Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
Millwall 0 v 0 Ipswich Town
EFL Championship
Friday, 26th December 2025 Kick-off 13:00
Millwall 0-0 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Friday, 26th Dec 2025 14:58

The Blues’ festive fixtures got under way with a 0-0 draw with Millwall at the Den. Town were largely in control of the game but tested home keeper Max Crocombe all too infrequently, while Christian Walton in the Blues’ goal made the afternoon’s outstanding save in the first half.

Town made two changes from the team which won 3-1 at home to Sheffield Wednesday on Saturday with Ivan Azon and Kasey McAteer coming into the XI.

Azon replaced George Hirst, who is out for a number of weeks with a groin injury, as the number nine, while McAteer took over wide on the right from Sindre Walle Egeli, who dropped to the bench.

Wes Burns made his return to the squad as a sub having been unavailable since January after suffering an ACL injury at Liverpool.

For Millwall, Caleb Taylor, Macaulay Langstaff and Joe Bryan came into the starting XI with Danny McNamara, Zak Sturge and Thierno Ballo dropping to the bench.

There was indecision in the home side’s defence in the opening seconds, keeper Crocombe rushing off his line to clear ahead of Azon after some he sitancy from his central defenders.

In the second minute, with the game beginning in a surprisingly open manner, Leif Davis cut back from the left of the area to Azor Matusiwa, but the Dutchman’s first touch let him down when in a good position to shoot on the 18-yard line.

On five, Lions skipper Liam Cooper was found in space on the right of the area after a Town attack had broken down and his cross was turned towards goal by Mihailo Ivanovic which Walton, making his 100th league start for the club, pushed away.

Moments later, the Town keeper appeared to indicate that someone in the crowd was shining something in his eyes ahead of a Millwall long throw, referee Tim Robinson subsequently approaching the fourth official.

In the ninth minute, Camiel Neghi wasted a promising opportunity for the home side by tamely curling a free-kick from just outside the area into the wall.

Soon after, Alfie Doughty crossed from the right and Ivanovic nodded into the ground to Walton.

Millwall were looking threatening and in the 12th minute Walton was forced to make a superb stop to keep the scores level.

Doughty again crossed from the right and Taylor’s angled header looked destined for the top corner until Walton got across to palm it away.

On 18, Marcelino Nunez hit the top of the wall with a free-kick and after the resultant corner was cleared to the edge of the box, hooked back towards goal, the ball striking a defender and almost falling for McAteer.

Within a minute, the former Leicester man flicked a header into Crocombe’s arms from a Nunez cross, the Chilean having left Ivanovic in his wake with a clever turn.

After Millwall’s spell of pressure, the Blues were on top and as the 20th minute approached, Davis crossed from the left but neither McAteer nor Azon were able to get a clean contact on it under pressure.

A minute later, Jens Cajuste, making his 50th league appearance for the Blues, brought the ball in from the right before hitting a shot just over.

In the 26th minute, Nunez got the ball over the wall from 25 yards out but failed to test Crocombe, who claimed to his right.

On 32, the Blues took a free-kick quickly just inside their own half and McAteer was sent away and brought the ball to the edge of the area before being challenged as he shot.

Millwall began to see more of the ball, Town not helping themselves by giving it away too easily in their own half, and in the 36th minute Neghli struck a shot from distance which Walton saved down to his left.

But the Blues quickly restored their dominance and as the half moved into its final five minutes Jaden Philogene won the ball not far inside the Lions’ half and brought into the area before losing control just as he was about to shoot.

That was the last chance of a half which Town had dominated for long spells but without finding the final pass or finish, despite having got in dangerous areas on a number of occasions.

Millwall came closest to going in front with Walton making another outstanding save to thwart Taylor’s header.

The second half began in much the same manner as the first had ended with the Blues on top and taking the game to the home side.

On 46, Philogene laid the ball back to Cedric Kipre on the edge of the box but the Ivorian’s shot was blocked. Moments later, Philogene was booked for showing his frustration after a throw was awarded against him.

The game lost its momentum and pattern following a series of stoppages and in the 56th minute out of nothing Ivanovic scuffed a volley which had Walton scampering to his right to keep out.

At the other end, within a minute, McAteer got into a dangerous position on the right and crossed, only for Azon to bundle it wide at the near post.

