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Norwich City 1 v 0 Ipswich Town
SkyBet Championship
Saturday, 6th April 2024 Kick-off 12:30
Norwich City 1-0 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Saturday, 6th Apr 2024 14:35

Town’s long, long wait for East Anglian derby success continues following a 1-0 defeat to Norwich City at Carrow Road. The Blues, who went into the weekend top of the Championship but following the afternoon fixtures are down to second, were never at their best with Marcelino Nunez’s 39th-minute free-kick giving the Canaries the lead and Town huffing and puffing unconvincingly as they looked for a leveller in the second half.

Kieffer Moore started for the Blues as boss Kieran McKenna named an unchanged team from the 3-2 home victory over Southampton on Monday, aside from Nathan Broadhead replacing Kayden Jackson. Striker Moore had been a doubt with a back problem suffered in that game.

Norwich made one change from the team which lost 3-1 at Leicester on Monday with Shane Duffy replacing Jacob Sørensen at the centre of the defence having done the same from the bench against the Foxes. Former Town midfielder Liam Gibbs was on the bench.

In blazing sunshine but with the wind gusting, the Canaries won an early corner, Town keeper Vaclav Hladky punching to the edge of his area from where Borja Sainz shot deep into the stand behind the goal.

But Town quickly began to take charge, an Omari Hutchinson cross from the right in the third minute appearing to hit a Norwich arm but with referee Matthew Donohue showing no interest.

The Blues, with former midfielder Kieron Dyer and boxer Fabio Wardley in the away end, won another corner within a minute when another Hutchinson cross was cut out. The corner was played short to Sam Morsy but referee Donohue whistled for a foul before the skipper’s deep cross reached Broadhead beyond the far post.

On eight, Norwich right-back Jack Stacey’s shanked cross momentarily looked like it might catch Hladky out but the keeper got back to claim.

Two minutes later, with the home side now seeing most of the ball, Stacey sent a low ball across the face and wide having exchanged passes with Josh Sargent after winning a challenge with Leif Davis deep in his own team’s half.

Town began to see more of the ball again, while also stopping Norwich passing out from the back with determined pressing, but without managing to create a chance, with too many passes in the final third not finding their man.

The Blues had their first effort at goal in the 22nd minute, Cameron Burgess heading well over at the near post from Davis’s left-sided corner, the full-back having won the kick himself having been found behind Stacey, playing a similar role for the Canaries down that flank.

Both teams continued to have spells on the ball but without any causing any penalty box danger. On 29, Gabriel Sara smashed a free-kick from 30 yards high and wide.

There was a scare for the Blues just after the half-hour when Sargent was sent breaking away into the Town half. Axel Tuanzebe got across to take the ball away from the US international just outside the area, however, referee Donohue gave a free-kick.

The Blues players surrounded the referee as the home fans and team bayed for a red card. However, after a long wait, and perhaps advice from his assistant who was in a better position to see the incident, Donohue showed a yellow rather than a red card.

It was certainly an incident which might have seen a dismissal, however, video evidence showed not only that Tuanzebe had got the ball but that Sargent had been offside. Nunez hit the free-kick into the Town wall and the ball deflected wide for a corner.

Norwich were on top, winning another free-kick - for a foul by Burgess on Sargent - then another corner with the Blues unable to take the game out of their final third.

And in the 38th minute they went in front. Morsy fouled Sargent around 30 yards out and Nunez struck a shot which wobbled away from Hladky, who could only palm onto the inside of the post. The ball bounced back across goal and over the line to the delight of the home support.


Town looked to hit back straight away, Burgess flicking a back header through to home keeper Angus Gunn, then on 42 a Moore shot deflected out for a corner.

The Blues had a claim for a penalty in two additional minutes when Hutchinson went down under the attention of Sainz but appeared to trip over the ball.

Moments later, a pass towards the Chelsea loanee was overhit, which summed up much of Town’s first-half display in the final third.

Having started brightly, albeit without threatening, the Blues had allowed the Canaries a spell on top in which they won a number of set pieces around the area, and it was from the last of those which the Norfolk side took the lead.

