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Portsmouth 2-2 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Thursday, 29th Dec 2022 21:49

Conor Chaplin netted three minutes from time against his old club as the Blues came from behind twice to draw 2-2 at Portsmouth. Marlon Pack’s fourth-minute free-kick gave Pompey the lead, but Cameron Burgess’s second of the season levelled seven minutes later. In the second half, Colby Bishop put the home side back in front very much against the run of play on the hour, before Chaplin denied his local side the win with a rebound from close range.

Town named an unchanged side, despite boss Kieran McKenna having said in the lead-up to the match that two players had been unwell prior to the 3-0 Boxing Day home win against Oxford and another seven had subsequently reported symptoms.

Chaplin and Marcus Harness started against their old club but Town’s third former Pompey player Gassan Ahadme travelled but along with Richard Keogh and Kane Vincent-Young wasn’t included in the 18.

Portsmouth, who had also had illness worries, made four changes from the 0-0 draw at Exeter on Monday with Ipswich-born Joe Morrell, Zak Swanson, Josh Koroma and Connor Ogilvie coming into the side for on-loan Blues striker Joe Pigott, who was ineligible, and former Town loanee Ryan Tunnicliffe, Denver Hume and Reeco Hackett, who all dropped to the bench.

The Blues made a scruffy giving the ball away on the edge of their own area before the hosts took the lead in the fourth minute via the game’s first shot.

Skipper Sam Morsy was harshly penalised for a foul on Koroma five yards outside the area and Pack struck a free-kick beyond Christian Walton to his left and into the net off the inside of the post.

Having conceded their first league goal in the opening 15 minutes this season, Town quickly began to dominate play but with Portsmouth looking to give them little time on the ball.

And the Pompey lead lasted only seven minutes. Pack fouled Morsy on the right, Lee Evans whipped over a free-kick from the right and Burgess, for the first time without his mask since undergoing facial surgery, turned the ball into the net from five yards.

Having got back on terms, Town maintained their superiority, however, in the 16th minute goalscorer Burgess was shown the game’s first yellow card for a foul on Owen Dale.

There was a scare for the Blues in the 18th minute when a corner was diverted out to Koroma just outside the area to the left from where the winger struck a shot which Woolfenden cleared from in front of the line.

But Town were still in control and in the 22nd minute Evans struck a powerful shot from 25 yards which home keeper Josh Griffiths did well to save down to his right and hold onto with Freddie Ladapo sniffing around for a rebound having scored in similar circumstances on Monday.

The Blues continued to see most of the ball and on 35 Morsy hit a low effort from distance which Griffiths stopped to his right.


Town maintained their dominance, passing the ball around slickly and at pace and in the 44th minute should have gone in front. After a long spell of possession with Woolfenden having joined in the attack, Burns crossed low from the right and found Ladapo but the former Rotherham man was through his shot as the ball arrived and it looped into the stand.

The half-time whistle sounded with Town still on the ball and looking for another opening from which they might score a second goal, which their display would certainly have deserved.

The Blues had appeared unaffected by Pompey’s early goal and quickly got into their stride and grabbed the equaliser, yet another set-piece goal with Burgess taking his opportunity from an excellent Evans free-kick.

From there, Town dominated and created one or two openings without making Griffiths work too often, while Ladapo will have been disappointed to have snatched at his late chance.

Pompey had had the occasional opportunity but with Walton untested since Pack's goal and the Blues will have left the field confident that if they maintained their level of performance in the second half they ought to claim the three points.

The home side swapped skipper Clark Robinson for Hume ahead of the start of the second period.

Harness scuffed a 48th-minute shot through to Griffiths as the Blues began the half as they had ended the first.

On 55, with Town having completely dominated since the restart, Evans was fouled by his fellow Welshman Morrell 25 yards out but Chaplin’s free-kick hit the wall.

Pompey had hardly had a touch in the second half but on the hour they went back in front. Hume looped a cross from the left to the far post, Sean Raggett nodded it back into the six-yard box and Colby Bishop turned it past Walton.

Town looked to hit back quickly for a second time and two minutes after Bishop’s goal, Harness played in Ladapo on the right of the box but the one-time Colchester youngster shot across the face of goal from a tight angle.

On 63, Chaplin did well to reach a ball on the left and sent over a low ball towards Ladapo, who was just unable to reach it. Moments later, Sone Aluko took over from Harness, then Koroma was switched for Ronan Curtis for Pompey.

In the 68th minute, Chaplin exchanged passes with Ladapo on the edge of the box but Ogilvie stepped across to prevent the former Pompey man from having a free run in on goal.

Three minutes later, Pompey sub Curtis broke away down the right and cut back to Morrell, whose shot, which looked on target, was blocked by Janoi Donacien.

