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Ipswich Town 0-1 Colchester United - Match Report
Tuesday, 9th Aug 2022 21:50

Town’s Carabao Cup involvement ended at the first round stage after Luke Hannant’s 29th-minute goal saw Colchester United to a 1-0 victory at Portman Road. The Blues dominated and had plenty of chances to score in the first half, but a Rekeem Harper error gifted Hannant the U’s goal and the Blues laboured after the break as the U’s won at Portman Road for the first time since October 1951.

Town boss Kieran McKenna made the expected wholesale changes with only Cameron Burgess remaining from Saturday’s 2-1 win at Forest Green Rovers.

Vaclav Hladky was in goal with former U’s defender Kane Vincent-Young on the right of the back three with Luke Woolfenden returning in the centre having been ill at the weekend with Burgess on the left.

Kyle Edwards and Greg Leigh were the wing-backs with Cameron Humphreys and Harper in the centre of the midfield.

Sone Aluko, who skippered, and Tyreece John-Jules started behind lone striker Kayden Jackson.

For Colchester, ex-Blues Luke Chambers, who captained, Cole Skuse, Tom Eastman and Frank Nouble were all in the starting line-up.

The U’s, whose head coach is former Town defender Wayne Brown, made four changes from the team which drew 1-1 with Carlisle on Saturday, while three players were making first starts. Tommy Smith and Emyr Huws were out injured, while Freddie Sears appeared to pick up a knock on Saturday and Alan Judge is understood to have been rested.

Ahead of kick-off both teams - other than Aluko - took a knee to applause from the sparse crowd with the upper tiers of the Sir Bobby and Sir Alf stands closed.

Aluko created the evening’s first opportunity, playing a low ball in for Humphreys but the young midfielder scuffed his shot through to visiting keeper Sam Hornby.

On three, wing-back Leigh was found on the left of the box but he similarly failed to make significant contact and Hornby claimed.

Town dominated the early stages with Colchester unable to get out of their penalty area with the Blues’ centre-halves sitting midway inside the visitors’ half.

On seven, Harper crossed towards the back post but a Colchester defender dived to head away in front of Leigh, then a minute later the former Morecambe man cut in and hit a shot which wasn’t enough to trouble Hornby.

The Blues continued to have all the possession and in the 14th minute, following a free-kick, Humphreys smashed a shot which sent Ossama Ashley sprawling.

The Town pressure dropped in its intensity as the game reached the 20-minute, although with the Blues still well on top. On 21 a headed clearance fell to John-Jules, who sent a volley well into the stand.

Three minutes later, the on-loan Arsenal man sought to sweep a low near-post corner goalwards but only found the side-netting.


Town should have taken the lead in the 26th minute when Aluko played in Edwards with a clever ball to the right of the area and the former West Brom man cut it back to Humphreys, who seemed destined to score his first senior goal but blazed over from 12 yards.

Two minutes later, having spent virtually no time in the Town half let alone the penalty area, the U’s went ahead following a catastrophic mix-up in the Blues’ defence.

Harper played a pass into his own area from the right between Burgess and Leigh and Hannant gleefully seized upon it and smashed past a startled Hladky to give the visitors an unlikely lead.

On 35, the game was held up after a smoke bomb was thrown on to the pitch by Colchester supporters, the second of the evening following one at kick-off.

The Colchester goal and its manner appeared to discombobulate the Blues and give the U’s confidence.

In the 38th minute, former Blues midfielder Skuse was shown the game’s first yellow card for a foul on Harper.

From the free-kick, Town, who had got back on top although while still a little nervy with John-Jules now down the centre having swapped with Jackson, created a chance, Humphreys crossing from the left but Vincent-Young was unable to keep his header down.

On 40, Humphreys had another great opportunity, the youngster having been picked out by Vincent-Young just beyond the penalty spot but the academy product scraped his shot wide. The 18-year-old, playing the Sam Morsy role in central midfield, had got into some excellent positions throughout the half but had been unable to take his chances.

Town were unable to threaten again before referee Sam Purkiss blew his whistle. The Blues had dominated almost from start to finish and had created plenty of opportunities but had been unable to take them, the best having fallen to the otherwise excellent Humphreys.

