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McKenna: Sometimes Crazy Matches Happen
Saturday, 29th Oct 2022 19:01

Boss Kieran McKenna admitted it was hard to verbalise his feelings after the Blues’ 4-4 draw at Charlton having twice been two goals in front.

Town looked on their way to the three points at 2-0 and again at 4-2 in injury time but let their advantage slip on both occasions.

“It’s hard to verbalise the feelings at the moment,” McKenna said. “It was such a roller-coaster of a game and of emotions.

“There’s obviously a lot of frustration and disappointment and anger in the dressing room at the manner of the goals we conceded, and that’s how it should be.

“Of course, we also have to, in the right time, take time to reflect on the good things in the game - coming again to another big stadium against a good team and, in my opinion, dominating and controlling the game, putting ourselves in a great position at 2-0, had great chances to go 3-0 and they scored off their first moment in the second half.

“From there, it was one of those days. We showed great character to go again after 2-2 when really the second goal comes from nothing again, it’s just a mistake.

“Showed great character, I always believed that we were going to score, I didn’t think we were going to score two and we’ve put ourselves on 96 minutes in a position that we have to go and win the game from.

“My feelings at the moment are that it wasn’t a lack of concentration, certainly not sloppiness, just a bit of a lack of control of our emotions, it was such an emotional game.

“Fantastic scenes and joy on 96 minutes when we got the goal and amongst other things my main feeling is we didn’t just manage to manage our emotions to handle those last couple of minutes, keep our details well, not give away free-kicks, defend our set plays properly, hold our high line in free play, keep the ball out of our box.

“We didn’t manage to get our details right and it’s frustrating. It’s also a human game and I understand there was big emotion there and if we could do the last three minutes again, I’m sure we’d see it out without too many problems but in the heat of the moment there are mistakes and it’s hard to find that clarity of thought, and that’s what we need to keep working on as a team.

“Look, lots to reflect on. Of course, it’s a very disappointing end result and I think on the whole we went into a really tough week where if you’d have offered us seven points at the start, I’m sure most of the people around the club would have taken it.

“It’s another tough game after a tough away game midweek and a tough game against Derby and we’ve come out of it with seven points and lots of positives and also some clear areas to work on.”

Clean sheets had been a regular feature of Town games until recently, however, in the last month the Blues have conceded twice agains Portsmouth, Plymouth and Port Vale and now four against the Addicks.

“It’s something that we need to do better on, for sure,” the Blues boss admitted. “There are different goals in there but if there’s a common theme it’s dealing with high balls into our box. There’s no point in shying away from it, that’s something we need to do better.

“Teams are going to target us on that from here on in, as they have done really all the way along because of how we play.

“We’ve got the winter coming up, we’ve got to stand up to that, we need to improve and we’ll be looking to do the work at the training ground to help us do that.”

Regardless of the disappointment of having drawn from a winning position, a draw away at Charlton isn’t on the face of it a bad result.

“Football sometimes is hard to explain,” McKenna reflected. “There are things that we need to do better, details to improve, but I think sometimes crazy matches happen and I think if we played the last three minutes over it wouldn’t happen again, there’s an element of randomness, an element of luck.

“Of course, when it’s not the first time we’ve given up a lead and when you’ve had goals this week where teams have put it in your box and you haven’t defended it well enough, you look at the pattern that’s emerging and think that you need to improve on that, and we don’t hide away from that.

“But also, sometimes there are things that you can’t control in football. There’s a randomness to it and also an emotional element to it that is easy to talk about now, what we should have done and what we should have done, but it’s not so easy in the heat of the moment.


“That’s what we need to keep working on with the players to find that right level of concentration but also control in those big, big moments in big emotional games.”

Quizzed on whether skipper Sam Morsy was picked on by referee Josh Smith in the first half, McKenna said: “No, big complaints. I thought it was a good game for the referee. Reffed it well in general by [my reckoning]. It wasn’t easy with a crowd who were looking for all the decisions for the home team. I thought the officials did a good job.”

Conversely, Charlton boss Ben Garner spent much of his press conference bemoaning the referee’s performance having been red-carded by the official for his complaints regarding Town’s second goal having felt the free-kick from which it was eventually scored shouldn’t have been awarded and that scorer Tyreece John-Jules was offside.

Garner said he felt referees and their performances are too regular a feature of the post-match discussion, including those between him and fellow managers."
“I think we’ve had plenty of our share of incidents this year that we feel aggrieved by and I could sit here and list them as every team could do,” McKenna said.

