Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
Ipswich Town 0-3 Hull City - Match Report
Tuesday, 24th Nov 2020 21:03

Town’s struggles against League One’s better sides continued as Hull City left Portman Road with a comfortable 3-0 victory. Mallik Wilks put the visitors ahead in the second minute, Josh Magennis made it two in first-half injury time and sub Tom Eaves made it three with 13 minutes left with the Blues, who are down to fifth in the table, never looking like they would get anything from the game.

Town boss Paul Lambert made four changes from the team which beat Shrewsbury 2-1 on Saturday with Luke Woolfenden, James Norwood, Keanan Bennetts and Emyr Huws all starting.

Woolfenden came in at the heart of the defence for Toto Nsiala, who dropped to the bench, while Huws was in central midfield with Teddy Bishop (ankle) and Jon Nolan (groin) both having picked up knocks on Saturday.

Alan Judge moved into the midfield three having been on the right of the front three against the Shrews. Brett McGavin continued in place of Andre Dozzell, who was serving the last game of his three-match ban.

Norwood was the lone central striker with Kayden Jackson among the subs, while Bennetts was handed his first league start for the Blues on the right of the front three with Freddie Sears continuing on the left.

Aaron Drinan returned to the bench for the first time since suffering a thigh injury in the opening league game against Wigan, while Oli Hawkins was also back in the 18 having missed out at the weekend due to knee and groin issues.

Hull City included ex-Blues right-back Josh Emmanuel and former Town loanee Callum Elder in their XI.

The Tigers made one change from the team which beat the MK Dons 3-1 on Saturday with Regan Slater coming in for Alfie Jones in central midfield.

After the teams took the knee in support of Black Lives Matter, the visitors took the lead with their first attack of the game in only the second minute.

Emmanuel fed George Honeyman to his left, who in turn played it on to Wilks, who was given time to hit a low shot past Tomas Holy to his left from just inside the area.

The Blues withstood a couple of promising Hull attacks in the immediate aftermath of the early goal before starting to dominate the ball, although without threatening.

On 23 Bennetts tricked his way into the box on the right of the box before hitting a shot which Jacob Greaves diverted out for a corner.

Town were beginning to look more dangerous with McGavin twice finding Ward with excellent passes, however, the Irishman’s crosses came to nothing. In the 25th minute the left-back took a dip at goal from a tight angle but the ball flew across the face.


Two minutes later, Norwood latched on to a ball over the top down the right and hit a shot which failed to trouble Matt Ingram in the Hull goal.

Town were forced into a change in the 32nd minute when Sears picked up what looked to be a hamstring problem. Lankester took over on the right of the front three with Bennetts moving to the left.

The Blues continued to see most of the ball but with Ingram untested. There was a scramble in the Tigers area following a Lankester corner on 38 but with no one able to get a clear sight of goal and eventually Bennetts dallied on the edge of the box and the danger was gone.

Almost immediately Wilks went to ground at the other end in a hopeful attempt to win a penalty before Hakeeb Adelakun’s weak shot was saved by Holy.

Chambers headed a Ward cross from the left to Ingram in the 44th minute and then Norwood was unable to get on a ball from deep from the Irishman at the far post.

The Blues were on top but were still to carve out a clear cut opportunity or significantly test Ingram.

And as the half moved into three minutes of injury time, the Tigers doubled their lead.

Reece Burke crossed from the right and an unmarked Josh Magennis beat Holy from eight yards with the Town players adamant the Northern Irish international was offside, however, the officials were unmoved by their protests.

Moments before the whistle, Chambers claimed a penalty when he was manhandled as a corner came over from the left but a spot-kick would have been a very generous award.

The skipper and his men trooped off after a half in which they had had plenty of the ball but as so often had been unable to turn possession into serious chances and goals.

At the other end, the Tigers had taken their two big opportunities clinically but with big questions over Town’s defending, and in the case of the second whether a linesman’s flag should have been raised.

The Blues had a mountain to climb in the second half if they were to maintain their 100 per cent home league record.

They started the period positively and on 49 Norwood flicked a McGavin cross following a corner towards goal but the ball was blocked by a defender.

The Blues continued to press and to try to find a way through the Hull backline but whatever they attempted they found an amber and black shirt in their way.

Hull should have made it 3-0 in the 62nd minute when Emmanuel, impressing down the right against his old side, crossed and Magennis, again completely unmarked, volleyed over when it looked easier to hit the target.

As Holy prepared to restart, the Tigers swapped Adelakun and Slater for James Scott and Jones.

