Sunday, 19 April 2026

Rochdale’s wild ride to the final day

Jim McNulty celebrates the late winner at Braintree.

 

For much of the season, the National League title race had unfolded away from the glare of the wider game. It had been a compelling contest for those within it but, beyond that, it had struggled to capture sustained mainstream media attention. That, it seemed, changed in an instant at Sutton.

Rochdale’s dramatic, last-gasp victory in South London did more than secure three precious points; it forced a wider audience to take notice. Suddenly, the narrative shifted. The prospect of a final-day meeting with York City was no longer a distant possibility but a looming, potentially decisive showdown − one that could settle the destination of the title itself. Perhaps it was helped by circumstance. With the Premier League paused for international fixtures involving the England national football team, attention drifted, however briefly, down the pyramid. What it found there was a story reaching its crescendo.

The appetite was immediate. Tickets for that final-day encounter at Spotland were released and quickly devoured. Rochdale’s home allocation disappeared rapidly, while in North Yorkshire, demand was such for their own 1,500 allocation that supporters queued overnight outside the LNER Community Stadium, determined to secure their place at what promised to be a defining occasion.

And yet, for all the noise building around it, there remained a caveat. None of it would matter if either side faltered before then. Four games stood between promise and reality.

For Rochdale, the first of those arrived on Good Friday, as they returned to Spotland to face Morecambe. The visitors, second from bottom, had already been edged aside in the reverse fixture on Boxing Day, but much had changed since. The Morecambe of April were under new leadership, with former Dale manager Jim Bentley installed in place of Ashvir Singh Johal. While the timing of his arrival proved too late to realistically preserve their National League status, there had been a discernible lift in performance − enough to ensure that, even here, nothing could be taken for granted.

The occasion had all the hallmarks of another step forward. A bumper Good Friday crowd, momentum carried from the late drama at Sutton, and an opponent struggling near the foot of the table. Instead, it became something altogether more uncomfortable − a performance that further exposed concerns which had been quietly building beneath the surface.

Jim McNulty largely kept faith with the side that had edged past Sutton, but there were notable returns. Oliver Whatmuff came back into the starting line-up following his involvement with the England Under-19s, restoring a familiar presence between the posts, while Harvey Gilmour was included among the substitutes after his lengthy absence. It was a squad beginning, at least on paper, to regain some of its depth at a critical moment in the season.

Rochdale began with visible purpose too. From the first whistle, there was a sharpness to their attacking play, the ball moved quickly into wide areas, and early chances followed. Kyron Gordon’s burst down the right set the tone, while Devante Rodney soon tested the resolve of the visiting defence. The pressure was sustained, and it brought opportunities. Set-pieces in particular offered promise, with Casey Pettit and Gordon both going close, the latter guilty of wasting the clearest of openings with a free header that drifted wide.

The breakthrough, when it came, carried a touch of individual brilliance. Aidan Barlow, assessing his options from the left, produced a looping finish that arced beyond the reach of the goalkeeper and into the far corner. It was a goal that, at that stage, felt like the beginning of something comfortable.

Dale attack a corner against Morecambe.


It should have been. The control was there, the chances were there, and yet the second goal − the one that might have settled the contest − never arrived.

Instead, a familiar pattern re-emerged. For all Dale’s authority in possession, there remained a vulnerability without it. When Morecambe ventured forward for the first time with any real intent, they found space too easily. A passage that should have been dealt with instead ended with Lewis Payne finding the net, the equaliser arriving as a consequence of a defensive lapse that had, of late, become increasingly difficult to ignore.

At half-time, the sense was one of frustration rather than concern. Rochdale had been the better side, created more than enough to lead comfortably, yet found themselves level. It was a theme that, worryingly, no longer felt isolated.

Callum Perry challenging against Morecambe.


The second half did little to ease those concerns. Where a response was expected, what followed was a drop in both intensity and control. The fluency that had defined the opening period gave way to something slower, more hesitant. Passes went astray, momentum stalled, and the game drifted.

Morecambe, by contrast, grew in belief. They did not need many invitations. A second goal, again stemming from a failure to deal with a relatively straightforward situation, saw Payne complete his brace at the back post. Within minutes, the damage deepened. Jack Nolan’s diving header made it three, the ease with which the visitors had turned the game on its head was concerning. At 3–1, the afternoon had shifted to genuine jeopardy.

