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Ipswich Town 1-2 West Ham U21s - Match Report
Tuesday, 14th Sep 2021 21:45

Ipswich Town’s wait for a win continues after a late Armstrong Okoflex penalty saw West Ham’s U21s to a 2-1 victory in their opening Papa John’s Trophy tie of the season at Portman Road. James Norwood gave the Blues the lead in the second minute but Keenan Appiah-Forson levelled for the Hammers’ youngsters on 12. With a minute left on the clock, keeper Tomas Holy conceded a penalty which Okoflex converted, before the visitors were reduced to 10 men in injury time when Pierre Ekwah was dismissed for a second yellow card.

Town boss Paul Cook made 10 changes from the weekend 5-2 loss to Bolton on Saturday with Sam Morsy skippering on his debut and young centre-half Albie Armin handed his senior bow.

Holy was in goal with Kane Vincent-Young - the only player to have started against the Trotters but who lasted only 21 minutes before being subbed - at right-back and Matt Penney on the left.

Luke Woolfenden and Armin were the centre-halves with Morsy and Tom Carroll - making his first Town start - in the middle of midfield.

Idris El Mizouni made his second start of the season in the number 10 role with Louis Barry on the left and Kayden Jackson the right with Norwood the lone out-and-out striker.

Jon Nolan was among the subs for the first time this season, while youngsters Cameron Humphreys, Zanda Siziba and Elkan Baggott were also on the bench.

After both teams taking the knee had been warmly applauded, the game got under way in steady drizzle.

And Town went in front in only the second minute via the first attack of the game. After good work from El Mizouni on the left, Penney drove towards the area and fed Vincent-Young breaking on the right.

The former Colchester man cut inside to Carroll, who looped into the area. Norwood appeared to get a flick on it causing West Ham keeper Kristian Hegyi to mishandle and the Blues striker stabbed in his first goal of the season.

Town continued their bright start and on seven Vincent-Young crossed for Norwood from the right but the Blues’ number 10 was already through his shot when the ball arrived and it bounced off him for a goalkick.

West Ham threatened for the first time in ninth minute when Daniel Chesters was sent away down the right behind Penney but Woolfenden did well to get across to cut out his low ball into the area.

That attack proved to be a sign of things to come and in the 12th minute the visitors levelled. The ball was neatly worked in from the left with Town failing to put in a serious challenge and Appiah-Forson shot across Tomas Holy and into the net. The Czech keeper got his right hand on it and will feel he probably should have kept it out.

In the 22nd minute Hammers skipper Ajibola Alese was booked for felling Norwood after the goalscorer had successfully chased a long Jackson ball down the right.

The visitors almost created a second in the 24th minute when Okoflex sent a dangerous ball across the six-yard area which the shaky Holy allowed beyond him but with no Hammers player there to add the final touch.


The Blues, whose performance had drifted after their bright start, began to show more of a threat and on 28 Jackson crossed low from the right but Norwood was unable to turn towards goal at the near post and it was cleared ahead of Barry behind him.

A minute later, Jackson shot first against Norwood and then over the bar from some distance out.

Just after the half-hour, Kamarai Swyer was played in on the left of the box and hit a shot which Holy was forced to palm behind.

On 35, Norwood took down a long ball forward from Woolfenden and fed Jackson breaking on the right. The former Accrington man sent it low across the six-yard area but too far in front of Norwood and Barry. Five minutes later, Norwood flicked a Carroll free-kick from the left wide, Penney having been fouled.

As half-time approached, the Blues were well in control, passing the ball around confidently with Carroll and Morsy at the centre of things, although without creating another chance.

During two minutes of injury time El Mizouni was booked for a foul on Harrison Ashby, the Tunisia international’s second transgression of the night.

Town had got off to the ideal start via Norwood’s early goal and might well have scored again in the opening minutes, however, once again they quickly allowed the opposition to get back into it, although from a West Ham perspective it was a well worked goal.

Both sides had one or two opportunities to go in front after that - Norwood had looked dangerous throughout - with the Blues finishing the half in a controlled manner with experienced midfield pair Carroll and Morsy increasing in influence.

Three minutes after the restart, Okoflex was booked for a foul on Vincent-Young as the right-back broke forward at pace into the West Ham half.

In the 54th minute Jackson underwent treatment for what looked to be an ankle injury but after treatment was able to continue. Ekwah picked up a yellow card for the challenge that led to his knock.

Two minutes later, Barry, who had had a frustrating evening, robbed Jamal Baptiste and burst down the left and into the area. However, he was outmuscled as he looked for space to cross and his claims that he had been fouled fell on deaf ears.

Jackson succumbed to his injury in the 57th minute and Conor Chaplin took over playing in the number 10 role with El Mizouni moving out to the right.

Chaplin quickly got involved around the edge of the area but was unable to carve out an opportunity. On the hour mark Penney shot not too far wide from just outside the area on the left.

The Blues began to play the controlled football of the latter period of the first half, then in the 67th minute Barry was replaced by Zanda Siziba, among those to have impressed for the U23s this season.

