Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
Cambridge United 1-1 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Saturday, 4th Feb 2023 17:07

Town’s long wait for a league victory at the Abbey Stadium continues after the Blues were held to a frustrating 1-1 draw by Cambridge United. Harvey Knibbs gave the U’s the lead on 24, before Town keeper Christian Walton saved a penalty from Joe Ironside eight minutes later. The Blues made three changes at the break and one of those subs, Kyle Edwards, created an equaliser for Freddie Ladapo nine minutes after the restart but Kieran McKenna’s men were unable to find a winning goal.

Town named the same team which beat Morecambe 4-0 at Portman Road 11 days ago with Leif Davis and Wes Burns both fit enough to start having returned to training following minor knocks in midweek.

Davis was in his usual role wide on the left with Burns on the right with Harry Clarke, George Edmundson, Richard Keogh at the back and Walton in goal.

Skipper Sam Morsy was alongside Lee Evans in the centre of midfield with Nathan Broadhead and 15-goal top scorer Conor Chaplin behind central striker Ladapo.

Cambridge made one change from the side which drew 0-0 at Lincoln last week with Knibbs coming into the side for Ben Worman, who dropped to the bench.

Former Blues midfielder Paul Digby skippered, while ex-Town forward Jack Lankester was on the bench alongside one-time Portman Road trialist Shilow Tracey.

Ryan Bennett, released by the Blues' academy at 16, and Suffolk-born Michael Morrison started at the heart of their defence, their first starts for the U’s at the Abbey Stadium since joining - in Morrison’s case rejoining - the club earlier in the month.

Town started on top and in the third minute Chaplin scuffed a volley from the left of the area after a very long Clarke throw from the right had reached him. Another two minutes later also reached the forward but he was unable to get in a shot.

The game quickly settled into a pattern, Cambridge sitting back in their half of the field as the Blues looked to find a way through them.

On 16, Broadhead, Davis and Chaplin interchanged on the edge of the area on the left as they sought to find space to shoot with the latter eventually hitting an effort which was blocked.

Five minutes later, Evans scuffed a free-kick from 30 yards wide, Clarke having been caught by Digby as he took the ball past the former Town man.

Aside from Walton catching a cross, Cambridge had shown nothing going forward but in the 24th minute they went in front via their first shot of the afternoon.

Edmundson miscontrolled the ball out of play on the Town left and from the throw, Digby played it to Knibbs, who brought it forward down the middle before hitting a powerful shot which beat Walton to his right.

Three minutes after taking the lead, the home side had another opportunity, Knibbs digging out a cross from the left towards Joe Ironside at the far post. Home fans claimed the striker had been fouled by Davis but the linesman’s flag was raised, saving referee Sam Barrott a decision.

But just after the half hour, with Town still to recover from conceding the goal, the U’s were awarded a penalty.


Edmundson clumsily felled Conor McGrandles in the area on the left but play continued and Knibbs found the net. However, referee Barrott had already blown and pointed to spot, much to the home side’s frustration.

Ironside took the kick and hit it low and hard to Walton’s right but the keeper got across to brilliantly tip it round the post. The Blues number one celebrated as he might as his teammates congratulated him.

From the flag-kick, Cambridge claimed another penalty but the ball clearly hit Keogh’s back rather than hand.

On 40, Morsy was booked for bodychecking Knibbs midway inside the Cambridge half with the Blues still huffing and puffing against a determined backline, while the home side were presenting more of a threat on their forays forward.

The half-time whistle was met with cheers and applause by the home fans and by one or two boos from the Town support.

Having started in control but without being able to create a serious chance, the Blues had allowed Knibbs a free shot at goal at a time when the U's had shown nothing going forward.

The Blues seemed to be rocked by conceding and Cambridge would have doubled their lead had referee Barrott allowed play to continue after Edmundson’s foul rather than immediately pointing to the spot. Fortunately for Town he did and Walton made a very impressive penalty stop.

Town had most of the ball in the Cambridge half in the latter stages of the half but without finding a way through the massed ranks of the Cambridge defence with home keeper Dimitar Mitov still to make a save.

The Blues made three changes at the break, at least some of them likely to have been forced by injury. Davis, who had been a doubt going into the match, Evans, who had undergone treatment during the opening period, and Clarke replaced by Edwards, harshly red-carded at the Abbey earlier in the season in a Papa Johns Trophy tie, Marcus Harness and Janoi Donacien.