“I can only speak for myself. My approach is to, within reason, try and focus on ourselves and control what we can control and referees are there in general doing their best and as long as there’s an honest performance, and I thought today the referee was and tried to make the right decisions, then they can make mistakes as well as both sets of players and staff can do.

“I’d rather focus on the game and the good things we did and the things to improve.”

However, McKenna agreed with Garner that there needs to be more investment in refereeing at League One level.

“I think that’s a given,” he said. “I think with the money that’s in the game, there needs to be a percentage of that that goes to the referees.

“The investment and the interest and the scale of League One now is really big league and games are getting huge following home and away.

“Of course, the investment to give them as much help and training as possible should be there.

“But, I repeat, I thought the referee, in my opinion, reffed the game well and to the best of his ability and I think it’s more important to look at what happened between the sets of players on the pitch.”

Asked to reflect on four goals having been scored in injury time, he added: “It was a crazy game. From 2-2, I thought we did so well to respond and push for that goal and we were the only team that was going to get the third goal. And to get it in front of our away end in front our away supporters was fantastic.

“To get another goal was fantastic and emotions were running high. Ninety times out of 100 you go on and win the game from there.

“There are things that we can do better and we’ll look at but football is a crazy game, random things happen. You kick the ball into the box and sometimes it goes one way and sometimes it goes another and amongst the things that we need to do better, it’s also a one out of 100 finish to a game.

“I don’t think us getting the winning goal was one out of 100, I thought we were pushing and building towards it and we’ve done it time and again to show that we can push and go for late goals.

“Of course, the late comeback was extremely disappointing and we need to better but it was also something that I don’t think would happen again and there’s a part of me that wants to focus on the things that are repeatable and I think our performance in general and the goals that we scored are repeatable and things that we need to keep doing.”

Regarding the whistles from the crowd when Town were in good positions on a couple of occasions in the first half, leading to a warning over the PA that the players would be taken off they continued, he said: “No one wants to see it, I’m sure Charlton weren’t happy with it as a football club either.

“I thought Tyreece was running straight through on goal, that was the key one. He was running straight through one-v-one with the goalkeeper and the whistle blows and he hesitates and stops because he thinks it’s a free-kick. Nobody wants to see that. I’m sure they will look at it.

“I thought we had a clear penalty, not to talk about the referee because I promised I wouldn’t! I thought there was a clear handball at the end of the first half [when Terell Thomas stopped a John-Jules shot], which is a clear red card, if we want to talk about decisions because he stuck his hand out to handle the ball.

“But I spoke to the referee at half-time and he said he didn’t have a good view of it, so that is what it is.

“It was just before we scored but by the laws of the game, I would have thought it would have been a penalty and a red card.

“No one wants to see whistles in the crowd, that was disappointing. Thankfully there weren’t any instances in the second half.”

Garner sought to whip the crowd up as he walked to the tunnel having been sent off. Did McKenna feel that changed the dynamic of the match? “Possibly. I think it probably changed the atmosphere where I think there was every chance the home crowd were turning against the home team and it probably gave them a common enemy and that shifted the focus towards the referee and not towards the performance of the home team.

“Did it change it? I don’t know. Of course, it added more emotion to the game, but having said that, we rode that out and we went and got ourselves to 4-2 in the 96th minute, so we can’t look at that as any excuse for why we didn’t win the game.”

Meanwhile, McKenna was asked about his former Manchester United colleague and friend Michael Carrick taking over as boss at Middlesbrough, who lost 2-1 in his first game at Preston today, the Lilywhites winner having come in injury time.

“Really happy for him, really good person, very knowledgable and I think has a chance to be a really good manager,” he said.

“Happy for him to find an opportunity that he was interested in and, of course, wish him all the best and I’m sure we’ll be on the end of the phone at different times. Can only wish him good luck.”

Addicks boss Garner was delighted with his team's comeback but was scathing regarding referee Smith's performance, particularly with regard to Town's second goal, and also that of the fourth official.

“It shows how good we can be,” he said. “The atmosphere second half was unbelievable, it really was.

“Everyone in the stadium can see Dobbo [George Dobson] has got the ball for the free-kick. To cap it off, [John-Jules is] offside from the cross. We get two players booked from it and I got sent off — from the referee getting a decision completely wrong.

