Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
Oxford United 0 v 0 Ipswich Town
EFL Championship
Friday, 28th November 2025 Kick-off 20:00
Oxford United 2-1 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Friday, 28th Nov 2025 22:02

Town’s six-game unbeaten run came to an end as they were beaten 2-1 by strugglers Oxford United at the Kassam Stadium. Mark Harris profited from an Azor Matusiwa error in the 24th minute to give the U’s the lead against the run of play. The Blues toiled having gone behind but levelled through Leif Davis’s excellent volley eight minutes into the second half, however, Town were caught short of numbers at the back as the U’s countered in the 77th minute, Przemyslaw Placheta restoring their lead, and the Blues were unable to find a second equaliser in the latter stages.

Boss Kieran McKenna made four changes from the team which won 2-0 at Hull City on Tuesday with Cedric Kipre replacing Jacob Greaves at the heart of the defence, Jack Taylor in for Jens Cajuste, who didn’t travel having suffered an ankle injury against the Tigers, in midfield and Sindre Walle Egeli and Jaden Philogene returning on the right and left respectively for Kasey McAteer and Jack Clarke.

Aside from Cajuste, all those dropping out of the XI were on the bench, while Cameron Humphreys came into the 20-man squad.

Oxford made two changes from their 1-1 draw at Norwich City on Tuesday with wingers Filip Krastev and Stan Mills, the son of former Canaries full-back Danny Mills, coming into the team for Tyler Goodrham, who was a sub, and Hidde ter Avest, who was absent from the squad. Ex-Town left-back Greg Leigh was on the bench.

In the fourth minute, a long Darnell Furlong throw-in from the right missed everyone and bounced just wide of the post, although wouldn’t have counted given the lack of a touch on its way.

Town dominated the ball in the early stages but didn’t threaten until the 11th minute when Taylor’s pass over the top was taken down by George Hirst but the striker’s shot was blocked.

Within a minute, Walle Egeli swept it wide to Davis on the left and the full-back cut it inside to the Norwegian, who took a touch before hitting a low shot wide of Oxford keeper Jamie Cumming’s right post when he will feel he should have broken his Town duck.

The Blues continued to dominate, Davis winning a corner from which Azor Matusiwa failed to make much contact with a difficult volley on the edge of the area, much to the home fans’ amusement.

On 17, skipper Dara O’Shea and Oxford frontman Mark Harris collided as the ball was played down the middle, the Kassam Stadium support claiming a foul, but referee Matt Donohue showed no interest.

Soon after, Taylor unleashed a trademark effort from distance which deflected off a defender and looped over.

Town went even closer in the 22nd minute when Davis crossed from the left to the far post and Walle Egeli nodded down and off the outside of the woodwork.

It had been all Town but in the 24th minute the U’s went in front, profiting from a Blues error.

Matusiwa scuffed as he all-too-casually turned a pass from Davis back towards Christian Walton and inadvertently played the delighted Mark Harris in on goal. Walton saved the striker’s first effort but the Wales international hit the rebound into the empty net.

As the half-hour approached, goalscorer Harris tried to catch Walton off his line with a dipping effort from distance that the Town keeper claimed comfortably.

In the 31st minute, the Blues weren’t far away from a leveller, Davis crossing from the left and Hirst flicking across the face and just wide of the far post.


But Town were struggling to regain their earlier composure and in the 34th minute more loose passing on the edge of the area allowed Will Vaulks a strike at goal which Walton snaffled with confidence.

As the half moved into its final few minutes, the Blues began to play keep-ball once again but without looking at all dangerous.

In the first of two minutes of time added on, Philogene crossed from the left and Marcelino Nunez wasn’t too far away from getting his head on it, as he did at Hull on Tuesday to put the Blues in front.

Moments before the whistle, there was another self-inflicted scare at the back for Town, O’Shea this time playing a wayward pass on the edge of the area. The ball was moved wide to the right and Mills cut in and hit a shot which Walton saved down to his right and Matusiwa cleared the loose ball ahead of waiting Oxford forwards.

Town had started strongly and had opportunities to go ahead, Walle Egeli coming close to scoring his first Blues goal on two occasions.

But, as had been the case a few times earlier in the season, an individual error led to an opposition goal against the run of play, Oxford not having threatened until they went in front.

Town wobbled for the period after conceding before regaining control and dominating the final minutes of the half, although without looking like scoring, until making another mistake which might well have led to a second Oxford goal.

Three minutes after the restart, Nunez hit the wall with a free-kick from much the same area he scored his two goals at QPR after Taylor had been fouled by home skipper Michel Helik.

The Blues hadn’t particularly looked threatening but in the 53rd minute, they levelled. Furlong won a corner on the right which Nunez sent to the 18-yard line just to the left and Davis volleyed with inside of his left boot into the net.

