A remarkable late show in Barrow offers Bradford City a remarkable late shot of promotion

Barrow 1
Spence 59
Bradford City 2
Pointon 29, Smith 90

By Jason McKeown

Well, well, well. Somehow, against all the odds – and after most of us had long since written off their chances – Bradford City will go into the final game of this difficult season still in with a chance of the play offs. Victory here in Barrow – a fifth success in the last six – sets up a last day showdown, where beating an out of sorts Newport County will give them every chance of finishing inside the play offs. Especially with an increasingly frail Barrow – beaten here, and now with just one point from their last 18 – nervously trying to crawl over the line in a tough home game against promoted Mansfield.

The clock stood at 89 minutes and 53 seconds when Andy Cook played Tyler Smith through on goal. Smith – with just one goal in his last 17 outings – has missed far simpler chances in recent weeks, and it was easy to fear the worst. But the 25-year-old ran through and bent a lovely curling shot past home goalkeeper Paul Farman and into the bottom corner of the net. By some distance, this was the most dramatic goal in Bradford City’s season – and it’s one that might yet go down in Bantams’ folklore. As it stood until Smith’s shot crossed the line – the clock now at 89 minutes and 56 seconds – City were guaranteed to be in next season’s League Two.

They think it’s all over. And, well, actually it isn’t.

Ahead of this weekend’s final League Two round of fixtures, three of the four play off places are still up for grabs. For City, the equation is a little simpler at least. Only the final, seventh spot can be reached – the position Barrow are unconvincingly clinging onto. A win for the Bantams and defeat for Barrow would see the two swap positions. Crawley – who end the season at home to 21st-place Grimsby – are first in the queue to take advantage of any further Barrow slip ups, but if they don’t win and Barrow lose, City can claim that final play off spot by defeating Newport.  

It’s crazy, makes little sense and yet here we are. Barrow have being a permanent fixture in the top seven ever since 11 November – the day they beat Bradford City 2-1 at Valley Parade in Graham Alexander’s first game in charge. The Bantams are now 9th in the league, and have not spent a single minute of this campaign inside the play off positions. They still have a bloomin’ negative goal difference! It would be an incredible turn of events for City to jump into the top seven for the first time on Saturday, just as the music stops. And yet, there’s now every chance this could happen.

This was a night to glean so much confidence ahead of that last day shootout, whilst at the same time further draining Barrow of theirs. City played well for long periods, especially in the first half where they really should have been out of sight. And though Barrow came roaring back after the break and threatened to seal their own play off spot, the Bantams ultimately stood up to some strong second half pressure, and Alexander showed commendable bravery to make positive changes from the bench that won the game.

It was a good performance from City, who in the first half especially pressed Barrow when out of possession and never allowed an edgy home side to settle. At times Barrow couldn’t get out their own half and they were indebted to Farman saving headed attempts from Ciaran Kelly and Cook. Calum Kavanagh missed the best early chance of the lot, with the ball suddenly rolling into his path after good pressing from Brad Halliday, only to screw his shot wide of the far post with just Farman to beat. Cook was in a great position alongside Kavanagh, and squaring the ball to City’s top scorer might have been the better option.

Still, City did get the goal their dominance deserved when a Richie Smallwood corner was cleared to Bobby Pointon just inside the penalty area. The 20-year-old took a touch to steady the ball before unleashing a ferocious strike that flew past a crowd of bodies and into the back of the net. A truly brilliant goal from a brilliant young prospect. How much of a better position might the Bantams be in right now if Alexander had not overlooked Pointon for so long?

When shortly after Kavanagh was given another sight of goal thanks to some awful defending – only to shoot tamely at Farman – it seemed clear that City had to take greater advantage of their dominance by getting a second goal. Barrow began to gradually come into the game as the half drew to a close, but they were on the ropes and there for the taking. City could have been left to greatly rue the fact that they let them off the hook.

