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Ipswich Town 0-1 Oxford United - Match Report
Saturday, 22nd Feb 2020 17:16

Matty Taylor’s goal a minute before the break saw Oxford United to 1-0 victory over 10-man Town at Portman Road. The Blues dominated the first half but were unable to find a goal and were hit by a sucker punch just before the break. The Blues huffed and puffed for the most part in the second half and had Kayden Jackson red-carded for an alleged stamp in injury time.

Town named an unchanged side with Tomas Holy in goal behind a back three of Luke Woolfenden, skipper Luke Chambers and Josh Earl, while Gwion Edwards and Luke Garbutt were the wing-backs.

In midfield, Flynn Downes was partnered by Jon Nolan with Alan Judge ahead of them behind strike pair Will Keane and Jackson.

There was one change on the bench with Andre Dozzell taking the place of James Norwood, who underwent a groin operation on Friday.

For Oxford, midfielder Alex Gorrin was back after a ban and replaced Mark Sykes, who dropped to the bench.

Town began the game brightly with Jackson, who was celebrating his 26th birthday, and Edwards both sending in crosses from the right.

The Blues controlled the early stages for the most part although twice Earl, playing without his protective mask for the first time since joining the Blues, gifted the ball to the U’s in his own half before his team-mates helped snuff out the danger.

On nine, Jackson escaped his man and broke away down the right before sending in a low cross which was too far in front of Keane.

Two minutes later, Jackson turned Edwards’s ball to feet into the path of Keane who looked to be in on goal until his first touch took him into the path of an Oxford defender, who cleared the danger.

The Blues continued to have the better of it with Oxford pinned back in their half and as the game reached the 15-minute mark Woolfenden struck a powerful 20-yard strike which was blocked just inside the area.

Town threatened again down the right in the 22nd minute, Jackson cutting a ball back to the edge of the area from where Garbutt smashed a shot over.

Two minutes later, Marcus Browne hit Oxford’s first effort of the game over the bar from a 25-yard freekick.

On the half hour a Judge corner from the left was nodded out to Chambers, whose header was flicked over the bar by a defender.


From the subsequent flag-kick, Nolan eventually stabbed the ball through to Keane in space inside the six-yard box to the left but Oxford keeper Simon Eastwood was able to smother.

Town continued to push for the game’s opening goal and in the 32nd minute Keane crossed low from the right and Downes flicked across the face of goal. Had the midfielder left it Garbutt behind him would have had an easy tap-in.

The Blues kept up the pressure and went close again in the 35th minute, Keane heading wide from a tight angle beyond the far post from Garbutt’s right-sided corner.

Oxford had made little impression from an attacking perspective but in the 36th minute James Henry broke into the area in space from the right but scuffed his shot through to Holy.

Town then attacked down the left, Jackson beating his man then teeing-up Garbutt, whose shot was blocked. Nathan Holland subsequently hit a shot which hit a Blues defender before Garbutt was booked for an attempted foul during Oxford’s previous attack. On 41 Nolan shot wide.

The Blues had dominated the half but a minute before the scheduled end of the half, the visitors took the lead.

A neatly-worked move ended with Cameron Brannagan finding Henry on the right of the area. His low ball across the edge of the six-yard box found Taylor, who beat Holy.

On the balance of play, Town could find themselves very unfortunate to be behind at the break. The Blues had dominated a team who usually control games themselves and had created a number of openings.

However, they had been unable to take them - or force Eastwood into any significant saves - while Oxford’s goal had come via their first passage of passing inside the Blues half.

Town won a corner moments after the restart, a bouncing ball reaching Woolfenden on the edge of the area after being half-cleared but the defender’s effort looped well over.

Soon after, Jackson was sent away on the left and his cross was diverted behind. From the subsequent corner taken by Garbutt on the left, Earl headed goalwards but Eastwood tipped over. From the resultant flag-kick, the ball was headed out to Judge, who shot over.

On 51 Oxford broke forward and Brannagan was found on the edge of the box but his strike was blocked by Woolfenden.

Two minutes later, Earl’s cross from the left took a flick off Josh Ruffels on its way towards the far post where it hit Edwards, who had been unable to react to the touch, and bounced straight to Eastwood.

Holland shot over after Woolfenden was overconfident on the ball in a dangerous area on 59, then two minutes later Taylor got in behind Chambers but fortunately for the Blues stabbed the ball straight at the advancing Holy.

Town were continuing to dominate with balls coming into the box from both flanks but with the Oxford backline remaining resolute. On 64 Browne was booked for a foul on Edwards.

