Mansfield Town 0 Argyle 0: Match report
ARGYLE drew a blank in a game for the first time this season as they battled to a goalless draw with Mansfield Town, although the game was not as uneventful as the scoreline may suggest.
In truth, the Pilgrims should have been home and dry after an opening half hour that they dominated, but missed several goalscoring opportunities.
As the game wore on each side exchanged changes, and while Argyle always seemed the more threatening of the teams on show, they were never able to get past Mansfield's experienced custodian Brian Jensen.
Argyle boss Derek Adams was forced to name a replacement for the injured Carl McHugh, and it was Josh Simpson who got the nod. What was slightly less expected was the inclusion of Ryan Brunt at the expense of Craig Tanner, although much pre-match chat about how Argyle would shift to accommodate Brunt proved unnecessary. He simply replaced Tanner on the left flank of Argyle's usual 4-2-3-1 formation.
Former Pilgrim Nathan Thomas, who signed for Mansfield in the summer via a short spell at Motherwell, lined up for the Stags on the left side of a four-man midfield, with the home side opting to stick with a 4-4-2 that saw them win their previous home league fixture 4-0.
Just four minutes in, though, they may have thought they had gone behind to a stunning goal. Reuben Reid, before this game, had scored two goals this season, from a combined distance of about three yards. Here, he caught a volley from a Peter Hartley centre with perfect technique from around the edge of the area. However, the ball cannoned off the cross bar and away, with Mansfield feeling blessed to not have fallen behind. The quality of the strike can be best explained by telling you a fair section of the home fans applauded Reid's effort.
An Argyle side overloaded with attacking intent were looking threatening, and a far more orthodox chance fell to Graham Carey to give Argyle the lead on 14 minutes. Reid and Brunt proved a little too much for Town defenders in the centre, and this allowed Carey to drift into space. With the ball at his feet, ten yards out, you would have backed him to score, but Brian Jensen made a strong save with his feet.
The chances kept coming - and they kept getting easier - but Argyle still could not find an opener. A gorgeous move involving several Argyle players culminated in Gary Sawyer picking up the ball on the left from a Hiram Boateng through-ball, and clipping in an inviting near post cross. Brunt accepted the party invitation, but went to the house next door. His flicked header from inside the six-yard area somehow found its way wide.
After the half hour mark, Mansfield brought themselves into the game, typically trying to take advantage of corners or long throws from Adam Chapman, but finding Argyle to resolute. Reminiscent of a fortnight previous, when ex-Pilgrim Jason Banton looked desperate to impress against former employers, so Thomas looked up for the fight. One weave-and-cross move needed Hartley to head clear under pressure, and minutes later Nathan cut inside a little and whizzed a shot wide. It did not trouble Luke McCormick, but it was Town's best chance to that point.
Mansfield certainly finished the first half the stronger of the teams, but without troubling McCormick, and there was surely few suggestions other than Argyle being the better team in the grand scheme of things.
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