TLG Stat-Pack – The Shrimpers vs. The Iron

Last updated : 19 October 2004 By Robert Craven

None of the three goalscorers from last season remain, though Drewe Broughton is only on loan at Rushden
The last meeting between the sides was a dramatic Friday night encounter, the likes of which Blues resurrected against Boston United less than a fortnight ago. Leon Constantine secured a double, Drewe Broughton scored his first (and so far, only) League goal at Roots Hall and Leon Cort bagged his opener for 2003/4 after grabbing seven the season before, but still the Seasiders had to wait until four minutes from time, and Constantine’s second to make sure of the win.


The last trip to Glanford Park was one to saviour - a point being enough to send the travelling band of Shrimpers home delighted. For that was the first time that Southend had come home from any away match with an ounce of reward, having suffered a club record thirteen straight defeats on the road since defeating Shrewsbury Town 1-0 in January 2003. Leon Constantine scored a second half equaliser to cancel out Steve MacLean’s early opener – Leon Cort also found the back of the net but had it disallowed for very little reason.


The previous trip to Glanford Park, though, was not such a happy occasion. Indeed, it was where that away run started all the way back in January as Martin Carruthers found himself amongst the scorers in a 4-1 demolition of the Shrimpers – despite the visitors actually playing some nice football at times. Blues fell asleep four times, and were punished on four occasions. It was Daniel Gay’s last game for the club.


The Shrimpers last win – before April - against Scunny was in March 2002, when Leon Cort (again) and unlikely forward Rob Newman were on the scoresheet within 25 minutes of the start. Player-manager Newman hit the back of the net with a sublime volley, playing alongside the later discarded Barrington Belgrave. Southend have won two and lost two of the five games since dropping to Division Three at home.


Overall, the home record is pretty good, although at Glanford Park it is a different story – Blues are almost as likely to win at Carlisle as they are on Humberside. Scunthorpe have managed eleven wins to Southend’s paltry, with seven draws comprising the twenty meetings to date in Essex. There have, as yet, been no cup games between the two clubs. Interestingly though, Blues biggest win against the Iron came at the Old Showground, in 1883/4, by six goals to one; these matches often end up with one side rampant.


Last Meeting


Southend United

4-2
(Attendance: 4,976)

Scunthorpe United

Leon Constantine 26, 86

Drewe Broughton 28

Leon Cort 40

Nationwide League Division Three @ Roots Hall on Friday 2nd April 2004

Matthew Sparrow 30
Steve Torpey 49

Darryl Flahavan

Duncan Jupp

Nicky Nicolau

Leon Cort

Mark Warren

Kevin Maher

Mark Bentley

Mark Gower

Carl Pettefer

Leon Constantine
Drewe Broughton

6

6

6

7

7

7

6(67)

7

8

8

6(76)

Tom Evans

Cliff Byrne

Lee Ridley

Andy Butler --

Paul Groves

Matthew Sparrow

Terry Barwick

Cleveland Taylor --

Lee Featherstone

Steven MacLean

Steve Torpey --

5

6

5

6

6

7

7

7

6(78)

7

6

Carl Emberson

Jamie Stuart

Tesfaye Bramble

Neil Jenkins

Lewis Hunt

-

-

-(76)

-

8(67)

Adam Capp

Alex Calvo-Garcia

Paul Hayes

Ian Kilford

Marcus Williams

-

-

-(78)

-

-


Match Report

By Mark Wallis

Leon Constantine hit a brace to just about secure the Shrimpers Third Division status
SOUTHEND United soared into the highest Division Three league placing of the season on Friday night as Scunthorpe United were seen off in a pre-weekend thriller at Roots Hall…


Steve Tilson’s side reached the dizzy heights of thirteenth position following this victory over Scunthorpe United, and indeed had the Shrimpers managed just one further goal they would have plundered their way into the top half of the table, as it stands Bury lay ahead of Southend on goals scored, and also level on points, goal difference separates Blues from eleventh-placed Boston United.


The home side were unchanged from the starting line-up which chalked up an impressive victory at Carlisle United six days earlier, with striker Lawrie Dudfield still missing with an infection whilst skipper Kevin Maher played his last match before a two game ban which will cover the forthcoming encounters against Huddersfield Town and Darlington.


Southend were obviously still flying from the magnificent Brunton Park victory, and started very brightly in this first Friday night fixture of the campaign.


Indeed, there were only a matter of seconds on the clock when Carl Pettefer’s free kick was flicked inches wide of the post by Mark Bentley. Then, only another five minutes later, Southend were presented with a fabulous chance to take the lead when Lee Ridley’s poorly headed backpass fell well short of goalkeeper Tom Evans and Leon Constantine darted onto the loose ball but could only fire his angled shot into the arms of Evans.


An early chance for the visitors from North Lincolnshire saw Terry Barwick zip a volley into the arms of Darryl Flahavan before Ridley nodded a Duncan Jupp centre clear, but only as far as Constantine who drove a low shot fractionally wide of the upright.


Drewe Broughton rolled an effort at Evans following a neat run on sixteen minutes before Mark Gower tested Evans from fully 25 yards. In between Flahavan easily dealt with a low effort from Cleveland Taylor.


Then, with 26 minutes on the clock the game suddenly came to life with three goals inside three and a half minutes, with the Essex side taking a two goal lead before being quickly pegged back by their determined visitors.


The Shrimpers took the lead when a fantastic through ball from Pettefer set Constantine, who had beaten the offside trap, through on goal and with the coolest of finishes the Blues top scorer slotted a shot into the bottom right hand corner despite ‘keeper Evans getting the slightest of touches.


