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Ipswich Town 2-3 Portsmouth - Match Report
Saturday, 7th Nov 2020 17:58

Sean Raggett scored a controversial 111th minute winner for Portsmouth as Town exited the FA Cup in the first round following a 3-2 after-extra-time defeat at Portman Road. Pompey scored two goals in two minutes via Ronan Curtis and Tom Naylor in the 11th and 13th minutes before Jon Nolan pulled a goal back for the Blues two minutes before half-time then, after Town had been denied a clear penalty for a foul on Oli Hawkins, sub James Norwood made it 2-2 on 66. Raggett won it for the visitors in the second half of extra-time when he stabbed home from close range following a free-kick but having strayed offside.

Town boss Paul Lambert made nine changes with centre-halves Toto Nsiala, who skippered, and Mark McGuinness the only players to survive from the team which lost 2-1 at Sunderland on Tuesday.

David Cornell was in goal with Janoi Donacien at right-back and Myles Kenlock on the left of the defence.

In midfield, Nolan was back after his suspension and joined Emyr Huws and Brett McGavin, who was in Andre Dozzell’s usual playmaking role.

Up front, Hawkins, facing his old club, played down the middle, with Freddie Sears on the left and Keanan Bennetts making his full senior debut on the right.

Striker Norwood was back on what was a very Town strong bench after his hamstring injury.

First-team coach Matt Gill was back on the touchline having missed the previous four games having tested positive for Covid-19.

Portsmouth named the same team which beat Lincoln 2-1 at Sincil Bank on Tuesday evening with ex-Blues frontman Ellis Harrison on the bench.

Town dominated the opening period of the game, but were largely passing it around in their own half of the field without threatening to create an opportunity with Portsmouth’s pressing and preventing them from getting into danger areas.

Perhaps inevitably, the visitors took the lead with their first attack of the game in the 11th minute.

McGuinness fouled Ryan Williams not far outside the area to the right and Ronan Curtis, who scored the goal which won Pompey the only league meeting between the sides last season, took the free-kick.

The Irishman’s strike beat the wall, Cornell palmed it on to the post but it appeared to hit the keeper again on his back and cross the line.

Two minutes later, it was 2-0. Town had been forced to go long after passing it around in their own half but it had quickly been returned. Eventually, Andrew Cannon cut it back from the right to the edge of the box and Pompey skipper Tom Naylor hit a low shot which deflected off McGuinness, who has had a tough week, and past Cornell to his right.

Town seemed a little shellshocked at suddenly finding themselves two goals behind and weren’t able to threaten until the 21st minute when Bennetts, who had made a positive start to the game, crossed from the right for Hawkins, who sent a header looping wide.

Portsmouth were forced into a change two minutes later when Cannon limped off having undergone treatment. Ben Close replaced him in midfield.

On 28 Hawkins was shown the game’s first yellow card following an aerial challenge with Rasmus Nicolaisen.

The Blues were continuing to see most of the ball but Pompey looked likely to score every time they broke forward towards the Town goal.

As the half-hour mark approached, a counter-attack of just that variety saw Close feed Curtis, who hit a shot from 20 yards which Cornell pushed past his right post.

The Blues played themselves into trouble in the 33rd minute when Cornell was closed down by Curtis just inside his area after an Nsiala backpass and kicked weakly straight to Marcus Harness. The former Burton Albion man probably should have shot first time towards the empty net but took the ball on and was eventually crowded out.

Despite continuing to dominate possession, Town hadn’t looked like scoring at any point until Nolan pulled a goal back out of virtually nothing in the 43rd minute.


McGuinness played a long ball forward for the Liverpudlian as he made a run into the box. Nolan’s first touch sent it to his left towards Raggett, who inadvertently returned it to the unmarked midfielder midway inside the area from where he hit a shot on the turn which beat the previously untested Craig MacGillivray in the Portsmouth goal.

The goal was the final action of a half in which the Blues had seen an awful lot of the ball but without being able to do much with it until Nolan’s late goal which owed more to poor defending than Town’s patient - and rather ponderous - build-up play.

