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Post by gledholt terrier on Apr 7, 2021 18:16:52 GMT 1
A bit late, working. Unlike those twats.
7 (Seven)
An evening of desperate ignominy in Norfolk saw Huddersfield Town trounced by a relentlessly excellent Norwich who clearly didn’t receive the memo to go easy on a club who had decided that their priorities lay elsewhere.
Deliberately enfeebling the team for a second time this season, Corberán compounded this sin by managing to organise the ragbag of has beens, never wills and never should have beens in to a shape which surrendered swathes of space in the middle. Carlos’ opposite number sat quietly and contentedly through the ensuing massacre.
The quality of the men in yellow cannot be disputed. They played with a verve and conviction born of talent and familiarity who resisted the temptation to showboat as they pushed at the open door and filled their boots.
It was not their responsibility that the opposition not only fielded an unbalanced mess who appeared to have barely met each other before, they had a coach who, contrary to evidence and experience, emasculated his best player from Saturday’s commendable draw by playing him at left wingback. A position at which he has failed whenever the idiocy has been perpetrated.
With Holmes, who had an appallingly inept first half, failing to carry out even the rudimentary duties of a central midfielder, Carlos’ folly was exponentially increased. Directly responsible for the second goal, continuously guilty of losing possession and lacking positional awareness or the ability to track runners, the American’s disastrous performance was only slightly below many of his equally culpable team mates.
The entirely anonymous Ward made few errors but only by dent of having virtually no involvement whatsoever. An already cataclysmically bad signing, Ward showed less than nothing defending from the front, won nothing by air or land and made you yearn for Campbell’s professionally honest endeavour.
If the result wasn’t entirely in doubt before the ink dried on the lamentable team sheet, the late addition of Joel “Lucky” Pereira following Schofield’s sudden and possibly diplomatic illness plunged Town’s prospects even further. 11 goals conceded in 2 games is not what you want on a CV.
Norwich’s opener came after just 8 minutes and just 30 seconds after Keogh made an excellent block to prevent a certain goal. The ball squirted out to Cantwell who skipped around Stearman and Duhaney with far too much ease before laying it in to the path of Pukki who caught Sarr flat footed from behind.
The listless defending so early in the game was an alarming harbinger of what was to come. The Canaries scented blood, the Terriers trembled and succumbed, though it took the hosts a little time to seal their victory with a second.
A sublime ball from Cantwell to the offside Pukki nearly opened up the increasingly fragile Town defence, just before Buendia set the Finn on his way behind Stearman and Keogh, and in to the area to finish.
Holmes, and it is difficult to convey just how poor he performed, had managed to give the ball away cheaply just inside the Norwich half which allowed Buendia the opportunity to play an inch perfect pass in to space behind the central defenders.
Within 5 minutes, Buendia was allowed acres of space to move forward and easily defeat Sarr’s half hearted, half turned attempt at a block with an excellent shot which beat Pereira and went in off the post.
At this point, even the mild resistance of the Yorkshiremen had crumbled in the face of overwhelming superiority and a 4th goal soon arrived with the impressive Cantwell and Buendia combining for the lovely haired Canary to hit the top corner beyond the hapless Pereira.
With no discernible press up top, barely a tackle being attempted and a complete absence of cohesion, Town, already dead and buried, looked ripe for a huge defeat.
Other than some poorly executed corners, Norwich looked flawless as they ripped in to their wretched opponents. Buendia, a top level player in all but status and which will soon be resolved, hit the bar with an excellent free kick, though the relief for the visitors was short lived.
One time Town target Dowell touched a glorious dink over the visiting defence to the irrepressible Buendia who could have made it a good day for himself with another goal but unselfishly fed the ball back to Dowell for Norwich’s nap hand.
A torrid first half ended without further damage and the traumatised and bewildered visitors could seek the sanctuary of the dressing room to hide their humiliation and embarrassment. Surpassing even the Bournemouth debacle, the only thing to hope for was that they would scramble to recover whatever passes for pride these days at Huddersfield Town.
Scott High was thrown on to replace the woeful Stearman at the break, though any one of the toxic central defensive trio could have been hooked. Presumably, Stearman drew the long straw.
