Enfield Town will be hoping to make it two wins from two tonight and continue their victorious start to the Bostik Premier Division campaign.

Following Saturday’s 3-2 victory at Folkestone Invicta, Andy Leese’s new-look side open their home season against Bishop’s Stortford this evening.

An equaliser from the vastly-experienced Jamie Cureton ensured the Blues opened up their season with a point on Saturday as they drew 1-1 at home to Dorking, but the Towners will go into their first home clash of the campaign upbeat after coming from behind to secure the victory in dramatic fashion.

Leese had to do without the injured Dan Rumens and Mat Mitchel-King, while Ryan Blackman was unavailable, and the visitors got off to a disappointing start when Invicat’s man-of-the-match Kieron McCann received the ball on the left, cut inside Sam Hatton and fired home a low right-footed drive after six minutes.

Lewis Taaffe was well offside when he had the ball in the net soon after and Sam Youngs fired well over before the Towners got back on terms in the 12th minute.

It came from a Taaffe free-kick from wide on the left as his delivery found its way past Invicta goalkeeper Tim Roberts, with defender Nat Blanks accredited with the decisive touch.

The Towners were to fall behind for a second time 10 minutes before the break when a free-kick from the right was only partially cleared and Adam Yusuff capitalised on the opportunity.

Leese’s side sought to get back on terms after the break, with Taofiq Olomowewe seeing a shot charged down and Youngs again caught offside when he was thwarted from close range by Roberts.

Enfield also had a penalty appeal turned down when Olomowewe looked to be impeded in the box following a good run by Taaffe.

But it was the introduction of Brandon Adams for Liam Hope with around 20 minutes that saw the visitors turn the game on its head in rapid-fire fashion.

The equaliser was to arrive after 77 minutes when a long clearance from Joe Wright found Adams and he outpaced the home defence and kept his composure to convert.

Barely a minute had passed when Youngs clipped the underside of the bar after finding himself in space and the grateful Adams did the rest from close range.

It almost got worse for Folkestone when Jerald Aboagye almost turned the ball past his own keeper, but Roberts was able to prevent his side from conceding a fourth goal.