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LEAGUE REVIEW

PREMIER DIVISION: WALNUT BOYS PIP NIRVANA ON LAST DAY

One of the most exciting Premier Division championship races ever went the way of AFC Kempston who

claimed the title by a margin of just two goals over Leicester Nirvana who finished as runners up for a second

season in succession.

The Walnut Boys set a record by going through their first 32 matches unbeaten until they suffered their only

league reverse at Eynesbury on Easter Saturday. Eleven of those matches had been drawn though and those

points lost meant they could never shake off the free scoring Nirvana outfit which spent the bulk of the season

at the head of the table.

A key encounter in the title race saw ten men Kempston beat Nirvana 2-0 at Hillgrounds on 13

th

February,

goals from Sam Johnson and Josh Winters giving the Walnut Boys a vital three points.

Nirvana suffered home defeats against Wisbech and Sleaford in the next few weeks but Kempston’s Easter loss

left the contest nicely balanced as the season moved into April, Nirvana a point clear from a game more.

Kempston dropped points in draws with Holbeach and Deeping but Nirvana did likewise at home to

Northampton Spencer and with four games each to play the duo were level on points with Nirvana two goals

better off.

Two more wins each in the next week saw the sides level on goal difference with Nirvana’s advantage down to

goals scored, but on 26

th

April Nirvana plundered seven goals against Holbeach while the Walnut Boys could

manage just three at home to Eynesbury.

Going into the final day Kempston needed to better Nirvana’s result by a five goal margin to turn the tables

and they duly completed the task with a 7-0 demolition of Boston Town while Nirvana were edging Eynesbury

2-1 at Hall Road.

Newport Pagnell finished a distant third, fourteen points behind the top two, with Holbeach fourth, a further

13 points back. The Tigers had seemed contenders for much of the season but their prospects were ruined by

a fixture backlog which saw them suffer seven successive defeats in April.

Cogenhoe finished strongly to claim fifth place ahead of Eynesbury and Sleaford who both exceeded

expectations finishing 6

th

and 7

th

respectively. Also outperforming expectations were Harborough who finished

in the top half of the top flight for the first time, and Rothwell Corinthians who finished 14

th

on their return to

the Premier Division.

Other clubs did not fulfil their potential with anticipated title challenges never materialising from Wisbech and

Yaxley.

Huntingdon hit the bottom of the table in their second game and never looked like escaping the basement.

They lost their first eleven games before a shock 1-0 success at Wisbech on 6

th

October. Eight days later they

picked up their only home win by a single goal against Wellingborough, but thereafter their only reward came

from home draws with Harrowby in February and Eynesbury in April.

The second relegation place turned into a three team contest between Sileby, Wellingborough and Oadby.

Eight defeats in their last ten matches saw the Poachers slide into the bottom two, six points adrift of the

Doughboys who lost just four of their last eleven games. Sileby finished level on points with Wellingborough

despite incurring a six point deduction for playing a player under suspension. Rangers had ended the season as

one of the division’s form teams after collecting a 19 point haul from their final nine matches.

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