There may have been an element of good fortune about both Pompey’s early goals, however, they had looked like scoring on almost every occasion they had broken forward and might well have been more than two goals in front prior to Nolan’s first for Town.

The Blues started the second period brightly and in the 48th minute Nolan wasn’t far away from a second. The former Shrewsbury man had won a corner on the left which was cleared to the edge of the box from where he struck a shot which deflected narrowly past MacGillivray’s right post.

From the flag-kick, McGavin’s ball in almost found its way into the net but was cleared from the line.

Town should have been awarded a penalty in the 50th minute when Nicolaisen clearly pulled Hawkins’s shirt as a Nolan cross from the left looped into the area. Referee Andy Haines and his linesman showed no interest with the Blues’ frustrations with officials continuing.

The home side had made a bright start to the second half and were playing more football in the opposition half and at a greater tempo than they had before the break. On 51 Pompey switched Callum Johnson for Haji Mnoga.

In the 57th minute McGavin curled a dangerous ball across the Portsmouth area from the right but too far in front of Sears breaking in at the far post. The attack had started after a Mnoga challenge on McGuinness had broken for Town, the tackle having arguably been reckless with the sub jumping in with his studs showing as he won the ball. Again referee Haines showed no interest.

Town replaced Hawkins with Norwood, making his first appearance since the Rochdale match on September 26th, in the 62nd minute.

And four minutes later the former Tranmere man levelled the match. Sears deftly turned a Donacien long ball into the path of the sub, who took it on into the area before slipping his first goal of the season - his last came in the 4-1 home defeat to Peterborough in February - past MacGillivray to the keeper’s right.

Two minutes after the goal, Bennetts, who had had some bright moments in his first senior start, was replaced by Edwards.

The Blues continued to take the game to the visitors, although a Curtis free-kick in the 70th minute was blocked by the Town wall and deflected wide. Following the resultant corner there was a brief dust-up between Kenlock and Raggett but referee Haines resolved the matter without the use of his cards.

Ex-Town striker Harrison replaced Curtis for Portsmouth in the 75th minute, moments before Huws scuffed a 25-yard strike through to MacGillivray. Two minutes after his introduction Harrison struck a shot well wide.

The Blues were looking the more likely scorers of the game’s fifth goal as the game entered its final 10 minutes. On 81 Sears hit a powerful effort which deflected wide for a corner.

From the flag-kick, Town might well have won it, however, Huws’s header under pressure flew the wrong side of MacGillivray’s right post.

Portsmouth weren’t too far away in the 84th minute when Harrison escaped down the left and sent over a cross but his ball was behind Williams.

On 88 McGavin played a great cross-field ball to Donacien, far from the first the young midfielder had played during an impressive display which may well put him in manager Lambert’s thoughts to take Dozzell’s place during the two league games of his three-match ban.

The pass led to a Town corner on the right which Portsmouth were unable to clear despite having several attempts. Eventually, the ball was hooked into MacGillivray’s arms.

Harrison headed wide for the visitors in the final scheduled minute but it was mainly Town pushing for the winner as the game moved into four minutes of injury time.

A minute or so in the Blues weren’t far away when Huws nodded an Edwards cross from the right back across goal and Norwood hit it against a defender on the turn with Sears unable to get to the rebound.

Pompey should have won it soon afterwards when Williams cut the ball back from the right to Close on the penalty spot but the sub somehow blazed over.

That was the final action of the 90 minutes and what had been an entertaining tie moved into extra-time.

After their under par first half, the Blues had been the better side in the second and had looked the more likely winners - and appeared to have been denied a stonewall penalty when Hawkins was fouled - until Pompey’s late miss.

The visitors made a fourth change - something allowed in extra-time - ahead of the start of the further half an hour with Bryn Morris replacing John Marquis.

Portsmouth started the first period of extra-time the brighter with Williams hitting a powerful strike at Cornell, then Harrison seeing an effort go wide.

Williams sent a dangerous ball from the right across the Blues’ box in the 94th minute but with no one able to get a touch. Moments later, Town swapped Sears for Jack Lankester.

Pompey went very close in the 96th minute when Harness hit an effort from the edge of the area which struck the outside of Cornell’s right post.

