Wednesday, 21 September 2016

Bondy's notes from Carshalton

Three points on the board 

I’m delighted we’ve got our first win of the season and my first competitive win since arriving at Teddington Athletic. It of course is specially nice to get your first win when you join a club. (Gaz, I think you said you’d buy me a coffee...) The girls are amazing people, so I’m really happy for them.

We were all disappointed we lost at Abbey Rangers, where we were the better team; I thought the players gave an honest performance there and got nothing for it. Thank you to the parents for your support on Sunday, we’re pleased you were able to celebrate two goals and a WIN.

Overcoming the unexpected

It was hard to know what to expect from a Carshalton side: promoted last season, beaten last week 4-2 at home by Fleet Town but scored two goals. We of course know Fleet Town set out a hard-working physical side.

Recognising this and looking at the result, we expected and discussed with the players that Carshalton would work hard. Starting with 10 players, Carshalton did indeed show what a hard-working team they are – and looked dangerous going forward: that continued for a lot of the game, I felt.

A good footballing team

We played some fantastic football. Any good coach will tell you that it’s a brilliant feeling when you work on things and it comes off, or you can see the improvement in training and on game day. We work a lot on possession in training: combination play, link-up play, support play, movement off the ball, angles, dribbling and especially being creative. When we started to link up with each other, with runs off the ball and players wanting the ball, Carshalton could not cope.

Squeeze and spread

I felt at times we could have been quicker to squeeze and press our opposition, winning the ball back or at least exerting enough pressure to force Carshalton into mistakes. We covered this in training and will continue to improve that part of our game: pressing as a unit and not individuals.

Time for shooting practice!  

Creating chances isn't an issue, but taking our chances is something we must improve on. We fully deserved to take the lead, but knowing how many chances we missed you can understand my concerns that we were going to be punished in the same way as at Abbey Rangers – creating chance after chance but not scoring and letting teams off the hook.

Thankfully in the last 10 minutes Boz’s strong determined run down the right, beating her defender with skill and pace, delivered a fantastic ball in the box Emily got on the end of it for her second goal.

Every goal counts

Emily said to me “My first goal doesn't count.' Like many players, Emily C is a perfectionist and sets high standards. It may not have been as good as your second, but it was on target and that’s all we ask for – it's up to the goalkeeper to save it. I played over 250 games and I got 17 goals – they weren’t all special, but they all count!

Ruby's professional performance

With not a lot to do for long parts of the game, it’s easy for a goalkeeper to lose concentration. Pushing to get our second goal, we left space in behind, but Ruby's positioning to make some very big one-on-one saves was excellent. Ruby was playing like a sweeper, coming out of her box to clear the ball.

What also impressed us was that Ruby was happy for her team-mates to play the ball back to her under pressure. Another was that Ruby played out from the back, passing to her defenders and midfielders so they could then bring the ball upfield. Everyone in the team wants to play good football!

Up next: Fleet Town

On Sunday 25 September we host Fleet Town. We know that Fleet are a very hard-working team who will make life difficult for us: they put four goals past Carshalton. Remember our Six Principles:

• Communication
• Collective Responsibility 
• Trust 
• Care
• Pride
• Smiles and Laughter 

Most importantly... 

I want to say how proud I am of you girls. We can have all the ideas and structure in place, but it's you who has to do it. I can see how hard you are working – you want to learn, you want to improve and you want to win. I know I keep saying this and I will keep saying it, but you are so brilliant – a breath of fresh air. Thank you for being you :-) and to the players’ families and friends, thank you for welcoming me into to your Teddington family! One last request: Please, we all know each other by now – it’s Bondy, not Dale...

Regards, Bondy

Wednesday, 14 September 2016

Sun 11 Sep: Abbey Rangers (A) L 0-1

For the fourth successive season, Teddington Athletic started their season at Abbey Rangers’ ever-improving Addlestone Moor ground. With the men’s senior team freshly promoted to Level 9 of the pyramid, the place has had a further spruce-up. Would Teddington match the vernacular improvements?

Now in their fourth season, the Teddington girls have had their own changes over summer. Snapped up by Millwall and Brighton & Hove Albion respectively, key players Phoebe and Ella Waldron are no longer available to play for the team they helped to found, but the squad is now graced by two new players and a new coach, Dale Bond.

A former semi-pro player, Bondy has been coaching in women’s and girls’ football for several years. Getting to know some of the Teddington girls at the London Youth Games, he was invited aboard by manager Dave Waldron and has immediately been welcomed by the girls, for his boundless enthusiasm and his innovative training routines. (More on Bondy here, in an introductory note from the man himself.)

One of Bondy’s innovations is a clearly delineated matchday timetable, which encourages the girls to get to the match early enough to get their social interactions done before a KO-minus-45-minutes “down to business” deadline; although not everybody quite got the memo, there was a notable focus about several players, with Ella Bothamley particularly switched-on.



The girls were also being shaped into a new formation, one which has been designed to get more of Teddington’s dangerous players working further forward. As the girls have progressed through divisions, formats and formations, certain players have willingly sacrificed some of their attacking intent for the greater good of the team shape; but with two of the team’s top three all-time goalscorers now having left – 52-goal Phoebe following 42-goal Sinead Morris in exiting via the wings – the pack has been shuffled to give greater creative licence to get some of the great players still in the squad into the areas where they can hurt the opposition.

That said, there is much pleasing familiarity. Inventive in triangles, the team still passes the ball along the floor. They had the game’s first half-chance within two minutes when new captain Carla Novakovic, collecting the ball in midfield, had the maturity and confidence to look up and measure a diagonal ball between defenders for her friend Ella Dodd to run off the shoulder of the last defender and force the goalkeeper into a hurried clearance which struck Doddsy but bounced harmlessly behind for a goal-kick. It wouldn’t be the last action to draw sighs of relief from the home fans.



Having bagged 14 goals in her debut campaign, Doddsy frequently played in midfield or defence last term – and while her excellence there means she will no doubt be selected in various positions this season, she can also push Ale Fairn hard for the front-running role. Certainly judging by her performance at Abbey, Doddsy will be too much of a handful for several defences – while the wise positioning and striker’s instinct of Ale offers the opposition a different kind of problem.

