Wednesday 27 March 2013

Carelss England Clawed Back By Montenegro


Montenegro    1        England    1
                                      Damjanovic  77                                     Rooney  6               


Since taking over as England manager there’s no doubt that Roy Hodgson has reinstated some pride and passion back into the national side; however in the competitive games England are yet to prove themselves for a full ninety minutes. Last night’s second half collapse in Montenegro a prime example.

A chance missed but qualification is still in England's hands
The fact  is after six world cup qualifying games England have only despatched minnows San Marino and Moldova and are still yet to beat an established side; a statistic which is becoming increasingly alarming.
       
A trip to group leaders Montenegro was an opportunity to prove England’s status as the best team in the group. For forty five minutes England dominated, but just like in Poland back in October they buckled under pressure, a trait which needs to be removed from the teams system.

England’s stuttering start to the qualifying group had been largely overlooked; a notable victory over Brazil in last month’s friendly combined with Hodgson’s optimistic fresh approach made out that everything was going to plan.

At the start of the night the game lay perfectly poised. England came off the back of an expected 8-0 thrashing of San Mario, a useful warm up for this pivotal game. In contrast Montenegro may have only registered one against similar opposition Moldova; however it was a result which kept them two points clear at the top of the group prior to kick-off.

According to Montenegro coach Branko Brnovic England’s excuses were already in place. A bad pitch, a hostile crowd and inexperienced centre backs, as the opposing manager had accused Hodgson’s side of being “scared” of the occasion.

However England had other ideas, with the chance to seize control at the head of the group the visitors were quick to impose themselves from the off. Although he hasn’t always shown it in an England shirt, in Wayne Rooney, Hodgson has a world class striker on his day.

 With just two minutes on the clock the Manchester United forward noticed a slip from the Montengro keeper Mladen Bozovic, from the edge of the area Rooney produced a Cantona-esque chip which looped over the fortunate keeper who watched the ball rebounded off the far post.

Three minutes later England got their reward. Glen Johnson’s powerful strike forced a finger tip save from Bozovic over his cross bar at full stretch, but it was from the resulting corner that England capitalised. An in swinging delivery from Steven Gerrard was met by the head of Rooney, who effortlessly shrugged off his marker to steer his header into the net.

England were worthy of their lead and remained in complete control. They looked a threat going forward with Rooney holding up possession allowing Tom Cleverley, Danny Welbeck and James Milner to join in the attacks.

In contrast the highly rated Montenegro forward’s Mirko Vucinic and Steven Jovetic were barely involved in the game, as England pushed high up the pitch and faced little threat towards their own goal.

The only criticism of the first half was that England were only 1-0 up. After twenty four minutes Rooney clipped a delicate cross inches over the head of Welbeck following some good build up play. Minutes later Welbeck appeared to be brought down inside the penalty area, but his protests were turned away by the referee as the striker was harshly booked for diving.

The phrase ‘A game of two halves’ couldn’t describe the match any better. Straight from the kick off England were rocking, struggling to hang on to their first half advantage.

Hodgson’s side suddenly lost control of the midfield and became victims to continuous waves of Montenegro pressure. Jovetic in particular began to have a greater impact, urging on the crowd who had been thriving all night.

Joe Hart gave the England bench a brief scare when he palmed Vucinic’s shot between his own legs but eventfully recovered. Minutes later the England keeper was again required, this time to make a flying save to his right from Jovetic’s sweetly struck volley. Its easy to say now but maybe at that point a substitution would have helped England, who were desperately hanging on.   

The Montenegro equaliser was on the cards and arrived thirteen minutes from time. A routine corner wasn’t dealt with by some careless England defending; the ball was cannoned around the penalty area but wasn’t cleared allowing substitute Dejan Damjanovic to finally poke the ball home after a series of attempts. 

The goal resulted in an overdue England reaction. Gerrard’s free kick was met by a vital intervention by Bozovic to keep the scores level but it was all too little too late. It was a game England couldn’t afford to lose with the prospect of falling five points adrift from the top of the group. A draw keeps their fate in their own hands but after the first half this was a game England should have won.

Hodgson remained positive making it clear that qualification is still in England’s hands and that they were still unbeaten in the group. The team now face a long wait until their next competitive games; a crucial double header in September sees a home tie with Moldova followed by a trip to Ukraine. 

