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Ipswich Town 1-1 Fleetwood Town - Match Report
Friday, 2nd Dec 2022 22:02

Sub Cian Hayes netted a 96th-minute equaliser to deny the Blues victory as Town and Fleetwood drew 1-1 at Portman Road, Luke Woolfenden having given the home side a second-minute lead. Second-placed Town looked destined to leap to the top of League One with Plymouth losing at home to Port Vale until Hayes’s late, late deflected goal claimed a point for the Cod Army, who ended the game with 10 men following ex-Blues loanee Josh Earl’s dismissal for making obscene gestures as he celebrated their goal.

One-time Fleetwood loanee Janoi Donacien and Freddie Ladapo were both fit to start having been doubts ahead of the match, manager Kieran McKenna’s 50th in charge of the club.

Kyle Edwards started in a team featuring one change from Town’s last League One outing a fortnight ago, the 2-0 win at Exeter.

Edwards came into the side for the injured Marcus Harness as one of the number 10s behind Ladapo.

Greg Leigh was on the bench having missed the Buxton FA Cup tie due to a minor knee issue.

Fleetwood’s XI included former Blues centre-half Toto Nsiala and ex-loanee Earl, while Joe Garner was on the bench.

With rain falling heavily, Town went in front in the second minute. Leif Davis sent over a corner from the left, Conor Chaplin shot, Ladapo turned his effort towards goal and keeper Jay Lynch saved, but Woolfenden tucked it away at the far post, the centre-half’s second goal of the season, both in the last three league games.

Having got off to an ideal start against the division’s draw specialists - Fleetwood had drawn 10 of their 19 matches going into the game - the Blues looked to press home their advantage.

On five, Shaun Rooney was booked for a painful-looking challenge on Chaplin midway inside the visitors’ half.

From Davis’s free-kick, Cameron Burgess headed across the face of goal but behind Wes Burns.

In the seventh minute, Woolfenden appealed for a penalty after he had been manhandled by Fleetwood skipper Josh Vela as another Davis corner came over from the left, however, referee Sam Purkiss felt it was six of one and half a dozen of the other.

Two minutes later, Fleetwood attacked for the first time, Callum Morton beating Christian Walton to the ball as he chased a ball into the right of the area with the keeper well out of his goal. Morton teed-up Promise Omochere on the edge of the box but his effort towards the empty net wafted well wide.

On 11, Chaplin shot from the left of the area forcing Lynch to palm away. The ball reached Edwards on the edge of the box but the winger's deflected effort was claimed by the keeper.

Ladapo went close on the quarter hour when he diverted Chaplin’s cross from the left towards goal and Lynch did well to tip over the bar.

Fleetwood were forced into the first change of the evening in the 19th minute when Paddy Lane was replaced by Dan Batty having suffered a knock.

Two minutes later, Burns, facing his old club, was shown Town’s first yellow card of the evening for what looked a fair tackle on one-time Blues loanee Earl.


Town continued looking for their second goal, Edwards hitting a wayward effort from the edge of the box in the 25th minute after an interchange of passes involving Chaplin and Ladapo. Two minutes later, Burns headed a Davis cross from the left over the bar.

Following a series of stoppages, the Blues began to lose their impetus a little and on 38 the visitors had their best chance of the half.

After what looked a high studs-up challenge on Cameron Humphreys just outside the area by Lewis Warrington, Rooney played Morton in on goal but Walton was quickly off his line to block, the keeper and Cod Army striker both left feeling a little sore after colliding but OK to carry on.

As the half moved into additional time, Chaplin crossed low from the right and Davis tried to turn towards goal from a tight angle beyond the far post but his attempt was bundled behind.

From the corner, Burgess looked to be hauled down by Earl as the ball came over but referee Purkiss waved away the protests with the Sir Bobby Robson Stand particular vocal in their claims for a penalty.

Seconds later, Chaplin felt Rooney had handled on the touchline but again with no reaction from the referee, then seconds later the former Pompey man was awarded a free-kick having been fouled to sarcastic cheers from the home support.

There were muted boos for referee Purkiss as he made his way off at the whistle with a number of decisions having appeared to go against the Blues over the course of the half, Burgess appearing to have been pulled over at the late corner.

Having got off to the perfect start, the Blues had dominated and had been close to adding a second on a number of occasions before becoming sloppier and losing their momentum in the final 15 minutes.