Doddsy almost broke the deadlock from a corner in the 13th minute but her right-foot shot was hacked off the line; collecting the clearance and remembering the drills from Friday’s training session, Emily Coulson turned her marker and fired in a shot which the goalkeeper just about parried. Emily is another who sacrificed her attacking ability for the good of the team last term: having gobbled up 40 goals in her first two seasons, she played deeper in 2015/16, but the formation rejig should give her more scope to drive on and punish the opposition. At Abbey, she was playing in a new role but grew strongly into it and will doubtless be bothering the scoresheet again this season.

Six minutes later Doddsy gave the travelling fans a close-up view of her power and finesse. Hammering down the right wing, full of strength and vigour with chalk on her boots, she beat two defenders before finding Emily whose shot forced a corner.



Sadly, a minute later, Teddington conceded against the run of play. Without really threatening a determined Teddington back line, Abbey had been focusing on playing via their left wing, and it was from that side that the goal originated – although blame cannot be attached to the overworked Anna Kauffmann: Abbey’s cross met runners who got their before their visiting markers, and despite Ruby Rudkin’s best attempts the cross was tucked in at the far post.

Goal notwithstanding, Anna – or “Coffee”, into which her surname has been twisted to avoid on-pitch confusion with new girl Hannah Hutchison – was having a good game. Part of the new tactical plan is to get the full-backs far more involved in the creative arts, and despite growing into an excellent right-back, the Danish girl has always had more attacking ability than your average No.2. But with Abbey focusing on their left wing, that simply left more leeway for Saskia Brewster, on the other side, to roam forward.



One of Teddington’s mainstays from the off, Sas has also long displayed a fuller skillset than that required by a stay-at-home full-back. After an excellent summer of diligent training, she is fitter than ever; coupled with constant coaching encouragement, that fitness and the new formation allows her to gallop forward and join in with the attacks, creating overloads for Teddington and problems for Abbey.

At around the 20-minute mark, Sas began to impose herself in midfield, and Teddington enjoyed having another safe pair of feet to pass through. When Sas recycled a throw to Liz Kriebel, the American girl had the patience to look up and the ability to pick out a long diag to Boz, whose parried shot was almost snaffled by Doddsy on the rebound.



Soon after, Sas went on the overlap again, and by now had developed the (fully justified) confidence to take the cross on herself, although Boz couldn’t quite reach it.

Just before the half-hour mark, a triple Teddington switch brought on Emily Bashford, Ale Fairn and Millie MacEacharn for Boz, Doddsy and Emily Coulson respectively. All three had played increasingly well but were given a long half-time break to recharge before coming back on.

The sheer pace of Bash gave Teddington another option, and Abbey another problem. A great angled ball from Liz – another girl increasingly getting to grips with a new position, in her case as a deeper-lying midfielder; she has the creative ability for the role, and is a willing learner keen to improve her defensive positioning – sent the winger on her way. Outstripping one defender for pace and bothering another with her fearless physicality, Bash couldn’t quite add the finish but had served notice and set Abbey on the back foot.

Not that the hosts were without threat, but Teddington looked comfortably the better team. When Abbey managed to send a ball over the top, Coffee raced back with the striker, put her foot on the ball, turned and played it calmly along the grass to start a new attack. And when the Abbey No.41 did get a rare sight of goal and sent one scudding inwards, Ruby was equal to it – despite her pre-match complaints that her top was too tight (“I’ve grown during summer”).

As the 40-minute half wore to a close, Carla was bright red and asking for water but still channeled back with her foe to foil an Abbey attack, put her foot on the ball, calmly turn inside and lay a pass off. The captain was leading by example, one of several Teddington players showing excellent technique, but as the half ended they realised they needed to up the shot-count.


Teddington started the second period stronger, with Bash again stretching Abbey down their left. The hosts hit back with another long ball but again Anna raced back to regain possession and start another attack. And she wasn’t the only full-back creatively involved: by now Sas was becoming a regular in the Abbey area, and when a left-wing corner landed at her feet she sensibly reset for a Carla 20-yarder to sting the goalkeeper’s hands.



Then Bash seared through again but ran out of pitch, before Teddington somewhat overplayed from an attacking throw-in, being caught on the break and thankful to Ruby for forcing a shot wide.

In general, though, the defence was strong. A large part of this is the eternal reliability of Millie Theobald, starting her fourth season at centre-back, marshalling her defence with superb reading of the game.

Millie T was buckling up with a new partner, Hannah. After an unhappy spell at AFC Wimbledon, the friendly Hannah – or “Hutch” as she has been nicknamed, the latest retitling due to clashes with soundalike teammates – has quickly settled in among her new team-mates and rediscovered her love of the game…which is the whole point.



Such a solid centre-back pairing, coupled with diligent cover from Liz and Carla, allowed Teddington to spend the majority of the match on the front foot. They had five chances in the 55th minute alone. First a dangerous cross in from the right was hurriedly cleared behind a fraction before Ale, trying to bend her runs, could turn ball into the goal.

Liz’s resultant corner was headed off the line by an Abbey defender under her own crossbar, and from that flag-kick Teddington could have scored three times – Sas having the clearest sight of goal, her full-blooded 12-yard right-footer somehow blocked and wellied out of danger. From that clearance Abbey mounted a counter-attack but Teddington sprung back and covered superbly, captain Carla again leading her troops back to do the unglamorous covering work.



Just after the hour, Teddington reversed their triple substitution and reverted to the starting lineup. That meant Doddsy, Em and Boz were all back in business, and within a minute the latter’s searching corner caused all sorts of mayhem in the box - but again the visitors couldn't quite capitalise.

The refreshed front three immediately knitted back in with Teddington’s other new girl. Off the pitch, Giulia Clini isn't the loudest voice - but on it, she has the ability to frighten defences. Certainly Abbey quickly recognised the danger she poses, abandoning their early three centre-back formation to detail a man-marker on to Giulia.



