League Two Season Preview: Part Three

With just two days to go until the new season, here’s Part Three of the League Two Season Preview, including a closer look at the Cobblers as well as Mansfield, MK Dons, Morecambe, Newport and Notts County.

Mansfield Town

Last season…

Much was made of Mansfield at the start of last season and with Steve Evans at the helm bringing in plenty of League Two experience there was every reason to think that the Stags would be up among the challengers for promotion. Evans had brought in the likes of Zander Diamond, David Mirfin and Bobby Olejnik at the start of the summer and had his own experience to draw on for an attack on the top three.

Despite this, Town didn’t really get going properly until December when they would embark on a run of one defeat in sixteen including a three game winning run in late January/early February. Then came the shock resignation of Evans with the club just two points away from the top three with Evans moving to League One Peterborough United, an apparent dream job for the Scotsman.

David Flitcroft was identified as the man to finish the job at Field Mill and he joined from fellow playoff chasers Swindon but Evans’ departure clearly hit the squad hard as they wouldn’t win again until 14 April, a 1-0 success of Chesterfield that reinvigorated their playoff hopes. But one win and two draws, including a final day 1-1 draw at home to Crawley wasn’t enough to finish in the top seven thanks to results elsewhere.

Transfers…

In: Matt Preston (Swindon), Neal Bishop (Scunthorpe), Craig Davies (Oldham), Otis Khan (Yeovil), Tyler Walker (Nottingham Forest)

Out: Rhys Bennett (Peterborough), George Taft (Cambridge), Johnny Hunt (Stevenage), Joel Byrom (Stevenage), Paul Digby (Forest Green)

Promotion Odds…

9/4

Outlook…

David Flitcroft begins his first full season as Stags boss with the clear aim of going one better than last season and at least making it into the playoffs. Early signs are good with the exciting signings of Tyler Walker from Nottingham Forest and Otis Khan from Yeovil and they look in good shape to be one of the challengers again this season.

One vital piece of outgoing business may yet hinder Town’s chances, though, with prolific striker Danny Rose, who hit seventeen in all competitions last season, handing in a transfer request this week amidst interest from former boss Evans at Peterborough United. If they can get a deal done and a replacement in during the final week of the window then they should still have enough to be up there in the table so for now I’m going with another playoff push for the Stags.

MK Dons

Last season…

There won’t be a lot of fond memories being handed down to the grandchildren from a wretched League One campaign for MK Dons. Starting off as outside bets for the playoffs, MK went from manager to manager and looked a shadow of their tag as contenders.

Despite a September win over AFC Wimbledon, form was concerning and Robbie Neilson was beginning to come under increased pressure. Between the end of September and the end of Neilson’s reign, MK fans only saw their side win on two occasions, one of which included a remarkable nine man win at home to Peterborough United. Neilson was sent packing after a 2-1 defeat at Sixfields in January and former academy coach and England under 16s manager Dan Micciche was the surprise appointment to try and steer them away from the relegation zone.

Micciche would last less than three months after seeing his side win just three times in sixteen outings. The season was all but over at that stage with just three games to go and the club six points from safety and Keith Millen stepped up from assistant manager to see through the inevitable relegation. As MK try to turn their tide back in the right direction they now turn to long serving Exeter boss Paul Tisdale and it’ll be interesting to see how he sets about his business as his new club.

Transfers…

In: Mitch Hancox (Macclesfield), Ryan Watson (Barnet), Jordan Moore-Taylor (Exeter), Ryan Harley (Exeter), Robbie Simpson (Exeter), Jordan Houghton (Chelsea), Mathieu Baudry (Doncaster), Baily Cargill (Unattached)

Out: Ed Upson (Bristol Rovers), Scott Wootton (Plymouth)

Promotion Odds…

6/4

Outlook…

Paul Tisdale wasted little time in bringing in three of his trusted Exeter playing staff in Jordan Moore-Taylor, Ryan Harley and Robbie Simpson to add to his squad which should be a level above League Two should they all stick together. Tisdale is the type of manager that will be excited by a project like rebuilding MK and should be relishing the fact that he no longer has his hands tied by financial pressures.

