Ruscoe concedes more than just the points advantage in Nomads loss.

Connah’s Quay Nomads’ 1-0 win over The New Saints at the Deeside Stadium on Friday night confirmed we ACTUALLY have a phase two Cymru Premier title race. Craig Curran’s goal amidst swirling winds of Storm Ellen was enough to send Andy Morrison’s challengers four points clear at the top with seven rounds left to play.

The game itself wasn’t a great advert for the Cymru Premier as a spectacle, although it is easy and lazy to direct accusations of “poor quality” at a semi-professional league based on one game played in conditions that would have affected games at several “higher” levels. Judgements should always be relative and what is more important to take from this game is that we have a genuinely competitive title race going into the latter stages. I would argue a league’s competitiveness and strength in depth is as important as what is perceived as “quality”.

The Cymru Premier has now provided plenty of talking points for the coming months and for the right reasons this time. Along with the title race, we have an intriguing three-horse fight to avoid possible relegation between Penybont, Carmarthen Town and Airbus Broughton. A battle between Cardiff Met and Cefn Druids for the final Europa League play-off spot. Not to mention the ongoing scuffle between Barry Town and Bala Town for 3rd place; which potentially guarantees European football next season depending on the final destination of the Welsh Cup. There are few dead rubbers at the moment, so the focus should be on matters on the pitch instead of the usual “gaffes” the wider media often jump on for clickbait.

Ironically, the best entertainment came after the turgid 90 minutes between Nomads and TNS when the latter’s manager Scott Ruscoe spoke to the media. Clearly rattled, Ruscoe launched his very own ‘Kevin Keegan moment’ when he was highly dismissive of Connah’s Quay’s title credentials and, less surprisingly, the direct style of Andy Morrison’s outfit.

Speaking to Sgorio‘s Nicky John, Ruscoe said the match was “probably one of the worst games we’ve been involved in. Poor conditions, poor quality throughout.”

Nothing controversial there I’m sure most viewers would agree. Ruscoe admitted conditions played their part in his side’s struggles and acknowledged it was something “both sides had to deal with” before launching a thinly-veiled attack on the Connah’s Quay approach to the game.

“They play like that every game,” Ruscoe told Sgorio, “they play like that in the wind, in the rain and if it’s nice, they like that on a good pitch or if it’s a bad pitch, it doesn’t really matter.”

Adding in an interveiw with The New Saints’ in-house media: “we like to get the ball down and the conditions are not conducive to pretty football. The wind was as bad as you’re going to get and it was very difficult for us to get any momentum in the game.”

This kind of snobbery isn’t new in football or exclusive to Ruscoe, but it smacks of the bitterness and the tension that is clearly being felt in the ranks at Park Hall. It’s ridiculous to criticise the style of a team that has just beaten you in a crucial title “six-pointer” and taken a four point lead at the top.

The best was to come when Ruscoe told both Sgorio and TNS TV that “We’ll beat Connah’s Quay at home so we’ll be hoping for someone else to get a draw.”

When asked if Connah’s Quay were pushing TNS as hard as anyone has, Ruscoe dismissed the notion “we’ve been pushed harder [and by better teams] than what these are.” Ruscoe denounced the prospect of Connah’s Quay navigating their way to the title.

“They are not going to win seven games in a row. No doubt, no chance at all,” he told TNS TV, stating “I think we’ll be alright.”

Although, Connah’s Quay only need to win six games from here to secure their first ever Welsh league title.

The comments are telling of the pressure Ruscoe is under as he now faces the real possibility of being the manager that oversaw the end of TNS’s monopoly of the Cymru Premier / Welsh Premier League title. Having led Nomads by four points at the end of phase one, Ruscoe’s side have now taken a single point from their first three matches in the ‘Championship Conference’ phase while Andy Morrison’s side have been unerring. The title isn’t in their hands anymore and it has been a long time since TNS were in this situation.

I doubt Andy Morrison will be losing any sleep over Ruscoe disrespecting his side; the interviews probably provoked a smile if anything. Nothing is won yet and the smart money would still back The New Saints to secure a 9th consecutive Welsh league title. However, Ruscoe’s public display of vulnerability confirms the threat from Deeside is being felt acutely in Oswestry but it also the kind of interview that shows the Cymru Premier matters more than than it’s low-profile.

It’s also added even more fuel to the fire of what is becoming a sparkling title race and we need more of it.