It didn't really stop her. Ghosting between attack and midfield, Giulia exemplified Teddington’s intention to pass and move, linking team-mates and searching for openings. In the 67th minute she made herself the pivot of a one-two with Liz, the American driving on and firing in a 20-trader that the goalkeeper was happy to shovel wide. Again Boz’s corner hit the danger zone but Liz’s header was more upward than goalward.


Another to grow into her role, Giulia was involved again soon afterward, at the heart of a flowing move across the pith. Gathering the ball from the inside-left position, she had the confidence and ability to look around and pick out a pass to Boz; she took it on a couple of strides and curled a ball into the path of Doddsy, who lifted her shot just past the under-fire goalkeeper.



Although still probing in attack, Teddington were starting to find the recovery runs harder, and in the 73rd minute allowed Abbey to flash a shot across goal. Now operating with a size-5 ball on a big pitch for 80 minutes, and with only three subs, the girls had been strongly advised to keep their fitness topped up; as the game wore on, those who had put in the miles over summer felt the benefit.

With three minutes to go Liz was still scampering around, sending Boz down the right for a cross which just evaded Doddsy and Em. Then Doddsy’s pressure forced yet another corner, just about saved at the near post following a scramble.



The final word so nearly went to indefatigable captain Carla. In time added on she fizzed in at least her third on-target 20-harder of the game, and this time the goalkeeper fumbled - but the ball trickled agonisingly wide for a corner from which one home parent, who had been advising his daughter to “run down the clock” with 15 minutes to go, claimed offside despite the defenders on the goal-line. Takes all sorts.



In the end, Teddington can count themselves very unlucky indeed to have lost this game. They had more possession and better chances; just as importantly, they played some very promising football. They have some lessons to learn and some fitness to gain, and the 2016/17 season has a long way to go, but if they carry on like this they won't go far wrong.

TEDDINGTON ATHLETIC Ruby Rudkin, Anna Kauffmann, Hannah Hutchison, Millie Theobald, Saskia Brewster, Liz Kreibel, Carla Novakovic, Ella Bothamley, Giulia Clini, Emily Coulson, Ella Dodd. Subs: Ale Fairn, Emily Bashford, Millie MacEacharn. Thanks to David T for the photos.



First week's results: Wimbledon saw off Maidenhead 4-2 while newly-promoted Carshalton, Teddington's next opponents, lost by the same scoreline at home to Fleet. The other promoted side, Hampton, won by default due to the absence of Crystal Palace – the "Blues" from last season, not the title-winning Reds, who have left the league. Teddington's fixtures through to the second Sunday of half-term are now on the blog's fixture list

A word from Bondy

I’m proud and frustrated after Sunday’s game. Proud of the performance from all 14 players. Fitness did show in the end – we hope the girls will take note of how importance fitness is to their performance.

I must stress that the effort, work-rate and the miles the girls must have covered on a very hot afternoon, a big pitch for 80 minutes, was very impressive. When the girls get fitter then the game will become easier.

We kept to our game plan even when we went a goal behind – passing the ball, movement off the ball, creating space going forward and creating chances. The three changes we made before halftime kept up the tempo and made an impact; same from the changes during the second half.

We have a lot of talent and ability, 16 players who can make an impact regardless if they start or from the bench we do have depth in the squad.

I will never ask the girls to promise me a win or promise me a goal or two. What I do ask, and what I expected, is an honest performance – and Sunday’s was  a proud display. We didn't win the game but we played hard and we kept going.

The better team lost on Sunday: 
What left me so frustrated was we were the better team and our performance was brilliant; even a point I don't think justified our performance. What is evident is that we have depth in the squad and we can reach even higher levels; Sunday was a good performance, but we can and we will perform at a level above.

Work In Progress:
For us it's a work in progress: new players, new coach and new formation. You can see already the girls are working hard and have very quickly learned a lot of the new formation; some are in new positions and new players have fitted in nicely with the new training structure.

We regroup on Friday night training. Welcome Carshalton Athletic. Carshalton lost on Sunday and will be looking to get points on the board just like us. No game is ever easy until the game is won. We will go into Sunday’s game full of confidence and energy. PMA POSITIVE MENTAL ATTITUDE.

Your Support:
Parents and families: thank you for your support on Sunday; looking forward to hearing you in loud voice. Your support means a lot not just for this season but seasons gone by. All the years, in whatever weather, you have travelled to make sure the girls get to training and matches. I'm passionate about the female game so appreciate everything you do for the girls, the team and the club.

Bondy

Wednesday, 7 September 2016

New season, new faces, new attitude

And so to season four. The Teddington players who started out as primary school ankle-biters are now closing in on their GCSE years, and the team faces new challenges.

For the first time, this season they won’t be able to call upon two former mainstays of the team, Ella Waldron and Phoebe Head. Brilliantly, both have ben picked up by professional teams – skipper Jelly by Brighton & Hove Albion, all-time top scorer Pheebs by Millwall.

Obviously the much-loved pair will be missed, on the field and off, but they go with our best wishes and will may still be around to support the girls. And as two leave, two new faces have joined the squad. Giula Clini is a midfielder/forward who has recently moved to the area, while defender Hannah Hutchison has switched from AFC Wimbledon. They are both very welcome, as are their families.

Any team would miss the qualities of Jelly and Pheebs but this is a great chance for the girls to show personal growth, and to take more responsibility. We have dealt before with losing players: it simply means more opportunity for others.

Ch-ch-ch-ch-changes


We will be playing a slightly new formation this season which we hope will make the most of the talented players at our disposal. For this season we also have the services of Dale Bond, an experienced coach who has worked with Brentford and LA Galaxy among other clubs. The girls have already taken to Dale – perhaps, as manager Dave Waldron freely admits, it’s nice to hear a new voice – and he will be bringing his enthusiasm and organisation to what is already a very well-run team.

In another change for this season, we will usually only be taking three substitutes per game. This is to make sure that all substitutes get a decent run-out during the game rather than kicking their heels on the touchline while we juggle formations and personnel.

Each player getting more game-time will place extra demands on their stamina. The girls are strongly encouraged to do some fitness during the week; Carla and her sister are happy to host regular sessions, and advice will be freely available from the management.

