McKenna: First Goal Changed the Game Disproportionately Thursday, 16th Jan 2025 23:17 Town boss Kieran McKenna felt Brighton’s first goal affected the game disproportionately as the Seagulls ran out 2-0 victors at Portman Road.
Goals from Kaoru Mitoma and Georginio Rutter saw Albion to the three points with Town never looking like getting back in it once they were behind, having had the better chances prior to the visitors going in front.
“I thought it was at best evens,” McKenna said reflecting on the game up until the goals. “I thought we were the more threatening team, they had more possession, certainly in the early parts of the game, but not really in threatening areas. I thought we probably had more threat and got to better areas.
“We finished the first half strongly, I thought we started the second half even better. We were the better team up until the point of their goal in the second half and the first real threat that we had on our goal.
“We defended the situation not as well as we would have liked and should have stopped the goal, and that changed the game really.
“From our point of view, it changed it disproportionately from what we would want, I think we could have found a better reaction than we did, but it looked like our confidence dropped in the game.
“Theirs certainly went up and they’ve got very good substitutes that they brought on with confidence, and they were the better team in the last 30 minutes.”
The game’s main talking point was Brighton striker Joao Pedro’s challenge on Town keeper Christian Walton, which referee Tony Harrington saw as warranting only a yellow card with most observers seeing it as a red.
“I’ve been asked about it a few times,” McKenna said. “I’ve not watched it back, to be honest.
“I think he’s left a little bit on the goalkeeper, I think he knows what he’s doing. It is what it is, it’s football, it happens, the referee gave a yellow card and dealt with it. It’s not something that we’re going to cry about too much.”
Asked whether the incident affected Walton, who conceded the first goal not too long afterwards, McKenna added: “I’ve not spoken to him about it, so I don’t know. As I say, I’ve not watched the collision back, maybe it’s worse than I saw at the time.
“At the time I thought he left one on the goalkeeper, he knows what he’s doing. Was it a red card? As I say, I haven’t watched it back, at the time I wasn’t screaming for one. How Christian was after it, again, I’ll have to ask him.”
Quizzed on whether it felt like a missed opportunity with Wolves having lost last night to drop below the Blues, who returned to the bottom three following this evening’s match, and Everton also losing.
“No, not given the results,” he said. “I think given the type of game, given the fact that if we score, I think Wes has the shot which goes just by the post, you’d think we’ve probably just about earned that at that point in terms of how we grew into the game.
“We’ve competed on a really even keel with a good side. If I’m honest, the game was much, much, much more even than when we played them earlier in the season.
“So, we’ve competed on an even keel and when you’re in that position, then you want to get points from it and push on in the game.
“We don’t any points from it and then in the end, the way they took the game away, probably changes the feel of the game from actually what is a really competitive game that we were in a really good position.”
Brighton were able to bring the likes of Rutter and Danny Welbeck on as subs, giving the Seagulls the sort of strength off the bench the Blues had in the Championship last season.
“Yes, they’re in a great position with that but they’re eight years in the Premier League and they’re a lot of good decisions and a lot of money ahead of us in that aspect,” McKenna said.
“They’ve got real depth, especially in those forward positions to go like-for-like in terms of quality and profiles and age and everything else.
“And they did that to good effect in the second half and they’ve done that right through the season.
“You can see in some of the games that they’ve come back in against some of the big teams, maybe having had disappointing first halves and then kicked on in the second against some of the bigger teams and got results.
“It’s definitely a weapon to have, it’s where we want to be, it’s where we’ve been in the last couple of seasons, but we know where we’re at with that. We believe in the players we’ve got here, everyone’s doing their best.
“I think Brighton are a lot of years ahead of us, but it didn’t look like that for 60 minutes in the game, to be honest. It was a really at least even game but in the end they were able to open up a margin on us.”
Explaining why skipper Sam Morsy was on the bench in a league game for only the second time at Town, McKenna added: “Samy’s very important for us, is having a strong season, Kalvin [Phillips] has been coming into some good form as well.
“The turnaround from tonight to Sunday I think is the quickest we have all season and we know the level of the opponent we’re playing on Sunday, and in the Premier League for us, it’s going to be a really, really quick turnaround.
“Kalvin’s obviously not available for any minutes on Sunday [against his parent club], he’s been coming into good form, so we thought it was the right thing tonight to utilise him for good minutes and I think we’re going to need Samy for big minutes and and hopefully a big performance on Sunday.”
Yesterday, Town completed the protracted move for Aston Villa forward Jaden Philogene and McKenna says the Blues remain in the market for new players with another number nine and an additional forward understood to be the targets.
“We’ll try to be,” he said when asked if the Blues will stay active in the market. “If we can find quality that can improve us.
“I think our depth is pretty good now. If we can get everybody back fit, our depth is fine, but if we can add quality that can help the starting XI or quality that can help from the bench, then we certainly aim to try and do so.
“We’ll try and do that, but only if the right players are available that can really push us on.”
