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Date: Sun 26th August 2001, 4.00pm
Venue: St.
James' Park
Conditions: Sunny
and noisy.
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Newcastle
United |
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mackems |
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Teams |
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34
mins. TV pictures showed later that the cockney
dwarf pushed Aaron Hughes moments before the ball reached him but Phillips
was still given the freedom of the box to glance a header past Shay Given.
43
mins. Laurent Robert chipped through a superb
ball over the mackem defence and Craig Bellamy nodded it down before racing into
the box, firing past Sorensen into the far corner via the keeper's right
glove.
Half time: Newcastle
1 mackems 1
Full time: Newcastle 1
mackems 1
Uncle Bobby said:
"We should have
won this by a cup of tea.
"Had Nobby
taken one of four second half chances he would have been a hero. I
feel a bit sorry for Solano that all the chances came his way but if he
comes back from Peru and tells me that he's scored a hat-trick then I'll
hang him.
"He tried to
skim his header in, trod on the ball when he was clean through, shot
weakly at Sorensen and then found himself in again when he should have
volleyed it at the near post. Apart from his
missed chances I thought he did quite well. It's a match that we'll look
back on and realise how well we've played without picking up all three
points."
About Speed:
"It's the same muscle but the injury is more serious this time. Gary
will be out for a lot longer than he was before.
"Robbie (Elliott)
isn't
too well at all but initially I thought Haas came off worse. He needed
stitches but finished the game well whereas Robbie was obviously in some
difficulty.
"Craig Bellamy
took his goal wonderfully well because it was a tight angle and he hit it
at just the right time, he's
penetrative and quick but he's still getting used to playing in a new team
with unfamiliar faces. He didn't play
in front of 50,000 fans at Norwich or Coventry and I doubt he's ever
experienced that kind of atmosphere in his career. He acquitted himself
very well indeed.
"As for Alan
Shearer I didn't want to put him on too early and I wouldn't have used him
at all if we had been well in control. However, we
were chasing the winner and I thought that, by introducing him when I did,
it would just give the crowd an extra lift at a vital stage of the game
for us.
"If I had
thrown him on earlier and he had suffered a recurrence of his injury then
I would have been kicking myself. He did well,
looked lively and came through 20 minutes of a very high class,
competitive game unscathed.
"If Robert Lee
doesn't deserve the man-of-the-match award then the people awarding it
don't have a clue - he was
outstanding again, just as he was against Chelsea, and his ball for
Solano's second half header was exquisite. All afternoon he lunged,
tackled and gave the fans what they want to see in this kind of
match.
"I'm very
pleased for Shay (Given) because I kept faith in him and he performed well under
severe pressure. I knew that he would come through in the end because I
was always confident he could handle the big occasion.
"Warren
(Barton) was the
same. There was pressure to leave both players out but I trust my players
and they rarely let me down."
Finally, Bobby paused during his post-match press conference to pass
on some advice to one of his former players, a Mr E.Gates, present in his
role as a radio presenter. The four word message?
"Get your hair cut."
Laurent Robert
addressed the nation via his own website as follows:
"I delivered some good
crosses and there was one which should have been a penalty.
"The defender
tapped the ball with his hand but the referee didn't see it. But in any
case the game went well for me.
"For Craig
Bellamy's equaliser, I got the ball in midfield and knocked it to him
after he called for it and he shot across the keeper to score."
"We've played
two good teams at the start of the championship and taken a point each
time and the team seems good together. Alan Shearer is getting fitter all
the time and as for the other injured players they're working hard and
hopefully we'll have a full squad before long."
Returning hero Alan Shearer spoke of his comeback, his fitness
and his plans:
"It
felt great to be out there. The crowd's reaction sent a shiver down my
spine and that was just when I was warming up. The ovation when I came on
was something else and all I need now is match fitness.
"We were
pleased with our performance but there was a tinge of disappointment in
the dressing room. One lapse at the back has cost us the points but we
still had the chances to win the game."
"I feel a bit
for Nobby because he's been among the goals for us already this season and
if we'd have wanted those chances to drop for anyone it would have been
him. I tried to pick him up in
the dressing room after the final whistle by explaining to him that it
could have been much worse. He could have missed a penalty against
Sunderland.
"I don't think
he saw the funny side and I know how he feels. He could have scored three
or four but he knows that one would have been enough. I'm
fine and the knee feels very good. The last 14 months has been the worst
period of my professional career because one day my knee would feel fine
and the next day there would be pain.
"For the first
time I can remember I am feeling no pain whatsoever and I just need to
rediscover my old sharpness. I didn't want to come back too early but now
is the right time and I can only get better."