In the 100th minute Harrison rose highest as a cross came in from the left but nodded the ball into Cornell’s arms.

Two minutes later, Alan Judge replaced Huws for Town, who had been second best in extra-time with the much-changed side’s lack of recent first-team game-time perhaps catching up with them.

Four minutes into the second period of extra-time Edwards cut in from the right and scraped a shot wide.

Soon after, Donacien was booked for a tangle with Harrison just outside the area on the left with the Town defender appear. And from the free-kick, Pompey won the tie in controversial circumstances.

Harness curled the ball into the area, Naylor's header was saved by Cornell, Nicolaisen chested towards goal and Raggett turned over the line from a matter of inches.

The Town players quickly surrounded the referee, Raggett having been clearly offside. Haines consulted with his linesman but awarded the goal and booked Norwood for his protests.

Just before the whistle confirming their place in round two, Pompey night have made it 4-2 when Mnoga was sent away on the right and into the area but Kenlock just did enough to put the sub off without bringing him down to cause him to put it over the bar.

Mnoga was clearly unimpressed by the challenge and the two continued to discuss the matter after the game had been brought to a close.

As seems to be happening with alarming regularity, the Blues were once again victims of poor refereeing with Pompey’s winner very evidently offside, while an obvious penalty - certainly more of a spot-kick than the one Sunderland were given on Tuesday - had been denied them in normal time.

While defeat was harsh on the Blues on the balance of the second half of the 90 minutes in which they should have won the tie having come from two behind to level, Pompey were the better side in extra-time with Town appearing to run out of steam in the additional half an hour.

Overall, not having a cup run in a season in which fixtures are already coming thick and fast may be a blessing in disguise, however, that won’t make losing yet another game to poor refereeing any less of a frustration to Paul Lambert and his players.

The Blues are next in action against Crawley at the Broadfield Stadium in the Papa John’s Trophy on Tuesday.

Town's FA Cup exit - their first at the first round stage since 1955 - and that of Charlton, who lost 1-0 at home to Plymouth, means the League One game between the Blues and the Addicks, which was postponed due to international calls last month and was previously pencilled in for Tuesday 22nd December, will now be played on Saturday 28th November (KO 3pm).

Town: Cornell, Donacien, Nsiala (c), McGuinness, Kenlock, McGavin, Huws (Judge 102), Nolan, Bennetts (Edwards 68), Sears (Lankester 95), Hawkins (Norwood 62). Unused: Holy, Wilson, Jackson.

Portsmouth: MacGillivray, Johnson (Mnoga 51), Nicolaisen, Raggett, Pring, Williams, Naylor (c), Cannon (Close 23), Curtis (Harrison 74), Harness, Marquis (Morris 90). Unused: Bass, Downing, Hiwula. Referee: Andy Haines (Tyne and Wear).


Photo: Matchday Images



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Nobbysnuts added 19:57 - Nov 7
On the plus side- I actually thought donacein had a decent game along with mcguinness and mcgavin. Norwood showed what we have desperately been missing up front but I'm afraid Freddie your time is up- absolute rubbish. He shouldn't even make the bench. Offers nothing. Please keep fit Norwood we need you!!!!! Just maybe you can fire us to the championship. Norwood/Jackson is a must.
4

northernblues added 20:03 - Nov 7
In 1981 we played 66 matches, finished 2nd in top flight fa cup semi finals won UEFA cup with less than 20 players, but now we rest the little cherubs
13

grumpyoldman added 20:09 - Nov 7
Due to being a skinflint this is the first match I have watched live in a long while, will I be paying to watch another one, no! Not until fans are allowed back. Passing for the sake of it with no penetration waste of time. Yes the ref and other officials were crap but were we any better? Why is music played and announcer used for an empty stadium? Brett Magvin by far the best player in our midfield, Hughes not as good as he thinks he is.
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midlandblue54 added 20:35 - Nov 7
Hawkins & Sears in the line up teams must be quaking in there boots !
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RobsonWark added 21:15 - Nov 7
northernblues added 20:03 - Nov 7
"In 1981 we played 66 matches, finished 2nd in top flight fa cup semi finals won UEFA cup with less than 20 players, but now we rest the little cherubs"

You can't play as a team when Lambert keeps changing the players all the time. Pick your strongest team week in week out and if you get an injury then you replace that player. We will never get anywhere while he keeps making so many changes to rest players. These are professional players who train a little during the week and play on Saturday afternoons and Tuesday evenings and don't run around that much in the game (as seen today on BBC iPlayer) so how can they be tired?!