Sunday 17 March 2013

Down And Out


Middlesbrough     0        Birmingham     1
                                                                            Zigic  81    


Where has it all gone wrong? Back at the end of December Boro were flying high, a convincing yet entertaining victory over Blackpool capped off a dazzling start to the season, which left the Teesiders one point off the automatic promotion places. Some even dared to believe in a return to the holy lands of the Premier League.

Not even three months down the line Boro sit only seven points better off than at the start of January, a 1-0 defeat at home to Birmingham was their tenth in thirteen games since the turn of the year which seems to have banished the promotion dream.    

Nikola Zigic's grabs a late goal to end Boro's playoff hopes
An endless drift away from the head of the table leaves Boro five points from the final playoff position with eight games to go. Now even the most optimistic supporter would find it hard to believe in a top flight return.

There was no hiding from the poor run of form from Tony Mowbray’s side, which clearly had an impact on the attendance. Barely 14,000 meant the empty seats visibly outnumbered the full ones; the dreary atmosphere from the second half of the season has been vastly unrelated to the buzz before Boro’s New Year freefall.

The results surely haven’t been helped by weekly changes to the Boro line up, for the visit of Birmingham the hosts showed seven changes from their trip to Bristol City last Saturday.

There were welcome returns for long injury absentees Justin Hoyte and Lukas Jutkiewitz while Adam Reach was also recalled to the side. Rhys Williams was left on the bench, as Jonathan Woodgate wore the captain’s armband partnering Andre Bikey in defence.

Faris Haroun took up the position of centre midfield despite Josh McEachran being available on the bench. In contrast the Birmingham team only showed three differences from their draw with Derby last weekend.

With the game only seconds old the visitors were forced into an early change, Jonathan Spector limped off following a challenge from Haroun, after a lengthy wait the Birmingham player was replaced by Keith Fahey.

With neither side brimming in confidence, the game stuttered into life. A cagey opening provided few goal scoring opportunities, however Andre Bikey’s careless header back to Jason Steele was nearly pounced on by Birmingham’s Wes Thomas, but the Boro keeper was alert to make a crucial save.

Boro shaded the possession but lacked a cutting edge to carve their opponents open, rarely testing Birmingham keeper Jack Butland.

But after half an hour it looked like they had cracked it, a valiant run from George Friend on the left took him into the heart of the penalty area, his low shot was pushed away by Butland into the path of Scott McDonald who tapped into an empty net. However celebrations were short lived by the waving of the linesman’s flag and it was back to square one.  

The visitors briefly threatened, but were reduced to long range shooting. First substitute Fahey dragged his effort wide from the edge of the area, before Ravel Morrison’s attempt from a similar position forced a decent save from Steele.

With the sides locked at 0-0, it certainly wasn’t the worst half of football that Boro had played this season. It was a typical tight Championship game, where taking your chances was going to be key.

After the break Boro were quick to rank up the pressure, winning five corners in the first eight minutes. But games of this nature are won by fine margins, with just under an hour played a goal kick from Steele was headered on by Jukekiewitz to release McDonald through on goal. Butland spread himself well to make a fine save; nevertheless it was a chance that went begging.

Only twenty years of age Butland has been tipped by many to one day challenge for a regular England selection. The City keeper was again called upon eighteen minutes from time when Reach’s cross looked to be heading wide but curled at the last second and could have snuck in if it wasn’t for Butland’s intervention.

Birmingham could consider themselves lucky not to be down to ten men after Nikola Zigic, who was already booked deliberately pushed the ball away with his hand, but luckily escaped a second yellow card. A decision which cost Boro dearly.

With nine minutes to go Boro began to get sloppy and were soon made to pay.  Haroun lost possession inside his own half, as the blue shirts suddenly flooded forward. A bursting run from Shane Ferguson down the left allowed him space to curl a low cross into the box which was inevitably turned in by the fortunate Zigic to steal the narrowest of game.

A victory would have lifted Boro up to seventh, two points away from the final playoff position. As it turned out a tenth defeat in thirteen leaves them five points adrift with eight games to play, surely an impossible task for a team who have scored just seven points out of a possible thirty nine. The season now appears effectively over for Mowbray and Boro.  