Responsibilities


With a matchday squad of 14 selected (on a Friday night after training) from a squad of 16, two girls will be unused every week. As ever, this will fairly distributed around the squad and will obviously include allowances for absences due to other activities. On the other hand, absence from Friday training will usually make the management’s squad selection decisions much easier. The girls will need to be on the ball this season.

After requests from many clubs (including ours), the league has decided to experiment with playing fixtures on the SECOND Sunday of each half-term – ie the day before most kids return to school. (For instance, they have already arranged a cup game, at home to Milford Pumas for Sun 30 Oct.) If it’s possible to bear this in mind when booking holidays, that would be very much appreciated, but we know these things aren’t always easy. Please keep Dave and Lisa informed of players’ availability via the Doodle poll – remember this is editable if circumstances change.

Our aims for the season will remain private for now, but our intention remains the same as ever: to help the girls grow as footballers and as people; to help them become adaptable footballers who can play in different positions; not to pick the most powerful players for short-term gain, rather to give a variety of young women a set of skills they might use for the rest of their lives, both on and off the field.

First game


The Premier Division is again an eight-team league in which we’ll play everyone three times. There are two changes, with Carshalton Athletic and Hampton Youth promoted; they will replace South Park and one of the Crystal Palace teams. Preliminary indications are that it is the champions, Palace Reds, who have left.

The season starts with some fascinating clashes between some of the stronger teams remaining from last year’s top flight. We start at Abbey Rangers, while AFC Wimbledon host Maidenhead; next week, Maidenhead host Abbey; then Abbey travel to Wimbledon.

So for the fourth successive season we start at Abbey’s ground in Addlestone.  It's a 1pm kick-off, so we would like players to be there (in home kit, not tour kit) at noon sharp. Let’s start as we mean to go on, being organised and giving ourselves the best chance of achieving our goals. The address is Addlestone Moor, Surrey, KT15 2QH; map here.



Fixtures, results & scorers, 2016/17

11.09.16 L 0-1 Abbey Rangers (a)
18.09.16 W 2-0 Carshalton Athletic (h)
25.09.16 D 3-3 Fleet Town (h)
02.10.16 W 4-0 Crystal Palace (a)
09.10.16 L 2-5 AFC Wimbledon (a)
16.10.16 L 3-6 Maidenhead (h)
30.10.16 W 6-1 Milford Pumas (h, Surrey League Cup 1st Round)
06.11.16 L 0-2 Abbey Rangers (h)
20.11.16 D 1-1 AFC Wimbledon (h)
27.11.16 W 4-2 Hampton Youth (h)
04.12.16 P-P Fleet Town (a, Surrey League Cup QF)
11.12.16 W 2-2 (5-4p) Fleet Town (a, Surrey League Cup QF)
18.12.16 W 6-3 Crystal Palace (h)
08.01.17 W 4-0 Fleet Town (h)
15.01.17 W 2-0 Abbey Rangers (h)
29.01.17 W 4-0 Abbey Rangers (h, Surrey League Cup SF)
05.02.17 L 0-5 Maidenhead (h)
19.02.17 L 0-2 Hampton Youth (a)
26.02.17 W 5-2 Fleet Town (a)
12.03.17 L (walkover) AFC Wimbledon (a)
19.03.17 W 5-2 Hampton Youth (a)
09.04.17 L (walkover) Maidenhead (a)
23.04.17 W 1-0 Carshalton Athletic (h, double-header)
23.04.17 W 1-0 Carshalton Athletic (h, double-header)
30.04.17 L 2-3 Maidenhead (Surrey League Cup Final, at Merstham FC)
07.05.17 L (walkover) Crystal Palace (a)

Fixtures subject to change. There are eight teams in the Premier Division; we play each team three times. Results, tables and upcoming fixtures come via PrawnSandwich.com - click the link then go to Surrey County Women & Girls League, U15, Premier Division.



Goalscorers:
13 Ella Dodd
12 Emily Coulson
11 Ella Bothamley
8 Liz Kriebel
6 Giulia Clini
2 Ale Fairn
2 Carla Novakovic
1 Emily Bashford
1 Saskia Brewster
1 Millie MacEacharn

(NB Penalty shootout goals don't technically count: sorry to Liz, Doddsy, Em, Giulia and Ruby)

FIXTURES, RESULTS & SCORERS for all TAFC seasons:
2017/18 • 2016/17 • 2015/16 • 2014/15 • 2013/14

Sunday, 8 May 2016

Sun 8 May: AFC Wimbledon 3-2 Teddington Athletic

On a hot day in May, Teddington finished off a fascinating first 11-a-side season with another trip to AFC Wimbledon. A win would mean a fourth-placed finish to match last season’s debut top-flight campaign; anything else would mean fifth.

The only change from the previous game was up top, where Ella Dodd replaced Ale Fairn. So goalkeeper Ruby Rudkin started behind a back four of Anna Kauffmann, Ella Waldron, Millie Theobald and Saskia Brewster protected by Amy Hallett, while Emily Coulson and Liz Kriebel patrolled midfield between Ella Bothamley on the right and Phoebe Head on the left. A strong bench of Ale, Emily Bashford, Carla Novakovic, Millie MacEacharn and Sadie Day would all be called into action.

The hosts rustled the net in the second minute from an offside position, but the officials couldn’t save the visitors soon after when the Dons’ first corner produced a goal. As hasn’t always happened, Teddington managed to repel the initial cross but the clearance fell to an unmarked player on the edge of the box who drove low under Ruby.

Teddington shuffled their pack, with Boz and Doddsy rotated for Ale and the increasingly impressive Sadie, who showed some confident touches in what turned out to be a 10-minute cameo cut short by a knock to the hip. She was covered by the solid Macca on the right, and by then Bash was terrifying Wimbledon from the left.

Within a minute of her entrance Bash had torn through the defence but lacked the support needed to finish the chance she’d created – and just before the break she burst through again, but neither she nor the willingly-supporting Ale could convert the chance.

That turned out to be Ale’s last input, her day cut short at the half by a foot injury. She was replaced by Doddsy, while the ill Anna was replaced at right-back by Carla.