Also Paul Lambert, when Sir Bobby Robson was manager of our beloved Ipswich Town he used to get injured players to walk in the sea at Felixstowe - apparently the cold salty sea used to help players recover from injuries. I can't see any town players doing that now - I bet they would rather curl up with a hot water bottle on the sofa watching TOWIE and texting or whatsapping on their mobile phones!



7

planetblue_2011 added 21:27 - Nov 7
Yet again the referee has cost us!! Then again Pompey were on top & deserved to be in next round. we just go to sleep & cant compete against the better teams. Why we can't I just don't get it! because they weren't even that good.
Good news is Norwood come on & scores with one of his first touches.
I still think Lamberts tactics are crap we need to pressurise teams like they do us, always be first to the ball, get every pass right & no mistakes. We can play well as we showed 2nd half but we need to play well for 90 mins to win games & that is where we go wrong. Honestly think we will struggle to finish in top 6 end of season, we need to up our game.
We are out in the first round of the FA cup it can't get any worse. We need to concentrate on the league now & start winning against the better sides to stand any chance of going up. We have the players to do it, it's just up to them if they want to😬
3

blueboy1981 added 21:45 - Nov 7
Diabolical Refereeing decisions again today went against us - however, after conceding two unbelievably soft early goals, a great fight back, levelled it and had the game for the taking.
Than we disappeared completely instead of going for the win - in extra we were simply embarrassing for the Home Team.
It's no good keep wingeing about the low standard if Refereeing as bad as it is - we had this game there for the taking, but simply weren't good enough again to do it.
At 2-2 it's push on time - but we went MISSING - that's the real reason we lost.
8

blueboy1981 added 21:52 - Nov 7
Why make nine changes when after today a two week break ? - another baffling Lambert decision.
Sorry folks, but we won't be heading in the right direction with this guy as Manager.
Go ahead - hold me to my words.
11

blueboy1981 added 22:24 - Nov 7
Refresh my memory - Has Lambert ever been able to get a full 90 minutes from his Team ?
I think not.
9

royoftherovers added 22:29 - Nov 7
Ref should be reported- only elite sport, no amateurs, allowed in lockdown ...
0

RobsonWark added 22:36 - Nov 7
Paul Lambert keeps breaking records.

First time we have been knocked out of the 1st round of the FA Cup for something like 60 years!!!
8

Carberry added 23:26 - Nov 7
I honestly believe Lambert believes he's a Premier League manager who has inadvertently found himself looking after a team in League 1. The big squad, the rotation of players and the style of play are all symptoms of some kind of delusion. Replacing moderate players with other moderate players and playing this passing game in our own half with bemused defenders, who to be honest shouldnt be left alone with the ball, suggests he just doesn't have a grasp of where we are....League 1. By the way, knocked out in round 1 of the FA Cup, how low have we sunk?
6

blueboy1981 added 23:48 - Nov 7
Successful teams have player movement on and off the ball - for large parts of todays game, yet again, the only player we had with any movement of note, was the one with the ball - the rest were either static or meandering around.
You do not have to be a Premiership team, or have Premiership players, to have movement off the ball - lack of movement, lack of combined urgency, and lacking in tactics - all add to our dour play, and plight, game after game.
Lamberts tactic of square and backward passing out of defence encourages such a lack of movement, and players become far too static.
Think I'm wrong ? - watch a fee higher league games and see the movement - often every player other than the Goalkeeper are on their toes, not their heels !
You do not need Premiership players for that either !
2

runningout added 01:46 - Nov 8
Too much blooming moaning from our coach. We're not scoring enough, so we deserve sweet F A
3

