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Ipswich Town 1-2 Southampton - Match Report
Saturday, 1st Feb 2025 17:11

Town’s hopes of staying in the Premier League suffered a significant blow after they were defeated 2-1 at Portman Road by rock-bottom Southampton, the Saints’ first away league win this season and only their second in the league. Joe Aribo gave the visitors the lead against the run of play in the 21st minute but Liam Delap levelled for the Blues 10 minutes later with his ninth of the season. Town had a number of chances to go in front but were unable to take them and were made to pay three minutes from time when Paul Onuachu stabbed home a rebound.

The Blues made four changes from the team which lost 4-1 at Liverpool last week with Aro Muric, Jens Cajuste and Nathan Broadhead returning to the XI and Julio Enciso making his full debut.

Muric took over in goal from Christian Walton, who suffered a groin injury at Anfield last week having started the last five matches, with Cieran Slicker the sub keeper.

Cajuste came back into central midfield alongside skipper Sam Morsy, who was making his 150th start for the club, with Kalvin Phillips on the bench.

Ensico, who came off the bench at Liverpool last week and whose corner led to Jacob Greaves’s late goal, was in the centre of the three behind Liam Delap with Omari Hutchinson on the right and Nathan Broadhead on the left.

Ben Johnson and Jaden Philogene were among the subs having started last week, while Wes Burns is out for the season having suffered an ACL injury.

Southampton gave debuts to January signings Welington, a Brazilian left-back, and Danish international midfielder Albert Gronbaek, while England keeper Aaron Ramsdale was back in goal with ex-Blues loanee Alex McCarthy dropping to the bench.

Another former loanee, James Bree, started for the Saints, but there was no place for Flynn Downes in the squad. Jack Stephens, Tyler Dibling and Kamaldeen Sulemana were all on the bench after returning from injury.

The Blues started on the front foot with Enciso and Delap both involved and on five the Paraguayan international won a corner on the left with a shot which deflected wide. The on-loan Brighton man took the flag-kick himself, Dara O’Shea heading back from deep but Saints keeper Ramsdale claimed the looping ball.

Town continued to see all the ball with the visitors struggling to get out of their half, Taylor Harwood-Bellis passing twice passing straight out of play under no pressure.

On 10, the busy Enciso shot low to Ramsdale’s left after winning the ball back not far outside the area but the keeper was able to save with little fanfare.

The Blues had maintained their dominance and Southampton had shown virtually nothing as an attacking force but on 21 the visitors went in front.

Kyle Walker-Peters was given space on the right and played a ball ahead for Mateus Fernandes. Greaves’s heel diverted Fernandes’s cross to Joe Aribo on the penalty spot and the Nigeria international hit a shot towards goal which Muric bundled into the net with his right hand. That the keeper felt he should have done better was clear from his reaction.

Town set about getting back on terms, Hutchinson making a burst towards the area before being felled by Harwood-Bellis only for referee Michael Oliver to wave away the protests, much to the annoyance of the home support.

On 24, Hutchinson sent over a ball from the right, Broadhead nodded down and Delap hooked the ball only just over.

As the game approached the half hour, Enciso broke past a number of Southampton players before feeding Leif Davis, whose cross clearly struck Walker-Peters on an outstretched arm. Referee Oliver again irked the Town fans by waving away protests and VAR evidently agreed with him.

But the Blues support didn’t have to wait too much longer for an equaliser. In the 31st minute, Broadhead dug out a pass on halfway, Delap’s pace saw him beat Saints skipper Jan Bednarek to the ball and through one-on-one with Ramsdale, who he confidently beat to his left.


Delap’s ninth goal for the Blues lifted the roof off a previously nervous and frustrated Portman Road, but was well deserved on the balance of the game.

Two minutes after levelling, Town should have gone in front. Delap sent Broadhead away towards the left and the Wales international took it on into the area before attempting to chip Ramsdale, who saved with his chest. The loose ball fell back to Broadhead at a tight angle but he was unable to make anything of the second opportunity.

Southampton created a chance in the 36th minute, Welington crossing and 6ft 7in tall striker Onuachu nodded straight at Muric, who claimed.

Four minutes later, there was a huge cheer from the Town support after referee Oliver showed the game’s first yellow card to Welington for a foul on Axel Tuanzebe not far outside the area, a number of earlier caution-worthy challenges from Saints players having gone unpunished.

Enciso took the free-kick and sent a low effort past the wall to the right but into the side-netting.

