
Dulwich Hamlet FCW 0 - 2 Ashford Town (Middlesex) FC Women
Tuesday 3 May
Meadowbank Football Ground, Dorking
Capital Senior Cup
To Dorking for the second time in two days, following the men’s team’s Bank Holiday outing there, as Dulwich Hamlet Women took on the formidable Ashford Town in the Capital Senior Cup Final. Beaten only twice this season, Ashford have been the bane of everyone’s existence all year, and will likely terrorise their new peers in the next league up. For now, it fell to Dulwich to do their best to hold them back, as the two teams faced each other on a balmy Surrey evening in front of a sizeable crowd of visiting fans - the Pepper Army were out in full force and fine song as Dulwich got down to business.
Ashford made their intentions known in the opening minutes, pressing high up. Dulwich had their own plans and looked to create their own momentum: Sophie Manzi whipped the ball through midfield to set the tone and give Madi Parsonson a terrific chance on the right. Backed into the corner, she got round her mark, but there was no-one in the box to carry it safely home. Lucy Monkman had eyes on the ball a minute later but was surrounded by four Ashford sentinels - these old foes know her ability well and had no intention of giving her any room.
Dulwich continued to build the pressure, as Asia Harbour Brown launched an attack on the left. Ashford keeper Sophie Shults powered forward to thwart her but couldn’t take the ball out of play. Dulwich needed to finish it, but couldn’t quite seal the deal. Turning the tables, Ashford threatened Dulwich with an early goal - a ball that should have been cleared in the box rolled hazardously past Hamlet keeper Rebecca Sargent. Ashford rounded for another go, but Harbour Brown, on peak box-to-box form, blocked it expertly a few yards from the goal.
A hard collision between Ashford skipper Alissa Down and two Dulwich players handed the advantage to the pink & blue, and Rosie Stone took the free kick. Her smart delivery into the box gave Dulwich a chance to take the lead but again, the final word eluded them. Ashford hauled the action back down the field and returned fire with a chancey strike in the box from Jade Johnson, skied over the bar - but moments later, they found their target. Brit Saylor’s clever footwork helped her evade her mark in midfield, but Ashford’s Lavana Neufville persevered and stole the ball away to set up Ashley Cheatley, who made the most of a 30th minute opportunity to take Ashford ahead.
Monkman had revenge on her mind, pelting toward the box with no challenger in sight. But she held the ball a fraction too long and missed her window. Raging now, Dulwich swarmed the left flank looking for a way to cut Ashford down to size. Harbour Brown wove her way down the left flank, testing for weaknesses in the Ashford wall, but she couldn’t quite break through.
Dulwich faced more danger in the box, scrambling to clear it out again. Cheatley had a brace in her sights but rushed the job and fumbled her aim; mercifully for Dulwich it barrelled past the far post. Her teammates kept the heat simmering as the whistle approached, chancing their moments where they saw them, but mainly just spoiling Dulwich’s fun. An unconvincing ball found its way into Sargent’s hands and Cheatley went for another go - a stonking run at the box, which Dulwich diverted neatly as sunset fell on the first half.
The second half opened tensely for Dulwich - Rhea Gall went in for a header inside the 6yd box, but came off worst and hit the ground hard. Thankfully, after a cautionary look from the medic, she was up and at ‘em again. Dulwich revisited their mission with urgency, but needed to convert it into laser focus and avoid burning out, with Ashford threatening to run them down. Ever-dependable defender Chana Hinds looked for a way through the midfield as Ashford tried to close her down - she found Manzi, but Manzi had no-one to pass to - a recurring problem for the Hamlet tonight, as shaky transition left them all too frequently with nowhere to land and no way to create or convert opportunities.
Ashford, temporarily hit by bad luck, hit the post, and seconds later Kalani Peart was down after colliding headlong with a Dulwich player. With play quickly resumed, Ashford were straight in with a 64th minute strike, firmly noped by Sargent with a clean save to keep Dulwich’s hopes alive. Harbour Brown saw a chance to tip the balance but had nobody to connect to. Dodging her mark she peeled off a shot on target anyway, but without back-up there was no way to divert or surprise the keeper, and it rolled coolly into Shults’ arms.
