Bristol Post

Finley the inspiratio­n again behind vital win for Rovers

Talking points from Bristol Rovers’ victory against Bradford at the Memorial Stadium, by

- Sam Frost

AFRUSTRATI­NG afternoon was worth it in the end as Bristol Rovers’ dominance eventually told in a crucial 2-1 win over Bradford City at the Memorial Stadium on Saturday. As the shot count rose higher and higher, so did the possibilit­y the Gas would endure a damaging afternoon in their pursuit of promotion.

That would have been totally undeserved, but Bradford snatched the lead against the run of play and Joey Barton’s side were heading for a second successive defeat, which could have sent the Gas falling out of League Two’s top seven. Mark Hughes’ Bantams had not earned their lead but Dion Pereira finished clinically to catch Rovers cold seconds after the resumption.

Responding to adversity is a great strength of this team, though, and for all the chagrin stoked by each passing chance, belief never faded on the pitch or the terraces. Rovers have been beaten just three times in four months and they have not suffered successive losses in that time, and they made sure those records were preserved and their momentum was regained.

Bradford’s goal did nothing to influence the flow of the game in their favour. If anything, Rovers’ grip on the contest only tightened. Still, they had to work incredibly hard for their equaliser. Better chances were wasted but Sam Finley - a clutch performer through the highs and lows of an eventful season - delivered for his team again by conjuring a thunderbol­t from his right boot to beat Alex Bass 11 minutes after falling behind.

Rovers had plenty of time and chances to win it from there and it was Connor Taylor who was the unlikely source of the decisive goal, scrambling home 15 minutes from time to secure three much-needed points to go level with the top three with just six games to play.

Aspects of the performanc­e need upgrading, but in parts, Rovers executed Barton’s dream game-plan. They had Bradford living under a strict lockdown in their own half for long periods of this game, leading to 31 shots and it was that pressure that eventually told.

A CONSTANT INSPIRATIO­N

THE murky early months of this season will not be remembered fondly as Rovers started dreadfully, but Sam Finley is a player whose standards have seldom dipped. Amid the good, the bad and the ugly, Finley has been outstandin­g; a player who makes the Gas machine work in each third of the pitch.

In no sense a flat-track bully, Finley may be diminutive but he stands tall in the big moments. He epitomises the deep reserves of character this team possesses.

Rovers have rarely exerted the kind of dominance they held on Saturday, but 10 minutes into the second half they had nothing to show for it. In fact, they were in arrears, owing to a rare defensive lapse from a back four rarely troubled by the Bantams.

In that moment, Rovers needed inspiratio­n and Finley was the man to provide it. He took aim and fired from 25 yards, catching the shot so sweetly that the ball wobbled beyond Alex Bass and crashed into the back of the net. The Mem roared as Finley briefly celebrated a moment of supreme class, before getting back down to work, as he has done all season.

The 29-year-old has a magnetic attraction to second balls, combined with an eye for a pass very

few League Two players can see. Too many players have contribute­d significan­tly to make Rovers’ player of the season a straightfo­rward debate, but Finley certainly is in the conversati­on.

FOLLOWING ORDERS

BARTON has been demanding more goals from Connor Taylor and the big man duly delivered one of priceless value on Saturday. it felt like a winning goal was coming, but nothing could be taken for granted on an afternoon when chance after chance went begging.

His aerial dominance, Barton thinks, ought to make the Stokie a regular contributo­r on the scoresheet, particular­ly with the quality of delivery Rovers often muster. He was able to double his tally for the season here, albeit with the same foot that equalised against Walsall in September rather than his head.

But Rovers have enjoyed a stream of goals from a wide variety of sources this season. Their centreback­s might be the only part of the team that is not performing in that regard and to see Taylor in the right place at the right time to score a huge goal in Rovers’ season will be hugely pleasing for Barton.

THE CHEAT CODE

THERE is nothing new in this column heralding the inherent brilliance of Elliot Anderson, who boggles the mind with every performanc­e he delivers for the Gas. Bradford centre-half Paudie O’ Connor certainly felt that way when Anderson, a much smaller man, proved a muscular mismatch.

A long punt from James Belshaw landed in the lap of the Geordie on the Bradford side of halfway, and with O’Connor for company. The Irishman tried to apply the squeeze on the on-loan Newcastle United starlet, but Anderson responded by sticking his backside out, holding off the challenge and spinning free, all in one movement.

It was one of many moments on Saturday that underlined the fact Anderson is on a different level. His intrinsic decision-making points to him belonging at a higher level.

Rovers have some excellent players who could cut it in League One and perhaps beyond, but none captivate the crowd like Anderson can. Time after time, he prompts gasps and ironic cheers as he makes defenders look foolish. He often looks like a video game cheat code in action.

ROOM FOR IMPROVEMEN­T

BARTON has long said he believes Rovers have not realised their potential, despite their huge haul of points since the turn of the year. Indeed, there are parts of their game that need to be improved and could be telling in the final six games and the play-offs.

The Gas are excellent at getting to the final third. However, once they get the ball to within touching distance of the opposition penalty area, there are imperfecti­ons. Any good attack needs to find the balance between a high frequency of low-percentage chances or a slightly lower quantity of better scoring opportunit­ies by engineerin­g an extra pass.

 ?? ?? Sam Finley celebrates scoring Bristol Rovers’ equaliser in Saturday’s League Two game against Bradford at the Memorial Stadium
Sam Finley celebrates scoring Bristol Rovers’ equaliser in Saturday’s League Two game against Bradford at the Memorial Stadium
 ?? ?? Elliot Anderson gets to the ball ahead of Bradford’s Alex Gilliead
Elliot Anderson gets to the ball ahead of Bradford’s Alex Gilliead
 ?? ?? Sam Nicholson gets a shot away for Rovers against Bradford
Sam Nicholson gets a shot away for Rovers against Bradford
 ?? Pictures: Will Cooper/JMP ??
Pictures: Will Cooper/JMP

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