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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



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d77sgw added 09:17 - Dec 27
A decent point away from home against a team that’s beaten West Brom, Saints, Stoke and Leicester already - they’re no mugs. Attacked with more pace and purpose, and on another day could easily have won that. McAteer and Azon v poor again - looked a better team after the subs.
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Lightningboy added 11:33 - Dec 27
First game i've missed this season - had far better things to do - and that's how it feels like it's going at the moment - the manager needs to wake his ideas up - the players sound as bored as I do - it's all so robotic - backwards,sideways,sideways,backwards - it's sleep inducing.
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Theipswich added 11:34 - Dec 27
I think certain players are not playing to their strengths....we are so monotonous and slow in our build up.Azon and Akpom are like fish out of water.I think we need to get some get-go strikers and would bring back Chaplin and get Szomodics back to scratch...up front we are ponderous and slow
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philpott2 added 14:55 - Dec 27
Incredibly slow, boring, lacking invention, no incision whatsoever.... O'Shea keeps making these godawful passes and touches around our box.
The team / squad haven't the team spirit, pace, touch or collective understanding of each other games that they had 18 months ago. And no urgency or drive and heart either, they simply go through the motions!
At £100 a match for tickets and travel with a pint and a bite, I'm getting to the stage where maybe I 'wont bother' either, like the players...switch it up McKenna, try a different formation and get them attacking with pace.
8

Texastom added 15:39 - Dec 27
Millwall fall of injuries but we do not have the quality or the backbone to win.
Agree with all the comments on here, the Team need to earn their wages, its just predictable like the England Cricket Team............losing interest
3

Texastom added 15:43 - Dec 27
New Recruitment Dept required, that's where most of the problems stem from.....
4

armchaircritic59 added 18:18 - Dec 27
delias cheesy flaps, thanks for the feedback, you go back a fair way too, I go back to 1963 ( Elf and Safety would have great fun with the old East Stand! ). But I'm not here to talk about that, I get enough grief if I keep mentioning the 70's and 80's!

I have this thought in my mind that won't go away. That our players have so much garbage planted inside their heads about systems, opposition tactics and players, how they are supposed to play, what they are not supposed to do etc, that they are almost afraid to do the one thing that should be the simplest thing of all, pass to someone wearing the same colour shirt, preferably forwards! It's my opinion and it is just an opinion, others may well disagree of course, which is fair enough, that the game today has become more robotic, players natural talents are being stifled at the alter of systems etc, being almost afraid to make a mistake. Dare I say it, overcoaching. Not letting players freely express themselves.

I do actually honestly believe we have some really decent players here, but they are not being allowed to freely express themselves. Well, I'm an old fool, so many will no doubt disagree.
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armchaircritic59 added 19:39 - Dec 27
Oh and a quick couple of " possibles " for the striking vacancy that's vey urgent. This guy signed a contract extension taking it up to 2029 with his club, earlier this year, but they might be interested if someone came along with some fancy money. " Promise David " plays for USG in Belgium, Canadian, 6ft 5ins, really good scoring record with his previous club in Estonia and also at USG. Yep, I know neither are the Championship, but worth a look. Next up someone more familiar, "Sam Surridge". Been tearing it up for Nashville in the MLS. Same again, worth a look.
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DifferentGravy added 21:19 - Dec 27
Armchair - I agree with your comments regarding modern football. Players are no longer coached to express themselves or use skill. In fact i would say that skill is being coached out of all modern football. Its all about making the pitch big, pass, pass, pass. May the fittest, fastest team win. It is incredibly boring and I personally feel football is at an all time low (at least in my lifetime). Im a fan of the last great skillful player.....being Messi......and seen him playing in games against Sturridge(usa footy)....i dont think Sturridge is the answer. Intrigued about David, however. Not really seen much about him. You are certainly not an old fool and I would definitely listen to your experience and knowledge as opposed to some of the unbalanced opinions on here at times. All the best.
4

armchaircritic59 added 00:23 - Dec 28
DifferentGravy, thanks for the feedback. I most certainly don't claim to have all the answers ( otherwise I'd be a manager ! ) and there are certainly a number of posters on here that are always worth a read, and one or two I enjoy reading aren't always the obvious ones! It just comes down to opinions in the end, as long as we respect others even if we don't agree with them. I've never marked a post down in here and I never will.

I think you've hit the nail on the head, it's coming more and more down to things like fitness, physicality, sheer strength etc ( all important of course, but not in the absence of technical ability ). I honestly think even some of the best players of other era's wouldn't find things anything like as easy if they were here now ( and they would of course be as fit as everyone else being subject to todays training regimes ) they'd have some of their natural, off the cuff talents, coached out of them. Yes you have to have some sort of system, but it's all becoming like a formula, one reason I think why the Championship is like what it is this season. Almost everyone is cancelling each other out, it's more about low blocks, pressing, etc than it is about actually playing football. The " Low Block " is not difficult to defeat. Teams just need to move the ball round at pace, move the defence around, pull it this way and that quickly and it will open up. I don't think you need to be Pep to work that one out!

Respect your opinion about Surridge, you've obviously seen him play recently. I know his record when playing in this country is nothing to get excited about, but sometimes an inform striker can keep a hot run going for some time. As for David, that's a bit of a left field choice, but we need something and urgently. No time to bed someone in, whoever it is needs to hit the ground running ( and scoring! ). It could easily be the difference between automatic promotion or not. Let's just hope those responsible get it right this time, to be fair, they've done a good job in recent January's even if close seasons haven't been as successful!

We can all rant and rave a bit in here sometimes, but there's one thing I'm sure we all share that is greater than everything else. That is wanting to see ITFC very successful on and off the pitch. Here's hoping!
0

Lightningboy added 10:58 - Dec 28
Agree with you both Armchaircritic59 & DifferentGravy.

Football is at an all time low and I do wonder if it'll ever get back to what it was.
0

bkb added 11:28 - Dec 28
Unfortunately this methodical, system based game has filtered down thru the pyramids. I have watched matches at step four and it is prevalent there. I can’t believe that players today enjoy the game as much as we did back in the day.
0

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 11:50 - Dec 28
Had a nostalgic moment the other day watching highlights of the 1978 Cup Final. What we wouldn't give today for a Clive Woods, a John Warke, or a Paul Mariner! We battered Arsenal with that brilliant team. TWTD! But now is now, and the team require our support.
On another point, watching the EFL highlights on TV, I may be wrong, but I was struck by what seemed to be quite a number of empty seats at grounds like Coventry, Stoke, etc. I can maybe understand it for teams that are not likely to be in the promotion race, but you'd expect Coventry to fill the ground at least. I'm glad to say we are pretty much sold out for our home matches, and I have to grudginly admit that our neighbours up the road have a good support base, especially given their league position. Couldn't see any empty seats at Carrot Road.
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armchaircritic59 added 18:53 - Dec 28
Steve ITFC, I was there. Great day. A little story I heard told by Warky as they were about to drive back home on the coach. Apparently the then Arsenal captain Pat Rice just appeared at the front of the coach and said " Sorry we couldn't give you a game today lads " and walked off. His way of saying well done I think, and a gesture he didn't need to make, and probably didn't feel like making, so kudos to him.

I'm not expecting todays team to play like that, it would be unfair, but I am expecting better than I've seen so far.
As for your mention of Coventry, I actually don't think they are any great shakes themselves, they've just found a way of being consistent in an incredibly inconsistent and sub standard league. Well done to them for that. I've probably put a curse on tomorrow!
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