Some sense of normalcy descended in the opening stages of the second half as Norwich settled comfortably in full certainty of their victory and another stride to inevitable promotion.
The introduction of Thomas, for Hogg, and Rowe for Holmes allowed O’Brien to move in to midfield and Town actually enjoyed a very brief period of ascendancy, with Thomas showing more ambition and positivity in a few minutes than Mbenza and Ward had shown put together.
Just before the hour, Thomas finally brought Krul in to the game, forcing a decent save at his near post.
Ineptitude soon raised it’s ugly head, however, when Skipp surged in to Town’s half with no challenge until Mbenza decided it was a good idea to make one as the Spurs loanee entered the area. It was a little soft, but difficult to complain about when any sort of attempted tackle was likely to upend the opponent who was in full flow.
Pukki drove in the penalty for his hat trick.
Sensing defeat was on the cards, Corberán withdrew O’Brien and Sarr and, to emphasise the sheer horror of the whole evening, Bacuna was handed the captain’s armband.
Any semblance of resistance collapsed again at this point and had Norwich capitalised, a historic defeat of Maine Road proportions and beyond was on the cards. As it was, only one further goal was added and the biggest defeat since November 1987 was suffered.
Humiliated, and with integrity considerably diminished, Town could only reflect on their opponents’ achievements following their relegation last season. While Norwich planned for demotion, the Terriers’ Premier League legacy is in tatters. If Rotherham are defeated on Saturday, the management and hierarchy may believe that the sacrifices made at Carrow Road will be deemed acceptable by the club’s supporters. They will be wrong.
Fielding a deliberately uncompetitive team in the hope that this will help towards a game against lowly Rotherham, who themselves were beaten comprehensively by bottom club Wycombe last time out, is both desperate and hugely disappointing. Even being in the position of scrabbling towards survival remains unacceptable.
Corberán’s repetition of his Bournemouth strategy, his incomprehensible deployment of O’Brien at left wing back and an ill advised reversion back to the tippy tappy nonsense he persisted with throughout the winless late winter months were hugely annoying and regrettably indicative of a refusal or inability to learn.
Having set out his stall, Rotherham must be vanquished. Minimum.
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Macjinx
Andy Booth Terrier
I've got a Gibson without a case but I cant get that even tanned look on my face.
Posts: 3,753
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Post by Macjinx on Apr 7, 2021 18:25:45 GMT 1
Accurate and more depressing for being so. Well done Martin for avoiding effing and jeffing. Onwards and upwards or downwards, who knows.
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Post by nicovaesen on Apr 7, 2021 18:47:21 GMT 1
You say they sought sanctuary from the dressing room to hide their embarrassment? Unfortunately not one of them, I believe, would have been embarrassed. Holmes was fist pumping opponents at the end!!! How they can look each other in the eye whilst collecting their silly wages is criminal. Otherwise great report as usual
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Post by Tim Nice But Dim on Apr 7, 2021 18:51:10 GMT 1
Everyone involved in last nights shambles should give their wages for a week to local charities, because we were beaten before we even kicked a ball. Appalling display and i fear that defeat will have long lasting consequence's.
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Post by willo on Apr 7, 2021 18:57:45 GMT 1
Everyone involved in last nights shambles should give their wages for a week to local charities, because we were beaten before we even kicked a ball. Appalling display and i fear that defeat will have long lasting consequence's. The very epitome of one team wanting it last night, the other team were beaten before they took to the field of play. You could tell from the very first minute.
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Post by Moooooy on Apr 7, 2021 20:01:37 GMT 1
You say they sought sanctuary from the dressing room to hide their embarrassment? Unfortunately not one of them, I believe, would have been embarrassed. Holmes was fist pumping opponents at the end!!! How they can look each other in the eye whilst collecting their silly wages is criminal. Otherwise great report as usual There needed to be some pinning up being done at HT, but I very much doubt there was. This side looks as gutless and passionless as they come. I said it in the match thread yesterday, no one made a tackle all game. We stood off and admired Norwich, where’s the professional pride?! Norwich are obviously a better side than us, but at least make it uncomfortable for them, Cantwell and Buendia were taking the piss. Go right through them and leave one on them, see if they still want to be doing flicks and tricks after that. But no, we rolled the red carpet out and bowed down to them. I’m still raging about it now. The whole club was beaten before they got off the bus, totally unacceptable for a professional side to throw the game like we did.