Sas Philp provided fresh legs and got straight into the action, snatching control in midfield and sending Asia on a run down the left flank, but Ashford headed her off. The crowd utterly lost its proverbial kaka in the 78th minute as Monkman forced the ball forward in the most promising strike of the game and it zoomed gloriously, magically… left of the post. Football is pain. Undeterred, Dulwich summoned their grit and powered on, a doozy of a header from Chana getting things moving again. Dulwich urgently needed to put a ball away and while their legs looked tired, they didn’t look beaten - anyone that’s followed this team for any stretch of time knows they don’t back down or give up, even when things look bleak.
But Ashford knew they were on the home stretch, and in the 85th, the deadly Cheatley did it again - spanking it in at such speed that Sargent didn’t have time to pick a direction, nabbing her brace and doubling their lead. It was an unstoppable goal and a heartbreaker for this team who delivered fire and grit from the jump.
Dulwich brought the talented Minnie Cruttwell on to work some magic, and kept the searchlights on. Hinds found Philp down the left wing, but Ashford weren’t about to give away their advantage, and denied her passage. Still, with five extra minutes on the clock, Dulwich edged their way up the field, looking for pockets of opportunity to the last. There’s no shame in losing to a team this lethal, but Dulwich kept their heads up and their blood hot as the final whistle closed the game, thanking their fans on the field and in the bar as the orange-clad Ashford lifted the trophy.
Ashford’s physical and psychological stamina has placed them out front this season and given Dulwich a hell of a lot to contend with on multiple occasions. It’s been a difficult and transitional third season for Ryan Dempsey’s squad, but their skill and chemistry are anchored by a never-say-die tenacity that will set them up well for their fourth season, after a well-earned rest and regroup. With nothing but proud words pouring from the travelling supporters afterwards, this team remain the pride of Champion Hill and should know they have every Dulwich supporter behind them.
Attendance: 204
Dulwich Hamlet
1 Rebecca Sargent; 2 Madi Parsonson; 4 Chana Hinds; 5 Rosie Stone; 6 Sarah Walters; 8 Brit Saylor ©; 9 Sophie Manzi; 10 Anna Jowle; 14 Lucy Monkman; 18 Asia Harbour Brown; 32 Rhea Gall
Substitutes:
7 Sas Philp; 12 Anna Stones; 13 Ceylon Hickman; 15 Hannah Baptiste; 20 Minnie Cruttwell
Ashford Women
1 Sophie Shults; 4 Kalani Peart; 6 Anya Kinnane; 7 Lavana Neufville; 8 Hannah Pearson; 9 Ruby Linton; 10 Alissa Down ©; 11 Jade Johnson; 14 Charlotte Baker; 16 Ashley Cheatley; 21 Jordane Hoesli-Atkins
Substitutes:
5 Laura Huse; 7 Alice Frise; 12 Chloe Farrell; 27 Millie Maggioni
Image: Liam Asman
DHFCW take on Trans Radio at Champion Hill!
DHFCW take on Trans Radio at Champion Hill!
On a beautiful crisp Spring evening in Dulwich, Champion Hill will play host to an event never before seen across our Tuscan hills – and one that you will not want to miss!
In much needed celebration of the fact that our game is for everyone, Trans Radio FC will be making their debut at the ground in a special invitational match against our very own Dulwich Hamlet women’s team.
We are incredibly proud to welcome Trans Radio to The Hill, and help to raise funds and awareness for the Trans Community, and witness a truly ground-breaking and history-making fixture.
The match will take place on [b]Thursday 31st March[/b], with kick off at 19.30. Tickets cost £4 for adults and £2 for concessions, with proceeds from gate profits, programmes and 50/50 tickets - going to Trans Radio.
You can buy tickets at the turnstiles, or go to the Seetickets website here to get them early – where you can also buy a programme or add an extra donation. Seetickets have kindly agreed to waive all fees for the game, to help generate even more money for the cause, so we want to say a big thank you to them for this generous gesture.
TRUK United FC were formed in January 2021, through Trans Radio UK, with the aim of connecting the community, supporting TRUK Listens and making football a more inclusive sport. They raise awareness of issues within the Trans community and also raise funds for TRUK Listens - a text based service for anyone who needs to talk but maybe has no one that they can talk to. You can learn more about them and their work here.
We look forward to seeing you there on Thursday 31 March!
CLUB STATEMENT: DHFCW Reserves vs Walton Casuals
Following an incident of racist abuse in the reverse fixture this season the club will be playing this game behind closed doors.
As with all incidents of physical and verbal abuse the club followed the correct reporting procedures with the authorities but are disappointed that the lack of action resulted in our players feeling unsafe and so unwilling to play this game. After discussions with team managers and players a list of conditions was identified that, if agreed with the opposition, the game could go ahead. Playing behind closed doors was one of those conditions.