There was a response, but it came late. The introduction of substitutes, particularly Ian Henderson, injected urgency that had been missing. A goal was initially ruled out for offside, a fleeting moment of hope quickly extinguished, before Henderson produced a finish of real quality, curling into the far corner to reduce the deficit and offer a glimmer of belief. In doing so, he underlined his enduring impact from the bench, his 16th goal as a substitute taking him past Kevin Townson’s previous record and reinforcing his status as Dale’s most reliable game-changer in such moments.

But it was too little, too late. For all the late pressure, the earlier damage proved decisive. In the final moments, as Dale committed bodies forward in search of an equaliser, the game was settled in a manner that summed up the afternoon. Ben Tollitt broke clear following another defensive breakdown and added a fourth, sealing a defeat that was damaging and sobering both.

The reaction at full-time reflected it. A crowd that had arrived expectant left subdued. Elsewhere, York’s victory at Boston − their first there in over half a century − saw them move level with Dale on points and ahead on goal difference. The advantage, painstakingly built, had shifted.

The dramatic nature of the late show at Sutton papered over the cracks of what was an otherwise abject performance. Here, the stationery store was closed. There was no paper to be found to mask what had unfurled.

Twelve goals conceded in five games told the story. For a side whose success had been built on defensive solidity, the shift was stark. Where once there had been blocks made instinctively, second balls attacked decisively − there was now hesitation.

It would have been easy to focus solely on the attacking shortcomings, and there were some. Chances, particularly in the first half, were not taken. But that alone did not define the outcome. On another day, two goals might well have been enough. The more pressing issue lay elsewhere.

This defeat was built on how Rochdale defended.

There were, perhaps, contributing factors. The absence of natural width on both flanks continued to shape the way Dale attacked. With Tobi Adebayo-Rowling and Tarryn Allarakhia unavailable, the balance had been altered. Dan Moss, consistent individually, operated on the left in a way that subtly shifted the team’s attacking patterns, drawing play more predictably to the right and reducing the variety that had previously made Rochdale so difficult to contain. It was a compromise that had been navigated successfully for a time, but now appeared to be taking its toll.

And yet, even within that, Rochdale continued to progress the ball effectively. Building from the back remained intact; territory was gained. The issue was not in reaching dangerous areas, but in what happened next − and, more critically, what happened when possession was lost.

With four games remaining, the sands had shifted. Level with York on points, behind on goal difference, and with defensive questions mounting, Rochdale’s path to the title had become significantly more complicated.

‘We’re disappointed to concede four goals at home because, ultimately, that’s why we don’t win the game today,’ said a dejected Jim McNulty afterwards. ‘Two goals should be enough to win if we’re defending how we have all season. At this moment, we’re not − and that’s something we need to address.

‘Nobody gives you 98 points for free. This league is a meat grinder that tests you in every way possible, and we’ve earned every one of those points we have on the board. There’s a long way to go. We’ll reset, focus on the next moment, and go and attack it.’

Dan Moss headed against the woodwork against Hartlepool.


That next moment was a trip to Hartlepool on Easter Monday, a fixture that carried its own sense of unease. It was Hartlepool who had inflicted one of Rochdale’s few defeats of the season in the reverse meeting back in December, a game played at Accrington Stanley’s ground, where their aggressive, front-foot approach had proven too much for Dale to handle.

Despite a recent 7–0 humbling at Wealdstone, Hartlepool remained within touching distance of the play-off places, their ambitions not yet fully extinguished. That heavy defeat, if anything, only added an element of unpredictability. Wounded sides at this stage of the season could be dangerous, and with their season still alive, there was little doubt they would again look to impose themselves physically and disrupt Rochdale’s rhythm.

From the outset, that pattern was clear. Hartlepool pressed high and with purpose, committing numbers onto Rochdale’s back line. With four players consistently closing down the build-up, Oliver Whatmuff was frequently forced to go long, a concession that played into the hosts’ hands. Without a reliable focal point at the top end of the pitch, those direct passes too often returned as quickly as they had been sent.

There were flashes, certainly. Early intent was evident, particularly down the left where Tarryn Allarakhia, restored to the starting line-up, provided a more natural balance. One such delivery led to the clearest opening of the first half, his looping ball picking out Dan Moss at the back post, whose powerful header crashed against the upright.

