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Ipswich Town 1-2 Arsenal U21s - Match Report
Tuesday, 8th Sep 2020 21:49

A strong Town side was beaten 2-1 by Arsenal’s U21s in their opening EFL Trophy fixture at Portman Road. Jon Nolan gave the Blues the lead in the 28th minute before one-time Town trialist George Lewis equalised first-half in injury time, then Folarin Balogun grabbed what proved to be the winner in the 54th minute. The Blues huffed and puffed and hit the woodwork twice as they looked for a leveller which never came.

Town made only three changes to the team which beat Bristol Rovers 3-0 in the Carabao Cup on Saturday.

Myles Kenlock replaced Stephen Ward, who was left out of the 18 but was training on the pitch before the match, at left-back with keeper David Cornell, who joined Town after leaving Northampton last month, taking over from Tomas Holy, who dropped to the bench.

Centre-half Toto Nsiala was initially down to start but dropped out at the last minute allowing Corrie Ndaba to make his full debut at centre-half with James Wilson taking his place on the bench.

Striker James Norwood, who played only 45 minutes of football in pre-season as he continued his rehabilitation after his groin operation in February, was among the subs having missed out on Saturday.

Again Flynn Downes was not included in the 18 having been given a few days off following the interest from Crystal Palace and his resultant transfer request, as was Kayden Jackson, who has been suffering with a groin problem and is the subject of a £1 million - not the £2 million initially reported - rebuffed bid from AFC Bournemouth.

Arsenal’s U21s, with U23s head coach Steve Bould on the touchline, included Norwegian-Rwandan winger George Lewis, 20, who had a trial with the Blues before joining the Gunners in the summer.

Their highest profile name in their side was 19-year-old Balogun, who has refused a new contract and is understood to be interesting Brighton. As expected, it was a very young side with an average age of 18 and a half.

Neither Harry Clarke nor Marcelo Flores, who both moved to the Arsenal youth set-up from the Town academy, were involved.

At an again empty Portman Road, with the shouts of the players echoing around the ground, the Blues quickly began to dominate possession against the Arsenal youngsters.

On seven, Jon Nolan flicked a header on for Freddie Sears to chase, however, Arsenal keeper Tom Smith was off his line and out of his area to clear.

Two minutes later, Sears fed Kenlock breaking on the overlap, not for the first time, but his cross was diverted behind by Arsenal skipper Mark McGuinness ahead of Aaron Drinan. From Andre Dozzell's corner, Luke Woolfenden nodded into Smith’s arms.

Town should have been in front in the 16th minute when Sears’s flick sent Drinan away into the area on the left. The Irish U21 international side-footed across the keeper and struck the outside of the post with Sears screaming for the ball to be cut back to him on the edge of the six-yard box.

The Arsenal kids were seeing most of the ball and passing it around neatly as the game reached the 20-minute mark but without Cornell having been tested.

In the 27th minute the Blues took the lead. Ndaba found Sears with an excellent cross-field pass, Dozzell having played a similar ball out to Alan Judge on the other flank moments earlier.


The ex-West Ham man cut in and sent in a cross which reached Judge at the far post from where the Irish international scuffed a shot which was cleared from the six-yard box. However, the danger wasn’t gone and Judge played the ball back in for Nolan, who scrambled home off keeper Smith from a few yards.

Despite conceding, the visitors again began to pass the ball around slickly but still without threatening goal.

On 39 Drinan chased Teddy Bishop's ball down the right but McGuinness slid in to make an important challenge just outside the area with keeper Smith having made a hasty run off his line and potentially in a lot of trouble. At the other end, Ndaba made a similarly impressive tackle albeit when the flag had been raised.

Just before the scheduled end of the half, Balogun hit Arsenal’s first shot of the game from the edge of the box, the ball deflecting wide of Cornell’s goal off a defender. But from the corner, with the period now in injury time, the young Gunners equalised.

The Blues repeatedly failed to clear their lines on the edge of the area and the ball was played to former Town trialist Lewis, who shot low across Cornell and into the corner of the net.

Town left the field at the break disappointed not to have been in front with the goal Arsenal’s only serious chance throughout the half.

Although neat and tidy on the ball, as you’d expect from a Gunners side, they had presented little threat and the Blues will feel the danger should have been cleared.

While Town hadn’t created a huge number of clear-cut opportunities themselves, they had certainly threatened enough to warrant a half-time lead.

The Blues swapped Sears for Gwion Edwards ahead of the second half, presumably to keep Saturday’s two-goal scorer fresh for Sunday’s League One opener at home to Wigan Athletic, while Arsenal brought on Miguel Azeez for Jordan McEneff.

Edwards sent over an early cross from the left which skipper Luke Chambers nodded behind from a tight angle beyond the far post.

Neither side had created another chance before Bishop was switched for Emyr Huws on 53, a minute before the visitors took the lead.

Ben Cottrell played Balogun through on goal to the right and the striker confidently beat the advancing Cornell.

