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Burton Albion 0-1 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Saturday, 16th Jan 2021 17:07

Mark McGuinness’s first career goal saw the Blues to a hard-fought 1-0 victory against bottom club Burton Albion at the Pirelli Stadium. The centre-half nodded home a deflected Alan Judge cross in the 73rd minute following a free-kick with sub Aaron Drinan having hit the bar four minutes earlier.

Town boss Paul Lambert, who was back in the dugout but sitting on the bench for the most part, made six changes with Tomas Holy, Toto Nsiala, Flynn Downes, Teddy Bishop, Gwion Edwards and James Norwood starting XI.

Holy replaced Dai Cornell in goal with the Welshman on the bench. At the back, Nsiala came in for Luke Woolfenden, who was also among the subs, alongside McGuinness.

In midfield, Downes, a half-time sub in last week’s 3-2 home loss to Swindon, returned in the three alongside Andre Dozzell and back-from-injury Bishop ahead of them, while Judge moved to wide right.

It was the first time the all-academy trio had started a competitive match in the same midfield three having impressed in the pre-season friendly against West Ham.

Edwards, still joint-top scorer with five goals along with the still absent Jon Nolan despite having been out since November, was wide on the left with Armando Dobra not involved.

Norwood, who scored his first league goal of the season having come off the bench last week, is the central striker, while Drinan dropped to the bench alongside Oli Hawkins, back after missing out last weekend with a minor knee problem. Kayden Jackson and Emyr Huws, who both started last week, missed out on a place in the squad and both watched from the stands.

The Brewers, playing their first home game since Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink’s return as manager, made two changes with midfielder Ciaran Gilligan and striker Charles Vernam coming into the side for midfielder Colin Daniel and defender Kieran Wallace, who were both missing from the 18. Ex-Blues striker Luke Varney was among the subs.

The game kicked-off after both teams had taken a knee in support of Black Lives Matter but was stop-start in the early minutes due to injuries to Burton players. On seven Jon-Joe O’Toole was replaced by Michael Bostwick.

Neither keeper was tested in a battling first 15 minutes as the teams sought to gain control. Burton had come closest to creating a chance when Lucas Akins crossed from the right but the ball scuffed off Ryan Edwards’s head and away from goal.

Town began to see more of the ball in the Burton half as the game passed the 20-minute mark but without causing Ben Garratt in the Brewers goal a problem with an easily caught Judge cross his only involvement.

The Blues were looking forward earlier than has usually been the case with Norwood looking to make runs in behind.

On 29 Chambers was booked for a challenge on Bostwick, although having appeared to make no contact with the home substitute who had leapt somewhat dramatically in the air.

Four minutes later, Vernam broke towards the byline on the left of the box and Nsiala slid in the divert behind. The Burton man required treatment before continuing.


Town continued to see most of the ball and on 38 Edwards, lively on his return, crossed from the left but was unable to find a team-mate.

The Blues eventually won a corner from which Nsiala rose highest but was unable to get enough on the ball to send it towards goal due to a foul, according to the centre-half. Referee Neil Hair wasn’t interested.

Burton skipper John Brayford appealed that he’d been fouled by Dozzell as a subsequent corner looped past him at the other end but again the official paid no heed to the appeals.

Burton should have gone ahead in the 44th minute when Ryan Edwards’s deflected cross looped over Holy, struck the bar and fell to Vernam, who seemed certain to score until Blues skipper Chambers threw himself into the path of his effort at goal to divert it behind.

After three additional minutes referee Hair brought a scruffy half in which chances had been very rare at both ends.

The standout opportunity - in truth the only clear-cut chance - was Vernam’s at the end which Chambers had blocked superbly.

The Blues had failed to give home keeper Garratt anything to do with one or two crosses from either flank and Nsiala’s header their most dangerous moments.

Town had, however, been less ponderous in possession than in recent games with more of the match being played in the opposition half, while Chambers and Nsiala had often looked to play early balls forward for Norwood to chase.