Photo: TWTD
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Gforce added 23:43 - Jan 16
I think possibly for the first time ever,Mckenna was out thought by his opposite number this time. Still we live and learn and move on. |  | |
Leejames99 added 00:44 - Jan 17
Has Burns got something on Mck he was awful, as for Morsy re City well I'm defo putting bet on a red card for him, City will just force him into his stupid, needless tackles. I hope we get Whitaker and Matic or another Prem experienced midfielder, maybe try and get Flyne Downes back or James Macatee would be amazing . Need sell some, once our players back from injury, Szmodicks and Tunazabe not Chaplin our bench will start looking good. For 8 million Whitaker is a great buy, he would excell in our team. |  | |
Facefacts added 00:49 - Jan 17
We should be making more of the violent conduct red card - that criminal should not be on a football pitch and its cost us. We get nothing from refs and VAR and we are trying to play the game the right way. We have to take the time to make it necessary for VAR to have another look, keep Christian under the doctor's orders on the pitch to make it clear that he's badly affected by the knock. Every other PL team would do that. The criminal has left one on our keeper and we don't want to make anything of it. That incident was the Premier League in a nutshell. |  | |
armchaircritic59 added 00:59 - Jan 17
I watched the game at home, as I no longer attend live matches, mainly due to health reasons. My take on it is Brighton in charge for first 20 minutes or so without much threat. We were the better team for the rest of the half. Second half, started ok for a short while, Brighton scored, game over, never looked like getting back into it. When we defend we have so many players sitting so deep, there's often no out ball, unless Delap is left up top on his own with little hope of support, even if he does manage to hold on to anything that comes his way. I'm not going to name names, don't think it does any thing positive, but I thought one or two were poor tonight. I thought O'Shea did well enough as per usual, and apart from the unfortunate toe ender from Greaves that led to their first goal, he did well enough too, and I actually thought Wes Burns was one of the better players too. Clever second goal, may have been difficult for Walton to see properly, until it was too late. As for the Walton/Pedro " clash ", definitely not a sending off for me, yellow yes, red no. All in all the best team over 90+ minutes won. We need some more craft and guile in the center of the park, I thought Cajuste was going to supply it, but he seems to sit so deep a lot of the time. I presume that's what he's asked to do, so not pointing a finger. All the other midfielders are " functional " though on his best days, Phillips can still spot a pass. Feel free to disagree, just politely please! I'd love to see a creative midfielder, another decent striker (not just a back up striker that's a drop off from what we already have), and Ben Doak. Sounds like I'm not going to get the midfielder unfortunately, but hopeful with the other two! |  | |
Woodbridgian added 07:02 - Jan 17
We probably did have the better chances but did nothing with them. Brighton were just more clinical I’m afraid. Games like this Everton and Crystal Palace will at the end of the season be the games that determine if we stay in this league or not. More valuable points dropped I’m afraid it’s just so frustrating. |  | |
poet added 09:30 - Jan 17
No one likes to lose, it’s bad for moral. Losing when you should have lost is hard, but losing when you should have won hits moral even harder. That’s what’s worrying me about last nights game. We created the better chances in the first half, only to be thwarted by their man of the match, their goalkeeper. We should have started that process earlier in my opinion, I believe we would have eventually broke them down. They actually created nothing in that half. I’m annoyed to have to say this, but I’d liken our second half performance to that of nothing more than a surrender. That’s even more damaging to moral. Kieran McKenna is now faced with the mighty task of boosting the moral of his players. After last nights second half collapse, I thought they looked very downbeat when the game ended. We now face Manchester City at Portman Road followed by Liverpool away, that makes McKenna’s task even harder, his managerial and coaching skills will be tested to the hilt. As a footnote, just how their players physical assault on Walton was adjudged to only merit a yellow card beggars belief, it was red and nothing but. |  | |
xantherick added 10:31 - Jan 17
Not good enough, bad tactics by the manager. Players are not good enough either. Time for a change. |  | |
algy added 11:48 - Jan 17
Just 8 more games to endure until the inevitable, then our team being built for the Championship can get on with winning our first league champions trophy for 34 years. |  | |
TedTurnip added 13:23 - Jan 17
Unfortunately, I think it doesn't matter how you wrap it up, we need a new keeper and CB |  | |
armchaircritic59 added 18:10 - Jan 17
This is the Premier League, when you're a newly promoted side that's come from nowhere in a couple of years, have no parachute money, have a budget that's much lower than many set by FFP, you are not on a level playing field, in the toughest league of all. Time may be telling that a few of the league one/ championship guys, aren't quite up to the challenge, not their fault, I'm sure they are doing everything they can. I believe after what they've given us over the past couple of seasons, they at least deserved a crack at the big time, we wouldn't be where we are now without them. It's true as someone posted in here a few days ago, there's little room for sentiment in football ( as in life unfortunately! ), so I expect we'll have learned a lot from this current season, and whatever happens during the rest of it, will be all the better for it. It was always a calculated risk buying largely young but talented players with their best years in front of them too, the Premier League is a harsh learning ground. They will be better off for the experience too. Whatever happens we all need to continue to give our support, and realise that games like last night will happen, and yes the second half wasn't good. Oh and one other thing that never seems to get a mention. KM and his backroom team have worked a miracle to get us where we are now. Remember, KM is only in his third season as a manager, he's still learning too, which I'm sure he'd acknowledge, never managed in a top league before, coached yes, managed no. I think whatever happens, the future is bright, we might just need to take a step backward first in order to get there! |  | |
churchmans added 22:16 - Jan 17
Same story! Mistakes at the back again and again! Fannying about with it at the back which lead to greaves making a mistake! 1.nil A needless foyl by morst followed by a free kick and goal 2.0 game over! As for our all round attacing/pressing poor and no quality! We move on and probably beat city 5nil sunday lol We have to deal with these dissapointing nights and just hope we do enough to stay in the leauge! |  | |
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