As Town prepared to restart, Drinan was replaced by Norwood making his first appearance of the season.

The sub headed wide for Town on 58, then Salah Oulad M’Hand nutmegged his way past Kenlock on the Arsenal right before shooting over with the Gunners having grown in confidence since their second goal and well on top. On 64 Azeez shot over from distance.

Town started to see more of the ball but on 67 lost possession midway inside the Arsenal half and the visitors broke quickly and it took a couple of last-ditch challenges and a Cornell save from Balogun before the danger was gone.

The Blues went very close to levelling in the 68th minute when Norwood crossed from the left, Chambers sent it back from the right, Huws returned it again and Judge, who had switch flanks with Edwards, stooped to head towards goal only for Smith to brilliantly tip it on to the post and behind.

Within a minute the woodwork was stuck again, Huws hitting a brilliant curling effort from distance which beat the keeper but hit the bar.

Tim Akinola was booked for a foul on Kenlock then, as the game moved towards its final 10 minutes, James Olayinka played in Azeez on the edge of the box but his low shot was too weak to trouble Cornell.

A Town equaliser wasn’t looking particularly likely, despite the Blues seeing a lot of the ball in the Arsenal half.

The Blues should have been on terms in the 85th minute when Nolan was played in on goal by a Norwood flick but keeper Smith advanced quickly and forced his not overly convincing effort at goal.

From the corner, the ball fell to Chambers who hit a powerful strike which was blocked by one of a number of players in the six-yard box. The ball was sent back in by Judge and Ndaba and keeper Smith collided. Before referee Neil Hair stopped play for the head injuries, Norwood had a chance but the opportunity was snuffed out.

After undergoing treatment on the field, Ndaba was helped around the pitch by physio Matt Byard and the club doctor, while Smith was able to continue for the Gunners. With all Town’s subs used, the Blues finished the game with 10 men.

As the match moved into injury time, the Blues went very close to an equaliser. After Arsenal had failed to clear a free-kick from the right, the ball fell to Huws, his effort was blocked, before Norwood’s stab goalwards was cleared off the line.

Deep in injury time, keeper Cornell came up for a free-kick and corner but was unable to help his team-mates to an equaliser.

The final whistle was greeted by cheers from the Arsenal players and staff after staging an impressive turnaround against their more senior opponents.

Town had been the better side in the first half but having grabbed their equaliser and after going ahead in the second period, Arsenal dominated for a long spell with the Blues struggling to get a foothold in the game.

Eventually, as the Arsenal youngsters tired, the Blues created more than enough opportunities to have taken the game to a penalty shoot-out but the Gunners youngsters remained resolute as well as riding their luck on occasion - Town hit the woodwork three times overall - while Town’s finishing was less than clinical on occasion.

A disappointing night, particularly given the strength of the side, putting a dampener on the positive mood following Saturday’s 3-0 home victory over Bristol Rovers in the Carabao Cup.

Town will be looking to a repeat of that performance when Wigan Athletic visit Portman Road for the League One opener on Sunday.

Town: Cornell, Chambers (c), Ndaba, Woolfenden, Kenlock, Nolan, Dozzell, Bishop (Huws 53), Judge, Drinan (Norwood 55), Sears (Edwards 46). Unused: Holy, Lankester, Wilson, Hawkins.

Arsenal U21: Smith, Alebiosu, Balogun (Cirjan 73), Bola, Cottrell, Lewis, McEneff (Azeez 46), McGuinness (c), Olayinka, M’Hand (Akinola 65), Oyegoke. Unused: Hillson, Kirk, Ogungbo. Referee: Neil Hair (Cambridgeshire).


Photo: Matchday Images



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budgieplucker added 00:55 - Sep 9
All credit to Paul Lambert for trying to roughly keep the same team.

The young Arsenal lads initially gave us too much respect and the game should have been dead and buried by half time. This is rather worrying because it shows the same as last year that we cannot kill games off.

All credit to the Arsenal youngsters for coming back and completely turning the game around and looking the better side in the second half. Agree with Brenner Woolley about the towering 6ft 4' left sided Central defender McGuiness, could be a really useful loan player if we felt we needed to add another left sided centre half.

Cornell, for me looks unimposing and concerned about his lack of height. Felt Pryzbeck who I have seen a lot has more potential!!!!

Andre Dozzell for us looked really classy and pulled most of the strings, was the heartbeat of the team and pleased that the lad is now getting a run. Keep putting in performances like that and he will most certainly keep the shirt.

Teddy failed to ignite for me, big fan of his but really frustrated to fail to see him move into top gear- yes he didn't have a bad game but with his talent he should be chalking up match winning performances.

Corrie Ndaba - looked very assured, so pleased for the lad.

Myles Kenlock - it pains me to be critical of this lad but I think he will fail to make the grade, he is just not good enough at the level.

Jon Nolan, I guess getting the goal justifies his inclusion, but he did look one of the poorest players on the pitch tonight.

