Southern Combination League's Supplementary Shield

A new football season for Hassocks Football Club's Robins

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By Scott Mccarthy

The 2021-22 Southern Combination League season is three months old now and for Hassocks, it has been a campaign so far featuring a new way of doing things with mixed results. In the summer, Hassocks decided to focus on youth. With Dave John stepping down as manager to become the club’s technical director overseeing all football at the Beacon. Former Under 18s manager Brad Sweetman was appointed as new first team head coach.

Sweetman is the youngest boss in the Premier Division and he is operating with the youngest squad by some distance. Most of those players have played under his management before in the Robins youth set up, where Sweetman led Hassocks to the Southern Combination Under 18 League title in 2017-18 and a second place finish the following season.

In the two curtailed campaigns, the Robins had been third in 2019-20 and top in 2020-21 when football was halted by the pandemic. Hassocks have enjoyed something of a golden age of youth team football over the past five years, so who better to manage those players as they transcend to senior football than Sweetman?

That is the theory, anyway. The Premier Division is awash with a fair amount of cash this year, meaning that players who perhaps should ply their trade at a higher level are turning out at step five of the non-league pyramid.
Hassocks, meanwhile, are trying to navigate their way through with a team of players mainly under the age of 23. Whilst they will no doubt become better talents for the experience and few clubs exhibit a degree of longterm planning like this, there is a danger that the Robins struggle in the here and now. The major problem with young players is that they tend to be inconsistent, and that is what has plagued Hassocks so far. The Robins have beaten a top eight side in Steyning Town despite playing for over an hour with ten men following an early red card. They then repeated the trick by picking up a point inside of half an hour, despite a dismissal start, against one of the preseason dark horses for a title tilt, Lingfield.
Table toppers Littlehampton Town were nearly shocked at their Sportsfield ground and AFC Uckfield Town have been held at the Beacon too. Mixed in with those promising showings have been several heavy defeats.

Results aside, the one thing you can say is that it is never dull. Sweetman has his side playing an exciting brand of modern football and when it works, it is great to watch. The key for Hassocks over the next six months is getting it to work more often. The games continue to come thick and fast as autumn turns into winter. Fixtures can be found on the Hassocks website and admission remains £6 adults, £3 concessions with under 16s going free. The Robins are trying to start a brave new era, so why not come down and see what it is all about?

The Hassocks Robins' superior but private football season

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By Scott McCarthy

It has been football, but not as we know it. Hassocks football club have spent April playing behind closed doors in the Southern Combination League’s Supplementary Shield, a competition designed to give clubs six more matches at the end of a campaign curtailed due to the winter lockdown costing four months of the season. And, in classic Hassocks style, the Robins have saved some of their best performances and results for when fans cannot be present.

Despite being the lowest ranked team in Group C, Hassocks went into their final game with a chance of qualifying for the semi finals as group winners following an excellent run of form. Their most impressive result was easily the 3-1 win over Horley Town achieved in their second fixture. You may remember – or you may have chosen to forget – that Hassocks suffered a club-record 8-0 home defeat last time they faced the Clarets, who were the favourites to win the Premier Division title before the regular season was called off.

To effect a 10-goal swing in six months is pretty extraordinary, even by Hassocks’ high standards of veering from the sublime to the ridiculous in double-quick time. The Robins also took four points from Crawley Down Gatwick, who were sixth when the campaign was cancelled.

When the competition was announced, Hassocks boss Dave John (pictured) said he wanted to use it to give his young players a chance to build some momentum ahead of the 2021-22 season. They have certainly done that and providing John can keep this squad together, then their achievements in the Supplementary Shield bode well.

There has been one other reason for their impressive performances: Pat Harding. With the Isthmian League opting not to resume, the Burgess Hill Town striker has been free to turn out for Hassocks, the club where he began his career 20-odd years ago and for whom he dual-signs every season.

Harding has five goals from five games, including passing the 200 appearances mark for the club. That no supporters have had the opportunity to see one of the most popular players in Hassocks history back in the red shirt is arguably the most disappointing aspect about empty grounds. Fans may have missed out on Harding, but his impact on the Robins has shown that they are one quality, experienced striker away from having a very good team next season.

Suddenly, the future looks very bright for when the Beacon can welcome supporters back, hopefully in the summer.