Colchester’s goal came from their only chance of the half, Hannant making the most of Harper’s sloppy pass across his own area. Having been knocked out of their rhythm after conceding, the Blues restored their control but still with an element of nervousness about their play.

Town began their second half search for an equaliser, Aluko hitting a shot into a defender in the 52nd minute, then Edwards winning a corner on the right.

From the flag-kick, keeper Hornby failed to claim when in a crowd of players, the ball falling loose to John-Jules, who shot over. It was another very good opportunity for Town.

The Blues continued to dominate against a U’s side happy to sit back on their lead, and continued to win corners on the right but still without finding the net.

Colchester made their first change in the 57th minute, Ashley taking an age to make his way off and eventually picking up a yellow card for time-wasting. Ryan Clampin replaced him.

Two minutes later, a corner, this time from the left, fell to Jackson with the striker having his back to goal but the former Accrington man could only manage to loop to Hornby on the turn.

Town went close on 63 when John-Jules took down a long pass, then sent over a low ball and Al-Amin Kazeem, making his first senior start, prevented Edwards, who was breaking in from the right, from managing a clean effort at goal and Hornby saved down to his left.

Hornby was in action again two minutes later blocking Aluko’s low curled 25-yard free-kick following a foul on John-Jules.

The U’s swapped Skuse, who was warmly applauded off by his old fans, for Cameron Coxe in the 68th minute, then two minutes later, Town made a quadruple substitution with Lee Evans taking over from Harper, Wes Burns replacing Vincent-Young, Conor Chaplin coming on for Jackson and Harness for Aluko.

Harness went close immediately, the former Pompey man bundling a corner from the left, Town’s 11th of the evening, wide off a defender with the U’s, led by former Town skipper Chambers, maintaining a robust defence of their lead.

On 77 goalscorer Hannant was booked for a dive as he lost the ball to Evans, then within a minute Junior Tchamadeu joined him for wasting time at a throw-in.

Chaplin went wide with a bicycle kick on 79, then Leigh was let down by a heavy first touch as the ball fell to him in the area with the left wing-back the furthest man forward but Town were struggling to work themselves clear-cut chances against the resolute Colchester defence.

Town switched Humphreys for Idris El Mizouni in the 84th minute as the U’s made a double change, Kazeem and Nouble for Samson Tovide and John Akinde.

Eastman blocked a Chaplin’s shot from the edge of the area before the fourth official’s board indicated five additional minutes.

Town huffed and puffed but could find little rhythm with the game stopping regularly as Colchester players took the turf and a fan briefly ran onto the field.

Evans struck a powerful shot but too close to Hornby and Town were unable to create another opportunity before the referee’s whistle sent the visiting fans wild.

The Blues had dominated possession in the second half but had only really created one clear-cut chance, John-Jules’s effort over following a corner, despite all their pressure with the Colchester backline putting in a determined and ultimately successful effort to record their first win at Portman Road since October 1951.

After celebrating with his current fans, former Blues captain Chambers applauded his old supporters, a gesture which was reciprocated.

Town really should have had the game won in the first half having created numerous opportunities but failed to test Hornby significantly let alone find the net, while gifting the U's their goal, their only shot on target all night.

The result, the worst of Kieran McKenna's time in charge in his first cup tie at Town, ends the Blues’ involvement in the Carabao Cup at an early stage having lost to opposition from a lower league for hardly the first time over the last 20 years, Newport County having beaten Town last year by the same scoreline.

Town will be looking for a far better outcome when they face the MK Dons at Portman Road in League One on Saturday.

Town: Hladky, Vincent-Young (Burns 70), Woolfenden, Burgess, Edwards, Humphreys (El Mizouni 84), Harper (Evans 70), Leigh, Aluko (c) (Harness 70), John-Jules, Jackson (Chaplin 70). Unused: Hayes, Edmundson, Donacien, Penney.

Colchester: Hornby, Chambers (c), Hannant, Skuse (Coxe 68), Chilvers, Ashley (Clampin 57), Eastman, Tchamadeu, Kazeem (Tovide 85), Miranda, Nouble (Akinde 85). Unused: Collins, Dallinson, Newby, Coxe. Referee: Sam Purkiss (Surrey). Att: 11,654 (Colchester: 1,447).


