There And Back Again Lane: Aldershot 2-2 Shrewsbury Town

Untitled

The magic of the FA Cup. A lot of people say that magic has gone now, what with stagnated kick-off times appeasing the television conglomerates.

The Shots’ FA Cup run of ’78/’79 is certainly one etched into the memory banks of those reading this now that are old enough to have been there.

Shrewsbury Town eventually reached the quarter-final which was our ambition until… well. Malcolm Crosby may never be forgiven!

Long before their infamous fifth round tie with Shrewsbury Town in February 1979, Aldershot’s best FA Cup run for 46 years could so easily have ended before it had begun.

Only Malcolm Crosby’s late equaliser against non-League Weymouth back in the November had saved The Shots from an ignominious first round exit but, five games and victories over Barking, Sheffield United and Swindon Town later, they found themselves pitched against Shrewsbury Town – fourth round conquerors of Manchester City and flying high in Division Three on a 12-game unbeaten run under new player-manager Graham Turner.

Untitled3

Aldershot, though, were on a good run of their own, second in Division Four and with just one defeat in 24 matches, and were able to welcome back defensive leader Joe Jopling from an Achilles injury just in time. In winger Alex McGregor, they even had a former Shrew in their midst.

11,895 – the Recreation Ground’s largest crowd of the season – witnessed a tense classic unfold before them as The Shots dominated without finding the first-half breakthrough they deserved. It finally came on 66 minutes, as Tommy Youlden invited Crosby to cross from the left and, as McGregor nodded the ball back towards the edge of the six-yard box, John Dungworth pounced with a fine composed finish.

Untitled2

The lead, though, lasted just three minutes, after Glen Johnson produced two superb saves to deny Paul Maguire and Dave Tong only for the prolific Maguire to finally net the second rebound.

Shrewsbury fans were demanding the final whistle long before the end and feared the worst when Will Dixon’s deep cross found Jopling rising highest at the far-post. His towering knock-down was perfect for Dungworth to curl a brilliant half-volley past Bob Wardle to put The Shots within touching distance of the quarter-finals.

Untitled4

Once again, however, Aldershot failed to preserve their lead in a moment which came to haunt Shots fans for decades. Thinking he had tidied up The Shrews’ final chance, Crosby played the ball out to Dixon but the midfielder had turned his back and Tong pounced to beat Johnson with a fantastic chip to restore parity seconds from the end.

Cherished boyhood memories, these. I can’t find the exact attendance but 13,254 is ingrained in me; perhaps some kind soul will come to clarify or rectify.

Shrewsbury had seen off Manchester City in the fourth round and so perhaps rightfully fancied their chances against us, even though we did manage to force a replay…

The two teams reconvened in Shropshire six days later, and again Aldershot had the better of the early exchanges, only for a rare error from Johnson to gift Shrewsbury the lead. Maguire’s free-kick proved too hot to handle and Steve Biggins reacted first to turn in the loose ball on 30 minutes.

That man Dungworth – who eight months later became The Shrews’ record signing – again showed his quality to snatch a deserved equaliser on the hour. Chasing down Andy Needham’s flick, Dungworth shook of his marker and slid the ball under the advancing goalkeeper.

Despite Shrewsbury’s vehement penalty appeals with two minutes of normal time left, this dramatic story still had an extra chapter in store. Five minutes into extra-time, and with legs tiring across the pitch, left-back Carleton Leonard started a marauding run down the wing to fire a stunning dipping drive over Johnson from outside the box.

s-l225

Biggins sealed victory in the 116th minute, nipping in at the near-post to flick Maguire’s corner into the net, and The Shots were left to ponder what might have been.

So close to winning it in the original tie, and still creating chances in the replay, Aldershot’s luck deserted them when they needed it most. They had given Shrewsbury two fantastic games, and both sides would remember these battles for a long time, but finally it was The Shrews who progressed to face Wolverhampton Wanderers in the quarter-finals.

So Shrewsbury made the last eight at our expense but it was a fantastic cup run and one of the best Aldershot games I can remember (because it’s not all about winning) and holds memories that fade each day as we grow older.

“I was at the home match against Shrewsbury, but I tried to keep in touch with the replay on the radio. I knew we had lost when The radio said that Wolves would be playing at Shrewsbury in the 6th round (before they told us the result from Gay Meadow).”

MikeB – ShotsWeb forum

A video of the quarter-final highlights here has commentary from the late, great Brian Moore.

Shrewsbury Town v Wolves, FA Cup Q-final – 1978

Before I close, I want to include this from shotsboy66 from ShotWeb:

One thing about Malcolm Crosby & the FA Cup….he led Sunderland out as Manager in the `92 final v Liverpool. The goal he scored at Wimbledon in 1981from the half way line was in the League Cup, just before joining York City in exchange with Ian McDonald.

I must say always had a lot of time for Malcolm Crosby. Back in the FA Cup season of 78/79 he didn`t appear for Aldershot until late September, due to not signing a contract, due to being in dispute with the club. Seem to remember there was speculation about MC joining Portsmouth, but nothing came of it, he then settled into the Shots side scoring the equaliser at home to Weymouth in the last minute at the Rec..don`t think he missed a game thereafter that season.

MC was a massive part of my early formative years..when I started going to Aldershot he had replaced Roger Joslyn who had joined Watford…and would you believe it was MC who`s goal beat Watford 1-0 at the Rec in their title winning season!

Thanks go to Shots Remembered from Twitter for the photos.