Having got on terms, Town began to put the U’s under pressure. Philogene cut in from the left and hit a shot which Cummings palmed wide for another corner on the right.

Davis, who coincidentally scored his first ever goal for the Blues at the Kassam Stadium in the game played in fog in January 2023, took the flag-kick and after it was half-cleared Nunez this time forced Cummings to block.

Town maintained their momentum, Taylor playing an excellent pass over the top for Hirst, who took it down but slightly too wide and Cummings came off his line to block his effort from a tight angle. The keeper needed treatment after the incident but was OK to carry on.

From the resultant corner, Matusiwa hit an effort into the ground and through to Cummings.

Oxford made their first changes in the 62nd minute, Mills and Mark Harris making way for Placheta and Lankshear.

The U’s almost handed a second goal to the Blues in the 66th minute, Walle Egeli playing a cross-field pass towards Philogene, Helik getting in the way but under-powering his header back to Cummings. Philogene reached the ball first and turned inside but lost his footing, allowing the grateful keeper to claim.

Town made a triple change as the game reached the 71st minute, Philogene, Hirst and Furlong making way for Clarke, Akpom and Ashley Young.

Two minutes later, Nunez struck the wall with another free-kick, referee Donohue awarding a goal-kick, much to Clarke’s amazement with the winger having let it run out of play and preparing to take a corner.

In the 75th minute, a long throw from the Oxford left was knocked on to Lankshear on the edge of the six-yard box but Walton had reacted quickly to come off his line to block. Moments later, Oxford made another double change, Goodrham and Ole Romeny replacing Krastev and Luke Harris.

And seconds after the change, the home side restored their lead. Brian De Keersmaecker cleared long following a Town attack, sending sub Placheta in behind Taylor and in on goal, the Pole confidently shooting low past Walton to his left.

Romeny struck wide from distance, then on 83 Young played the ball against Goodrham, claiming it had been handled and the Oxford sub brought it into the area on the left before stabbing towards goal, Walton making another sharp save.

Town, who were looking more likely to concede a third goal than score a second of their own, made two more changes, McAteer and Ivan Azon replacing Walle Egeli and Matusiwa.

The Blues began to get on top again and in the 86th minute Young cleverly found Akpom in the area, the on-loan Ajax man working it to McAteer, who sent it powerfully across the six-yard area but with no Town player far enough forward to make anything of it.

Two minutes later, the Blues seemed certain to score, Young playing in McAteer on the right and the Irish international cutting to the near post for Azon, who turned against the keeper. The loose ball wouldn’t fall to Taylor but Nunez was able to smash a shot goalwards, which rebounded out to Clarke, who worked his way into the area but his effort bobbled off a defender to Cummings.

In five minutes injury time, Young in open play and then Davis from a free-kick in a promising position on the left both found Cummings’s arms with a cross.

Moments before the whistle, O’Shea was found by a deep cross beyond the far post but sent the ball behind, much to the Irish international’s obvious frustration.

The whistle was greeted by huge cheers from the Oxford support, celebrating only their second Championship home win of the season.

Town can once again look back on not taking their chances when on top, then gifting opportunities to the opposition at the other end, a tendency they seemed to have put behind them in their recent run.

A result which sees the Blues remain fifth ahead of Saturday’s games when they seem set to drop back into mid-table and ends their run of away wins at three.

Town, who have still never won a league game away at Oxford, are next in action away at Blackburn Rovers in the restaging of the abandoned game on Tuesday evening.

Oxford: Cumming, Long, Brown, Vaulks, Helik (c), M Harris (Lankshear 62), L Harris (Romeny 76), De Keepsmaecker, Mills (Placheta 62), Currie, Krastev (Goodrham 76). Unused: Ingram, Prelec, Bradshaw, Leigh, Davies.

Town: Walton, Furlong (Young 71), O’Shea (c), Kipre, Davis, Matusiwa (Azon 84), Taylor, Walle Egeli (McAteer 84), Nunez, Philogene (J Clarke 71), Hirst (Akpom 71). Unused: Button, Johnson, Greaves, Humphreys. Referee: Matt Donohue (Manchester). Att: 11,307.


Photo: Action Images via Reuters



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



chripswich added 02:35 - Nov 29
One team can go 2nd
One team can get out of drop zone
Who wanted it more?

Terrible terrible night

The mind boggles
7

delias_cheesy_flaps added 04:27 - Nov 29
When are we going to ditch the god-awful playing it out from the back…the opposition can’t score if the balls in their own half and it will also speeds our game up!
6

tractordamage added 05:19 - Nov 29
As soon as people on social media were forecasting a 3-0 or 4-0...you knew Oxford would do well.
We had the same bravado in League 1, and got burnt every time.

