AFC Wimbledon 2-3 Woking

The Dons once more succumbed to lower level opposition in the FA Trophy to leave their Wembley dreams in tatters.

Plucky Woking belied their poor position in the Conference South to deservedly snatch victory at the leaders of the Blue Square Bet Premier.

Elvis Hammond struck with three minutes remaining on the referee's watch to earn a famous win.

The Cards are Trophy specialists, winners in 1994, 1995 and 1997 and earned a place in the final against Grays at Upton Park four years ago.

Graham Baker's men are on the march again to leave Dons manager Terry Brown frustrated.

He said: “This is a competition we wanted to do well in and we've gone out of it, again to a side from further down the Pyramid. It's disappointing.

“We were probably the favourites to go the whole way and it's an opportunity to get to Wembley wasted from that point of view.”

Wimbledon bowed out last January to Conference North Workington, while in 2009 it was lowly Uxbridge that put paid to their Trophy hopes.

The afternoon didn't start well for the much-changed Dons, who left top scorer Danny Kedwell on the bench and made four other alterations to the side that drew 0-0 with Luton Town on Wednesday.

They went 1-0 down within three minutes as lively Moses Ademola struck after Hammond's ball into the box.

A tidy Mark Nwokeji finish after 32 minutes made it 1-1 but these was no stopping Ademola. After his early goal in the first, he notched another – a composed penalty kick - right at the end of the first half to make it 2-1 to the Cards.

Kedwell was introduced for Christian Jolley after 55 minutes and ten minutes later he slotted home a penalty, won when Adam Doyle handled in the area after Luke Moore's shot.

But despite regaining parity for a second time, Wimbledon blew it again late on.

Aswad Thomas put in a great cross and there was Hammond to give Seb Brown no chance with minutes remaining.

It was a wonderful return for Alan Inns and Andy Little as Woking celebrated another upset.