The club have been happy throughout the process to support whatever decision the players wished to take regarding the game irrespective of potential punishment from the football authorities. This decision was taken to provide them with the protection they should be able to expect from the football authorities. It should not fall to individual clubs and their players to have to take the lead.
It is clear from this incident and others like it that the processes and policies in place are woefully inadequate and there is both an inability and a reluctance to deal with many serious abusive situations that occur with players or fans.
As a result not only will we continue to pursue the authorities on this individual case but also push for a change in how fast and how seriously these incidents are dealt with. This incident is not resolved which is why we are not commenting on the detail of what occurred on the day or since.
Fans among you who have read past columns regarding the incidents this season will know that we do not believe words are enough, it is not enough to condemn racism and other forms of abuse, it is action that is required if we are to remove it from our game.
This season has seen a worrying increase in incidents at matches, urgent action is needed to reverse that trend. Authorities that have taken no action between the two fixtures despite constant chasing have demonstrated they are part of the problem.
We will continue to work with positive influences and organisations in the game and increase our efforts to test and then hopefully help improve the rules and policies of the game so those failings can be addressed.
Dulwich Hamlet 0 - 3 Millwall Lionesses
Opportunism counts for a lot in football. You can have a team stuffed with talent, a canny and strategic manager and enough grit to de-ice Dog Kennel Hill for a thousand Januaries - and Dulwich have all of that in spades (not to mention a supportive crowd, numbering 472 for the first home game of the year) but sometimes it’s just the team that makes the most of its chances that walks away victorious. Despite plenty of sparkle from Dulwich Hamlet this week, they just couldn’t convert, while their fellow SE London opponents made lemonade all afternoon.
Dulwich opened with confidence, with frontline stars Sophie Manzi and Lucy Monkman going after multiple chances in the opening minutes, but Millwall keeper Chrissie Wiggins was a wall of nope from the start, seeing off all attempts. Ten minutes in, Molly Hawkins scored with Millwall’s first shot on goal - an auspicious start for the visitors, and one that would change the tone for the rest of the game. An audacious, long free kick a minute later threatened to double the lead, but returning keeper Klaudia Kovacs threw hands and it scraped the top of the post.
Asia Harbour-Brown, and Rhea Gall - back with the Hamlet after six months living in Argentina - worked hard to set up new channels of attack, but couldn’t find connections and the chances fizzled out, including a cross from Gall into the box that could have lit the Hill on fire if it had found its way home. Dulwich increased the pressure, but Millwall responded physically, hauling Hannah Baptiste down in front of the box, and attracting the ref’s attention after Milly Penfold pulled Gall to the ground. Hawkins escaped down the left wing with the ball and an idea, but met Gall - the collision handed Millwall a free kick but their aerial plan was badly positioned and came to nothing. Another volley from the Millwall frontline was closed down by Kovacs, alert to the danger and ready to stop them.
It was a frustrating half for Dulwich, kept in midfield and denied chances by Millwall. Against the visitors’ strong keeper, a coordinated attack and some serious pressing was needed, with either a battering ram assault to exhaust her or some devious routes into the box, but the Hamlet weren’t good enough in transition and handed over the ball too many times. Dulwich’s last chance of the first half came just before the whistle, as Monkman spotted an opportunity in the box but didn’t have the support to help her get round her mark.
Dulwich returned with new ideas; Sarah Walters’ clever defending shut down a Millwall attack, and a lightning wing run from Harbour-Brown sent the ball into the box only to be defused by Millwall’s defence. Manzi spanked a shot over the heads of the defenders which Monkman raced to finish, but Wiggins was there first. Millwall looked for a route down the wing but Walters and Chana Hinds denied them, while Harbour-Brown scouted more chances. But what Dulwich brought in hope, Millwall matched in confidence. In the 59th minute, Chloe Burr zipped into the box and buried a goal - Hinds fought to block her but couldn’t close it down. Millwall were on a roll, and made it 3-0 two minutes later - Burr again with a torpedo from outside the box.
Dulwich, who never go quietly, fought to rebalance the situation. A great tackle from Manzi gave the newly subbed-in Sas Philp a chance - she kept it in play, and Manzi booted a shot straight at goal - a beaut, but disallowed by a linesman with an offside flag and no sense of fun. Undeterred, Manzi tried to create some surprise with a neat sideways kick to outfox her mark.
