The S24 Preview: Southend United v Carlisle United

Last updated : 20 March 2010 By exiledessexboy
v http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Carl_Badge.png

SHRIMPERS


This is it then lads, somehow we have to repeat last week's defensive shut out while hoping somebody can put the round white thing in back of the net, all while Carlisle's players are dreaming of Wembley glories. Easy.

We've played well, and lost, and rubbish, and got a draw, against Wycombe, Tranmere and Exeter for gawds sake, I'll take somewhere in-between, a last minute own goal, and three points thanks very much!

If we don't, a win that is I don't mind how we score, then even a win against Walsall may be too late, I don't fancy needing a win at St. Mary's on the last day though the game could be well up before then.

As a supporter of 43 seasons this has been up there with the shittest and it's not over yet with another high court appearance still to come, and whatever Mr. Martin tells us at his Q&A, and probably very little, you can't help but feel that possible relegation will not be the end the end of the heartache.

Still, you've got to try and remain positive, for the players sake if no one else, so I'll bring back Macca from his one match suspension to hopefully give some drive in midfield and let Granty take a rest on the bench, he didn't look fit last week.

I'll keep Laurent in for no other reason than he might do something, and surprise is one thing Ron doesn't have to cough up for.

I'm told that that certain players believe the odd team-mate has let them down, as well as the Shrimper faithful, on occasions this season. (Macca's brainless sending off at Hartlepool is a fair example.)

Well lads, whoever Tilly sends out, this is it.

It's been tough for everyone this time around but let's give it our all and try and make the last ten games something worth turning up for.

COME ON YOU BLUES!!!!!

Possible Southend United:
Mildenhall, Francis, Baldwin, Barrett, Malone, McCormack, Moussa, Laurent, Vernon, Paterson, Scannell.

Subs: Bentley, Sankofa, Herd, M'Voto, Grant, Spencer, Crawford.

OPPOSITION

Peter Murphy is set to start at centre-half as Danny Livesey is receiving treatment for a hamstring injury.

Midfielder Tom Taiwo is available again after completing a one-match suspension for a double yellow in the 2-1 win over ColU.

Striker Scott Dobie (groin) and winger Ben Marshall (calf) will both travel to Roots Hall with an outside chance of starting, though Dobie has been involved in training again this week.

However, midfielder Kevan Hurst (knee) and strikers Duffy (groin) and Joe Anyinsah (groin) are definitely out.

Cumbrian boss Greg Abbott will have to decide to stick with skipper Paul Thirlwell in midfield and new loan signing, powerful forward and old Dioncaster nemisis, Jason Price, who made his debut last week.

That also leaves Marc Bridge-Wilkinson, who came on a sub in the win against Yeovil last time out and played on the right hand side of midfield.

While this is their last game before next Sunday's JPT final against Southampton, a win will see them reach the accepted safe figure from relegation of 50 points.

10Southampton (-10)3510433615585252115128613647+25
11Carlisle United 3793728213872131121114495247-3
12Yeovil Town 37864311935111530111115464944-3
13Walsall 3558526226381725111113434744-4

Last time out - Carlisle United 1 Yeovil Town 0 (played on Tuesday, March 16th, 2010.)

The obvious but pointless question now is whether Carlisle United are counting the physical cost of their forays on so many fronts this season. The Blues have been recast in 2009/10 as an entertaining cup team but bodies are going over like dominoes before Wembley's giant arch has even been glimpsed.

Anyone who presumed David Beckham had the monopoly on cup-related heartbreak should park themselves in Danny Livesey's head if it turns out the hamstring injury that sidelined the centre-half last night has ripped away his chance of defending United's cause in the Johnstone's Paint Trophy final.

Misfortune spares no footballer. If it did, the fates would swerve Livesey, as honest and clear-headed a professional as walks the earth. Time now, perhaps, to get Uri Geller and The Sun newspaper on board to try to soothe the former Bolton man's injury in double-quick time. Otherwise, his slow-motion trudge around the perimeter of Brunton Park's pitch last night will be remembered as the most poignant walk of the season.

Planning permission may now be sought for an extension to Neil Dalton's treatment room, since Livesey will be jostling for space with a cluster of other injured combatants. Joe Anyinsah, Kevan Hurst, Scott Dobie, Darryl Duffy, Lenny Pidgeley and David Raven remain unavailable for selection, while Ben Marshall will also check into that cramped corner of United's ground today after going off with a bash to his calf last night.

The theory that a draining fixture list is to blame for all these strains and wounds isn't entirely flawless, since Raven's was a long-standing problem, Pidgeley's was a broken bone and Duffy and Marshall have only been with the Blues since January. But as Livesey pulled up unchallenged in the 70th minute last night it was still reasonable to ask whether the demands of an extended campaign - this was Carlisle's 50th game since it all began last August - had finally taken their toll on one of their regular and most durable performers.

