AFTER their defeat, Boston's Steve Evans left coach Paul Raynor to face the press and share his unique view of the game.

'It was the proverbial game of two halves,' he said. 'We dominated the first half, didn't capitalise on the pressure we had and in the second half made individual errors that ultimately cost us. We nullified the threat of Chester but goals change games.'

His view didn't tally with the game, in which the Pilgrims proffered nothing in attack bar one fortuitous goal.

Mark Wright meanwhile revealed he and Graham Barrow have changed things in training to produce more goals and nine in four games shows their efforts have paid off.

'We had one of the League's worst scoring records,' he said. 'Credit to the lads they have responded to that. The penny has dropped with Gregg Blundell and he has transferred his bubbliness in training onto the pitch.

'He is great in the dressing room and there is no-one in the team you would wish goals for more than Gregg.

'First half was a battle in the wind and the rain. Second half there was more space and once we turned them and played beyond them we scored goals.

'I was not happy with the goal we conceded but to complain would be picking.'