Alan Judge - industrious but for me is overated, at times his touch and decision making is well below the standard required for League 1 level, Runs around at 90 mph and has a habit of getting everyone's way, to be fare he is showing better so far this season's but quite honestly I think we have much better options. I would be prepared to allow him to leave on a free transfer.

Freddie - very subdued

Huws - apart from his shot that hit the bar he struggled to make an impression on the game.

Drinan - good spells unlucky to not to score with his shot and that hit the post. I would keep persevering with the lad, a real handful.

We still have a lot of work do and can see a lot of changes week in week out as I players struggle to find consistency.
2

Zondervantheman added 04:09 - Sep 9
Playing the youngsters in this competition last year was one of the only highlights in a pretty dismal season.
And let's face it we only got knocked out last year when we put the seniors in.
Give the boys a chance match the U21s against ours.
Let's not forget the likes of Dozzel, Bishop, Downes, Dobra etc are now senior players.
We should already be looking to the next crop to be coming through and tearing the shirts from the under performing first team...
2

jas0999 added 05:58 - Sep 9
Worrying considering the so called strength of our team against a very young team. Contrast to Saturday, this reminds me of last season. Not taking chances. Not stopping the opposition from scoring.

Poor result.
3

soapy added 07:22 - Sep 9
It was actually a very watchable match and quite exciting at the end. It's all minutes in the engine for the new season on Sunday. COYB
1

dirtydingusmagee added 07:28 - Sep 9
given the overall strength of Prem clubs compared to lower leagues, i wasnt a surprise to lose, Think it was a good decision to sub Freddie , no need to risk him prior to Sunday, Just hope everyone is ''up for it''. Sunday ,and beyond,
1

Nobbysnuts added 07:46 - Sep 9
Oh dear............just when they got our hopes up they snatch them away....😫
-1

Help added 07:51 - Sep 9
Not sure how unexciting the game was yesterday, but as I was listening to Brenner on Radio Suffolk with Darren Ambrose co commentating they did seem to spend a lot of time not describing the match but in general discussion about town, players, etc. Did anyone think that.
0

runningout added 08:00 - Sep 9
Very embarrassing no matter who the opposition. Glad some honesty above as Nolan and Kenlock are not doing it. Just wish these guys would prove us wrong
0

MonkeyAlan added 08:35 - Sep 9
Embarrassing. Our first team can't even beat an under 21 side. Evans hang your head in shame. How you have ruined this club. It must be our worst set of first team players ever. What utter rubbish.
2

Dockerblue added 08:50 - Sep 9
Chambers, after apparently playing well on Saturday covered himself in glory again when Arsenal equalised. He was ball watching, had two opposing players behind him and when the ball came to one of them he didn,t block or tackle. Absolute joke that this bloke is captain of this once great club. I will not watch on Sunday if he is playing!
-2

IpswichT62OldBoy added 09:17 - Sep 9
We are a team of two halves, still
0

TJS added 10:06 - Sep 9
Any 'result' from this 'competitive fixture' should be treated with the utter contempt it deserves.
0

Radlett_blue added 10:12 - Sep 9
This was a group game, so why would there have been a penalty shoot-out in the event of a draw?
0

Michael101 added 10:17 - Sep 9
GForce yes all of them.
0

Orraman added 10:58 - Sep 9
Radlett blue- the penalty shoot out is to give the winner an extra point, so 1 point to loser and 2 points to winner and this means that the game actually gets a win/lose result
0

StowTractorBoy added 11:24 - Sep 9
My goodness me - how far we have fallen. The line up should have been more than good enough to beat a bunch of kids. Really worried about my beloved Club and the direction we are going in. Saturday was impressive so just hope that was a marker rather than last nights showing. I know fans knock this competition but is the only chance we have of a day out at Wembley which I am sure we would all love. Just hope we can overturn Gillingham and Crawley but won't hold my breath.
1

Skip73 added 12:10 - Sep 9
Bangalore, I agree with you, morons who write 'should of and would of' should be made to go back to school and retake their English course. Even my 9 year old knows its 'should have'.
1

supasmiler71 added 12:58 - Sep 9
Not concerned about this loss at all. I'm sure it was seen as another good run out for the first team (or most of them) before the serious business of getting back up to the Championship begins in earnest. Sunday will be different. By the way, there's a reason many of these "kids" are in the U21s for Arsenal....because they are bloody good players!
0

TJS added 13:18 - Sep 9
Where on earth did Arsenal get the font for the numbers on the back of their shirt ?
Looks likes something normally reserved for neo-nazi banners.
0

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 14:21 - Sep 9
A lot of good, fast football was actually played by both sides. You have admit that the Arse youngsters were very, very good. Not many L1 teams would have got a result against them - and yes, that is embarrassing given that it also applies to us. But we hit the post, hit the crossbar, had one cleared off the line, Nolan missed a sitter, and we should have had a penalty for handball in the first half. In other words, with a bit more luck, we would have got a draw. But give Arse youngsters their due. They looked to be a very skillful, well-drilled side.
1


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