Who is pushing for promotion in the district leagues? (South Wales FA)

Parks football, recreation football; whatever you want to call it, football in the lower echelons of the Welsh football pyramid is just as enjoyable as the upper tiers. There obviously isn’t the same quality in both the standard of play and facilities but it is still 11 v 11 with 3 points up for grabs. While the football at this level has largely a social function, there are some ambitious clubs trying to find their way into the more organised standard in the regional South Wales Alliance and Gwent Premier Leagues.

So here’s a round-up of all the current state of play in the district leagues across the South Wales FA, where the champions of each league are vying for promotion into the South Wales Alliance League. A similar Gwent County FA round-up will follow.

South Wales FA

Aberdare Valley
Abercynon and Cwmaman 2nds are locked on 26 points at the top of the Premier Division with a number of clubs having games in hand, including Penywaun. Last season’s champions Abercwmboi are languishing in mid-table and although they have games in hand, it would take an incredible run for them to retain their title. A three-point deduction hasn’t helped their title defence either.

Last season Abercwmboi did not apply for the South Wales FA champions play-offs but Abercynon and Penywaun did. You would expect the latter two to have the same ambition again this season.

Napiers Arms lead the way in Division One, although second-place Butchers Arms have the advantage of games in hand. The division has been reduced to nine teams after Gwawr FC withdrew from the league.

Bridgend & District
Bettws hold a seven-point lead over Wyndham BGC and both sides have four games left to play. So two wins for ex-Welsh League Bettws will guarantee the title after they missed out to an irrepressible Maesteg Park last season. They will almost certainly apply for the end of season play-offs.

An improved Llanharry side lead the way in division one, seven points clear of Pencoed Athletic with a game in hand, and look certain for a return to the top flight. Tondu Robins and Welfare Park (5th and 6th respectively) are best positioned to join Llanharry if a second promotion place is available.

Llanharan are top of division two, which is effectively a reserve team league. Unbeaten in 12 league matches, they are 4 points clear at the top with three games in hand. Their place in division one next season is inevitable.

Cardiff Combination
Champions Fairwater are top and unbeaten in the premier division, although they are being pushed hard by Avenue Hotspur. Fairwater missed out on promotion in the play-offs last season, while Avenue, I believe, also harbour ambitions to reach the South Wales Alliance League.

Homeguard are having another successful season after they romped to the division two title last season. They are unbeaten in division one, along with Thornhill, having scored an impressive 70 goals in 9 matches. Hard to find any reason why both sides won’t be in the premier next season.

Cardiff Jets have won all 11 of their division two matches so promotion should be a formality. The title remains theirs to lose because they have a 7 point lead over Cardiff Hibernian with a game in hand. Roath Park Rangers have games in hand and could push the re-formed Hibs side for any additional promotion spot.

Cardiff & District
There is an intriguing battle at the top of the premier division. Cardiff Bay hold a narrow advantage over Star FC with Pentwyn Dynamo and Tongwynlais just below with plenty of games in hand. Several sides may be seeking promotion to the next level and the battle for a place in the play-offs could go to the wire.

Cardiff Draconians 2nds are the division one leaders but in a league comprised mostly of reserve sides, it will be two of Space Jam Galaxy, Creigiau and Cardiff Villa to join the premier division next season. Space Jam have the points on the board at the moment, but there are plenty of games in hand for the other sides.

It is a three-horse race in division two between Splott Albion, Canton Libs 2nds and Llanedeyrn Wanderers. Cardiff Cosmos Athletic could make a push with a good run from their fixture backlog, but it would have to be an almost flawless run-in now.

In the lowest tier in the South Wales FA pyramid, Splott Cons are romping away in division two with a 100% record after 9 matches. Llanrumney Athletic are similarly placed with four games in hand on the leaders.

Merthyr & District
The Merthyr League is running with just one 7-team division this year after the loss of champions Navi Treharris this season and Hills Plymouth at the end of last season. Merthyr Town were also fielding a reserve team in this division at the start of the campaign but that side seems to have withdrawn also.

Aber Wanderers, Pantyscallog Village Juniors and Quar Park Rangers are all on 16 points at the top, although last season’s unlucky runners-up QPR have played a game more. Bali Glass are already in the mix. It is unclear whether any club will seek promotion this season. QPR did last year and share a ground with SWAL club Merthyr Saints.

Port Talbot & District
Gwynfi United lead the single division league, unbeaten after 13 games and 5 points clear of closest rivals Glyncorrwg. Last season the Port Talbot League split into two conferences after every side had played each other once. That looks set to happen, if it hasn’t already, soon. Last season’s runners-up FC Porthcawl are currently on the border of the split.

