Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
Ipswich Town 0-1 Sheffield Wednesday - Match Report
Saturday, 2nd Feb 2019 17:18

Lucas Joao’s 90th minute goal saw Sheffield Wednesday to a 1-0 victory over the Blues at Portman Road. Wednesday spurned a number of chances but Town were on top and starting to create opportunities when Owls sub Joao turned home Adam Reach’s cross from the right.

Blues skipper Luke Chambers and fellow centre-half James Collins both missed out due to injury, neither of which are understood to significant knocks.

In their absence Matthew Pennington and Toto Nsiala started at the heart of the defence with new loanee James Bree making his Blues debut at right-back and Myles Kenlock at left-back.

In midfield, stand-in captain Cole Skuse was behind Flynn Downes and Teddy Bishop, who scored a hat-trick for the U23s on Monday.

Collin Quaner started as the central striker with Alan Judge on the left and Freddie Sears on the right.

Trevoh Chalobah and Will Keane were on the bench alongside Josh Emmanuel, who was involved in the Town team for the first time since the final day of the 2016/17 season having returned from his loan spell at Shrewsbury.

Callum Elder was the loanee who missed out on a place in the matchday squad with only five of the six permitted in the 18.

For the Owls, who had new manager Steve Bruce in charge for the first time, striker Fernando Forestieri made his first start since November, while central defender Michael Hector was back in the team having been ineligible for last week’s FA Cup defeat to his parent club Chelsea.

The game started scruffily but with the Blues on top, taking the game to the visitors and trying to get their passing football going.

On 10, following a corner, Judge sent the ball back in to the far post and Pennington headed wide.

A minute later at the other end, Forestieri smashed a snapshot well over from distance after the ball had broken to him.

One or two feisty Wednesday challenges flew in, particularly on Bishop and Judge, and Town won several early freekicks, while the Irishman slid in to make a number of tackles himself showing no signs of concern regarding the injury which kept him out for so long.

The Owls had shown little in the early stages but in the 18th minute they went close to going in front.

Steven Fletcher was found at the far post on the left in space by Michael Hector but Bartosz Bialkowski saved his shot with his leg. Kenlock cleared but only reached Barry Bannan, but the Scotland international’s low strike was blocked by Nsiala.

Moments later, Bishop skipped past his man at the other end but misread Quaner’s run and the danger was cleared.

The academy product was beginning to get more involved with his running with the ball causing Wednesday problems.

Town appeared to be growing in confidence and just after the half hour, following another Bishop run, Sears struck a low shot from distance on the right wide.


Despite the Blues having been on top, the Owls should have gone ahead in the 38th minute.

After a shot had deflected out to Morgan Fox, the former Town schoolboy’s low ball across the six-yard box was somehow diverted over the bar from a matter of feet by Adam Reach. The ex-Boro man will wonder quite how he failed to score.

Moments later, Forestieri nodded over from Liam Palmer’s cross from the right, then at the other end Bishop got his head to Judge’s under-hit freekick from the right but scuffed his attempt well wide.

On 42 Forestieri was found in space on the right of the box and Bialkowski batted away his strike. The Blues repeatedly made heavy weather of clearing but eventually the danger subsided.

Just before the end of the scheduled 45 minutes, Town won yet another freekick in the Wednesday half, Forestieri having fouled Quaner. The Owls failed to deal with Judge’s ball into the box from the left, an improvement on his earlier efforts, but eventually referee Oliver Langford gave the visitors a freekick.

That was the last action of a not overly-enthralling half in which Town had played most of the football but Wednesday had had much the better of the few chances.

New Owls boss Bruce will have gone off wondering how Reach had failed to give his team the lead, while Bialkowski had been the busier of the two keepers.

Town’s best moments going forward came from Bishop bringing the ball forward but so far without creating a clear-cut opportunity. The Blues had also failed to make enough of the numerous freekicks the Owls had conceded in potentially dangerous positions.

Five minutes after the restart Forestieri’s chip from the right of the box looped harmlessly to Bialkowski’s right with Wednesday having had marginally the better of the early exchanges.

Sam Hutchinson was shown the game’s first yellow card in the 54th minute for shoving Quaner into a hoarding as the striker burst past him round the outside as the Blues broke.

