Portsmouth News

Penalty shoot-out specialist­s Rams book top flight return

- Simon Carter simon.carter@nationalwo­rld.com @portsmouth­sport

Petersfiel­d Town won a third high-pressure penalty shootout in just over a month to book a return ticket to the Wessex League top flight.

They defeated New Milton Town 4-2 on spot-kicks in the Division 1 play-off final after a 1-1 draw in the New Forest.

For the second time in five days, young keeper Harry Greenfield made a crucial save as the Rams returned to step 5 football after a five-year absence.

Greenfield had stopped Newport IoW’s ninth penalty last Tuesday as Petersfiel­d won 9-8 on spot-kicks on the island after another 1-1 stalemate.

Petersfiel­d had finished 10 points adrift of Newport after 38 league games, and eight behind New Milton, but it is them who will be playing in the Premier in 2023/24.

In late March, Greenfield was again the hero as the Rams defeated higher tier Fareham Town on penalties to book a Wessex League Cup final place.

All three of those shootouts were away from home, and for joint-manager Joe Lea that spoke volumes about his squad’s character.

‘Yes, penalties are a lottery but we’ve won three in a row and that says a lot about the players’ composure,’ Lea told The News. ‘It’s a high pressure environmen­t, but to win three in a row shows a real togetherne­ss - and we’ve got a keeper who’s good at saving penalties and players willing to step up and take them.’

Alex Barsa latched onto a fine pass from skipper Connor Hoare to put Petersfiel­d into a half-time lead at New Milton.

The visitors missed chances to extend that lead - they had three one on ones - and were hit by what Lea called a ‘sucker punch’ of a home leveller.

Barsa had the honour of converting the Rams’ winning penalty after New Milton’s second spot-kick had hit the bar and their fourth had been saved. Hoare had seen his effort - the Rams’ second - also saved.

Lea insisted the joy of mastermind­ing Petersfiel­d’s return to the Wessex top flight outweighed anything he’d achieved during his playing career.

He admitted it was some kind of vindicatio­n for deciding to call time on his playing career early - he only turned 25 last December - to concentrat­e on coaching and managing. ‘This is a feeling that exceeds anything I experience­d when I was playing,’ he declared. ‘It’s a lot different to being a player, as a manager you feel a lot more responsibi­lity than you do when you’re playing.’

Lea and co-boss Pat Suraci took over Petersfiel­d last summer after the club had finished 12th in Division 1. They only collected an average of a point per game over 36 fixtures in 2021/22. This season, from two more games, they banked 40 more points and finishing seven places higher.

‘We would have exceeded expectatio­ns regardless of whether we’d gone up or not,’ said Lea. ‘Promotion was something we didn’t even talk about last summer. We just wanted to finish in the top half, that was the target, and get the team playing our brand of football.’

Petersfiel­d face Baffins in the Wessex League Cup final at AFC Portcheste­r this Saturday.

 ?? Picture by Robin Caddy ?? Petersfiel­d skipper Connor Hoare is presented with the Wessex League Division 1 play-off final silverware
Picture by Robin Caddy Petersfiel­d skipper Connor Hoare is presented with the Wessex League Division 1 play-off final silverware

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