Pompey, who looked to be tiring, made a double change in the 74th minute, Tunnicliffe and Dane Scarlett taking over from Morrell and Bishop.

Town made two switches of personnel of their own two minutes later, Kyle Edwards and Kayden Jackson replacing Burns and Ladapo.

Pack was booked for a trip on Chaplin as the Blues’ subs began to make an impact and reinvigorate a Town display which had lost its impetus. On 81, Greg Leigh took over from Leif Davis following another all-action display from the left-back.

A minute later, Chaplin unleashed a strike from 25 yards only just past Griffiths’s left post, then Leigh sent over a dangerous low ball from the left which Ogilvie did well to slide behind ahead of Jackson and Edwards.

Town kept pressing and probing looking for their second leveller of the evening and in the 87th minute it came.

Following a long spell of possession, Morsy found some space just outside the box and hit a somewhat speculative low shot which Griffiths saved but couldn’t hold onto and Chaplin was first to the loose ball to slam home from close range against his old club, the forward’s 12th goal of the season.

There was no celebration for the Blues, Chaplin quickly taking the ball back to the centre circle with Town looking for a winner. Pompey swapped Swanson for Hackett in the penultimate scheduled minute.

The Blues continued the pressure in five minutes of added-on time but were unable to find a third goal.

Town had largely been well in control of the game and although delighted with the late equaliser, will feel their overall dominance deserved more.

But as in other matches, possession wasn’t turned into chances, while Town’s vulnerability to balls looped into their area was again evident as Bishop put Pompey back in front with the home side’s first attack of the second half.

Plymouth and Sheffield Wednesday winning 1-0 and 2-0 at home to respectively Wycombe and Port Vale means the Blues stay second but now four points behind the Pilgrims and ahead of the Owls on goals scored ahead of Monday’s trip to Lincoln City.

Portsmouth: Griffiths, Morrison, Raggett, Robertson (c) (Hume 46), Swanson, Morrell (Tunnicliffe 74), Pack, Ogilvie, Dale, Bishop (Scarlett 74), Koroma (Curtis 66). Unused: Oluwayemi, Hackett, Jacobs.

Town: Walton, Donacien, Woolfenden, Burgess, Burns (Edwards 76), Evans, Morsy (c), Davis (Leigh 81), Chaplin, Harness (Aluko 64), Ladapo (Jackson 76). Unused: Hladky, Edmundson, Humphreys. Sam Allison (Wiltshire). Att: 18,849.


Photo: Matchday Images



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ArnieM added 22:19 - Dec 29
We need to understand . “Possession stats”does. not.win. games! GOALS scored vs soft goals conceded, do!

Also, How much of our possession stats are actually down to our play or the opponents just simply sitting back and letting us play with it? We hardly a bloody threat from our half or on the half way line, are we??
10

churchmans added 22:22 - Dec 29
Saxonblue74
Jackson is pony!
Good point tonight need to buy well in January and beat plymouth&sheff wed at home! Or I fear we heading to playoffs and worried about that
5

Theipswich added 22:22 - Dec 29
blues1.Pretty dim reply of yours.There were few shots on goal considering all the possession and tiky-taky stuff and those few shots rarely troubled their keeper. I expect more from Town and am entitled to "moan" as you so eloquently put it..it is the whole point of a forum..
8

Nomore4 added 22:26 - Dec 29
As soon as Jackson came on I knew the chance to win the game was gone
5

Saxonblue74 added 22:29 - Dec 29
churchmans, I'm not Jackson's #1 fan. I do however like to judge players on how I perceive them to have performed and I think he did ok tonight.
1

Mariner1974 added 22:31 - Dec 29
Gutsy to come from behind twice in the game, with the knowledge that we were the superior team. We dominated the game, they spent vast majority putting every man behind the ball and trying to catch us on the odd break. Should have been 3 Points as we were the best team, but always good to have the spirit and desire to come back and equalise, and press on for the win which would have been deservedly ours. Harness looked too eager to please against his old team. That happens, and ball wasn't sticking to Freddie tonight. As good as he was against Oxford, the ball didn't stick tonight. Think we could have brought on Edwards earlier as he causes havoc to a tiring defence. Happy to be supporting the team that dominated the game, had 70% possession, and passed with precision and class. We're in a great place going into the New Year.
5

Ipswichbusiness added 22:32 - Dec 29
All our virtues and vices were on display this evening.

Virtues; attractive football, lots of possession, excellent fighting spirit and two good goals.

Vices; we struggle to convert possession into decent chances or goals, again we conceded a goal from a high ball hoofed into the box (when are we going to learn to defend those?).

