SALISBURY are second in the table after back to back wins in the league.
They beat struggling Didcot Town 2-1 on the road on Saturday afternoon, before seeing off Plymouth Parkway by the same scoreline on Tuesday night.
Against Didcot, the home side were the first to threaten; just two minutes on the clock when Jenson Wright picked up the ball 30 yards out but he could only drive it high and wide of the goal.
It was two minutes later that the Whites had their first sight of goal. A strong run from former Didcot man Josh Hedges saw him feed it inside to Ryan Penny and his first touch took him into the area and clear on goal. Home keeper Leigh Bedwell came out and spread himself well to deny the midfielder a first goal for the club, with Dan Fitchett unable to capitalise on the loose ball.
Salisbury continued to threaten and on seven minutes a deep Tom Leggett cross was met by the head of Coppin who put his header wide of the post. With the game settling down the next real goal-scoring chance wasn’t until the 20th minute and it saw the Whites take the lead.
A good drive forward from midfield by Penny saw him feed it through to Fitchett and when his low shot was saved, Charlie Gunson picked up the ball and saw a shot deflected for a corner. That set piece was swung in by the same player and Jombati rose high to power a header into the back of the net from 10 yards out.
That goal stung Didcot into life and only some fine defending from Salisbury stopped them equalising three minutes later. A fine move down their right-hand side saw Robbie Gallagher draw a good save from Josh Gould before both Leggett and Josh Sommerton blocked goal bound shots on the line in the scramble that followed before the Whites finally hacked the ball clear.
That was pretty much the last real goal-scoring chance of the half; Fitchett and Gunson both having half chances to extend the lead whilst at the other end neither Wright nor Patrick Osborne could trouble Gould when shooting from outside the area as Salisbury went in with a narrow lead.
The second half should have seen the Whites double their lead almost immediately but when Gunson was clean through on goal he dithered slightly which allowed Bedwell to block the ball behind for a corner. The game opened up as the half progressed, with both teams looking to play on the front foot.
On 51 minutes Gould had to be alert to push wide an Osborne shot on the turn before a minute later at the other end Hedges saw his shot from the edge of the area deflected wide.
On 58 minutes Salisbury doubled their lead and it came from the penalty spot. Hedges picked up the ball 25 yards from goal and his mazy run took him past three players and into the area where he was brought down.
Referee Neil Fyfield had no hesitation in pointing to the spot and, following a lengthy delay which saw three home players booked, Jombati stepped up and coolly sent Bedwell the wrong way for his second goal of the game.
The game was starting to get pretty scrappy but on 67 minutes a strong run from Aaron McCreadie saw him play in Fitchett whose ball to the back post was met by a sliding Leggett but the ball went narrowly wide of the post.
Eight minutes later Hedges came inside again and was unlucky to see his deflected shot hit the legs of Bedwell and go behind for a corner.
On 79 minutes the home side pulled a goal back when Putland was quickest to react after Gould had got down well to save Gallagher’s low effort; the Didcot man on hand to lash home the rebound.
The goal saw the home side try to push for an equaliser but unable to fashion a chance to fully test Gould, whilst at the other end Bedwell showed strong hands to push Hedges near post drive over the bar.
With the game ticking into time added on Salisbury substitute Sam Ashton should have added a third; heading just wide from six yards out following Gunson’s ball in from the left, but the Whites saw out the game to secure all three points on the road.
Fitchett and Hedges scored against Plymouth. Salisbury take on Poole Town on October 31.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here