Deveronvale 3 - 0 Formartine United

League Match
Saturday, December 21st, 2019, 3:00 PM at Princess Royal Park, Banff
Attendance: 200
Referee: Scott Leslie
Deveronvale v Formartine United, Dec 21st 2019, Princess Royal Park, Banff
Deveronvale Formartine United 

Goalscorers
Colin Charlesworth (11)
Ryan Sargent (33)
Ross Aitken (48)
None.

Team Managers
Steve Dolan Paul Lawson

Starting Eleven
James Blanchard
Michael Dunn
Harry Noble
Ross Aitken
Courtney Cooper
Kyle Willox
Colin Charlesworth
Kyle Gauld
Scott Dunn
Matthew Wallace
Ryan Sargent
Kevin Main
Craig McKeown
Johnny Crawford
Darryn Kelly
Stuart Smith
Stuart Anderson
Graeme Rodger
Daniel Park
Kieran Lawrence
Scott Lisle
Garry Wood

Bench
Jody Munro
Ross Archibald
Robert Allan
Sam Robertson
Kevin Adams
Grant Noble
Grant Pennet
Errol Watson
Michael Clark
Liam Strachan
Andrew Greig
Paul Lawson
Conor Gethins
Aaron Norris

Substitutions
Sam Robertson for Colin Charlesworth (49)
Ross Archibald for Scott Dunn (86)
Conor Gethins for Stuart Smith (53)
Andrew Greig for Scott Lisle (53)
Aaron Norris for Garry Wood (73)

Bookings
None. Johnny Crawford
Kieran Lawrence
Daniel Park

Red Cards
None. None.

Appearances & Goals To Date
Kevin Main (GK) 72 apps -
Craig McKeown 139 apps20 goals
Johnny Crawford 143 apps11 goals
Darryn Kelly 14 apps1 goal
Stuart Smith 255 apps24 goals
Stuart Anderson 229 apps34 goals
Graeme Rodger 212 apps71 goals
Daniel Park 42 apps10 goals
Kieran Lawrence 84 apps3 goals
Scott Lisle 28 apps13 goals
Garry Wood 169 apps79 goals
Andrew Greig (sub) 82 apps25 goals
Conor Gethins (sub) 131 apps47 goals
Aaron Norris (sub) 47 apps3 goals

Starting Lineup
Youngest Player:Scott Lisle (21 years 233 days)
Oldest Player:Kevin Main (37 years 282 days)
Average Player Age:30 years 89 days
Domestic Players:11 (100.00 % of starting eleven)

Matchday Squad
Youngest Player:Liam Strachan (21 years 45 days)
Oldest Player:Kevin Main (37 years 282 days)
Average Player Age:29 years 255 days
Domestic Players:17 (94.44 % of matchday squad)

First Team Debuts

Milestones

There's poor; there's bad and there's embarrassingly bad. Formartine's performance here never reached the dizzy heights of either of the first two categories and can only really be described as one that was bad enough to tarnish Christmas for most of their loyal supporters - some of whom were massochistic enough to have endured the full 90 minutes of humiliation as their side was completely outclassed by a decent but by no means outstanding Vale team. The consequence has been to propel United for the first time in several seasons to the lower half of the league while Vale edge past them into 8th place.

This was a pale shadow of the United side that with a fair number of the same players in the same positions and under the same management went twenty odd games in a row, undefeated, who knocked Peterhead out of the cup earlier this season. There is something badly amiss. Some players have lost a yard of pace and others have had periods out through injury, but none of that seems really to explain the palpable lack of attitude, aptitude and ability to play coherently as a team that has been around of late. They looked like a team where the management had lost the dressing room or more worryingly, where some players are working to that end to pursue their own ends. Either way it needs to be sorted before supporters abandon the cause.

Again United started brightly enough for the first 5 or 10 minutes before fading faster than stonewashed denim. Within 5 minutes they had forced a couple of corners and sustained a bit of pressure on the home rearguard. In the 6th minute following a corner on the left from Anderson the ball was only partially cleared before being knocked back into the area in front of left post by the same player and Wood delivered a strong header that rebounded to safety from the upright. They never got that close again.

Vale on the back of some decent results, were soon giving as good as they got and showed themselves to be quick on the break. Aitken was doing sterling work box to box turning defence to attack and in the 11th minute he slipped a ball forward through the inside left channel to CHARLESWORTH who took the ball to Crawford, turned him inside out and worked his way towards the near post area before striking a neat low shot beyond the reach of Main into the opposite corner.

If Vale needed a confidence boost they now had it and began to press United quite hard. A couple of waves of attack and 6 minutes later they had United in all sorts of trouble. Charlesworth came through the midddle with Sargent to his right and leaving McKeown in no man's land burst into the box towards the right side where Smith was the only potential obstacle and he was a few yards off. The left back covered the ground and got in a lateish, long legged and illegal tackle. Noble took the penalty and, as is his custom, Main duly saved it.

It was one sided by now and Vale continued to hold Formartine feet to the fire. In the 33rd minute after an abortive United attack was dismantled about 30 yards out and the ball was again fed forward by Aitken to Gauld. Dunn and Wallace were ahead of the United defence but they advanced enough to play Aitken onside and Dunn was smart enough to remove himself from contention as SARGENT burst through from the back, bore in on Main and clipped the ball past him for 2-0.

The second half was barely 4 mins old when a United attack was broken up by AITKEN and Noble. The former broke forward to get the ball back wideish right ahead of the half way line. He then worked his way past a few defenders and a couple of insipid tackles before having only Main to beat. He took the ball wide of the keeper before squeezing it past him into the far corner of the net.

At 3-0 down and forty minutes to go United still had a glimmer of hope but despite using all three subs they made little impression on a more determined team that kept their shape better. A defeat embarrassing in its scale and deeply worrying for United supporters in the ease with which it was achieved.

Match report by Colin Keenan



Photography by Ian Rennie