Sean Raggett: I thought I had saved Portsmouth against Oxford - it turned out to be millimetres away

Sean Raggett believed his dramatic intervention had saved the day.
Sean Raggett consoles Cameron McGeehan following his penalty miss in the play-off semi-final second leg at Oxford. Picture: Robin Jones/Getty ImagesSean Raggett consoles Cameron McGeehan following his penalty miss in the play-off semi-final second leg at Oxford. Picture: Robin Jones/Getty Images
Sean Raggett consoles Cameron McGeehan following his penalty miss in the play-off semi-final second leg at Oxford. Picture: Robin Jones/Getty Images

Instead it proved a pivotal moment as Oxford United went on to take Pompey to penalties – and clinch play-off victory.

Raggett’s goal-line clearance three minutes into first-half stoppage time appeared to spare the blushes of Ellis Harrison from registering a calamitous own goal.

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Then, following a pause, referee Darren England was alerted to Hawkeye’s verdict. The goal stood.

That cancelled out Marcus Harness’ first-half opener. It would take a 5-4 penalty shoot-out defeat to finally separate the sides.

For Raggett, it was his final Pompey appearance – and a critical point of the game.

He told The News: ‘I didn’t realise what had happened initially, because I was behind it.

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‘I thought maybe a striker had nipped in before Bassy – then thought I had cleared it off the line in time. I honestly didn’t believe it was in.

‘At the time I was marking Josh Ruffels at the back, then I saw the ball so tried to react. Unfortunately I was just that little too late.

‘I thought I’d got there. I looked straight at the linesman – then heard the ref blow the whistle and point to the centre circle.

‘I couldn't believe it. It happened right before half-time, which is not the best time to concede.

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‘As it turned out, from watching replays, the goal was millimetres from being disallowed.

‘If we didn’t have goal-line technology for that game then it wouldn’t have been given, but then you can’t complain because it was a goal.

‘If we had defended that we would have gone in at the break 1-0 up and very positive. Yet suddenly Oxford had a big lift.

‘They came out better in the second half, which shows you it really was a good time to score.’

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It was fellow loanee Cameron McGeehan whose Pompey penalty was saved.

Raggett was seventh on the list to step up, backing himself to succeed if called upon.

He added: ‘Cameron had a really good game. He’s a strong boy and I’m sure will be able to bounce back from that no problem.

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‘There's not a lot you really can say to someone in that situation, you just want to let them know they haven’t let anyone down.

‘It’s a complete lottery at the end of the day, someone’s going to miss. That’s just how it goes, unfortunately.’

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