Not for the first time, Teddington conceded again from a corner, this one nodded over the line from a yard. Having given themselves a mountain to climb, the visitors picked up their icepicks and crampons and set off: Bash shot just wide of the post, then Doddsy knocked on a falling through-ball with the outside of her right heel before running on to her own flick and firing just wide from the edge of the area.

So it was no real surprise when Teddington reduced the arrears after 11 minutes of the second period. Pushing forward from midfield, Emily laid a great ball to Liz, who used her strength to create space in the inside-right channel, used her guile to cut in our her left foot and used her ability to shoot from the edge of the box, with the goalkeeper only able to parry it into the roof of the net.

Still Teddington came. When Emily couldn’t find space for a shot the ball was recycled through Amy to Doddsy whose shot from the edge was well saved; clearly troubling the Dons defence, the big striker then burst on to a Jelly throw, and with Em and Boz in support she had the confidence to shoot herself – just wide of the far post.

That confidence was well-placed. The very next minute, Doddsy timed her run through the inside-right channel perfectly, latching on to a Jelly through-ball and powering it into the near top corner from the edge of the box.

Teddington had been well on top for 20 minutes, and with 16 minutes to go they scented a first-ever victory over Wimbledon – the only team they’ve played more than once without beating. Sadly, they lost concentration and immediately conceded to an old story: the ball over the top falling into the gap between defence and goalkeeper, gleefully finished by a nippy attacker. Within 30 seconds of the restart Boz was sent through by the same means, but the Wimbledon goalkeeper was rapidly off her line and alert enough to snuffle out the danger.

While continuing to seek improvement, Teddington will always look to play the game the right way. It was almost their undoing when a passing move out of defence was intercepted, but Ruby did well to save the high shot. And with Phoebe back on the pitch, there was a late flurry of chances. First Pheebs received an excellent Amy through-ball but dragged her shot just wide of the near post. Then there followed an exhilarating minute in which Phoebe burst down the left and saw a shot parried, her cross from the rebound just evaded Boz, Carla recycled the Dons’ clearance to Jelly who powered through but Emily was controversially flagged offside.

The only remaining incident of note was an entirely accidental bust nose for Millie, borne with stoical determination and a comical amount of passing up the conk. This season has been anything but a slap in the face for Teddington. True, they finished a place lower than last year; credit for that must go to the welcome newcomers Maidenhead, who have made the division more challenging while remaining thoroughly pleasant on a personal level.

Despite the positional slip, Teddington’s first 11-a-side season wasn’t a regression. The Tampa tour which dominated the agenda for so long, taking an enormous amount of effort and money from helpers too numerous to mention here, will prove to be an enormous aid to the girls’ personal and football development: gaining a new earnestness and interest in self-improvement, they have thrown themselves into multiple training sessions with a genuine desire to improve and enjoy their game. And what could be better than that?

TEDDINGTON ATHLETIC (4-1-4-1): Ruby Rudkin; Anna Kauffmann, Ella Waldron, Millie Theobald, Saskia Brewster; Amy Hallett; Ella Bothamley, Emily Coulson, Liz Kriebel (1), Phoebe Head; Ella Dodd (1). Subs: Ale Fairn, Emily Bashford, Sadie Day, Millie MacEacharn, Carla Novakovic.

Tuesday, 3 May 2016

Sun 9 Apr: Teddington Athletic 1-3 AFC Wimbledon

After tropical Tampa it was back to temperate Teddington, but not back to Broom Road. This final home game of the season was staged at NPL, and from next season the girls will play at the club’s newly-leased Udney Park facilities.

Ella Dodd and Carla Novakovic forgot their boots, sending George scurrying back for them and themselves slinking to the bench. The back six was unchanged from recent games but found themselves under the cosh for the first couple of minutes: Ruby Rudkin fumbled a hopeful through-ball and AFC Wimbledon scented blood, shooting from everywhere and hitting the bar twice.

But with three minutes gone it was Teddington who opened the score. Picking up the ball on the edge of the area, Liz Kriebel found Phoebe Head ghosting in from the left. Teddington’s top scorer turned inside onto her favoured right foot, but when that shot was blocked she simply popped the rebound away left-footed.

She nearly bagged a second two minutes later, tearing on to a bouncing through ball but firing just over when pressured by the onrushing goalkeeper. So much for not enjoying playing on the left: Phoebe was, by her own admission, loving the freedom this was giving her.

Pheebs was on the left partly because the management knew she could play there even when she insisted otherwise, but also to accommodate the entirely different right-wing threat of Ella Bothamley. Fun on tour ushered Boz into a central position socially, but her footballing ability has never been in doubt: the only question has been whether to play her up top or wide right. Her crossing is arguably the best at the club, and she demonstrated it once again during a superb Teddington move that demonstrated the best of the girls’ improvements in Florida.

Passing the ball carefully out of defence by moving for each other, the team worked the bak through Emily Coulson to Boz on the right. Hitting the byeline, she sent over a peach of a cross which narrowly missed Ale Fairn’s near-post run and was just behind Phoebe at the back-stick; Pheebs collected and was just about to finish when the big centre-back recovered superbly to knock it behind.

Clearing that corner only left Wimbledon prey to another swift counter-attack, this time rather more straightforward as right-back Anna Kauffmann lofted a ball that was intended for Ale but yet again found Phoebe – who was once more foiled by the big No.16, a quietly superb centre-back. She was having to be, and she looked relieved when Phoebe switched to the right for the last 10 minutes as Carla replaced Boz and Emily Bashford came on for Ale.

All Teddington’s good work had only yielded a one-goal advantage, and that was wiped out with a controversial penalty just before the half-hour. The Dons striker dragged it back, knocked it past her marker and went over the leg. It’s later revealed by the visiting management to be the sixth penalty she’s won that way this season.

Still, the half-time team-talk was positive, as it should be considering Teddington had just had very much the upper hand against the outgoing champions. Doddsy and Boz replaced the breather-taking Liz and Phoebe, but within two minutes the home team were behind when a corner from the left deflected in off the back of a defender who didn’t jump.