Don't play with Fate.

What a depressing outcome...the weekend is very different now to what we expected.
6

ThaiBlue added 05:52 - Nov 29
We are so bad to watch
7

philpott2 added 06:47 - Nov 29
To concede goals from our possession was criminal i.e. we had a free kick on the edge of our box, so there was no reason for the ball to remain there...just get it upfield and set the defence ready for the next passage of play (it was a mistake by Matusiwa, after all, and Morsy made a few errors like that in his time).
The second was our throw-in near their box which Leif took, hence him being out of position.
The Oxford players almost all looked quicker to the ball, hungrier and generally faster and sharper. Town players were lucky to win a lot of free kicks last night as they were diving to the floor. Another ref may have let play on a few times and we'd have been in bother...O'Shea as last man cheated for his, having looked at his man and dived onto him.
We don't look like we can score a goal, despite the amount of ball we have in so many matches.
Walton excellent.
Nunez invisible, gave the ball almost every time he had it.
Hirst tries, was ok.
Egeli seems to appear more often in the box now, and has a couple of chances, hitting the post with his header. I'm still waiting for more from him, but he's pretty strong for a teenager.
Taylor and Matusiwa were combative, pretty sharp and competitive.
Phillogene did very little considering how much ball he had. Oxford defended him well crowding him out in numbers. But he was weak and pretty ineffective. Clarke saw a lot of the ball but was very poor, falling over mostly.
Furlong just ok. Young was slow...
Leif I thought, had one of his better games.
Centre halves simply ok....just touched the ball a lot, passing it back and forth. I think Greaves may have got forward more, would have run at Oxford when gaps appeared and been a bit more adventurous.
Akpom just about ok. McAteer's cross I guess should have been lower to give a chance of it going in.
Every corner we conceded had our entire team around the six yard box and again, as usual, opposition players free on the edge / outside of the box waiting for the clearance....
Way too predictable in terms of tactics.....the players simply aren't good enough or quick enough or skilful enough to beat teams with that much pace, hunger, togetherness and are so well organised. Their keeper didn't have much to do,which says an awful lot.
Poor yet again!
7

Expatractor added 07:26 - Nov 29
It does feel like recruitment has gone wrong since Town got promoted to the premier league. Playing style has changed also. We are an average championship team but should still make the playoffs. I love what Kieron has done for the club and I believe he's an all round decent bloke but everything feels a little stale on the pitch these days. Ipswich has a tradition of being a 'nice' club which is something to be proud of but I feel there is now a need to be a bit more nasty , for want of a better word. We've had a couple of great years but so have other of our peer teams. The likes of Brighton, Bournemouth, Brentford and now Sunderland going well.
8

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 07:31 - Nov 29
A very negative set of posts after this one - perhaps not surprisingly. We were not bad, but I accept that Oxford seemed to have more raw urgency and desire. I think this might stem from the fact that we apply the patterns no doubt repeated ad nauseam on the training ground but are afraid to use a bit of creativity and individuality, We do seem to have been a bit more direct of late (a bit less faffing around getting started from the back, and a few more longer balls from Walton) but in my opinion we need to be less afraid to break with the pedestrian build up at times and try an unexpected pass, take a man on, and shoot more. It won't always come off, but at least we would be less predictable. Anyway, on to the next one. If we beat Blackburn and/or Coventry, all the posts will suddenly become positive again. COYB!
0

Bluewhiteboy added 07:32 - Nov 29
To many luxury players, how much spent on egeli! Sure there is potential but there is a reason why none of the bigger clubs mentioned signed him.
2

bluesissy added 07:39 - Nov 29
Dreadful....play like that against Coventry and we will get absolutely battered.
6

buryblue77 added 07:41 - Nov 29
I rarely post comments, good or bad. But I am fed up with watching this dross. Bring back Mick McCarthy, if we're going to play rubbish football then at least know how to defend.
McKenna has no plan b, I know it's said a lot, subs are generally the same time and the same players. No change of formation.
3 terrible games in a row which we only won 1 of those because Hull were pretty awful at the back.
I've never actually been a McKenna fan, even during the good times. But he has to go, I know we're in the play offs but with some decent coaching I think we could be pushing top 2. Failure is not an option and I really feel that if we don't go up automatically, we won't go up via play offs either.
3

Jcb2007 added 07:57 - Nov 29
Dear Santa, for Christmas Id like my team to be more clinical in front of goal, send Mcateer back to Leicester, bring Ogbene back from Sheffield, see Wes back on the right wing, Blackburn gift us a goal next week and half the Coventry team come down with flu. Thank you.
5

Elizabeth added 08:14 - Nov 29
Well said Jugsy .. such a fickle bunch who are obviously not supporters of the club ..
Wasn’t expecting a loss against a bottom six club , but it happens .. they are all scrapping for points ..What we do lack is a leader on the pitch .. Sam was an excellent motivator.. we do miss him .
1

TownSupporter added 08:28 - Nov 29
Being disappointed for watching football much worse than our promotion season 2 season ago with a team millions of pounds more is not fickle.