Anything less than promotion will be seen as a failure and that’s surely what Tisdale and his new team will finish with.

Morecambe

Last season…

Another season of battling the odds under Jim Bentley so nearly saw The Shrimps relegated but right at the death they managed to keep their heads just, and only just, above water to send Barnet down to the National League on a dramatic final day of the season.

A 2-1 opening day win against Cheltenham Town showed nothing of what was to come and Bentley’s men would win just four more times before Christmas. Poor form continued to mean that they were dicing with death for the entire season and after beating Exeter 2-1 in mid-March they would slowly see Barnet close in on them in the relegation battle thanks to a number of dropped points in the last knockings of the campaign.

They would need a point on the last day of the season and duly got it on a nerve wracking afternoon at Coventry. Barnet won their game 3-0 but it wasn’t enough to catch Morecambe on goal difference, giving the Shrimps their salvation.

Transfers…

In: James Sinclair (Unattached), Andrew Tutte (Bury), Jason Oswell (Stockport), Zak Mills (Grimsby), Rhys Oates (Hartlepool), Liam Mandeville (Doncaster), Mark Halstead (Southport), Jordan Cranston (Cheltenham)

Out: Aaron McGowan (Hamilton Academical)

Promotion Odds…

20/1

Outlook…

It’s again going to be tough for the Shrimps to break out of the pack at the bottom of the table, particularly as talisman Kevin Ellison turns forty by the end of August. They’ve brought in some decent experience including Andrew Tutte from Bury, a consistent performer at this level. Jason Oswell is one to watch having scored twenty nine times in the National League North for Stockport County last season and Jim Bentley will be desperately hoping that form continues in league football.

Bentley will be sure to get the best out of what he has again but it looks like another relegation battle to me.

Newport County

Last season…

A season that exceeded many expectations at Newport with a superb FA Cup run and a small tilt at getting into the top seven. Mike Flynn did an excellent job at getting the most out of his players once again as the Exiles finished in an impressive eleventh place in League Two.

The first three games of the season were all away games thanks to the Rodney Parade pitch being re-laid but County picked up five points from those three to give themselves a good start to the campaign. Inconsistency dogged them through the early months but the fact that wins were being racked up in good number meant that they were never in any danger of being dragged into the battle at the bottom end of League Two.

County would be just five points from the playoffs following a 2-0 win at Yeovil in March but a four game winless run put paid to any realistic ambitions of reaching the top seven. Back to back victories in April, though, steadied the ship and a final day draw at Carlisle earned them their final place in eleventh.

Away from the league, County would earn national recognition thanks to their fine FA Cup run that saw them beat Walsall, Cambridge and Championship side Leeds United en route to a plum tie with Spurs. They so nearly pulled off an incredible upset at Rodney Parade thanks to Padraig Amond’s goal but Harry Kane levelled with eight minutes to go to take the tie back to Wembley, where Spurs finally sealed the victory but only by a 2-0 score line that in no way disgraced Flynn’s men.

So a good league finish, a cup run and a Wembley appearance – not bad at all!

Transfers…

In: Keanu Marsh-Brown (Forest Green), Charlie Cooper (Forest Green), Fraser Franks (Stevenage), Tyreeq Bakinson (Bristol City)

Out: Ben Tozer (Cheltenham), Frank Nouble (Colchester)

Promotion Odds…

12/1

Outlook…

The problem you have with punching so high one season is that it’s difficult to match the following year and Newport could well fall into that category. Transfer activity has been fairly limited so far but the capture of the exciting Keanu Marsh-Brown from league rivals Forest Green Rovers should add a new level of creativity to their play.

Without a cup run distraction they may go well but it will be still be tough to reproduce the form of last season. I’m only giving them a shot at mid-table security again this time around.