martin587 added 07:20 - Nov 8
I struggle to get my head round the reasoning of making nine changes when we have a two week break.PL said if you play well you keep the shirt.Most of the first 45 minutes the team looked disjointed and lacked little direction.The second half was much better and the substitutions lifted the team.Good to see Norwood back and he took his goal well but looks far from a fully fit player.McGavin had a good game and I was impressed the way he held the ball up and made space to play the ball.With our full team out we would have won this game and I certainly don't think Portsmouth are a big threat this season.One final thing we play very nice passing football at times but we still don't have the end product.Something to ponder over the next two weeks by PL.Just a shame we can never get a cup run together.
4

therein61 added 07:24 - Nov 8
Pompey always play on the counter attack and P.L played straight into their hands in the first 1/2 hour they just sat back saving energy while we played across the back resulting in 0-2 before we started to show some forward intent with a goal we didn't look like scoring
The second half was better and at times played them off the park and the game was there for the taking until we fell back into looking like rabbits in car headlights
Unless you sort it big time P.L this will be the story of another sad season.
3

midlandblue54 added 07:58 - Nov 8
All I want for Christmas is lambert gone !
4

granadablue added 08:04 - Nov 8
More shocking refereeing decisions!! Can't we use the video of the 'tackle' by the Pompey player yesterday (which wasn't even given as a foul!!!!!) and send it to the FA / EFL as video evidence that Dozzell's red card was unjustified??? I'd like to see how they can say Dozzell should have been sent off when the Pompey lunge wasn't even a foul, let alone a yellow card.
3

grumpyoldman added 08:12 - Nov 8
People blaming the ref are disguising the fundamental problem. We made it easy for Portsmouth, once leading all they did was allow us possession as we did it without anybody looking for the killer pass, when it happened twice we scored. Instead of blaming crap officials blame the players.
5

Help added 08:21 - Nov 8
Good points McGavin, Bennetts, Norwood, McGuiness, 2nd half performance. Coming back from 2 nil down.
Bad points Referee, 1st half & extra time performance. No real strength in depth and how will the reserves get their game time? because they need it. Some old heads not really helping the youth coming through.
Lets see Norwood up front instead of Hawkins, with McGavin pushing a very capable young midfield gaggle of players for positions in the first team.
2

Zondervantheman added 08:54 - Nov 8
A good effort and yes things certainly seem to be against us at the moment but the reality is we went one step further than Bury town in the FA cup this year and Norfolk currently have 2 teams still left in the competition. Saying that Portsmouth are on par with Ipswich with their history and exceptional fan base. Best visiting fans we have at Portman Road.
1

Billericay12 added 10:11 - Nov 8
Thought we were poor defensively and lack of movement and creativity in midfield made it even harder to move the ball forward from defence. Proper strikers finish from Norwood. Will be an asset when he is fully fit but ideally with someone alongside him. I agree with others on here, our 4 3 3 is more like a 4 5 1. The two wide players of the 3 are either too deep and when the ball is in wide area the other wide player needs to be narrow to link up with the central striker. Basic stuff really but makes you wonder what they are taught on the training ground sometimes ! Some poor refereeing decisions today but we still need to be better for more of the game.
2

BlueSwede added 14:56 - Nov 8
Couldn't care less about the cup and being knocked out. But wonder when we will get a ref who actually knows the rules. 100 perent a penalty when Hawkins was pulled down, the foul from Mnoga was as red as it can be and he didn't even get a yellow, and have seldom seen a clearer offside them the Portsmouth winner.
Thought we played very well in the second with more penetration and rolling the ball 50 meters closer to he opponents goal than in the first half.
0

gosblue added 15:05 - Nov 8
Once again we have failed to get at these cr*p teams from the start. I make no apologies for repeating myself but if you are 3-0 up it doesn't matter if you get a couple of bad decisions going against you. The modern game doesn't allow for a setting down period in a game. Let's go for it from the kickoff and see what happens. If we lose 4-3 in a game in which we've been ‘at it' from start to finish then so be it.
2

runningout added 17:52 - Nov 8
A few of our players don't think they're as good as they really are. Wish our coaching staff could get it through to them. We can beat any team in any league with true belief. If the Pompey team that turned up yesterday are the in form team from League I we will walk rest of season, He says :-)
0


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