Wednesday, 25 March 2026

Chatham Town 1 Tonbridge Angels 1

Match 69/25/2411 - Tuesday, 24th March 2026 - Kent Senior Cup Semi-Final

Chatham Town (0) 1 Cooper 78
Tonbridge Angels (0) 1 Baker 55
Tonbridge Angels won on penalties 6-5
Attendance: 816
Admission: £8
Mileage: 34/4,211

A COUNTY CUP FINAL, REALLY?

This is a football blog, so let’s get that out of the way first! In a howling gale, at times driving rain, this was never going to be one for the purist and it certainly was not. It was scrappy, attritional and, for large parts one hoped that one skilful moment would settle it, thus avoiding the lottery of a penalty shootout.

As it happened the second half brought two great finishes, but one for each side, and the spot kick drama needed to unfold.

After four successful spot kicks and one saved by Angels’ goalkeeper Matt Rowley, the scene was set for Alfie Pavey to complete the contest but his effort was saved by Nathan Harvey and the drama continued beyond the first five designated takers when Kian Moyes levelled for the hosts. Three successful penalties, one for Bunmi Babajide when memories of his missed penalty at Chippenham swirled around the Angels’ faithful. Up stepped Tope Fadahunsi for the Chats, his shot was pushed upwards by Rowley, diving to his right and when the ball rebounded off the crossbar, he became engulfed by ecstatic team mates.

Tonbridge’s history is barely a history in the County Cup. They haven’t won it since 1975 and their last appearance in the Final, 13 years ago, is best forgotten as they lost 7-1 at Longmead to a Charlton Athletic Under-23 squad.

Back in October, Chatham knocked the Angels out of the FA Cup. It was a result that was richly deserved, but as good as the Chats were on the day, it was felt that the Angels had not done themselves justice and to progress to the Kent Senior Cup Final at their expense would be seen as a modicum of recompense.

Chatham are also firmly in the playoff-off chase, nobody is going to catch Jay Saunders’ Folkestone Invicta, but the jostling for the advantageous places perhaps dictated their team selection with a couple of notable absentees. Meanwhile, Alan Dunne made three changes but the starting XI looked as strong as possible.

The hosts started the brighter with Matty Macarthur, an ex-Angels loanee, to the fore, but once the Angels settled into the game they were the dominant side with wind-assisted corner after corner from Bailey Akehurst dropping underneath the crossbar, giving Harvey acute discomfort.

But, in truth, the only winner during the first period was the wind with my half-time thoughts being that the home side had been subdued to the point that the atmosphere barely resembled that of a semi-final.

Dunne brought life to the game at the start of the second period bringing Frankie Baker, Babajide and Kyle Smith into the game and the added pace of the front two brought a different dimension and pretty much an immediate dividend as a misplaced pass saw Baker run clear of a labouring defender to finish with aplomb as Harvey advanced.

Babajide’s pace and quick feet continued to harass the Chatham back line and, just three minutes after the goal, his effort was agonisingly deflected wide of the post.

Akehurst saw a couple of shots go narrowly over and substitute Sean Shields tested Harvey as the Angels took charge of the game, so it came as a surprise when a misplaced pass from Matt Warren landed at the feet of Simon Cooper, who took aim from 25 yards to find the bottom corner.

Buoyed by their equaliser, it was the Chats that made the late running and probably the Angels who were the more relieved to hear the final whistle, despite Rowley not being unduly tested.

And so to penalties, once again history doesn’t reflect well on Tonbridge, but Pavey apart they were immaculate.

Wednesday, 22nd April at Priestfield Stadium sees 1975 revisited with Maidstone United once again the opponents. Alan Dunne promised us memories, after 51 years it will be nice to have a new one.

Pictures: David Couldridge

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