South Berks suffer six-pointer heartbreak as survival fight goes to the wire
There are games that shape a season, and then there are games that define it. At Cantley Park on Saturday, South Berkshire’s Ladies’ 1st XI found themselves in the latter, locked in a high-stakes, nerve-shredding six-pointer against fellow strugglers Haslemere — a contest played out against a backdrop of wild weather swings and rising tension.
With Berkshire starting the day in 10th and Haslemere just beneath them in 11th, both sides knew the equation. Victory for Berks would all but secure their safety; defeat would drag them right back into the mire. For Haslemere, it was even more stark — lose, and the trapdoor beckoned.
What followed was a match as unpredictable as the elements themselves.
Under bright blue skies and a blustery wind, Berkshire came flying out of the blocks, immediately pinning Haslemere deep inside their own half. The early pressure was relentless, and it nearly told when Kelly Hancock found space in the circle, only to see her effort drift agonisingly wide of the target. It set the tone for a dominant opening spell, but one that frustratingly yielded no reward.
Haslemere, however, weathered the storm.
As the skies darkened and the wind picked up, the visitors began to find their feet. Slowly, almost imperceptibly at first, they edged their way back into the contest. Then, in the 23rd minute, came a moment that shifted the entire complexion of the game. Berkshire failed to deal cleanly with a Haslemere short corner, and amid the scramble that followed, the ball broke kindly for Martha Rea, who reacted quickest to force it under the diving Natasha Childs and into the net.
It was a goal very much against the run of play — but in matches like this, momentum can be a fragile thing.
Stung into action, Berkshire responded with urgency and intent. What followed was an extraordinary siege of the Haslemere circle, as Berks won short corner after short corner — five in quick succession — yet somehow failed to find a way through a stubborn and well-organised defence. The pressure was suffocating, the equaliser felt inevitable, but time and again Haslemere held firm.
Until, finally, the breakthrough came.
On 31 minutes, another corner, another scramble, and this time Leila Sanders took control. With a sharp turn and quick thinking in a crowded D, she created just enough space to lift the ball high into the net, a finish of real quality that brought Berkshire level and Cantley Park to life. At 1-1 going into the break, it felt as though the momentum had swung decisively back in the hosts’ favour.
Then the heavens opened.
The second half began in near farcical conditions as a sudden hailstorm swept across the pitch, turning the contest into something resembling survival hockey. Visibility dropped, control became a luxury, yet somehow the game pressed on. Through it all, Berkshire continued to carve out chances, but the finishing touch eluded them.

And then, as abruptly as it had arrived, the storm passed. Sunshine returned. Normality resumed. But only briefly.
Just before the hour mark came the moment that may yet define Berkshire’s season. A loose pass out from the back was seized upon by a Haslemere forward, who drove into the circle and drew a foul. From the resulting short corner, the ball found its way to Grace Bowdery, left unmarked in front of goal, and she made no mistake, calmly turning it home to restore the visitors’ lead.
It was a sucker punch.
What followed was a desperate, all-out push from Berkshire. Wave after wave of attack crashed against the Haslemere defence, but this time there would be no way through. The visitors threw bodies on the line, defended with discipline and heart, and behind it all stood goalkeeper Laura Dadswell, who produced a performance of outstanding composure and resilience to deny everything that came her way.
When the final whistle sounded, it was Haslemere who celebrated a priceless 2-1 victory — and Berkshire who were left to contemplate what might have been.
The result leaves both sides locked on 22 points, with Berkshire clinging to 10th place on goal difference alone, their advantage standing at seven. With New Forest and Southampton University already consigned to relegation, it now comes down to one final, dramatic weekend.
On paper, Berkshire may have the kinder fixture, travelling to ninth-placed Aldershot & Farnham, while Haslemere face the daunting prospect of hosting champions Havant. But as this season has already shown, nothing can be taken for granted.
The permutations are brutally simple. Win, and survival is almost certainly assured. Slip up, and everything is on the line. A Berkshire defeat, combined with a Haslemere draw, would be enough to send them down.
The stage is set for a finale dripping in tension.
Elsewhere, there was a calmer, if no less committed, performance from the Ladies’ 5th XI at Phoenix Reading. With the hosts already relegated and Berkshire sitting comfortably in mid-table, the stakes were lower but the intensity remained.
Helen Wilson struck in the 25th minute to give Berkshire a deserved lead at the break, and although it took until just before the hour mark to put the game beyond doubt, Bronte Charles duly obliged with a second to seal a professional 2-0 victory.
They will now bring the curtain down on their campaign next weekend at Cantley Park against third-placed Amersham & Chalfont, before attention turns to cup action the following week — and, for the 1st XI, the most important 70 minutes of their season.
Attention then quickly turns to cup action on the 25th, with a packed afternoon ahead at Cantley Park. The Mixed A side open proceedings with a quarter-final clash against St Albans, before the stakes rise further as the Ladies’ Over-55s take on Epsom in a semi-final encounter. Pushback is at 12:30pm, with the club’s awards night at the Coppid Beech Hotel bringing the curtain down on what promises to be a dramatic end to the season.