Just before the hour, skipper Dara O’Shea gave the ball away in the Town final third, Aidomo Emakhu eventually hitting a shot which Walton batted away. Macaulay Langstaff was subsequently caught offside having been played into a dangerous position in the area.

On 63, Philogene brought the ball inside from the left and shot in a trademark manner but failed to trouble Crocombe, who gathered at his near post.

Two minutes later, Town made their first changes of the afternoon, McAteer and Azon making way for Walle Egeli and Chuba Akpom.

Almost immediately after the changed, Emakhu shot over from the back of the box for the Lions, a deep Tristan Crama cross from the right.

Philogene went close to putting the Blues ahead in the 69th minute. Akpom turned his man midway inside the area as the ball was played into feet, it bouncing out to Philogene, who cut inside and hit a shot from a tight angle which Crocombe saved.

Town were getting a up a head of steam, Philogene having another effort blocked before Walle Egeli shot wide from the right-hand side.

That was Philogene’s last action, the former Aston Villa man making way along with Cajuste for Jack Clarke and Jack Taylor in the 71st minute. Millwall swapped Emakhu for Ballo and Billy Mitchell for Ryan Leonard.

As the match moved into its final quarter of an hour, Nunez just failed to find Akpom with a pass inside the area, then Walle Egeli curled a shot from just outside the area to the right wide.

On 79, with Town keeping up the pressure, Nunez got under a volley from the edge of the box, the ball looping onto the roof of the net.

Two minutes later, Clarke played a low ball from the left across the six-yard area but inches too far in front of Akpom, a Millwall defender hooking behind at the far post.

The home fans thought they’d front following a counter-attack after the resultant corner, but Neghli had been flagged offside long before he rounded Walton and stroked into the empty net.

Neghli was swapped for Ra’ees Bangura-Williams and Bryan for Sturge, before Darnell Furlong was booked for a foul on Ballo.

With three minutes left, Nunez made way for Burns, making his return to first-team action 335 days after suffering his ACL injury at Anfield.

The Blues were unable to threaten again in three minutes of added-on time - surprisingly scant given the stoppages early in the half - and both teams had to be content with a point.

Town, drawing 0-0 for the second time this season, the first away from home, will feel it was a missed opportunity to pick up three points on the road having controlled the game for the most part.

However, they rarely created clear-cut chances with Philogene forcing Crocombe to make his most significant save just before he was subbed and had scruffy spells, while the Lions will feel they had the better of the chances and Walton made the game’s outstanding stop in the first half.

But a draw away against the side sixth in the table can’t be seen as too bad a result, even if the Lions are now without a win in four. Town, who remain third in the table following the later afternoon matches, are in action again away against leaders Coventry on Monday.

Millwall: Crocombe, Taylor, Crama, Cooper (c), Bryan (Sturge 83), Doughty, Mitchell (Ballo 72), Emakhu (Leonard 72), Neghli (Bangura-Williams 83), Langstaff, Ivanovic. Unused: Benda, McNamara, Matthews, Harding, Howland.

Town: Walton, Furlong, O’Shea (c), Kipre, Davis, Matusiwa, Cajuste (Taylor 71), McAteer (Walle Egeli 65), Nunez (Burns 87), Philogene (J Clarke 71), Azon (Akpom 65). Unused: Palmer, Greaves, Young, Johnson. Referee: Tim Robinson (West Sussex).

Photo: Matchday Images



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



dirtydingusmagee added 18:38 - Dec 26
Like everyone and their dog can see we have nothing up front, Azon , Akpom what waste of space they are. We have never as far as i can remember had such poor strikers, We have always had at least one good striker,what the hell happened when with plenty of warning we lost Delap..Unless something pretty special and unlikely happens in January we will be going nowhere. Today the only likaely person to score was Philogene, and just as he seemed be getting going and threatening he got pulled off at the usual allotted time ffs.
13

dirtydingusmagee added 18:55 - Dec 26
If McKenna named 2 real strikers and put cardboard cut outs of them up front they would still do better than Azon and Akpom
.
3

armchaircritic59 added 18:55 - Dec 26
Expatractor, I'd go a bit further, much better, sadly.
0

MidlandsBlue added 19:03 - Dec 26
You could make a cup of tea each time O'Shea gets the ball while waiting for him to make a pass, or, if you are lucky enough to be the opposition get all 11 players behind the ball while waiting for him to pass in to the midfield (or right back) and then watch as we struggle to create anything due to the now infamous low block which has proven to work so well against us. I'd love to see us mix of up, like the 3-5-2 away to Spurs, different and hard to predict. Actually looking forward to the inevitable Matusiwa suspension as it will force McKenna into something different, similar to Nunez as the 10.