On 70, following a long spell of Town possession, Vincent-Young crossed from the right just in front of Norwood with keeper Hegyi failing to hold onto it, however, the linesman’s flag was raised.

Soon after, the Blues played themselves into trouble midway inside their own half on their right and eventually Woolfenden was forced to stab away from Okoflex for a West Ham corner.

The Hammers thought they’d scored from the flag-kick, Holy mishandling it goalwards and appeared very fortunate that referee Charles Breakspear and his linesman didn’t adjudge it to have crossed the line, much to the frustration of the visitors.

Having grabbed hold of the ball, and with the Hammers protesting that they had scored, the Czech keeper threw it long for Chaplin to chase into the West Ham half. The former Barnsley man rode a tackle and fed Siziba who had joined him in breaking forward and the youngster looked to be tripped as tried to take the ball between defenders as he sought to find himself space to shoot. Referee Breakspear waved away the Town protests.

The incidents at both ends livened up what had been a dreary half and woke the previously soporific crowd up. Moments later, Siziba headed over at the near post from Norwood’s right-wing cross. Soon after, El Mizouni was swapped for Joe Pigott.

After Pigott had shot deep into the Sir Alf Ramsey Stand from distance, Morsy, currently serving a three-match ban which covers league games for a sending off in his final Middlesbrough match, was shown the first yellow card of his Town career for a foul.

From the free-kick, the visitors were awarded a penalty with a minute left on the clock. The ball was floated into the area, Baptiste headed wide but was sent flying by Holy’s late punch. Referee Breakspear pointed straight to the spot and Okoflex confidently sent the ball into the corner of the net to give the young Hammers the lead.

The visitors were reduced to 10 men in injury time when the already booked Ekwah dived in at Siziba’s ankles and was shown a second yellow card.

The Blues desperately went looking for an equaliser in the remaining minutes, Penney hitting a shot which deflected behind, moments before the final whistle confirmed defeat to an U21 side for the second time in two seasons.

Once again Town got their noses in front but let their opposition back into the match soon after going in front.

Again they were made to pay for an individual error at the last, Holy, who earlier looked to have conceded an own goal, arriving late to punch clear and taking out Baptiste.

Town’s second-half display had lacked urgency up to that point but it came too late to prevent a second embarrassing result of the week.

The Blues travel to Lincoln - far from a happy hunting ground in recent seasons - on Saturday as they continue to look for a first victory of the season.

Town: Holy, Vincent-Young, Woolfenden, Armin, Penney, Morsy (c), Carroll, Jackson (Chaplin 57), El Mizouni (Pigott 78), Barry (Siziba 67), Norwood. Unused: Hladky, Baggott, Humphreys, Nolan.

West Ham U21: Hegyi, Okoflex, Alese (c), Ekwah, Ashby, Chesters (Rosa 88), Laing, Longelo, Swyer (Perkins 71), Appiah-Forson, Baptiste. Unused: Kinnear, Dju, Diallo, Forbes, Casey. Referee: Charles Breakspear (Surrey). Att: 4,231 (West Ham: 150).


Photo: Matchday Images



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Monkey_Blue added 21:56 - Sep 14
Cook has said we can't judge him on last season. So he prefers to be judged on no wins in 8 rather than 4 wins in 24? He said actually we should judge him after the Wycombe game which actually became the Bolton game. He bragged it would be a strong side, so what's the excuses list going to contain tonight?
20

midastouch added 21:56 - Sep 14
Sounded hopeless on the radio! It's getting harder and harder to keep the faith with Cook as we seem all over the place! Another very disjointed sounding display which isn't actually a huge surprise given the manager keeps tinkering and changing the team around so much. I've got no idea what our best team would be now and it's clear neither has Cook!
20

DavoIPB added 21:58 - Sep 14
That was not a strong side. If you need a win put out your first choice team and get a win. If that was our first choice team then we are going down. We kept the ball well and were a much better side than west ham but had not idea what to do with the ball when we got near the goal. League two strikers on the pitch and a left back who can't go past people. A right back who is still obviously carrying an injury a very poor goal keeper which all results in losing a game.
9

DavoIPB added 21:58 - Sep 14
That was not a strong side. If you need a win put out your first choice team and get a win. If that was our first choice team then we are going down. We kept the ball well and were a much better side than west ham but had not idea what to do with the ball when we got near the goal. League two strikers on the pitch and a left back who can't go past people. A right back who is still obviously carrying an injury a very poor goal keeper which all results in losing a game.
1

Pezzer added 21:59 - Sep 14
Unfortunately football has moved on, Cook is stuck in the past.
12

dirtydingusmagee added 21:59 - Sep 14
Cook is embarrassing he has to go, this is the lowest point ever for the club now and dosnt look like getting any better with him in charge, REALLY REALLY PIZZA'D OFF NOW .
13

WalkRules added 22:00 - Sep 14
As much as I want Cook to work out I think that the time has come. Please can our owners sort this out.
16

alliedaz added 22:02 - Sep 14
I go to nearly every game, I put myself through the pain, why can't you try and stick to 11 players?? Maybe we got to many new players, not many managers get given so long, best you sort it out cook or you will be gone
0

dirtydingusmagee added 22:03 - Sep 14
Instead of prancing onto the pitch in self adulation Cook should crawl out with a carrier bag over his head , HANG YOUR HEAD COOK .
13

PortmanTerrorist added 22:03 - Sep 14
Manager was in self preservation mode on Saturday. How is he going to unwind his pre match drivel this time. Either the players are not being coached or they cannot/will not take instruction from PC. Either way it's a disaster. We need to stop allowing him to play the need more time routine, it does not wash anymore.

