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Season 1998-99 Southampton (a) Premiership |
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16 mins: Beattie shot
0-1
Ruud Gullit said:
Dave
Jones:
Whatever one might think about the quality
of play, it is certainly an intriguing time to be a football supporter on the
Hampshire and Dorset coast. The omens were poor for an individually
gifted but collectively ineffective Newcastle - they had not won at The Dell
since February 1972 and Alan Shearer has not scored in six matches here since
Southampton sold his goals to Blackburn. The run extended to seven after the
visiting team's toothless display. Although the scoreline may suggest that
Southampton were dominant, in truth they were mediocre and fortunate to be two
goals ahead at the interval. At that moment Newcastle might as well have
run their white shorts up a flag-pole. Their surrender was completed just
before half-time as Didier Domi committed a needless foul on Egil Ostenstad,
holding him down as the Norwegian attempted to jump for a cross before Alan
Dodd thumped in a well-taken penalty. Aside from a couple of Shearer headers
and a Nolberto Solano free-kick which struck the bar, a late headed goal from
Dietmar Hamann was all that Newcastle could offer. James Beattie, impressive for England
Under-21 against France recently, caught his manager's eye. "At the moment
he's got so much power he's thunderboots," remarked Southampton's manager,
Dave Jones. "We knew we were signing a player with potential. He hangs in
the air so well - the last player I saw like that was big Joe Royle." Such comparisons are as yet premature and
unearned. The 20-year-old Beattie, while ox-strong and sprinter-swift, is
missing many qualities from the striker's repertoire including a decent first
touch, good close control and Shearer's goal instinct. The young man is no more
than promising, and puts one in mind of John Hartson after a week at a health
farm. Despite the win Southampton remain bottom
of the Premiership. Bottom, that is, of the 19 clubs with a realistic chance of
survival. A visit to Old Trafford next Saturday is unlikely to help their cause
as Manchester will surely be more united than Ruud Gullit's fragmented
Newcastle. Biffa |
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