The degree of pointlessness that comes with these thoughts is there because no club will turn its nose up to a selection of lucrative frolics in cup competitions, whether or not its squad is as modestly-sized as United's. Ducking out of a possible £500,000 surge to Wembley in the JPT was a non-starter for the Cumbrians this season, given their financial position. The regrettable clause in that deal was that not every man could be guaranteed to be left standing when the big day came around.

Carlisle's rise to an uncommon feeling of comfort at this point of the season - it is a good 20 years or so since the Blues batted out a campaign's final overs from mid-table - has not, it turns out, drained the season's finale of drama. Instead of sweating over the team's fate, we now turn our minds to the personal sagas of their hurt legions. To classify any muscle strain as a deep trauma would be crude when the Football League's current charity of choice is Help For Heroes. But it still matters, still hurts, when a professional is deprived of the rare chance to play at the game's most glittering arena.

That opportunity will not, at least, be denied Adam Clayton, presuming the midfielder negotiates Saturday's trip to Southend unscathed. The Manchester City loanee summoned the one moment of stellar quality last night to bank United's second successive win against higher-ranked opponents, and elevate the Blues to 11th in League One.

A game which always looked likely to swing on a single strike was duly settled in the 66th minute, when a cleared corner from the substitute, Marc Bridge-Wilkinson, found its way to Clayton on the fringes of Yeovil's penalty area. The 21-year-old's chested control and firm, measured volley was a triumph of technique and allowed Clayton to intrude on Carlisle's goal-of-the-season squabble.

United traded places with the Glovers - and took a substantial stride towards third division safety - not because of the attractiveness of their football but because they showed sufficient willing and spirit to keep pushing at their visitors until the decisive chance came. That Adam Collin was scarcely extended also tells you how comfortably Abbott's men contained the limited threats of Terry Skiverton's well-organised collective.

A first half short of obvious openings began with the first of several telling aerial challenges from Jason Price, whose presence forced a corner which Graham Kavanagh duly bent onto the Millwall loanee's head. Price couldn't divert the chance on target and the game then descended into an earnest but often grinding contest.

A rare foray by Dean Bowditch - Yeovil's likeliest provider - led to a smart stop from Collin in the 13th minute, but Carlisle generally took territorial control.

Paul Thirlwell, back in the side for the suspended Tom Taiwo, took unsuccessful aim after Kavanagh and Richard Keogh had made ground down the right.

Kavanagh then failed by a whisker to put Marshall in on the right, and moments later Marshall skinned Smith and served Price with a tricky headed chance which the afro-haired line-leader couldn't keep down.

Marshall's next duel with Smith - after Kavanagh had belted a volley just wide - came to the 18-year-old's cost, as a firmly-contested 50-50 challenge left the winger with a sore calf and led to his half-time withdrawal, as Bridge-Wilkinson trotted on.

Yeovil's policy of caution, interrupted by occasional breaks around the attacking fulcrum of Sam Williams, kept much of the action in their half after the break and led to another surge from Kavanagh, who followed positive work from Thirlwell and Matty Robson by pinging a deflected shot fractionally over the bar.

The player-coach then gave way for Gary Madine, whose substitute appearance was his first since his arrest for alleged assault last month and who was greeted with a handful of boos from the home support, as other fans tried to shout down the jeering few.

While Brunton Park gets its emotions in order on the subject of the young striker, Abbott has clearly decided that Madine can serve a professional purpose - at least until he answers bail on April 11 - and in the context of this game his impact was noticeable.

With his first act, Madine pressed down the right and won a corner.

He was then beaten to Bridge-Wilkinson's delivery by Alex McCarthy, but Clayton was quickly onto the clearance and returned his first league goal past the Yeovil keeper with great style.

We then witnessed Livesey's long goodbye and a late surge of Yeovil pressure - a tame shot from Williams, a near miss from Shaun MacDonald, an off-target header from Craig Alcock and a hash of an injury-time volley from Steven Caulker - before the cost of United's heartening victory could be assessed.

Carlisle's advance towards a stress-free conclusion to their league season, if that is indeed where they are headed, should not pass without favourable comment.

Praise can certainly flow Abbott's way if he can keep his troops on their current promising path.

The immediate hope is that the 50-point tape can be breasted at Roots Hall in three days' time without any further sprains or strains.

Cumbrian boss Gregg Abbott told www.newsandstar.co.uk: "We have to hope it is not as bad as it looked when Danny (Livesey) hobbled off there. But he never looks the most pleasing on the eye at the best of times."

