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Ipswich Town 0-2 Portsmouth - Match Report
Saturday, 12th Dec 2020 16:58

Town fans had a disappointing return to Portman Road as two first-half Ryan Williams goals saw Portsmouth to a comfortable 2-0 victory over the Blues, who are still to beat anyone in League One’s top nine this season. Williams, who hadn’t scored previously this season, gave his side the lead on 29 and added the second a minute before the break and Pompey could well have extended their lead in a second half in which they struck the woodwork twice.

Town boss Paul Lambert made one change with Andre Dozzell returning in the three-man central midfield, alongside Jon Nolan with Alan Judge ahead of them, having missed last week’s 2-1 win at Plymouth as he was suspended having reached five bookings.

Brett McGavin dropped to the bench, while striker Aaron Drinan was also among the subs having recovered from his hamstring injury.

Portsmouth were unchanged from the team which beat Peterborough 2-0 at Fratton Park on League One last weekend with winger Michael Jacobs back from a knee injury and on the bench alongside ex-Town striker Ellis Harrison.

Fans were back at Portman Road, dotted around the stands aside from the Sir Bobby, for the first time since March with the game watched by 2,000 season ticket holders allocated their tickets via the ballot.

For the first time in 280 days the Blues players were cheered on to the pitch as they made their way from the tunnel.

Prior to the whistle both teams took a knee in support of Black Lives Matter to warm applause from the Town support.

Even with such a relatively small crowd the game seemed to have greater intensity virtually from the off.

The first serious action came in the eighth minute when Town lone striker Kayden Jackson chased a ball down the right into the area. Keeper Craig Macgillivray came off his line and the two reached the ball at the same time and the ball went out of play.

Jackson and the Blues fans made an ambitious penalty claim but referee Thomas Bramall opted to award a free-kick against Town, which seemed third in his list of possible decisions.

A minute later, Blues keeper Dai Cornell was forced into the game’s first big save, the Welshman getting down and across to his left to push John Marquis’s low curling shot from just outside the area wide.

Pompey were presenting the greater threat in the opening minutes, forcing Town into regular mistakes as they tried to pass out from the back and winning a number of corners which the Blues managed to repel.

On 16 Ronan Curtis, a scorer in the last two matches between the sides, was very fortunate to escape a booking for sliding in on Jackson well after the ball had gone, much to the annoyance of the Blues’ support. Two minutes later the Irishman fouled Dozzell on halfway and again managed to keep out of referee Bramall’s book.

Curtis might have made it three in three against Town on 22 when Marcus Harness out-battled Mark McGuinness on the edge of the area. The former Burton Albion man fed Curtis in space but the one-time Derry City man screwed his shot well over.

Town were next to threaten in the 25th minute. Dobra, playing wide on the right for Town with Jack Lankester on the left, tricked his way into the box from a Jackson pass before hitting a shot across Macgillivray which the keeper blocked with his feet.


But four minutes later, Pompey took the lead. Harness crossed from the right, Marquis, in acres of space, tapped back first time to Ryan Williams and the Australian international slammed his first goal of the season into the roof of the net. It was a very poor goal to concede from Town’s perspective if well-worked and neat from the visitors’.

Town suffered a further blow in the 33rd minute when Jon Nolan was forced off with an injury and McGavin took over alongside Dozzell in the deeper-lying midfield roles. Nolan was playing only his third game after returning from a groin problem.

Pompey probably should have made it 2-0 in the 36th minute when Lee Brown cut back from the left and skipper Tom Naylor shot wide as he broke unchecked to the edge of the box when he should at least have hit the target.

Two minutes later, Blues skipper Luke Chambers headed weakly through to Macgillivray following a Ward cross from the left.

Town, with Dobra having moved into the middle and Judge to the right, were starting to see a lot of the ball and in the 41st minute Alan Judge cut in from the left and hit a shot which Macgillivray was forced to punch away.

In the final scheduled minute of the half, Pompey doubled their lead. The ball was crossed from the right, Curtis nodded back into the box and Williams turned home his second of the afternoon and the campaign unchallenged.

