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Town 2-1 Yeovil Town
Tuesday, 17th Sep 2013 21:47

Daryl Murphy and Aaron Cresswell netted second-half goals as the Blues came behind to beat Yeovil 2-1 at Portman Road. Winger Joel Grant, a player who held talks with Town in the summer, put the visitors ahead with a stunning strike from the edge of the box two minutes before the break, but Murphy scraped home from close range on 53 and Cresswell added the second seven minutes later.

Murphy was back in the Town starting line-up in place of Frank Nouble up front, while skipper Carlos Edwards returned to the side for Paul Anderson, who missed out with a minor groin injury.

Murphy struck the game’s first shot in the opening minute from the edge of the box, but failed to significantly test Wayne Hennessey in the Yeovil goal.

The Irishman hit another shot wide from the right soon afterwards as the Blues started brightly. On six, Ryan Tunnicliffe scuffed a low shot through to Hennessey from the edge of the Glovers’ box.

Aside from a couple of Joel Grant breaks and Christophe Berra dispossessing Andy Williams inside the Town area, the early stages had been all Town. In the 16th minute a long spell of Blues passing ended with David McGoldrick hitting a powerful shot which Hennessey blocked.

Grant saw an 18th minute effort deflect wide for the Glovers, but the game was largely being played in the visitors’ half with the Blues set the challenge of breaking down the Yeovil defences. On 22 Murphy just failed to get his head to a corner coming in from the left.

The Blues continued to push and in the 26th minute McGoldrick tricked his way to the byline on the left but his cross was cleared to Tunnicliffe, whose shot was blocked.

Three minutes later, McGoldrick cut in from the right and hit a low shot across the face of Hennessey’s goal.

Town went close again in the 34th minute when Aaron Cresswell sent Tunnicliffe away down the left and the on-loan Manchester United man cut the ball inside to Murphy. The Irishman took a touch when he should have shot first time, allowing a defender to get across to block his effort on goal.


Soon after, Cresswell struck a couple of efforts, Luke Ayling painfully blocking the first and Hennessey grabbing the second, then at the other end Williams shot at Gerken. Moments later, the Town keeper had to react sharply to clear Luke Chambers’s backpass ahead of the Yeovil striker.

The half had been almost all Town, but as so often happens it was Yeovil who would go in front in the 43rd minute.

The Blues failed to clear from the edge of the box and Grant — a player who might have been wearing a Town shirt had circumstances been different — twisted his way around Cole Skuse, found himself space and smashed a left-foot shot into the top corner of Gerken’s net.

In injury time, Tunnicliffe crossed from the left but Chambers’s knock-down was too far in front of his team-mates.

The half-time scoreline of 1-1 was hardly a fair reflection of a first 45 minutes which the Blues had dominated for the most part, however, without making the most of their possession or opportunities.

But Yeovil had defended stoutly and Grant’s brilliant strike was one which few keepers would have stopped.

Williams hit the second half’s first shot into the sidenetting in the 48th minute, then at the other end Hyam’s 25-yard strike was deflected wide after he had been teed up by Tunnicliffe.

Town got back on terms in the 53rd minute when McGoldrick brought the ball across from the left and played the ball to Edwards, who fed Chambers breaking on the right.

The right-back sent in a deep cross which Skuse headed back across goal towards the far post and Murphy. The Irishman scuffed his initial effort against the post but beat Hennessey with the rebound for his first goal of the season.

McGoldrick wasn’t far from making it 2-1 within a minute when he broke into the area on the right, cut past his defender and hit a shot which fizzed over the bar. It looked like it had taken a deflection but referee Darren Deadman gave a goalkick. On 56 Tunnicliffe shot not far over from 25 yards.

Town went in front on the hour when McGoldrick played the ball to Cresswell to his left just inside the area. The full-back’s left-foot cross was blocked by summer Town trialist Dan Seaborne but the loose ball ran to Cresswell, who curled a right-foot shot past Hennessey for his first goal of the campaign.

On 68 Murphy saw a shot deflect behind, then from the corner Tommy Smith stooped and headed wide.

Town continued to look the more dangerous side and on 76 Hyam hit a low effort which Hennessey blocked and then claimed ahead of the on-rushing Murphy. Two minutes later, Jay Tabb took over from Tunnicliffe on the left of midfield.

On 80, Murphy was just prevented from getting on the end of a Cresswell freekick from the left by a defender’s head, then from the corner Hennessey saved Berra’s header superbly to his left after Smith’s flick. The loose ball fell to McGoldrick but his shot was blocked.

In injury time Joe Ralls had the chance to grab what would have been an undeserved leveller after latching on to a low cross from the right but Gerken was equal to his scraped strike.

McGoldrick shot over for the Blues moments before referee Deadman blew the final whistle to signal a second Town home win in four days.

The Blues were well worth the three points having been the better side throughout if not at the top of their game. Grant’s excellent opener came against the run of play with Town not having made the most of their domination of the match up to then.