Fleetwood, who having gone behind so early offered more going forward than some recent visitors to Portman Road, had had a couple of opportunities and Walton had been forced into one significant save late on in the half.

Town started the second half shakily, Woolfenden’s pass failing to find Chaplin and Batty was eventually crowded out in the area.

But the Blues quickly began to get on top and in the 50th minute Chaplin forced Lynch into his first save of the half when Burns’s cross was half-cleared to the forward, who struck a powerful effort from the right of the box which the keeper palmed across the face of goal.

Following an elaborate free-kick played into the area from the left which was cut out, the Blues kept the play in the Fleetwood half and eventually Chaplin shot over from 25 yards to the right.

On 58, Chaplin was felled by Earl as he sought to turn him midway inside the Town half. Referee Purkiss spoke to the former Preston man, who made his apologies clear, but failed to show a card.

Earl and Chaplin, who had evidently felt the challenge, tangled again moments later and both ended up on the floor before Vela and fellow skipper Morsy exchanged words after a strong challenge by the Fleetwood man on the Town midfielder on the byline. Referee Purkiss spoke to the captains but took no further action.

As the hour mark passed, the Town fans raised the volume a couple of turns as news that Plymouth were behind at home to Port Vale filtered around.

However, in the 64th minute, Fleetwood almost carved out an opportunity after Burgess, who moments earlier had suffered a blow to the head when defending a free-kick, gifted possession to Omochere on the right. The forward fed Garner, who flicked into the path of Batty, who slipped as he broke into the area.

Moments later, the Fleetwood sub was booked for a foul on Morsy on halfway, then on 68 Town swapped Edwards for Kayden Jackson.

On 74, Burns drifted a cross towards the far post, Jackson nodded down but failed to pick out a Town player and the danger was cleared.

Three minutes later, a well-worked Town move which started on the left but ended on the right saw Donacien cut back from the byline towards Humphreys breaking to the edge of the six-yard box but the youngster was unable to direct it towards goal.

Town swapped Ladapo for Gassan Ahadme in the 79th minute and Fleetwood replaced Omochere, who looked to have picked up a knock, with Cian Hayes.

Soon after the changes, Burns whipped a low ball towards the far post from the right and Jackson turned towards goal under pressure from a defender but his effort was too close to Lynch, who had had a quiet second half.

With five minutes left on the clock, former Blues striker Joe Garner was introduced for Batty and almost immediately almost levelled.

After a corner had been cleared back out to the right, the ball was returned into the box and the ex-Town frontman headed towards goal but found Davis on the line to clear from under the bar when a goal looked certain.

That was Davis’s last action of the match with Leigh taking over for the final three scheduled minutes, while Kane Vincent-Young replaced Burns, who had taken a blow to the shin when making a block challenge a few minutes earlier.

There was a brief flashpoint as Davis looked to make his way from the far corner towards the dugouts with Rooney pushing him in the direction of the byline behind the goal before Morsy and others stepped across to make their thoughts on the matter known.

The fourth official’s board showed six additional minutes in which the visitors looked for a leveller and in the final minute of injury time it came.

Following a throw-in on the left, the ball ended up with Hayes on the right. The sub cut in and hit a shot which took a deflection off Burgess’s head, beat Walton and hit the inside of the post before nestling in the back of the net.

Portman Road was stunned into silence as Fleetwood celebrated. Ex-loanee Earl took his celebrations too far, making gestures to towards Town fans and as the players regrouped for the restart was shown a straight red card.

There was time for one more unsuccessful Town penalty appeal, Jackson having been bundled to the ground as he looked to get in a shot, before referee Purkiss ended the evening with boos aimed at the official following his whistle and as he made his way to the tunnel.

It had been far from Town’s most fluent performance and Fleetwood - who have now drawn 11 of 20 League One matches this season - showed enough going forward throughout for the danger of an equaliser to have always been there. The Blues got away with Joe Garner’s effort which was cleared off the line, but lightning didn’t strike twice.

Overall, having gone ahead so early, the Blues really needed to have capitalised on their threat in the spell immediately afterwards with chances harder to come by in an unusually lacklustre second half.

Once again, Town showed their tendency to let leads slip, as they did in their previous home game against Cheltenham and twice at Charlton.

With Plymouth losing 2-0 at home to Port Vale, a Town win would have put them top of the table. As it is the Blues are now only a point behind the Pilgrims with third-placed Sheffield Wednesday, two points off Town, at Derby County tomorrow and able to go top of they win.