The need for at least one striker in January is painful, I'd personally take Chaplin back and send Akpom and Azon back. Azon just doesn't look like he will cut it for us, Akpom looks like a fish out of water in our system after his one glorious season with 'Boro.

Watch us beat Cov again so we can all lament how close we should be if not for the results like today, Oxford and Blackburn


4

armchaircritic59 added 19:08 - Dec 26
Very sad to hear that cpaz97, not the Ipswich supporters I used to know years ago. Maybe the likes of Kasey should turn up at those peoples places of work and give them dogs abuse.
3

blueboy1981 added 19:11 - Dec 26
Note:- Kieffer Moore still finding the Net too !!
Just saying ! - another mistake ???
2

hossblue added 19:12 - Dec 26
Watching Wrexham vs Sheff Utd why did we not keep hold Kiefer Moore was it finances? He still knows where the goal is.
3

Orraman added 19:46 - Dec 26
Apart from Delap we have struggled with consistent centre forwards for many years and yet it seems that Naarwich seem to turn them up regularly. Over the past 7/8 seasons they have unearthed Puki and Sargeant and now a guy called Makama seems to be scoring for fun with another one today.

If a club like that lot can find them why can’t we as a much superior club with far greater resources not do likewise or are we too preoccupied with finding yet more wingers?
5

armchaircritic59 added 19:59 - Dec 26
Orraman, could be that our recruitment team isn't too good. Or it could be that there is interference from places that shouldn't be interfering. We won't know of course.

As far as I'm concerned there are zero excuses for not recruiting a solid no9 in January. ( oh yeah, I've heard the tune, 9's are difficult to get, blah, blah ). As we have taken the only creative midfielder we have and decided he's a no 10, we need a creative midfielder too, unless Nunez moves back to where he should be playing, and we buy a 10 instead. A reliable stand in for AM is absolutely essential as well.
2

cpaz97 added 19:59 - Dec 26
Armchaircritic59 - I don't think the people shouting this are particularly employable!
-1

BuckieBlue added 20:17 - Dec 26
I see the comments on here, but In the opinion of those of you who regularly attend gaMES
0

BuckieBlue added 20:19 - Dec 26
I see the comments on here, but in the opinion of those of you who attend games regularly, what is the biggest factor in us being in top 6, not top 2?
2

tractorboybig added 20:28 - Dec 26
Walton saves us agian
6

Tractorboy1985 added 20:32 - Dec 26
Armchair.. I think we are agreeing on many issues.. and like we’ve all said this site is for all of us to discuss/disagree on our beloved football club.. I said it when we got promoted.. enjoy this.. proper proper blokes, minimal wages (although still hideous for a footballer) they played their heart out for ITFC and themselves! The team spirit.. we now have players earning ridiculous money on the back of a team who were ripped apart far too quickly because we are trying to jump too quickly! We all need to settle down.. realise and be patient with our end goal.. we will get there… this club has some unbelievable backing.. the town is a privilege to be in pre match unlike thee Evans era.. my only issue is we need to scout abroad rather than pay 12-20 million on “promising players” who are in our face! I still stand by though that Kasey McAteer is one of our worst signings ever! Uppa towen.. onto Coventry COYB
2

tractorboybig added 20:50 - Dec 26
Tractor boy 1985 Azon Akron two worse signings. With manatees
1

Bluearmy_81 added 21:12 - Dec 26
Have any of the inane happy clappers heard of the concept of toxic positivity?! If we don’t go up this season, given what we’ve spent, it’s a huge failure landing at the door of McKenna. Thats the reality.
5

Tractorboy1985 added 22:18 - Dec 26
Tractorboybig… you get my jist.. our recruitment has been v poor.. we sold our best striker (which was happening from January) and replaced him with 2 loans! Terrible business and planning!
1

