Matty Taylor hails Shrewsbury captain Ryan Bowman after win over Cheltenham
New boss Matty Taylor heaped praise on Shrewsbury captain Ryan Bowman after his second-half goal secured a 1-0 win over Cheltenham.
Bowman pounced in the 50th minute after Luke Southwood had to dive at full stretch to parry Ben Williams’ header towards his own goal following Jordan Shipley’s cross, ensuring it was the perfect start to Taylor’s reign at the Croud Meadow.
“I can only commend Ryan for what he’s done since I’ve been in the building,” Taylor said.
“He’s been exemplary in his behaviour, he’s in unbelievable physical shape and he’s paid to score goals, which is what he’s done today.
“I am pleased for him, leading the team and scoring the winning goal. I thought it was a dominant performance, without the scoreline suggesting that, because we were excellent, especially in the first half.
“It’s nice to get three points and a 1-0 win at home is the ideal start, even if we should have been out of sight by half time.”
Bowman had shot wide a minute before his goal after a long clearance from Marko Marosi caught out the away defence.
Three Cheltenham staff, including director of football Micky Moore, left for Shrewsbury this summer, meaning there was an extra edge building up to the opening-day clash, but the game did not come to life until late in the first period.
Daniel Udoh turned a low ball from Shipley over for Shrewsbury and at the other end after Liam Sercombe’s shot was saved, Rob Street nearly netted against his former loan club but Morgan Feeney’s fine challenge denied him.
Bowman’s strike partner Udoh, back from a 12-month ACL injury absence, forced Southwood into a block at his near post in the 75th minute as Shrewsbury nearly made it 2-0, but they had done enough.
Robins boss Wade Elliott was encouraged by the way his team finished the game, despite suffering an opening-day defeat.
“I thought the last half-an-hour or so was probably a better representation of what we want to be about,” he said.
“For whatever reason the shackles came off and we looked a bit more like ourselves. For the first hour, it wasn’t a classic, put it that way.
“It was a cagey game and we knew it’d come down to a moment and unfortunately, we were on the wrong side of that moment.
“Before that, ironically enough without having the bulk of the game we probably had the better chances and in the last half-an-hour we took the ball and played with a bit more intent.
“The challenge from us is to have that mindset from the off.”