The German frontman, on loan for the rest of the season from Huddersfield, was swapped for Keane a minute later with the game increasingly being played in the Wednesday half.

Just after hour mark Bannan was yellow-carded for a foul on Bishop, before the Owls missed another golden chance to go in front.

Nsiala left a ball through to Bialkowski not realising Forestieri was behind him and onside according to the officials. The Argentinian looked certain to score but blazed wildly over. It was another fortunate escape for the Blues.

After Downes had been somewhat surprisingly booked for what referee Langford deemed a foul, Wednesday switched one-time Blues target George Boyd for on-loan Spurs man Josh Onomah.

Nsiala did well to force Forestieri wide after a Skuse slip on 68, then three minutes later Wednesday had another opportunity to go in front.

Forestieri was sent away on the left behind the Town offside trap by Hector but scraped wide when he either should have scored himself or cut across the area to Fletcher, who was immediately replaced by Joao.

Chalobah replaced Bishop, who had tired after an excellent first half, in the 74th minute as Judge prepared to take a freekick on the right. The Irishman sent in a dangerous ball which eventually fell to Downes, who shot not too far wide.

The Blues threatened again two minutes later when, after a patient move, Skuse cleverly flicked to Keane, who fed Judge on the edge of the box but the former Brentford man shot over.

Wednesday subsequently put the Blues under pressure with Nsiala making an important blocking challenge inside the box, then Bialkowski claimed a high ball into the area at the second attempt.

On 79 Judge played a superb pass from the left into the path of Bree breaking on the right. The new signing sent over a low cross towards Keane, who had made a significant impression having come off the bench, but a defender just got across to turn behind. Following the corner, the ball broke to Bree but the on-loan Villa man shot well over.

Town forced Keiren Westwood into his first save of the afternoon in the 84th minute, Chalobah heading Judge’s corner into the ground and goalwards but without enough power to cause a problem for the Irish international, who lost his grip on the ball initially but reclaimed as Pennington went after the rebound and caught him in the head.

Rolando Aarons, who joined the Owls on loan from Newcastle on Thursday, took over from Forestieri four minutes from the scheduled end.

On 88 Keane headed a Judge cross from the right goalwards but without the power to beat Westwood, then in the final scheduled minute the South Yorkshiremen took the lead.

Town felt Hector’s challenge on Keane on halfway had been a foul, and the on-loan Chelsea man had appeared to go in with both feet, but referee Langford waved play on.

Hector played the ball wide to Reach, who burst round the outside of Kenlock and cut back to unmarked sub Joao, who turned home. It was the Portuguese striker's third goal against the Blues this season having netted both goals in the Owls' 2-1 victory over Town at Hillsborough in August.

Blues keeper-coach Jimmy Walker was yellow-carded for dissent in injury time after a foul on Hector had been awarded against Keane, although probably more through frustration.

Ellis Harrison took over from Downes for the final few seconds in which the Blues got one or two crosses into the box without being able to cause the Wednesday defence any problems. But there was to be no equaliser before referee Langford blew his whistle to boos, aimed towards the official rather than the Blues.

The Wednesday winner came at a time when Town had looked to be in the ascendency and for the first time were starting to create chances, although a 0-0 draw appeared to be the most likely outcome at that stage.

However, over the 90 minutes they couldn’t really complain about the result with the Owls having failed to take a succession of chances with Forestieri missing gilt-edged opportunities in addition to Reach’s first half howler.

Town continued to pass the ball far more than was previously the case but all too often without getting into dangerous areas with their only serious chances coming in the later stages and mainly from Judge’s set pieces, which improved as the game wore on with Wednesday giving away plenty of freekicks in dangerous positions throughout.

But overall, they don’t present enough of a threat going forwards and give far too many opportunities - particularly today with their makeshift and at times very shaky backline - to their opposition.

With Millwall and Rotherham drawing 0-0, the gap to safety stretches to eight points plus goal difference with 16 left to play and League One football next season looks an ever more certain outcome.

The Blues are next in action next Sunday in the East Anglian derby against Norwich City at Carrow Road.

Town: Bialkowski, Bree, Pennington, Nsiala, Kenlock, Skuse, Downes (Harrison 90), Bishop (Chalobah 74), Sears, Judge, Quaner (Keane 55). Unused: Gerken, Nolan, Dozzell, Emmanuel.