Northampton Town

Last season…

Where do we start? From the dourness of Justin Edinburgh to Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink’s constant tinkering and mind blowing starting line ups, the season was an absolute disaster and produced some of the worst performances from a Cobblers team that we’d ever seen.

There was even some mild optimism at the start of the season but Edinburgh lost his first four games of the season included a morale sapping 4-1 defeat at Peterborough which was the final straw and he was shown the exit before September could even get going. Hasselbaink was brought in under a lot of fanfare and started well but a 6-0 home defeat to Bristol Rovers highlighted the deficiencies in the squad. The plan was to try and keep in touch with those outside the drop zone by the time the January transfer window came around and there was brief relief thanks to a three game winning run at the start of 2018.

But everything slowly unravelled for Hasselbaink as baffling tactics and players playing completely out of position led to a divide between the fans and manager. A 2-1 home defeat to Gillingham was the height of the mess and the narrow score line masked an absolutely horrendous Tuesday night outing. Time was running out in the battle for survival but it looked like we’d left it far too late when Hasselbaink mirrored Edinburgh’s exit after defeat to the Posh.

Dean Austin tried hard to turn things around and instilled a sense of fight and belief among the squad that we’d not seen all season. A 3-2 win at Bury and a 2-0 success at home to Plymouth gave us real hope that we could pull off a miraculous escape but everything evaporated thanks to Walsall’s last minute winner at the Bescot Stadium that all put sent us packing to League Two barring a miracle score line against Oldham on the final day. A 2-2 draw with the Latics took them down with us but the consolation would come from Austin being appointed full time thanks to the fight he gave the club in the final few weeks of a torrid season.

Transfers…

In: Andy Williams (Doncaster), Junior Morias (Peterborough), Hakeem Odoffin (Wolves), Lewis Ward (Reading)

Out: Richard O’Donnell (Bradford), Joe Bunney (Blackpool)

Promotion Odds…

11/4

Outlook…

It’s always difficult to predict your own team but the Cobblers could do well now that we seem to finally have a manager leading the way with a passion that rubs off on his players. The summer has seen Town going for quality over quantity in the transfer market with Austin not keen on breaking up a squad and starting again. The fact that he earnt the player’s respect at the end of last season gave him the chance to send them away over the summer knowing exactly what was expected of them and that should help us be much more combative this time around.

Once Junior Morias is fit we should have a great striker on our hands and Lewis Ward looks a safe pair of hands in goal. If we keep the squad fit we should pose most teams problems and compete for at least a playoff place.

Notts County

Last season…

County were the front runners early on in League Two last season. After losing their opening game, Kevin Nolan’s men won eight of their next nine games to accrue 25 points from 10 games and see them top the table. A 3-1 defeat at Mansfield finally ended their terrific run but the Magpies would stay right in contention through the autumn. A late penalty in the New Year’s Day victory over Port Vale put them in second place ahead of the second half of the season.

It was here that the league season began to get interrupted by progress in the FA Cup where County saw off Championship side Brentford to set up a Fourth Round tie with Premier League Swansea City at Meadow Lane. Back to back league defeats preceded that glamour game but the Magpies pulled off an excellent 1-1 draw to take the Swans back to the Liberty Stadium. The cup run would end in a dramatic 8-1 loss in Wales so it was back to the league for the final push for the top three.

A pivotal 1-0 loss at Accrington at the start of April looked to have knocked the stuffing out of their chances of automatic promotion and though they hit back with three straight wins, Jamille Matt’s stoppage time winner against them for Grimsby in the penultimate game meant that County had to settle for the playoffs.

Coventry City were the opponents for the semi-finals and a solid 1-1 draw at the Ricoh there was plenty of hope of reaching the Wembley showpiece. But a stunning away performance from the Sky Blues at Meadow Lane saw them win 4-1 and consign Nolan’s side to another season in League Two.