We broke up a hard working never say die team. The signings have not been good on the majority over the last 2 seasons.

Some fans are happy clappers and others are not happy with mediocre- let’s be honest, that is what we are seeing.

McKenna just plays the same way week in week out and the subs literally are like for like. We even joke about the time they will get subbed on.

You can’t live in the past nostalgia with management - progress and adapt or get left behind.

The Christmas run in could be pivotal for us.
6

LWNR1973 added 08:30 - Nov 29
Sack the bored.
-1

BangaloreBlues added 09:17 - Nov 29
I am sick to death of this tippy tappy play out from the back.
I'm sick to death of the slow pace of our play.
Nice cross field balls that rarely produce anything.
No striker in the middle to put the ball in the net.
Did you notice how quickly Oxford attacked in the second half once they go the ball? Make us look like a team of snails.
All that money spent, by far the best squad in the league.
Look at Coventry's play compared to ours.
Whatever your opinion, this is ALL on the manager and there's no argument about it.
Not long ago I said KMK out, then I changed my mind, and while I'm not going to say KMK out it's obvious MA and the board need to take a long look at this. We should EASILY be in Coventry's position, but instead we'll be lucky to reach the play offs.
I'm worried that the board and MAs loyalty to KMK means we could be stuck with this awful style of play for many years to come. It's boring, it's slow, and it's not Premier League.
8

blueboy1981 added 09:26 - Nov 29
One Trick Pony - enough said.
Sussed by Rowett so easily !!
3

Tedray added 09:53 - Nov 29
For a long time our unconvincing team wobbled about and we did not know whether they were on the up or going down. That situation still remains with some really really testing fixtures coming up.About time the sycophantic Blue Monday team realised that KM is not all he is cracked up to be - if only they could be rid of that simply awful Rich things would start to be a lot better
2

blueboy1981 added 10:16 - Nov 29
Reality !! - £200million spend Club and Team - shown how to WIN a Football Match by a Ckub and Team with a LEAGUE 2 BUDGET !!
Not the first occasion eithet.
3

Bugledog added 10:37 - Nov 29
Not a great viewing experience. No passion and drive to want it. Why are we unable to break down teams like this? We need a striker who scores! It's simple.
2

d77sgw added 10:46 - Nov 29
Basically any team that defends deep, gives us possession, will get a result. We can’t break through them, and will generally (Preston, Charlton,Oxford….) make one or two stupid errors and gift them a goal. This is the one thing that gives me hope for the playoffs -we’ve got a better chance against teams that come out and play against us. Just right now I have no confidence we’ll even make those.
3

blueboy1981 added 10:58 - Nov 29
McKenna has proved he is at best no more than an average Championship Manager / Coach - if we were by fortune more than finesse, again be Promoted (unlikely) - then he would NOT be the one to take us forward and establish ourselves in the Premiership.
He is a One Trick Pony - How much more evidence does anyone need ?
0

ldnj added 11:17 - Nov 29
Might be more open matches against the likes of Coventry ? As others have said, teams like Oxford are happy to sit back and frustrate and stifle then broke away. Will Cov be more open ? Do seem to be missing someone who looks up and sends that telling pass - who remembers Morsy's cross to Davis for "that goal" last season ... I'd like to see ones like Humphreys given a chance and allowed to not just tap it sideways, but as he's homegrown that seems unlikely.
1

dirtydingusmagee added 11:26 - Nov 29
people can moan about teams sitting back all they like, at the end of the day they are getting results against us , those saying Oxford sat back , they scored twice and to be honest could have at least doubled it . Its down to us to play better [much better ] if we are to get promoted , I cant see us being in top 6 at Christmas, more like mid table . Hope im wrong
6

Rimsy added 11:56 - Nov 29
So disappointing. McK has been great for the club, but I keep wondering how much more this group of players could give, with someone at the helm with some different ideas. We do have a class squad for the Championship but they're just not being used to the optimum. The league is rubbish and we should be tearing it up.
4

Texastom added 12:06 - Nov 29
The biggest problem we have this Season is Leadership.
There isn’t any from top to bottom.
Players and Team are better than this, but we are not getting the best out of them, why?
3


You need to login in order to post your comments

Blogs 297 bloggers

Ipswich Town Polls





About Us Contact Us Terms & Conditions Privacy Cookies Online Safety Advertising
© TWTD 1995-2025