Top marks for attempting to lighten the mood on a night which, ideally, should have felt more festive. But just watch those spirits plummet if Wembley's door now shuts in Livesey's face.

ADAM COLLIN - The goalkeeper did what little he had to do with sufficient skill and confidence.

RICHARD KEOGH - Mixed fortunes from his attacking runs but was reliable in defence.

EVAN HORWOOD - Alert and responsible at the back and always keen to help Robson attack down the left.

DANNY LIVESEY - Faultless in his defensive work but hamstring injury means he is sweating over his Wembley place.

IAN HARTE - Used the ball well and did enough to keep Yeovil's limited attackers at bay.

PAUL THIRLWELL - Did the unflashy midfield work as Clayton and Kavanagh attacked, and rarely wasted possession.

ADAM CLAYTON - Tried all game long to inspire Blues and finally cracked it with a peach of a goal.

GRAHAM KAVANAGH - Set-pieces caused plenty of problems and went close to scoring before making way for Madine.

MATTY ROBSON - Not his most sparkling display but put in a tireless shift and stretched Yeovil after the break.

BEN MARSHALL - Grew into the game and looked positive until calf injury cut short his night.

JASON PRICE - Height and presence caused problems for the Yeovil rearguard all game long.

Coca-Cola League One, Tuesday, 16th March 2010 @ 19:45; Brunton Park
Click for Carlisle United squad list
Clayton 66
Click for Yeovil Town squad list
Starting Line-ups
1Collin 7
3Horwood 7
5Livesey (Murphy 73)7
14Harte 7
21Keogh 7
8Kavanagh (Madine 65)6
10Robson 6
11Thirlwell 7
25Clayton 8
16Marshall (Bridge-Wilkinson 46)6
31Price 7
Substitutes
4Bridge-Wilkinson (Marshall 46)6
6Murphy (Livesey 73)
17Offiong
19Aldred
23Kane
28Madine (Kavanagh 65)6
39Gillespie
6Goal Attempts7
2On Target3
4Off Target4
0Hit Woodwork0
2Offsides4
5Corners5
10Fouls8
Starting Line-ups
1McCarthy 6
2Alcock 7
5Caulker 7
6Forbes 8
16Murray (Welsh 56)7
25MacDonald 7
27Davies, S 7
28Smith 7
9Williams, S 6
10Tomlin (Davies, A 68)6
14Bowditch 6
Substitutes
7Davies, A (Tomlin 68)6
8Murtagh
11Welsh (Murray 56)6
15Martin
17Downes
23Hutchins
Referee
A Bates, Staffordshire
Attendance
3731
Carlisle Utd. Cards
(none)
Yeovil Town Cards
Forbes47unsporting behaviour

(Report supplied by www.newsandstar.co.uk and player ratings from www.carlisleunited-mad.co.uk)