The lead was then doubled only moments later, and it came courtesy of Broughton’s first league goal at Roots Hall, and only his second in a Southend shirt. Gower’s corner was not properly cleared by the Iron defence and Jupp chipped the ball back into the danger area where ex-Kidderminster Harriers frontman Broughton nodded home at the far post.


However, less than two minutes later the visitors had reduced the deficit. A mazy run from Matthew Sparrow never brought a Southend challenge and a poorly struck shot took a huge deflection off Steve MacLean and bounced into the bottom left hand corner of the South Stand net with Flahavan, wrong-footed, left completely stranded.


However, Southend continued to press forward, and a third goal almost arrived when Evans did ever-so-well to tip Leon Cort’s header, from a Broughton knock-back following a Maher corner, over the top of the crossbar.


That two-goal advantage was restored though with five minutes remaining before half time. A perfectly lofted Maher corner found the head of Cort whose firm downward header found the bottom off the net courtesy of a ricochet, it was the tall defender’s first strike of the campaign, and arrived in his fifty-first outing.

Half-time - Southend United 3 Scunthorpe United 1


An early second half opportunity saw Broughton shoot off target after a badly placed clearance from Andy Butler before the visitors, who had begun to take control of proceedings pulled another goal back four minutes after the re-start, a low left wing centre from Taylor found Steve Torpey who despatched a neat low finish past the outstretched arm of Flahavan.


For whatever reason, Southend now found it hard to get themselves going in the same manner as they played in the first period, and Tilson’s men were clearly struggling to gain possession, and when a blue shirt did grab hold of the ball it was often swiftly given away.


A curling free kick from Scunthorpe’s leading goalscorer, Glasgow Rangers loanee Steve MacLean, drifted inches wide of Flahavan’s post before Pettefer made an absolutely fantastic block to deny the same player.


However, for all their possession, Scunthorpe found clear-cut opportunities hard to come by, and the Shrimpers finally began to create second half chances of their own.


Constantine struck a volley into the arms of Evans following a neat back header by Broughton before a low Jupp cross saw the heel of substitute Lewis Hunt flick the ball onto Gower who shot at the legs of Evans.


Gower then sprinted to the goalline before cutting inside and seeing his lobbed effort headed away by Paul Hayes before, with four minutes to spare, the fourth crucial goal arrived. Everything stemmed from a Scunthorpe free kick, which saw Barwick’s effort blocked by the Southend wall before the ball was hoisted out onto the right flank where Tesfaye Bramble, also on off the bench, raced clear before slipping a ball across the box where Constantine, despite a mishit, guided a low effort past the helpless Evans and into the bottom left hand corner.


Evans’ evening still wasn’t finished though, and he was on form to deny Constantine a hat-trick when he pushed the 22-goal hit man’s long range effort around the foot of the post.

That however, was that, in what was a highly entertaining Friday evening fixture. By the TLG reckoning, three more points should do us…


Last Five Meetings


2nd April 2004 – Southend United 4 (Leon Constantine 26, 86, Drewe Broughton 28, Leon Cort 40) Scunthorpe United 2 (Matthew Sparrow 30, Steve Torpey 49) – League Division Three

25th January 2003 – Scunthorpe United 4 (Martin Carruthers 11, Ian Kilford 36, Alex Calvo-Garcia 43, Paul Hayes 70) Southend United 1 (Jay Smith 17) – League Division Three

27th September 2003 – Scunthorpe United 1 (Steven MacLean 6) Southend United 1 (Leon Constantine 69) – League Division Three 29th December 2002 – Southend United 1 (Leon Cort 39) Scunthorpe United 2 (Martin Carruthers 75, Steve Torpey 81) – League Division Three

23rd March 2002 – Southend United 2 (Leon Cort 17, Rob Newman 26) Scunthorpe United 0 – League Division Three


The Complete Head-to-Head Record


2003/4 – H4-2 A1-1 (League)

2002/3 – H1-2 A1-4 (League)

2001/2 – H2-0 A0-2 (League)

2000/1 – H1-0 A1-1 (League)

1998/9 – H0-1 A1-1 (League)

1989/90 – H0-0 A1-1 (League)

1986/7 – H3-1 A0-3 (League)

1985/6 – H2-1 A0-2 (League)

1984/5 – H1-1 A1-2 (League)

1983/4 – H0-0 A6-1 (League)

1980/1 – H2-0 A1-2 (League)

1977/8 – H2-0 A2-1 (League)

1976/7 – H1-1 A0-1 (League)

1972/3 – H1-0 A0-0 (League)

1971/2 – H2-3 A1-1 (League)

1970/1 – H2-2 A0-3 (League)

1969/70 – H3-0 A0-2 (League)

1968/9 – H0-3 A1-4 (League)

1965/6 – H0-0 A0-1 (League)

1964/5 – H0-1 A1-2 (League)


Summary


Overall

Matches: 40

Southend United wins: 11

Scunthorpe United wins: 17

Draws: 12

Southend United goals: 45

Scunthorpe United goals: 53

Biggest Southend United win: 6-1 (away; 1983/4)

Biggest Scunthorpe United win: 4-1 (home; 1968/9, home; 2002/3)


In The League

Matches: 40

Southend United wins: 11

Scunthorpe United wins: 17

Draws: 12

Southend United goals: 45

Scunthorpe United goals: 53

Biggest Southend United win: 6-1 (away; 1983/4)

Biggest Scunthorpe United win: 4-1 (home; 1968/9, home; 2002/3)


At the Old Showground and Glanford Park

Matches: 20

Southend United wins: 2

Scunthorpe United wins: 11

Draws: 7

Southend United goals: 18

Scunthorpe United goals: 34

Biggest Southend United win: 6-1 (1983/4)

Biggest Scunthorpe United win: 4-1 (1968/9, 2002/3)


Robert Craven
www.thelittlegazette.com