Rhondda & District
Trehebert BGC are well in control of the Premier Division, holding a 10-point lead over Cwm Rhondda having played two games more. These sides had been neck and neck for much of the first part of the season but unbeaten Treherbert now have the edge, including a 5-3 over Cwm Rhondda in December.

Last season’s champions Penygraig United have had a difficult campaign and currently sit 6th in the 8-team division, so their hold on the trophy will end this season.

Their village rivals, Penygraig BGC, have shrugged off last season’s relegation and are well clear in division one, 13 points ahead of last season’s double cup winners Tonypandy Albion. Albion do have four games in hand so could close that gap and the second meeting between the sides could be crucial. Although both sides are almost certain to go up based on form and results this season. 3rd place Ferndale BGC have lost 4 matches, while Tonypandy have lost once.

Taff Ely & Rhymney Valley
The folding of champions Ynysybwl Athletic at the start of the season meant the most open TERV Premier title race as Nelson Cavaliers, Talbot Green, Rhydyfelin, Church Village and Cwrt Rawlin all looked capable of challenging. Unbeaten Nelson (champions in 2017/18) are the favourites but they have a league fixture backlog developing alongside continued participation in league and regional cups. Their recent league and cup wins over Cwrt Rawlin certainly consolidated their position as the team to beat but should they falter Talbot Green and Rhydyfelin look the sides most likely to profit. Nelson and Rhydyfelin have both expressed ambition to seek promotion to the SWAL in the past.

In Division One it looks like a straight shoot-out between Cefn Hengoed and Aber Valley 2nds for the title. Cefn Hengoed are unbeaten but a 3-point deduction means Aber Valley are in the hunt. Aber’s side cannot be promoted so that leaves the door to promotion open to other senior sides in the league should be they finish in the top two. It looks like it’s between Pontypridd and Fochriw Village to claim the second promotion place.

Vale of Glamorgan
The VOG league re-structured this season into two larger divisions and it’s a very competitive premier division this season. Notably, champions Barry Athletic are languishing in 6th place, although they do have games in hand. AFC Rhoose lead the way presently, although there are a number of sides on their tail such as Holton Road and Island Marine. This could be the most interesting of the district league title races and still plenty of football to play.

AFC Rhoose also top division one, their B side unbeaten in 12 matches and 7 points clear of Barry Vikings. Two will go up, which won’t include Rhoose B, and at the moment it Barry Vikings and Cadoxton Barry are the among best positioned for promotion at the end of the season.

Titanic tussle at Tudor Park

A weekend free of club duty (no fixture) meant the opportunity to visit a new ground and last weekend there was one fixture in the south that really stood out: Pencoed Athletic BGC’s visit to Maesteg Park in round three of W John Owen Cup.

The W John Owen Cup is the league cup organised by the South Wales Alliance League (SWAL), contested this season by the 45 member clubs of the league. Where it sits in the order of things within the ‘South Wales’ region is open to debate. The South Wales FA (SWFA) Senior Cup has a more prestigious history but nowadays the W John Owen Cup probably has the greatest depth of competition because it is rare for all of the SWAL’s best sides to play in the Senior Cup.

What was intriguing about this tie is that it brought together two of the most upwardly mobile clubs in the south below the Welsh Football League, two teams in good form this season, as well as an opportunity for me to finally visit an historic Welsh football ground.

Tudor Park is the home of Maesteg Park, an original League of Wales ground where the now defunct Maesteg Park Athletic club were based. The ground bears all the hallmarks of its previous status including floodlights, hard standing around the perimeter of the pitch and a relatively large stand (although no seats) by Welsh League standards. It feels quite bare bones against the increasingly higher expectations of ground criteria certification required to play at the highest tiers of Welsh football nowadays. Nevertheless, it feels like you have stepped into a space imbibed with history the moment you cross the car park and walk through the iconic turnstile into the ground.

It is an enormous ground too, not too dissimilar in scale to the nearby Caerau Athletic Ground, and having recently completed an asset transfer of the facility from Bridgend Council, there are no doubt development plans from the ambitious club (some work has previously been carried out, including improvements to the changing room block to include a sports room for players and supporters, as well as kitchen renovations). There is enormous potential to convert this grand old space into a first-rate football facility.

The Maesteg Park story is impossible to tell without reference to the club that preceded them. There was a period when the old Maesteg Park Athletic were among the best teams in the south Wales leagues, competing in the upper echelons of the embryonic Welsh football pyramid of the 1980s before joining the League of Wales as a founding member in 1992. That year, Maesteg Park Athletic also reached the semi-finals of the Welsh Cup for the first time, losing 4-0 on aggregate to professional outfit Cardiff City.