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Post by Farsley Terrier (UK product) on Apr 7, 2021 20:56:22 GMT 1
Last night was the result of more than 2 years of downward ideals within the club. It's been coming a while but it won't be the lowest we go, that is to come later this season when we're relegated on Goal difference because some Richard Head thought we could be clever by saving our players for a supposedly more important game to come. Which idiot thought it was a good idea? -7 goal difference on the night? You always play your best side. Play the players in the positions they know how to play. Basic stuff. It's not like we're well clear of the dropzone with nothing to play for. The approach to this game was totally inept.
Raging about it doesn't come close.
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ambryboy
Jimmy Glazzard Terrier
Posts: 4,623
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Post by ambryboy on Apr 7, 2021 21:12:09 GMT 1
Only one Town booking tells a tale, such a mauling should have had tackles flying in resulting in a few more yellows being dished out.
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Post by Rigodon on Apr 7, 2021 21:20:29 GMT 1
Oh how I'd like a Danny G report on this game.
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Post by redblue on Apr 7, 2021 21:20:36 GMT 1
“Sensing defeat was on the cards...,” ✊
Caused me to spray tea all over the place
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Post by Lard Buttie on Apr 7, 2021 21:54:34 GMT 1
The body was too badly mangled to do a post mortem
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Post by richhtfc on Apr 7, 2021 22:09:29 GMT 1
Got to be honest when I saw the line up I didn’t think the team was massively weak, certainly not to the same levels as in the Bournemouth game anyway. Pereira was the biggest worry and to be fair to him I don’t think Schofield would’ve done any better on the night.
I think the bigger issue was the formation and tactics which appeared to be to try and take Norwich on at their own game. The consequence was we were dragged all over the place by a much more competent team who passed us to death and clinically finished again and again.
I can only think that Carlos told them to show him what they could do as he felt we’d lose anyway. Hopefully it’s yet another teaching to all at the club that the current crop are simply not good enough players to improvise formation at the drop of a hat.
I don’t accept it was massively weak personnel wise from the start though, it finished with a way weaker line up who did a bit better because we changed to a familiar formation.
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Post by otium (EPBS) on Apr 7, 2021 22:33:48 GMT 1
I saw the back three announced without real full-back support and tried to back 6-0 and 7-0. We have been due an arse-holing all season due to having so many shot and wayward defenders. The press and defensive midfield have reduced goals against all season but we have ridden our luck. Only recall two good performances and one was a defeat to a Bristol City team who have since won just 3 from 16. This is one of the poorest teams Town have fielded in 40 years and i genuinely believe the worst in the Championship in the last 15. If i was a Div 1 manager i would only want O'Brien of those who played the last few weeks....nowhere near enough quality. Keogh, Stearman, Duhaney, Ward, Campbell...seriously, either shot or rubbish. I can sit and blame Phil, recruitment or Corberan....the apples, barrel and preservative are all rotten.
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Deleted
Deleted Member
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Post by Deleted on Apr 8, 2021 6:54:39 GMT 1
. Pereira was the biggest worry and to be fair to him I don’t think Schofield would’ve done any better on the night. . For me, whilst he was not really directly responsible through poor handling or shot stopping for any of the goals, he was a massive part of why Norwich were getting goal scoring opportunities in the first place. In recent weeks, we’ve cut out defensive mistakes off the back of a conscious decision to NOT have Schofield and the defensive unit piss about with the ball under pressure as the first choice option from the back. We’ve cleared our back third much quicker, in a clear development of our strategies that acknowledges we don’t have the players with the qualities who can reliably play strictly in the way that we’ve been trying to. Perreira comes in and it’s immediately evident that’s out of the window, he’s trying to demonstrate how confident he is in himself and those around him by looking for the short option at every opportunity, being slower to realise when he needs to go longer and forced into the mistakes of rushing his release under pressure, often turning over possession. He was indirectly responsible for a LOT of dangerous Norwich possession, and we got away with at least another 3 goals where his instinct was to play a 5 yard pass or try and wrong foot an attacker, cock up, then scuff a clearance directly to a Norwich player whilst we were all caught out looking for space ready to build an attack rather than expecting to suddenly rebuild the defensive shape. He is and was a liability, Schofield isn’t ill and plays against the exact same team and we might well lose, but you can almost guarantee it wouldn’t be by 7. If Schofield is not ready for Saturday and Periera starts again, we need some answers on Leutweiler. Is he injured / ill also ?? Is he a bad trainer?? He surely can not be as poor a keeper as Periera ??