Barrow couldn’t really play any worse in the second half, and Pete Wild’s half time words clearly saw the home side remerge fired up and full of urgency. Cole Stockton saw an effort cleared off the line by Kelly after managing to get round Sam Walker, but having a tight angle to shoot from. It wasn’t the most convincing piece of goalkeeping from Walker, and sadly a sign of things to come.

For just on the hour, Barrow equalised. Kelly caught Stockton with a challenge that saw the Irishman injure himself. The resultant free kick from Kian Spence was struck from a long way out, wasn’t exactly a thunderbolt, but it deflected off a pretty flimsy-looking City wall and edged past Walker, who should really have saved it. And from there Barrow took charge. Balls pumped into the City box from all angles. Some admirable City defending to thwart Barrow’s directness, but there was little let up. For a period, the visitors were hanging on.

But still, City got through it. They ultimately took the sting out of Barrow’s momentum. Slowed the game down. And with the arrival of Clarke Oduor, Harry Chapman and Smith from the bench for the tiring Alex Gilliead, Kavanagh and Pointon, they got a second wind. Moments before Smith struck, Chapman had got free out wide and sent over a delicious cross that prompted a Gazza-at-Euro-96-style-lunge for the ball from Smith where he agonisingly failed to connect. The ball went out for a throw in, the excellent Tyreik Wright and then Chapman won aerial challenges from it, and then there was Cook to send Smith away to win the game.

Six minutes of stoppage time were announced, which stretched into almost nine nerve jangling minutes of late Barrow pressure. Free kicks and corners pumped into the box, but more heroic defending from a backline that did an amazing job. Alexander successfully shored things up by introducing Jon Tomkinson and Lewis Richards. The fact he had to sub off the subs Chapman and Smith – barely 10 minutes after they had come on – was unusual, deeply pragmatic, but ultimately vindicated. Cue the full time celebrations of players in front of the corner of the Holker Street Stadium that housed the disbelieving visiting supporters.

There’s a lot of weird emotions here to explore. But first, let’s give City credit for what they’ve just achieved. This win stretches their unbeaten run to six games. They’ve regained an awful lot of pride that had been stripped away in March, when opposition teams were queuing up to humiliate them. Who would have thought that their horrendous 3-0 thumping to Harrogate Town, exactly a month ago, is now just one game away from proving to be their last of the regular season? City slumped to 17th in League Two that day, some nine points off the top seven. They were 14 points behind Barrow – the side they can now overtake and pip to the play offs – having played a game more.

Saturday is going to be nervy, edgy and tense – but above all else, it’s going to be exciting. This is a chance that we thought was long gone. A bonus. A free hit. The margins are still very thin. The odds are still against City. And if they come up short, it won’t hurt in the way that it will if you’re a Barrow fan who misses out from here.

That said, it’s difficult to fully work out how to feel about this. The league table doesn’t lie after 46 games of course, but for most of this season Bradford City have massively underachieved, underperformed and left us all feeling incredibly down and frustrated. It’s difficult to argue they deserve to finish inside the top seven, less so that they deserve to be promoted. The experience of watching Carlisle United from a distance this season (and Forest Green the year before) is also slightly worrying. Are Bradford City really equipped to play in League One next season? Going up would be nice, but might be counterproductive.

Promotion seasons don’t come around very often, especially in these parts, and it would be incredibly ungrateful to bemoan going up at Wembley in just over a month’s time. But this does not feel like a promotion season. We do not have a collection of brilliant memories picked up along the journey, in the same way the promotion seasons of 2012/13, 1998/99, 1995/96, 1984/85 etc are full of treasured moments that are fondly remembered. This is still not a football club united and together.

I think above all else, most of us had mentally checked out this season. Some fans I know haven’t been to a game since January. Others stopped going in March during that awful week. Even for those of us who still turn up, the last few weeks have felt more akin to winding down and looking forward to a summer break, the anger of City’s seeming failure to push for promotion something we’d moved past. All that was left to do this season, it seemed, was perform the post mortem. Now, we’re having to double check we haven’t made any plans on the Sunday 19 May, knowing that suddenly we might need to be prepping ourselves for a trip to Wembley.

