Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
Ipswich Town 2-2 Reading - Match Report
Saturday, 4th Feb 2017 17:23

Tom Lawrence scored twice to take his tally for the season to 10 - and eight in his last eight games - as Town drew 2-2 at home to Reading. The Blues will feel they deserved to claim the three points against an under par Royals side who levelled twice through Jordon Mutch and then Jordan Obita.

Steven Taylor and Emyr Huws were both handed their Town debuts as Mick McCarthy made five changes from the team that lost 3-0 at home to Derby County on Tuesday.

Josh Emmanuel, Toumani Diagouraga, making his first appearance at Portman Road, and David McGoldrick returned to the XI with the Blues again lining up in a 3-5-2 system.

The Royals made two changes from the team which won 1-0 at Birmingham in midweek with debutant Jordon Mutch and Yann Kermorgant, who had been out with a calf injury, coming into the team for Roy Beerens and George Evans.

Town, with Taylor playing in the middle of the central three with skipper Luke Chambers to his right and Christophe Berra to his left, started well and created the game’s first opening in the fourth minute.

Emmanuel beat his man on the right before cutting in and hitting a low shot towards Royals keeper Ali Al-Habsi’s near post but the keeper read it and saved.

While it was a clever effort which showed that the 19-year-old has the self-confidence to take the initiative, the right wing-back probably should have cut the ball back to his waiting team-mates.

On eight Cole Skuse underwent treatment after suffering a leg injury challenging Mutch on eight but carried on.

The Blues continued to look the better side, having most of the ball against a Reading side known for keeping possession for very long spells under Dutch manager Jaap Stam.

In the 11th minute, Lawrence sent in a dangerous freekick from deep on the right which flew just beyond Taylor and dropped just behind Berra, who was unable to get on to the loose ball before it was cleared.

Town went close again in the 20th minute when Huws broke forward and fed Diagouraga on the edge of the area after referee Geoff Eltringham had played a good advantage, Lawrence having been fouled.

The Frenchman might have shot but fed Emmanuel to his right. The wing-back exchanged passes with Huws, crossed and Jonas Knudsen flicked a header wide at the far post.

As Reading prepared to take the goalkick Skuse was replaced by Grant Ward, the Bristolian not having recovered from his earlier knock.

The visitors created their first opening of the game on 23, Garath McCleary sending in a low cross from the left which the sliding John Swift could only divert well over the bar.

Town were playing some good stuff at times with new recruits Huws and Diagouraga both impressing in midfield and Ward having settled into the game quickly.

But on the half hour Reading might have claimed an undeserved lead when a loose ball fell to Kermorgant on the edge of the box but his low shot was easy for Bartosz Bialkowski in the Town goal.

However, most of the game was still being played in the Reading half of the field and in the 34th minute Huws struck a sharp shot from distance which was hit powerfully but too close to Al-Habsi.


Huws made the pass of the game in the 38th minute, playing a 25-yard ball inside a Reading defender for Knudsen to run on to, but Al-Habis had come off his line quickly and blocked as the Dane looked either to shoot or cut across to McGoldrick.

The Irish international chased the loose ball but Al-Habsi reached it first and put it out of play off the Town number 10.

Reading were starting to have more of the ball but on 43 the Blues scored the goal their first-half performance had fully deserved and the goalscorer was no surprise.

Huws brought the ball out of defence to halfway before playing a pass into the path of Lawrence to his right. The on-loan Leicester man brought the ball forward, cut into the area, sold a couple of dummies and lashed a brilliant strike into the net off the underside of the bar.

It was yet another contender in the Welshman’s personal Goal of the Season competition owed a lot to Huws, who had quickly won over the Blues’ support with his first-half display.

Reading immediately looked to get back into it, Liam Kelly shooting over after McCleary’s cross had deflected out to him on the edge of the box, but in injury time the Blues came closer to adding to their lead.

Huws sent over a corner from the right and an unmarked Taylor rose high at the far post to nod down but across the face of goal.

Soon after, referee Eltringham’s whistle was greeted by warm applause from the Town faithful after the Blues’ best 45 minutes at Portman Road in some while.

Town had looked a completely different side to the one which was so comprehensively beaten by Derby on Tuesday and a second goal, had Taylor’s header bounced the other side of the post, wouldn’t have flattered them against a Reading team which had only shown fleeting signs of getting their passing going.