Oxford swapped Holland, who had picked up a knock, for Sykes in the 70th minute, then the Blues, with their performance having become scrappier and more frustrated, switched Edwards for Teddy Bishop and moved to 4-4-2 with the sub on the left of midfield.

On 80 Jamie Mackie replaced goalscorer Taylor for the visitors, then three minutes later Dan Agyei took over from Henry.

Town were continuing to push and send balls into the box but the U’s were maintaining their determined defence.

As the game moved into four minutes of additional time Judge was switched for Freddie Sears.

Town’s frustrating afternoon got worse three minutes into injury time when Jackson was, to the surprise of most in the ground, shown a straight red card for what referee Scott Oldham indicated was a stamp on Oxford skipper Rob Dickie.

The striker looked bemused as the card was waved in his direction and the Blues may well have grounds for an appeal with Jackson otherwise facing a three-match ban.

Woolfenden was booked for a foul, then just before the whistle, with referee Oldham, who had had an inconsistent afternoon, starting to lose control, there was a scuffle involving most players from both teams by the corner flag by the away fans.

The final whistle was greeted by boos from the home support aimed partly towards the referee but also at manager Paul Lambert and his assistant Stuart Taylor as they made their way towards the Sir Bobby Robson Stand after another frustrating afternoon at Portman Road.

Town had dominated possession in the first half and created enough opportunities to have won the game. However, they failed to take their chances or even overly test the keeper. Oxford scored with their first serious shot in open play.

The Blues were still on top for most of the second half but were less dominant and still failed to create enough chances against an Oxford defence who will be delighted with their afternoon's work, Earl’s early header the only big save Eastwood was forced to make.

The defeat sees the Blues, who have now won just four of their last 18 in the league, drop to eighth, eight points off the top two and two from sixth, with a visit to Blackpool, who drew 0-0 at Wimbledon this afternoon, next Saturday.

Town: Holy, Chambers (c), Woolfenden, Earl, Edwards (Bishop 71), Nolan, Downes, Garbutt, Judge (Sears 90), Jackson, Keane. Unused: Norris, Skuse, Wilson, Dozzell, Huws.

Oxford: Eastwood, Ruffels, Dickie (c), Moore, Gorrin, Brannagan, Taylor (Mackie 80), Forde, Henry (Agyei 83), Holland (Sykes 70), Browne. Unused: Stevens, Long, Hanson, Thorne. Referee: Scott Oldham (Poulton-le-Fylde). Att:19,367 (Oxford: 1,365).


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blueboy1981 added 14:38 - Feb 23
Londontractorboy57 - you certainly show your intellect, do you know anything else other than to verbally abuse people, by name calling .... ??
Just curious - because it seems not.
A shame really that this site doesn't control, better still eradicate such, because eventually others will vacate it - then what will be left.
Over to you Phil & Co ...... !!! How about it ?
5

cat added 14:39 - Feb 23
DirtyD with mutual respect! Until it's looking highly unlikely then I'm clinging to my faith, whether that's blind optimism or not remains to be seen, but that's how I roll. Yesterday's game was ‘another one' of them, we did not deserve to lose. Missing out on promotion will not only bring massive disappointment but the big concern is the effect it will have on attendances etc. PR has been a good place to be this season, something the likes of Londontractor can't seem to get his ‘pin' head around.
5

londontractorboy57 added 14:45 - Feb 23
When you cant counter an argument you always turn to these comments hence your name Bluebore!!!!!Go on fire off PM to teacher.
1

blueboy1981 added 15:29 - Feb 23
.... just a shame you're so sad - and take note, no need to name call you, or verbally abuse.
People like you lower the respectability of this site - it'll eventually suffer for it.
Thought about changing your avatar lately ? - you may need to !
0

Linkboy13 added 15:51 - Feb 23
Why wasn't Jackson running into the box and getting onto his own crosses .The only forward worth his salt now he's suspended probably due to frustration with playing with a bunch of numpties. Could give Morris a chance but he hasn't done anything to warrant a chance needs to go out on loan to improve his game.
0

Northstandveteran added 15:56 - Feb 23
I'm just happy that now McCarthy has gone, the fans of Ipswich town have become truly united.
Barriers bridged,
Deep wounds healed,
We are again as one.

Peace and vegetable rights brothers.
2

Northstandveteran added 15:56 - Feb 23
And they say sarcasm is the lowest form of wit?