"It's been four
years since we've had a genuine left winger with pace and Laurent is an
exciting player. For the last three years everything has been down the
right, on Nobby's side, but now we have some balance again. I've been
watching him very closely in the last few weeks and his signing has to be
good for me."
Goalscorer Craig Bellamy had a few words to say:
"I'm
delighted to have scored in my first Tyne-Wear derby - if you're going to
win the fans over that's a good step. It was the biggest club game I've ever played in by a considerable
distance.
I've played for Norwich and Coventry but that's nothing compared
to this - it was amazing walking out into that noise, but you can't
let it get the better of you because you can freeze up. Derbies are such
tight affairs and there's so much to lose that you can't afford to do
that.
"It was the biggest game I've played in so it's got to be my biggest
goal. I'll certainly remember it for a long time, but we were disappointed
we didn't get the three points because we created the better chances. The three
points were all that mattered."
Finally, star performer Robert Lee gave his reflections:
"That was
definitely a match we should have won and we had two great chances to
clinch it at the end. We
conceded a sloppy goal and should have scored more ourselves. We wasted
countless opportunities towards the end of the game and there's no doubt
we should have wrapped it up.
"Thankfully the
crowd never got on our backs and they were excellent throughout. They gave
us the belief to come back into the game and after we drew level we were
the better side. You cannot afford to give Kevin Phillips space in the box
and we paid the penalty for doing that. We let him loose for a second and
suddenly we were 1-0 down but we should have seen that coming."
Monkey's Heed grunted:
"I was just
glad when the final whistle went. In the second half we didn't pass the
ball at all and Newcastle will see themselves slightly unfortunate not to
get the three points.
"The biggest
thing about my team was that we kept on going and we dug in.
"It was a great
goal from Kevin and it gave us a great start, but it was disappointing
conceding just before half-time. From our point
of view it was a bad goal, we had possession and lost it and I think three
of my players just stood watching it. When the ball
got played through we haven't picked Bellamy up - that was disappointing,
but the kid's finished it well.
"If we could
have held on until half-time it might have been different but, in the end,
I was just glad when the referee blew up."
It's now 10 games unbeaten for
Newcastle in all competitions, a run that includes six Intertoto Cup games and
stretches back to defeat at Anfield in May. In league games only, our record is 1
defeat in 9 games.
For the third time in eight days United found themselves behind
but managed to claw back parity to avoid defeat.
In each of the last seven Tyne-Wear matches (all the Premiership ones),
the side who took the lead has not won the game.
Craig Bellamy became the sixth Welsh international to net in a Tyne-Wear derby for United,
following Bill Foulkes, Wyn
Davies, Reg Davies, Ollie Burton and Gary Speed. Ian
Davies also managed it, but never got any further than the Welsh U21s.
Before this game, the last five scorers for United in the Tyne-Wear
derby had been five different nationalities - Kieron Dyer (English),
Helder (Portuguese), Didier Domi (French), Gary Speed (Welsh)
and Andy O'Brien (Irish).
Two games in, and a pair of the stickier
fixtures out of the way. After the foul ups of recent seasons, the fact
we've got any points at all should be a relief and to be unbeaten at this
stage is a creditable return. Indeed, had we played Leicester as
scheduled, things could have been rather jolly.
And yet...the players, supporters, manager and TV audience will reflect on
this game as two points lost for the Magpies. Had one of the chances we
created after the interval been put away, Peytar's primates were a beaten
side.
In stark contrast to the previous two derby matches on Tyneside, the team in black and white looked to have the upper hand in the
spirit and commitment department, with the small town in Durham XI only
topping the immobility and "didn't fancy it" rankings.
Under those circumstances, a mackem side seeming to be short of team
spirit and criticised by their own tribal chiefs over team selection
policy were there to be beaten. Despite the badge-kissing antics of
Hutchison, who seems to attract worship and derision in equal measures
from the unwashed down the road, Peytar's boys look a shadow of the
miserable, bullying outfit that just failed to hoof their way into Europe
last season.
As for our lot, aside from the seemingly inevitable forced departures
through injury (this time Elliott and Speed, a year to the week Dabizas
and Cort limped out of St.James'), there was much to be optimistic about,
if not content.
The return of Shearer after his longest period on the sidelines yet was
greeted by waves of applause that suggested he's been out long enough for
the rank and file to exorcise the memory of his patchy pre-op
performances. While things never quite turned out in the hoped-for fairy
tale manner, his 100% tackle/free kick record in the 15 minutes he got on
for showed that some aspects of his game remained instinctively intact.
So, the prodigal son of a sheet metal worker returned to an ovation, and
while the side lacks millions of pounds worth of talent (through injury
and absence of form), points are being collected and games not being lost.
Support from the stands was there in bundles, and most people even stuck
around to see the final stages.
Where next then for the lads in this now purely domestic season, now we
have a short respite before it all goes off again big style?
