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Sunderland 2-0 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Saturday, 20th Nov 2021 17:07

Town were left rueing missed chances as Sunderland struck twice late on to claim a wholly unlikely 2-0 victory at the Stadium of Light. The Blues had a number of opportunities before the Black Cats netted via Luke O’Nien on 85 and an Aiden McGeady penalty in injury time, their only shots on target, to claim the three points.

Sone Aluko replaced Wes Burns wide on the right in the only change from the team which drew 0-0 with Oxford United in League One at Portman Road a week ago.

Burns was missing from the 18 due to what’s understood to be a knock, while Kane Vincent-Young was again on the bench, having returned to the squad for Tuesday’s FA Cup victory at Oldham, along with Boundary Park goal hero Idris El Mizouni.

For Sunderland, Elliot Embleton, Nathan Broadhead and Bailey Wright came into the XI. Broadhead joined 10-goal top scorer Ross Stewart up front, while former Republic of Ireland international McGeady was on the bench.

Dennis Cirkin was absent from the squad with O’Nien at left-back and Tom Flanagan on the bench.

Town started well, Kyle Edwards overhitting a cross from the left before the Blues won a couple of early corners.

Sunderland struck the first shot of the game on four, Embleton cutting in from the right before curling an effort high and wide.

Town had largely been in control but in the 10th minute they almost played themselves into trouble in their own half of the field, however, Lee Evans dispossessed Stewart just inside the area when the situation was starting to look dangerous.

Within a minute, the Blues had threatened at the other end, Bersant Celina crossing from the right and Macauley Bonne turning a volley against a defender from eight yards.

Aluko had made a brought start, twisting and turning his way into the right of the area on a number of occasions. The Nigerian international was also making his presence known at the back, heading away a poor Embleton ball into the box after Janoi Donacien, making his 50th appearance for the Blues, had been penalised for not a lot.

On 18, Aluko won a corner on the right from which home keeper Thorben Hoffman punched away under pressure from George Edmundson, referee Tom Nield giving what looked a harsh free-kick against the Town defender.

Nield showed the first yellow card of the game to Sunderland skipper Corry Evans in the 20th minute for a late lunge at Edwards as the winger stretched his legs on halfway.

Town were continuing to have much the better of it and on 22 Edwards cut in from the left and hit a shot which cannoned against a defender.

Sunderland started to get more into the game with the home fans making themselves heard for the first time.

In the 26th minute Broadhead and Stewart exchanged passes as they broke into the box but Toto Nsiala cleared.

Town should have gone in front on the half hour when the Blues passed their way in from the left, Edwards eventually cutting across to an unmarked Celina, who scuffed his shot too close to Hoffman, who was able to pounce on it when it really should have been past him before he could react.


Sunderland were next to threaten with the Blues making a number of blocks and interceptions without Christian Walton being forced into a save. On 34 Lynden Gooch was booked for a late tackle on Bailey Clements on halfway.

Town went close to going in front again in the 36th minute when Celina was found on space on the right and sent over a cross and skipper Sam Morsy’s shot from the edge of the box deflected wide.

While the Blues were seeing most of the ball and for much of the time were looking composed, Sunderland were looking a threat whenever they got the ball in the Town half.

On 41, Stewart claimed a penalty after rather obviously throwing himself to the ground as he anticipated an Nsiala challenge coming in but referee Nield waved away his appeal.

Town were left scratching their heads how they hadn’t scored in the 41st minute when they had three bites of the cherry from Donacien’s cross. Hoffman twice blocked from Celina from eight yards, then Bonne looped a third attempt into the keeper’s arms.

Black Cats boss Lee Johnson was shown a yellow card for evidently having said something to the fourth official in the 42nd minute as his side began to put Town under some pressure in the first half’s final minutes.

The excellent Edmundson cut out crosses and headed away a number of balls, then in the final minute of scheduled time did brilliantly to get a touch on an O’Nien cross from the left and Stewart as a result was unable to make a clear contact when he looked certain to score.

As the teams went off at the break, Evans was receiving treatment on the pitch and referee Nield was booed by the home support, presumably for the penalty decision, which he appeared to have got right.

Town will have left the field feeling that they should have been in front having been on top for most of the half and with Celina having had two very decent opportunities in addition to one or two other chances.

