Andy Woodman felt a draw was a fair outcome for Bromley as Rosaire Longelo’s half-volley recused a 1-1 draw against Ian Holloway’s revitalised Swindon.
Omar Sowunmi’s second-half header had given Bromley the lead but Longelo’s equaliser made it three games unbeaten for Swindon.
And Ravens boss Woodman felt the travelling Robins were worth their point, saying: “I thought Swindon came for the draw today, they tried to kill the tempo of the game and nullify everything that we are about. I can’t moan about it as I would have done the same in their position if the opposition had scored five in their previous game.
“We couldn’t get our game going, they didn’t let us get our game going and we have to give credit to them for that. That happens sometimes. I wanted us to show more tempo in the second half and get more bodies up the pitch and we did that- we stopped being safe.
“The disappointment for me is that while we didn’t defend well for their goal it was a handball – and we cant get away from that fact”.
The first half produced little by way of goalmouth incident.
Nnamdi Ofoborh dragged his low effort wide of Grant Smith’s left-hand post while Will Wright curled a free-kick just wide on the half-hour.
The second 45 appeared to be following a similar pattern until Sowunmi broke the deadlock with a towering header from Idris Odutayo’s left-wing cross.
The lead did not last long, however, as Longelo’s excellent finish levelled the game up once more.
Swindon could have won it two minutes from time when Joel Cotterill’s deflected effort from distance bounced agonisingly past the post and at the other end Corey Whitely fizzed an effort narrowly wide as both teams had to settle for a point apiece.
Robins manager Ian Holloway was delighted with the level of performance from his side as they continue to pull away from the bottom two.
He said: “I felt we had to change the team today as the last time I played the same side in a short space of time it led to bad performances. I made the decision to freshen it up, whereas Bromley played their same 11 and I felt my players put in the same level of performance and organisation as the 11 who played against Wimbledon. I believed they could do it and they showed today why I was right to think that.
“The only thing that disappointed me today was the goal. By that I mean we had two players marking their big fella and our communication needs to improve as we shouldn’t have made it so easy for him to score. That said it didn’t knock us, we kept going and I felt with the second-half substitutes we ended the game the better side. It’s another point that keeps us ticking over”.