After
the spineless performance against Millwall and a bad defeat at Burnley, my main
wish was to walk away from the two next home games feeling proud of the team I
support, whatever the result. Part one has been accomplished. The effort,
determination and character that were so sadly absent before were back in
force, which together with no little ability and so much better movement ended
up making a decent Forest team look pretty ordinary for large periods of the
game. That we should have won nobody can seriously argue against; the stats
alone ought to confirm that as we had by far the greater number of scoring
opportunities, in both halves. But it felt like a victory.
Sir
Chris celebrated at the end like it was and he had every right to. And note to
board: there is no other manager in the country, not one, who would have
received the backing from the crowd that Powell received after we’d fallen
behind in the first minute. (Of course, for a laugh I’d texted my French
partner Suzanne at 19.40 to say ‘good news, we’re not losing yet’; had to send
one at 19.48 to say ‘we are now’.)
Sod’s
law means that when you have ample time to write a match account, due to a
12.15 kick-off, the incidents of note could have been scribbled on the
proverbial back of a fag packet. Now it’s 22.30 and trying to describe all of
those from tonight’s encounter would take me well past my bedtime. Suffice to
say – again in direct contrast with the televised Millwall match – this was one
that any neutral would have thoroughly enjoyed.
The
absence of Kermorgant from the squad did underline how questionable was the
decision to send him on towards the end away at Burnley. Without him, and the
others (including Pritchard), we lined up with a flat back four (Wilson,
Wiggins, Morrison and Wood in front of Hamer), a front two (Church and
Sordell), and a four-man midfield of Stephens, Gower, Cousins and Harriott. But
the surprise was that Harriott operated less on the flank than in a roving
role, putting the onus on the full-backs to provide the width; Stephens tended
to be on the left side, Gower central and Cousins to his right.
The
game had barely started when a ball played in the air out wide prompted a silly
and unnecessary challenge by Cousins on the returning Andy Reid. The free kick
was right on the touchline and seemed an open opportunity for him to curl in
something dangerous for someone to get on the end of. Just didn’t expect him to
curl one quite superbly into the top far corner of the net. Quite clearly Hamer
didn’t either as despite the angle he couldn’t get a touch on it.
Not
surprisingly the team seemed stunned and for the next 10 minutes or so Forest
set out to put their stamp on the game. Not by pulling us apart but by
demonstrating that they were bigger, stronger, could knock the ball around at
ease. They would have realised that we were low on confidence and might have
killed the game off in that period. Instead, with the crowd repeating the
Cardiff reaction of last season, we gradually worked our way back into the game
and, despite the absence of an aerial threat for balls played forward, began to
create chances, due in no small part to the contribution of Wiggins going
forward.
A
lot of things in that period weren’t going right, not least as Harriott
operating centrally found himself running into crowded areas. But it was
already apparent that the movement and willingness to give the guy with the
ball necessary support was a world apart from the Millwall game, not least due
to the contribution of Stephens. That alone began to bring rewards.
The
first of many chances that came and went was the result of a Wiggins ball in
from the left. Church had escaped his markers and got between them and the
keeper, only to fail to get a decisive contact. It was a bad miss. From another
Wiggins cross Cousins failed to make any contact when in a great position to
score. Wilson cut into the box and I thought his shot was destined for the net,
only for it to go agonisingly wide. And just before the break Stephens got
clear down the left and a parried shot led to the sort of goalmouth scramble
that when you’re luck’s in gets converted. Against that, one interception saw
Forest break clear and only a combination of Wood and Wilson managed to prevent
their guy putting it away. At the break we were a distance ahead on chances but
hadn’t taken any and were behind to something exceptional.
We
picked things up where we left off in the second half, with early jitters
between their defenders and keeper resulting in a corner and another near miss.
Forest’s anxiety at their loss of control of a game that early on seemed theirs
for the taking was to be reflected in three substitutions quite early on. But
we still needed to score.
Just
when we were starting to think it might really be one of those nights we did.
Decent work down the left ended with the ball running loose on the other side
and Wilson bearing down on it in loads of space. Seemed he would take it on and
shoot, but instead he played it square to Sordell in a better position and he
finished coolly, showing what he might be able to do regularly if the service
is provided.