Teddington wobbled a while, Wimbledon wandering in behind the defence to force a good save from Ruby. Gradually the home side worked to find a way back into the match, a high-point being an extraordinary Bash dribble: searing at the terrified defence from the halfway line, she turned them inside out three or four times but couldn’t quite find room for a shot. This likeable girl shows immense promise.

For the last 10 minutes Teddington switched to an orthodox 4-4-2, pushing Doddsy up top and sacrificing Amy’s defensive screen for Liz’s forward raids while Phoebe returned to her left-wing beat for Carla. But pushing forward brings risk and it was Wimbledon who scored again, from another avoidable defensive slip – this time an unmarked right-wing runner having the freedom of the 18-yard box to slot home.

With defeat went Teddington’s slim hopes of second or third place. Subsequent results mean that in their final game of the season, at Wimbledon, they need to win to overhaul Maidenhead and match last season’s fourth place. It would be a shame if they didn’t do it, for they are now capable of greater things than at this time last year, and they have much to look forward to.

TEDDINGTON ATHLETIC Ruby Rukdin, Anna Kauffmann, Ella Waldron, Millie Theobald, Saskia Brewster, Amy Hallett, Ella Bothamley, Liz Kriebel, Emily Coulson, Phoebe Head (1), Ale Fairn. Subs Carla Novakovic, Ella Dodd, Emily Bashford.

Thursday, 7 April 2016

This weekend, this month and the future


Udney Park


Teddington Athletic Football Club is very glad to announce that it has exchanged leases to use the Udney Park playing fields in central Teddington. The initial agreement is for 18 months but hopes are high that this will be extended far into the future, and that TAFC will be able to call the 13-acre site home.

Competitive games will start from next season, but first this summer's end-of-season Awards Night should be held there, as we are at liberty to use the clubhouse (pictured). The club will be announcing further plans in due course; the first priority is finding a groundsman...



This week's training


In a change to the usual venue, this Friday's training session will be held at Udney Park, at 4.45pm to 6.15pm. Please can the girls wear their blue tour training tops, blue shorts and blue socks - and bring rain jackets just in case.

This week's match


In another change to the usual venue, Sunday's home game against AFC Wimbledon will be held at the NPL Sports Club (Queen's Rd, Teddington, Middlesex TW11 0LW) at the north side of Bushy Park. 10am kick-off, be there for 9.15am.

Remaining fixtures: the four-way fight


While in Tampa, the league finally confirmed that the November's game at Crystal Palace Reds, for which Teddington couldn't raise sufficient players due to half-term holidays, has been awarded to Palace as a walkover (three points, zero goals). Also, Teddington dropped to third as a result of Wimbledon’s walkover win against South Park, which took the deposed champions into second place above Teddington on goal difference. After drawing 1-1 in Berkshire last Sunday, Maidenhead are a point back, with Abbey Rangers two points behind that. In other words, there’s only three points between second and fifth, and each of the four teams could finish in any of those positions.

The 1-1 draw at Maidenhead was Abbey’s fifth successive winless game (drawing with Maidenhead twice, Wimbledon and Teddington, and losing to Teddington). The Addlestone outfit are struggling to fit in their remaining six league fixtures, and they might have another date to add if they beat second-tier Hampton Youth in this Sunday’s League Cup semi-final. Following that they travel to champions Crystal Palace Reds then face two more league ‘double-headers’, on successive Sundays at Crystal Palace Blues and Wimbledon, before finishing their league campaign at South Park.

Wimbledon are also busy. After travelling to Teddington they have the Surrey County Cup final against second-tier Carshalton, they travel to South Park before that double-header against Abbey and closing home game with Teddington.

After an impressive first season, Maidenhead have a rest this week then play host to South Park and Crystal Palace Reds.

If Teddington won both games against Wimbledon, they would finish above Maidenhead and match last season’s fourth-placed slot; it would also mean that Wimbledon would require at least three points from that Abbey double-header – which might in turn stop Abbey finishing above Teddington…

It’s all to play for, and the management value all parental help in making sure the girls are supported, fuelled and rested for these last two vital games of a groundbreaking season. It could be Teddington's best yet.

Click the image below for fixtures




Sunday, 3 April 2016

Tampa Day 10: Twister sisters

Once more unto the breach, if that’s not an unfair description of the Ed Radice complex that has begun to feel like home for the Teddington girls. Their fourth and final game was a 10am kick-off, overcast and muggy but not exactly Mississippi midsummer and not too hot – and by half-time, it would be raining in advance of a gathering storm.

With an early alarm call and a game the previous evening, the players were perhaps understandably a little dopey; Millie T needed a third explanation during a warm-up that was eventually abandoned when the girls couldn’t get to grips with the rondo passing drill.

Even so, it has served them well, they are getting ever better at it – and, importantly, increasingly implementing the skills it teaches into match situations. They are also now self-sufficient in monitoring each other’s pre-match stretches, while today Carla Novakovic led the cardio warm-up with the enthusiasm and experience she has helped to bring to the midweek fitness sessions that have also helped the girls reach a new level.


After coming off the bench to excellent effect in the last couple of games, Carla returned to an otherwise unchanged starting XI: Ruby Rudkin in goal, a back four of Anna Kauffmann, Ella Waldron, Millie Theobald and Saskia Brewster protected by Amy Hallett. Ella Dodd and Emily Coulson patrolled the midfield with Phoebe Head wide right and Emily Bashford continuing her education up front; Sadie Day was ill but sat on the bench alongside Millie MacEacharn, Liz Kriebel and Ella Bothamley, with Ale Fairn defying pre-match injury doubts to join them later on.

All players having been briefed that a hooter would sound if lightning was detected to be getting dangerously near, the match kicked off to the atmospheric sound of thunder, the air moist but not yet raining. Having been asked before last night’s match to each set themselves a private personal target, today some of them were given personal improvements to attempt – things that might not come off, but for which they would not be chastised for trying. It’s good to report that all the players involved did so, and usually successfully.