The former Rotherham man had never previously scored twice in a match before, let alone twice in one half.

Portman Road rang with boos only 45 minutes after fans’ had made return following nine months away with the Blues appearing set for their third successive home defeat at the half-time whistle.

Pompey’s goals had both looked all too easy and they might well have had a third had Naylor hit the target.

At the other end, as has been a familiar story, Town had had a lot of possession but had rarely threatened with Dobra’s direct running with the ball into the box having presented their biggest danger and their one real chance.

Town began the second half looking to repeat their FA Cup comeback against Pompey when they came from two goals down to level at 2-2, only to unluckily lose 3-2 in extra-time.

Pompey should have made it 3-0 in the 48th minute when goalscorer Williams crossed from the right and Marquis, again completely unmarked, headed wide when he really should have found the corner of the net.

Andy Cannon shot well over from distance on 53 with the visitors starting the half the stronger with Town looking deflated.

Marquis was inches away from making it three in the 56th minute when his header from Curtis’s free-kick on the left slammed against the bar and away with Cornell having badly misjudged it.

A minute later at the other end, Jackson looked to run on to a Ward through ball but a defender’s toe put it behind.

Following the corner a Dobra shot was blocked on the edge of the box, then Pompey make a promising break but Curtis was unable to find Marquis with a pass. On 59 Portsmouth swapped Brown, who had picked up a knock for Cameron Pring.

Town had shown few signs of getting back into the game so on 63 manager Lambert made a double change with Judge and Jackson making way for Keanan Bennetts and Aaron Drinan. The decision to stick with one up front was loudly booed.

A minute later Portsmouth again came close to their third of the game, Curtis hitting a shot from distance which stuck Cornell’s cross bar for a second time.

On 67 only a brilliant Cornell save kept the score at 2-0. Pring sent over a free-kick from deep on the left and Sean Raggett, the scorer of the controversial winner in the cup tie, headed goalwards only for the Blues keeper to get down to his right to palm it past the post.

Curtis was shown the game’s first yellow card in the 70th minute for a late tackle on Lankester, who joined him in the book for his unimpressed reaction. Having been cautioned, Lankester was immediately replaced by ex-Pompey man Oli Hawkins as the Blues finally moved to two strikers.

Moments later, McGuinness became the second Town played to be booked for a foul on Marquis on halfway. On 74 McGavin had his name added for a foul on Harness as Portsmouth looked to break following a rare Town attack, then five minutes later Raggett joined them for stopping Cornell from kicking the ball out.

Pompey had dominated the second half with the Blues first attempt at goal in the second half not coming until the 84th minute when McGuinness headed over from a corner. Jacobs replaced Curtis as the game moved into its final four minutes, then Jack Whatmough was booked for a foul on Bennetts.

The final whistle was again greeted by boos from the returning 2,000 plus shouts of 'Lambert out' aimed at the Blues boss as he made his way towards the tunnel, while skipper Chambers and the players’ applause to the fans as they made their way off was reciprocated.

The Blues had once again been made to look very much second best against one of the division’s better sides, as was the case against Hull and Charlton in the previous two home matches which also ended in defeats.

Town are still to beat anyone currently in the top nine and will have to be very much better than this if they are to defeat any of the other sides challenging at the top of the table.

Having secured their 2-0 lead in the first half, Pompey really should have extended it by one or two more in the second half with the woodwork hit twice, Marquis missing a sitter and Cornell making one terrific save.

Town looked short of ideas and short of confidence once they’d gone two down and a second-half comeback never looked even a remote possibility. Their only serious chance of the game and the only save Macgillivray made all afternoon was from Dobra in the first half.

Goals continue to be a significant worry with the two at Plymouth - both netted after the Pilgrims had been reduced to 10 men - the only two scored in the last five matches.

The Blues drop to sixth, although with three of the four sides directly below them having played fewer games.

Burton Albion are the visitors to Portman Road on Tuesday before a trip to another of the top sides Peterborough, currently fourth, next Saturday.