Town had one or two spells during the half but without seriously testing Gunn with too many passes going astray in the final third.

The Blues made a nervous start to the second half, giving the ball away in their own half on a couple of occasions but with Norwich unable to make anything of the situations.

But Town gradually began to dominate the ball with the Canaries seemingly happy to sit in their half and frustrate, while trying to catch the Blues on the break.

On 58, with Town having made little impact in the final third, a long ball down the Norwich left struck Sainz, who managed to recover and loop a ball over the advanced Hladky but well wide of the post. Still, it was a warning to the Blues.

Two minutes later, Morsy felled Sargent as the striker broke towards the box but referee Donohue saw no foul. The ball eventually reached Stacey, whose low shot was saved by Hladky down to his right. Morsy’s challenge definitely looked a foul, however, it would have been outside the area and in any case Burgess was behind him so it would probably have been a yellow rather than a red card.

The Blues, who had shown little threat since the break made a double change, Broadhead and Tuanzebe making way for Jeremy Sarmiento and Harry Clarke.

Sarmiento, Monday’s late-winning goalscoring hero, quickly got into the game, sending over a left-wing cross which Moore looped to Gunn, the Blues’ first shot on target.

Town continued to dominate with Norwich sitting in their own half. On 67, Hutchinson cut in from the left and struck a low shot which was little trouble for Gunn.

Almost immediately Norwich threatened at the other end, but Burgess slid in ahead of Sargent as he broke into the box and Hladky claimed the loose ball.

On 70, Morsy was robbed midway inside the Town half and Sargent was able to bring the ball to the edge of the area before hitting a low shot which Hladky stopped and Luke Woolfenden cleared.

Norwich were looking more liked to score a second on the break than Town were an equaliser despite their possession and in the 71st minute Sargent again escaped on the left before rolling back into the path of Sainz, who shot well over.

Two minutes later, Davis played a low corner to Conor Chaplin from the left, a familiar set piece for Town fans, but for once the forward hit it against his standing leg.

That was Chaplin’s last involvement in the game, the 13-goal top scorer making way along with Moore and Luongo for Marcus Harness, Ali Al-Hamadi and Jack Taylor. Norwich switched Ashley Barnes for Town academy product Gibbs.

As the game moved into its final 10 minutes, Hutchinson and Sarmiento combined on the right and the Ecuadorian international struck a shot on the turn but well over.

On 85, the ball was looped into the right of the box for Al-Hamadi and the former AFC Wimbledon man tried to loop it over Gunn but it struck the keeper and then the Iraqi international, who tried to knock it back to Hutchinson but with too many yellow shirts ahead of him.

Three minutes later, a well-worked move ended with Sarmiento crossing from the right towards Harness, hut the ball got caught under the former Portsmouth man’s feet and he was unable to get in a shot.

Town continued to look for an equaliser in five minutes of injury time, Hutchinson seeing a shot from the right of the box blocked.

Deep in injury time, Al-Hamadi chased a ball down the middle and claimed he had been man-handled as he burst into the area but again referee Donohue wasn’t interested.

Town continued to huff and puff but were unable to conjure another serious chance before the referee’s whistle confirmed that the 15-year wait for a derby win will be extended.

Once again the Blues, so good all season, fell short against their greatest rivals, who on the balance of the game deserved the three points. While Town have been the superior side all campaign, they were a pale shadow of themselves for most of the afternoon, putting in perhaps their worst 90 minutes of the season.

Having made a relatively positive start, Town allowed the Canaries, who have now won eight in a row at home, to get on top and win a succession of set pieces from which they scored their goal.

In the second half, the Blues saw most of the ball with Norwich happy to sit back on their lead but with little success, creating very little in the way of clear-cut chances and Norwich keeper Gunn wasn’t forced to make a serious save all afternoon, while the Canaries always looked a threat on the break.


Town’s substitutes, particularly Sarmiento, had some impact but not the game-changing influence on a match they have had on so many occasions this season.