Player Ratings
Jason Steele   7- Good individual performance, made some decent saves but wasn’t overly worked
Justin Hoyte   7- First game in a two months, but looked like he had never been away, a cool experienced head at right back
Jonathan Woodgate   7.5- Again showed his Premier League quality to keep Birmingham strikers relatively quiet
Andre Bikey   6- Another erratic performance, caught in possession a couple of times
George Friend   6.5- Added usual spark going forward, sometimes struggled defensively due to pace of Nathan Redmond   
Adam Reach   6.5- Got a couple of crosses into the box, but struggled to regularly test the full back
Faris Haroun   5.5- Looked out of sort in centre midfield, gave too many passes away
Grant Leadbitter   7.5- Worked hard in midfield, moved the ball well with good range of passing       
Sammy Ameobi   5.5- Found it tough to get involved in the game, had little impact going forward
Scott McDonald   6- Was given little to feed off, but was a little wasteful when chances came along
Lukas Jutkiewitz   6- Worked hard getting some success in the air, but again had limited opportunities

Subs
Ishmael Miller   5.5- Replaced Jutkiewitz after sixty five minutes, had little impact on the game
Mustapha Carayol - Came on with thirteen minutes to go but offered little going forward
Josh McEachran- Surprising he never started the game came on with four minutes to go and had little chance

My Boro Man Of The Match Jonathan Woodgate

Wednesday 13 March 2013

"The Messi Show" Again


Before last night no team in Champions League history had recovered from a two goal first leg deficit without having scored an away goal. For any side the mountainous task would appear almost impossible, not if you’re Barcelona.

After losing three of their last five games, two to arch rivals Real Madrid, it seemed that the greatest team in the world had reached a stage of decline following the departure of manager Pep Guadeola last summer. Some were calling it “the end of an era”

With present manager Tito Vilanova currently away from the team recovering from parotid gland cancer, the side have clearly lacked required leadership this season.

In his absence the Spanish giants, who have dominated Europe over recent years, lay on the brink of a tragic Champions League exit before the quarter finals. The thought was simply unthinkable.

An unexpected 2-0 deficit to AC Milan after the first leg at the San Siro the perfect stage was set for a Barcelona master class with a packed out Nou Camp behind them.
Lionel Messi, on his day Unstoppable 

Barcelona’s 4-3-3 formation abruptly turned into 3-5-1-1 with a three man defence of Javier Mascherano, Gerard Pique and Jordi Alba. Pedro and Dani Alves operated the wings sandwiching the midfield trio of Xavi, Iniesta and Busquets who endlessly stretched the Milan defence. David Villa led the line with the ever indescribable Lionel Messi drifting behind him.

Overall the home side contained eight Spaniards, just a shame we don’t see as many regular English players in our own Premier League.   

The intensity levels of the opening twenty five minutes were truly mind-blowing; on a carpet like pitch Barcelona’s high tempo passing produced a unique football experience which only comes along every so often.

Milan did their best to close down routes to their goal, but Barca still found even the narrowest of gaps, when a curling shot from Messi flew into the visitors net after just five minutes. The match had sprung into life.

Despite the hosts dominance the game pivoted on a two minute spell six minutes before half time. Although the final result looks convincing if Milan’s M’Baye Niang had converted a golden chance before the interval things could have swung the other way, as it happened the eighteen year old forward saw his one on one with the keeper rebound off the post, only for Messi to punishingly sweep home Barca’s second a minute later.

Even with David Villa’s third goal after the break an away goal from Milan would have seen them through, which on this performance from Barcelona would have just been wrong.

Some nervy moments followed, however they were all dashed when Alba sealed an historic victory in stoppage time, after he burst forward on a late counter attack tucking the ball away coolly to seal a resounding 4-0 win.

Although Messi will steal most of the headlines the whole team performance from Barcelona was one of intent, a message to the rest of Europe. From a neutral point of view the Champions League just wouldn’t be the same without Barcelona.   

Monday 11 March 2013

Rafa Gets The Last Laugh


Behind every great team lies a great manager, a tactician, a leader and in some cases you could even use the word genius. It is a position where even the best have a limited control over success or failure yet they are usually the first to get the blame when things go wrong.   

Of course the outcome of a football match is down to the players, however at times the strategic duel on the touchline has had a tendency to almost overshadow the action on the pitch.

A satisfying result for Benitez but he nearly stole the victory   
The past decade has provided some of the greatest managers the game has ever seen. But by carrying such big egos there’s no getting away from some of the unfriendly managerial rivalries that follow, after twenty seven years at the heart of Manchester United Sir Alex Ferguson has no doubt experienced his fair share.