An away draw against a promotion rival is a good result. If we fail to go up it will be due to us throwing away home points against mid/lower League rivals such as Lincoln and Fleetwood.
8

surgery added 22:32 - Dec 29
As I've said before, possession totally meaningless statistic

The only one that counts is possession + end result = attempts on target
4

Nobbysnuts added 22:36 - Dec 29
Can't decide whether that's a point gained or two dropped....
0

delias_cheesy_flaps added 22:42 - Dec 29
We need more shots from our players, Morsy took a gamble from distance, the keeper fumbles and we get a deserved equaliser. More shots less tippy-tappy footy required.
8

Carberry added 22:47 - Dec 29
Don't think Portsmouth are quite the team most on here are making them out to be, they haven't won in 8 games and Cowley is close to getting the sack.
Turning possession into goals seems something we are incapable of doing it seems, while we keep getting told we are the best team in the league. Something isn't connecting. I didn't see this game but it sounded like the last away performance at Wycombe. We have the talent and ability but not the plan that works.
5

TimmyH added 22:55 - Dec 29
blues1 - those shots we had on target were speculative attempts all at their goalkeeper (and obviously plus the ones we scored from), fortunately for us he spilled one. Nothing really from creative play in the final third.

We need to start winning away against 'rivals'...not just gloating about our possession.
6

Epiphone added 23:04 - Dec 29
It's not getting GOALS that's the problem,we're top scorers in this Division!Another away point (along with our GOAL scoring record)keeps us in second.

COYB!!
3

suffolkblueeye added 23:36 - Dec 29
IFollow commentary team that included Guy Whittingham were the most objective and amusing I've listened to, better than our dull sh*t when Alex matthie isn't about, or the rambling dribble from the biased Lincoln numpties, Walton's dive was an embarrassment by the way
0

EssexTractor added 00:30 - Dec 30
Easy to be disappointed in dropping two points when other three promotion chasing sides all won but they were all at home
Tonight's was Game 1 out of 23 games in second half of season
After Game 1 of first half we had dropped two points , but by game 23 we were SECOND
So keep the faith and with at least one formidable January signing that Top Spot still achievable
Keep Calm and Carry On
2

RobsonWark added 01:30 - Dec 30
Saxonblue74 added 22:29 - Dec 29
churchmans, I'm not Jackson's #1 fan. I do however like to judge players on how I perceive them to have performed and I think he did ok tonight.

I don't know what game you were watching!
1

Sharkey added 02:09 - Dec 30
The 2-2 goal looked about two yards offside.
-2

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 07:08 - Dec 30
Ipswichbusiness has got it spot on. We may be the highest scorers in the league, but we should be converting all that possession into even more goals. Domination and then the sucker punch has become a bit of a pattern this season. We play some lovely football - best in the league at times - but we need to be more direct and clinical. Our build-up play is becoming a bit predictable. We could and should shoot more. In doing so, we may lose possession, but equally we might create an unexpected opportunity. Anyway, still pretty much on track, but Wednesday's and Plymouth's consistency is beginning to be a bit worrying. I don't want to have to meet Barnsley again in the play-offs!
9

warktheline added 07:16 - Dec 30
Nice to read through so many positive posts! Undoubtedly, McKenna will be analysing turning dominance and possession into scoring more, and conceding less goals.
1

tractorboybig added 07:44 - Dec 30
well at least the happy clappers are still in their dream world
-4

Saxonblue74 added 07:46 - Dec 30
I watched the very same game as you RW, but try to offer a constructive point of view. I'll ask you again, what do you think Jackson did wrong in his few minutes?
0

Nomore4 added 08:05 - Dec 30
Saxon I could see nothing that Jackson did wrong. You just knew he wouldn't score.
Not ideal when you bring on a forward player. Hoping to get a goal.
But just look at his goal scoring record, not just this season, but over 4 plus seasons.
Nowhere near good enough.
5

Saxonblue74 added 08:18 - Dec 30
Agree Nomore4. What he does do though is pressurise tiring defences with his pace and works hard off the ball, both of which I thought he did reasonably well last night. Robsonsonwark saw that as "running around like a headless chicken". Just didn't feel his performance deserved being singled out. Opinions, that's all!
5

Nomore4 added 08:51 - Dec 30
I think what we are crying out for Saxon is a forward player who has the qualities you mention.
But also knows how to score regular.
Hopefully over the next 4 weeks this is addressed.
As currently we have 2 forwards on the bench who have never been goal scorers.
Pompey signed Bishop. We signed a forward from Burton who scores less than Jackson.
1

jas0999 added 09:25 - Dec 30
An away draw isn't a disaster, but can't overlook the fact Sheffield and Plymouth continue to win games. Very pleased it was us m this occasion who got the equaliser late in the game, but for me, it's another game to add to the list that we ought to have won.

That said, our defending was at times poor again, whilst in my view we are at times lacking up front.

Lincoln becomes a big match. 7/9 over Christmas would be a good return. 5/9 or even 4/9 wouldn't be great.
5


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