Passes which would normally be completed went astray all afternoon, while the Blues were second to the ball all too often, perhaps showing the effects of Monday’s heroics against the Saints or maybe the illness which has hit the camp over the last couple of weeks.

The Blues are down to second in the table with Leicester back to the top having beaten Birmingham 2-1 at the King Power Stadium and Leeds having lost 2-1 at Coventry City.

Town are next in action at home to Watford on Wednesday with Middlesbrough at Portman Road on Saturday.

Norwich City: Gunn, Stacey. Gibson, Duffy, McCallum, McLean (c), Nunez, Sainz, Sara, Sargent, Barnes (Gibbs 75). Unused: Long, van Hooijdonk, Fassnacht, Batth, Fisher, Welch, Aboh, Montoia.

Town: Hladky, Tuanzebe (Clarke 61), Woolfenden, Burgess, Davis, Morsy (c), Luongo (Taylor 75), Hutchinson, Chaplin (Harness 74), Broadhead (Sarmiento 61), Moore (Al-Hamadi 75). Unused: Walton, Ball, Travis, Jackson. Referee: Matthew Donohue (Manchester). Att: 27,001 (2,001).


Photo: Action Images/Reuters



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FrankMarshall added 15:08 - Apr 6
Need results to go our way today or we are looking at 3rd
1

Texastom added 15:08 - Apr 6
Worst performance since Paul Lambert days.
Players bottling again against Norwich.
What’s the matter with them?
They can’t seem to handle pressure, the old Ipswich character coming back again.
McKenna failed against Norwich again and couldn’t change it again.
Norwich in the playoffs then so season over. We won’t beat them.
1

SickParrot added 15:08 - Apr 6
Hladky was at fault for the goal, not because he didn't save it, but because he organises the wall. If there had been two more players in the wall the goal would've been prevented. That said, I don't blame him for the defeat. That was due to poor performances all over the pitch.
3

blueboy1981 added 15:17 - Apr 6
Hate to say and accept it - but the team that wanted it, and up for it - Won It !!
And yet again deserved it !
WTF was wrong with us today ?? - most of whom hardly turned up !!
4

dirtydingusmagee added 15:23 - Apr 6
Great season so far but another p#ss poor derby performa will almost certainly meet them in playoffs c now and who fanvies that now ? Starting eleven were poor to a man today.. Very disappointing didnt even make a game o all thatsaid im sure the ref was going to give Norwich free kicks in front of goal until they did score. Think its all over -? yes but it was good while it lasted
4

BlueInBerks added 15:23 - Apr 6
Kentish, that wasn't the keepers mistake that was due to us (Morsey) giving away daft free kicks in poor positions - against a side which scores lots from set pieces
5

warktheline added 15:25 - Apr 6
Poor performance, and it is obviously more painful losing to our rivals. But when I read posts, for instance, ‘nowhere near good enough AGAIN!’ It’s painful that we have such supporters. So many are unable to see the bigger picture, the points tally doesn’t lie! Leeds lost against their rivals Preston, and the list goes on! It’s the course of a season that earns merits, not one off derby games…whether we win it or lose! These people know so little about football it’s embarrassing!
2

budgieplucker added 15:25 - Apr 6
I think in all honesty the season is starting to catch-up with us a bit, on the stats nothing much between us but again we didn’t hit the right levels of intensity today and when we often do it’s like we only have enough fuel in the tank for a sprint towards the end. First 15-20 minutes we managed the game well to avoid the weakness of falling behind in 10 mins.

Their season still needs a play off place without it being deemed a failure and Wagner despite the early season whinging is starting to mould a strong side although little flair and they have a decent chance of going up through the play offs. There fans will look stupid if he now gets them u, which he might do, It’s not the loss of 3 points today that necessarily concerns me it’s more the psychological impact of Norwich gaining momentum and knowing they can handle us in the playoffs and may be better suited to the big game mentality than us. They broke with purpose, pressed at the right time and managed us in the final third well. They could be hitting the final straight with strength and determination which is not good news if the script is that we are to meet them again.

