Well, what a day it turned out to be for the Daggers yesterday. The past few months really have been a rollercoaster as we continue to yo-yo in and out of the bottom two. It was quite pleasant to not wake up for "Football Day" on a hangover for once as me and Chaz made it to the cafe just after 11. After collecting the betting slips, I enjoyed a delightful full English in the Eastbrook cafe accompanied by a budweiser as the drinking began. We then made it into the clubhouse to watch the early game the London derby Chelsea v Spurs. While watching the game, I read through the programme notes with Still's programme notes being the most inspiring for a while. He reiterated a number of times how much the players and the club appreciate the support, it is worth mentioning at this point despite the numbers not being as much as most of the teams in the Football League, the togetherness is and always has been second to none. We then made our way in the ground at quarter to 3 after not the most exciting 0-0 stalemate in the early game made slightly more entertaining by a very vocal Spurs fan who keep making the point Spurs wouldn't be happy with 4th and only wanted 3rd, how quickly expectations rise after a few months of success.
As I made my way to The Traditional Builders Stand which is normally allocated to away fans but had been opened to the Daggers fans today, there was certainly more of a buzz around the place compared to normal. As I predicted the rest of the ground looked a bit sparse however the atmosphere in the TB stand was certainly building up some momentum and creating one of the best atmospheres of the season. Gaffer John Still named an unchanged side to the team that dominated Barnet on Tuesday night with the only change being Dave Hogan returning to the bench after Jon Bond had been recalled by Watford in the week. Stanley made one change to the side that hosted Morecambe in midweek with Craig Lindfield coming in for Padraig Amond up front. Amond instead took his place up on the bench with the only other change being Ryan Hopper replacing Jersey born Kurtis Guthrie on the bench.
The players grace the stage of the Stadio de LBBD |
Both teams continued to exchange blows as half chances were created by the lively Bobby Grant who had a hard volley which Lewy managed to tip over while Elito again menaced the Stanley defence before shooting wide. Akinde did earn the Daggers a free kick in a dangerous position however Mickey Spillane was unable to repeat his spectacular effort at Burton from a dead ball position as he hit the ball high over the bar into the glorious Essex sunshine. Captain Arber focused on how important the first goal was for the Daggers in his programme notes however this time it went to the visitors as the ball fell to Bobby Grant who showed his class curling the ball into the bottom corner giving Lewy no chance. A great time to score for Stanley who in fairness had probably shaded the first half in a very professional performance. The Daggers managed to squeeze a half chance in before the break as Spillane found Doey but his header was no trouble to Nicholls. After a slightly jaded Daggers first half performance I decided to sample the beer in the TB Stand in the downstairs bar.
The Daggers were now attacking Liverpool's answer to the Kop The Traditional Builders Stand as they began the second half. Still had made a change at the break as he withdrew Josh Parker from the action and introduced an integral member of the reem team Billy Bingham. Within minutes of the restart Jon Nurse was brought down by the lively tempered Aristote Nsiala but the infamous controversial Stuart Attwell waved away any claims. Nursey was then also brought off from Still as target man Josh Scott was introduced to the play. The Daggers were looking more motivated and on the front foot however Stanley's starman Grant did give them a break as he unleashed a 25 yard strike straight into Lewy's arms. Still then went into a 4-3-3 formation as he introduced fan favourite Brian Woodall in place of John Akinde who is still trying to find his feet since returning on loan from Crawley.
Unity from the boys. |
This for me was easily the best home game of the season as the Viccy Road faithful finally showed some real togetherness and backed the boys from the off. The win also took us off the bottom and out the bottom two into the dizzy heights of 21st position. A real good weekend for the Daggers as no other team in the bottom 8 managed to pick up a victory with relegation rivals Macclesfield and Barnet and Northampton and Plymouth both playing out stalemates against each other respectively while Hereford were defeated at home to Crewe and Burton were battered away at Wimbledon. The only other strugglers Bradford managed to revive a point at home to Gillingham after being 2-0 down. There is still a long way to go with 7 games left to play however it is back in our own hands as we sit 2 points above the relegation zone.
Chap of the Game: Mathieu Baudry
This week I am giving my chap of the game to Baudry who is easily one of the best defenders I have seen put on the Daggers shirt. He is composed and reads the game extremely well for a player of his age and level. Another solid performance yesterday where he made several last ditch attempts and if it wasn't for his performance, we certainly wouldn't have had the opportunity to nick it at the death. The maturity of the lad is something we have definitely lacked and is a great loan signing from Still.
There were a number of positives to take away from yesterday's encounter. The second half performance surely must have won over a lot of Still's doubters this year as his half time team talk and substitutions clearly made a telling effect and reinstalled that he is still the best man for the job. A real spirit was shown in the team to come back from a goal down and keep going right til the very end where we were rewarded. A personal highlight for me was the togetherness in the club as I enjoyed a post match pint, I reflected on why this club means so much to me. When I started watching this club, it was one of the things that made me fall in love, we don't have the thousands and thousands of supporters that the clubs around us do but we have something much more valuable which is a spirit and togetherness. I urge everyone to get to as many games as you can between now and the end of the season as together we will keep this club in the Football League. Stay Positive. Keep The Faith. We Are Dagenham.
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