Wilks had another chance for his side’s third when Bennetts gifted possession to the former Barnsley attacker in the Hull half on the Town right. Wilks broke away beyond Woolfenden, who made a desperate lunge to stop him on the edge of the box, but fortunately for the Blues Holy saved his shot from a tight angle.

Hull switched Magennis for Eaves in the 71st minute with the Tigers comfortably seeing out the second half.

Town had continued to huff and puff but with Ingram still untested. In the 72nd minute, Ward crossed from the left and Bennetts flicked a header wide.

A minute later, Ingram was forced into a save when Norwood was sent away down the left. The striker was on his own so hit a shot from a tight angle which the keeper turned behind.

Town replaced Norwood and Bennetts with Hawkins and Jackson as they prepared to take the resultant corner, which like so many of their set pieces came to nothing.

Any lingering hopes the Blues had of a shock turnaround were extinguished in the 77th minute when Eaves was sent away on goal after a wayward Lankester pass with Mark McGuinness playing him onside. The striker beat his former Gillingham team-mate Holy with confidence to make it 3-0.

Town continued to look for a goal in the remaining minutes but without ever going close and the referee’s whistle confirmed the visitors’ victory and an end to Town’s home league unbeaten run.

A Hull win never really looked in doubt from the moment they took the lead in the second minute. Town had plenty of the ball but never had the guile to find a way through the Tigers, who could well have won more convincingly with Magennis missing a chance as good as the three they scored.

If Hull as leaders are the benchmark for a team aspiring to automatic promotion, on this evidence the Blues, who are still without a win this season against anyone in League One’s top eight, look a long way short of that standard.

Had their been a crowd present, they would undoubtedly made their thoughts known at half-time and after the final whistle.

Town will have another go at beating one of the division’s top sides on Saturday when Charlton, who are down to sixth after a 4-2 defeat at Burton this evening, are in Suffolk.

Town: Holy, Chambers (c), Woolfenden, Nsiala, Ward, McGavin, Huws, Judge, Bennetts (Jackson 74), Sears (Lankester 32), Norwood (Hawkins 74). Unused: Cornell, Nsiala, Kenlock, Drinan.

Hull City: Ingram, Elder, Burke, Smallwood (c), Wilks (Coyle 83), Honeyman (Samuelsen 82), Emmanuel, Adelakun (Scott 63), Slater (Jones 63), Greaves, Magennis (Eaves 71). Unused: Long, Batty. Referee: Lee Swabey (Devon).


Photo: Matchday Images



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



ringwoodblue added 21:21 - Nov 24
Predicted 0-2 but it was worse than the score line suggests. The team are littered with lightweights with young McGavin being the best of a bad bunch. Norwood ran around like a loon but had zero service.

Lambert is tactically inept, has no plan A let alone plan B. Hull aren't that great but we made them look good.

We are heading mid table and will stay there unless there are radical changes. Changing the manager alone won't fix it as the problems are throughout the club.
10

Karlosfandangal added 21:21 - Nov 24
Young team learning their trade......Only thing for me is everyone wants the club to keep the young talent.....but if they don't shine in League one what is the point of keeping them.

Think we need Norwood up front as he ruffles lots of feathers....Bishop Dozzell an£ Downes in the middle of the park would make a difference.
Lankester and Bennetts in for Judge and Sears
Chambers and Woolfenden in the centre with Ward and Vincent Young as the wingbacks and Holy in goal.
2

dirtydingusmagee added 21:23 - Nov 24
LAMBERT smarten yourself up and get down the Job Centre. You have had time to make a go of things ,you havnt ,and you wont , move on .
10

heathen66 added 21:23 - Nov 24
Absolutely disgraceful performance
Tactically inept management
Keep picking the same underperforming players in Sears and Judge and everyone else out of position.
Wilson has obviously fallen out with the manager EFL Team of the week, dropped the next !!!
Takes of the most dangerous players (Bennetts and Norwood) and then plays Jackson wide midfield.
at 2-0 we should have thrown caution to the wind and played Jackson, Norwood and Hawkins as a genuine front 3 but it seems PL know best. Perhaps taken the backwards thinking Ward off and played 3-4-3...just try something different...just try something.

Feeling quite shellshocked tbh !!!
11

Gandj64 added 21:25 - Nov 24
Simple solution-
Lambert out and Paul Cook in.
Cook will get snapped up by a championship club very soon so just do the deal Evans and pay him what he needs.
6

runaround added 21:26 - Nov 24
Bizarrely I think first half we did well but fell asleep defensively in 1st & last minute ending 2-0 down. Second half was all too easy for Hull. You have to say that the number of players unavailable tonight had a bearing on the result but we have to do better. Judge, Huws & Sears are just not good enough as they have shown too often. Norwood was the one bright spot tonight.
Lambert had no plan B & no idea. Our league position is the only thing saving his job & I have no faith in him turning things around. Massive improvement needed now
7

nick8 added 21:28 - Nov 24
Been saying it for well over a year now..