Town: Cornell, Chambers (c), Woolfenden, McGuinness, Ward, Dozzell, Nolan (McGavin 33), Dobra, Lankester (Hawkins 70), Judge (Bennetts 63), Jackson (Drinan 63). Unused: Holy, Nsiala, Kenlock.

Portsmouth: Macgillivray, Johnson, Brown (Pring 59), Naylor (c), Whatmough, Williams, Marquis, Curtis (Jacobs 86), Cannon, Harness, Raggett. Unused: Bass, Close, Harrison, Nicolaisen, Hiwula. Referee: Thomas Bramall (Sheffield).


Photo: Matchday Images



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bobble added 21:11 - Dec 12
we need to play fast clever hoofball if we have so many injuries, attempting slow build up passing football limits our goal attempts and hinders us, not the opposition.
a good manager should adapt quickly to the circumstances that present themselves not be rigid in tactics.
2

Michael101 added 21:20 - Dec 12
I will repeat a post made a few times,1Evans is to tight to pay off lambert,2Lambert won't walk3why would be when he's getting paid for failure.4Evans only appoints last chain Charlie's.5until Evans foxtrots Oscar itfc are finished.6RIP ipswich town.
2

Dolphinblue added 21:20 - Dec 12
😂😂😂😂#thenegcrew are so entrenched in their views that anyone who begs to differ is either a nodge or attention seeking....nah just dont agree 🐬🐬🐬🐬🐬
-10

Michael101 added 21:22 - Dec 12
Last chance Charlie's.
0

planetblue_2011 added 21:22 - Dec 12
I've been blaming the manager, owner everyone at the club, now it's about time to blame the 11 individuals on the pitch. Shaky defence which is all over the place, midfield is to weak, and now the strikers which are no where to be seen.
The players clearly don't want to play for the football club. Where is the pride of wearing a town shirt, no heart, no team leadership, no passion and just not interested in playing football. It's not good enough, the size of this football club should be doing so much better with the backing and the support it gets. All of them are Pathetic!!
7

bluesince76 added 21:38 - Dec 12
Evans is the reason we are in league 1 failure to sack bad managers on time and rewarding failure think yes probably happy to stay in this league.
2

BangaloreBlues added 21:57 - Dec 12
Imagine this page if we lose to Burton...
2

dirtydingusmagee added 22:08 - Dec 12
Bangalore watch this space , Dolphin cant win any arguement put up so has to try to wind people up with his stupid Lambertforever game. Lambert forever ? to what depth of football do you hope to reach Flipper. ? YELLOW AND GREEN are your true colours Flipper .
3

blueboy1981 added 22:36 - Dec 12
Dolphinblue is best ignored - just a wind up merchant.

A measure if how bad things are when ‘runningout' comes up with ‘it would have been better with MM' ..... !!!
No thanks - couldn't see MM or Lambo' being a success from the beginning of either tenure.
Haven't been proved wrong either - unfortunately.
Both abject disasters, has beens, or never were's - with no respect for the Club, or Supporters.
4

RobsonWark added 00:07 - Dec 13
Chambers shouldn't even be on the pitch let alone be club Captain. When does he ever give orders or any encouragement to any of our players like a Captain should do.
3

eddiespearitt03 added 01:30 - Dec 13
You could see the only person who was genuinely upset at conceding a goal was the goalkeeper. The first goal was class, just quick simple passes that totally lost our players. The second goal was a disgrace. A typical defensive howler we see too often. Just a simple lob into the box and Chambers was needing a step ladder to get his head on it. We now have defenders looking around at each other with the "here we go again" look.
1

Dmodeboy added 08:06 - Dec 13
This club is once again sleep walking into decline. It happened in the Championship, and it's now happening in League One. The acceptance of mediocrity and total lack of ambition is clear as day.
Lambert needs to go. Thats evident. The team have no desire or motivation. The system we play isnt working with the players we have, yet we still play that system then wonder why we don't score.
But the owner is happy with this. This season is slipping away like all the others and he does nothing. Sits on his hands banging on about a level playing field, forgetting there are smaller clubs who have achieved more with less resources.
Its an utter shambles. The decline shows no sign of ending. And the air of acceptance says it all. There is no joy in supporting this club. Our owner doesn't seem to care. I'm starting to not care too.
9

bobble added 08:55 - Dec 13
make mick mills manager
1

dirtydingusmagee added 10:20 - Dec 13
Robson Wark do you not rewalise he could be the next manager ! Evans does have history.
1

dirtydingusmagee added 10:59 - Dec 13
that should be REALISE,before the Dcrew comment on spelling out of desperation to score a point .
1