Dulwich’s second half was full of smart little flourishes like that - Monkman’s wasp-like ability to zoom in and attack from nowhere, Manzi’s all-round excellence on the ball - but collectively the team seemed to suffer from shortsightedness with how to weaponise that skill. The connections weren’t there, the passing wasn’t thoughtful enough. It felt reactive when they most urgently needed to plan and build an attack.
In the final fifteen, Harbour-Brown - with seemingly endless energy - kept the pressure up, partnering with Zoe Elmore to create in midfield and change the outcome, but Millwall were everywhere they turned, hoovering up every possibility. Walters and Gall saw Millwall trying for a fourth and saw them off, communicating well with Kovacs. Weirdly, Millwall - who should have been enjoying themselves - showed some temper, as Maisie Joyce shoved Elmore to the ground. A furious Champion Hill crowd roared “off! off!”, and Millwall took Joyce and her yellow card off the field immediately.
Millwall were still after a fourth goal, but Harbour-Brown whipped round and headed them off at the pass. Gall fired a free kick to Manzi, which Millwall scooped up, but Hinds got forward and kept it in play. Monki had a chance to finish it but Millwall’s keeper dived and covered it, determined to keep her sheet clean. More temper from Millwall went unchecked this time, Milly Penfold fully shoving Harbour-Brown to the floor, to the ref’s indifference, though he penalised Philp for a tackle seconds later, handing Millwall a free kick that came to nothing. The six minutes of added time felt like twelve, with Dulwich looking outrun. There were still chances for them, including a beautiful shot from Philp, which looked on target but clipped wide of the post, but Millwall had the game wrapped up.
Dulwich have some figuring out to do. As ever, there’s a wealth of talent and tenacity, as they showed in flamboyant recent wins over London Seaward and Denham United, but they need to improve their communication and transition, and position better to support the chances they create. Too many times, one or another player seemed to be out front on their own, against a solid team who took every chance they got, with a brick wall of a keeper giving them the foundation for a hard-to-beat approach.
Attendance: 472
Dulwich Hamlet FCW:
1 Klaudia Kovacs; 3 Rhea Gall; 4 Chana Hinds; 6 Sarah Walters; 9 Sophie Manzi; 10 Anna Jowle; 14 Lucy Monkman; 15 Hannah Baptiste; 17 Anna Stones; 18 Asia Harbour-Brown; 20 Minnie Crutwell;
Subs:
7 Sas Philp; 11 Zoe Elmore; 21 Jazmine Lacrette; 22 Joanna Gibson
Millwall Lionesses:
1 Chrissie Wiggins; 2 Millie Connell; 3 Elizabeth O’Callaghan; 5 Jordan Butler; 6 Amy Nash; 8 Libby Stubbs; 11 Lucy Bolitho; 12 Chloe Burr; 16 Milly Penfold; 17 Maisie Joyce; 19 Molly Hawkins;
Subs:
9 Ellie Hinkley; 10 Lottie Ivison; 13 Serena Hand; 15 Aiofe Saunders; 20 Kaydence Kabadaki
Referee:
Gary Strangwood
Assistant refs:
Mark Casswell
Grisha Zeigermaher
Photo:[ Liam Asman
Dulwich Hamlet FCW 4 - 1 London Seaward
Sunday 21 November 2021
London Capital Cup
It’s been a somewhat rocky road for Dulwich Hamlet recently. Regular viewers know the depth in this squad, and their first two seasons saw them settle in comfortably at the top of the table, choosing furniture and picking out paint colours (pink and a handsome shade of navy, obvs). This season the mojo has been shakier: why? Injured stalwarts, talented new signings still building chemistry with each other? Growing excellence from other teams? The depressing skulduggery that denied them a well-earned promotion last season? It could be all or none of the above, but the Hamlet haven’t quite seemed themselves - until today. Spare a thought for London Seaward, who rolled into town the day Dulwich got their devil back. The former Leyton Orient players dwell in the next league up, which fazed the Hamlet less than none.
Dulwich were off the starting block with speed, chancing a shot past the goal in the first minute. Both teams tested each others’ defences, Seaward keeper Elleah Fenner saving Rosie Stone’s free kick, and the dependable Chana Hinds rerouting a dangerous looking Hayley Barton in the box. Ellie Millbourn set out her stall for her home debut, shaking off her mark and creating some mischief in the box. Her creativity paid off - minutes later, she marked her card with a goal at 19’, cleanly finishing a direct run into the box.