Lambert get out of our club
6

Michael101 added 21:29 - Nov 24
Robmonkeyoo7,just a repeat of the post I've make a few times now,Ebenezer Evans won't pay off Lambert 4years.So if Lambert did walk he would only appoint somebody cheap ,so I'm afraid we going to stay up to our armpits in the brown stuff.Evans is the one who should foxtrot Oscar.NOW.
4

planetblue_2011 added 21:30 - Nov 24
Players are not good enough!!
The manager isn't good enough!!
The owner isn't good enough!!
The club is a sinking ship!!
What more is there to say... we are 💩🤔!!
9

inghamspur added 21:30 - Nov 24
Now looking like an average League One team at best. A few injuries at the moment but other teams also have to cope with that. Our squad wasn't good enough to stay in the Championship and are are a long way off from reaching those heights now. Manager is chopping & changing the team around too much so no momentum, although injuries will have forced some decisions on him - not an excuse though. The decision to take Norwood off was just plain daft.
4

BettyBlue added 21:30 - Nov 24
It's not all doom and gloom.

We've got next season to look forward to.
-1

LWNR2013 added 21:32 - Nov 24
Faffing about at the back. Short passes back to Holy, putting him under pressure time and time again. Huws supposedly highly technical....

Done up like a kipper.

What would 4000 home fans got from that?

Revolutionary management change please.
6

delias_cheesy_flaps added 21:34 - Nov 24
Well nobody's got the "its 3 points which matters" to fall back on tonight.
Perhaps people will finally realise Lambert is totally out of his depth as a manager and our owner is a complete c*ck who cannot pick a good manager if his life depended on it!
It's been time for Lambert to go since last Christmas, perhaps we finally get rid of this turkey now!
8

Len_Brennan added 21:34 - Nov 24
If we change the manager now, we have a chance of going up; if we stick with Lambert we have no chance.
17

inghamspur added 21:35 - Nov 24
Just realised he took Bennetts off as well, which makes it even more daft. Some good managers available at the moment eg Paul Cook, Danny Cowley
4

BettyBlue added 21:35 - Nov 24
You can't sack him just before Christmas.

He'd only walk away with the best part of £4,000,000.

Have a heart.
3

Billericay12 added 21:37 - Nov 24
A full back that couldn't nail down a place in our very average first team all of sudden looks like a world beater !!! (Slight exaggeration)
Overall I blame Evans for our demise. A manager can only work with what he's got and I think Pep Guardiola would struggle with our squad but I have to question the negative approach, lack of creativity and stubbornness in refusing to change the system or game plan when things aren't working.
4

Lathers added 21:38 - Nov 24
Hull weren't even that good tonight and we lost 3-0 without creating a decent chance. I really do believe we have a decent enough squad to be competing at L1 level, but they are lost under the mid-guided leadership of a man who doesn't have a frigging clue what he is doing. And he's got another 50 months left on his contract!
6

Esseeja added 21:39 - Nov 24
Judging from the stunningly poor lack of ambition, passion and willingness to succeed at this club, I would show no shock, and would even be confident at this point, to see a club like ours in the bloody Vanarama leagues by 2030.
2

aas1010 added 21:40 - Nov 24
Time for a change . Lamber out
2

bozzly added 21:40 - Nov 24
5th in the league with the amount of first team players out injured is not too bad in my opinion
0

Pezzer added 21:41 - Nov 24
Why are Norwood and Jackson not playing as a front 2? Does Dobra not offer something more than Judge? Sears is not a winger so a front 2 from Norwood, Jackson and Sears? 4-4-2 in this League not a bad formation. Lambert is showing zero potential for being able to get a settled hungry confident team out week in week out and must be on borrowed time.
4

BettyBlue added 21:42 - Nov 24
Teams must really hate coming to Portman Road.

1

herfie added 21:42 - Nov 24
One further step in our demise. Seeking hope that the owner, manager and coaching staff have a clue. Sadly they don't, and those major shortcomings will ultimately determine our future. Depressing.
0

BettyBlue added 21:44 - Nov 24
Why are Norwood and Jackson not playing as a front 2?
It's a tats thing.

I don't understand it either.
3


You need to login in order to post your comments

Blogs 296 bloggers

Ipswich Town Polls

About Us Contact Us Terms & Conditions Privacy Cookies Advertising
© TWTD 1995-2024