Photo: Matchday Images



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Nomore4 added 23:01 - Aug 9
As a season ticket holder in lower North…..tonight made a change sitting in the upper Pioneer.
The digital screens look great and the new screen in the corner I could read unlike the Bolton game.
I was very impressed with Col Utd left back…there best player by some distance.
As for Jackson….best we get another attacker ASAP. Especially considering Jackson was supposed up for this game among old mates….A L2 striker was and still is.
5

Nomore4 added 23:05 - Aug 9
Is Harper actually a professional footballer?
4

hyperbrit added 23:08 - Aug 9
Is someone sticking pins in a Town doll somewhere 'cause it's getting to be a curse at this point..what did McK say about sports psychologists? A real striker might break the spell at this point.
4

RobsonWark added 23:19 - Aug 9
The best striker we had was Norwood. We should have given him a new contract! Instead we kept Jackson...
3

budgieplucker added 23:33 - Aug 9
With petrol, 2 tickets (I paid for my partner) and 2 cups of tea exorbitantly priced (and tasting overwhelmingly of limescale) that was not far short of costing another £50. 11,000 was an exceptionally good crowd. It's not surprising that probably many of those who didn't go call it the Mickey Mouse cup and feel smug that they didn't get stung for some more hard earn cash.

The Carabao Cup is a decent competition and should be treated with respect as indeed the fans who turn out to support the club. The EFL Trophy maybe can be seen as more an experimental competition, but to deny your supporters a potential evening out against a premier club or like Burton a couple of seasons ago a semi final against Manchester City deserves a much better attitude to the competition.

Paul Cook didn't get a free pass from me last year when we went out to Newport, and neither is KMcK going to get a free pass from me this evening. I didn't learn a lot other than confirmation of what I already know:-

Burgess is an accident waiting to happen.
Harper couldn't cut it at Crewe and just isn't good enough for this squad
Edwards as always is “all fizz and no pop”
Kayden Jackson, well is just Kayden Jackson snuff said

On top of that John-Jules is looking to emulate Keenan-Bennett's and is also going for the “all froth and no substance” award.

This was a poor B team, no strength in driving forward from midfield, passages of play becoming to predictable slowly working the ball to one side then back to the other side.

No sign of improvement tonight at set pieces. Again corners are becoming a bore.

Squad not strong enough and so much work has been put in to build momentum and enthusiasm for the new season. Big screen despite feedback from first match almost appears to be a waste of time
And again tonight very difficult to read a lot on it. I think the tremendous support that the fans give this club deserves a much better attitude and approach towards this fixture.
5

Saxonblue added 23:45 - Aug 9
Why do we play a reserve team every year and lose every year to more lowly opposition? This changes the mood and puts pressure on the team right at the beginning of the season - momentum is king. .

Why did we let half decent strikers leave like Norwood and Pigott before we have anyone better? We need a good striker desperately.
6

yorkieblue62 added 23:50 - Aug 9
Sure enough disappointing result & performance & I do think it was a mistake to make so many changes. However all this talk about knives out & pressure on the manager is utter cr.p. Look at the league table after 10 matches before getting so hysterical.
1

joyousblue added 23:54 - Aug 9
So many of you make me sick, suddenly McKenna is a crap manager , Norwood is suddenly a tiptop goal scorer , it's a cup upset get over it , oh yeah suddenly we sign an old defender when we need a striker , what a bunch of back stabbers you are ,McKenna will sort it then you bunch of saddoes will say told you so great manager etc Norwood was crap glad we sold him , he has had to sort out the mess of cook , if he sees something in Jackson , then I believe him , I'll tell you what you bunch of clueless idiots , piss off and join a knitting club , and moan and moan about the weather the price of ham , your favourite on love island , just don't come back till you realise you know nothing or better still support Norwich , you can moan about Coleman's mustard Delilah's dress or farmers weekly bunch of t####
-5

RobsonWark added 00:04 - Aug 10
Joyousblue are you Jackson's brother lol. The guy is absolute CRAP!!! Norwood was a quality striker who struggled because of injury. I would take Norwood any day over Jackson!! You should cut out the drinking too!! Not good to comment when you are drunk lol.
2