Teddington started on the front foot, with Phoebe playing a nice give-and-go with Doddsy down the right before Anna – always a solid defender, and now increasingly creative – also sent Phoebe scampering away. The winger forced a corner which she pulled back to Jelly, whose cross to the far post found Bash but the shot whistled just over.


As is her right and wont, Phoebe then cut out the middle-girl and had a crack herself, forcing a good save from the goalkeeper,  but as per last night’s game Teddington were working the defence harder than the keeper, having majority possession without creating too many clearcut chances.

There are many weapons in the Teddington armoury and after 21 minutes, Phoebe was replaced by Boz. Soon enough the sub came close too, with Doddsy driving on from midfield and finding her in the inside-right channel, but just as Boz cut inside and shaped to shoot with her left foot she was blocked by a despairing defender. It was the story of the half: Teddington commanding the opponents’ half but generally being halted at the 18-yard line. Not a bad story to tell, all told.

One of the coaching conundrums this season has been how to get more goals from Doddsy and Emily C. Last season they plundered 33 between them, with Doddsy playing a fair few games up front and Em usually tucked into the No.10 slot; since the move to 11-a-side they have generally been selected as central midfielders, working hard for the team but perhaps at the sacrifice of goalscoring potential. But with the back four allowing the full-backs (and occasionally Jelly) to come forward and overload the midfield, the two can now get forward a bit more – and when Carla received a throw-in and cleverly worked the ball to Doddsy, her good friend fired just wide of the near post. There’s goals in them there boots.


And there’s more elsewhere in the team. One direct threat is the pace of Bash up top, and just before the half-hour she produced a little lightning of her own, knocking it past a startled defender and leaving her for dead, then outstripping another before being stopped by a third.

But when Teddington made the breakthrough, just after the half-hour when Liz and Macca replaced Em and Carla, it was through teamwork and passing – entirely fittingly for the tone of the tour. Doddsy’s intelligent diag allowed Boz to force a corner, from which she found Doddsy in the area. The midfielder’s right-foot shot was blocked, but the rebound fell serendipitously for her to fire home left-footed.

This time Teddington tightened up their game management and made it to the impending break without conceding an equaliser. The half-time interval allowed the ref to announce that the thunderstorm – whose leading edge was already dumping plenty of precipitation on the participants – was expected to hit in 15 to 20 minutes, at which point he would abandon rather than delay the game.


It also allowed Teddington to rest Bash, move Boz up top and reintroduce Phoebe, and to encourage Saskia. Unquestionably a brilliant defender – well, almost unquestionably: told she’d played well in the first half, she shrugged “I haven’t done much really” – she also has the ball skills and technical awareness to create problems for the opposition, and she was reminded that the back four allows her (and Anna) the licence to get forward and do just that.

So she did. For the first 10 minutes of the half Teddington got a lot of pleasure down the left, with Sas helping to overload the opposition midfield, and after 44 minutes she was involved in a move which progressed through Doddsy and Boz to Phoebe, who expertly lashed high past the goalkeeper.

Having battled determinedly through illness, Ale then replaced Amy, with Doddsy dropping to the anchor role before being replaced by Em, and Boz having a go in central midfield before flitting back up top when Carla replaced the ailing Ale. It’s that kind of positional fluidity that serves the team well now and should hopefully serve the girls well for a lifetime of football.


The positional experimentation and rolling substitutions – just before the hour Bash and Amy reappeared for Macca and Liz – did hamper Teddington’s rhythm a little; Tampa came into the game more than they had previously, but like their visitors in the first half they struggled to convert possession into penetration or shots. On the one occasion they did get behind the backline, Ruby was quickly onto the scene once she’d been rudely disturbed from gazing directly upwards into the gathering stormclouds. Denying a Dave-started rumour that she was catching raindrops on her tongue, she insisted “I was wondering if I was going to get hit by lightning.”

And indeed on 64 minutes, later than expected but six minutes shy of the full term, the referee responded promptly when a lightning flash was followed rather too promptly by a startling peal of thunder.

All ran to the changing rooms, where Tampa Bay United chief George Fotopoulos thanked all concerned for getting involved. An intelligent and passionate advocate of women’s and girls’ soccer, he has been a superb host; having helped develop the Teddington girls’ football, he explained how he hopes they will continue to evangelise for the beautiful game. He has certainly done his bit to make it so, and not merely by presenting the Teddington team with a trophy later accidentally broken by a horrified Boz.


By that time the team had driven home unscathed through a tornado warning. The storm passed quickly enough for the girls to enjoy a trip to the mall and present a final-night entertainment revue, singing and dancing in teams – well, except Boz, who did her own thing with typical humour and winning self-mockery. The girls have had a wonderful time on a brilliant tour, and are coming home not just better players but better people.

 

TEDDINGTON ATHLETIC Ruby Rudkin, Anna Kauffmann, Ella Waldron, Millie Theobald, Saskia Brewster, Amy Hallett, Phoebe Head (1), Emily Coulson, Ella Dodd (1), Carla Novakovic, Emily Bashford. Subs: Liz Kriebel, Millie MacEacharn, Ella Bothamley, Ale Fairn.

Saturday, 2 April 2016

Tampa Day 9: Close but no Cuban cigar

After a baking-hot April Fool’s Day morning around the pool, the third of Teddington’s four games was played on a gorgeous Floridian evening. The opponents this time were Tampa Bay United’s U14 Premier team, the ‘second string’ to the nationally top-rated Elite squad but a state-division top-flight side in their own right, and maintaining the pass-and-move ethos stamped throughout the Tampa club. How much would the visitors have learned from previous encounters?

Liz Kriebel returned to the squad after illness, but with another game in the morning, Ale Fairn wasn’t asked to risk aggravating her troublesome back/shoulder problem. Continuing in the recent 4-1-4-1 formation, Teddington included a couple of new starters who had earned their places with strong substitute appearances: Emily Bashford up front and Millie MacEacharn wide left. Phoebe Head switched to her favoured wide-right slot, with Ella Dodd and Emily Coulson in front of Amy Hallett in midfield and the usual back four of Saskia Brewster, Millie Theobald, Ella Waldron and the increasingly impressive Anna Kauffmann protecting goalkeeper Ruby Rudkin. Liz, Carla Novakovic, Sadie Day and Ella Bothamley made up a strong subs’ bench – and each would be involved.