I tend to disagree.
2

Dissboyitfc added 16:00 - Feb 23
Who is responsible for organising the defence because there was none for their goal, how Edwards just strolls back having failed to cut out a pass is truly shocking, you will see more effort on a Sunday morning, whilst its true Edwards is not a RB he should be able to spot danger , Garbutt on the left was in the area trying to defend, We look very weak at RB without KVY. If we cant score we shouldnt be gifting goals in that way. patheti!
3

Dissboyitfc added 16:14 - Feb 23
Pathetic
0

dirtydingusmagee added 16:50 - Feb 23
still no farmer Dolphin with his load of bullocks.!
1

BeattiesBackPocket added 17:06 - Feb 23
Blueboy1981 at least you can debate without the name calling unlike some on here!
Just because no one can give you a name doesn't mean he hasn't run us into the ground and it's about time he knew the fans aren't happy with what he's doing. Every season it's lies with him 5 year plans that start every bloody year, selling season tickets on the back of seasons in the championship saying about promotion pushes when even McCarthy said his remit was to keep us up and not one of you guys who support Evans can explain where 110 million has gone in 13 season and how teams with much less resources and gates can still pay competitive wages, afford to buy the off player and make championship promotion pushers every season not one of you can explain it. If he goes he has to take the debt with him as it's his debt anyway if he really is going to keep losing money every season then why not cut his losses and stop continuing to lose money himself now that makes no sense whatsoever. Don't tell me at the right price there wouldn't be buyers there were 3 originally sheepshanks went with him.
1

Benficablue added 18:27 - Feb 23
From a financial viewpoint, a comparison between ITFC and Brentford mentioned earlier can be seen on the website Financial Football News. It is a season out of date but transfers and TV revenue feature. Sadly, the crowd size these dates does not make up much of a clubs income (relative to players wages).
1

Daniel72 added 18:55 - Feb 23
A goal before half time is a killer. Keep the faith.
-2

Upthetown1970 added 19:52 - Feb 23
Put the u23's in for the next match they cant do any worse.
1

blueboy1981 added 20:49 - Feb 23
BBP - fair comment. Whatever it takes, this mess has to be sorted.
When playing second fiddle to the likes of Oxford, Fleetwood, and several others around us at this level ( no discredit to any of the Clubs I mention, in fact quite the reverse ) - it just has to be addressed by whatever means is necessary, to reverse our last decade long trend.
It has got to the point where failure can no longer be condoned, as it so often is, and likely to continue with some .......... where radical change is well past due date.
Whatever that entails.
2

midastouch added 08:54 - Feb 24
I went out Saturday and so only listened to the first half on the radio and sounded pretty encouraging to begin with but as the half wore on we sounded less convincing. Wasn't happy when I had to leave to go out about 1 minute after hearing us concede the goal!
I'm tired of saying the same old things and most of it has become more and more obvious as the season has developed! Mainly that is, every time we come up against the better organised teams we seem to come up short. If we went up, which is looking ever less likely now, (at best we have about a 20% chance as surely the Play Offs is our only way now and we're even outside of those now!) then I think we would need some serious investment to stand any chance of survival and under Evans I just can't see the required amounts forthcoming.
With Norwood out and now Jackson facing suspension then isn't it time we gave Ben Morris a chance? At the very least let him have a run out from the bench as it would be a good experience for him.
Lambert looks to be a busted flush to me. I didn't like his tone in the press conference ahead of the Burton Albion game when asked some probing questions by Phil. They were exactly the sort questions that the fans wanted to hear answered. He made excuses such as it taken teams like Leeds more than one go to get our of the league. But what he failed to acknowledge is that teams that are expected to get out of League One and fail, subsequently soon part company with their manager! If we don't go up this season it's a failure and Lambert and Evans need to take a big look in the mirror.
The only thing I can say in Lambert's defence this week is he stuck with the same winning team that beat Burton and that obviously made sense. But unfortunately when the level of the opposition improves we can't seem to get it over the line no matter what the line up! That is why we may as well gamble on some of the unknown quantities such as Dobra and Morris as sadly too many of the first team regulars have failed to produce the goods when it matters most this season.
2

JewellintheTown added 09:30 - Feb 24
Dark day. Cant see where goals will come from anymore, defence poor, over hyped youngsters not performing. Lots of huffing and puffing but no positive end results. Cheap talk, average effort, poor skills. Work rate for some high, but rewards low. Some wear their heart on their sleeves but their bodies cant match it anymore. Some are turning up for the pay and cruising. Up and down week on week like a yo-yo, same old tactics don't seem to work except for certain teams. does Lambert do any homework or have plan B's or are the team just rubbish at following any? I cant see this getting any better for a long, long time.
0

londontractorboy57 added 09:46 - Feb 24
6 pages of news comments did we lose.
-3

Linkboy13 added 16:07 - Feb 24
What's happened to Dolphins negcrew i need a laugh must be back at school.
1

londontractorboy57 added 19:27 - Feb 24
Minus Numbskulls you were right Mickma so right.
-2


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