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Ardley: We must sharpen up

Image: Neil Ardley: Expects better

AFC Wimbledon boss Neil Ardley has ordered his players to sharpen up their home form following their 3-2 defeat to Stevenage.

Matt Tubbs put the Dons in front before half time, but goals from Dean Wells, debutant Cameron Lancaster and Charlie Lee put Stevenage in control, before Adebayo Azeez came off the bench to hit a late consolation. With the Dons now having taken just one point from three matches at the Kingsmeadow Stadium, Ardley admitted his concern. He said: "The home form has got me down. We've got 4,500 people who come and watch us at home and we haven't put in enough good performances or results for them to go home happy. "We didn't do enough and it's frustrating. In the first half we were quite open in midfield, we had two wingers on the pitch. I told the boys at half time I wanted to go for it. Maybe I chased it too early and we got disjointed because of it. "I'll take responsibility for going for it and maybe the fact we haven't won enough at home is the reason I did. I can't take responsibility for us losing battles around the pitch as well though. "The second goal, we looked at it again, it was never a shot. Obviously that changed the pace of the game and we chased it even more. "Credit to Stevenage, they played well, they ran hard, and they deserved the win in the end." Stevenage boss Graham Westley revealed Lancaster had admitted his goal was not quite as intended, but believes the new signing from Spurs is helping to form an exciting Boro team. He said: "Lancaster's goal, people will ask: 'was it a special moment?' I think any one of us who have played the game know that it was a well delivered ball to the back post that happened to go in. "When I asked him afterwards he had one of those wry smiles. He put in a terrific display. He was strong in holding the ball up, he was creative with his feet and he got in the right areas. "People say to me: 'could this be the best Stevenage team ever?' I would never say it lightly because I have too much respect for the teams that have gone before, but yes it could. "There are some fantastic qualities in there. It's a question of merging them, getting them to understand each other and creating that collective ambition that we've always had. "There were some really good passages of play at the start of the second half and I think we showed there that the seeds that I'm talking about will certainly realise themselves sooner or later." Breaking news, transfer gossip, line ups and goal alerts from your football club - delivered direct to your mobile. Sign up for Sky Sports Alerts

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