With the Bristol and Southampton games it was almost a case that we only fired ourselves up when we felt bullied or intimidated and we needed to go more physical. Our game is suffering a bit from being played at the same tempo until the clock starts to run down and we then sense an urgency.

No matter what the final outcome we will all be proud of what we have been able to achieve this season
8

ITFC62 added 15:27 - Apr 6
As Muhammad Ali said to George Foreman during their fight in Zaire, "this is the wrong place to get tired". COYB
3

blueboy1981 added 15:31 - Apr 6
Looks like more ‘Squeaky Bum’ time looming in the Play Off’s now !!
Go Forbid - who could ever live another defeat down to these ? - and Miss Out to THEM ?
3

OliveR16 added 15:34 - Apr 6
To lack intensity is that game is inexcusable. The goal was effectively a Morsey own goal, giving away yet another completely unnecessary freekick in a dangerous position. Five more games before the budgies knock us out over two legs. Time to go on holiday I think.
-3

Help added 15:36 - Apr 6
Okay, without reiterating what has already been said on here I agree with all of the comments. No passion, no guile, no forward momentum. Leif never took anyone on. Omari created very little. Morsy had one of his worst games I've seen. Mass ineffectual, Broadhead absent. In fact nothing from the front 4 at all. Ponderous from the back to front. To many passes to marked men, no cutting through balls to turn the defenders. Stray passes, overhit passes, lack of control of the ball, to many flicks, second to every ball.

But not to high and not to low. We move on. A performance against Watford required now at home under the lights. Bounce backability required once again. We may not make top 2, but still twists and turns in this season, it is not over yet. I just hope we do not play like that again this season.
3

Help added 15:41 - Apr 6
oh and how I hate 12.30 kick offs
1

Dissboyitfc added 15:41 - Apr 6
The worst performance this season We will beat that lot in the playoffs, We wont play that bad again against them!

Simply awful!!!!
3

Blue56 added 15:43 - Apr 6
Unbelievable season, but didn't seem up to the task today. This game means so much to our supporters, yet left flat, that performance and Leeds and Leicester trip up, I doubt it.
0

dirtydingusmagee added 15:45 - Apr 6
Got to get behind Coventry now and pray⁷⁸
2

Westy added 15:45 - Apr 6
Think I'm going to throw up.
1

warktheline added 15:55 - Apr 6
Plenty of more twists and turns to come before season is over! No easy games now, for ourselves and teams chasing automatic promotion!
3

leagueonescum added 15:57 - Apr 6
Obviously hurt losing to the mustard sniffers but hand up but we deserved to. We didn't turn up but then sometimes we've won this season and not deserved it. Cmon Coventry! In KM we trust, COYB!
1

cfmoses added 16:02 - Apr 6
Let’s give the Scum credit for their game plan in the second half. Gunn had almost nothing to do. Our front four to a man were ineffective for the whole game and I lost count of the number of times I shouted at the Blues for playing so slowly.
2

yorkieblue62 added 16:04 - Apr 6
Some of you will remember 1981 when we also lost1-0 to an inferior Norwich side during an end of season collapse which saw us hand the Div 1 title to Villa. Only difference is I 'd love finishing second this time.
1

KMcBlue added 16:05 - Apr 6
If you give away that many free kicks outside the box you are going to concede....
3

Bert added 16:07 - Apr 6
Everyone had an off day with so many players anonymous. Norwich nullified both flanks, we were second to the ball and never really looked like scoring. Norwich played the game how they wanted it. Boring but effective. It really hurts but there will be more twists and turns to come.
2

cfmoses added 16:13 - Apr 6
Yorkieblue…had the same bad memory as you. Seem to recall two days after that 1-0 defeat we travelled to Cologne to witness Butch take us to the UEFA cup final. But just like this season we tired and with injuries affecting us we lost 5 of the last 7 and handed the title to Villa.
0

cfmoses added 16:14 - Apr 6
Omg Coventry are 2 up,
0


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