The funfair situated behind the North Stand at Hillsborough provided
considerably more entertainment for any onlooker than that witnessed on the
pitch.
The windswept and often rain-lashed conditions which prevailed throughout most
of the game were hardly conducive to anything resembling good football,
particularly on a mire of a pitch with barely a blade of grass covering the
middle third.
It is little wonder Wednesday have won just two of their last nine home games,
with this point hardly adequate in their battle to beat the drop.
Terry Yorath's side will perhaps be relieved four of their remaining seven
matches are away from such horrendous home conditions, although the Owls are
still potentially nine points shy of the 50-point target generally accepted as
the safety watershed.
Gillingham were fortunate enough to reach such a welcome mark in midweek after
their 2-1 home win over Grimsby, and for the first half at least they played as
if their season was already over.
Wednesday should have sealed a much-needed victory by the break. But the
treacherous conditions underfoot in teenage Gills keeper Jason Brown's penalty
area during the first period, combined with fine saves and two dismissed penalty
appeals were the reasons for the Owls' failure to find the net.
Shefki Kuqi, Gerald Sibon and Alan Quinn all had their chances, while referee
Paul Armstrong made positive and instant decisions in waving away spot-kick
claims after the former had been brought down by Nayron Nosworthy and Roland
Edge in two separate incidents.
Brown, at 19 making his second league appearance following his debut in
midweek for the dropped Vince Bartram, had to be alert in punching clear a high,
hanging cross from underneath his own crossbar in the 11th minute from Wednesday
skipper Trond Soltvedt.
The Norwegian later added to the club's injury problems by failing to emerge
for the second half following a touchline challenge from Iffy Onuora which
initially led to him requiring lengthy treatment.
Brown later saved at the feet of Kuqi, before making a full-stretch save to
deny Quinn, although was grateful to watch a fizzing free-kick from Sibon flash
past the post in first-half injury-time.
The save of the game came from Brown just 10 minutes from time after Quinn had
let fly from 25 yards, with the young keeper brilliantly tipping the ball over
the bar.
He was also involved in the game's one moment of controversy when a poor
punched clearance to a Kuqi cross looped up and behind him, with Edge
acrobatically hacking clear off the line.
There were claims the ball had crossed, but assistant referee Chris Harwood
was in the ideal position to judge, further adding to Wednesday's frustrations.
At least Gillingham showed up for the second period and the victory was theirs
for the taking - although it would have been an injustice - in the 74th minute
when sub Guy Ipoua played in Marlon King.
With Wednesday's defence looking for an offside flag which never came, King
had the goal at his mercy, but from 10 yards and with only Kevin Pressman to
beat, he flashed his right-foot shot inches wide of the post.
It was the woodwork which denied the Owls on the stroke of full-time when Kuqi
and Matthew Hamshaw combined to set up Soltvedt's half-time replacement in Simon
Donnelly, but from eight yards he cracked the final opportunity of a poor game
against the bar.
Teams
Sheff Wed: Pressman, Geary, Soltvedt (Donnelly 45), Broomes,
Burrows, Haslam, Sibon (Morrison 83), Quinn, Armstrong, Kuqi,
Bonvin (Hamshaw 79).
Subs Not Used: Heald, Maddix.
Booked: Geary, Burrows.
Gillingham: Brown, Nosworthy, Hope, Butters, Edge, Smith,
Hessenthaler, Gooden, Shaw, Onuora (Ipoua 65), King.
Subs Not Used: Bartram, Browning, Saunders, Perpetuini.
Att: 20,361
Ref: P Armstrong (Thatcham).