Boro 1 – 1 Spurs

SUNDAY 5 JANUARY 2020
Boro 1-1 Tottenham
Fletcher (50) 29%
6(4)
4
7
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
71%
14(4)
14
11
Lucas Moura (61)

Battling Boro earn Replay

Redcar Red reports on Boro’s Cup draw against a full-strength Spurs…

Injury ravaged Boro took on Mourinho’s injury ravaged Spurs side at the Riverside in the FA Cup third round at the Riverside. Boro would be missing the usual suspects, Randolph, Shotton, Assombalonga, Friend, Dijksteel and also worryingly this seasons captain Dani Ayala after he limped off the pitch at Deepdale. Loan arrivals Lukas Nmecha and Patrick Roberts would be available and thought likely to feature at some point.

Spurs have their own growing list of absentees with talismanic striker Harry Kane hobbling off in their last game against Southampton and added to that they would be without Captain Hugo Lloris, left back Ben Davies, Danny Rose, perma-crock Tanguy Ndombele, meanwhile Eric Dier and Kyle Walker-Peters were expected to be fit to return for this afternoon along with Son Heung-min. It was thought that likely departee Christian Eriksen could be possibly making one of his last Spurs appearances before departing the club for Inter Milan later this month.

Patrick Roberts made his Boro debut in place of Marvin Johnson, McNair at CB for Ayala and Mejias in goal for the rested Pears. Spurs won the toss and decided to swap ends, playing towards their sizeable following in the South East corner. Consequently, Boro kicked off earning an early throw in leading to a McNair dribble ending with Spence winning a corner. Headed clear from the near post Coulson chested it down outside the Spurs box and hit a volley over Gazzinga’s crossbar as the first minute barely ticked over.

A claim for a handball and penalty was dismissed from another Coulson effort which went out for Boro’s second corner with the third following immediately. It was weakly cleared out by the Spurs defence and Clayts headed it back into the path of Roberts whose dinked shot-come-cross went over Gazzinga’s goal with the clock showing just over six minutes. As Spurs mounted their first serious attack a well worked cut-back from Son to Ericksen and instinctive shot from the edge of the Boro box had Mejias blocking and as the ball flew out Fletcher being dragged down by Dier as Boro tried to break quickly.

Under pressure a cheeky and confident series of passes in the Boro box involving Howson, Mejias and Saville was well received by the home fans as Boro attempted to play their way out of trouble rather than hoof it Pulis style. Spurs once again came back at Boro and Mejias had to be off his line quickly to block another effort. Spurs had now settled, passing the ball around comfortably and keeping possession, Boro were sitting back and conceded the away sides first corner in the twelfth minute. The optimists amongst us took comfort in the stats that of late Boro have conceded possession in most of their games but came out on top, albeit perhaps not against last season’s Champions League Finalists.

Howson stepped out and intercepted brilliantly on the edge of his own box and moved forward but with Fletcher out wide left he played it harmlessly straight down the middle for Spurs to simply collect and go on the offensive again. All the hard and clever work done but scrappily conceding possession after a momentary lapse.

The second Spurs corner in the sixteenth minute was “recycled” back to the middle of the park and eventually went out for a Boro throw after it came off Winks in a move that had the away fans uttering a few North London expletives in questioning the objectivity of it all. Dael Fry cut out a dangerous cross but it came straight back in for this time McNair to put it out for a corner. Fry then took his turn to meet it to add to the rapidly growing Spurs corner count, which when delivered was blown by Ref Stuart Atwell for a punched effort from Moura easing the pressure on Boro.

Winks fouled Saville thirty yards out and MacNair’s resultant floated free kick to the far post was headed goalwards by Fry with Gazzaniga saving then having to save again with his feet after a muddled scramble in the Spurs box before eventually being cleared by Sessegnon. Another fee kick from the opposite flank was headed out for a Boro corner which was cleared but redeemed by a sublime bit of McNair skill in his own half with twenty-five minutes expired and Boro in fairness credibly holding their own whilst still looking credibly dangerous. A Spurs corner in the twenty-sixth minute was blasted over by Sessegnon with the Spurs threat growing but Boro resolutely holding them at bay. Fry headed out another cross in the twenty-eighth minute conceding Spurs sixth corner and a seventh immediately followed but was headed clear and then eventually in a no nonsense display hoofed clear by Coulson.

A good Boro break involving Howson and Spence with a clever one two was eventually wasted when Spence over-hit his final dinked ball to Fletcher running behind the Spurs defence. As Spurs countered, Roberts clipped the heels of Vertonghen conceding a soft free kick, which was only bettered by the terrible delivery, softly sent in to Mejias’ near post unopposed not that many of us complained!