Lawrence’s goal and Huws’s debut were probably the main half-time talking points but Emmanuel and McGoldrick were also among those to have caught the eye, while Taylor had provided much-needed leadership and talking at the back.

Ahead of the second half, Reading switched Swift, who had a trial with Town during his Chelsea days with a view to a loan move, for former Norwich man Lewis Grabban.

Town began the second half as they had ended the first, McGoldrick hitting a cross-shot from a tight angle on the right into the side-netting, then shooting wide when cutting in from the other flank.

Lawrence came inches from netting his second of the game in the 50th minute when he brought the ball in from the right and hit a low curling strike, which just flew the wrong side of Al Habsi’s left post.

Town had started the half on top but in the 53rd minute the Royals got back on terms with their first attack since the restart.

With Chambers grounded after challenging with Kermorgant on halfway, the Blues were left short of men in the box when Jordan Obita cut the ball back from the left to an unmarked Mutch, who took his time before hitting a low shot past Bialkowski to claim a debut goal.

Danny Williams hit a shot which Bialkowski did well to palm wide to his left soon after the goal as the Royals briefly threatened to get on top, but Town quickly reasserted their superiority.

On 56 Lawrence cut in from the left and hit a shot which was blocked, McGoldrick and Ward having subsequent efforts deflected away from goal, while Diagouraga looked to have been tripped as he sought to get on a loose ball but referee Eltringham waved away muted protests.

Town maintained the pressure by winning two more corners but were unable to create another opportunity until the hour mark when McGoldrick broke away on the left and hit a low shot which Al-Habsi saved down to his right.

Moments later, the Irish international conjured a little bit of magic to create Lawrence’s second of the afternoon to restore Town’s lead, threading through an inch-perfect pass for the Welshman to take on into the area and slip past Al Habsi to take his season’s total into double figures.

Reading began to dominate possession as the game moved into its final 35 minutes but without looking particularly dangerous until 69 when McCleary was found in space on the right and whipped over a cross which Taylor superbly flicked past his own far post with Kelly behind him probably already celebrating heading the equaliser.

Town might have made it 3-1 in the 77th minute when Diagouraga sent Lawrence away down the left and the two-goal frontman found strike partner McGoldrick in space on the right of the area. The former Forest man’s first touch let him down and he took the ball too wide. However, he got in a cross but one which no Blues player was able to profit.

And three minutes later the Royals got back on terms for the second time. A corner on the right was cleared and Obita smashed an unstoppable low 25-yard strike just inside Bialkowski’s right post.

The goal was harsh on the Blues, who weren’t too far away from going back in front as the game moved into its final 10 minutes, Lawrence hitting a 20-yard freekick just over. Moments later, Grabban was booked for a foul on Knudsen.

As Al-Habsi prepared to take the goalkick, Teddy Bishop and Jordan Spence replaced the tiring Diagouraga and Huws in the Town midfield, while Reading switched George Evans for Kelly.

The Royals put the Blues under a brief spell of pressure with Chambers, Emmanuel and Taylor all making important interceptions, then in the final minute of scheduled time Lawrence played a clever freekick to McGoldrick into the right of the area, the Town number 10 crossed but no one was breaking into the six-yard box to add the final touch.

The Blues were the side pressing for a winner in injury time with Knudsen - who was booked late on for catching Kermorgant in an aerial challenge - sending in dangerous long throws from both sides but the match ended in a draw.

However, there was applause rather than boos from the home support, who had loudly got behind their side throughout and stayed on to give their team a warm ovation.

Despite not taking all three points the Blues had been as good as at any time this season and were unfortunate not to claim the win.

While Reading’s first equaliser was well-worked, the second came out of out of virtually nothing with the Royals rarely looking like a side which is third in the Championship.

There were excellent performances throughout the Town side with Lawrence continuing his unplayable form, taking both his goals superbly and looking to shoot at pretty much every available opportunity.

McGoldrick also put in one of his best displays of this season, and claimed his best assist, while Huws and Diagouraga were both hugely impressive in the second half, although perhaps inevitably tired after the break.

But all in all a much, much better afternoon at Portman Road and one which gave hope of a significant improvement during the remaining months of the season.

The result moves the Blues up to 15th but now only eight points off the bottom three with Blackburn and Burton both winning.

Town: Bialkowski, Emmanuel, Taylor, Chambers (c), Berra, Knudsen, Skuse (Ward 21), Diagouraga (Spence (82), Huws (Bishop 82), Lawrence, McGoldrick. Unused: Gerken, Pitman, Sears, Moore.