In truth, Hartlepool carried the greater threat before the interval. Former Dale winger Tyrese Sinclair, lively throughout, tested Whatmuff with a curling effort that demanded a sharp intervention, while further pressure from set-pieces and second balls kept Dale’s defence engaged. The warning signs were there. Rochdale had enjoyed spells of possession, but penetration had been limited, their forward play lacking both cohesion and conviction.

The second half followed a similar course, albeit with Rochdale able, for a time, to push the game further into Hartlepool’s half − as much the result of the hosts dropping off as any renewed endeavour. The introduction of substitutes, notably Ian Henderson and later Tobi Adebayo-Rowling, brought a shift in emphasis. Where earlier phases had been predictable, now there was at least variation. Adebayo-Rowling’s direct running carried the ball forward, stretching the game in ways that had previously been absent, while Henderson’s movement offered a level of intelligence and unpredictability that unsettled defenders.

Even Mani D couldn't find a way to break the deadlock.


Yet even then, the final action remained elusive. Opportunities to shoot were passed up, moments hesitated upon. Connor McBride and Devante Rodney both found themselves in positions where more conviction might have altered the outcome, only for the chance to dissolve. The longer it remained goalless, the more the game drifted into a familiar tension.

And with that came the inevitable shift. As Rochdale’s attacking impetus waned, pressure returned in the opposite direction. Sloppiness crept in, passes misplaced, clearances hurried. Hartlepool sensed the opportunity but, crucially, could not take it. What might once have been punished went unconverted, and in that, there was at least a measure of fortune.

Ultimately, the goalless draw felt reflective of a broader issue rather than an isolated outcome. This was now a side operating without its usual sharpness, its fluency dulled at a point in the season where precision mattered most. The return of Harvey Gilmour, composed and assured in deeper areas, provided a degree of stability, yet even that could not fully compensate for the lack of a consistent presence ahead of the ball.

More telling still was how the system itself began to show strain. For much of the campaign, it had functioned with remarkable efficiency, each component operating at a level that sustained the collective. Here, and increasingly in recent weeks, that margin had narrowed. When individuals dropped even slightly below that level, the structure lost some of its cohesion. Attacks became predictable, the ball recycled rather than progressed.

There were solutions, perhaps. The impact of Adebayo-Rowling hinted at one. Henderson’s movement at another. But as the final whistle sounded on a game that never truly ignited, the overriding sense was of an opportunity missed to reassert control at a critical juncture.

In isolation, a point away from home was not without value. In context, York City had defeated Altrincham at home and now moved two points clear of Dale in the table with two to play before the final-day showdown.

‘The situation doesn’t really change,’ McNulty said afterwards. ‘We go into the final three games knowing that if we win them, we win the league. That’s the objective.

‘You have to keep perspective. After conceding four in the last game, to come here and keep a clean sheet against a team with real attacking threat is very pleasing.

‘The backing today was outstanding. If we win the next few, it sets up the mother of all shootouts on the final day. And if we win all three, we know exactly what that means.’

Harvey Gilmour back in the midfield against Wealdstone.


The next step came at Spotland, where Wealdstone were the visitors.

On paper, it was a fixture that offered encouragement. Dale had won the reverse meeting 3–1 back in August, a performance built on total control. But little about the run-in now lent itself to easy assumptions. Wealdstone arrived a changed side under the experienced Gary Waddock, their recent form pointing to a team revitalised at precisely the moment it mattered most. A remarkable 7–0 victory over Hartlepool had underlined their attacking threat, while a composed 3–0 win against Aldershot reinforced their growing confidence. Added to that was the momentum of a place secured in the FA Trophy Final.

For Rochdale, the challenge was clear. This was no longer simply about performance, but about nerve. Having watched a recalcitrant York once again prevail in the earlier kick-off, this time 1-0 against a spirited Tamworth side, that nerve would be tested more severely than at any time previously in the campaign.

But for long stretches, this was a performance devoid of the urgency that the occasion demanded. Rochdale had possession, often in advanced areas, but rarely did they translate it into meaningful threat. The ball moved without incision, options appeared limited, and the composure that had defined their best displays was, once again, conspicuously absent.

There had been early signs of promise. Dan Moss glanced a header wide, while Emmanuel Dieseruvwe tested Dante Baptiste from distance and later had the ball in the net, only for the flag to intervene. Tobi Adebayo-Rowling, making his first start since February, offered a willing outlet, yet the overall pattern remained sterile. Too often, promising positions dissolved into recycled possession, the tempo insufficient to unsettle a Wealdstone side content to remain organised and disciplined.