On 44, Cajuste did well to clear the danger with Fernandes threatening to find a way through the Town backline.

A minute later, Morsy sent Hutchinson away on the right, the former Chelsea man cutting in but shooting straight at Ramsdale.

Two minutes into three additional minutes, the Blues should have taken the lead. Hutchinson crossed from the right, the ball reached Broadhead, who took too many touches before hitting a shot which was blocked. A first-time strike would probably have seen the Wales international, who was only eight yards out, celebrating his first Premier League goal.

That was the last action of a half which the Blues had controlled throughout aside from a couple of Southampton attacks.

Town had started positively, with the enthusiastic Enciso causing the visitors plenty of problems, although without creating any serious chances, before the Saints scored via their first attack, a goal which the Blues defence and keeper Muric won’t want to watch back.

As has so often been the case under Kieran McKenna’s management, going behind didn’t appear to impact Town too much and it took only 10 minutes for the equaliser, created well by Broadhead and finished confidently by Delap.

From there, the Broadhead had had two chances to put his side in front but perhaps showed his lack of recent goals with his finishes.

The visitors made a change ahead of the second half, Harwood-Bellis, who had looked out of sorts throughout the first period and had picked up a knock towards the end, making way for club captain Stephens, returning to the team for the first time since December 4th.

In the 53rd minute, Delap was blocked off by Bednarek inside the box, the Town striker claiming a penalty but referee Oliver showing no interest.

The former Manchester City man was still down in the area holding his face as play continued with the Blues still in possession. Eventually, with Delap now on his feet, Hutchinson played a pass across the edge of the area to Davis, who laid back to Cajuste, but the Swedish international’s shot flew well over.

Visitors’ half-time sub Stephens lasted only 11 minutes, taking his leave on 56 having picked up a niggle and Will Smallbone taking over.

Just before the hour, Enciso went close to putting Town in front. Greaves nodded Cajuste’s long throw from the left back from the near post and Delap stabbed it out to the Paraguayan, whose effort wafted just past the angle of post and bar.

Southampton subsequently had a spell on the ball, Bree shooting wide from the edge off Davis.

From the corner, the ball found Aribo in space but the midfielder sent the ball well wide, the ball almost falling for a teammate on the byline to the left before the danger was cleared.

The Blues broke immediately through Ensico and Hutchinson, the latter crossing for Broadhead but the Wales international couldn’t get it under control and the ball bounced through to Ramsdale. That was Broadhead’s last involvement with Philogene taking over.

In the 65th minute, Delap brought the ball in from the left before mis-hitting a shot well wide. Five minutes later, the visitors swapped debutant Gronbaek for Sulemana.

On 71, Delap muscled his way around the outside of Bednarek before shooting from a tight angle when there were options in the middle and Ramsdale saved.

Moments later, Cajuste was sent flying in the middle 10 yards outside the area. Morsy took a quick free-kick, Bednarek clattered into Delap as the Town striker turned, but the Blues kept playing and Enciso’s shot failed to trouble Ramsdale.

Bednarek was eventually booked in the 74th minute for hauling over Delap five yards outside the area. Davis’s free-kick struck the top of the wall.

Town were by now completely dominant, Davis crossing from the left and then Philogene from the right with the Blues encamped in the Saints half.

The Blues swapped Cajuste, again one of Town’s key men, for Jack Taylor, before there was a hold-up in play as Ramsdale was treated.

Soon after, Sulemana made a pacy run into the area on the left but Tuanzebe kept up with him and forced him off the ball.

Welington underwent treatment and eventually made way for Yukinari Sugawara with Lesley Ugochukwu also coming off and Adam Lallana, who played for the Saints U18s in the 2005 FA Youth Cup final at Portman Road as the Blues won the trophy, took over.

Town’s impetus had been halted by all the stoppages and they were struggling to put attacks together and in the 87th minute the Saints went back in front.

Aribo fed Sulimana down the left, the sub cutting in and hitting a low shot which Muric saved down to his right. However, the Kosovan keeper could only palm it out and Onuachu beat Greaves to the loose ball and stabbed into the net to send the away fans to his left into raptures.

Town swapped Enciso and Davis for George Hirst and Jack Clarke for the final three scheduled minutes plus eight in additional time.

The Blues huffed and puffed in the closing minutes but without creating a significant opportunity and it was the visitors’ fans cheering at the whistle and muted boos from the Town supporters.

A big blow for the Blues as they battle relegation with the games against those around them towards the bottom of the division matches which it is far more important to win than those against the likes of Liverpool and Manchester City, who beat them in previous weeks.