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Post by shawsie on Apr 8, 2021 7:08:03 GMT 1
Last night was the result of more than 2 years of downward ideals within the club. It's been coming a while but it won't be the lowest we go, that is to come later this season when we're relegated on Goal difference because some Richard Head thought we could be clever by saving our players for a supposedly more important game to come. Which idiot thought it was a good idea? -7 goal difference on the night? You always play your best side. Play the players in the positions they know how to play. Basic stuff. It's not like we're well clear of the dropzone with nothing to play for. The approach to this game was totally inept. Raging about it doesn't come close. Its only a game fella!!! I used to get wound up by it as well, but right now que sera sera......... There is hope whilst fans continue to rage as anger often elicits a positive response. When it turns to apathy and cant be arsed is when the club is in real trouble........we wont have long to find out on where we are both on and off the field.
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Post by morleyterrier on Apr 8, 2021 7:17:28 GMT 1
A bit late, working. Unlike those twats. 7 (Seven)An evening of desperate ignominy in Norfolk saw Huddersfield Town trounced by a relentlessly excellent Norwich who clearly didn’t receive the memo to go easy on a club who had decided that their priorities lay elsewhere. Deliberately enfeebling the team for a second time this season, Corberán compounded this sin by managing to organise the ragbag of has beens, never wills and never should have beens in to a shape which surrendered swathes of space in the middle. Carlos’ opposite number sat quietly and contentedly through the ensuing massacre. The quality of the men in yellow cannot be disputed. They played with a verve and conviction born of talent and familiarity who resisted the temptation to showboat as they pushed at the open door and filled their boots. It was not their responsibility that the opposition not only fielded an unbalanced mess who appeared to have barely met each other before, they had a coach who, contrary to evidence and experience, emasculated his best player from Saturday’s commendable draw by playing him at left wingback. A position at which he has failed whenever the idiocy has been perpetrated. With Holmes, who had an appallingly inept first half, failing to carry out even the rudimentary duties of a central midfielder, Carlos’ folly was exponentially increased. Directly responsible for the second goal, continuously guilty of losing possession and lacking positional awareness or the ability to track runners, the American’s disastrous performance was only slightly below many of his equally culpable team mates. The entirely anonymous Ward made few errors but only by dent of having virtually no involvement whatsoever. An already cataclysmically bad signing, Ward showed less than nothing defending from the front, won nothing by air or land and made you yearn for Campbell’s professionally honest endeavour. If the result wasn’t entirely in doubt before the ink dried on the lamentable team sheet, the late addition of Joel “Lucky” Pereira following Schofield’s sudden and possibly diplomatic illness plunged Town’s prospects even further. 11 goals conceded in 2 games is not what you want on a CV. Norwich’s opener came after just 8 minutes and just 30 seconds after Keogh made an excellent block to prevent a certain goal. The ball squirted out to Cantwell who skipped around Stearman and Duhaney with far too much ease before laying it in to the path of Pukki who caught Sarr flat footed from behind. The listless defending so early in the game was an alarming harbinger of what was to come. The Canaries scented blood, the Terriers trembled and succumbed, though it took the hosts a little time to seal their victory with a second. A sublime ball from Cantwell to the offside Pukki nearly opened up the increasingly fragile Town defence, just before Buendia set the Finn on his way behind Stearman and Keogh, and in to the area to finish. Holmes, and it is difficult to convey just how poor he performed, had managed to give the ball away cheaply just inside the Norwich half which allowed Buendia the opportunity