The Non-League Football Paper

VASE CLASSIC – THAT’S A DEAL!

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WELL, the last three weeks have provided great excitement, and a duffer of a game. Let’s start with the FA Vase – one of my favourite competitio­ns.

Who can forget Farnboroug­h Town beating Billericay Town 2-0 in the first leg of the semi-final (the Billericay fans didn’t turn up until half-time as their coach drivers had taken them to Farnboroug­h in Kent), in April 1976.

The whole town cancelled everything for the day of the final, on the back of it. People changed wedding plans and even moved holidays.

Billericay won the second leg 6-0 in a freak spring snow storm and Farnboroug­h’s Wembley dream was over. The closest my club ever got to Wembley, and it doesn’t look like it will happen again for while.

Having watched Binfield dispatch AFC Uckfield Town, I decided to follow them in the fourth round too, this time at Deal Town.

I caught the train down to Deal, which sits on the English Channel with a strong wind blowing in off the sea.

There is a black double decker bus behind one of the goals, with Deal Town on the destinatio­n board. On the wall of the changing room there is a sign which reads “Deal

Town, the only side to win the FA Vase from Kent, 2000”.

A lot of the 111 spectators took advantage of the pitchside clubhouse bar to watch the game. The first half saw Binfield attacking more, and they would rue the chances that weren’t taken.

Bad boy

Armed with a nice pint and a chip butty, I ventured out for the second half. Tackles were flying in, not least from Binfield’s Tom Melledew who collected a second yellow, so he was off.

Macauley Murray looked to have capitalise­d by putting Deal in front from the penalty spot after Calam Gallimore was brought down but Binfield threw caution to the wind and were rewarded in the 84th minute with a goal from Josh Helmore.

An exhausting extra-time period still couldn’t seperate them so I travelled back to Binfield for the midweek replay, only to see the most amazing game of football I’ve seen for a long time!

The weather couldn’t have been more different. The game was played out under a pale blue sky, without a breath of wind and it led to a much better game of football. There were quite a few who had travelled up from Deal in the crowd of 346.

Marathon

Asa Povey scored early to put Binfield a goal up but, ten minutes before half-time, Jack Paxman crossed for Ben Chapman to level.

Binfield then scored early in the second half through George Short and had two good chances to seal the tie before Deal equalised again through Chapman.

So, extra-time was called for again and with ten minutes to go, Deal took the lead for the first time on the day. Paxman scored a goal that reflected his involvemen­t with every one of their attacks.

It looked like it was all over, but no, a few minutes later, in a goalmouth melee, Liam Gavin poked the ball home. On to penalties.

After five penalties they were level at 3-3 and into sudden death. Unfortunat­ely, it wasn’t that sudden – in the end there were 22 penalties with every player taking one before Josh Helmore, hero of the first game, blasted his second spot-kick over the bar and into the clubhouse wall.

The only Deal player who hadn’t taken one was Jamie Tonkin, the keeper. Grace, the Binfield shotstoppe­r, had already scored and looked confident but Tonkin slotted the ball past home for the celebratio­ns to begin.

Last weekend, I had a Burns Night gig in Bath, to stop off and watch Chippenham Town v Havant & Waterloovi­lle.

Fourth versus second bottom. I wish I hadn’t. I loved the BlueBirds Bar, with its compliment­ary crisps. I also had a pickled egg.

I liked it that they held a minute’s silence for the actor Dereck Fowldes, who had been a lifelong fan. I also liked an errant free-kick knocking a cup of tea out of the hand of a fan. But the game was pants!

 ??  ?? SPOT ON: Deal keeper Jamie Tonkin scores the winning pen
SPOT ON: Deal keeper Jamie Tonkin scores the winning pen
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