Town will rue missing opportunities in the first half, the otherwise excellent Broadhead having two chances that he probably would have taken in his pomp in the last two seasons, while Enciso and Delap may feel they should have done better with second half opportunities, although Ramsdale wasn’t as tested as he should have been after the break.

Enciso, Hutchinson and Philogene after he came on caused problems with their running with the ball but all too often kept hold of it too long when they might have moved it on to teammates.

Southampton, whose last away win was at Leeds in the Championship in May and whose manager Ivan Juric is celebrating his first Premier League win, had one real chance in each half and scored from both of them with questions regarding the returning Muric on each of them, although Town never looked entirely comfortable at the back.

The result makes little difference to the Blues’ position as it stands, Leicester having lost 4-0 at Everton and Wolves in action at Villa later this evening, but losing to Southampton, who remain seven points behind second-bottom Town is a big blow both in terms of failing to take points and also psychologically.

Town: Muric, Tuanzebe, O’Shea, Greaves, Davis (J Clarke 87), Morsy (c), Cajuste (Taylor 77), Hutchinson, Enciso (Hirst 87), Broadhead (Philogene 64), Delap. Unused: Slicker, Johnson, Godfrey, Townsend, Phillips.

Southampton: Ramsdale, Walker-Peters, Harwood-Bellis (Stephens 46 (Smallbone 56)), Aribo, Bree, Fernandes, Ugochukwu (Lallana 82), Gronbaek (Sulemana 70), Onuachu, Welington (Sugawara 82), Bednarek (c). Unused: McCarthy, Armstrong, Dibling, Bella-Kotchap. Referee: Michael Oliver (Ashington). VAR: Jarred Gillett. Att: 29,902 (Southampton: 2,961).


Photo: Reuters



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Ipswichbusiness added 17:26 - Feb 1
To all those who told me before the match that this was not a must-win game, I would ask you to study the fixture list and tell me which games you expect us to win. You should do so in the following format:

“Despite having lost at home to the worst team in Premier League history, I still think that we can beat [insert name of team(s)] because [insert reason(s)].”
8

chepstowblue added 17:27 - Feb 1
Trust the process !!!!!!
-3

Blue56 added 17:27 - Feb 1
Total embarrassment, against arguably the worst team in Premier League history! Southampton were awful... and we were worse!
2

SuffPunch added 17:27 - Feb 1
If McKenna has been brave enough to put Slicker in goal, we wouldn't have lost this game.
11

Esseeja added 17:28 - Feb 1
I've tried to be supportive of the players. This is the one game I cannot give support for at all.

Enciso had moments of quality, but Brighton fans warned us of his inability to pass 5 yards in front of him. Multiple times with Hutchinson, Enciso, Philogene, where we didn't make the blatantly obvious pass, this is a pattern that has been reoccurring for the past 2 months now. It feels like these players are far too selfish but don't have the quality Delap has to justify it. Broadhead knows how to do both. We took him off at 60. Why?
We are too predictable. Watching us try and cross the ball, even score from a cross this season, is one of the most painful things I've had to watch this season.
There was a moment when there was a player completely free out wide, and we opted against that pass. Frustrating is not a strong enough word for how I felt at that moment.

Chaplin is sorely missed, Szmodics is also missed because he knows where the goal is.

This not the Muric of last season, and Walton isn't good enough. I've tried my hardest to back Muric. I wanted to back Walton. Both have been disappointing beyond belief.

Did we even Challenge Ramsdale in the second half? Why are we so poor in second halves at Portman Road?

Then again, if Wolves don't win this evening, my confidence in finishing 17th stays as high as it is.
Please sign a midfielder, though. Morsy isn't effective enough in this league and Phillips needs more help.
12

Suffolkboy added 17:30 - Feb 1
It’ll be exceptionally interesting to hear what the cool calm analyst KM has to say . I’ve little doubt he’ll avoid laying personal blame on anyone,but it’s high time he let the inevitable inner anger actually show .
Where oh where is the character and individual flair and initiative amongst our crew ,who jointly demonstrate endeavour but some how lack the actual driven hunger — both in attack and defence ?
We shall see !
COYB
1

itfc2024 added 17:31 - Feb 1
what a joke losing to Southampton deserves relegation

the team is shocking the boring slow build up is non effected

why does everything need to go thought morsy cos he's a poor premier league player

