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AFC Wimbledon 0-0 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Tuesday, 11th Feb 2020 21:46

Town’s first ever game at Kingsmeadow ended in a frustrating 0-0 draw with AFC Wimbledon. The Blues dominated possession throughout and hit the bar throughout James Norwood in the first half, while a number of better opportunities were spurned in the second.

Josh Earl was handed his full Town debut at left wing-back as the Blues made three changes from the side which lost 1-0 at Sunderland at the weekend for their first ever game at Kingsmeadow against AFC Wimbledon.

The on-loan Preston man, who came on as a sub at the Stadium of Light, replaced Myles Kenlock, who dropped to the bench, while Emyr Huws came into the midfield trio for Jon Nolan, who was also among the subs.

Kayden Jackson was up front alongside James Norwood with Will Keane on the bench.

Skipper Luke Chambers was making his 350th appearance for the club, while former Blue Shane McLoughlin was at right-back for AFC Wimbledon.

Town, wearing their Barcelona-style away kit but with yellow socks so as not to clash with the Dons’ blue and with owner Marcus Evans watching from the directors’ box, started positively, dominating the early possession.

The Blues continued to play keep-ball with the home side making the occasional foray forward but neither team created an opportunity in a stop-start freekick-heavy first 20 minutes.

The game progressed in a similar manner as the 30-minute mark passed with Town still having most of the ball but without being able to break through the Dons sitting back in their half.

On 39 Callum Reilly was shown the game’s first yellow card for a foul on Huws 25 yards out. The Welshman took the freekick himself and his low shot, which might have been destined for the corner of the net, caught a defender on the way through and went out for a corner.

From the resultant corner, Town went close to going in front. Skuse - who was taking all the set pieces - sent the ball in from the left, it was half-cleared to Norwood and the striker crashed it against the underside of the bar from 10 yards.


The ex-Tranmere man had another go as the ball bounced back to him but his second shot was scuffed wide and the danger was eventually cleared with home fans wondering how it had stayed out.

And that was that for a not overly entertaining half in which the Blues dominated the ball but were unable to find a way through the organised Dons happy to sit back.

A set piece always looked the most promising route from which Town would create an opportunity and they were unfortunate Norwood’s strike cannoned off the bar.

The Blues needed to show more guile and up the tempo of their passing in the second half, or perhaps look to go more direct, in order to claim the three points.

The second period began as the first had ended and on 56 Jackson hit a shot on the turn from 12 yards which Rod McDonald deflected wide. From the corner, the ball fell to Norwood at the far post and Wimbledon keeper Joe Day did well to save down to his left with the loose ball somehow falling safely.

A minute later, Norwood hit a 20-yard freekick low into the wall and then crossed behind the goal after the ball had been returned to him on the left.

On 62 Norwood sent Jackson away down the right and the ex-Accrington man cut the ball cross to Flynn Downes who turned the ball against a defender on the edge of the six-yard box.

The ex-Tranmere man had a golden chance to put the Blues ahead in the 67th minute when he picked up a loose Wimbledon pass five yards outside the Dons’ area and took the ball into the area one-on-one with Day. The striker might have played it left to Jackson but tried to chip the keeper, who saved.

Two minutes later, Downes was booked somewhat harshly for a foul, the midfielder’s ninth League One yellow card of the season, then Paul Osew hit Wimbledon’s first shot of the night well over from wide on the left.

As Tomas Holy prepared to take the goal-kick, Town switched Norwood, who will feel he ought to have taken his season’s total to at least 12 goals, with Will Keane, while Wimbledon swapped Reilly for Scott Wagstaff.

The Dons began to show more of an attacking threat with Joe Pigott heading wide from a 76th minute corner.

A minute later, Jackson was sent away on the right behind the Wimbledon backline and cut the ball back. It hit Keane with other players behind him and looped into Day’s arms.

Within seconds, Skuse knocked the ball into the area and Keane hit a brilliant shot on the turn which was flying into the top corner until Day superbly got across to tip it over.

Freddie Sears took over from full debutant Earl on 81, just before Terell Thomas shot wide for the home side.

Luke Woolfenden hit a low effort through to Day but without enough power on 85, then a minute later Wimbledon replaced Max Sanders with Jack Rudoni.

Day did well to push Sears’s 20-yard freekick past the post in the 87th minute, Huws having been fouled.

In the first of three additional minutes, Pigott hit a low shot across the face of goal and wide.

Town were forced to defend a couple of Wimbledon corners in injury time, which they did without a serious concern, before referee Craig Hicks brought a frustrating evening to an end.

The Blues had dominated possession throughout and in the second half certainly had enough chances to have claimed all three points, just as they did in the first half at Sunderland on Saturday.

Norwood will feel he should have taken at least one of his opportunities, while Keane was thwarted by the save of the night from Day, who also made a good stop from Sears.

The Blues remain seventh ahead of back-to-back home games against Burton Albion and Oxford United, who drew 2-2 at the Pirelli Stadium this evening.

AFC Wimbledon: Day, O’Neill, Osew, McDonald, Thomas, Hartigan, Reilly (Wagstaff 70), Sanders (Rudoni 87), Pigott (c), Pinnock, McLoughlin. Unused: Trott, Guinness-Walker, Roscrow, Lamy, Wood.

