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Date:
Sat 14th April 2001, 3.00pm.
Venue:
Portman Road
Conditions: Occasional
showers, but most of the liquid in the Suffolk area appeared to be contained within the bellies of toon
fans......
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Ipswich
Town |
1
- 0 |
Newcastle
United |
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Teams |
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Half time: Ipswich
0 Newcastle 0
76
mins. Nolberto Solano handled a goal-bound
Hermann Hreidarsson header on the line and the referee rightly awarded a penalty, with
the Peruvian being dismissed. Marcus Stewart stepped up and shot home over the diving
Shay Given 0-1
Full time: Ipswich
1 Newcastle
0
Uncle
Bobby said of his welcome back to Portman Road:
"It was very warm and very
genuine. I was very happy here and I was grateful to the way they
responded to me.
And of the game itself,
"One moment, one lack of
concentration cost us.
"Before the game I made it clear
that he (Hreidarsson) was the number one danger from free-kicks and corners and we left
him just once but it cost us.
"I didn't think we were going to
concede a goal all afternoon. We would have got a bit of praise had we got
a battling 0-0.
"Until every player in our club
realises that you have to be alert every second of the match we will
continue to concede those type of goals.
"It's cost us a point here and
it's cost us points elsewhere. The players might think we don't deserve
that but I do think we deserve it until we learn.
"We lost a match here we should
never have lost. We have no Alan Shearer, Kieron Dyer in midfield and
Nikos Dabizas is out and he's our best defender - now we will lose Nobby
for two games and I feel sorry for him."
On his former club:
"They may not have outstanding players like David Beckham or Ryan
Giggs but every member of this side plays to his potential and
beyond."
George Burley
praised his over-achievers, saying:
"The
pressure was on us, Newcastle are safe, maybe
with nothing to play for, but we are fighting for a European spot.
"Everybody expected us to win
because of what we have done in the league so far but I knew that
Newcastle do have some outstanding players.
"But Marcus (Stewart) tucked it away and
that's why he is the leading scorer in the Premiership - it was a
well-taken penalty.
"We have been in the top six
virtually all season and the league table doesn't lie. It's a wonderful
achievement."
A casual observer at this game could have
certainly gone away with the impression that both sides were well-matched
and enjoyed an equal league placing. The fact that this would have been in
the lower mid-table position we're currently enduring rather than the rarefied
air of the upper reaches tells it's own story, however.
While the home side have successfully built up a head of steam and are in
the habit of regularly acquiring points each time they take the field,
their visitors have at present forgotten what it's like to have a lead,
never mind win a match. All credit to Ipswich for bucking the trend and
silencing the critics, but any side with Alun Armstrong in it shouldn't
make the rest of the league tremble in their boots.
Technically there wasn't much between the
two teams, with the Magpies as capable as their hosts of playing neat
football in midfield without causing offence. The principal difference
appeared to be a combination of form and luck that served us so well in the
past when allied with genuine striking power, and at present has totally
deserted us.
The fact that our forward line had all the attacking menace of
the Swiss army didn't help - not a criticism of Cort, but a reflection of
the limited contribution Shola made, and the lack of support and service
from the midfield, who could argue they were under instructions to stem the
blue tide.
Nobody has been able to explain precisely why Cort's first half header was
chalked off, the supposed push not showing up on post-match reruns. Referee
Dean thought he saw something amiss, but for those of those without x-ray
eyes the disallowed goal merely signalled it was going to be another one of
those days. Unpunished skirmishing in other Premiership matches shown on TV
that night (principally Leicester v Man City) merely made things worse. The
only consistency is the inconsistency....
No complaints though about the penalty, which had a certain inevitability
about it, given our current plight and the fact this was the third
successive game we've been penalised in such a way. At least this one was a
genuine offence, unlike the pantomime awards at Everton and Bradford.
Aside from Cort's effort and late shots from subs Gallacher and LuaLua there
wasn't a great deal for the travelling fans to shout about, but the "we
will give you foot and mouth" chant was augmented by a rendition of
"shall we burn you just in case?" - which provoked great
mirth among the adjoining tractor boys and local constabulary.
An encouraging performance from Andrew O'Brien unfortunately wasn't enough
to carve out a clean sheet, but Town never laid siege to our goal, and the
only time that Given looked to be genuinely struggling was when a defensive
header from Hughes cannoned off the United crossbar in the first half.
It's very difficult to feel anything other than empathy with Ipswich, partly
arising from the adoration that was accorded Bobby Robson (which one sensed
would have been extended to Kieron Dyer had he played) but also the totally
unthreatening atmosphere both in the town beforehand and during the game.
The non-segregated toilets, catering facilities and access and low-key
stewarding between home and away fans couldn't have been in greater contrast
to the expected war zone that will await us on our next road trip.
Having said that though, a couple of Town followers didn't exactly cover
themselves in glory on a previous visit, when their banging on the roof of
the Newcastle dugout had caused a certain K.Keegan to venture into their
midst to sort them out. Had that been repeated in this match though, no doubt one
of Bobby's Paddington hard stares would have been enough to calm the errant
Tractor Boys....
In conclusion, one goal for Ipswich always looked likely to be enough, but had we held on for a point in a goalless draw, or had Cort's
header contributed to a 1-1 final score, Bobby's plan would have worked,
we'd be a point better off and buoyed by the knowledge that we were
beginning to regain some of our old confidence and form.
Instead we now face a home game against another utterly inconsistent outfit, desperately
seeking a win. The three points we need to confirm our Premiership status
cannot come soon enough, with fans, player and manager all looking for the
boost that a win would bring, especially with that trip down the road
looming.
PS: Best not to mention either the awful shrieking masquerading as opera
singing from some bloke in the middle of the pitch at half time - and he wasn't
even fat.....
Biffa
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