Portsmouth News

It’s gearing up to be a title race thriller with Deans and Baffins flying a PO flag

Can 15-year wait for a Portsmouth area winner end in 2022? The Wessex League Premier Division looks impossible to call ...

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Two Portsmouth area clubs are right in the mix in what is gearing up to be the most exciting Wessex League Premier Division title race for years.

Horndean’s home win over US Portsmouth on Tuesday saw them open up a threepoint lead over Hamworthy United, Baffins Milton Rovers and Brockenhur­st.

AFC Stoneham are fifth, but just seven points adrift of Michael Birmingham’s table-toppers with two games in hand.

Behind them are Shaftesbur­y, who have won eight and drawn three of their last 11 league fixtures and boast the division’s best goals-pergame average of 3.4.

The north Dorset club might be 13 points adrift of Horndean, but they have four games in hand.

There have been several one-horse title races in recent times which have done little to create any excitement in non-league circles.

Poole Town collected a hattrick of titles between 2008/09 and 2010/11, winning by 15, 18 and 20 points respective­ly.

Winchester City won by 14 points in 2011/12 and Salisbury romped to the silverware by a 20-point margin in 2015/16, winning the title with six games left.

But even the margin was shattered by Sholing in 2018/19, the last season that was completed before the pandemic. Back then, the Southampto­n-based club finished a remarkable 31 points ahead of runners-up Horndean.

There have been some far tighter title races in the 21st century, including two being decided on goal difference - Wimborne pipping Lymington & New Milton in 1999/2000 and Gosport Borough edging out AFC Totton in 2006/07.

In 2016/17 Portland finished just a point ahead of Moneyfield­s, while Blackfield & Langley did likewise over Andover Town 12 months later.

But none of those seasons saw four clubs - at least - go into their final few matches with a shout of the title. But that is certainly looking the case this year.

Between 2008/09 and 2018/19, the smallest gap between the top four at the end of the campaign was 17 points (in 2016/17). The largest was an astonishin­g 42 (in 2018/19). In the remaining eight seasons, the gap was anywhere between 20-25 points.

This season, the top seven are currently separated by just 13 points. And the teams in sixth and seventh - Shaftesbur­y and Bashley - have at least two games in hand on the top five.

You have to go back to 2007/08 to find a top four that finished within 10 points of each other - AFC Totton (106 points), Sholing (102), Wimborne (96) and Poole Town (96) in what was a 44-game season.

It was even closer 20 years ago, in 2001/02. Then, Andover (96), Fleet (95, AFC Totton (94) and Gosport (89) were seperated by just seven points.

The 2019/20 season was looking like providing a similar outcome before Covid-19 wrapped its tentacles around the worldwide sporting fixture list. Then, the top four were separated by just 11 points with fourthplac­ed Christchur­ch holding four games in hand on leaders Alresford.

The hope is now the 2021/22 campaign provides the thrilling title race that 2019/20 was promising.

Over the last 10 completed seasons, the average points-per-game ratio of the Wessex Premier champions has been 2.506 points basically two and a half points per game.

Sholing (2.76, 2018/19) boast the highest PPG average in a season, while Portland (2.35, 2016/17) have the lowest.

At present, Horndean are averaging 2.25 PPG, which over the 40-game term works out at 90 points. Hamworthy and Baffins are averaging 2.31, which equates over the season to 92 points.

There are few margins for error over the course of the next few months …

Horndean might be top, but they face an incredibly tough fixture list in the next few weeks. Of the Deans’ next six league games, four are against teams in the top seven - Bashley (Jan 15, home), Hamworthy (Jan 22, home), Stoneham (Jan 29, away) and Baffins (Feb 12, home). Their other two are hardly straightfo­rward either - Moneyfield­s (Jan 18, away) and Blackfield & Langley (Feb 5, away).

There was a shock on Bank

Horndean might be top but they face an incredibly tough fixture list in the next few weeks Wessex League title race

Holiday Monday when lowly Christchur­ch shocked Brockenhur­st 3-2. But such results are rare - that was only the second time this season that a team currently in the bottom seven has beaten one of the current top seven. Cowes’ 2-1 win at Stoneham in September was the other occasion.

Baffins and Hamworthy have only lost to teams in the top seven - Rovers to Horndean, Stoneham and Brockenhur­st (in injury time) and the Hammers only to Baffins.

At this moment in time, it is almost impossible to pick a likely champion. Just ask one man who knows the league well, US Portsmouth assistant manager Tom Jeffes.

Jeffes made his Wessex debut for Bournemout­h Poppies in the noughties; he was later part of the Poole side that won the Premier in 2010/11 and was captain when USP were rewarded for their results over the two pandemic-shortened seasons with promotion in last summer’s FA restructur­e.

Now in his 30s, Jeffes - a striker converted into a central defender - remains a vital part of a US team experienci­ng their first season in the Wessex Premier.

‘The Wessex League, over the past few years, hasn’t been what it was in the past,’ he commented. ‘You had some extremely good sides - Poole, Winchester, Wimborne, Gosport, Sholing. You had Thatcham and Newbury before then.

‘There was a dip after that and now, it’s not back to the standard it was, but there’s some very good sides in the top eight.

‘It’s wide open this year and that’s for non-league football in this area.

‘We’ve played everyone this season apart from Shaftesbur­y and, for me, I’d say Hamworthy (for the title). They have a strong side - they gave us a bit of a lesson home and away this season (5-0 and 3-0).

‘But they’re not running away with it, and Horndean and Baffins have got a very good chance. I wouldn’t bet against either of them.

‘Wilko (Baffins boss Shaun Wilkinson) has done a good job, he’s brought in some key players. We were gutted to lose Sarge (Harry Sargeant) and he’s fitted in extremely well in midfield with James Cowan. They’ve got Jason Parish, Craig McAllister, Rudi (Blankson) - they’re a real threat going forward.’

Jeffes feels the 10 Portsmouth area derbies that make up a quarter of Horndean’s and Baffins’ fixture lists could work in Hamworthy’s favour.

‘The lads (in the Portsmouth area teams) are all mates, and they are desperate to get one over on the other. The Moneyfield­s v Baffins game the other day was a perfect testament to that. ‘Hamworthy haven’t got anything like that this season. That’s probably why, if I was a betting man, I’d go for Hamworthy.’ Horndean have three derbies left in 2021/22 - at Moneyfield­s and Fareham and home to Baffins. So far, they have won five, drawn one and lost one (5-1 at home to Fareham) of their derbies.

Baffins have four derbies left - home to US Portsmouth and Fareham and away to Horndean and Portcheste­r.

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 ?? ?? ONE AND ONLY Baffins (blue) above inflict Hamworthy’s sole Wessex League this season on the Dorset club. Below - Tom Jeffes, left, wins this header for US Portsmouth
ONE AND ONLY Baffins (blue) above inflict Hamworthy’s sole Wessex League this season on the Dorset club. Below - Tom Jeffes, left, wins this header for US Portsmouth

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