Still scarred from a cruel Champions League exit at the hands of Jose Mourinho and Real Madrid, Ferguson was forced to turn his attention to the FA Cup, now United’s major interest with the league practically sewn up. Although Ferguson’s respect for the so called “special one “is mutual his relationship with current Chelsea boss Rafa Benitez is a different story.   

In the stand out tie of the of the FA cup quarter final the two would once again do battle, and it was clear that it was personal. Not even liked by his teams own fans Benitez had everything to prove, but United are ruthless, two up inside eleven minutes thanks two defensive howlers from Chelsea, as John Terry sat helplessly on the Blues bench unselected by Benitez.

However United weren’t at their vintage best and despite retaining their two goal advantage at half time they had shown some unusual complacency in possession. The stick received by Benitez has been endless since he joined the London club and his decision to replace Frank Lampard with John Obi Mikel after the break brought more negative chants from the travelling Chelsea fans.

But the fact is the Spaniard got it right. His second substitution saw the introduction of Eden Hazard who replaced Victor Moses and the Blues were an ominous threat going forward. With half an hour to go, Hazard pulled one back with a stunning goal from the edge of the area giving the tie a different feel.

Mikel’s introduction gave cover to Chelsea’s defense allowing key players like Mata, Oscar and Ramires to bomb forward, leading to a deserved equaliser neatly finished by Brazilian Ramires.

From then on there was only going to be one winner, as Ferguson had goal keeper David De Gea to thank denying Mata the winner in injury time, as United hung on. After an almost humiliating first half it was Benitez who had the last laugh but couldn’t quite land the knockout punch on his bitter rival. The replay at Stanford Bridge is currently at an undecided date but is bound to be another eventful affair.    

Sunday 3 March 2013

Boro Beat The League's Best Now For The Rest


Middlesbrough    2       Cardiff    1  
                                Dyer  13  Ameobi  17                                     Gunnarsson  67


In their two meetings with table topping Cardiff City, Boro have shown that they can more than mix it with the best in this division. A clear reminder of the quality Tony Mowbray’s team is still capable of.

Back in November Boro left South Wales empty handed, after a more than dominant display over the Bluebirds deserved at least a point. Since then Cardiff have been flying at the head of the table, but in the reverse fixture the Teessiders left an overdue mark on their Welsh rivals in an enthralling 2-1 victory.

Relief for Tony Mowbray and the Boro fans
The win wasn’t without drama, Boro’s habit of doing things the hard way made for a nervy climax, but the hosts hung on to claim only their second league win since the turn of the year as they hope to re-launch their promotion aspirations.   

Like Wednesday’s FA cup tie with Chelsea Mowbray opted for a balanced 4-4-2 formation, but made five changes. Ishmael Miller partnered Scott McDonald upfront, while Seb Hines replaced the injured Andre Bikey. Kieron Dyer returned on the right of midfield along with Josh McEachran in the centre, both were ineligible to play on Wednesday.

There was also a warm welcome for debutant Sammy Ameobi, who replaced Faris Haroun. Rhys Williams and Curtis Main dropped to the bench, Mustapha Carayol missed out altogether. Cardiff made two changes from their victory over Wolves last time out.

The opening minutes provided half chances either way. First Craig Bellamy, who was booed the whole afternoon for his time at Newcastle, sent a speculative effort wide. Moments later Grant Leadbitter’s free kick was met by another former magpie in Ameobi whose towering header bounced off the top of the cross bar.

Boro took heart from a gutsy performance on Wednesday night, playing a majority of the game on the counter attack, which worked to a great effect after thirteen minutes.

McDonald made a promising run towards the opposition penalty area before chipping a delicate pass to his left towards Miller. The Boro forward, on loan from Nottingham Forrest, did well to hold off a challenge from defender Kevin McNaughton and square the ball across the penalty area, where he found Dyer, who couldn’t miss from close range, marking his first goal for the club with a simple finish.

Just four minutes later the Cardiff net bulged again. Ameobi, who had already become a popular figure with the fans, received the ball from McDonald on the right. The Boro debutant skipped past two defenders who were left mesmerised by the winger’s quick feet which took him inside the area, where on his favoured left foot he smashed the ball past Cardiff keeper David Marshall doubling Boro’s advantage. The Riverside was firmly on cloud nine.