Town: Holy, Chambers (c), Wilson, Woolfenden, Donacien, Skuse, Downes, Huws, Earl (Sears 81), Norwood (Keane 70), Jackson. Unused: Norris, Nolan, Judge, Dozzell, Kenlock. Referee: Craig Hicks (Surrey). Att: 4,745 (Town: 789).


Photo: Pagepix



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dirtydingusmagee added 08:51 - Feb 12
carlgibbs13 we already have Pinnochio , telling us the lads done brilliant ,we should have won ect .
1

afcfee added 08:56 - Feb 12
I knew Norwood was a bad shout, league 2 striker at peak age.
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FenboyBlue added 09:01 - Feb 12
We've spent so many years away from the top end of the table, any table. This year we found ourselves in the automatic spots for half a season almost by mistake rather than design. And now it feels like the team have got a collective nosebleed from the height and have a fear of getting promoted. If the excitement of being in the promotion spots can't motivate this team to win games and having a manager with previous promotion experience then I don't know what will.
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BeattiesBackPocket added 09:22 - Feb 12
Blueboy1981 who has hired the managers given our five year contracts etc employed Milne Clegg Keane etc? Evans? Read my post on page two and instead at asking for questions about ‘who' give me an answer to my question because not one Evans supporter can!?
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BeattiesBackPocket added 09:25 - Feb 12
Blueboy1981 which manager on the up will come here? One of the worst wage budgets in the last 3 seasons in championship the wage budget will go down again next season who will come here other than a Holloway or a manager towards the end of his career!? Yes we have prestige as a club but anyone on the up is not going to want to taint their cv so it's a manager like hurst from lower leagues, an ex player or manager on his way to retirement
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Seri added 09:31 - Feb 12
It has to be something with Marcu Evans. He's the only constant factor in this scenario with players so negatively clever and so frightened to make mistakes or whatever. Evereything goes so slowly that the opposition has time to build a wooden fence.
They never challenge or dribble - they just turn around and pass backwards or sideways. Lambert tells us we play well, but actually we don't. The neat play is always on our own half about 350 yds away from their goal. Run against them ! Dibble! Shoot ! Don't care about the consequences - or Marcus Evans staring eye.
2

peteswindon added 09:32 - Feb 12
For the first time in 45 years supporting town I turned off after 40 mins and didnt bother even checking the result until the next morning. We are nothing short of a joke totally useless.
3

afcfee added 09:37 - Feb 12
Holloway would be better than current.
1

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 09:45 - Feb 12
I don't really blame Lambert. He was actually doing better when he constantly rotated, but he got criticised for that; so he changed to a relatively stable eleven, and now he's getting stick for that as well. But what is he actually supposed to do? The injuries have played a part. Against Wombledon, Lambert picked what must have been pretty much the best team (on paper) available to him. You might argue he could have left out Skuse or Huws for a more forward-thinking midfielder - but then who has shown that they can shoulder that role? Lambert is stuck with what he has, and the penny is beginning to drop that these players are maybe nothing special. Is that Lambert's fault? But they are ours, so COYB!
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Pecker added 10:06 - Feb 12
Awful, just bl00dy awful.
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PulhamBlue added 10:21 - Feb 12
Unless the "dominating" possession is converted into goals, it means diddly-squat... Are the players having yet more time off to get themselves together, or are you going to order them in for some much-needed training and shooting practice, Mr Lambert?
1

ITFCsince73 added 10:31 - Feb 12
Don't worry about Lambo.
We have the useless overpaid gruesome twosome leading us again next season.
You never know it might be 7th season lucky
1

ringwoodblue added 13:11 - Feb 12
It's not only Norwood that is lacking in confidence it's the whole team! Without Garbutt and KVY we lack any creativity and have no one to exploit dead ball situations. Season over in my opinion as we are finding our natural level - mid-table!
2

londontractorboy57 added 15:24 - Feb 12
blueboy1981 You rant and you rave yet your still clueless bluebore!!!!!.....
0

londontractorboy57 added 15:28 - Feb 12
BeattiesBackPocket You wished for MM to go and what have you ended up with ?
0

londontractorboy57 added 15:35 - Feb 12
Be carefull what you wish for numbskulls
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del45 added 15:56 - Feb 12
Norwood one season wonder but for us hopeless cannot beat keepers when one-to - one time and time again.
0

ldnj added 16:57 - Feb 12
Although I'm not a proponent of chopping and changing managers and would like them to be given time, I do wonder what would have happened if they had given the job to Gary White. He was supposedly interviewed and has a good record with very limited resources. I'm sure he would have liked the chance to manage an English club, and one which could have potential. Oh well, he's in China now. That could be useful for the future ...
0

jas0999 added 17:46 - Feb 12
Nowhere near good enough I'm afraid. Club is in a mess from Evans to a Lambert to the players.

At the vast majority of clubs, the manager would have been sacked if they had Lamberts atrocious record. Just three wins in twenty in all competitions. Dreadful. At this club however you get rewarded by an incompetent owner for failing. Shocking.
1

Linkboy13 added 18:00 - Feb 12
We should support our team through thin and thin the thick days are long gone.
0

BeattiesBackPocket added 00:33 - Feb 13
Londontractorboy I did want him to go at the end because we'd had 5 years and gradually got worse each year and would've been in the same position as now at that rate however I always said he wasn't funded it doesn't matter who we have as manager with this owner simple even you must be able to figure that one out!?
0


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