Returning trio Edwards, Downes and Bishop had shown glimpses of their best form but without having been able to hurt the opposition.

Five minutes after the restart Edwards almost sent Norwood away on the break, however, a Burton toe cut out the Welshman’s pass as Town counter-attacked with the home side having started the second half positively.

In the 55th minute Norwood was booked for coming back on to the field having been treated for an injury without being waved on, although the striker claimed, somewhat vociferously, that the fourth official had told him to go on.

Town began to start showing some threat, a neat interchange on the right involving Dozzell and Bishop saw Judge into space but the Irishman’s cross was blocked. Moments later, Norwood was swapped for Drinan.

The game was beginning to get a little more open and just after the hour mark, Joe Powell played in Akins, who tried to round Holy, however the Czech stuck out one of his long legs to take the ball away from the striker. From the resultant corner, Brayford was booked for a dive having again claimed a penalty after a tangle with Dozzell.

The Burton skipper shot well wide from 20 yards in the 64th minute with the Brewers having been the better side in the second half.

Town went very close to going in front in the 67th minute. Chambers turned away from his man on the right in the aftermath of a Dozzell corner from the left which like too many of Town’s flag-kicks had hit the first man. The skipper’s cross was flicked on by Bishop and Drinan looped a header over Garratt but off the bar and behind. The Blues were beginning to look the more threatening of the two teams.

On 71, Judge was found as he broke towards the byline by Chambers’s throw but the former Irish international’s cross failed to find a Town player.

A minute later, Hawkins took over from Bishop, who will have been happy enough with his return, having just won a free-kick just outside the area to the left.

And when play restarted, the Blues took the lead. Dozzell tapped the ball back to Judge from the free-kick, his cross caught a Burton foot on its way and McGuinness nodded his first senior goal past Garratt and into the net.

The Blues had begun to get on top after making a slow start to the second half, although the goal was their first shot on target.

Owen Gallacher was booked for a foul on Judge on the right in the 76th minute and from the free-kick the Blues went close to a second. The unlucky Drinan, who is still to score a senior goal for Town, stooped to head goalwards by Garratt somehow bundled it away.

Burton switched Powell and Vernam for new signings Sean Clare and Josh Parker, then on 79 Town replaced Edwards with Freddie Sears.

There was a scare for the Blues seconds later when the otherwise solid Nsiala inadvertently mis-kicked a cross from the left towards his own goal but Holy, who like Garratt had had a quiet afternoon, quickly got down to his left to save.

Sub Parker should have done better in the 81st minute when Akins pulled the ball back from the left but the debutant frontman blazed over from just inside the area.

Dozzell was booked for a cynical foul on Akins in the 83rd minute as Burton looked to get forward, then two minutes later Drinan joined him for a foul on Gallacher, who needed to be replaced by Indiana Vassilev having suffered a knock in the challenge.

Town saw out the final scheduled minutes and an additional four without much trouble to confirm a hard-fought three points.

The game was far from a free-flowing classic and Burton will rue not taking their chance just before half-time.

The Brewers began the second half strongly but Town, who were far from brilliant, gradually began to take control and were starting to look the more threatening side, Drinan having hit the bar, when McGuinness reacted quickest to the deflection on Judge’s cross to head into the net.

The win, completing the Blues' first double of the season, sees Town move up a place to seventh, one point behind Charlton in sixth with two games in hand with the Addicks on the same points as fifth-placed Peterborough and Doncaster in fourth with Posh having played the same as Town and Rovers one fewer.

Next up for the Blues are back-to-back home matches against Peterborough next Saturday and Sunderland the following Tuesday.

Burton: Garratt, Brayford (c), Edwards, Powell (Clare 76), Hemmings, Akins, Carter, Vernam (Parker 76), O’Toole (Bostwick 7,) Gallacher (Vassilev 86), Gilligan. Unused: O'Hara, Varney, Hart.