PREVIOUSLY

At Southend Utd. (16)At Carlisle Utd. (16)
ResultsTotal%ResultsTotal%
Southend Utd.743.75Carlisle Utd.1062.50
Carlisle Utd.425.00Southend Utd.318.75
Draws531.25Draws318.75
GoalsTotalAv.pgGoalsTotalAv.pg
Southend Utd.201.25Carlisle Utd.342.13
Carlisle Utd.140.88Southend Utd.150.94
On Neutral Ground (0)Overall (32 matches)
ResultsTotal%ResultsTotal%
Southend Utd.00.00Southend Utd.1031.25
Carlisle Utd.00.00Carlisle Utd.1443.75
Draws00.00Draws825.00
GoalsTotalAv.pgGoalsTotalAv.pg
Southend Utd.00.00Southend Utd.351.09
Carlisle Utd.00.00Carlisle Utd.481.50
Records
Highest Aggregate7Carlisle Utd. 4 - 3Southend Utd.1964/1965
Highest Southend Utd. score:3Southend Utd. 3 - 0Carlisle Utd.2008/2009
Highest Carlisle Utd. score:5Carlisle Utd. 5 - 0Southend Utd.1997/1998
SeasonDateHomeScoreAwayCompetition
2009/2010Sat 24 OctCarlisle Utd.2 - 1Southend Utd.League One
2008/2009Sat 21 MarSouthend Utd.3 - 0Carlisle Utd.League One
Sat 06 SepCarlisle Utd.2 - 1Southend Utd.League One
2007/2008Sat 19 AprCarlisle Utd.1 - 2Southend Utd.League One
Sat 27 OctSouthend Utd.0 - 1Carlisle Utd.League One
2003/2004Sat 27 MarCarlisle Utd.1 - 2Southend Utd.League Division Three
Sat 20 SepSouthend Utd.2 - 2Carlisle Utd.League Division Three
2002/2003Sat 04 JanCarlisle Utd.1 - 0Southend Utd.League Division Three
Tue 13 AugSouthend Utd.0 - 1Carlisle Utd.League Division Three
2001/2002Tue 05 MarCarlisle Utd.0 - 0Southend Utd.League Division Three
Tue 25 SepSouthend Utd.3 - 2Carlisle Utd.League Division Three
2000/2001Sat 28 AprSouthend Utd.1 - 1Carlisle Utd.League Division Three
Sat 11 NovCarlisle Utd.3 - 1Southend Utd.League Division Three
1999/2000Mon 24 AprSouthend Utd.2 - 0Carlisle Utd.League Division Three
Sat 02 OctCarlisle Utd.1 - 1Southend Utd.League Division Three
1998/1999Sat 23 JanSouthend Utd.0 - 1Carlisle Utd.League Division Three
Tue 01 SepCarlisle Utd.3 - 0Southend Utd.League Division Three
1997/1998Sat 10 JanCarlisle Utd.5 - 0Southend Utd.League Division Two
Sat 09 AugSouthend Utd.1 - 1Carlisle Utd.League Division Two
1989/1990Sat 03 MarSouthend Utd.2 - 0Carlisle Utd.Fourth Division
Sat 06 JanCarlisle Utd.3 - 0Southend Utd.Fourth Division
1981/1982Sat 06 FebSouthend Utd.1 - 1Carlisle Utd.Third Division
Sat 12 SepCarlisle Utd.3 - 2Southend Utd.Third Division
1979/1980Sat 03 NovCarlisle Utd.4 - 0Southend Utd.Third Division
Sat 18 AugSouthend Utd.1 - 0Carlisle Utd.Third Division
1978/1979Mon 12 MarSouthend Utd.1 - 1Carlisle Utd.Third Division
Sat 23 SepCarlisle Utd.0 - 0Southend Utd.Third Division
1970/1971Mon 11 JanSouthend Utd.0 - 3Carlisle Utd.F.A. Cup
1964/1965Fri 02 AprCarlisle Utd.4 - 3Southend Utd.Third Division
Sat 21 NovSouthend Utd.1 - 0Carlisle Utd.Third Division
1962/1963Sat 30 MarCarlisle Utd.1 - 2Southend Utd.Third Division
Sat 10 NovSouthend Utd.2 - 0Carlisle Utd.Third Division

REF

The man in the middle is Andy Woolmer from Northamptonshire.

He gives an interview here: www.refworld.com/referee/162/1/andy-woolmer

FIXTURES

Friday, March 19th:
Tranmere v Hartlepool, 19:45.

Saturday, March 20th; (all kick-offs 15.00): Charlton v Gillingham, Leyton Orient v Huddersfield, MK Dons v Southampton, Oldham v Brighton, Southend v Carlisle, Stockport v Brentford, Swindon v Norwich, Wlsall v Colchester, Wycombe v Exeter, Yeovil v Bristol Rovers.

Monday, March 22nd:
Leeds United v Millwall, 19:45

Tuesday, March 23rd;
(all kick-offs 19.45): Colchester v Brentford, Southampton v Hartlepool, Southend v Walsall.

BET

Southend (win) - 8/5, Draw - 12/5, Carlisle (win) - 7/4.
For all the footy odds go here: www.oddschecker.com/football/english/league-one

HISTORY

The club was formed on 17 May 1904 at Shaddongate United's Annual General Meeting when the club's members voted to change the club's name to Carlisle United. The newly formed club initially played at Milhome Bank and later at Devonshire Park, finally settling at their current home Brunton Park situated on Warwick Road.

There is a myth that still persists to this day that the club was formed from the amalgamation of Shaddongate United and Carlisle Red Rose. Carlisle United actually defeated Carlisle Red Rose 3-0 in the 1905/06 FA Cup.

During the 2008-09 season there was action off the field, as, on 3 July, a consortium of local businessmen, led by director and accountant David Allen completed a takeover of the club from Fred Story. Carlisle's start to the season was one of their best, maintaining an unbeaten run in the league throughout August.

However, this was followed by one of the poorest runs in form of recent Carlisle United history - with only one win since August, and a 6-game losing streak, ended by a draw at home against Peterborough United F.C.

On 3 November 2009, Carlisle announced that they had parted with John Ward "by mutual consent", and Greg Abbott became the caretaker manager of the club.

On 5 December 2009, Greg Abbott was announced as the permanent manager of Carlisle, after his performance in his 6 game stint and low wage demand had impressed the board enough to appoint him, and he's now signed a one-year extention to that contract tying him to the club until 2011.

Carlisle secured their place in League One after beating Millwall 2-0 on May 2 and Northampton Town were relegated to League Two.

If you want a more comprehensive history of the club, go here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carlisle_United_F.C.