Kidderminster Harriers 2 Spennymoor Town 2.

A dramatic stoppage time penalty rescued a deserved point for Spennymoor from their trip to Aggborough on Saturday.

This was another battling display by Moors, especially considering the wet and windy conditions which they had to defend against in the second half. And in the eyes of many Spennymoor followers, they deserved a point for a top class long range goal from David Foley, his fourth of the season, that gave them a half time lead.

“As we’ve seen before this season, David is capable of scoring special goals, and that one was certainly the best so far,” said assistant manager Tommy Miller. “It was a fantastic strike, with great awareness. He spotted the keeper off his line and he couldn’t have put the ball into a better place.

“It was a great point. We led at half time and that was thoroughly deserved. We went toe-to-toe against a full-time team and we certainly didn’t look out of place. Out fitness levels were fantastic, we kept going and got a point that we deserved.

“We knew it would be difficult in the second half because of the wind, but we dug in well and got a valuable point. It was a bit backs against the wall, but we defended well. We were a bit unhappy with the goals that we did concede, but we stuck at it and got a goal at the end.

“We’ll take that into the Chorley game this Saturday.”

Moors might have dropped to fifth in the table because of Brackley’s home win over Blyth, but that won’t concern them after another morale-boosting display against a team that was in the Football League not so long ago.

Foley gave Kidderminster something to think about when he put Moors into the lead after six minutes. Kidderminster keeper Brandon Hall cleared the ball out as far as the former Hartlepool player who quickly chested the ball down 35 yards out, and fired it straight back over the helpless keeper and in off the bar.

There followed a strong period of Kidderminster pressure against which Moors defended well, with recalled defender James Curtis outstanding. They always looked dangerous on the break, and Glen Taylor had a header cleared off the line.

With the elements in their favour, Kidderminster piled on the pressure in the second half, and Shane Henry cleared a Joel Taylor shot off the line.

But Kiddie levelled just after the hour when James McQuilkin fired into the bottom corner of Jordan Porter’s net.

The woodwork then denied Joe Ironside the lead from a corner, but they had no escape on 78 minutes when sub Andre Brown headed home from a McQuilkin free kick.

But Moors displayed plenty of resilience, and levelled in the third minute of stoppage time. Sub Rob Ramshaw burst into the Kiddie penalty area and was brought down by defender Jimmy O’Connor who was shown his second yellow card, and Joe Tait again showed his coolness as a penalty taker by beating Hall from the spot.

Moors: Porter, Griffiths, Curtis, Tait, Henry, Dixon (sub Johnson 86), Chandler, Fewster (sub Hall 60, Anderson (sub Ramshaw 73), Foley, Taylor. Subs not used: Lowson, Armstrong.