Transfers…

In: Kristian Dennis (Chesterfield), Andy Kellett (Wigan), Tom Crawford (Chester), Kane Hemmings (Oxford), Will Patching (Manchester City), Ben Hall (Brighton), David Vaughan (Nottingham Forest), Enzio Boldewijn (Crawley), Christian Oxlade-Chamberlain (Portsmouth)

Out: Jonathan Forte (Exeter), Carl Dickinson (Yeovil), Michael O’Connor (Lincoln), Adam Collin (Carlisle), Nathan Thomas (Sheff Utd), Nicky Hunt (Crewe)

Promotion Odds…

11/8

Outlook…

Kevin Nolan will have surely learned many lessons along the way to the playoffs last season and should come back with a renewed sense that this could be County’s year and the season that will come to define his early years as a league manager. Kristian Dennis brings with him an eye for goal that had him scoring regularly for Chesterfield despite their relegation and David Vaughan, signed from across the river at Nottingham Forest, could be that gem of experience they need. Enzio Boldewijn is another who can excite the Meadow Lane faithful after signing from Crawley for a six-figure fee.

County have the backing, squad and manager to really challenge again and should be challenging for promotion again come May,

A winning start…

Mohammed - match winner

Mohammed – match winner

It’s a rare feeling for a Cobblers fans is this – three points on the board on the opening weekend have eluded us for many a year. Indeed the last time we won on the first day (a 4-2 victory over Cheltenham Town in 2008) we thought that Leon Constantine might actually be a worthy signing…heady days! This time around, and after six opening days without even scoring a goal, there was less of a gung ho approach but more of a sense of a team worked performance that firstly broke down a Mansfield side coming to frustrate and then displayed toughness at the end of the game when the Stags were trying to claw back a point.

The debutant most were talking about before the game was John-Joe O’Toole but it was Kaid Mohammed, another making his first official appearance for Town, who claimed the headlines with a powered header at the back post for the only goal of the game. O’Toole was brought off in the second half and that move ended up giving Chris Wilder a welcome selection headache for the games to come.

That was because of another fine performance from Ivan Toney who brought more cohesion with Marc Richards to the front line and we could easily have doubled the lead on more than one occasion after the youngster came on. At home, a dual attack is likely to be better received and it’ll be interesting to see how Wilder plays it in the coming months at Sixfields. Away from home O’Toole should bring plenty to the table but it’ll be hard for the boss to ignore Toney if he continues to show as much guile and positive energy that he showed again on Saturday.

It was a general consensus that we’ll face a lot tougher tests than Mansfield this season but anything garnered from the first game of the season is a real positive. Just to not be playing catch up in the early weeks would be a huge improvement on recent seasons and having a genuinely coherent squad with substitutes coming on that could easily have started a game shows a depth that’s not been seen at this stage of a season for quite some time.

There’s of course work to be done and we’ll have a hugely tough examination at Molineux on Tuesday evening in the League Cup to really test the mettle before another tester at York in the League on Saturday but for once we’re saying that the early signs are good.

Just to be back in football mode is fantastic to be fair – until that first dodgy league defeat comes around let’s enjoy seeing our name at the right end of the ‘league table’ for a while!

Run continues but Cobblers held by ten men

Carter...third of the season.

Carter…third of the season.

Northampton Town 1-1 Mansfield Town

League Two

Saturday, March 15th 2014

It wasn’t quite what the Cobblers wanted from this weekend but, as has become the way under Chris Wilder, it certainly wasn’t a disaster and we head into Tuesday night’s clash with Rochdale at Sixfields still on an unbeaten run. It was another case of having to come from behind and against a big Mansfield side who are just keeping their heads above water it was a decent point in the end despite the Stags going down to ten men right before the equaliser.

At this stage of the season, and in particular in this closest of League Two campaigns, there’s just no use looking at the league table and planning where your points will come from. It would have been easy to think that this was a great chance to bag three more points but the Stags clearly had other ideas and were set up to stifle any momentum that we gained on Tuesday night at Exeter.