“They need to look at themselves. It was like being back at school with the fourth official, every time I tried to speak to him it was like a kid saying he’s going to tell his mum about you. Just stand up and have a conversation — be a man.

“It’s probably a ban and a fine, I don’t know, I’ve never been sent off before. I don’t want that to overshadow what was such an incredible team effort and incredible atmosphere here this afternoon.

“I don’t need a replay. He gets all of the ball — a perfectly-timed tackle. And for the cross he is a yard offside. You can’t get those decisions wrong. There are livelihoods on the line. How much effort we’re giving and the standard of refereeing is nowhere near good enough.

“The referee today spent most of the time before the game telling my staff that he’s a Championship referee. The EFL need to look at that, if that’s the case. He’s not good enough for League One.”

Garner felt the home fans played their part following his entreaties to them to ramp up the atmosphere after his dismissal.

“I was frustrated and there was some energy and noise from the crowd — I just went with them,” he explained.

“It rose and rose. I wanted to show how much I value them and my passion, how much it means to me.

“They responded. We don’t get that result without the crowd, we don’t. Not a chance. That emotional energy was so, so important in the game. It shows what a special atmosphere we can create here. To do what we did was special.”

Regarding the errant first-half whistler, he added: “The first one went in their favour because we stopped — they got a cross and got a corner.

“But the second one probably went in our favour because he was through on goal. I’ve never known that before.

“On both occasions I thought it was the referee. We all stopped for the first one.

“It was John-Jules who went through and it probably affected him, in all honesty. I don’t know where it was coming from and I’m glad it got sorted. Hopefully we never get that again.”


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dirtydingusmagee added 05:24 - Oct 30
lets face it the team like everyone watching thought they'd smashed it at 2-4 ,they were sure ,as we were they had won, and they lost the plot. It was a totally ,unbelievably crazy last few minutes. Now they will realise they need to stay switched on till the final whistle [hopefully] it will be on their minds in future, and will have learned from it. KM should kick all their backsides, then the team should kick each others , and move on . COYB
1

pherabella added 06:34 - Oct 30
The overarching trend is that we outpass, outwork and outcreate our opponents the majority of the time. Keep that up and we'll win considerably more games than we lose/draw. Players are human and do make mistakes it just about minimising those mistake. Other teams will slip up and if we keep up our current 2+ average points per game we will be fine. COYB
1

bernie added 08:09 - Oct 30
Of course crazy things happen but that was football suicide , come on lads that was bloody madness!!
2

Len_Brennan added 08:59 - Oct 30
Cameron Burgess is one of the strongest aerial defenders in the league, we should not underestimate his loss in that department & it would appear that opposing managers have recognised it. Burgess has a weakness in being turned by quick & tricky forwards, but if he is deemed fit enough & psychologically ready to compete, perhaps he should be considered for a return in order to get us past these disappointing errors. It was notable that Richard Keogh was on the pitch for the 3rd & 4th goals that we conceded, as some might argue that he is the answer.
4

BobbyBell added 09:10 - Oct 30
I cannot believe some of the negative comments on here. So many people on here who have never made mistakes, never slipped up under pressure, never had emotion get the better of them. Get real!! You are not perfect and neither are our players. Some on here would moan if they were the first two points we had dropped all season. We've scored four goals away at a venue where most teams would be glad of a point. If it had finished 2-2 at 90 minutes would you all be so scathing?
-1

Ipswichbusiness added 09:49 - Oct 30
We are second in the League and scoring goals, so we are well placed for automatic promotion. We have a good manager.

The point is that it could, should, be even better. The defeat at home to Lincoln was an awful result and throwing away two goal leads is poor. I thought that dealing with high balls into the box was basic defending.
5

Nomore4 added 14:31 - Oct 30
You need to keep off comment platforms Bobby.
-3

gixxeral added 18:44 - Oct 30
Spot on Bobbybell. Nomore4, who are you to say that!
3

62WasBest added 20:31 - Oct 30
BobbyBell - Making a mistake isn't the issue. Making the same mistake repeatedly is. I can think of many, many situations where letting emotions take over before a job is completed would be viewed as incompetence at best and possibly result in deaths at worst. There is no place in professionalism for excessive displays of emotion whilst there is still work to be done.
1

Broadhill added 10:14 - Oct 31
Crazy game. Very annoying too. Being 2 up twice is beyond stupid to then squander.
1


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