9th Feb. 1997
Morley the scourge of Wanderers
URI GELLER, Reading's celebrity supporter, was in attendance,
which probably explained the remarkable twist yesterday's match
took in the second half, when the loss of their goalkeeper, Bobby
Mikhailov, inspired the team from the wrong end of the First Division
to raise its game and defeat the runaway leaders, courtesy of
a 14-minute hat-trick from Trevor Morley.
After 45 mundane minutes devoid of notable incident, the entertainment
quotient suddenly went through the roof once Bulgaria's World
Cup goalkeeper had to withdraw, after damaging knee ligaments
in making a brave save at the feet of Bolton raider Scott Sellars.
Three goals from Morley, enjoying something of an indian summer
just short of his 36th birthday, were enough to win it, but only
just. Alan Thompson and John McGinlay equalised twice, and it
needed some eccentric heroics from Jimmy Quinn, Mikhailov's unlikely
stand-in, to deny Bolton a point.
It was not a good week for the Premier League wannabes. Knocked
out of the FA Cup by little Chesterfield last Tuesday, they have
now had their cushion at the top of the First Division trimmed
to nine points by Wolves, who won 2-0 at Huddersfield. They missed
Nathan Blake, their suspended striker, who would surely have found
a way past Quinn's improvised, cat-on-a-hot-tin-roof goalkeeping.
That said, they were comfortably the better team until Mikhailov's
injury stood the game on its head. Quinn, Reading's joint player-manager,
readily admitted as much, saying: "We only started playing after
Bobby went off. Until then, we just couldn't get the ball down
and pass it."
Bolton's Colin Todd is still happy with his lot as manager of
the best team outside the Premier League, but this was not a game
he enjoyed. "At half-time I couldn't see us losing,"
he said. "But when the keeper went off we relaxed our grip
a bit. The worrying thing is that we've suddenly started shipping
goals. That's got to stop.
"The only way we can miss out on promotion now is by throwing
it away, which is what we did here."
Bolton are still odds-on favourites to regain the Premier League
place they lost last May after just one season up there, but it
was a shock to the system to have their hot streak in the First
Division halted after seven straight wins just four days after
giving away three goals, and their place in the PA Cup, to Second
Division Chesterfield.
Without Blake, they regrouped in 4-5-1 formation, using an extra
midfielder, John Sheridan, and McGinlay on his own up front. Seeking
to play composed, constructive football, they were the classier,
more cohesive side in the first
half, and might have been three goals to the good by its midpoint.
Their first couple of opportunities came to nought through two
impressive reminders of Mikhailov's international pedigree. First
he got down smartly to save Thompson's close range shot, then
he timed his advance from his line to perfection to thwart McGinlay.
The third chance should have left the goalkeeper with no hope,
but Thompson, set up by Gudni Bergsson's right-wing cross, blazed
hurriedly wide.
An unremarkable game of
modest attainment caught
fire, unexpectedly, in the
second half. Sellars
threatened to provide the goal
so badly needed when he was
clean through, only to lose
possession to another brave
intervention by Mikhailov,
who sustained his injury in
going down at the winger's
feet.
Unable to continue, he handed the goalkeeper's jersey to Quinn,
which was one for the "fancy that" brigade. In the corresponding
fixture at Burnden Park, which Bolton won 2-1, McGinlay took over
in goal when Keith Branagan was injured. In safely collecting
his first cross, Quinn promptly laid out one of his own defenders,
Paul Bodin, setting the Keystone Cops tone for what was to follow.
Losing their goalkeeper spurred Reading to redouble their efforts,
and 11 minutes into the second half they went ahead, sparking
the goal rush with their first decent strike of the game. And
what a good one it was, too, Morley turning with wrong-footing
dexterity on the edge of the penalty area before shooting with
cool deliberation into the left-hand corner of Gavin Ward's net.
Game on. Bolton were level within five minutes when Thompson took
advantage of Quinn's unfamiliarity with the gloves, shooting in
from 25 yards with the goalkeeper transfixed. Back came Reading,
ahead again in a matter of seconds when Gerry Taggart's clumsy,
scything challenge on Michael Meaker enabled Morley to score from
the penalty spot.
The crowd were still in celebratory mood when McGinlay cut in
from the left and curled a shot across Quinn and into the far
corner for 2-2.
Still the goals came, Morley completing the third hat-trick of
a career now in extra-time, and a memorable win, when Barry Hunter
headed on a Bodin corner from the left for the nomadic striker
to drive the ball home at the far post.- Quinn somehow held out
in a frantic, edge-of-the-seat finale. It had been some transformation.
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