SUBSTITUTIONpublished at 63 mins
AFC Wimbledon 1-0 Notts County (2-0 agg)
Josh Kelly is coming on his 29th sub appearance of the season, replacing the rather unfortunate Marcus Browne who might have sealed the Dons' Wembley place already.
Josh Neufville's early goal settled the nerves for AFC Wimbledon at the Cherry Red Records Stadium
Josh Neufville's early goal sealed back-to-back wins over Notts County as AFC Wimbledon secured their spot in the League Two play-off final.
The Dons took a 1-0 lead into the game and Neufville settled any nerves on eight minutes as he expertly chipped former Wimbledon goalkeeper Alex Bass to double his side's aggregate lead.
Notts, missing top scorers Alessandra Jatta and David McGoldrick through suspension and injury respectively, could not find a way through the league's meanest defence and the hosts spurned several chances in the second half to put the game out of sight.
Johnnie Jackson's side will face Walsall in the final at Wembley on Monday, 26 May.
AFC Wimbledon will face Walsall for a place back in League One after three years in the fourth tier
The Wombles made an emotional return to Plough Lane at the Cherry Red Records Stadium five years ago as a League One side and now have the opportunity to return to the third tier after a three-year absence.
No League Two side have conceded fewer than the 35 goals that Johnnie Jackson's side have let in this season.
And in the Saturday afternoon sun they made the perfect start with Neufville's early goal, as he calmly lobbed Bass.
The hosts withstood the Magpies' pressure in the first half and in the second had multiple chances through Marcus Browne to seal the win, with the forward denied by Bass and then a last-ditch challenge from Jacob Bedeau after capitalising on Matty Platt's mistake.
But for some inspired keeping from Bass and a remarkable diving save to keep out Matty Stevens' goalbound header, the hosts would have put the game to bed long before the end.
The fans chanted "we're going to Wembley" as they closed in on the win and a place in the final under the arch where they will take on a Saddlers side who also won both legs of their play-off semi-final.
Notts County goalkeeper Alex Bass produced a stunning save to keep out Matty Stevens' goalbound header
From the outset, this was a tough assignment for Notts County – taking on the league's meanest defence while missing their two top scorers.
Jatta's red card at Meadow Lane ruled him out of the tie while McGoldrick was missing through injury, with the pair accounting for 39 goals between them this season.
Guinean striker Mai Traore was the player trusted by Stuart Maynard to step into that void, making just his third start for the club and having not yet scored since moving to Meadow Lane in February.
The 25-year-old made lots of purposeful runs in behind to stretch the Wimbledon defence but rarely tested goalkeeper Owen Goodman as Notts, who were playing National League football two seasons ago, managed just one shot on target despite having 73% possession.
AFC Wimbledon boss Johnnie Jackson told BBC Radio 5 Live:
"It was an unbelievable goal from Josh, he got in behind, controlled it. It's a goal worthy to win any game, any tie.
"We probably should have made it a little more comfortable with some of the chances we had in the second half on the counter attack.
"But we knew 1-0 would be enough today, so that's brilliant."
On his players' achievement:
"They're such a great group of lads, they give everything for me, for the club, for the shirt - I can't ask for any more.
"If it hadn't gone our way today, it wouldn't have been through lack of effort or endeavour so I'm so pleased for them. They deserve their shot."
Notts County head coach Stuart Maynard told BBC Radio Nottingham:
"First and foremost, I'm devastated for the fans who were absolutely incredible today.
"On the game, it was very tough. I thought we started very bright on the edge of their box and we were camped in there quite a lot with a few efforts here and there.
"Then we conceded a very sloppy goal, and in these big games you just can't give a team of Wimbledon's quality at home, with their defensive record, a leg-up. That is what we have given them.
"Sometimes it's the type of goal you concede. We conceded a goal you shouldn't really concede, it's defensively poor from us as a group and it's frustrating.
"If he comes inside and puts one in the top corner, I think it's a different feeling and we come back. But it deflates you a little and goals change games.
"It made it a very up-hill battle. In the second half the frustration creeps in and I don't think we stick to the way we played in the first half, so it's frustrating."
Manager: Johnnie Jackson
Formation: 3 - 5 - 2
Manager: Stuart Maynard
Formation: 3 - 4 - 1 - 2
Manager: Johnnie Jackson
Formation: 3 - 5 - 2
Manager: Stuart Maynard
Formation: 3 - 4 - 1 - 2
League Two
All competitions
All competitions
All competitions
AFC Wimbledon have won six of their seven Football League meetings with Notts County (L1), keeping four clean sheets in the process.
Notts County have lost all three of their away games against AFC Wimbledon in all competitions, conceding at least two goals each time.
After remaining unbeaten between December and February on home soil in League Two (W6 D2), AFC Wimbledon ended the regular season with two wins in their final seven home league games (D2 L3), though one of those victories was against Notts County in March (2-0).
During the League Two regular season, only Doncaster Rovers recorded more wins (12) and points (41) in away games than Notts County (W10 D7 L6 – 37 points), only losing one of their final five away league games in 2024-25 (W3 D1).
AFC Wimbledon have kept 22 clean sheets across their League Two games this season, including one in the first leg of this play-off tie. The Dons have also conceded the fewest goals (35) and faced the fewest shots on target (132) of any side in the division in 2024-25 (inc. play-offs).
During the regular season in League Two, Notts County scored more goals on the road than any other side (37) as well as posting the third-highest xG total (34.7), with eight of their 10 wins coming via a 2+ goal margin.
As well as scoring the winner in the first leg of this play-off tie, AFC Wimbledon’s Riley Harbottle also lead all players for most tackles (5, level with Myles Hippolyte), possession won (6) and duels won (12). It was just the second time a player hit those numbers in a League Two match this campaign after Timothée Dieng for Cheltenham Town vs Swindon Town in March.
In the first leg, Notts County’s Conor Grant recorded four shots on target, with only David McGoldrick managing more in a League Two game for the club this season (5 vs Accrington Stanley in September). In fact, Grant had 23.5% of his total shots on target during the whole of this campaign in the first leg.