It’s just all a bit surreal. Cold hard logic determined the season was over. Weeks ago! These end of season wins were little more than a nice ending. Nothing to take too seriously or get too excited over. And yet now, we have to turn back on the tap of fully charged emotions. Be gripped by a football supporting anxiety that has been absent at Valley Parade for weeks. I feel really oddly nervous about Saturday. After months of being dosed repeatedly by cold hard reality, we can suddenly dare to dream.

It’s going to be a really interesting atmosphere on Saturday. Do we turn up biting our nails, glued to our phones for score updates and singing ourselves hoarse? Or do we feel slightly embarrassed that we’ve got a chance of stealing a prize that we shouldn’t really have any right to claim? And does this upturn reframe any of the ill feelings most of us have had towards the club’s hierarchy for their performance this season? Does this allow us to start to forgive and forget some of our grievances? To restore some confidence in the future?

Or is it all just a flash in the pan? One more false dawn, just to make us feel a type of pain that we’d tried to numb ourselves from experiencing, all over again. They say it’s the hope that kills you. We didn’t have any hope, and in some ways that was quite nice. Now that bloody hope is back, ready to rip us apart.

We often joke there’s never a dull moment supporting Bradford City. Except for most of this season, it has been quiet and dull. The narrative predictable, formulaic and stale. At times we’ve been utterly rubbish, with some of the worst performances imaginable. And yet now we might be facing the most unexpected of season finales. A glorious end to an inglorious season.

Whatever lies in store between 3 and 5pm on Saturday, suddenly, you can’t take your eyes off this.



Categories: Match Reviews

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30 replies

  1. As a stay away season ticket holder – I’ve not been to VP since Crawley on 6th Jan, I could be (and have been) criticised for suddenly embracing this last ditch opportunity. I stayed away to try and make a point with my empty seat. I wanted to go, I wanted to #getbehindtheladsffs, but I looked at the bigger picture. As did quite a lot of us, who felt it was important for the club to remember not to take us for granted. Rightly or wrongly, that’s what we did. And whether by accident or design, things have taken a turn for the better. Rupp has made his promises, Sharpe has been appointed, and the players (who, btw, I genuinely like almost to a man) have found some form just when we assumed they never would.
    So just like my tweet for anyone who saw it, I’ll be swaggering back into VP on Saturday praying we pull off this miracle just as much as anyone, because those who stayed away did so because they care and they thought it was the right thing to do, not because they don’t care.

    • Whoever invented play offs is an absolute genius. After a miserable season of mid table mediocrity we go into the last game in 9th place with everything to play for.

      Great performance from the lads, with even a bit of a swagger in that first half! Overall we definitely deserved the win. And an outstanding little through-ball from Cook and cracking finish from Smith to save our season.

    • You bought your season ticket, that shows your commitment and support. I’m in a similar position – taking the family to rugby at Twickenham on Saturday and suddenly after last night feeling I should be travelling north again. Everyone has their reasons for going or not going, no need to justify it to anyone, not least the childish ‘bigger fan cos I go every week’ brigade. Buying a season ticket gives you the right to turn up when you want to.

    • Whilst there’s merit in suggesting that open letters ( Jason’s), or a couple of dozen fans making a pre-match noise outside VP may have prompted a response from the owner.

      It’s highly unlikely your self-sacrifice to not attend will have made any difference. The vast majority of the UK’s 67million population have never attended VP therefore they’ll have as much bearing on any changes at VP as you’ve had by your absence.

      Mr Rupp and Sparks are still at the club. Yet you’ve ended your boycott on the back of a few wins and a possible play-off position.

      • Chris – There were more than a “couple of dozen” fans at the protest - I was there. Then I went home. You’re also wrong about the impact of empty seats – it hasn’t just been my empty seat has it? Thousands and thousands of empty seats which showed Rupp what the club is without fans. And you don’t think that also encouraged him to act?