to play an inch perfect pass in to space behind the central defenders. Within 5 minutes, Buendia was allowed acres of space to move forward and easily defeat Sarr’s half hearted, half turned attempt at a block with an excellent shot which beat Pereira and went in off the post. At this point, even the mild resistance of the Yorkshiremen had crumbled in the face of overwhelming superiority and a 4th goal soon arrived with the impressive Cantwell and Buendia combining for the lovely haired Canary to hit the top corner beyond the hapless Pereira. With no discernible press up top, barely a tackle being attempted and a complete absence of cohesion, Town, already dead and buried, looked ripe for a huge defeat. Other than some poorly executed corners, Norwich looked flawless as they ripped in to their wretched opponents. Buendia, a top level player in all but status and which will soon be resolved, hit the bar with an excellent free kick, though the relief for the visitors was short lived. One time Town target Dowell touched a glorious dink over the visiting defence to the irrepressible Buendia who could have made it a good day for himself with another goal but unselfishly fed the ball back to Dowell for Norwich’s nap hand. A torrid first half ended without further damage and the traumatised and bewildered visitors could seek the sanctuary of the dressing room to hide their humiliation and embarrassment. Surpassing even the Bournemouth debacle, the only thing to hope for was that they would scramble to recover whatever passes for pride these days at Huddersfield Town. Scott High was thrown on to replace the woeful Stearman at the break, though any one of the toxic central defensive trio could have been hooked. Presumably, Stearman drew the long straw. Some sense of normalcy descended in the opening stages of the second half as Norwich settled comfortably in full certainty of their victory and another stride to inevitable promotion. The introduction of Thomas, for Hogg, and Rowe for Holmes allowed O’Brien to move in to midfield and Town actually enjoyed a very brief period of ascendancy, with Thomas showing more ambition and positivity in a few minutes than Mbenza and Ward had shown put together. Just before the hour, Thomas finally brought Krul in to the game, forcing a decent save at his near post. Ineptitude soon raised it’s ugly head, however, when Skipp surged in to Town’s half with no challenge until Mbenza decided it was a good idea to make one as the Spurs loanee entered the area. It was a little soft, but difficult to complain about when any sort of attempted tackle was likely to upend the opponent who was in full flow. Pukki drove in the penalty for his hat trick. Sensing defeat was on the cards, Corberán withdrew O’Brien and Sarr and, to emphasise the sheer horror of the whole evening, Bacuna was handed the captain’s armband. Any semblance of resistance collapsed again at this point and had Norwich capitalised, a historic defeat of Maine Road proportions and beyond was on the cards. As it was, only one further goal was added and the biggest defeat since November 1987 was suffered. Humiliated, and with integrity considerably diminished, Town could only reflect on their opponents’ achievements following their relegation last season. While Norwich planned for demotion, the Terriers’ Premier League legacy is in tatters. If Rotherham are defeated on Saturday, the management and hierarchy may believe that the sacrifices made at Carrow Road will be deemed acceptable by the club’s supporters. They will be wrong. Fielding a deliberately uncompetitive team in the hope that this will help towards a game against lowly Rotherham, who themselves were beaten comprehensively by bottom club Wycombe last time out, is both desperate and hugely disappointing. Even being in the position of scrabbling towards survival remains unacceptable. Corberán’s repetition of his Bournemouth strategy, his incomprehensible deployment of O’Brien at left wing back and an ill advised reversion back to the tippy tappy nonsense he persisted with throughout the winless late winter months were hugely annoying and regrettably indicative of a refusal or inability to learn. Having set out his stall, Rotherham must be vanquished. Minimum. Both extremely well written and accurate in assessment.
