FA Cup Weekend - Let the dogs have their day!
Forget
what Sky Sports will try and tell you as this coming weekend is the greatest
football weekend of the year. The big clubs may not care about the FA Cup until
the quarter finals but for many smaller clubs entering the First Round proper this
will be the pinnacle of their achievements. The magic of the cup lives on for
these teams and even after last nights win for Salford there will be further
shocks, I can guarantee you of that!
The week
leading up to the First Round is always filled with trepidation for the ‘big’
clubs and the build up has started badly for all the favoured teams. Each and
every morning this week when the larger teams have drawn back their curtains
they have been greeted by the sight of rain. Weather has such a big influence
in these sorts of games as the greater hunger and desire is usually shown by
the underdog. Fair weather and good pitch conditions helps retain the gap in
technical ability but bad weather, like we have experienced of late, makes this
First Round more of a lottery than the favoured clubs would like.It’s hard to pinpoint exactly what factors you prioritise as important when trying to pick your way through the minefield that is betting the FA Cup. That is in general let alone the hardest round of all which is this one, the First Round proper. There are probably three major factors I look for when attempting to locate a Cup upset and each of my selected games has at least one element, if not more, of those. They are:
1 – A
manager or management team who the players really want to play for but desperately need a win
2 – The
League team playing away from home who tend to be involved in low scoring
nervous games
3 – A
professional team with a poor recent away record on their travels at an up and coming non league club Borough boss Teddy Sheringham has this week publicly stated that if he had started his managerial reign at a Premiership club with the same results as he has at Stevenage then he would have been sacked. That might be true as last week they were humiliated 5-1 on home soil by promotion chasing Oxford. Sheringham is a likeable character and from what I can gather his players enjoy working with him. Maybe those words to the media was a calculated ploy from Sheringham to get his team up for this FA Cup tie. Stevenage have scored in five straight games though and they host a Gillingham side who although lying third in Division One are just 3-2-3 on their travels this season. The home team have conceded in twelve straight games but the Gills defence is similarly porous as they have kept just one clean sheet in the last ten games. Stevenage seem to have too good of a squad to become embroiled in a relegation battle and are already twelve points off of the Play Off spots. Even this early in the season this looks as though it could be Stevenage’s last chance for some form of success this season and are Gillingham content to concentrate on promotion to the Championship? Get your brylcreem out ready to back Teddy’s Boys!
Many of you subscribers to my Stats Pack may be surprised that I am going against Wycombe in this game as I am high on them and their boss Gareth Ainsworth. The away team are a strong side on the road as they are set up and have conceded just three goals in seven away games this season. What a stupid selection then this is I hear you cry! Well these are the sorts of games where I see that kind of tactical set up to actually work against the league club. These are the games that the league club has to start fast, strong and physical so they take charge of the tie before the smaller club are able to gain a foothold. FA Cup First Round games are rarely won by tactics alone so as crazy as it seems the measured approach from Wanderers may work against them. Anyway have you ever been to the Shay (New or Old) on a wet and windy Sunday afternoon? It is character and heart that often wins the day over the pieces carefully arranged on the tactics board.
Away day
journeys bring back memories for both players and supporters alike. If those
memories are haunting then it often becomes a psychological problem for a team
rather than an ability issue. This is what Yeovil face here as they have won
just two of their last twenty one competitive matches on the road. Maidstone
have an indifferent record at home so far this season as despite lying third in
the Conference South they are just 4-0-3 at home. However, they have drawn just
one of fourteen games and I am sure they would see any possible replay as a
distraction, to their primary goal of promotion come next May. Yeovil have kept
just two clean sheets all season and with the pressure on them here to deliver
I can see them faltering even further in an already disappointing campaign.
Speak
tomorrow with another #GoalRush Sunday and my NFL column.
Jimmy
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