Town: Walton, Donacien, Woolfenden, Burgess, Burns (Vincent-Young 87), Morsy (c), Humphreys, Davis (Leigh 87), Chaplin, Edwards (Jackson 68), Ladapo (Ahadme 79). Unused: Hladky, Edmundson, Keogh.

Fleetwood: Lynch, Vela (c), Morton, Lane (Batty 19 (J Garner 85), Warrington, Holgate, G Garner, Omochere (Hayes 79), Nsiala, Rooney, Earl. Unused: Stolarczyk, Wiredu, Johnston, Baggley. Referee: Sam Purkiss (London). Att: 22,801 (Fleetwood: 66).


Photo: Matchday Images



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Suffolkboy added 23:11 - Dec 2
Looks like severe emotional crisis has weighed upon a few contributors here tonight ! The stats again tell pretty well the whole story ; shots , shots on target ,goals ?
KM will need to find recruits who can actually put the ball into the net : if we were to go up there's no doubt whatsoever this squad would not be able to hold its own at a yet more physical level.
Watched F play Ebbsfleet in the Cup ; outstandingly they were match hardened and professional even if no more than average professional footballers .
ITFC just manage to look and be unconvincing as a scoring unit ,AND still have no physical specimens to stand out and above in either penalty area.
It'd a glaring fault line which deprives the team of one manner of achieving success .
Targets have plainly been identified for January , action seems already in place ,let's hope success materialises and we start not only to look the part BUT be the finished article !
COYB
2

Gforce added 23:14 - Dec 2
Very unlucky tonight, undone by a complete fluke.Fleetwood players running around like they've just won the league one title.
Mark my words,we'll still be top at Christmas.
5

Cakeman added 23:16 - Dec 2
Dreadful game spoilt by yet another equally dreadful referee. That said we were poor and predictable. Will never get promotion unless we can start winning at home by killing teams off once we have taken the lead. To do that we need players who can score. Yes we have already scored plenty this season but our conversion rate against chances created is dismal.
We play like Man City for twenty minutes and then like Ely City for the remainder. (Sorry Ely no disrespect intended but I had to name a lower league City). Visiting teams soon discover that we are barkers not biters and they must be relieved when they see chance after chance go begging.
I think we shall soon see Sheffield Weds take over at the top and I fear unless we can heavily recruit some quality in January we shall drift to just about hang in the play off places.
3

atty added 23:16 - Dec 2
For all the improvements on and off the pitch and the Club defo moving forward here's a salutary thought - this team would get slaughtered by the McCarthy play off side.
-1

multiplescoregasms added 23:20 - Dec 2
We just can't kill teams off at home can we. First 20 minutes or so we looked really positive and a threat, but then it all goes downhill. We didn't deserve to win tonight, and they certainly deserved a draw. Probably the worst home performance of the season. Is this squad really good enough to get promotion? I think we need 2 maybe 3 players in January to get us even close.
2

planetblue_2011 added 23:41 - Dec 2
Well this just sums up our home form at the minute, it's not good enough simple as that. Surely we will go for a striker in January who can score us the goals & hopefully get us promotion. Surely Clarke Harris is on the radar & Whittaker who has been mentioned but I do like Ryan Hardie from Plymouth, really think he has lots of goals in him!! Better still we could go for championship striker!! We have to improve quickly at home starting against our bogie side posh next sat👀
2

Bert added 23:46 - Dec 2
What the heck were our tactics in the second half ? We let Fleetwood have the ball, we let them drive at us , we thought we could defend a one goal lead but we all know what happens when we do that. Fleetwood are no mugs and they got their tactics spot on while we sat back. Did McCarthey return to the touch line tonight because that second half was oh so reminiscent of the bad old days.
Another weekend ruined.
11

RobsonWark added 23:50 - Dec 2
Dissboyitfc added 22:17 - Dec 2
"Absolutely gutted, as any true town will be! But there will be 1 or 2 ( I won't call them supporters, because they aren't) people who will be delighted with Fleetwoods equaliser".