At the other end, Sunderland had caused the Blues problems but with Edmundson outstanding, the Black Cats were yet to manage a shot on target.

Town began the second half very strongly with the Wearsiders unable to get out of their half. On 50, Donacien crossed from deep on the right and almost found Celina at the far post but a defender was just able to nod away in front of the Kosovan.

The home side started to show a little more but with their attacks coming to frustrating ends, as was audible from the home support and from manager Johnson, who kicked a ball which landed at his feet a long way back onto the field, earning an admonishing look from the referee.

In the 55th minute, Celina was booked after O’Nien took to the turf after the most minor contact between the two as they waited for the Blues to take a throw-in.

Three minutes later, Morsy shot wide after Edmundson had cut out a Sunderland attack and Edwards had tricked his way past his man and fed his captain.

Just before the hour mark, Donacien crossed from the right but just behind Bonne, whose header looped wide.

Sunderland, who had been woeful going forward since the break, introduced McGeady in the 63rd minute for Embleton. A minute later, Stewart was booked for tripping Edwards as the Blues were breaking.

There was a scare for the Blues in the 66th minute when Carl Winchester was fed in on the right of the box but Edmundson got across superbly to slide behind. The Black Cats were starting to show a threat for the first time since the break.

Town swapped Edwards, who had had a lively afternoon, and Celina, who will have been frustrated not to have found the net, for Scott Fraser and Conor Chaplin in the 69th minute.

Two minutes later, Edmundson outpaced Stewart as he chased a ball down the right channel, beat the Sunderland striker to it before nutmegging him, much to the delight of the Blues 2,000 travelling supporters.

In the 76th minute, the Wearsiders swapped skipper Evans for ex-Norwich midfielder Alex Pritchard.

The Blues had another great chance to go in front in the 78th minute when Fraser crossed from the left, Bonne and a defender battled for it and it fell to Aluko, who blazed well over, appearing to slip as he shot.

As the game moved into its final 10 minutes, Town switched Bonne for Joe Pigott and Sunderland Leon Dajaku for Broadhead.

Town were still looking much the more likely scorers and on 82 Chaplin rather wasted an opportunity after being played in in a promising position on the left of the box by Fraser.

But in the 85th minute the home side took the lead. Pritchard’s deep corner from the left looped over Walton and found O’Nien beyond the far post and his header back across goal found the net to send the Stadium of Light into raptures.

To the frustration of the Blues players and support, the goal was the Black Cats’ first attempt of the second half and their first on target all afternoon.

The goal gave the Wearsiders belief they’d not shown previously and just before the fourth official’s board indicated five additional minutes, Dajaku looped on to the bar, albeit having strayed offside.

Moments later, the Black Cats were awarded a penalty when Stewart’s shot struck Nsiala, who was standing just in front of him, and the referee somewhat harshly pointed to the spot for handball. McGeady converted from the spot to seal the three points for the home side.

Late on, a late looped effort from distance was sent wide of the Town goal with Walton not overly concerned. Seconds later the referee’s whistle ended the game with Nsiala, Pigott and Aluko all continuing to protest about the penalty with referee Nield.

A 2-0 defeat gives little impression of the game overall, the Black Cats scoring with both their shots on target in the final minutes.

Town will rue missing good chances in the first half and another opportunity, Aluko’s shot over, in a second which they had dominated until the closing stages.

On the overall balance of the game, the Blues deserved more than the draw in which the match looked likely to end but it’s goals that win games and they were the one thing missing from Town’s display.

The Blues, who have dropped to 10th, seven points off the play-offs, are next in action when Rotherham, second having beaten Cambridge 3-1 at home today, visit Portman Road on Tuesday evening.

Sunderland: Hoffmann, Winchester, Wright, Doyle, O'Nien, Evans (c) (Pritchard 76), Neil, Embleton (McGeady 63), Broadhead (Dajaku 80), Gooch, Stewart. Unused: Patterson, Flanagan, Alves, O'Brien.

Town: Walton, Donacien, Nsiala, Edmundson, Clements, Morsy (c), Evans, Aluko, Celina (Chaplin 69), Edwards (Fraser 69), Bonne (Pigott 80). Unused: Hladky, Vincent-Young, Burgess, El Mizouni. Referee: Tom Nield (West Yorkshire).