Sheffield Wednesday: Westwood, Palmer, Lees, Hector, Fox, Hutchinson, Bannan, Reach, Boyd (Onomah 65), Forestieri (Aarons 86), Fletcher. Unused: Dawson, Pelupessy, Thornley, Nuhiu. Referee: Oliver Langford (West Midlands). Att: 16,888 (Wednesday: 1,713).


Photo: TWTD



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



DebsyAngel added 11:43 - Feb 3
DissboyITFC - I thought that Nsiala looked ok in the first half and Bart looked a lot more confident in this match than have seen him in a while. I think while its goalless, I sincerely hope that we can score. Agree that Bishop had a good first half too. The second half, I was getting more frustrated and knew it would just peter out into the same old same old. The extreme cold and not feeling that great certainly did not help. I suppose we all see different things at matches and have our own opinions.
4

TimmyH added 12:14 - Feb 3
@Karls_dad...great post!..have to agree all the advertising around the ground looks dated the same as it was back in the early 90's, the screen behind the goal (which gives half time results and score / time board) was also used to get the supporters behind the team but all it did was advertise local companies and yes as you said the food and drink on offer is pretty shameful (I now don't touch any of it). I wish you all the best health wise and I lost my father just before Xmas whom as a lad he took me often to see the club in the 70's and early 80's which brought back memories when we were a forced to be reckoned with the Cobbold family at the helm...unlike the shambles of today run by a prolific businessman whose advertising is seen everywhere and heard through the tannoy system as I entered the stadium - Yuck!
11

karls_dad added 12:25 - Feb 3
Hi it,s a long day for me from North Norfolk in the heart of canary land!

Thank you for the kind comment, but I just had to write down the things that I saw and experienced, i will continue making the trip as long as I am able!

But surely I cannot be alone in seeing the decline, the don,t care attitude from the club itself, the stewards give their own time freely and do a fabulous job, hats off to them all.

The kids with their flags, a highlight of their childhood always to be remembered, if I was one of them I would have looked up at what I was given with sadness, to me it was shamefull!

Anyway health permitting i shall be at the next one! And if I get the chance to speak to Paul as i will be right by that tunnel I will ask him why we are flying such terrible flags for the kids?

It just seems all so wrong? I walk past all the clubs/players cars and think they would not look out of place in Dubai! Yet we cannot afford some new flags? Or nobody cares?
14

Northstandveteran added 12:32 - Feb 3
Wishing you all the very best Les.
So sorry to hear of your situation.
10

Cakeman added 12:39 - Feb 3
Spot on Karl's dad, very well put. Fully agree that our stadium is very tired. Must be due for another lick of paint on the turnstiles which has not been done since Mr Clegg departed I believe 😉
7

dirtydingusmagee added 12:50 - Feb 3
our shabby stadium wont look so out of place next season , there are plenty of ''sheds'' in the lower leagues, , the whole ITFC scene is going t#ts up.
7

Dissboyitfc added 12:50 - Feb 3
Debsyangel... whilst I might agree that Nsiala and Bart were ok and I also agree about the cold and miserable conditions! And yes we all see different things, but I don't think I have seen anyone else describe that first 45 as brilliant! Our best period of the match was the last 15 or so, kean really looked up for it! Where as Quaner was quite simply awful, he didn't look bothered.

I have several bets on next Sunday, shutting up them cocky canaries is a tough ask, on yesterday's showing I fear the worst!
1

DebsyAngel added 13:40 - Feb 3
DissBoyitfc - maybe looking back, I was trying to be kind when I wrote my original post. I was really not feeling great when I typed it and wasn't really thinking straight! The last 15 mins did have some excitement there, agree. Hope your bets work next week - I will be watching through my fingers in the comfort of my warm house!!
1

brendenward35 added 14:39 - Feb 3
Just seen highlights looks like we were beaten on pace everytime god help us next saturday
1

Facefacts added 14:46 - Feb 3
Hopefully Chambers and Collins will be back next week. It will be the most experienced line up available. I can even see Knudsen coming back in. It will be defend the penalry area and try to nick something on the break.
1

Swn98 added 17:26 - Feb 3
DebsyAngel You dont have to defend your opinions to anybody !!!!
4

dirtydingusmagee added 18:52 - Feb 3
EVERYONE OUT ,! Lets start again .
3

SanDiego added 19:41 - Feb 3
Great post from karls_dad, sums up the state of things nicely. I've been going on about our club not having electronic advertising boards for what feels like years now. Missed revenue there for sure!