Ipswich: Holy, Chambers (c), Nsiala, McGuinness, Ward, Dozzell, Downes, Bishop (Hawkins 72), Judge, Edwards (Sears 79), Norwood (Drinan 59). Unused: Cornell, Woolfenden, Kenlock, Lankester, Sears. Referee: Neil Hair (Cambridgeshire).


Photo: Pagepix



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Michael101 added 17:30 - Jan 16
Well done Ipswich ,the last few days I hadn't had a good nights sleep but after 5mins I was sound asleep many thanks.
6

BeattiesBackPocket added 17:30 - Jan 16
That's probably our strongest side and we still only labour to a 1-0 win with our first shot on target taking 70 odd minutes against the bottom team. 16th in form table and unless we can finally beat a team in top 8 we will get beat next week we just don't score enough goals. The squad may be big but it's nowhere near good enough, the owner doesn't care tells everyone 'be careful what you wish for' when fans want lambert out. If we went up we have 3/4 players who could cut it in the championship so major investment would be needed and our owner is not prepared to do that simple he's sold our next players off and bought in league two and one players and this is where we're going. We cannot beat anyone top 8 over two seasons so this result HAS papered over enormous cracks for me and people go on about the playoffs but again without being able to beat anyone top 8 how do we negotiate the play offs.
A wins a win but let's get some perspective bottom team and 70 mins to register a shot with one striker!
8

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 17:33 - Jan 16
At least we didn't play 70% of the match in our own half. Not brilliant by any means, but better. Surely two up front is what's needed. Norwood had no support first half, but Drinan AND Hawkins was ok-ish. Norwood should be one of the two if he's fit. Next two matches will be key. I don't think we have the quality to win or even draw them, but I live in hope. Maybe our returnees will up their games after today's warm-up and suurpise us all.
8

therein61 added 17:34 - Jan 16
Be interesting to see how he sets up for 2 difficult games(they shouldn't be but then we have Lambert) after just saving his neck today,
At least it's 3 points which keeps us in the mix but something off the park has to change and P.D.Q motivation and tactics wise.
2

Orraman added 17:36 - Jan 16
For weeks we've had people moaning on here about the slow possession game getting us nowhere. Tonight we win a scrappy game and now there are people moaning about too much hoofball. Why don't you just accept the 1 - 0 win and be content if just for one night.
I remember the long distant Premier games when our 1 - 0 to the Tractor Boys chant was heard week after week. I'll happily take more of this if we keep on accumulating points
0

muhrensleftfoot added 17:36 - Jan 16
Whatever Lambert says that was awful to watch. Yes a welcome 3 points but let's not kid ourselves. Dreadful. How the incoherent incompetent Lambert can in all decency stay in the job, only highlights Evans' lack of understanding of running a football club.
11

Lathers added 17:36 - Jan 16
A scrappy, narrow win as many predicted against woeful opposition. The pitch looked awful tbf, but it was like watching park football. Great to see Bish, Edwards and Downes start although understandably none of them looked that sharp. We just don't create enough chances and until Lambert plays 2 up front we won't improve.
4

therein61 added 17:37 - Jan 16
Oh and by the way congrats to the many who forecasted the Wolf being benched today after his comments a few days ago just shows what a petulant manager we have.
10

TimmyH added 17:38 - Jan 16
The fixture list (pile up) in late January through to March looks ridiculous! 2 games a week for 2 months or so...surprised we're not playing mid-week - I wonder how many players we'll have left standing after that lot, knowing what we're like?
2

stiggytrunk1955 added 17:40 - Jan 16
sane crap different match
2

Gforce added 17:40 - Jan 16
Great to get the win today, but I'm afraid I can't see us getting anything out of the next two games. Peterborough totally outplayed us last season and it wouldn't surprise me at all if the same happens again,Johnson Clarke Harris is bound to score. As for Sunderland they are unbeaten away all season, I just don't think we'll have the guile or quality to break them down. They seem to be improving rapidly under Lee Johnson and had a comfortable away win today.
Lose those two and we're back to square one in around 10th place.
Hope I end up totally wrong of course.
3

d77sgw added 17:40 - Jan 16
Three observations: 1) Our results with Holy in goal are far far better - does he organise the defence better? This season and last it's noticeable that our results dipped (even if performances before were poor) when we dropped him. 2) despite their detractors Chambers And Nsiala earned us that 3 points today - real bodies on the line defending 3) yet again, performance improves when we have 2 up front. Get Hawkins and Norwood in the same team and we might yet have a chance
2

