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Ipswich Town 0-0 Bolton Wanderers - Match Report
Saturday, 22nd Sep 2018 17:26

Town recorded their fifth successive home draw at the start of the season as Bolton Wanderers left Portman Road following a hard-fought 0-0 stalemate, despite having been a man down for 47 minutes. The Trotters lost Marc Wilson to a red card on 34 after he hauled down Kayden Jackson but the Blues only created one serious chance - a Luke Chambers header brilliantly saved by Ben Alnwick - having been reduced to 10 men themselves late on when Jon Walters suffered an injury with all three substitutions already having been made.

Toto Nsiala returned to the Town starting line-up following the completion of his three-game suspension for his red card at Sheffield Wednesday.

The former Shrewsbury man is started at the centre of the defence alongside skipper Luke Chambers with Matthew Pennington moving to right-back with Janoi Donacien dropping out.

The St Lucian was again the loanee to miss out on a place in the matchday squad - only five are permitted in the 18 - with former Jon Walters fit enough to take a place on the bench after his achilles injury.

Bolton made four changes to the team which lost 2-0 at Middlesbrough in midweek with Mark Beevers, David Wheater, Gary O'Neil and Josh Vela dropping out of the starting line-up in favour of Wilson, Erhun Oztumer, Will Buckley and Craig Noone.

Jason Lowe scraped a weak shot wide for Bolton after five minutes following a long throw in an opening 20 minutes of little penalty area action. Town had most of the ball but without creating an opportunity.

On 21 Wilson scuffed a volley wide at the far post from a Oztumer cross after a corner, but Town were in control of the game even if they’d not been able to test Bolton skipper and keeper Alnwick.

In the 29th minute Grant Ward was bundled over by Craig Noone just outside the area on the left and Gwion Edwards, who had already sent in a couple of potentially dangerous crosses from the right, hit a powerfully-struck freekick into Alnwick’s midriff.

The visitors were reduced to 10 men in the 34th minute when Wilson was shown a straight red card for denying Jackson an obvious goalscoring opportunity.

Ward did superbly on the left to bring the ball out of a tight area following a Bolton attack, then sent Jackson away with a superb pass. The pacy former Accrington man burst away beyond Wilson, who dragged him back as he broke towards the area with only Alnwick to beat.

Referee Stephen Martin immediately awarded a freekick - with Town making few protests that it was a penalty - then showed Wilson his red card to little complaint from the Trotters players.

As Ward prepared to take the freekick, which was deflected wide off the wall, Bolton boss Phil Parkinson swapped Oztumer for Wheater.


A minute before the break, Trevoh Chalobah was booked for a foul on Will Buckley with Town subsequently making heavy weather of clearing the danger from the freekick and subsequent corner.

Town had continued to enjoy a great deal of possession and had passed the ball around confidently, although largely in unthreatening areas but still without testing Alnwick.

Seconds before the whistle, Ward ended a long spell of Town passing by scraping a shot well wide.

It had been a first half of few incidents aside from Wilson’s red card, which looked the correct decision, the Ireland international had been caught out by Jackson’s blistering pace.

Neither keeper, however, had been forced to make a save in the entire 45 minutes in which Bolton perhaps had the better of the chances - or perhaps more accurately half-chances - with the Blues backline not always defending with confidence.

Chalobah was replaced by Tayo Edun ahead of the second half with the Blues starting on the front foot.

On 47 Pennington scuffed a shot wide from distance after an Edwards cross had been cleared, then Jon Nolan mishit a bouncing ball well wide from 25 yards out.

Town, with Edwards and Ward having swapped flanks, continued to dominate possession but struggled to find a way through the unsurprisingly deeply encamped 10 men of Bolton. In the 59th minute Nolan found some space to hit a shot but curled it well wide.

Five minutes later, Nolan crossed into the box after a corner had been cleared and Nsiala nodded over.

Despite having had all the ball in the second half the Blues were still to test Alnwick and on 71 manager Paul Hurst made a double change.

It was little surprise that Walters was added to the attack alongside Jackson with Jordan Graham joining him on the left of a four-man midfield with Ward and Cole Skuse making way.

Walters hadn’t had time to make any impact before he pulled up with what looked like a recurrence of the achilles injury which saw him miss Tuesday’s game against Brentford in the 81st minute as he chased a ball on the right of the area.

The clearly anguished Ireland international was treated on the pitch before eventually making his way around the peripherary to the tunnel alongside physio Matt Byard with the game now 10 versus 10.

Bolton suddenly saw the chance of what had looked an unlikely victory and the Blues found themselves under pressure for the first time. On 83 a loose ball fell to Wheater inside the Town box but Chambers slid in to block.

Three minutes later, the Blues went close as close as they would come to a goal. Graham’s freekick from the left was flicked on towards the top corner by Chambers but somehow Alnwick was able to get across to brilliantly paw it out for a corner.

Despite the numbers having been evened up the game had returned to the pattern from prior to Walters’s injury.

Edun was booked for a foul in injury time as Town kept pushing in the closing stages but without being able to find the goal which would bring them their first win of the season.

The final whistle was greeted by boos - brief but far louder than than those at half-time on Tuesday - and then muted applause as the players left the field.

Having played 47 minutes with an extra man Town missed a big opportunity to finally grab that elusive first win of the season.

The prodded and probed but only seriously threatened once when Alnwick superbly saved Chambers’s header.

In some ways Town might have been better off had Bolton not been reduced to 10 men, the Trotters having defended staunchly and in depth after the red card. A more open approach from the visitors with 11 players might have suited Town more.

The draw will up the already significant pressure on manager Hurst, despite the Blues having climbed a place off the bottom of the table on goal difference courtesy of Sheffield United’s 3-2 victory over Preston, former Blue David McGoldrick having scored the late winner.

