time trailing, they finally managed to equalise on the stroke of
half-time.
A ball in from the left somehow worked its way through to Lambert,
and the winger managed to get enough contact on the ball to drill it past the
keeper and force it into the net.
It was no more than Newhaven had deserved and hopes at half-time
were high that we could build on this momentum going into the second-half.
That’s not what happened.
Within two minutes of the restart Crawley Down were back in
front. Clements against the scorer, flicking in at the near post unmarked from
a corner.
From then on, the hosts pretty much took total control of
the match, and were it not for a combination of some good saves from Chiosa,
determined defending and wayward finishing, we could easily have found
ourselves well out of it.
Our cause wasn’t helped by a number of injuries to our
centre backs which undoubtedly hindered our flow. During the game, the
once-again impressive Richmond Osei had no more than four partners: Elliot
Bresciani, Tarun Rohilla, Leo Charman and, finally, Scott Smith.
With 15 minutes remaining, Newhaven hadn’t really look like
scoring in the second-half, with one long-range free-kick from Ezra Roeg, which
was hit well enough, but straight at the Crawley Down number one, all they
really had to show from their rare attacking endeavours.
Step forward Lee Robinson. Guilty of some misses in the
first-half, the experienced striker kept plugging away and finally got his
reward with 14 minutes left on the clock, latching onto a long ball before
taking it round the keeper and this time making no mistake.
Surely now the late momentum would be with Newhaven, right?
Wrong.
Almost immediately, the hosts went close to taking the lead
for the third time, only for Chiosa to deny them with his best save of the game.
Crawley Down then hit the bar, I think via the head of Osei,
before Smith produced a great last-ditch block to keep us level.
We were then reduced to ten men for the final ten minutes,
when Ezra Roeg was sin-binned after Ryan Blunt had been bafflingly penalised
after being clattered by a Crawley Down defender on the edge of the area.
The young Dockers showed plenty of grit and determination,
though, to battle through and cling onto a decent point on the road.
Very much the proverbial game of two halves.
Having already exited the FA Cup, there’s no game on
Saturday, so we resume our league campaign next Tuesday (19th
August) with a trip to Little Common, before a Sunday afternoon outing to
Surrey as we take on AFC Walcountians on the 24th. Less than
48-hours later we’re in action again, as AFC Varndeanians visit Fort Road in
the league.
Four points from six is a solid enough start to the season. Let’s
hope we can build on it over the coming weeks.
Come On You Dockers!
My man of the match (aka, the controversial part): Richmond Osei. This could just have easily gone to Chiosa (again), but in my opinion Osei played just as pivotal a role in keeping us in the game last night. A task made all the more trickier by the constant (enforced) changes of centre back partner.
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