        Yes, Rupp and Sparks are still there – I still think a change in ownership and complete break from the influence of the Rhodes family is in our best interests; I still think Sparks is over-promoted and incompetent as a CEO, and an extremely unlikeable person to boot, but I don’t support Stefan Rupp FC, I support Bradford City FC.

        So I make no apologies for going on Saturday. I was going to anyway because of other things the fixture represents, but happily there’s still something to play for.

    • Welcome back on Saturday. I hope lots of others who have stayed away also join you in returning.

      • Seconded, welcome back Leon and anyone else who’s stayed away for their own reasons.

        One game, hopefully 4 for us all to get behind the same cause. I’m thankful for those who organised the protest as I do believe it forced Sparks hand to fly to Germany and gave us David Sharpe and I think that’s a really important appointment.

        I don’t think this season is a success unless we get promoted now. We should have comfortably made the play offs this year in a poor division outside of the top 4.

    • I too have stayed away for most of this year. Having seen some turgid stuff over the years and years before and still going, this time it felt different. The apathy from the owner seeping through the club and poor football decision after poor football decision made me use the only thing I’ve got which is withdrawing my support. I think that a season ticket holder not going after constantly attending after about 27years, did show something and along with the thousands that also withdrew their support, I wholeheartedly believe it triggered action (along with the letters and protests) and with all that said, I too will be swaggering back to VP on Saturday. I’m not asking Bradford City to be Manchester City, sometimes it wont work, we will lose more than we win all I want to see is effort from the club, and it’s effort from the owner down to the players. Standing still in football means you are going backwards as everyone else will overtake you, our club has gone backwards, we are no longer a “big club in the 4th division“, we are a 4th division club same as the rest, we deserve to be there as thats what we’ve been run to be. Lets hope the chairman now sees that we cannot be taken for granted we cannot be run to just exist, we demand more, we will only accept more and win or lose we will support as long as the effort is there. Saturday may not fall our way but lets hope the effort is the sign of things to come.

    • Me too. I have stayed away since Boxing Day hoping ( but not expecting) my absence to be noted.

      Like many others.

      I have also not renewed my season ticket but written to the club to tell them why.

      Ownership rather than football reasons. The way fans are taken as fools.

      Fans forum!

      Really???

      Sparks statements!

      Really ????

      Rupps promises!

      Really???

      I am going on Saturday but then I always was.

  2. What a thrilling turn of events for Bradford City! Their persistence really paid off, culminating in that dramatic late goal. It’s amazing how quickly fortunes can change in football, giving them a shot at the playoffs in the final game. I’m eager to see if they can seize this unexpected opportunity and make a remarkable leap into the playoffs. The excitement is palpable!

  3. Well, well, well indeed Jason.

    If only, earlier in the season, GA had……………………………………………..

    Roll on Saturday. Hope springs eternal!

  4. Normally I’d be buzzing but low on goodwill in the tank. The clubs sapped it out of me. It might take a while to rekindle my passion.
    Hoping I’m not the only in this boat.
    Goodluck for Sat.

  5. Walking out of the ground after the Notts County game, I turned to my lad and said ‘knowing this bloody club, it’ll come down to the last game of the season, and we’ll have to thump Newport’…..

    I love the emotional roller coaster of supporting this club. Might need a couple of pre game pints to calm the nerves on Saturday!

  6. Do we deserve this slimmest if chances? Did Millwall, when they crawled into the last L1 play off spot the season we faced them at Wembley? Yet having ddged a further bullet or two at Wembley, up they went, not to return to the lower leagues since. Football often hinges on fine margins and a bit of luck. We’ve had our share of bad luck as well as good, this season.

    We’ve continued to go- and renewed our season tickets 2 weeks ago. On Saturday, I will have the same outlook as always- hope for the best, fear for the worst!

  7. We are getting more bodies forward at times it looked like 3-1-4-2. Smallwood enables it. A word for our maligned captain. Man of the match in our most important game of the season.