Town have their next chance to finally end their winless run and reduce that pressure when they travel to Birmingham - who won 2-1 at Leeds today - next Saturday.

Town: Gerken, Pennington, Nsiala, Chambers (c), Knudsen, Skuse (Graham 71), Chalobah (Edun 46), Edwards, Ward (Walters 71), Nolan, Jackson. Unused: Bialkowski, Harrison, Spence, Downes.

Bolton: Alnwick (c), Olkowski, Hobbs, Wilson, Grounds, Williams, Lowe, Buckley (Wildschut 87), Noone (Donaldson 90), Oztumer (Wheater 36), Magennis. Unused: Matthews, Vela, Doidge, O’Neil. Referee: Stephen Martin (Staffordshire). Att: 14,755.


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herfie added 20:54 - Sep 23
Notwithstanding the clarity that hindsight brings - the wisdom of ME's gamble to adopt his ‘brave new world' approach; appointing PH as his first choice manager; conducting major surgery on the squad, replacing proven experience with willing, but clearly limited, lower league tryers, failure to, as yet, arrive at a settled and consistent team set up; players unsure of their roles and increasingly disjointed and lacking self belief and confidence. Real possibility that winning games in a hard, uncompromising, league is beyond us. Rumours of behind the scenes unrest and dissent etc etc.

Having arrived at where we now are, therefore, who has the balls to admit we're in deep sh*t, that the optimism we all experienced following MM's departure has become a hollow memory and, most importantly, what options exist to avoid the inevitable outcome resulting from original decisions - whilst taken in good faith - are going to lead to our beloved club's descent into terminal mediocrity. Of course I passionately hope this is never going to happen. But, equally, on the ‘evidence' presented so far, there's a need for honesty and realism. Worrying times.


2

wayway added 21:01 - Sep 23
Blueboy, how many other clubs has Burley failed at, I know he was a fans favourite but like Butcher, too many failures. The one I do regret not going into management is Matty Holland. I just hope we do not panic and bring in someone like Holloway, another failure
-1

Roystontown added 21:18 - Sep 23
What do these players do all week? Look like a bunch of blokes who just met in the pub and fancied a kickabout.
2

warktheline added 21:42 - Sep 23
Cowley brothers or Steve Clarke all day long for me! Wrong man I felt but he's presently doing the job!....sure hope he's a quick learner! Brings in two 'young strikers' and replaces them with 'the good old days Walters'! Head scratching !!!!
0

cobboldblue added 21:57 - Sep 23
My son (12) , who is in his third year as season ticket holder sat through the whole game with his head phones on listening to music on his mobile, he's never done that before, not even under MM & TC. Enough said. Well actually no, not enough said because he can't judge the football against the glory years (as I can). Before the start of the season we were looking for a couple of away games to go to as well as the home ones as we have done before but If this carries on that is not going to happen.
0

Bluearmy_81 added 22:19 - Sep 23
The manager is immaterial while we have Evans in charge. They will always fail because they are set up to with the underfunding that is typical of his reign. This club will not progress in my opinion until Evans is gone. It could well be finished by then however.
2

warktheline added 22:21 - Sep 23
....and don't even get me started on the ‘three stooges'!.....'mediocracy' and now ‘subpar' is the order of the day!
1

loudnproud added 22:29 - Sep 23
So the opinions are that Hurst has got rid of some fair championship fire power and replaced them with poor quality...
Its a well known fact that some of the players under McCarthy were loyal to him and his ways......thats understandable. Is it not conceivable that Hurst,upon being appointed, may have said to the squad he inherited ....."Clean slate and a fresh start.....Those of you who do not want to be here,for whatever reasons, please let me know....as i do not want anyone at this football club that does not want to be here...." Just offering another option folks
2

warktheline added 22:51 - Sep 23
What's the odds on Luke Chambers becoming ‘player manager' in the foreseeable future! You heard it here first folks!!!!
0

austractor added 22:53 - Sep 23
1 upfront at home, a Paul Jewell-esque loan roster, and a Roy Keane form sheet this far in and our better young players being overlooked?

More than enough for me. He is not up to it. Will eat my keyboard if proven wrong.
1

Zondervanromeo added 22:53 - Sep 23
So get rid of hurst and appoint a firefighter type manager then the cycle continues I give him until Christmas surly we can't get much worse I think bringing Dozzell in now would be a good move to get some of the crowd on side
0

Cakeman added 07:59 - Sep 24
Spot on loudnproud, well said. Hurst has had to rebuild possibly more than he first envisaged with the likes of Waghorn, Garner and Webster wanting to move on. I am sure he would have preferred to keep them but no point if their hearts were not in our club.
Therefore Hurst had no option but to bring in players from the lower divisions because of the lack of funds available to him.
He couldn't even get the main signing he was looking for in Curtis Tilt from Blackpool. It is not Hursts fault. The owner is now reaping what he has sowed.
2

TimmyH added 10:43 - Sep 24
...seriously do people believe that BOTH Garner and Waghorn wanted to move on after only being here a year, I don't!!...Probably a plan concocted by our right honourable Marcus to free up more money to go into his own pocket. All Garner has done so far this season at Wigan is keep the bench warm!
2

Razor added 10:49 - Sep 24
This was my 50th year watching Town anniversary game and I was sort of hoping for something a bit special to celebrate and what did I get------lamentable drivel from both the team and the manager.

Why do we need 3 centre halves to look after one forward----as soon as the sending off happenned a (FIT) forward should have been sent on and we should go all out to win the game, basics really.

This guy is obviousy out of his depth and it is just how long the owner will wait before he also realises it-----Nigel Clough please when you do Evans!!
1

Swn98 added 08:21 - Sep 25
Why doesn't penquin blue post any more after all he got what he wished for.
1


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