It really feels like our club is being run like a mafia laundering front. Just enough investment to keep it operational and in business but no more.
2

budgieplucker added 20:13 - Feb 3
Very disappointing that we didn't make the opposition goalkeeper work apart from one lightweight header.

Clearly we do not currently have enough about us to survive however hard PL tries to spin it.

Bringing some perspective to this though we had Bishop, Kenlock and Downes in the side which is an endorsement for our academy. However, young players are not going to be consistent - I thought Downes laboured yesterday despite the fact that I think he has had a very good season so far and has put in much better performances. Kenlock's defensive frailties were exposed at the death - but to be fair mistakes this year from far more senior professionals have been more prevalent. Teddy showed that his talent hasn't been lost during his prolonged absence and gives us hope for the future.

Also consider this, the lad Bree at right back who had quite a quiet but OK game (understandably given he has only been in the building a couple of days) cost £3 million. Look what we received for Tyrone Mings and Aaron Cresswell - this just illustrates the size of the challenge and whatever you think of ME I don't think I would want to contemplate spending that sort of money on a full back. I was delighted to see Josh Emmanuel back on the bench.

We don't have much of an alternative but to allow PL to keep drilling into the team a style of football that will hopefully stick and become second nature to all at the club. This may take some months but maybe is the price to re-establish an identity and create fluency. Yes some of the defensive players look very uncomfortable playing out from the back and the crowd get restless but we have to persevere otherwise we will become hostage to the “hoof” - we need to try and create the space and get the ball on the ground into the midfield to start off more meaningful attacks and playing decent football.

After Jack Lankester add the likes of Woolfeden and Nydam to the mix then we have an excellent crop of youngsters who I think can make an impact in Division 1. My fear is that Andre may not be at all suitable for this level of football but I hope to be proven wrong.

I trust PL to get the right level of experience next year alongside our own , whether that includes James Collins, Alan Judge and Will Keane remains to be seen from their efforts over the next 3 months, but I do think both Jon Nolan and Ellis Harrison will be assets in Division 1.

At 4.45 yesterday I almost had to drag myself from deep disillusionment but watching the U23s on a regular basis gives me great hope that this football club can get itself back onto the right path. As Mick Mills said yesterday it's not all about spending money it's about getting the right recruitment.




2

dirtydingusmagee added 21:07 - Feb 3
will be interesting at the end of the season selecting player of the year , jeeeeeeeeez
1

wayway added 21:11 - Feb 3
Karls Dad, that post should be copied and published in the sports pages of the E A D T, The Evening Star and the Eastern Daily Press. That would make the influential people amongst our supporters sit up and take notice. Time Evans PLC was challenged, surely a consortium could be put together, has anyone ever considered the Chinese owners of The Port of Felixstowe to see if they would be interested in the club
EVANS OUT AND EVANS OUT NOW
1

ArnieM added 22:33 - Feb 3
People covering Lambert to make Town a “ team” capable of winning games with the utter dross Hurst left him are in cloud cuckoo land. Even the players PL has managed to bring in - would need several months to gain an understanding with team mates. No we are going down because Hurst brought in ELEVEN lower league player. Shock , amazement we are going down.

Lambert is trying to go a salvage job with both hands tied behind his back and just s 4 week window. I think we'll see Lamberts real team building over the summer as the Vlub clear out the dross and the high paid pretenders jump ship . Our U23's is in part, the way forwatd and hopefully at last the end of wholesale use of loan players / journeyman .

....” the young players here are the future of this Club”( Lambert)
1

shakytown added 02:48 - Feb 4
I believe it's time to accept that we are down and just get on with rebuilding the team. All the loanees should be sent back to their parent clubs unless they are likely to become our players next season. Those who are on medicals should be re-evaluated as to whether they will be fit to play next season and if not terminated. lets at least get some experience into our younger players for the future and this should include the under 23's as how can they possibly be any worse the listless disinterested talentless offal on display every week. Harsh times call for harsh solutions.
2


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