    Wright was important, as was Pointon to it too. We missed Walker. Can’t fault the attitude and commitment last night but we missed his quality.

    What a way to win it. Onto Saturday

  8. As always with City you never know what’s going to happen . Can we do it ? Of course we can ! Will we do it ? Who knows .

    Can’t wait for Saturday now but keeping a bit of a lid on my expectations.

    Re-posting a phrase i made a few months ago “It’s a funny old game !” Never more true

  9. how ironic when we miss out to Crawley

    the owners Rupp said weren’t fit to own us

    • Not sure what point you’re trying to make. Is it that you’d rather have Crawleys owners because they’re a point or two ahead of us?? Bizarre

  10. I’ve predicted it. Barrow draw, we beat Newport 8 0 and Crawley then score a last minute winner. So Bradford City

  11. Just looking back at 2013 season end (pre play offs) to check my memories are not deceiving me . . . if I’m reading the google data right, we won the last league game of the season to get into 7th place on 69 points after not really performing well in the league until we got the cup run (and lots of early grumbling, until we started taking scalps about needing to focus on the league not the cup).

    • This isn’t quite right. In 2012/13, City climbed into the play offs with around 6 games to go, and confirmed their place in the penultimate game, at home to Burton. Their last game of the season was a 0-0 draw at Cheltenham when Parkinson rested some players. City spent a lot of that season in the play off positions, especially pre-Christmas. They had a slump in Jan – Mar, partly due to the cup run, before coming back.

  12. Echo the thoughts Jason – how should we feel? I would worry about what League One would hold in store if, miraculously, we were to get promoted. There’s a very strong chance it would be counter-productive. The best outcome might be that we gain another morale-boosting win on Saturday to finish the season on a real high, but that it ultimately isn’t enough to finish above both Barrow and Crawley. Whatever happens, we’ll end with more league victories on the road than at VP this season, and it’s that home form which has become a real problem now over successive seasons. If we want the ground to be rocking and rolling again in the future, that somehow needs to get sorted.

    • spot on. It’s been a thrill watching City away and usually some strong performances.

      Home form has been dismal and a source of most of the discontent. Steve’s right, the results/performances at home has turned off many and needs sorting – as it has for a few seasons now.

    • I’m hoping for promotion! Dearie me

      Things could also go very wrong in league two next season, and probably will, judging by recent history.

      I think being in league two causes us all sorts of problems, financially for one thing, but also the weight of expectations, finding league two level players who can handle the big crowds, constant infighting, the ever-present threat of non league oblivion, that kind of thing.

      Anyway no need to worry just yet, promotion is still a long shot…. Would be almost laugh out loud funny to get promoted after a season of strife like that.

  13. Just to pursue the above point a little further; we finished in 7th with 69 points in 2013 but we’d had some sticky sequences of uninspiring results in the league, in that season, too. If we win on Saturday we will have won more games this time around than in that historic season. I hope it makes us just as worthy of a happy outcome.

  14. How quickly people forget , we’ve been bang average in a poor league . Poor team selections , poor tactics and some very poor performances . Another season in the basement beckons . As Sparks said “ No room for mediocrity at this club “ …….blah blah blah . Come 5 o’clock Saturday the if only thoughts will start . Think on this If only they actually put a shift in for the previous 40 games …………shambles

  15. Can I compliment the author of this article (Jason). In my opinion a very clear objective unbiased viewpoint. Thank you Jason.

  16. we’re 25-1 to get promoted atm but I didn’t think we’d do anything ,so backed Doncaster at 30-1 (2 weeks ago).I’m stuck between a rock and a hard place right now . Bloody city

  17. All we can do is hope. It gives an opportunity to play Huddersfield again. If nothing else, we can look forward to a team that can play well and have a half decent squad afterall. Watching last night, I witness a team that fought to the end. Right decision for Alexander to bring on defenders for the last few minutes. Well done lads onwards and upwards.