Sunday, 18 January 2026

Frozen pitches, fresh faces and a job done for Rochdale

 

Jake Burger drives forward against Tamworth.

By the time Rochdale AFC emerged from the festive break, they had slipped from first to fifth in the National League without kicking a ball. The irony was hard to miss. A temporary move from Spotland to Accrington’s Wham Stadium, after pitch problems at home, ended in familiar frustration as a nationwide freeze rendered yet another surface unplayable, postponing the scheduled game against Brackley. Those title rivals spared by the freeze took full advantage.

When football finally returned, it did so not in the league but in the FA Trophy, with a fourth-round trip to Tamworth offering no immediate route back to the summit. It did, however, provide something else: an opportunity for several first-team regulars to continue their rehabilitation after spells out through injury and international duty.

There had been a reshaping of the squad during the enforced downtime, too. Liam Humbles, who had barely troubled the starting XI since joining the club in the summer, was sent on loan to Altrincham until the end of the season.

Levi Amantchi, Charlie Waller and Nathan Broome returned to their parent clubs following expiration of loan spells, while Ryan Galvin was recalled by Barnet. Amantchi’s five months at Dale were modest in numbers but timely in impact, his late-July arrival yielding 20 appearances and a pair of goals, the most significant of which secured safe passage through to the FA Trophy fourth round at Leamington. Upon returning to Walsall, he was almost immediately transferred back to the National League, this time with Gateshead.

Broome’s contribution was briefer but more impactful: drafted in amid injury to Ollie Whatmuff, he brought calm and competence between the posts, keeping clean sheets in two of his four outings. Waller, likewise, made a competent fist of covering Sam Beckwith’s injury during his one-month stay. Galvin departed with a respectable record in Dale colours five appearances, four wins – even if he himself did not set the world ablaze at left wing-back.

None were long-term fixtures, but each served a purpose at a moment when the squad needed reinforcement.

Amantchi’s departure in particular, however, left Dale with a familiar problem. Emmanuel Dieseruvwe’s injury had already exposed the thinness of options at No.9, forcing reliance on the evergreen Ian Henderson now 40 with only a brief and not-entirely-convincing flirtation with Tyler Smith as an alternative. Smith is much more effective operating at No.10. So, when the club announced it had moved to reinforce that position, the news was greeted with palpable relief albeit tempered by more than a few raised eyebrows.

Perry, Duku and Bilongo joined Dale in the same week.


The reinforcement arrived in the shape of Manny Duku, a 33-year-old Dutch forward recruited from mid-table Tamworth, a signing that offered both cause for optimism and reason for caution. Duku had made fast starts before. At Raith Rovers in 2020/21 he scored in every League Cup group game, including a superb first-time finish from a tight angle against Hearts, later adding a penalty in a 3–2 league win over the Tynecastle side. Ten goals in 12 appearances suggested momentum appeared firmly with him.

At his best, Duku showed sharp movement, finished chances well and was willing to press never rapid, but quick enough. The concern was sustainability. That early burst at Raith gave way to a 16-game drought as his off-the-ball intensity faded, a pattern that repeated itself at Inverness Caledonian Thistle. More recently he has drifted through the English non-league, posting respectable returns at Solihull and Tamworth. Now he arrives at Spotland as a calculated gamble one that may depend on whether competition with Dieseruvwe can keep him engaged beyond any initial surge.

Duku was joined at Spotland by left wing-back Bryant Bilongo on a 1.5-year deal from Bristol Rovers and Coventry City U21 captain Callum Perry, on an initial one-month loan.

Positionally, the pair feel very much like McNulty signings: versatile, option-heavy additions. Looking at the refreshed squad, Bilongo, Joe Pritchard and Tarryn Allarakhia can all operate at left wing-back; Perry and David Tutonda provide competition at left centre-back; while Pritchard also offers an option as a No. 10, as does Allarakhia, who impressed there before his AFCON sojourn.

Tom Myles was involved in a penalty shoot-out v Tamworth.


None of that, however, was put to the test at Tamworth. With none of the new arrivals featuring, or indeed announced at this point (and Duku was cup-tied into the bargain), Rochdale named an XI that spoke clearly to where the FA Trophy sat in McNulty’s list of priorities some distance below the league campaign. Tom Myles started in goal behind a back three of David Tutonda, Liam Hogan and Dan Moss, with Bryce Hosannah and the returning Allarakhia operating as wing-backs. Casey Pettit and Jake Burger anchored the midfield, while Aidan Barlow and Tyler Smith supported Ian Henderson up front.

Tamworth, by contrast, treated the tie with greater seriousness, fielding a strong side that ultimately prevailed on penalties after a 1–1 draw in normal time. Dale had taken the lead before the interval through Smith’s very well-taken effort, but as the contest wore on the hosts’ greater cohesion began to tell. An equaliser in the final 20 minutes dragged the tie beyond 90 minutes and into a shootout.

Sudden death beckoned after the opening exchanges from the spot. When substitute Charlie Waller’s penalty struck the upright, the door was left ajar, and Matt Curley stepped through it, converting to send Tamworth into the fifth round and bring Dale’s Trophy interest to a quiet end.