It set the tone for Dulwich, who kept Seaward on the back foot as they tried out a string of ideas - a cheeky go at a brace from Millbourn, a long shot from Sophie Manzi, and Anna Jowle looking for her own way into the box. Seaward could find no traction in midfield, thwarted by Harriet Crofts defending high up the pitch. In the 30th, it seemed Seaward would find the counterbalance, but couldn’t drive a ricocheting ball anywhere closer than the crossbar. Dulwich were having none of it, and Anna Stones reasserted dominance with a gorgeous sliding tackle. Sadly the referee showed little appreciation for great art, and handed Seaward a free kick from midfield. Egle Trezzi’s optimistic strike was powerful but comfortably wide.
With halftime bearing down, Seaward raced to find an equaliser; no through route down the wing, with Hinds guarding the left flank, and Saskia Reeves-Priestley saw off a player casing the right edge of the box. Dulwich returned to the locker room clutching the advantage.
If the East Londoners thought the second half would bring redemption, their hopes lasted seconds. Manzi closed on the edge of the area in the 46th and slammed a shot into the back of the net, making short work of a well-aimed dive by Fenner. London Seaward saw the urgency of finding a foothold in the game, and regrouped. The chances volleyed box-to-box as both teams tried to wrest control, Asia Harbour-Brown trying for a third Dulwich goal, and Niamh Carty looking for a Seaward opener. The visitors’ efforts delivered - Seaward opened their account at 57 minutes with Giorgia Bracelli’s shot which slipped sneakily past Reeves-Priestley.
Dulwich had tasted victory, and were not handing it back. Seaward, revitalised, pounded at the Dulwich defences, but the home side’s organised approach kept the score locked down. Chana Hinds beat three hungry midfielders in a pounding run down the wing, while Harbour-Brown and Stones relayed back and forth across the field to set up opportunities. Hayley Barton fought to level the score, but a misjudged strike and a fearless save off the line from Reeves-Priestley dulled her chances. A subbed-in Hannah Baptiste brought reinforcements, providing back-up to the hardworking Hinds, giving Dulwich room to scope out their next opportunity.
Desperation started to show for Seaward. An ill-judged foul on Rosie Stone handed her a free kick, which skipped over the bar. Harbour-Brown outsmarted her mark with some canny footwork, and a vicious tackle sent her flying moments later as fury and panic started to dominate the visitor’s tactics. Manzi’s free kick was knocked out of orbit by a doozy of a save, but Dulwich kept their cool, trusting in their game plan, and the coordinated approach paid off beautifully. In the twilight minutes, Baptiste made magic of a corner, heading it deftly into the net to put Dulwich 3-1 up at 84 minutes. A furious Kate Kerr showed her temper, trying to kick a placed ball away from Manzi. Dulwich had the last laugh - a triumphant Lucy Monkman finished a perfect Harbour-Brown cross with a neat tap-in at the 89th to seal the deal for the Hamlet.
Dulwich were organised, focused, determined, read each other effectively and converted their chances with flair. An exceptional team effort, with the younger players showing imagination and commitment and gelling neatly with the more established players - this is the team we know and love. Seaward fought hard, but a lack of discipline undressed them. They let temper derail their grit and knock them off balance when they most needed to regain their footing. For Dulwich it’s a much needed restorative, a ride into the next round of the Cup, and the reminder they and we needed that this team has the chemistry to bring the fight to the rest of the season.
Attendance: 238
Dulwich Hamlet:
1 Saskia Reeves-Priestley; 4 Chana Hinds; 5 Rosie Stone; 6 Sarah Walters; 9 Sophia Manzi (c); 10 Anna Jowle; 11 Anna Stones; 12 Minnie Crutwell; 16 Ellie Millbourn; 18 Asia Harbour-Brown; 20 Harriet Crofts
Subs:
14 Lucy Monkman; 15 Hannah Baptiste; 17 Sarah Milner; 19 Jordan Williamson; 21 Jazmine Lacrette
London Seaward:
6 Giorgia Bracelli; 8 Egle Trezzi; 10 Hayley Barton; 11 Kayleigh Xidhas; 13 Kate Kerr; 15 Elleah Fenner (keeper); 25 Skye McNally; 26 Maisie Cannon; 30 Ash Marchant; 34 Felicia Lodin; 36 Gemma Howes;
Subs:
3 Cheryl Anderson; 23 Niamh Carty; 39 Seren Ahmet
Referees: Anjam Mirza
Photo: Liam Asman

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