Oldozblue added 00:51 - Aug 10
It is more same old Ipswich fans rather than same old Ipswich. Probably forgot or unaware many "fans" wanted Robson sacked early on. Cobbold apologised about the fans behaviour them. I suspect McKenna will be great. Its only the entitled who think success is owed to them - it ain't.
-3

shakytown added 01:07 - Aug 10
Strong squad. Hilarious Some of these are pub level at best.
5

algarvefan added 01:26 - Aug 10
What is slightly worrying for me is we are a team who depends on one player Sam Morsy. He is our driving force, our engine and we don't have a spare one. When defenders can't defend he is there and when strikers can't score he will be there popping in the all important goal.
Maybe Ball will be the answer as a similar player but lets be honest we knew we needed a tried and tested striker, where is he Ipswich but the lightweights we currently have up front are not cutting the mustard.

Oh and 10 changes to a team says you don't care about the result, it's crazy.
6

oldtimer3 added 06:26 - Aug 10
Was it Colchesters first team? Putting our reserves out for this match is a very arrogant and disrespectful. Supporters play good money to watch their team and deserve better! If we can't field at least 7 first team regulars play the tie behind closed doors!

4

martin587 added 06:45 - Aug 10
To score goals we need an experienced STRIKER.Enough said.
5

johnwarksshorts added 07:07 - Aug 10
We are cursed in cup comps. Oh well I know its a cliché but we can now concentrate on what's important 1 League 1, Searching for a striker who can put ball in net. COYB.
1

ImAbeliever added 07:28 - Aug 10
Meaningless, reserves run out. Back to business Saturday.
-1

BcarefulwhatUWish4 added 07:49 - Aug 10
Obviously not great that we are out of the cup but it's not a disaster. You'd have to get to the third or fourth round at least to make good money in the Carabao Cup (with prize money and half gate receipts) and also hope for a televised match. The Carabao Cup only really gets interesting in the last 16, and we were never likely together.

Disappointing performances from a lot of players, this was their big opportunity and they didn't make the most of it. Unlikely that many of them will start on Saturday.

The real task at hand is getting us out of this division, we've been here far too long already. It's time for us to exit Division 3.
2

ThaiBlue added 08:36 - Aug 10
We think we are something special but we really are not.
7

JewellintheTown added 08:37 - Aug 10
Wish I got paid huge sums of money to have a warm up match as a second string football player and not be bothered at losing.
Only thing I learnt from this match is that our second string aren't the depth in squad we thought they were claimed to be, and now the rest of the league knows that too.
5

dezb added 08:39 - Aug 10
A predictable melt down!

Everyone saying we dont take cups seriously enough and a its a travesty should note the crowd was less than half of the opening day (no fingers pointed, an ok turnout but miles off league attendances). Also in the build up to the game there were countless predicted lineups showing 9 / 10 / 11 changes and no-one was overly concerned. The team should have been good enough to win, it was just one of those nights!

Move onto Saturday! Return to the strongest starting 11! COYB

0

runningout added 08:59 - Aug 10
Strongest line up doesn't score enough to see off opposition. Which makes next game interesting!! This is NOT a new thing and not winning any game will throw any momentum in the bin. Can players deal with expectations week in week out. The team put out on Tuesday had no composure and to be honest they should have that in abundance
1

OliveR16 added 09:04 - Aug 10
dezb - Move onto Saturday! This is the right managerial mantra.
However now on Saturday the morale of the players, the fans, the owners will all be diminished.
'Running toward adversity' is noble.
'Creating adversity to run toward' is stupid.
2

blueboy1981 added 09:06 - Aug 10
Same old - making excuses for every Ipswich falure.
Some things never change with Ipswich - that too !!!
1

blueboy1981 added 09:11 - Aug 10
At the moment - early doors granted - I think McK is being found short of experience, and beginning to show already.
For the sake of all - I hope I'm wrong, lets see, as time will tell - as always.
1

blueboy1981 added 09:25 - Aug 10
McK seems obsessed with possession - as I've said a thousand times, possession doesn't win games Goals do …!!!
Do we EVER need a finer example of that than than this most recent debacle.
This Result will surely not impress the Owners … and a few other factors too.
Massive change in tactics required - or Questions will be asked, if not already !!
2


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