The underlying issue was not simply tactical, but emotional. There was a tension to Rochdale’s play, a sense of a side caught between patience and urgency, and fully committing to neither. Even in deeper areas, where their composure had previously been a strength, there were, once again, signs of hesitation.

When the breakthrough came, it was not for the hosts. Just before the hour mark, a partially cleared set-piece was returned into the area and, after a neat exchange, Deon Woodman converted from close range. It was a familiar concession, too − another moment where Rochdale failed to deal decisively with a second ball, continuing a recent pattern of defensive lapses that had begun to undermine their control.

For a time, the response was muted. Confidence appeared fragile, the forward line struggling to impose itself, and the sense grew that this might be the afternoon where the title challenge finally faltered. Yet if the performance lacked fluency, the resolve, once again, did not.

McNulty turned to his bench, and with it, the dynamic shifted. Luke Hannant introduced a natural outlet, offering width and delivery where previously there had been none. John-Kymani Gordon, operating with greater freedom, began to stretch the play, while the introduction of Ian Henderson altered the very nature of the attack. His movement alone forced Wealdstone to rethink, his presence unsettling.

JK Gordon crosses against Wealdstone.


Ed Francis, calm and assured in possession, added a measure of control that had been lacking in the middle, allowing Rochdale to sustain pressure with greater purpose. Gradually, almost imperceptibly at first, the balance of the game began to tilt.

The equaliser, when it arrived with 12 minutes remaining, was testament to this. Francis lifted a delicate pass over the defence, Henderson read it instinctively, cushioning it with his chest before volleying a finish with a composure that has long defined him. It was a goal that changed not just the scoreline, but the belief within the ground.

From there, momentum took hold. And as the game entered its final moments, it was rewarded. Devante Rodney, finding space on the edge of the area, slipped the ball into Hannant’s path, and the substitute responded by driving a thumping low effort into the bottom corner to complete the turnaround.

There was still time for one final test of resolve, Oliver Whatmuff producing a crucial save to preserve the advantage, but this time Rochdale held firm. The whistle, when it came, confirmed not just victory, but survival within the title race.

Luke Hannant celebrates his incredible winner against Wealdstone.


In truth, this had been one of Rochdale’s poorest performances in possession. For over an hour, they had looked a side weighed down by the moment, lacking the sharpness that had carried them so far. And yet, when it mattered most, as they did at Sutton, they found a way.

It was not control that defined this afternoon, but character. For 75 minutes, there had been little to suggest a positive outcome. But they never let go − not the players, not the bench, not the supporters. And in the end, when quality finally met belief, it was enough.

The title race, improbably at times, lived on.

‘It was a special one, adding to a catalogue of moments that have made this a special season,’ McNulty said afterwards. ‘We’ve reached 102 points – that’s history-making – and I can’t praise the players enough for the belief they showed to turn around a situation that looked perilous.

‘The impact from the bench was outstanding. They could have felt sorry for themselves, but instead they came on and gave everything for the team. That sums this group up.’

In the afterglow of that extraordinary, nerve-shredding victory, the club paused − briefly − to recognise the individuals who had carried them to the brink of something remarkable.

At the end-of-season awards, Harvey Gilmour’s influence across the campaign was emphatically underlined, collecting the Supporters’ Player of the Season and multiple other accolades, a reflection of his connection with the stands. Kyron Gordon, meanwhile, was recognised by those within the dressing room and beyond, landing both the Players’ Player and Club Player of the Season awards.

There were nods, too, to defining moments and emerging talent. Casey Pettit’s strike against Eastleigh was voted Goal of the Season, while Oliver Whatmuff’s development was honoured with the Young Player award. Across the club, contributions at every level were acknowledged − from community impact to the women’s team − reinforcing a sense that this was not just a squad chasing history, but a club moving forward together, as per the ownership group’s mission.

It felt, in that moment, like a celebration. But with two games still to play, the real prize remained just out of reach.

The penultimate step on the road to a potential title decider was a trip to Essex to face Braintree Town. It was a fixture that offered zero margin for error. Braintree, a hybrid of part-time and full-time players whose relegation from the National League had already been confirmed, were playing only for pride. With the title race finely poised, anything other than victory for Rochdale would all but hand the initiative to York.