Town went about looking for a goal, Ladapo looping an early header into Mitov’s arms from a right-sided cross.

On 50, an Edwards shot from just outside the area on the left deflected wide for a Town corner in front of their fans.

However, in the aftermath of the flag-kick, the ball was cleared and Keogh found himself in a foot race with Sam Smith, which the Cambridge man won. But the veteran defender used all his experience and guile to slow the striker up and Walton dived in at his feet to claim, taking a boot to the head for his trouble. After treatment, the Town keeper was able to continue.

Edwards, who scored twice against the U’s at Portman Road in the 3-0 win earlier in the season, had had an impact since coming on and in the 54th minute, the winger created the Blues’ equaliser.

The former West Brom man tricked his way round the outside of Liam Bennett, not for the first time, before sending over a cross which Ladapo steered across Mitov and just inside the post. The striker celebrated his 14th goal of the season with the travelling 1,400 fans behind the goal.

Just before the hour, Burns was tripped on the right by James Brophy, just outside the area. Chaplin smashed the free-kick through a crowd of players, Mitov blocked and the ball fell kindly for Cambridge, who cleared.

Two minutes later, a Chaplin shot from just outside the area caught a defender on its way wide with the Blues well on top and playing at a higher tempo in the first period. From the corner, Edmundson won the ball in the air but couldn’t make a clean contact.

Town almost made it 2-1 in the 63rd minute, Harness clipping over a cross from the right for Ladapo, who flicked a header towards the far post where Chaplin just failed to get a touch as he slid in.

The Blues continued to dominate and on 66, after a long spell of Town possession, was fed in on the right of the box but shot high and wide from a tight angle.

Cambridge were forced into a change four minutes later after Lloyd Jones suffered a knock, George Williams taking over on the left of the home side’s back three.

On 73, Burns was played in down the right by Harness, but the Welshman’s cross flew across the six-yard box too high for anyone to get a touch. As the U’s prepared to restart, Town swapped Chaplin for George Hirst.

The on-loan Leicester man was involved immediately, chasing a Morsy pass played into the right of the area and cutting across to Broadhead, who got a touch but while colliding with Mitov, who claimed and required treatment for a knock to his hand before continuing.

In the 76th minute, Donacien was played in on the right of the box and chipped over a cross which took a deflection and looped goalwards but Mitov was able to stop it, not entirely comfortably before claiming.

Soon after, Cambridge won a corner and subsequently kept the ball in and around the area with the Blues struggling to clear their lines but eventually getting the ball away.

In the 81st minute, Town switched Broadhead for Cameron Humphreys, while the U’s replaced Ironside with Tracey.

With the game in six minutes of injury time, Liam Bennett broke away on the Cambridge right and sent over a teasing cross, but no teammate had reached the area. Soon after, following a U’s free-kick not far outside the Town area, Digby was booked for pulling back Harness as Town counter-attacked.

The Blues continued to look for a winner, a Edwards corner was cleared as was a Donacien long throw with the Cambridge defence remaining resolute.

Town, whose only win at the Abbey remains a League Cup win in 1993, had been much better after the break and the equaliser, excellently created by Edwards, coming as early as it did gave them ample opportunity to push on for the winner.

But, while they dominated, the Blues didn’t create too many further clear-cut opportunities with Broadhead’s chance from Hirst’s cut-back perhaps the best, while the U’s remained a regular threat on the break.

Another draw against opposition they ought to be beating sees the Blues lose ground on the teams behind them, fourth-placed Derby and Bolton in fifth both having won. Town are now only two points ahead with the Rams having a game in hand on them and the Trotters having played a match more.

Sheffield Wednesday’s 1-0 home victory over Plymouth means the Owls are now top on goal difference ahead of the Pilgrims with Town six points behind ahead of Wednesday’s visit to Portman Road next Saturday.

Cambridge: Mitov, Digby (c), Jones (Williams 70), Brophy, Ironside (Tracey 81), Smith, R Bennett, Morrison, McGrandles, Knibbs, L Bennett. Unused: Mannion, Haunstrup, Lankester, Okedina, Worman.

Town: Walton, Clarke (Donacien 46), Keogh, Edmundson, Burns, Morsy (c), Evans (Harness 46), Davis (Edwards 46), Chaplin (Hirst 73), Broadhead (Humphreys 81), Ladapo. Unused: Hladky, Jackson. Referee: Sam Barrott (West Riding). Att: 7,154 (Town: 1,485).