The
outpouring of relief, the effort expended, and the fact that we now had
something to protect perhaps not surprisingly resulted in the tempo dropping
and Forest coming more into the game. There was always a threat from set
pieces, with more than a fair share of pushing/pulling/blocking going on which
the ref seemed oblivious to. But by and large we kept them at bay and continued
to fashion the better chances.
I’m
not sure I remember all of them, but Cousins hit the post from a tight angle
inside the box, prompting another scramble from which a goal seemed inevitable,
then Harriott blazed over from a good position. At the other end it seemed for
a moment that the ball would break in the box for one of their guys, but
Cousins was to make a quite superb block. It was all set up for a last-gasp
winner for us and the chance did come at the death (after Hughes had replaced
Gower, Church limped off for Pigott, and Dervite made a late entry to the
fray). Another corner and Morrison coming in at the far post couldn’t keep the shot
down.
With
the final whistle the players didn’t seem sure whether to celebrate or bemoan
the fact that this was a game that we should have won, with a little more
composure and luck in their box (can’t even call it the final third as some of
the chances were from a few yards out). Whatever the initial reaction, with a
chance to reflect they should take away pride in the performance and the
obvious lesson that to compete in any Championship game requires the level of
commitment that was on show tonight and not in the previous home game. There is
no excuse for letting standards drop on Saturday.
Player
Ratings:
Hamer
– 6/10. Their goal made him look a little foolish and given the distance and
angle there has to be some culpability, even though it was a superb curling
effort. Otherwise struggled to deal with their corners but thanks to those in
front of him didn’t have a shot in anger to save.
Wilson
– 7/10. Defensively sound, bar one moment at the end when having been beaten to
the ball lost his composure and was rounded again when on the ground. Gets a
clear assist for our goal.
Wiggins
– 8/10. There was concern about his form in the early games, but tonight he
provided our most potent attacking threat in the first half as well as playing
his part defensively.
Morrison
– 8/10. Oh, so nearly a 9, if only he’d converted the chance at the finish.
Wood
– 7/10. Quietly effective and impressive. Their absence of chances from open
play was in no part due to him.
Stephens
– 8/10. Just a world apart from the Millwall display. Not every pass or flick
came off but made himself available, supported the guy with the ball, and
almost scored.
Gower
– 7/10. Unfussy and composed. Provided solidity in the centre of midfield.
Cousins
– 7/10. Poor foul at the start to give away the free kick for their goal,
missed a good chance in the first half, and couldn’t quite convert the one in
the second. But otherwise very good, notable that unlike Pritchard when
isolated in possession he didn’t tend to lose it but managed to find an out.
And deserves a mark for his block in the box towards the end.
Harriott
– 6/10. Harsh perhaps as he didn’t stop running and trying to make things
happen, but didn’t really cause them the problems he might have done in his
role and often chose the wrong pass/option.
Church
– 7/10. Another tireless performance but as against Millwall he failed to take
a good chance when it arose.
Sordell
– 7/10. Often out of the game, is unable to provide an effective challenge for
balls in the air, but took his chance when it came.
Subs
– Hughes (7/10: a delight to see him back on the pitch, brought on to help
shore things up); Pigott (6/10; worked hard enough and did offer more of a
challenge to their centre-backs when it came to competing for balls in the air);
Dervite (too late on for a mark).
2 comments:
This was an excellent and heart -warming display from the team and the fans.
In my assessment of our players, I would give Cousins an 8, and Stephens a 7. Its onlt the send time that I've seen Cousins play ( 1st against Barnsley) and both times I've been impresssed by his touch, passing and awareness. Its worrying for us that Premiership clubs are already tracking him, if his talent means he moves on and up, then lets wish him well.
I hadn't seeen Richard Wood play before this game, but I thought he had a very good game, though its difficult to judge whether this was because the Forest forwards were below par.
I Sir Chris we trust. Onwards and upwards !
It was indeed. Cousins could well have merited an 8; perhaps his unnecessary foul on Reid which led to their goal stuck in my mind, but so too did that late block. Having played for England's youth, as a full-back if I remember correctly, I suspect he's been on clubs' radars for a while but has had a quiet couple of years, perhaps working out whether he's a full-back, centre-back, or midfielder.
Am going to rethink my match ratings as the spread seldom goes wider than 5-9.
Post a Comment