Halifax Courier

Sensationa­l Shaymen are just too good for Woking

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FC Halifax Town battled to a superb 1-0 win at Woking to move into the top ten in the National League table.

Rob Harker’s first-half goal was protected by a spirited, fighting Halifax performanc­e, with The Shaymen resilient and resolute throughout.

After Saturday’s goalless draw at Dagenham and Redbridge, this represents another big step in the right direction for Town on the road to Wembley.

The Shaymen gave it their all, put bodies on the line and were rewarded with one of the best results of their season. While they move into the top ten, Woking missed the chance to move up into third.

If either side looked promotion contenders, it was Halifax.

James Daly had a low shot flash across goal after just two minutes.

But rather than being a signal of intent, it was wholly out of place in a timid, tame start to the contest.

Halifax edged ahead when Harker notched his third in four games from close range when Will Jaaskelain­en failed to keep hold of Tylor Golden's left-footed shot from 20 yards.

It was too slow and ponderous from the home side. Halifax had them where they wanted them and were finding it too easy to keep it that way. The Shaymen were excellent off the ball - bright, alert and alive to danger.

Golden and Capello were superb on the flanks, sharp and dynamic, while Harvey Gilmour - one of two changes as well as Milli Alli - again excelled in the Town midfield, gliding over the surface, showing good awareness, reading the game and using the ball well.

Woking finally stirred a few minutes before halftime, with Sam Johnson finally called into action from a low shot by Jim Kellerman.

Rhys Browne was starting to cause problems, producing a fierce shot on the turn at an angle that Johnson reacted well to parry behind.

Woking played with more vibrancy and tempo after half-time, but Town had a sniff of a second a few minutes after the interval when Harker, epitomisin­g a hardworkin­g display, regained possession on halfway and starting an attack that ended with Capello firing into the side-netting.

Woking were still too ragged on the ball, still too easily picked off by a Halifax side showing no signs of taking their foot off the gas before Wembley, throwing themselves in front of shots, tracking back and closing down.

Substitute Marcus Dackers improved Woking's attacking output but the home side were yet to really build up enough sustained pressure.

Certainly not enough to break Halifax's resistance.

Was this really the same team that surrendere­d so meekly to Woking back in October? They were unrecognis­able. They were almost pegged back when Padraig Amond headed a corner off the post with 15 minutes to go.

Johnson then palmed away Joe McNerney's bullet header as Woking cranked up the pressure.

It was attack versus defence, but Woking's attack just wasn't good enough and Town's defence was too good, even when substitute Mani Dieseruvwe was shown a straight red card for catching McNerney with his arm in an aerial challenge.

 ?? ?? Town keeper Sam Johnson deals with a high ball during the superb win at Woking.
Town keeper Sam Johnson deals with a high ball during the superb win at Woking.
 ?? ?? Harvey Gilmour challenges for the ball.
Harvey Gilmour challenges for the ball.
 ?? ?? Town’s resolute defence proved too strong for Woking.
Town’s resolute defence proved too strong for Woking.

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