Indeed it was the visitors to strike first when Adam Murray played in Oliver Palmer who slotted in past Matt Duke to leave us with another tough battle on our hands. The unbeaten run was well and truly in doubt and Town were frustrated in attempts to get back into it before the break with Ricky Ravenhill firing over with the best effort before half time.

We were in need of a big turning point and it came just past the hour mark. Darryl Westlake put his hand in the way of an Alan Connell header and suddenly the Cobblers had a penalty and an extra man after Westlake was shown a straight red card for the incident. Darren Carter duly obliged in levelling and with a staggering THREE goals this season is now the club’s top scorer!

With the impetus now well on the Cobblers Zander Diamond headed over the bar but it wasn’t all one way traffic with Mansfield creating chances of their own through Anthony Howell and Colin Daniel. Chris Hackett got on the end of an Alan Connell cross but fired wide and that was as good as it got for the final quarter of the game with the points shared and Mansfield, as with Bristol Rovers two weeks ago, left Sixfields the happier of the two sides with a draw.

Whilst there’ll be plenty of disappointment with the result it still makes it six games without defeat and keeps the mini run going. Tuesday against Rochdale is a game in hand on many teams above us and if we can cause what would be considered an upset then we’ll be level on points with Exeter, who drew at Newport on Sunday afternoon. That in itself would provide a huge psychological boost to have finally closed the gap and whilst there’s still so much football to be played it would start to look more and more in our own hands.

There’s plenty to work on before Tuesday with the possibility of new loan signing Cristian Lopez making a starting appearance after coming from the bench for the last few minutes of this one. Lopez filled in the ‘big man’ place on the team sheet and replaces the recalled John Marquis who we could have done with against a strong and powerful Stags outfit.

Rochdale will bring with them their own dangers of course and have the chance to go top of the league if they pick up the win at Sixfields and Chesterfield slip up at Plymouth.

There’s so little between most of the clubs in this division, though, that every game from now on becomes unpredictable, and in turn, keep us all on the very edge of our seats and at the edge of our nerves.

Northampton Town v Mansfield Town: Match Preview

sixfieldspanoramaNorthampton Town v Mansfield Town

League Two

Saturday, March 15th 2014

We’ve reached the stage where one more win would bring us right to the brink of escaping the relegation zone. For weeks the Cobblers have been clawing back the gap, winning games but then discovering other results going against us and desperately hanging on but now it’s starting to become more and more in our own hands.

With Exeter not playing till Sunday this weekend, there’s a huge incentive for Town to strike huge fear into them by claiming all three points against a Mansfield Town side who are themselves still peering over their shoulder. Indeed, a Cobblers win would bring the Stags back to within two points and also drag a few other clubs properly into the mix so it’s another massive weekend.

After a decent enough start to life back in League Two, Mansfield’s slide began with five defeats in a row in November before another three games without a win in December. The run was ended with victory over Cheltenham Town in the final game of 2013 and since then it’s been a stabilising job for Paul Cox as he looks to avoid taking his club back to where they came from last May. They’ve been as unpredictable as any League Two side since the turn of the year and that makes them pretty dangerous to the Cobblers.

There’s new found hope at Sixfields these days, though, and Chris Wilder has clearly instilled something in his men to enable them to put a good enough run together to reach this pivotal moment in the season. Every game is huge from now on but after this one is through and we’re faced with just ten games to play we’ll have a much better idea on how things are going to pan out.

Nerves at the ready…

Team News…

The Cobblers welcome back Ricky Ravenhill after the midfielder served his one match ban on Tuesday night at Exeter with Gary Deegan likely to be the man sacrificed. John Marquis was recalled by Millwall this week with the Championship side activating a 24 hour recall clause in his loan deal. He was swiftly replaced by new loanee Cristian Lopez who joins from Huddersfield Town until the end of the season. Lopez has spent a brief spell on loan at Shrewsbury Town earlier this season, scoring once in five outings before returning to his parent club. He goes straight into the squad for Saturday’s game. Joe Widdowson, meanwhile, remains a doubt with his ankle injury.