After the break, they kept up the pressure and the goals came from Murphy and Cresswell. There was little panic from there and — aside from Ralls’s late opportunity — Mick McCarthy’s men looked more likely to add to their lead than the Glovers were to get back on terms.

Two home wins in the space of a few days, both after going behind, see the Blues climb to a much more healthy-looking 11th in the Championship with 10 points after seven games.

Town: Gerken, Chambers, Berra, Smith, Cresswell, Edwards, Skuse, Hyam, Tunnicliffe (Tabb 78), Murphy, McGoldrick. Subs: Loach, Hewitt, Veseli, Wordsworth, Taylor, Nouble.

Yeovil: Hennessey, Ayling, McAllister, Fontaine, Seaborne, Edwards (Davis 71), Upson, Ralls, Grant (Hoskins 78), Hayter (Moore 62), Williams. Subs: Dunn, Dawson, Foley, Ofori-Twumasi. Referee: Darren Deadman (Cambridgeshire). Att: 15,340 (Yeovil: 155).


Photo: Action Images



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JWM added 12:51 - Sep 18
I'll take 3 points over 'style and quality' all day long thank you very much!
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carlisleaway added 13:17 - Sep 18
Agree with JWM, we have watched some shocking football during the Keane and Jewell years. When we do win and maybe not as grand as some people would like, all we get is moan moan moan on this board.
The team seem to be getting backed much more from a smaller crowd, what does this say !! Hyam may not be the ideal player, but I would back the boy against others who do not give 100%, Edwards seemed to be the weak link last night.
Nothing has been said about that wonder save from the Yeovil keeper late in the second half or the block from Cresswells shot just before half time. We would have been shouting how well the team had played if these had gone in, get behind the lads because would you rather be an Ipswich fan or a Bolton or Birmingham fan at the moment. In Mick we trust....
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PremierBlue added 15:54 - Sep 18
3 points *with* style and quality is the Ipswich way. That's how we got all those fans in the first place. That is our destiny. Let's work our way there without losing sight of the vision.
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NoelTheDub added 16:10 - Sep 18
carlisleaway.....I agree we dont forget the dark days of keane or jewell but mick putting carlos on the wing two holding mids is looking for trouble v yeovil we got away with it because we are just about better than them at the moment.Going a goal down with a defensive team on the pitch is common with us why not at home when we play teams like us we should be more forward minded, ie tabb turncliffe skuse or hyam and give wordsworth or taylor a go.Saying all that our team is just ok at this time you can lose 10 12 14 games and still get the playoffs in this crazy league so go for a more attacking at home and against the weaker teams instead of giving them a chance because of weak links.
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Mick added 16:18 - Sep 18
We're having chances and looking like scoring goals now.
6 points from top/bottom.
Where do we go from here?
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Count_Arthur added 16:54 - Sep 18
Agree with Keaneish - talk about negative comments!

Mick Mills is a great bloke, an Ipswich legend etc. etc but his comments on Radio Suffolk after the match were dreary, monotone, uninspiring and negative!

I left the ground on a high, caught 5 minutes of Radio Suffolk analysis and was about to slit my wrists!

I say again - COYB!

(What's happened to Wordsworth, surely he's one of our most creative midfielders, who can also get goals - he didn't even warm up last night!)
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Tomairyn added 17:51 - Sep 18
Chevvymalc........who had the other 4% ??
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jas0999 added 18:34 - Sep 18
Another three points and yet again well deserved! Performance not as good perhaps, but six from six is excellent and clearly a vast improvement on this time last year. Still work to do though. Midfield lacks flair and goals. All very are working though. Despite his goal I remain unimpressed with Murphy. Lucky to score after missing an easy first attempt. His finishing was on the whole abysmal. He does add height and aggression though!

Overall delighted with the result.
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Hegansheroes added 18:53 - Sep 18
Keaneish- you must remember although Mick Mills did not have the greatest footballing skills he had a brilliant football brain. I was there last night and heard MM's comments this morning and have to agree with him, I am worried about the lack of a creative midfielder, we have Wordsworth who never gets a look in, Taylor although a forward he can run at people, Marriot doing well etc. I am sorry but MM's teams are never going to play attractive football and will rely on the long ball to people like Murphy. It takes me back to the days of Duncan which were pretty bad. We are in a far better situation than this time last season but having watched ITFC since 1961 I have never been so bored with the play. Anderson is being told to play tight when he is a natural winger, God after the last few years don't we deserve some entertainment. Still think Bristol C got a great deal, JET scored again, why couldn't MM have used his undoubted ability. Although Keane was crap every one should read his autobiography, especially his comments on MM. Even under Bill McGarry we were a really entertaining team but we did have the likes of Jungle Boy.
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meekreech added 19:59 - Sep 18
Football today is no longer for entertainment , it is all about results !!!! Long gone are the days of pretty , free-flowing ,lots of goals and entertaining football . These days it is results that count and if the game entertains it is an extra !
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