After three years of struggle in the national league, Athletic’s return to the southern tier 2 Welsh Football League meant they were at a more suitable competitive level and they remained among the top sides in the Welsh League before a dramatic decline between 2007 and 2010. After relegation to division three of the Welsh League was confirmed in 2010, the resignation of the club’s long-time caretaker David Griffiths and his family meant the club was dissolved.

From the smouldering embers a new club emerged, taking on the Maesteg Park name and based at Tudor Park. However, the phoenix club began at the very bottom of the pyramid in the Bridgend & District League, harnessing the rich seam of talent left behind in the collapsed club’s junior set-up. Focusing heavily on local players, a new committee has gradually built Maesteg Park into a force over the last decade. Last season they swept aside all comers in district football, claiming a Bridgend League and Cup treble and earning promotion to the South Wales Alliance League with play-off victories of Fairwater (Cardiff Combination) and Ynysybwl Athletic (Taff Ely Rhymney Valley).

That Andrew Jones’ side were head and shoulders above their previous level has been emphasised by a storming start to life in the Alliance. Winning all their first eight games by a margin of at least two goals, the Park Arabs look well on course for promotion again. They have lost once in 14 league games so far, 2nd in the table with games in hand over leaders Canton Rangers. The only real blip in the season so far was a surprise exit in the SWFA Senior Cup to Rhondda League side Cwm Rhondda. Many would have put Maesteg Park down as one of the favourites to lift the trophy.

Visitors Pencoed Athletic BGC came into the game in similar upward trajectory. A club that was well-established in the now defunct South Wales Amateur League (which merged with the South Wales Senior League to form the SWAL in 2015), Pencoed were placed in the premier division of the SWAL from inception and over the past 5 years have steadily improved. Two top three finishes in the past three campaigns have consolidated their status as one of the best teams at this level. The top of the SWAL is a crowded place these days though and if Mark Powell’s side are to finally claim a league title this season they will need to come through what presently appears to be a five-horse race.

Both sides started the game with notable absentees. Maesteg’s top scorer Steffan Roberts was unavailable, Pencoed were missing several first team players but were able to start Adam Carpenter who signed from Cymru Premier side Penybont before the game. If you didn’t know any better you would have thought watching the first half an hour that the home side were the higher league opposition. Maesteg dominated the first half in terms of possession and territory, winning lots of duels but I couldn’t pick out too many truly clear-cut opportunities. Lots of good play from the hosts but the Pencoed keeper wasn’t as busy as Maesteg’s control may have forced.

Even though their attacking moments were sparse in the first half, Pencoed did look incisive from counter-attacks and probably should have taken the lead before they did but for a horror miss from a couple of yards out. However, break the deadlock they did through Jack Delve’s fine finish somewhat against the run of the play.

After the break Maesteg Park came out of the blocks strongly and another period of sustained pressure ensued, bombarding Pencoed’s penalty area with a series of dead ball situations. The pressure eventually tolled around the hour mark when Pencoed’s custodian spilled a free-kick and the ball was bundled home. I believe forward Ashton White – one of the young, local stars of this Maesteg side – claimed the goal.

The final half hour proved a proper scrap on a pitch that wasn’t easy on the eye or the play; it was testament to the quality in both sides that such an engaging football match was played out on the surface. There were chances at both ends but neither side could strike the decisive blow in the regulation 90 minutes so we got another half-hour.

The winning moment came shortly into the second period of extra time, Pencoed’s Darren Townsend showing the poaching instincts that made him one of Mark Powell’s key targets in the summer to score from close range. Maesteg threw everything they could muster at Pencoed in the final stages and the visitors really had to dig in and use all their resolve to retain the lead, with a little bit of fortune along the way. The exhaustion of both sets of players was evident at the final whistle.

Pencoed progressed but there was no shame for Maesteg Park, newcomers in regional football, who more than competed with their higher level opposition. It was a fantastic football match, a hard-fought slugfest of a game. The crowd of around 90-95 is very good for a club playing at tier 7 but it was an encounter of such quality and competitive spirit it deserved the company of two or even three times that number.

Match notes
18.1.2020
Maesteg Park 1-2 Pencoed Athletic BGC [AET]
(Ashton White 60′; Jack Delve 40′, Darren Townsend 107′)
W John Owen Cup Third Round
Tudor Park, Maesteg
Attendance: 95 (approx) | Entry: Free

Welsh Ground #84