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Post by detox on Apr 8, 2021 7:55:52 GMT 1
Wagner would have played 5 at the back, 4 in midfield including two more full backs and a lone striker. We'd have still lost mind, but probably only 0-1
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Post by bluesandtwos on Apr 8, 2021 8:32:20 GMT 1
. Pereira was the biggest worry and to be fair to him I don’t think Schofield would’ve done any better on the night. . For me, whilst he was not really directly responsible through poor handling or shot stopping for any of the goals, he was a massive part of why Norwich were getting goal scoring opportunities in the first place. In recent weeks, we’ve cut out defensive mistakes off the back of a conscious decision to NOT have Schofield and the defensive unit piss about with the ball under pressure as the first choice option from the back. We’ve cleared our back third much quicker, in a clear development of our strategies that acknowledges we don’t have the players with the qualities who can reliably play strictly in the way that we’ve been trying to. Perreira comes in and it’s immediately evident that’s out of the window, he’s trying to demonstrate how confident he is in himself and those around him by looking for the short option at every opportunity, being slower to realise when he needs to go longer and forced into the mistakes of rushing his release under pressure, often turning over possession. He was indirectly responsible for a LOT of dangerous Norwich possession, and we got away with at least another 3 goals where his instinct was to play a 5 yard pass or try and wrong foot an attacker, cock up, then scuff a clearance directly to a Norwich player whilst we were all caught out looking for space ready to build an attack rather than expecting to suddenly rebuild the defensive shape. He is and was a liability, Schofield isn’t ill and plays against the exact same team and we might well lose, but you can almost guarantee it wouldn’t be by 7. If Schofield is not ready for Saturday and Periera starts again, we need some answers on Leutweiler. Is he injured / ill also ?? Is he a bad trainer?? He surely can not be as poor a keeper as Periera ?? In fairness to Pereira, and it feels strange even saying that, Carlos had put no height in midfield or attack, which limits the effectiveness of long balls. With Sanogo and Vallejo playing we have good targets, Holmes & Ward not so much so. I do still agree with you though. If you are failing playing it out from the back then try plan B, even if it means our players have to scrap for it. We were found out by opponents a long while ago with tippy tappy.
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Post by richhtfc on Apr 8, 2021 8:53:01 GMT 1
. Pereira was the biggest worry and to be fair to him I don’t think Schofield would’ve done any better on the night. . For me, whilst he was not really directly responsible through poor handling or shot stopping for any of the goals, he was a massive part of why Norwich were getting goal scoring opportunities in the first place. In recent weeks, we’ve cut out defensive mistakes off the back of a conscious decision to NOT have Schofield and the defensive unit piss about with the ball under pressure as the first choice option from the back. We’ve cleared our back third much quicker, in a clear development of our strategies that acknowledges we don’t have the players with the qualities who can reliably play strictly in the way that we’ve been trying to. Perreira comes in and it’s immediately evident that’s out of the window, he’s trying to demonstrate how confident he is in himself and those around him by looking for the short option at every opportunity, being slower to realise when he needs to go longer and forced into the mistakes of rushing his release under pressure, often turning over possession. He was indirectly responsible for a LOT of dangerous Norwich possession, and we got away with at least another 3 goals where his instinct was to play a 5 yard pass or try and wrong foot an attacker, cock up, then scuff a clearance directly to a Norwich player whilst we were all caught out looking for space ready to build an attack rather than expecting to suddenly rebuild the defensive shape. He is and was a liability, Schofield isn’t ill and plays against the exact same team and we might well lose, but you can almost guarantee it wouldn’t be by 7. If Schofield is not ready for Saturday and Periera starts again, we need some answers on Leutweiler. Is he injured / ill also ?? Is he a bad trainer?? He surely can not be as poor a keeper as Periera ?? I take your point but it didn’t feel like we were set up tactically to play the ‘plan B’ we’ve developed in recent weeks. I thought Carlos decided we should ‘have a go at them’ with our passing game.
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Post by Farsley Terrier (UK product) on Apr 8, 2021 9:05:06 GMT 1
Wagner would have played 5 at the back, 4 in midfield including two more full backs and a lone striker. We'd have still lost mind, but probably only 0-1 if Wagner had been managing we'd have won the game because the guy knew his shit at this level.
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Post by Galpharmer on Apr 8, 2021 9:34:19 GMT 1
I saw the back three announced without real full-back support and tried to back 6-0 and 7-0. Here he is. Be sure to tell us who's going to win the Grand National, an hour after it's finished.