This feeling was best summed up by Emmanuel Dieseruvwe, when he said pre-match, ‘The boys have got to give their lives for these last two games now… it’s a really important time to really focus and lock in. When you're away from home, you’ve got to respect it and do what it takes on the day to get the victory. And where we are now, it’s something we really need to do.’

The ‘life and death’ analogy almost proved fitting. Before Dale's relegation to the National League, this writer only knew Braintree as the hometown of the Prodigy. On a dusty pitch that looked more like a village cricket outfield in September than a football surface, it almost became better known as the graveyard of Rochdale's title ambitions.

Jim McNulty made two changes from the Wealdstone game, with Devante Rodney and Luke Hannant coming in, and Joe Pritchard returning from injury to take a place on the bench. Dale almost had the lead inside six minutes, Hannant bundling his way past a couple of defenders on the edge of the area before seeing his effort cleared off the line − the unforgiving pitch doing as much to slow it down as any defensive intervention. Dale missed other chances too − Dieseruvwe and Kyron Gordon in chief.

The hosts, however − winless in nine − had other ideas than simply rolling over and allowing their visitors to set up a final day showdown. Goran Babic fired over. Lewis Walker had a shot well blocked. Chay Cooper saw an effort deflected inches wide and dragged another off target. Three very good chances for a team with nothing left to play for. The defensive wobbles that had crept into recent performances were visible again, a back three that had once felt so assured now carrying an edge of hesitancy.

It was addressed, fleetingly at least, by a moment of fortune and composure at the other end. Less than 10 minutes before the break, a ball forward was contested, Aidan Francis-Clarke hooked it across his own area, and it fell kindly for Aidan Barlow. He held his nerve, and found the bottom corner. Dale went into half-time a goal to the good.

The second half began with more purpose. Dieseruvwe headed Hannant's deep cross wide, then flicked a header into the path of Barlow, whose dipping effort was well held by Caleb Ansen. The tempo was higher, the spaces there to exploit − and yet Dale couldn't convert them.

Dale then seemed content to regress into protecting their slender lead rather than seeking to expand upon it. It was around this point that the limitations of the afternoon began to show more clearly. Ryan East and Harvey Gilmour were both looking a tired combination, the midfield pairing lacking the sharpness to retain the ball and dictate the tempo that had briefly looked so promising after the break. Changes were made from the bench, but the approach remained. Protect the lead. See it out. It is a logic that makes sense if it pays off, but makes the heart sink in the stands when it doesn’t.

Oliver Whatmuff had already been tested a couple of times. But just 10 seconds into seven added minutes, substitute John Akinde got in front of his marker to bundle home a ball lofted into the box. Braintree had equalised. Time seemed to stop.

It looked as though Dale were being consigned to the play-offs at the most painful possible juncture, handing a guard of honour to York City on their own turf rather than contesting a title.

And then − the 99th minute. A clearance. Callum Perry, just inside the Braintree half on the left, pumping a ball forward. Dan Moss nodding it into the box. Emmanuel Dieseruvwe, who had started to look a threat again, controlling and finishing to Ansen's left into the inside netting. The final kick of the game. The visiting support went wild.

Mass celebrations erupt at Braintree.


‘The flame still burns for this team − it won’t go out,’ said a visibly jubilant McNulty afterwards. ‘In those final moments there was no shape, no plan, just pure belief from everyone and, somehow, we found a way. We just haven’t gone away.

‘The happiness it brings to everyone − the fans, the families, everyone connected to the club − that’s what makes moments like this so special. You can’t replicate it.

‘We’ve run a marathon this season, and these last few weeks have been insane − but all we wanted was this final game. Now we’ve given ourselves that chance.’

McNulty was right. The result was all that mattered here, and it was delivered. As good as the effort of this season has been, and it has been extraordinary, Dale almost didn't get the job done against a side with nothing left to fight for. That they did said something about character, even if it said rather less about the control that had defined them for most of the season.

There is now a week to get through before what is arguably the biggest game in this club's history. The selection against York will be almost secondary. Whoever goes out there will have to show up and keep going until the final whistle, just as they did at Braintree. Dale can play badly and win. The pressure is all on York.

No other finale would have been fitting.

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


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Rochdale’s wild ride to the final day

Jim McNulty celebrates the late winner at Braintree.   F or much of the season, the National League title race had unfolded away from the gl...