WARRINGTON Town’s winning run came to an end on the road on Tuesday evening.

Almost immediately after Connor Woods had equalised for Mark Beesley’s side, Aaron Haswell struck the winner for hosts Whitby Town just before the hour mark.

They had trailed at half-time thanks to Bradley Fewster’s goal for the Seasiders, who climb further away from relegation trouble.

On the other side of the coin, Yellows’ four-match winning league run is at an end but they remain fourth in the Northern Premier League Premier Division table.

After the game, Town boss Mark Beesley admitted his side "did not do enough" to take anything home from the Turnbull Ground.

"It was a difficult night to play football for both teams, but they coped with it better than us," he said.

"They played with the wind really well – they had willing runners and they bombarded us.

"We had to settle things down at half time and I thought we started the second half really well.

"We scored a good goal and at that point, you think there’s only one winner but conceding 30 seconds later is really, really poor and we never recovered.

"We didn’t stop the cross even though there was two of us there – it was way too easy to get the ball in the box.

"If they don’t score, we’re in the ascendency but goals change games.

"We gave a really poor goal away and we didn’t really recover until the last 10 minutes. It gave them a big lift and I don’t think we did enough."

Read Matt Turner's verdict on the game below

AS the saying goes – “you’re never more vulnerable than when you’ve just scored.”

An age-old footballing cliché it may be, but it applied perfectly to Warrington Town’s windy evening on the Yorkshire coast.

They had been building nicely after a below-par first half and when Connor Woods prodded home Sean Williams’ deep cross to level the scores, they looked to have a platform to kick on.

Less than 60 seconds later, though, that platform had been obliterated and in truth, they never really recovered from Aaron Haswell’s sucker-punch.

On the balance of play, however, it cannot really be argued that Whitby deserved their victory based on the opening period alone.

Had they gone into the break three or four goals to the good, there could have been few complaints such was their dominance in terms of chances created.

Even aside from Brad Fewster’s crisp finish, Tony Thompson’s woodwork was rattled and goal-saving blocks were made as Yellows lived dangerously.

They comfortably lost the midfield battle, with Grimsby loanee Jamie Bramwell highly impressive at the base of the home diamond.

Perhaps the biggest victory for them was that they were still in the game and could see a route back.

Whitby is always a tough place to come regardless of form, particularly on a cold Tuesday night with the wind whipping up a storm.

However, these are the kind of tests sides with ambitions on promotion have to pass.

Town have had it pretty good in the past few weeks and have built quite a patch of momentum and they will hope this turns out to be but a minor speedbump.