Photo: Pagepix



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ImAbeliever added 18:48 - Nov 20
Last 12:-
6 wins, 3 draws, 3 defeats…..The mark of top 4 beast.

0

Monkey_Blue added 19:04 - Nov 20
If every stat and the result were reversed wouldn't people on here feel the win was a sign of a good team? 3 points whilst not playing well? It's a sign of some sort of iron installed by cook? But it wasn't us winning so it has to be the intangible injustice.
0

RobsonWark added 19:09 - Nov 20
We should have had a player on the post, from the corner, for Sunderland's first goal. The penalty should never have been given. It wasn't deliberate handball. The player was turning away from the shot.
0

algarvefan added 19:10 - Nov 20
There was so much to admire about Town today with some quite honestly excellent performances BUT we looked impotent in the final third, the decision making was awful and we seem to want to pass it into the net at times. I think Celina should go wide left and Chaplin in the number 10 role. We have gone from scoring for fun to blankety blank.

I wouldn't do too much if I were Paul Cook maybe tweak the side, felt for Walton as he has been excellent recently and that was never a penalty in a million years, so lay off Toto.

If we lose Tuesday and are goalless again I might start to worry after all it is repeating the pattern of the past 2 seasons!!
4

SickParrot added 19:41 - Nov 20
For the fifth time this season we lost an away game we should have won. This team flatters to deceive but doesn't have a winning mentality. Can PC change that? If there are more signings in January do they then need 10 games to gel? I can't see us getting in the top 6 this season.
5

dirtydingusmagee added 19:46 - Nov 20
i said in pre match post Sunderland will get back on song and we needed 100% from the team. Well once again we've come up 10 pence short. That game showed we are not the force some believe we are. That result has pushed us back again and now even playoffs look a bridge too far. Tuesday will be another test. The ''PC TWO STEP ''continues.
5

TimmyH added 20:09 - Nov 20
@Algarvefan - that's exactly what I thought last week at Oxford in the final third, poor decision making, too much overplaying trying to do an Arsenal and pass the ball into the net and nowhere near enough composure in certain situations. Must correct you about the last 2 seasons, we were much better than this up to Xmas! (Well points wise).
0

DavoIPB added 20:20 - Nov 20
How, just how have we lost that game?

Sunderland the worst team I've seen for ages. Yet we just seemed devoid of ideas in final third of pitch. Should have won that comfortably
2

Orraman added 20:34 - Nov 20
With the quality we have in the squad we should indeed be performing better than this. As a club we are showing such a vast improvement on the last few seasons in terms of match day atmosphere and the ongoing investment in the club. As has been stated above our record at this stage of the season last season under Lambert was far better than this despite the boring, unexciting fare on show.
Unfortunately Cook is a one trick pony. His game management is pathetic and every club in the land knows what to expect when they play Ipswich. Blueboy is correct in saying it is just one Plan A manager after another. We can see at all levels, teams trying something different both before games or in game if things aren't working out but Cook only knows one way and he is just not good enough to manage a club of this stature. It is 4-2-3-1 only and for as long as we have to put up with him that is all we will ever get
6

Linkboy13 added 21:07 - Nov 20
Looks like this is turning into a season of rebuilding. Hard luck stories im afraid don't get you points. The team lacks mental toughness and will be cervially tested against Rotherham on Tuesday who have it in abundance. Don't know if Cook is the answer to our prayers but i can see more comings and goings on the player front before we can consider getting promotion.
4

USA added 21:35 - Nov 20
No plan b. Sometimes you just need a change to mix it up and make a breakthrough.
1

Marinersnose added 22:09 - Nov 20
It sounded as if we deserved to get a point but we again failed to score. Creating chances appears to be a problem and when Bonne isn't scoring we appear to lack any other goal threat. Pigott is a decent finisher but plays in a front two which Cook refuses to use so effectively he is surplus to requirements. We need more creativity and another striker who can play the loan role. Alternatively Cook could change tactics and go two up top.
3

atty added 22:17 - Nov 20
Give Bonnie a rest, play Pigott, Chaplin as 10. There's 34 goals there from last season.
1

shakytown added 22:49 - Nov 20
I know i will be slammed and downvoted for it but we were tactically outclassed today. Sunderland knew what formation we would play and countered it quite comfortably. we had chances sure but they were mostly long range efforts and Bonne was just totally isolated out of the match so posed no threat whatsoever. A one trick pony is easy to ride Mr Cook.
9

istanblue added 22:55 - Nov 20
Fail to score by missing easy chances: tick
Toto gives away a penalty again: tick
Mid-table in League One: tick
7 points off the play-offs: tick