Reading: Al-Habsi, Gunter (c), Obita, Moore, Blackett, Swift (Grabban 46), Williams, Kelly (Evans, 83), Mutch, McCleary, Kermorgant. Unused: Jaakkola, Beerens, Meite, Popa, Oxford. Referee: Geoff Eltringham (County Durham). Att: 15,091 (Reading: 558).


Photo: TWTD



Please report offensive, libellous or inappropriate posts by using the links provided.



martin587 added 12:15 - Feb 5
Seasider,Your post was spot on,well said and I agree 100%.👍
1

Swn98 added 12:20 - Feb 5
Cat it wasn't the point that mattered it was the performance and atmosphere that mattered it was lovely to see everyone being nice and polite to each other.
For the first time in along while I left looking forward to the next game.
3

martin587 added 12:24 - Feb 5
Midfield has been a big problem all season and yesterday showed what we had been missing,although there is still a fair bit to do to get it perfect.
I'm NOT knocking Skuse one bit as he has played his part this season but without him in the team we seem to play with more freedom.
IT was a vast improvement from Tuesday night so let's just hope we can keep moving forward,but what does concern me more is the fact we are relying on loan players who to be very honest are the ones who are really showing there colours.
2

Swn98 added 12:40 - Feb 5
Don't get all the angst about loan players apart from Lawrence I'm sure at the end of the season we will be able to do deals on any loanee we want to keep.
Looks like shrewd management just in case we were to get relegated and have to work to a different budget..
On the subject of Lawrence what a professional obviously from MM comments offers were made for him but denied and didn't let it turn his head and gave 100% for the cause.
3

Seasider added 12:47 - Feb 5
know Swn98 says not bothered about down marks;but must be nice to get + and no -(and this is not a sarcastic remark)
3

Swn98 added 14:50 - Feb 5
Thanks seasider I think it is a reflection of the feel good factor, 99% of fans have at last got some hope after yesterday's game the new players galvanised the team along with the supporters I was sceptical before the game so many new faces sometimes take time to gel but no they gave their all for their first time in the shirt played quick attractive football.Yes it could be a false dawn if it's not it goes to show what a master Mr Mccarthy and his team are for making a silk purse out of a sows ear.
He will b much missed when he does depart.
With regards the arrows I don't come on here to win a popularity contest just to share my views.
4

IpswichT62OldBoy added 17:37 - Feb 5
Wonderful to see such positivity, both from the Team and on the forum.
I had been a Mick fan but had come to the point after Xmas that I didn't think he was still sane and wanted him to go, Derby did nothing to change my mind, however perhaps his outlook is changing.
If we maintained that standard of play and tactical sense for the rest of the season I would not be ashamed to
re-asses my view of M Mc
1

DerryfromBury added 17:50 - Feb 5
Seasider. you said it all. if we keep playing with yesterdays team/formation we'll be safe.
1

walberblue added 18:12 - Feb 5
Highlights what a disaster MM has been this season. Why wait till February to change things? What have the fans been saying all season?
1

Swn98 added 18:39 - Feb 5
Walberblue have you not noticed the long list of injuries the change came about yesterday because of the new signings giving us more skill and options in midfield we were a completely different team yesterday. I'm with IpswichT62 I had been a supporter of MM taking into account he has to work with one hand tied behind his back after Tuesdays game I thought the pressure had got to him and it was time for him to go.After yesterday's display love him or hate him you have to respect his ability to unearth freebies and cheap players and get themto play attractive football.
1

chevvymalc added 22:06 - Feb 5
As nobody else has mentioned him I thought Emanuel did a great job at right back defending and attacking an old head on young shoulders . Well done.
I also thought we were doing ok before Skuse went off and carried on the same way when he went off so that it does not make him a bad player does it???
2

Razor added 10:26 - Feb 6
Much improved on Saturday and it was interesting that with some actual football being played with a bit of spirit the crowd got behind the team and we all together for a change--long may it continue!!

If Skuse had got the ball for the first goal we would not have scored---it would be stop and sideways or back---so good to see the ball pushed forward at first opportunity.

Now its money bags villa------come on we can do it!!
1


You need to login in order to post your comments

Blogs 295 bloggers

Ipswich Town Polls

About Us Contact Us Terms & Conditions Privacy Cookies Advertising
© TWTD 1995-2024