Ebantiass added 22:36 - Dec 26
We were at best average in the first half but much better in the second half. I'm not going to name names that i think were very poor today, just an away point at the sixth placed team is clearly not too bad. I believe we could have won and in truth maybe should have but we live to fight on. No hand in sand from me, I just don't think all the negative nonsence helps anything.
2

Ebantiass added 22:45 - Dec 26
Head in the sand
0

atty added 23:00 - Dec 26
Talk about players who were released, who wanted to leave actually, a bit off the mark. Can’t see that any of them are pulling up trees in the ChAmpionship. Delap and Hutchinson, doing ok in the Premiership, both young players remember, and they were off pronto because of relegation, because they were class.
0

rkl added 00:04 - Dec 27
We need to finish the attacks earlier.
It’s all too much passing and sometimes trying to make one turn too many before a blocked shot or an off target one.
Goals happen when the defence is out of position. I like Nunez because he makes things happen.
If Cajuste can make more surging runs it would be a massive threat too.
McAteer is too slow and indecisive in attack.
I would like to see Johnson given more chances as an attacking full back, but guess he is on his way out.
5

ipswichamerica added 00:09 - Dec 27
We have literal grown men on this site moaning and complaining and mastering the art of being an armchair critic. We have to put in perspective that this is just a game. The performance against Blackburn deserved harsh criticism - otherwise, this team is in 3rd place in the table, and is right in the hunt. We won the East Anglian Derby, we have beaten some really good teams like Coventry, we have the second best goal differential and one of the fewest goals conceded.
5

armchaircritic59 added 00:14 - Dec 27
Tractorboy1985, I agree with a lot of what you say. Certainly the backing we've never had the likes of before, even remotely. Most certainly agree with the scouting, we need to be ( if we aren't already ) in S. America, most of Europe and S. Asia ( Japan etc ). As to whether we'll get there ( the PL ), I guess we'll all find out over the next few months. Much might be decided in the January window.

Regarding most peoples favourite player in here Kasey McAteer (!), I defend him quite a bit on account of the dogs abuse he gets, which shouldn't happen. Others are just as culpable. Is he ripping up trees? Most certainly not. In my opinion he's a RWB who for some unknown reason has been playing out of position all his career. But then, I've never managed at any level of football in my life, so what do I know?

One thing I do know for certain though, I'd seen many, many live football matches before KM was even born.

We are currently a team playing without passion, commitment, pace, are predictable and as I've heard many say, not just in here and not just Town fans either, boring. Personally I think KM should rip up the gameplan, start over again, take the handbrake off and let players be free to display what talents they have. Then we might truly see if they have some!
6

delias_cheesy_flaps added 04:45 - Dec 27
@armchair, a very good post IMHO, and apologies all for the rather long post in advance.

1975 was my first game at Ipswich as a 10 year-old, I started watching the best, endured lots of horror show teams, managers and performances, with occasional bright spots in-between then and now.

Since promotion, KM’s teams, in all honesty have mostly been an unenjoyable watch, the current expensively assembled squad seems to be robotised, devoid of passion, quality and self-thought, its as if their footballing skills have been stripped from them at the training ground!

We see glimpses of what the players are capable of on the odd occasion they use their natural skill and play with pace, we look a very capable and dangerous team when this happens, unfortunately this doesn’t happen enough for my liking, we soon revert back to the god-awful pedestrianised play.

Naturally all fans want to see their team win all their games, and want to be entertained in the process. Considering our abject performances this season, we are somehow sitting 3rd, fans should look past the 1 or 3 points gained and look at the bigger picture, should we get promoted, the current squad and tactics will without doubt be doing a Wolves. And so the cycle of more investment, more time to gel, etc. etc. continues.

In all honesty, I really don’t look forward to watching Ipswich play which is a terrible thing to say, but as a fan I still watch every game (time permitting), more in hope that we put in a 90 minute performance of exciting football regardless of the result, and a run of consistently decent performances…I could be waiting a long time with the current setup!
11

bricor2011 added 08:51 - Dec 27
McKenna just doesn't know how to motivate a team, he just stands in the Technical area head bowed,hands in pockets or fiddling with the zipper on his coat.
0


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 1995-2026