New era, same old Ipswich
5

bobble added 00:45 - Nov 21
2 awful refs cost the wallabies and town
-3

chepstowblue added 01:51 - Nov 21
A disappointing defeat against a bog standard Sunderland team, and that final 5mins has probably kick started their season.What disappoints me the most is that we seemed more than content in the second half to settle for a 0-0 draw. They were there for the taking, but we created nothing and didnt look likely. Based on a fairly dominant first half showing we deserved something today, but a reluctance to go up a gear and move the ball quicker meant that they enjoyed a danger free second period. Aluko disappeared, Bonne hardly moved, Celina needs to be wide left and Chaplain as the ten. Edmundson once again the stand out performer. In real time I thought the pen was a cast iron cert. On second viewing on returning home it looks harsh. Damage already done by then. I fear Tuesday evening will bring more of the same. At the moment I doubt that we'll hit the consistency levels required to help atone for our slow start to the season to bridge the gap. We are nearly but not quite, and more weeks than not I'm left believing that we're not quite good enough.
5

Minneapolis_ITFC added 02:39 - Nov 21
They stole a victory, that's the sum total of it. Just hope everyone associated with or at Sunderland FC is honest enough to admit the best team lost and they got three points they barely - or didn't - deserve.

Cook favors the 4-2-3-1 deployment with Bonne spearheading attack but I and guess many others are starting to tire of it over time. If we had put an extra man or two up front to directly partner him we may just have won, but it's all hypothetical after the event.

Can't fault our players today for trying, guess they showed enough ambition and desire, however the inability to put opposition teams to the sword more than we do or convert missed opportunity on the field, once again provides a concern.

Being truthful and candid, got to imagine automatic promotion is not a viable target, I do hope it's not the minefields of the play-offs once again but in reality, that's the most plausible target for the team right now.
2

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 05:09 - Nov 21
Sorry, LordMac. That was meant to be an ”up” arrow, not a down one. In fact, I never give ”downs” so this was a mistake.
0

dirtydingusmagee added 09:21 - Nov 21
Minni i know where you are coming from, but the best team didnt lose, the team that failed to take there chances did. And its not for the first time, We have a good squad, but Cook is not getting the best from them. Cook dosnt seem to have the tactical ability to change things. Sure we have been playing more watchable football but we need better results from this squad.
6

barrystedmunds added 10:34 - Nov 21
Still not sure how we managed to grab defeat from the claws of victory. The bottom line is, you have to take your chances, the triple save from their keeper in the first half was a game changer, scored from there and I think we would have run riot. But we didn't and we come away with nowt. If we play like we did yesterday, we'll win more than we lose but I worry we are not winning enough to make sure we're in with a shout at the end of the season. COYB
0

atty added 13:18 - Nov 21
Chaplin at No.10, Celina on the left, Burns or Aluko on the right. Would prefer Bonne and Chaplin up
top, Celina, Evans,Morsy, Burns middle four, but that ain't going to happen.
1

IpswichT62OldBoy added 17:00 - Nov 21
Certainly not a penalty the other goal was very soft.
We look like we should be wining games like this, we had chances and played decent football.

I cant say I am not entertained, the peril, thrill, excitement and despair are part of it .
There is such improvement in all areas that the apathy and anger I oscillated between during the decade of no hope, no interest, no energy, are as but a dim remembering of a particularly unpleasant journey, the sort of journey that involves a 4 hour layover in Baghdad and a bus transfer.
0

blueboy1981 added 20:34 - Nov 21
Quite simply - the best is not being got from this Squad of players.
Should and must be capable of much better results.
The Jury is still out on you Mr Cook - the above has to be down to you … !!!
0

Barty added 08:18 - Nov 22
Cooks formation / tactics will not get us promotion but he has not got the ability to change things when needed.
1


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