Photo: Matchday Images



Please report offensive, libellous or inappropriate posts by using the links provided.



bringonbrazil added 19:17 - Feb 4
DREADFUL. Where is the pace? Defence were ball watching and unable to run.
5

delias_cheesy_flaps added 19:25 - Feb 4
When are we going to learn that possession and passing it around our back four, means absolutely diddly squat in the grand scheme of things??????????
10

Linkboy13 added 19:26 - Feb 4
I know we are only six points off the second spot with seventeen games to play but the team are not giving us any optimism that they are capable of turning things around. I watched the youth team last night they showed great fight, passion and togetherness that is not evident in the first team possibly some of the first team squad think they are above playing in league one. We need to take Tuesday's replay very seriously now i think and field our strongest team but the problem is what is our strongest team and there lays one of the problems im afraid.
13

Texastom added 19:29 - Feb 4
Weird thing is we have got worse since signing all these new players.
The team look disinterested.
Too many changes, too many players off form, too many mistakes and panic at the back.
They can't handle pressure. What on earth is going on?
I won't disagree with The Owners if they lost patience with McKenna. Like many I am fed up with the lack of attitude and commitment from the players.
It's a shambles.
Shef Wed will turn us over and we will be 4th and drop like a stone now…
Make the Play-offs? No
7

Texastom added 19:32 - Feb 4
Playing pretty possession football won't get you out of League One McKenna.
You need drive, fight and passion for a start.
11

Lower_North added 19:39 - Feb 4
Said it before play offs beckons.

Anyone fancy Derby, Bolton, Barnsley over 2 legs?

I don't ..
11

BlueBlueBlood added 19:45 - Feb 4
Soft goals being conceded mixed with the inability to be clinical in front of goal are only taking us one way at the moment.

Need a raucous PR next Saturday people.
4

blueboy1981 added 19:49 - Feb 4
McK has the impression we are Man Utd playing in Division 3 - hopefully now realising we are NOT ! - and his tippy tappy, pass sideways, pass back, to win the Possession Stats - Don't result in enough points to Escape this Dire level we find ourselves entrenched in.
16

Michael101 added 20:12 - Feb 4
Blueboy the point you made in your 18:48 post sounds just like all the Joe royal years, that was 20 years ago and we are still making the same mistakes
2

blueboy1981 added 20:35 - Feb 4
Michael101 ….. so very true.
The main difference now being, I believe, is we have Owners who mean Business, and will not accept failure.
That's not what they invested for - if results don't improve, and crowd numbers drop off (as I suspect they will, if the Play Offs look the only likely achievement) I predict we should not be surprised at whatever is forthcoming.
The Owners have put much into the Club to date, and just to continue ‘sitting' in Division 3 - I cannot see that fitting their Objective at all.
6

DaGremloid added 20:49 - Feb 4
Care to explain your down vote for me, Blues1 - the only one out of 31? What exactly is it you don't agree with or are you, as usual, just downvoting because it's me.

If I put up a post saying I was donating 10 grand to Gt Ormond St Hospital you'd vote me down.
0

ArnieM added 21:34 - Feb 4
Just not good enough are we….by a country mile based on today, and so many similar games that have gone before.

No threat to the opposition goalkeeper.
Can't defend our own box.
Play possession football mostly in our own half.
Rarely take a shot on goal .

Is it the type of players ? ( have we recruited players suitable for championship, but not robust enough to get out of league one?).

Is it the tactics deployed? Playing possession based football, when perhaps a higher proportion of more direct football , might achieve more against league one players who pack their defence?

Is the psychology of our players…weak mentality , easily bullied?

Why do we play league one matches like we are playing in a training knock about?
12

JJ1970 added 21:40 - Feb 4
What can one say? Another abysmal performance. Questions need to be asked NOW before it's much too late. With all due respect to other teams in this dire league, a lot of which are playing good DIVISION 3 football on a shoestring. Yet, we've had the kind of investment, that should be competing at the top of this league with a canter. But no, in all honesty, it started going wonky before Santa had even finished filling his sack. Yet we had the happy clappers down voting every poster that had something negative to say. Where are you today? Are you starting to see the wood through the trees? We get an odd cheeky result, you bang ya drums loud! As been pointed out sooo many times, by the ‘so called' neg crew. One swallow don't make a summer. If we do go up, I'll munch that humble pie with glee. Sadly, the team and manager are not even providing me with the ingredients to make it 😩..
9

dirtydingusmagee added 21:42 - Feb 4
The chopping and changing is the biggest problem imo ,In the past a team was named and only altered if a player was injured or really out of form , you could name the team each week with confidence. Now we never know the starting eleven till
shortly before kick off and can be sure half the team will be changed in the course of the game regardless as to wether we are playing well , winning or losing ! Cant our players do 90 minutes ?, or two games in succession anymore ? . Play the strongest 11 and only fix what is broken , Dont keep changing players for the sake of it . If a manager doesnt know his strongest team and can play them to their strengths surely he is failing . IMO
13