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Post by richhtfc on Apr 8, 2021 9:51:42 GMT 1
Wagner would have played 5 at the back, 4 in midfield including two more full backs and a lone striker. We'd have still lost mind, but probably only 0-1 if Wagner had been managing we'd have won the game because the guy knew his shit at this level. Like when Fulham beat us 5-0 away and 1-4 at home?
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Post by Farsley Terrier (UK product) on Apr 8, 2021 9:59:38 GMT 1
if Wagner had been managing we'd have won the game because the guy knew his shit at this level. Like when Fulham beat us 5-0 away and 1-4 at home? but we didn't lose to Norwich away, in fact I remember us beating them.
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Post by detox on Apr 8, 2021 11:00:23 GMT 1
Like when Fulham beat us 5-0 away and 1-4 at home? but we didn't lose to Norwich away, in fact I remember us beating them. Not with this squad of players he didn't....
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Post by otium (EPBS) on Apr 8, 2021 11:10:24 GMT 1
I saw the back three announced without real full-back support and tried to back 6-0 and 7-0. Here he is. Be sure to tell us who's going to win the Grand National, an hour after it's finished. No liquidity, i only got 70p matched on 7-0 at 790/1 2021-04-06 21:36 229275976339 2021-04-06 14:40 Fixtures 6 Apr / Norwich v Huddersfield/ Correct Score 2 Home Commission of 5% on Net Winnings of GBP525.54 - - - (26.28) 5,378.55 2021-04-06 21:36 229275948586 2021-04-06 14:40 Fixtures 6 Apr / Norwich v Huddersfield/ Correct Score 2 Home / 6 - 1 Back 230.00 2.59 Lost (2.59) 5,404.83 2021-04-06 21:36 229275866029 2021-04-06 14:39 Fixtures 6 Apr / Norwich v Huddersfield/ Correct Score 2 Home / 5 - 1 Back 75.00 7.00 Lost (7.00) 5,407.42 2021-04-06 21:36 229275976339 2021-04-06 14:40 Fixtures 6 Apr / Norwich v Huddersfield/ Correct Score 2 Home / 7 - 0 Back 790.00 0.70 Won 552.30 5,414.42 2021-04-06 21:36 229275888348 2021-04-06 14:40 Fixtures 6 Apr / Norwich v Huddersfield/ Correct Score 2 Home / 6 - 0 Back 210.00 0.17 Lost (0.17) 4,862.12 2021-04-06 21:36 229275845262 2021-04-06 14:39 Fixtures 6 Apr / Norwich v Huddersfield/ Correct Score 2 Home / 5 - 0 Back 60.00 17.00 Lost (17.00) 4,862.29
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Post by Waterloo Terrier on Apr 8, 2021 11:38:50 GMT 1
if Wagner had been managing we'd have won the game because the guy knew his shit at this level. Like when Fulham beat us 5-0 away and 1-4 at home? Still got promoted ahead of them though didn’t he. Carlos’ post Xmas record is in Siewert territory now and he was in the Prem.
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town1
Iain Dunn Terrier
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Post by town1 on Apr 8, 2021 13:19:18 GMT 1
Still waiting for the HTtv post match show. Even the club embarrassed?
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Post by Captainslapper on Apr 8, 2021 13:39:46 GMT 1
' to emphasise the sheer horror of the whole evening, Bacuna was handed the captain’s armband.' Superb report Gledholt. Was looking forward to this one and you havent disappointed.
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Post by turbo2 on Apr 8, 2021 13:46:33 GMT 1
' to emphasise the sheer horror of the whole evening, Bacuna was handed the captain’s armband.' Superb report Gledholt. Was looking forward to this one and you havent disappointed. I like the one where he said “stearman drew the long straw’. Brilliant stuff.
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Post by Captainslapper on Apr 8, 2021 14:14:59 GMT 1
Black humour is great. Like a coping mechanism. Think us brits are excellent at it. Seeing the humour in something terrible.. within reason of course.
I was shouting at the screen at Holmes in particular in that first half. His level of abject uselessness was almost beyond belief for anyone earning a living as a footballer, nevermind an extremely good one. By the half hour mark though, the anger had turned to laughter. We were pissing ourselves at how shit he was.
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