What a complete idiot! Sounds like you were hoping we would concede the goal just so you could say that. I bet you had that one written down and been wanting to say it all week.
1

brittaniaman added 23:55 - Dec 2
SHEFFIELD WEDNESDAY could knock us out of the top two tomorrow !!!!!!!! the way they keep scrapping 1 nil wins ? that would be a shame because not sowe WERE a lot of points ahead of them.
2

brittaniaman added 23:57 - Dec 2
not so long ago were a lot of points ahead of them
JUST correcting my Grammar !!!!!!!!!!
1

lonepill added 00:11 - Dec 3
What kind of football club concedes 90+ minutes goals like this on a regular basis, it's disasterous, all the world cup teams in their worst nightmares don't concede so late so why do we?
2

Michael101 added 00:13 - Dec 3
Cakeman, no need to be so hard on Ely city, could have used a really rubbish side like norwich.
2

Michael101 added 00:25 - Dec 3
Sick parrott, not killing teams off has been a Ipswich fault for far to many years now,the points you say we have lost is not something new not afraid it's been the Ipswich way .
2

Edmundo added 00:34 - Dec 3
Too much respect shown to their thugs, by the ref and especially our players. We didn't seem to have a plan in the second half, a mid-liw block against that quality of team is asking for pressure on our back 3. Unlucky to concede like that, but we were asking for it.
3

bobble added 06:27 - Dec 3
could have gone top,, but now could be outside auto promotion spots
-1

bobble added 06:33 - Dec 3
still at least plymouth are cracking up quicker than us, maybe us and wednesday will go up.....jackson is clearly still rubbish and a smelly remnant from that lunatic manager we had years ago who attempted and probably achieved to make us worse than when the dark lord managed us...
0

Umros added 07:18 - Dec 3
Oh dear, a solid away record but poor at home cancelling out, this ex non league outfits seem to be a real issue. We seem to be our own worst enemy, have poor luck and poor referees that just won't cut issues from game and lose control. How many of Fleetwoods attempts to get the ball were just bundles of no intent ? Our strike force worries me, none of the three that appeared tonight are clinical and more headless than helpful in our final 3rd. I hope this isn't going to blow up after such promise! Finally Josh Earl, you are a childish embarrassment to the game, grow up!
4

Lower_North added 08:14 - Dec 3
Sixth home game for me this season. Only seen us win once.
3

bernie added 08:19 - Dec 3
I'll say it again, we struggle with the physicality of teams and we seem to sit back with teams to try and stop conceding silly goals but it's not working, we still haven't found that balance yet , I really hope I'm wrong but can't see us staying in the top two . To many players not at their best and not the refs fault but wasn't great .
1

Theipswich added 08:33 - Dec 3
Norfolk village idiot RobsonWark once again incapable plot writing without offending fellow Town fans…
1

Linkboy13 added 08:38 - Dec 3
Poorest performance for a long time looked very flat. Biggest disappointment for me was Kyle Edwards never took on his full back once and seems to have lost that blistering pace he had when he first joined us. Sam Morsy is being over worked in midfield and desperately need Evans back.
2

Saxonblue74 added 08:39 - Dec 3
I don't disagree with the comments calling for a striker in January, I'm sure that would be a wise investment. I do however question what difference it would make to a performance like that? We simply didn't create anything, particularly in the 2nd half. The best striker on the planet would have had nothing to feed off. Agree with some of the previous comments, probably the worst performance under Mckenna and under the circumstances perhaps even the worst result. Tactically baffling. Surely Edwards, Davis, Burns, Chaplin, Ladapo and Vincent Young running at them should be enough? Take them on, draw the foul and maybe even enough of a stone-waller to convince this appalling group of officials no option? We all know Nsiala has a mistake in him if put under pressure, but we made him look very dependable! Regarding the officials, when are they going to be held to account for their performance? I guess league 1 isn't important enough, despite the big crowds it's attracting? How did the ref AND the linesman not see that as a foul on Jackson?
5

aloanagain added 08:43 - Dec 3
Fleetwood the team we have been waiting for all season. Get our early goal then that will bring the opposition out. Well that really did bring Fleetwood out but the story didn't happen. We can't manage a defensive team now we can't manage an attacking team. Yes the ref made some strange decisions, the crowd was big but quiet and full marks to Fleetwood for for the way they controlled the game,apart from a few rash professional fouls. Well done to the Fleetwood following for coming out on a Friday night game. The true supporters of the club.
5

blueboy1981 added 08:52 - Dec 3
Teams are coming to Portman Road now, expecting and knowing they can take points away with them.
That has to be reversed to be serious Promotion contenders.
Rabbits in Headlights spring to mind, when under pressure - and well noted now by visiting Teams !!
Scathing - but True !
8

ImAbeliever added 08:58 - Dec 3
Yes, last night and Charlton were a tad unfortunate, but keep the faith, we have a few out injured. Much to come.
2


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