Umros added 21:58 - Feb 4
Yes frustrating and poor but some of our ‘so called fans' booing the team at half time and full
time is a disgrace ! See you all at Bristol …..thought not….hope not !
2

Irishblueboy99 added 22:07 - Feb 4
Km is not the answer for this club, even if we get promoted this year he would be completely out of his depth in the championship. Top 2 unlikely at this stage but still possible, playoffs with km in charge, highly unlikely to get up, Sheffield Wednesday, Plymouth, derby, Bolton churning out results week in week out, is Kieran McKenna the man to lead us to the promised land, absolutely NOT, at the moment he is leading to another year in league one. Bye bye for me before it's too late, results dont lie
3

Pilgrimblue added 22:26 - Feb 4
It's all very sad. The supporters deserve better from both the manager and the team! How much longer will they continue with the massive support with record crowds.
I'm not sure it was good idea to sign more players as they may have disrupted the team.
I don't understand how we can thrash teams one minute and then play so badly. I don't think KM is strong enough with players plus he's making mistakes on team selection. I mean why hasn't he started Kyle more often and got the team to develop a left sided attack. Plus the right isn't as effective with Donacian holding back too much.
We play very few cross passes that might open up defences. Midfield take too long to get forward unlike Plymouth so I'd play Cameron more often.
5

dusth added 22:47 - Feb 4
Dear Lord, never in my life heard such a load of hysterical depressives. It is way to early to issue your considered verdict on the season. I was gutted after the first half when we were poor against a sit-back side but we solved that problem and could have won. We all need to grow some and support the Town. Next week will be a better one. You heard it here first.
4

Bert added 23:15 - Feb 4
Interesting that on average the number of posts after each game is around the 100/125 mark and that includes multiple posts from regulars. That equates to less than 0.5 % of our average gate. No doubt the conclusions will be very varied as to why that is.
0

warktheline added 23:27 - Feb 4
It's the muppets show! Fickleness at the highest level..blueboy 🤣😂 you need to go change your underwear 🤣😂
…time shall prove so many wrong.
-2

ChrisR added 23:34 - Feb 4
Results since October are equal to bottom half of the table , simply not good enough considering the investment and quality of the squad and management .
Would have lost today if Cambridge had scored their penalty .
There is a toughness and resilience missing in all parts of the side , I wonder if KmK ever raises his voice at half time , or shows some fight or desire , perhaps his best role is coach , do we need a motivator instead? The second half of the Morecambe game we were easily outplayed by a side 4-0 down , and today's game was the worst first half I have ever seen . We ain't going up at this rate , and our lovely owners will be pulling the plug if so!
9

tractorboybig added 09:15 - Feb 5
with derby, barnsley, bolton and peterbourgh all away we wont be in the play offs
2

Cloddyseedbed added 09:20 - Feb 5
We're at our best when we play slick, quick passing football and attack with pace, we have the skill. Unfortunately we don't play like that anymore, just for a few minutes per game. We now play a pedestrian pace of passing football mostly based in our half. When we do get into attacking area's it's too easy to work out what we're doing and where the passes are going. We have become the most predictable team in the league to play against and most teams, if not all, have worked us out. McKenna better start learning new tricks. Marks out of ten in player ratings for yesterdays game tells the story. To win games you need to be 7's and 8's. Realistically I can't see us gaining any ground just loosing it and struggling making playoffs. Team now looks unsettled and very low in confidence.
10

blueboy1981 added 10:10 - Feb 5
To concede that Cambridge goal was Disgraceful - four players stood watching, and did nothing but let him walk through them.
Not the type of play from committed players at all.
A truly laughable Goal to concede for sure.
4

blueboy1981 added 10:12 - Feb 5
warktheline -normal gutter type post from you - no content - just tripe !
1


You need to login in order to post your comments

Blogs 295 bloggers

Ipswich Town Polls

About Us Contact Us Terms & Conditions Privacy Cookies Advertising
© TWTD 1995-2024