Teddington started the match as they would go on: impressively. Patiently passing and probing for weaknesses, they had the majority of possession and almost broke through when Phoebe’s cross was inches away from a flying Bash, who is diligently learning the centre-forward ropes and already showing she’s very capable of playing that role. Tampa’s only early chance was ruled out for offside, but Ruby also started as she meant to go on, coming off her line much more quickly to extinguish the threat anyway.  

Before the quarter-hour the visitors started to rotate their squad, with Doddsy and Phoebe given a breather while Liz and Sadie added Teddington’s own American (and half-American) midfield flavo(u)r. At the mid-half water-break, Carla came on for Emily C and Boz for Macca, with Sadie switching to left midfield, which placed her nearer her watching family – although her twin brother got a bit too close for Sadie’s liking in the second half, coming over to annoy the subs’ bench before being shooed away.



Sadie played a full part in a continuing impressive Teddington performance. With the ever-improving Anna stepping out of defence to add overloads, the visitors were starting to play some nice triangles without quite penetrating the defence or troubling the goalkeeper – so on the half-hour, they expedited a pre-planned switch to a back three, with Jelly pushing on into midfield.

Reaching half-time satisfied but not satiated, Teddington continued with the back three but rang the changes, pushing Doddsy up top with Em just behind her, Phoebe on the right and Carla on the left. Jelly and Liz held the midfield, with Amy the insurance in front of the back three. And for the next quarter of the game, Teddington were dominant.



Within a minute, they’d had their first shot on target, Liz following up at the edge of the area with a solid effort. Then Doddsy, having been beaten to a through-ball by a centre-back who’d nipped in front of her, executed instant revenge by doing the same back, expertly laying off for Phoebe to tear down the line and cross to Em, whose shot was pushed onto the bar. A minute later, Em was in the right place again but her shot was deflected to Carla, who shot wide.

It wasn’t just that Teddington were now creating genuine chances; they were genuinely creative. Carla – playing in her sixth different position of the tour, having already done well in central midfield, defensive midfield, left midfield, left-back and (almost unbelievably, considering she’s three foot nowt) centre-back – combined well on the left wing with Doddsy and Em, playing those Tampa-like triangles, then recycling through the anchoring Amy to Jelly to Phoebe to find Doddsy on the edge for a shot desperately deflected.



So it was no surprise when Teddington took the lead 10 minutes into the second half, and again it was delightful football. Having been pinned back down their right side by Carla, Doddsy and Em, Tampa were happy to clear it 30 yards out – but there was Amy again, tidying up with a five-yard diagonal ball to Jelly, who did the same to find Phoebe. A one-two with her friend and skipper sent Pheebs through on goal, where she instantly hammered into the bottom corner.

Tampa might have equalised within a minute when the otherwise superb Millie T fell over in possession, John Stones-style, but Ruby roared off her line and panicked the striker into shooting over. A minute before the water break, Liz suffered a nosebleed so Carla tucked inside and Bash re-emerged on the left, immediately linking up well with Doddsy and feeding Jelly, who took her time and went for the top corner but saw her shot well saved by the goalkeeper. Once again Jelly had done almost everything right and been unlucky to be denied, as she had been by the woodwork in the second game shortly before the decisive third goal.



So it was, to quote baseball legend Yogi Berra, “deja vu all over again” when Tampa went up the other end and scored. With the last attack of the third quarter, the home side worked their way along Teddington’s back three probing for an opening – and with the visitors’ midfield not sufficiently helping out, they found one, breaking through the inside-left channel to fire high past Ruby.

Shuffling their players but maintaining the 3-4-3, Teddington rested Amy and brought on Boz (alternating with Bash on the left and up top, with Doddsy in a midfield anchored by Carla). And to give them their due, Tampa had the better of the final quarter, pushing up their wide players to get around the defence: twice Ruby had to be very alert to dash out of her six-yard box and block-tackle a striker. Giving it the death-or-glory, Teddington stuck to their attacking guns and could have won it with four minute remaining but Jelly, fed by Phoebe and Doddsy, despaired to see another good shot well saved by the goalkeeper.



So it was honours even, and perhaps it’s revealing that Teddington felt a tinge of disappointment as they shared empanadas (reflecting the Tampa area’s strong Cuban heritage) with their affable opponents and their welcoming parents. It says that the fast-learning visitors are earning the right to live with their vaunted hosts by applying their new knowledge, but must remember to keep doing all those simple things which any team must commit to muscle memory – digging back, covering for each other, working hard.

If they can do that – and find a way to balance the defensive diligence which has seen them concede just 15 goals in the last 14 league games with the attacking élan they displayed for much of this game – then they will have a good chance, not just in tomorrow’s tour closer, but in the two remaining league games against top-four rivals AFC Wimbledon.  



TEDDINGTON ATHLETIC Ruby Rudkin, Anna Kauffmann, Ella Waldron, Millie Theobald, Saskia Brewster, Amy Hallett, Phoebe Head (1), Emily Coulson, Ella Dodd, Millie MacEacharn, Emily Bashford. Subs: Carla Novakovic, Liz Kriebel, Sadie Day, Ella Bothamley.

Friday, 1 April 2016

Tampa Day 8: Busch rangers

A second day of rest and relaxation for the girls, with a trip to Busch Gardens, a "venerable amusement park" founded in 1959 by the folks who brought you Budweiser. Cheers!



The girls were predictably fearless in their choice of thrills, taking full advantage of their express passes to enjoy rides like Falcon's Fury, which dropped them 335 feet face-down in five seconds. Your reporter stood making notes.


The girls stuck together in groups of five or six and came together for lunch...


...and eventually returned to the team vans.


Then it was off to Applebee's for an all-American evening meal, followed by milkshakes paid for by Anna's tie-dyed T-shirt business. (Waitress: "Your girls are absolutely wonderful.")

Then there's only one thing to do: jump out of the vans, dump your stuff by the pool and...