Immediate results from Sat or jog on. Burley and butcher will sort this in no time and create a succession plan with Dyer.....why not@
5

Karlosfandangal added 22:03 - Sep 14
Fed up of hearing how strong a squared we have, Why Walton Edmunson and Burgess were not playing as they look the ones who will play plus Mosey and Carroll could get a feel how the back line would play with them
7

Bezzer added 22:04 - Sep 14
We need to play a strong 4-4-2 formation! Two out and out wingers and defenders who can defend! I think the personnel is there, need a manager like Eddie Howe to make it happen!!
2

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 22:05 - Sep 14
Have we actually got too many "good" players but without any obvious first eleven? You could play all manner of combinations of the players we have and expect them to be the team that starts. Maybe it's better to have an established starting line-up and then a few youngsters and back-ups who wouldn't normally start but would be really motivated to perform if they happened to get the chance through injury or because of the nature of the tournament. I can see motivation dropping off if we are always making changes and not playing players who probably rather expected to be a part of the action. I accept changes for tonight's match as it's not the league, and that's when you can experiment. But who will start on Saturday? It could almost be anybody, and that's surely confusing for the fans and the personnel (Morsy excepted).
0

Drifter3012 added 22:05 - Sep 14
Advert in every American newspaper tomorrow.
"One English soccer club for sale. Will take offers.
Sold as seen."
Gamechanger 2020.
2

richardpaul added 22:05 - Sep 14
Made my point on previous report Thoroughly peed off with this Cook needs to take a back seat and change his name to George Fred or Jim anything but Paul because that name hasn't been a good one for the Town
0

surgery added 22:05 - Sep 14
Where the hell are the Yanks? You couldn't keep them off here before the season started
2

BobbyBell added 22:05 - Sep 14
Can we cancel the match on Saturday please as we are going to get well and truly stuffed.
3

timkatieadamitfc added 22:06 - Sep 14
4:2:3:1 is clearly not working and will ultimately cost him his job as it appears he seems unable to do anything else, with no plan b an option when it inevitably goes tits up
7

SheptonMalletBlue added 22:07 - Sep 14
Cuckold out!!
0

bluesince76 added 22:08 - Sep 14
This is not acceptable it's not happening for cook I would make the change now while there's still time to salvage something from this season we played brilliant football under burley and isn't he living in Ipswich just a thought.
1

ITFCOYB added 22:08 - Sep 14
We've been undone again by a couple of mistakes here. But overall a pretty telling reflection on where we are at. Several decent players and some genuine quality coming through, but can't buy a win, can't catch a break, and arguably don't deserve much more than we're getting. Carol was awful. Holy was awful. El Miz, who I have liked when I've seen previously was poor. KVY a shadow of his former self. Wolfy good, Armie looks a super player, lovely feet, great reading of the game. Chaplin looked great when he came on. Morsy looks very solid and a good buy. Norwood deserves great credit for endeavor, without really troubling the centre backs. Penny okay, but not offering much. Jackson okay without offering much. Siziba looks a prospect.

We need a win or two and I think it will all start coming together. We'll see.

West Ham kids, for their part looked really solid at the back, physical and organised - dangerous on the break too. Gutting to be turned over by kids, but they deserved to still be in the game, and ultimateky took their chance to pinch it.

Ipswich aren't getting outplayed from what I've seen this season and I'd still rather watch us playing this brand of football than the rubbish we've been served for the past ten years or so, and I believe the results will come.

Coyb
-11

BlueRuin69 added 22:08 - Sep 14
Look at the above picture...even Cook doesnt believe anymore. We are the laughing stock of football. Get this Clown out of my club!
12

Drifter3012 added 22:09 - Sep 14
Rotherham had 26 shots tonight against Lincoln, 8 on target and only scored 1.
Work out our chances of a first win.
2

algarvefan added 22:09 - Sep 14
Why did he say say he was fielding a strong side tonight, because he didn't, I would have picked the same team as Saturday and sent them out to redeem themselves tonight after the farce against Bolton. I want to support Cook but we are making no progress.

I will never understand Holy's selection either, the man is a disaster waiting to happen every game.
8

carlgibbs13 added 22:09 - Sep 14
That header picture says it all. Hang your head in shame Cook, as this is now embarrassing.
11


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