Saturday, 7 February 2026

Gillingham 2 Tranmere Rovers 1

Match 53/25/2395 - Saturday, 7th February 2026 - League Two

Gillingham (1) 2 Hale 25.65
Tranmere Rovers (0) 1 Whitaker 78
Attendance: 5,564
Admission: £21
Mileage: 40/3,226

The first signs that the weekend’s football was not to go as scheduled was on Tuesday when Weston-super-Mare’s home game against Worthing was postponed due to a waterlogged pitch. As various storms have battered the south-west since the turn of the year, the Optima Stadium had already suffered two postponements for the same reason. So, the prospects were not good and with a weather forecast that proved correct with rain expected every day going forward left Tonbridge Angels supporters fearing a wasted 300-odd mile round journey.

Torquay United wasted no time and postponed their game on Friday but Weston decided to hold fire, announcing a 8am pitch inspection on Saturday morning. At precisely 8.06, that inspection had been completed, match postponed. One wonders whether the inspection involved somebody looking out of their bedroom window, observing that it was still raining and picked up the phone to Tonbridge to tell them to get off the coach and go home. Credit to Weston, they saved a wasted journey, but could they have made that decision on Friday, almost certainly.

So, plans to change, thankfully Gillingham are at home with no obvious noises that their pitch was going to be unplayable, and as ever, tickets readily available. After an unexpected Saturday morning lay-in and a couple of hours immersed in the curling at the winter Olympics it was time to make the gentle 25 mile trip to sit, more or less, in the same seat that I placed myself for many, many years.

Gillingham are a strange side at present and, from my limited viewing, not a great side to watch. Everything seemed to be lumped forward to Sam Vokes and when he was replaced on the hour with two more big target men in Seb Palmer-Holden and Josh Andrews the practice continued. They are a team that plays in fits and starts, both of my previous visits this season have seen them surrender leads as they retreated to defend their box in numbers.

They shouldn’t have needed to do this as they were well deserving of their single goal half-time lead against Tranmere Rovers and when they went two-up it seemed a done deal but a goal on 78 minutes from Charlie Whitaker set up a closing period that included six added minutes in which the Gills were forced to hold on for grim death.

Ironically, for all the big men and the long balls pumped into the leaden sky, it was Gillingham’s new signing, Ronan Hale, relatively diminutive, that had given them the comfort of a two goal lead, the second of which from a header from a Max Clark corner that had missed the heads of Palmer-Holden and Andrews. Hale’s first half goal was a sharp finish after Ethan Coleman had headed a clearance back into the box.

The win ends a personal drought that I had not realised had stretched back to 29th December 2023 without a win, albeit that was only eight games and most of them have been draws.

Picture: Gillingham FC

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