BcarefulwhatUWish4 added 17:44 - Jan 16
Not great but better than the Swindon game. We got the 3 points and that's what's important.

We are in a reasonably good position both in the table and the PPG table. 7th in both. Behind Charlton in one and Accrington in the other. Lots to play for. Let's see how this team does the next few games.
2

casanovacrow added 17:46 - Jan 16
too many 1 dimensional players.
0

Ipswichbusiness added 17:51 - Jan 16
Apparently I am a “master statistician”. Therefore, I would observe that the result leaves us in seventh place with 35 points after 20 games. By contrast, Hull are in second place having played 21 games and amassed 39 points. According, if we win our game in hand and the other results go our way, we could be one place behind Hull.

I now await being told that this is “infuriating” and, whatever the numbers say, we are bottom of the league.
0

jonbull88 added 17:52 - Jan 16
Lambert out!
4

billys_boots added 17:52 - Jan 16
Not impressive but a small step in the right direction. Hopefully this is the start of a continuously improving run, with stability and positivity, to provide a launch pad for the second half of the season. Or it might just be 3 points scraped against the league's worst side. Glass half full?
0

Elizabeth added 17:58 - Jan 16
Don't really know where to start .. apart from the obvious winning the game by a narrow margin this was an utterly dire performance .. so many players not controlling the ball . keeping possession or knowing what they're supposed to be doing ... what the hell is going on in training ? Too many changes again .. a complete mish mash ! Next game is Peterborough , let's hope that we can improve by then .. there seems to be unrest in the club going by the body language of certain players . It is a difficult time for everyone and football can lift people's spirits .. so please , please wear the shirt with pride and make us proud to support this great club !
7

bluedispare added 18:03 - Jan 16
Player coaching needs to improve.
1

LWNR2013 added 18:03 - Jan 16
Young on loan full back heads on from a deflected cross ....
0

ThaiBlue added 18:04 - Jan 16
Remember we are not a great team at the moment so lets take the 3pts and move on.fair play to chambers and nisala thought they were very good.
0

ringwoodblue added 18:10 - Jan 16
I keep hoping for a reaction from the players and a noticeable improvement in performance but it never comes.

If we play the same in our next two matches as we have in the last two, then sorry we will get hammered!
2

BettyBlue added 18:12 - Jan 16
Zero shots on target, three points, Lambert rescued.

Doesn't get much worse than that.

Lambert OUT NOW
5

Timefliesbyintheblue added 18:12 - Jan 16
Anyone that believes Woolfenden was dropped for his comments rather than his performances, is so biased as to be totally blinkered.
Today was not good; we deserved to win because of the pressure we exerted in the 15 minutes before the goal. Nsiala was man of the match and once again a Chambers block saved a certain goal. Hawkins coming on as substitute before the kick was taken caused sufficient turmoil in their defense, for it to open up and give McGuinness his chance.
Unless we improve quickly and drastically, the play offs is our biggest hope.
I still think to sack the manager now would be bad timing, although accept the opinions of those that think otherwise.
It is the personal and cowardly abuse towards Lambert and/or Evans that I disagree with however frustrated and angry I get about my team.
Have a good week end one and all, even those that disagree with me..
0

ntoms97 added 18:14 - Jan 16
Shock as we keep a clean sheet when Holy is back in goal. Hopefully we've seen the last of Cornell for a while! Now all we need is Lambert to get dropped too!
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