Wednesday 4 June 2014

A Season to Remember



The 2013/14 season will go down as one to remember for Bromley fans and although it ended up being a tale of what might have been there was so much to enjoy on the way.
Mark Goldberg rang the changes to the squad during the close season bringing a number of new faces and almost completely rebuilding the team. The side took on a more rugged look with Rob Swaine & Jay May joining from Billericay, Joe Anderson and Dean Poolley at full backs and Ashley Nicholls from Dorchester in midfield. Plus some exciting young talent joined in winger Brandan Kiernan, Irish U19 International midfielder Steve Smith and striker Samir Mullings from Southend. By the end of an interesting pre-season managers son Bradley Goldberg re-joined to partner Jay May up front.
The league season kicked off with three impressive wins 2-0 at Hayes & Yeading, plus 4-0 & 5-1 victories over Whitehawk at Tonbridge at home. On the August Bank Holiday we lost our first game 1-0 at Rob Stringer’s solid Bishop Stortford. A win at home to Gosport kept us up in contention on the last day of the month. 
With Joe Welch injured all pre-season Lewis Carey came in as Keeper from Bournemouth and deputised brilliantly up until September when Joe got the nod to start and Lewis departed for Tonbridge Angels. Popular midfielder Mike Jones also went on his way to Canvey Island as the squad was trimmed down to meet the budget restrictions.      
With the club celebrating 75years at Hayes Lane in September the club launched a special home shirt which was widely appreciated by the fans although it didn’t do players carrying a few extra pounds any favours! After a narrow 2-1 defeat at Eastleigh we bounced back with four consecutive wins which kept us top of the table, but October would prove to be a much tougher month. Taylor Parmenter came in to provide cover in defence after being released by QPR and winger Ben Swallow also joined.
A last minute set piece saw us drop two points at Boreham Wood before we ducked out of the FA Cup and then lost 1-0 at Sutton amid rumours of budget cuts and with half a dozen players out injured. Fortunately a Jay May goal saw us pick up a win at Maidenhead on the last Saturday of the month. After Keith Bird & Mickey Paye left their roles as Reserve managers to take over at Cray Wanderers Steve Smith, Warren McBean & Shamir Mullings departed on dual registration The Wands in October along with most of the reserve squad, none of them were to come back. 
The run into Christmas was broken up by blank Saturdays with other teams still involved in either the Trophy or FA Cup, but when Bromley did get to play the results continued to be positive going the whole of December unbeaten including wins at Dover, Basingstoke and Weston Super Mare. A bumper crowd of 1,344 at Hayes Lane saw us draw 0-0 with Ebbsfleet on Boxing Day before two more away wins followed 2-1 at Whitehawk and 3-1 at The Fleet on New Years Day.
Albert Jarrett finally returned from a serious knee injury. Briefly in December Ryan Hall also came back to Bromley following his release by Leeds before heading off to MK Dons in January, while Swallow departed for Dartford.   
The New Year began with heavy rainfall all over the south and key games were lost to the weather which would later take their toll. After 14days off a lethargic performance at home to Concord Rangers saw us lose for the first time at HL 2-1 and after not playing for another fortnight we travelled down to relegation threatened Dorchester and lost 3-2 on a very heavy pitch with one or two  players looking well off the pace.           
The cups took a back seat in the campaign with an early exit from both FA competitions not helping the budget but helping the schedule, we withdrew from the London Senior Cup at the Quarter Final stage after being drawn away at AFC Wimbledon, who had delayed their previous game with Cray by three months before demanding this tie be played in a week, and then Mark fielded a reserve team at Dover in the Semi Final of the Kent missing out on a final at Gillingham to end the season on Mayday.     
With only two games possible in February, the fixtures began to stack up for March and April and just as the busy spell began the injuries hit the squad. After very few problems all season three of the back four and all of the available centre backs at the club were ruled out due to injury and suspension. With Rob Swaine suspended & injured, Jack Holland crocked on England C duty and Taylor Parmenter with cracked ribs, Devante McKain from Gillingham and Max Fitzgerald from Walton Casuals were brought in on dual registration to cover. Sadly they were ‘thrown to the lions’ on debuts against Sutton & Dover at home and we were crushed on both occasions. Centre back Adam Bailey-Dennis came in from Bury Town and winger Louis Dennis came in from Dagenham, but by the time they had been brought in the positive momentum had gone and the lead had disappeared with Eastleigh top.         
By the time they were all back fit the eleven point lead had disappeared in a terrible run of form and despite running Eastleigh close at home for the whole game the 2-1 defeat in front of over 1,000 on a Tuesday night pretty much sealed our fate. Although there were flashes of the previous good form late in the season with wins over Weston, Bishops Stortford at Gosport the team had never regained it’s momentum on belief ahead of the play offs.

Finishing third we travelled to fourth placed Ebbsfleet for the first leg of the play off semi final, but within eight minutes of the kick off the tie was over as we trailed 2-0 and were down to ten men. Eventually despite the players best efforts to recover from the terrible start we got caught pushing forward rather than consolidation and lost 4-0. The second leg although a mere formality at least allowed all involved with Bromley to restore some pride with a Danny Waldren goal giving us a 1-0 win and ending a memorable campaign with a home victory and our first clean sheet since 1 January.             
In the end a number of factors conspired to derail the title bid; the weather causing several postponement when the team was playing well, injuries to key defenders, budget constraints and other better funded sides hitting form at the right time saw us slip from first to third in a few weeks. When other sides who already had their grounds up to Conference Premier standard were adding players to their squads we were spending thousands on installing seating to meet the criteria. Only time will tell if this is a missed opportunity or the start of an era where we compete at the top end of the table, but it’s certainly better than facing the drop as we did in the previous two campaigns. 

Col.

No comments:

Post a Comment