Casey Pettit converts his penalty against Tamworth.


There was little time to linger on any disappointment that might have been felt at Tamworth. Just three days later, Rochdale were on the road and back to league business, heading to the north-east to face Gateshead. Pre-match confidence was understandably high: the Heed sat bottom of the National League and had already been dismantled by Dale in the reverse fixture earlier in the campaign.

Yet, as so often in this division, context mattered. In the weeks leading up to the game Gateshead had acted, reappointing Rob Elliot as manager and reshaping their squad changes that would be tested for the first time against Rochdale, and which threatened to render league position and past form largely irrelevant.

In the event, Dale’s return to league action was marked by a 2–0 success. On a chilly Saturday afternoon in the north-east, Jim McNulty’s side did what good sides do on the road – struck when on top, weathered a wobble, then finished the job.

The headline belonged to Manny Duku. Thrown straight in after arriving earlier in the week, the striker marked his debut with a goal that demonstrated sharp movement and an instinct for being in the right place at the right time. Just after the half-hour, Dale carved Gateshead open. A neat one-two between Kyron Gordon and Tobi Adebayo-Rowling created the angle for Gordon to slide Devante Rodney in behind. His delivery across the box was perfectly weighted and Duku, sliding in, did the rest.

Duku could – perhaps should – have doubled his tally minutes later. Ryan East’s high press forced the turnover and, after driving forward, he fed the debutant once more. This time former Dale loanee Tiernan Brooks was equal to it, but the chance underlined Dale’s superiority during a first half in which they broke with pace and purpose. At the interval, the sense was not just that Dale deserved their lead, but that they might regret not making it more emphatic.

Gateshead, to their credit, emerged with greater intent. Crosses began to rain into the area, testing Dale’s defensive shape. Former loanee Levi Amantchi came closest, his header crashing back off the bar, while Aidan Elliott-Wheeler skewed another opportunity wide. It was a reminder that one goal rarely settles anything, particularly away from home.

In the midst of this, Oliver Whatmuff’s return between the posts was significant. Calm to the point of serenity, he exuded an assurance that steadied those in front of him. Nothing was hurried, nothing looked awkward. If goalkeeping is often about temperament as much as technique, Whatmuff offered a masterclass in the former.

The decisive moment arrived late on and again it was crafted expertly. Adebayo-Rowling’s cross from the right missed Henderson but found East on the edge of the area and the midfielder made no mistake, slamming his finish into the near corner. It was a goal that cut through any lingering doubt and restored control.

The second half had lacked the fluency of the first and ball retention was not always convincing, allowing Gateshead more territory than McNulty would have liked. Yet defensively Dale were largely sound, if occasionally exposed by crosses – an area that will need tightening, particularly as new recruits learn the nuances of the system.

With pressure beginning to build down Dale’s left, the introduction of David Tutonda at left centre-back felt like astute game management, offering fresh legs and positional nous to help see the contest through.

There were reminders, too, that not all debuts arrive fully formed. Callum Perry, operating on the left of the back three and understandably short of match sharpness after limited recent game time, showed glimpses without quite settling into a rhythm. That McNulty was able to manage his minutes rather than expose him late on felt sensible, and Perry looks a player who will benefit quickly from regular football.

Bryant Bilongo, introduced later, also looked like a player still learning the structure, occasionally caught out of position but visibly receiving instruction from the bench.

There were plenty of encouraging individual notes. Jake Burger’s ability to carry the ball through midfield gave Dale a different dimension. Casey Pettit provided his now-familiar steadiness and looks increasingly like a starter waiting to happen, perhaps in a three or with East pushed wider as he was here in a second-half reshuffle. Duku, beyond the goal, showed enough movement and physical presence to suggest, with a little more ruthlessness, he can more than capably deputise for Mani Dieseruvwe, especially with Henderson’s intelligent running on offer as an alternative too.

In the end, this was not a performance to stir the soul, but it was one to please the pragmatist. A job done, points secured, debuts bedded in.

Duku celebrates with team-mates after opening his account.


What now lies ahead for Dale is a frenetic stretch that may go a long way towards defining their season. First comes a testing trip to a much-improved Solihull Moors, before the long-awaited return to Spotland to face strugglers Truro on newly laid turf. That is followed by the rearranged visit of Southend United, after the National League finally ruled that the original fixture should be replayed rather than allowed to stand.

Beyond that looms February, and what looks like the true examination of Dale’s promotion credentials: a daunting run against Boreham Wood, Carlisle United, Forest Green Rovers and Scunthorpe United in almost consecutive games. If Dale emerge from that run anywhere near the summit, they will have done very well indeed.

As always, thanks to The Voice of Spotland/Dan Youngs/Rochdale AFC for use of images.


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Frozen pitches, fresh faces and a job done for Rochdale

  Jake Burger drives forward against Tamworth. B y the time Rochdale AFC emerged from the festive break, they had slipped from first to fift...