Hutchinson and philogene £40 million wasted both are rubbish

muric is a terrible goalkeeper but Walton ain't much better

all this money spent has made us worse
-3

Bluewhiteboy added 17:32 - Feb 1
I had a horrible feeling before this must win game we would draw but didn't dream we would lose to worst team in prem history!
Big changes needed if we are goi g to stay up. Starting with a proper goal keeper.
If we are serious about staying up maybe a new manager or at least get someone with experience to coach the coach!
0

Bert added 17:33 - Feb 1
Least said the better.
5

chepstowblue added 17:35 - Feb 1
Just to add, I believe that our regular championship eleven would beat the current crop. I know that it doesn't work like that, and a few players from that era remain, but we had an identity and an understanding in our play back then. I can't even be bothered to watch the Wolves game, so inevitable is the outcome to our season.
5

ArmaghBlue added 17:35 - Feb 1
Inexcusable trash yet again. The players and manager are an embarrassment to the club
-9

TimmyH added 17:36 - Feb 1
Have to say I feel a bit sad tonight - that was a p-poor result, not through lack of effort but just not good enough against the poorest side that has turned up at PR this season. At times we had more players in the opponents half then at any other game this season, other times more frantic on the break football when players were clearly not on the same wave-length as others and that has clearly been a theme this season, and cannot keep clean sheets for toffee!
Thought Enciso had a good debut and Delap again probably MOTM but on the flip side Philogene looks lightweight and I have concerns over his signing like I did before we signed Muric (lets not go there as enough has probably already been said). Our recruitment has certainly been mixed.

Finding it now very difficult to find an argument that we'll stay up...
12

therein61 added 17:36 - Feb 1
Oh dear!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
1

blueboy1981 added 17:40 - Feb 1
McKenna has I am afraid failed his Premiership Test - who could possibly see it otherwise now.
The Bottom third Teams in the Prem’ are of low standard - and we are below that.
Could we have done worse without spending £120million ? - I doubt it very much.
ABYSMAL Showing - and gone backwards for sure.
6

Karlosfandangal added 17:41 - Feb 1
At least Town were still in the game right to the end instead of of the game being over by the 30min mark

All TOwn are doing is getting further in to debt by through ING money at the problem

Let’s get back in the Championship so we can watch some football instead of men against boys
But what in the Championship and we have this all over again

Down arrows please
5

Town1Inter0 added 17:41 - Feb 1
Tempting as it is to moan about the result, we need to think about some positives for the back half of the season. We need a settled starting 11 and to bed in new signings, especially Enciso and Philogene (we’ve made more changes to starting 11 this season than any other team) and then take into account that in the past few seasons we’ve faired better in the back half than the front half. We just need a mini run and for Wolves to not have one!
3

gkroon89 added 17:43 - Feb 1
Wolves are winning - let’s hope Villa turn that around.
1

Town1Inter0 added 17:43 - Feb 1
Oh and can we also have a new GK, CDM and number 9 before the end of the transfer window?!
1

johnwarksshorts added 17:48 - Feb 1
Oh no! My nightmare came true.
0

EssexTractor added 17:49 - Feb 1
We are disappointed tonight
Some are naturally angry
( oh dear Wolves have just scored)
But sadly despite feeling it was a winnable fixture look at the statistics particularly second half
Ransdale only had back passes, no saves, Corners We had none.
Physicality again too much for our “ boys” , and some played like that .
Without having a midfield with dynamism ,and dangerous passing ability the front line will get nowhere in The Premier League.
We do not have that.
Delap cannot be the only threat but he has been all season . Who would blame him if he took his power and skill and footballing talent elsewhere next season.
No further words from me about our goalkeeper today
Others have spoken , but some doubt about the recruitment policy , now only of him but certain others.
6

Davidwb20 added 17:51 - Feb 1
I don’t like to single out a player - However, Muric has let us down too often this season and again today. Should have saved 8 million and kept Hadkly!!!
11

Stato added 17:51 - Feb 1
That's the performance you get when you tell the players its not a must win game
3

Stato added 17:51 - Feb 1
That's the performance you get when you tell the players its not a must win game
1

Elpelly added 17:51 - Feb 1
If we can’t beat Southampton at home then we’re not good enough to stay up. Have been optimistic throughout the season but am resigned to relegation now as can’t see us picking enough points up, with all those dropped when we have been playing well costing us too.
5

yorkieblue62 added 17:53 - Feb 1
Funnily enough its a bit like 2001/2 when Burley made some poor transfer decisions, though not £100m worth and then compounded things by not working out what his best team was, albeit with a much smaller squad.
8


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