Mansfield full back Darryl Westlake could be included in the Stags’ squad after it was revealed that he didn’t tear his hamstring in the defeat to York City on Tuesday night as first feared. One man who will be missing, though, is Ritchie Sutton, who has a hamstring injury that looks set to keep him out for up to three weeks.

Previous Six Meetings…

21/09/13: Mansfield 3-0 Cobblers (League Two)

Earlier this season the Cobblers had one of those away days that we’d unfortunately become accustomed to as the Stags eased to a comfortable win. Ben Hutchinson put them in front on the half hour mark before Sam Clucas made it two just a few minutes later. An own goal on his debut by Mathias Doumbe sealed a miserable day for Town.

18/03/06: Mansfield 1-0 Cobblers (League Two)

Richard Barker scored the only goal of the game the last time the sides met in 2006 at Field Mill but the Cobblers would still go on to win promotion a couple of months later.

26/12/05: Cobblers 1-0 Mansfield (League Two)

David Hunt’s goal was enough to give the Cobblers a narrow win on Boxing Day 2005.

01/01/05: Cobblers 2-1 Mansfield (League Two)

Former Cobblers striker Derek Asamoah was sent off two minutes before half time for Mansfield for diving but the away side took the lead as Paul Warne’s corner was met by David Rowson who nodded into his own net. But the Cobblers hit back in the second half when Trevor Benjamin made the most of a couple of deflections to fire us level and Martin Smith headed in for the winner with fifteen minutes to play.

05/09/04: Mansfield 4-1 Cobblers (League Two)

The first meeting since the playoff semi-final a few months earlier saw Mansfield hammer the Cobblers. Derek Asamoah, who had swapped Sixfields for Field Mill in the summer, headed his new side in front before Eric Sabin levelled briefly. Before the break Wayne Corden made it 2-1 and the home side never looked back. Second half goals from future Cobbler Colin Larkin and (a second from) Corden confirmed a big home win.

20/05/04: Mansfield 1-3 Cobblers – Mansfield win 5-4 on penalties (League Two Playoff Semi-Final, Second Leg)

An extraordinary second leg of the playoffs saw the Cobblers come from two goals down on aggregate with three goals either side of half time. Marc Richards got the ball rolling before Chris Hargreaves levelled the tie just before the break. In our first attack of the second half, Martin Smith curled in for 3-0 on the night and 3-2 on aggregate to send the thousands of Town fans into a state of delirium but there were more twists to come. Tom Curtis appeared to foul Eric Sabin on the half way line but incredibly the decision went the other way with Curtis popping up to lash in just seconds after he could easily have been sent off! Derek Asamoah was brought down late on but there was nothing giving from referee Phil Crossley and Mansfield went on to win the penalty shoot-out with Sabin missing the crucial kick for Town. The most emotional game of football that I have ever seen and one that may not be matched for a long time!

The man in the middle…

The referee for this one is Andy Haines who last took charge of a Cobblers game in another crucial home game in March 2012 when we were again fighting relegation. On that day we saw off Aldershot Town 3-1 so hopefully we’ll have a similar outcome on Saturday!

Prediction…

This is the big chance to close the gap from three points to zero points and to really pile the pressure on Exeter who don’t play until Sunday. Mansfield need the points as well as they’re in the clutch of teams just above the drop zone but fingers crossed for our momentum to continue. 2-1.

Stagnant Cobblers lose on the road again

Mansfield Town 3-0 Northampton Town

League Two

Saturday, September 21st 2013

I’m losing the will to write these match thoughts. Another away day comes and goes and, though we did manage the incredible feat of actually keeping eleven men on the pitch for a full ninety minutes this time, the Cobblers slipped to another horrific defeat on the road. The fact that not even our home form is keeping us afloat this time is making this season into a complete disaster with the safety net of Sixfields already broken.