Hopefully Shearer's return from injury and long-overdue run of games will
be aided by quality assistance from his colleagues, and in Robert he
certainly looks to have an ally in terms of hitting the danger areas with
quality passes. When the rest of the team belatedly started feeding him
with the ball against the mackems, he genuinely looked a class above
anything else on display. If we could endeavour to get Dyer on the same
field as him, the attacking possibilities would be mouth-watering.
In the meantime, both Robert and Solano need to focus on finding their
talismanic number nine with quality balls into the box. There's been no
sadder sight in recent seasons for toon fans than Shearer being forced
into wide positions to deliver good crosses that aren't capitalised on by
his colleagues.
Repeated viewing of the 8-0 leathering of Sheffield
Wednesday (featuring Emerson Thome of course) should be the order of the
day. God knows how much longer we've got big Al for - the least we can do
is maximise his effectiveness and minimise the donkey work he's saddled
with. Al, Ball, Goal, Repeat.
In an ideal world, whoever played next to
Shearer would be capable of shouldering the workload, especially against
the quality defenders who will inevitably expose his reduced mobility in
coming games. Whether that player is Ameobi remains a big doubt in my
mind. Taking into account his often Waddle-esque languidity, he seems to
err on the shoulder-shrugging side of easy-going too often for my liking.
Just as he had against Troyes, he walked off for his half time cuppa
against the mackems having barely featured or threatened. Hopefully a
well-heeled brogue was brought into contact with the back of his shorts
within said dressing room.
Critical praise from the chattering classes and broadsheet newspaper
interviews are all very well, and uncle Bobby simply refuses to have a
word said against him, but our hyper-active manager looked more energetic
and active on the touchline for great swathes of this game than his young
striking prospect. Shola's body language when subbed seemed to betray the
fact that he thought his time was up for longer than this game, when in
fact the continuing saga of Carl Cort's tin legs means he still has senior
opportunities.
Crucially for him, the goal and harrying performance from Bellamy may have
just tipped the scales in the Welshman's favour. Apparently taking
instruction from coach John Carver about playing on the shoulders of
defenders (not literally), Bellamy was our chief forward threat in the
early stages of this game. LuaLua's continuance as a bit part player means
that the ex-Coventry player seems set for an extended run in the side.
Hopefully his improved performance and goal against the mackems will help
him to settle in and garner praise from the stands in a similar way to
Andy O'Brien after his strike on Wearside last season. He may be a full
Welsh international, but much work needs to be done to convince many
punters of his eligibility for the Geordie dream
team.
Turning to the defence, maybe I was alone
in not being particularly bothered about the departure of Robbie Elliott
and absence of Quinn on the bench, but I doubt it. Aaron Hughes fitted in
at full back as he has in the past for both club and country, and with the
marauding Frenchman in front of him, his natural tendency to hang back and
at least try and defend places him above the two other left backs in the
frame at present.
Bobby Robson recently spoke about lending Robbie videos of
Roberto Carlos to give him ideas on how to get forward effectively. Maybe
he should slip a few old Stuart Pearce tapes through Elliott's letterbox,
as it's when defending that he seems to be especially struggling at
present.
If Hughes plays on the flank, then Dabizas has a choice of partners
ranging from the youthful enthusiasm of the Caldwells through the dubious
motives of the Spaniard, or the unassuming presence of O'Brien. Significantly
Bobby is looking to the transfer market in this area (and in
the process spending what remains of his £20m budget). Whether the three
centre back ploy is in his mind is unclear, but we've traditionally
struggled with this system regardless of the personnel employed.
At right back and in goal, it seems that
barring further disasters on a regular basis, Given and Barton will
continue at the expense of Harper and Griffin. Certainly Bobby's
first-choice pair did little wrong; Given not unduly
tested and Barton opting to hoof the ball out of play rather
than reprise the fancy footwork that opened the door for Troyes.
Commitment is never in question for the lad, but he's either very good or
very bad.
So, a comparison of the two pretenders to the throne of North East
football reveals that our lot aren't quite as pudding-like as in recent
years, and the halo could just be slipping from the 'nana peeler. Both
sides have spent a few quid on reinforcements, and from what was on show, we appear to have bought talent more suitable for
this league.
Time will tell on that, as will the emergence of further
"local" players from the respective Academy teams. Ratboy
Phillips aside, they seem to be on a downward spiral thus far, while we
seem slightly more robust and watchable.
If this season brings nothing else, at least the prospect of a realistic
tussle with the forces of darkness down the road may illuminate the coming
months. While Bobby and his boys may have grander aspirations, he knows
that nowt cheers up his own folk more than getting one over on the old
enemy, and beating Boro just doesn't count.
Next time, maybe.
Biffa
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