Throughout the first half Boro looked far from a side who had only won one of their last nine league games. They looked a solid unit without the ball, proving a tough nut to crack for the league leaders. While going forward Mowbray’s side possessed an ominous threat on the break.

Cardiff’s main weapon came in the shape of their set pieces. With just over half an hour played Bellamy’s in swinging corner had to be punched away by Jason Steele, the ball fell at the feet of Cardiff skipper Peter Whittingham who drove a first time shot back towards goal, forcing an acrobatic save from the Boro keeper who tipped the effort over the bar.

The hosts did create chances to claim a third, which would have surely sealed the game. The closest coming on the stroke of half time when Ameobi burst down the left before picking out McDonald, the striker's shot of the edge of the area deflected back off Ameobi and looped towards the Cardiff goal, forcing Marshall to turn the ball over his cross bar.

Chasing the game, Cardiff attempted to push forward after half time. However Boro still threatened on the break .Ten minutes after the restart Dyer received the ball on the left where he fired across the goal but couldn’t find another Boro shirt.

It was make or break time for the visitors, with half an hour to go Cardiff boss Malkey Mackay introduced striker Heidar Helguson to try and salvage something from the match.

With a lead to defend Boro naturally retreated deeper and deeper down the pitch, as Cardiff began to rank up the pressure which eventfully told mid way through the second half.

Throughout the game the visitors threatened, from corners taken by Bellamy and Whittingham, and with just under twenty minutes left to play they got their reward. Bellamy’s corner from the left fell nicely for the unmarked Aron Gunnarsson who steered his header past Steele offering the league leaders a life line.

That set up a tense finish as Boro fought to hang on, Mowbray played his hand by making a double change. Off went both goal scorers to a standing ovation, Dyer and Ameobi were replaced by Marvin Emnes and Emmanuel Ledesma.

Cardiff went close when Fraizer Campbell connected with Whittingham’s cross, but the former Sunderland forward plummeted his header into the ground, which bounced over the cross bar as it became nail biting stuff for the home fans.

The dying few minutes were hectic, as Cardiff threw the kitchen sink at Boro in hope of snatching a point. Ben Turner’s header required a terrific save from Steele at full stretch. Minutes later Boro defender Steven McManus took a hammering shot to the face preventing Steele the trouble, as the hosts stood firm.

In the mist of chaos, Boro had chances to wrap up a third, both Emnes and Ledesma broke away in the Cardiff half but their shooting let them down in advanced positions. Thankfully for Boro with all the excitement came a crucial three points as Mowbray looks to kick-start his teams push for promotion.

The result keeps Boro in seventh place with a trip to Huddersfield on Tuesday. But the win is a real platform of belief for players and fans that this side can beat the best this league has to offer, hopefully  now they have the confidence to reproduce these types of performances every week.

Player ratings   
Jason Steele   7.5- Not much he could have done about the goal, alert when called upon making some crucial saves
George Friend   7- Few problems defensively, a bit sloppy in possession when going forward
Steven McManus   8- Barley put a foot wrong dealt with everything that came his way in defence
Seb Hines   7.5- Solid game kept Bellamy and Campbell relatively quiet
Nicky Bailey   7- Another game at un-preferred right back, but still showed plenty of fighting spirit and leadership
Kieron Dyer   7- Best performance in a Boro shirt, got on the score sheet and tried to get more involved
Grant Leadbitter   7- Reformed partnership with McEacran in midfield, which gave a good balance
Josh McEachran   7- Worked hard didn’t have a massive impact on the game going forward, but was comfortable and reliable on the ball
Sammy Ameobi   8- Scored a belter of a goal and added a spark to the game, looked a threat every time he got the ball. Great debut
Scott McDonald   7.5- Played a big part in both goals, good on the deck where he brought other players into the game
Ismael Miller   7- A bit frustrating at times but added a physical presence which caused defenders problems, got assist for the first goal

Subs
Unfair to rate these players as they were only on the pitch for a short space of time
Marvin Emnes – Gave fresh legs with 15 minutes to play missed good chance late on
Emmanual Ledesma – Replaced Ameobi who was tiring on the right  
Curtis Main – Came for the frantic final minutes, someone who will work and chase the ball down

My Boro Man Of The Match Sammy Ameobi