This latest shocker came at Field Mill, a scene of heroes of the past but what is now fast becoming a graveyard. If only we had one or two in the current squad with the fire of a Chris Hargreaves or Ian Sampson or the guile and skill of a Martin Smith, all of which gave us that extraordinary night in 2004. The problem we’re now faced with is that we do have supposed quality in the side but the full potential is just not being reached.

It doesn’t feel anything like the last time we were in this position- second bottom of the entire Football League – yet here we are. There’s no sign of any players with the questionable abilities of a Chris Arthur of Ashley Corker, bless ‘em, with the current crop of players individually appearing fully fitting of a side that you would imagine to challenge for the top seven.

Mansfield were in no mood to care about any of this, though, and took advantage of a shaky Town side to ease into fifth place – an impressive return to League Two so far. The Cobblers had a decent start again and could have taken the lead when Chris Hackett just missed a flick from Clive Platt but were punished when a stunning free kick from Ben Hutchinson flew into the net to open the scoring.

The Stags never looked back and the Cobblers’ demise created another painful Saturday afternoon.

The home side doubled their lead shortly after the opener in scenes similar to those dark away days last season when Sam Clucas finished past Matt Duke to send his team into the break 2-0 up.

Darren Carter twice tested Alan Marriott with free kicks before Ian Morris also had a shot well saved as we briefly flirted with the idea of a comeback. It wasn’t to be though and it was all summed up when debutant defender Mathias Kouo-Doumbe somehow slicing the ball past Duke from full on twenty five yards.

Game over, then, and four out of four away games have ended with no points with the Cobblers languishing in all too familiar territory at the wrong end of League Two. It’s desperate stuff and leaves us with just one side – Accrington Stanley – below us in the league ladder. The home game with Morecambe next weekend becomes arguably the first must win game of the season. That’s not to say that it’s an easy fixture with the Shrimps going very well in eighth place but any home game right now would feel like one that we would have to pick something up from.

It’s another weekend of the stats reading in our favour but the result handsomely not doing. The result is what matters most right now and I would swap all the perceived ‘better football’ for a 1-0 scrap right now. We need it, the players need it and Aidy Boothroyd definitely needs it.

It’s not yet six pointer territory but in terms of confidence and belief these next couple of weeks will play a massive role in what’s to be the final outcome of this flagging season.

Mansfield Town v Northampton Town: Match Preview

Football - FA Cup - 3rd Round - Mansfield Town FC v Liverpool FCMansfield Town v Northampton Town

League Two

Saturday, September 21st 2013

Just the mention of Field Mill is enough to send the hairs on the back of my neck stand up. The ground where the Cobblers blasted their way into the playoffs in 2004 on the final day of the season was emotional enough after Colin Calderwood and John Deehan had masterminded an incredible rise back up the table.

But what happened a week or so later is now stuff of folklore and whenever we make the short journey there it never fails to bring back those memories of Town stunning the Stags, who were 2-0 up from the first leg of the playoff semi-final at Sixfields, by coming back to lead 3-0 on the night and 3-2 on aggregate. The shenanigans involving one Tom Curtis and the ensuing period of extra time along with Derek Asamoah’s clear penalty being turned down made the eventual penalty shoot-out defeat all that more difficult to take.

Since then Mansfield have been on a journey backwards into non-league before returning, after a five year absence, in April following a 1-0 win over Wrexham that secured the Conference title. Former Kettering Town defender Paul Cox, taking charge of his 100th league game at the club tomorrow, masterminded the rise back to the league and his side sit eighth after a positive start in League Two that’s seen them lose just once in the opening seven games. That defeat was on the opening day at Scunthorpe and the Stags have since drawn three and won three and are on terrific form as they prepare to host the struggling Cobblers.

Town are down on four points and with away form showing no sign of letting up it’s looking like a tough, tough game tomorrow. Overturning the form book is crucial. It need not be anything like the drama of 2004…anything, like a deflected own goal or Clive Platt bundling one in off his stomach will do at this point as long as we come away with something!

