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Post by gledholt terrier on Sept 19, 2021 11:54:44 GMT 1
Well, that was pretty terrible. (Not going to Swansea next week)
Cut down to size
Town plodded to a disappointing defeat at the hands of a rejuvenated Nottingham Forest, who dealt with the extremely limited threat offered by their hosts with supreme comfort from the very first minute.
Results across the Championship in round 8 were in head scratching territory, “invincible” Fulham beaten at home by a side dismantled by Town a short time ago, crisis club Derby despatched Stoke and Blackpool went to Middlesbrough on the back of a heavy home defeat and won.
Perhaps it was the combination of an unshackled squad of professional footballers finding the freedom to achieve their potential against a complacent group who have had too much wind blown up their collective backside, but the mockery of the respective form of the contestants was bewildering.
Even before Forest’s excellent opener, Town looked sluggish and devoid of flair. Every player consistently took the safe option and soon dissolved in to a syrup of turgid possession which rarely survived contact with Forest’s defence who will struggle to have an easier 90 minutes all season.
In contrast, the East Midlanders were prepared to play on the edge of risk and none more so than Joe Lolley, restored to the starting line up by Stephen Reid, as the left side of Town’s defence succumbed far too easily.
It was no surprise when a dominant Forest took the lead with a goal of simple, direct quality. The highly regarded Brennan roasted Colwill for pace, having brushed aside attempts to stop him further up the pitch and delivered a fantastic cross met by Grabban who powered his header past a hopelessly exposed Nicholls.
Arguably, Town could point to a dubious advantage played by the referee after O’Brien was upended, they lost possession moments later allowing the counter, but that would be clutching.
The entirely deserved goal deepened the resolve of the visitors, who were able to control the game despite, and possibly because of, Town’s dominance of possession. Keeping hold of the ball only served to bring a plethora of old problems to the surface. Allied to the numbing and desperately slow passing was a hesitancy which consistently closed up space, movement stagnated as deliberation overwhelmed instinct and intent became entirely predictable.
Ward, a surprise inclusion following his performance at Bloomfield Road (and pretty much every other one), was fortunate to see only yellow after a lunge precipitated by a typically awful first touch before the goal and again offered far too little but did, at least, have Town’s only attempt on target, a weak header straight at the keeper, of a desperately poor first half.
In an attempt to change the dynamics of a game in which they were clearly second best, Corberán opted to change to a back four, bringing on Turton for Pearson. Theoretically, this would push Thomas up the pitch and provide better protection on the left, where Forest’s main threat emanated.
With Colwill having perhaps his least convincing performance and the proven threat of Pearson from set pieces, the personnel aspect of the change was questionable, though the tactical argument was fair enough.
Unfortunately for Carlos, the substitution proved immediately disastrous. Colwill, rather than leave a mundane ball in the box to Nicholls, chose to put the newly arrived Turton in trouble and he was promptly dispossessed. Nicholls made a decent save from the eventual shot by Yates, but Lolley was alert to possibility and capitalised on Turton’s lack of reaction to double Forest’s lead.
Within minutes of the restart, then, Corberán’s plans were in tatters, Forest’s confidence was confirmed and enhanced, and a team which had struggled to overcome a small hill in the first half were looking up at a steep mountain.
Belief, a commodity already scarce on an afternoon to forget, disappeared both on and off the pitch.
If anything, a third Forest goal looked more likely than a Town comeback but after a brief flurry the visitors sat back to comfortably soak up any pressure their hosts could muster, which proved minimal.
The much maligned Holmes came on at the hour mark and provided a little hope with an energetic performance. Sadly, his colleagues, including fellow sub Mipo, were impervious to his prompting and continued their safe and slow approach to a game clearly already lost.
Mipo is yet to make any impact whatsoever. His introduction in to the past 3 games haven’t been ideal, but he has barely touched the ball over about 50 minutes of game time. He should, of course, be given time and patience, but simply doesn’t look the answer to our central striker problems, which are deep, on the available evidence.
Towards the end of the one sided contest, Lees met a Thomas corner but put the chance wide when, it could be argued, Pearson would have converted. Turton also glanced another corner chance wide which the top scorer would have probably gobbled up.
It was unfortunate that Corberán’s decisions to try to change the game imploded almost immediately. Town have survived mundane first half performances before (indeed, this was the case just a few short days ago), but Forest’s second entirely undermined any hoped for transformation.
Mechanical, risk averse and lacking intensity, Town had a very poor afternoon but credit should be given to a thoroughly professional Forest who will surely recover from their terrible start played out under a manager who appears to have strangled them with his noted pragmatism.
The Championship though? Weird.
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Post by bluestripe on Sept 19, 2021 12:04:24 GMT 1
Ward was fouled immediately before the yellow card challenge. It happened right in front of me. His shirt was given a good tug back. This meant he was struggling to control the ball and contributed to the lunge.
To be fair to the ref, he would have been unsighted. But it shouldn't have been a yellow card, never mind a red.
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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: 3,736
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Post by Macjinx on Sept 19, 2021 12:14:44 GMT 1
Depressingly accurate report Martin. It's frustrating that at the start of nearly every half we dont know which Town team is going to turn up. Standing with the ball in your own half,then passing it sideways or backwards isnt going to win many games. Not only do you need movement, you need players who can spot the movement and deliver a telling ball. No evidence of that yesterday.
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Post by sonny on Sept 19, 2021 14:29:24 GMT 1
Great report as usual. We have to find a solution to the central striker issue. It isn't Ward, who demonstrates every week that he cannot play with his back to goal (or facing any other way) and sadly it doesn't look as though the West Ham lad is the answer either.
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Post by malcolmbrown on Sept 19, 2021 19:06:12 GMT 1
Excellent, thank you.
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Post by deightonrifle on Sept 19, 2021 19:19:23 GMT 1
Excellent report as ever.
Even after the first goal I felt the most, likely and perhaps only, way back in to the game was from a set play. So playing the second half with neither Pearson nor Sarr on the pitch seemed mistaken whatever the tactical arguments. And desperate though it sounds I suspect Naby would provide more of a threat up front in the latter stages than Mipo.
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Post by 28901 on Sept 19, 2021 22:07:07 GMT 1
Ward was fouled immediately before the yellow card challenge. It happened right in front of me. His shirt was given a good tug back. This meant he was struggling to control the ball and contributed to the lunge. To be fair to the ref, he would have been unsighted. But it shouldn't have been a yellow card, never mind a red. This is spot on. He was late in the challenge because he was being held back.
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Post by 28901 on Sept 19, 2021 22:08:44 GMT 1
Excellent report as ever. Even after the first goal I felt the most, likely and perhaps only, way back in to the game was from a set play. So playing the second half with neither Pearson nor Sarr on the pitch seemed mistaken whatever the tactical arguments. And desperate though it sounds I suspect Naby would provide more of a threat up front in the latter stages than Mipo. Corberan just has no fuvkin imagination. He wont try anything Like for like subs. It's so bloody frustrating. Town just gave up on the points after the second.
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