Kickingblock added 11:00 - Dec 13
They only carried on from where they left off in March.
Was any other outcome on the cards?
1

Dolphinblue added 11:01 - Dec 13
Bluearmy1981 not even a fan.
#KEEPLAMBERTINFOREVER
-3

Dolphinblue added 11:03 - Dec 13
Magilton.....hounded out
Mick......hounded out
Lambert.....attempts to hound out........
Where has this left us #numbskullsneverlearn
-4

Dolphinblue added 11:10 - Dec 13
#Messagetotruefans.......Join me in my mission to keep Paul Lambert in post. Our present situation is caused by injuries and instability caused by #thenegcrew hounded out all our managers. Constant changing of managers solves nothing. We need stability, once our best players are fit will thrive under Lamberts philosiphy. Or new manager and more decline only for #thenegcrew to negin again...they have whinged since Magilton was the boss....glory hunters...#supportyourclubwhatever. COME ON SPEAK UP FOR YOUR CLUB THIS NEGATIVITY IS DESTROYING ITFC....#dont u understand there wont be a club left without saviour EVANS! GET A SEASON TICKET NOW THATS THE WAY TO SAVE OUR GREAT CLUB...SUPPORT!!!!
-5

Dockerblue added 11:12 - Dec 13
Spot on RobsonWalk, the bloke offers nothing, the second goal was just typical, Chambers missed a simple enough defensive header and for the umpteenth time the opposition score! He done the same against Plymouth, ran towards the ball and left his man unmarked and we all saw what happened next, they scored. Shocking! We have him,Ward & Judge, so called senior players and they do nothing to help all the youngsters, no encouragement or leadership, no verbal instructions, NOTHING. Hang your heads in shame at where this once great club are.
0

Dolphinblue added 11:12 - Dec 13
*philosophy
0

Dolphinblue added 11:15 - Dec 13
Oh here we go..Chambers has become a target again....Joke supporters
0

dirtydingusmagee added 12:03 - Dec 13
#eatmoredolphins , im slow, the penny has just dropped, Flipper , You ARE Marcus Evans, , you little rascal coming on here .
7

Northstandveteran added 12:31 - Dec 13
You have to feel sorry for those that attended yesterday.

How bad must their home lives be that watching that s### is their best option in the middle of a pandemic...in December...poor sods.

Can I remind those that blame the injury list that

A) We were cr@p with a full squad

B) Any players returning from injury are playing....cr@p

Yes we have stability and consistency.

Every day, week and month for the past five years we have consistently yet stably got worse.

Without any hiccups or bounces, just a continuation of granule decline.

Oh...and during and after the match, I was wearing my,
Not in the least surprised face.
11

warktheline added 12:59 - Dec 13
Whilst Evans owns this club there's only one way it's going....div 2 next stop, thereafter Conference ! No ambitious manager will want to work under his restraints , that's why McCarthy was left scratching his head, totally out of ideas, and impetus....Lambert took the job as security, with such an awful track record, who could blame him? No, I don't deny Lambert undoubtedly ‘dreamed' of success in Suffolk, but his CV stated otherwise ! ....full circle back to Evans!!!

I'm extremely grateful for our past history, something I was very privileged to have watched....and before anyone remarks ‘football has since changed!'.....I'd immediately counter that with “An informed and knowledgeable owner can singlehandedly put in place a structure from ‘top' to bottom (driven by desire and enthusiasm) which will in turn lay the ‘foundations,' at the very least, to produce a ‘competitive' football club”!.....is ‘just' being competitive to much to ask for?
8


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