 

Doumbe...new addition

Doumbe…new addition

Team News…

Mansfield are without Chris Clements with the midfielder damaging knee ligaments during his side’s win over York City last weekend. Martin Riley is another to miss out through a suspension after being sent off in the same game. But Matt Rhead is available again after completing his own one match ban.

Ahead of Saturday the Cobblers have signed up defender Mathias Kuou-Doumbe on a contract until the end of the season. Aidy Boothroyd has been touting an experienced defender as the next signing and the deal has been done in time for the former Hibs, Plymouth and MK Dons defender to be a part of the squad for the trip to Field Mill. Elsewhere, Ian Morris is the favourite to come in for suspended midfielder Gary Deegan with Matty Harriott another to be pushing for a start.

 

Previous Six Meetings…

18/03/06: Mansfield 1-0 Cobblers (League Two)

Richard Barker scored the only goal of the game the last time the sides met in 2006 at Field Mill but the Cobblers would still go on to win promotion a couple of months later.

26/12/05: Cobblers 1-0 Mansfield (League Two)

David Hunt’s goal was enough to give the Cobblers a narrow win on Boxing Day 2005.

01/01/05: Cobblers 2-1 Mansfield (League Two)

Former Cobblers striker Derek Asamoah was sent off two minutes before half time for Mansfield for diving but the away side took the lead as Paul Warne’s corner was met by David Rowson who nodded into his own net. But the Cobblers hit back in the second half when Trevor Benjamin made the most of a couple of deflections to fire us level and Martin Smith headed in for the winner with fifteen minutes to play.

05/09/04: Mansfield 4-1 Cobblers (League Two)

The first meeting since the playoff semi-final a few months earlier saw Mansfield hammer the Cobblers. Derek Asamoah, who had swapped Sixfields for Field Mill in the summer, headed his new side in front before Eric Sabin levelled briefly. Before the break Wayne Corden made it 2-1 and the home side never looked back. Second half goals from future Cobbler Colin Larkin and (a second from) Corden confirmed a big home win.

20/05/04: Mansfield 1-3 Cobblers – Mansfield win 5-4 on penalties (League Two Playoff Semi-Final, Second Leg)

An extraordinary second leg of the playoffs saw the Cobblers come from two goals down on aggregate with three goals either side of half time. Marc Richards got the ball rolling before Chris Hargreaves levelled the tie just before the break. In our first attack of the second half, Martin Smith curled in for 3-0 on the night and 3-2 on aggregate to send the thousands of Town fans into a state of delirium but there were more twists to come. Tom Curtis appeared to foul Eric Sabin on the half way line but incredibly the decision went the other way with Curtis popping up to lash in just seconds after he could easily have been sent off! Derek Asamoah was brought down late on but there was nothing giving from referee Phil Crossley and Mansfield went on to win the penalty shoot out with Sabin missing the crucial kick for Town. The most emotional game of football that I have ever seen and one that may not be matched for a long time!

16/05/04: Cobblers 0-2 Mansfield (League Two Playoff Semi-Final, First Leg)

In the first leg, Rhys Day had put Mansfield in control before Junior Mendes followed up from a Tom Curtis shot to put the Stags two goals to the good. Ashley Westwood was sent off late on for the Cobblers.

 

The man in the middle…

Steve Rushton is the man handed responsibility for this one. He’s only refereed three games so far this season but showed two red cards in his last match; Crawley’s 3-2 win over Gillingham in League One. We don’t have good memories from his last Cobblers game after Rushton sent off Town’s Danny East in last season’s defeat at Fleetwood Town.

 

Prediction…

The Cobblers could do with some luck but must take chances after wasting plenty of them during last week’s defeat to Exeter. A lot will depend on what happens in midfield with Gary Deegan suspended but it’s a chance for someone else to stake a claim. I’m going out on a limb here but this could be the one. 1-0 Cobblers.