Fletcher then had a good run working his way to the edge of the Spurs box but Sessegnon crept in blind side to rob him and Fletcher’s last despairing touch conceded a goal kick to Spurs. An Aurier cross across the face of the Boro six-yard box to Sessegnon was blocked by the attentions of Spence doing just enough to put off his youthful counterpart. A break by Spurs was blocked off by McNair but Dele Alli as if detonated by a land mine leapt through the air twisting and turning in pure Quentin Tarantino angst receiving a yellow card for his now infamous precious theatrics. The irony was that it was a foul by McNair without any necessity for the drama and as a consequence Mejias launched the Boro-awarded free kick up field and as Saville tackled to prevent a Spurs counter attack, Stuart Attwell’s whistle went for half time with scores at 0-0.

Despite the chasm in comparative resources Boro had accounted for themselves very well with the most interesting duel being between Sessegnon and Spence which was about 50/50, praise indeed for Spence after only a handful of first team appearances. McNair and Fry had been solid and dependable, Fletcher working hard in the lone role up front. Saville and Clayts had been busy running, chasing and closing down doing the dirty often unappreciated work. Spurs had of course looked by far the more likely to get something out of the game but it was Boro who had come closest with Fry and then Saville in that double strike mid-way through the first half. Roberts looked a little short of match practice, which was to be expected and probably the most likely to be subbed at some future point.

Boro came out unchanged with the same back three and wing-backs, midfield and Fletcher up front. Spurs returned, somewhat delayed presumably after a Mourinho moan in the away dressing room. Spurs eventually kicked off with Boro attacking the South Stand. An early Spence interception prevented a Spurs attack, setting up Roberts who cutting in from the wing, unleashed a left footed shot but it was blocked. In the next phase of play Roberts then cut across Winks on forty-eight minutes with the England International blatantly fouling, conceding a free kick. It was floated in and a knock down from Fry to Saville saw George go down in the box with howls for a penalty but Atwell ruled play on and fifteen seconds later it was Saville himself winning a midfield ball, lobbing it over the Spurs defence from the halfway line and Fletcher just onside ran through one on one against Gazzaniga and placed it in the middle of the Spurs net to put Boro ahead. Fifty minutes gone and Boro deserved the opening goal having come out for the second half showing far more intent.

A brilliant collect and through ball from Roberts set Saville away but with Gazzinga coming off his line and a defender bearing down on him it was antagonisingly inches too far ahead. Spurs best response was a distanced cross come shot from twenty yards out from Eriksen sailing wide on fifty-five minutes. In a knee jerk double substitution Winks and Sessegnon both went off for Lamella and Celso coming on as Mourinho realised that he now had a game on his hands if he was to deliver silverware to Tottenham this season.

On sixty minutes a text book ball down the Boro left flank saw Aurier deliver a perfect far post cross which saw Moura use his head this time to head home unopposed having lost his marker Spence and Howson caught in between. One apiece now and game back on with Spurs significantly raising their game since that Boro opener. Aurier was becoming increasingly instrumental in launching Spurs attacks down their right and our left-hand side. Fletcher had done well to hold the ball up and Howson advanced as Boro got a cross in across the danger area but it was cleared and as it went out for a throw in Woodgate signalled a change as Johnson came on for Coulson in an effort to address the growing menace of Aurier.

A minute later and Gestede then came on for Roberts who was now blowing out of his derriere. After Spence had advanced and won the initial challenge deep in the Spurs half an immediate back flick from Gestede with his first touch into the path of Fletcher was saved. Seventy minutes now gone and the game looked finely balanced despite Spurs possession stats.

A Johnson headed clearance saw a free kick awarded to Boro after Lamella attempted an overhead kick in close proximity on the recently arrived Boro left wing-back. It was now attack versus defence as Spurs probed and probed whilst Boro had Gestede and Fletcher to lump the ball up to as plan “A”. A long-range Lamella strike saw Mejias diving low to tip it wide conceding a corner. As the Corner was cleared Aurier delivered in another quality cross headed clear by McNair for an additional notch on the Spurs corner count which was thankfully overhit, going out for a throw in to Boro on seventy-five minutes. Nmecha then came on for Fletcher who had literally run himself into the ground.

Moura then single handedly slalomed his way through some pretty weak Boro challenges winning a corner on seventy-seven minutes which was headed clear by Gestede. Ten minutes remained and Boro were now camped in their own half with Gestede isolated and Nmecha at the tip of the Boro defensive wall. Moura again cut in on his right foot this time unleashing a shot which had Mejias diving across his goal tipping it wide. Seeing the ball out safely for a goal kick a minute later saw Mejias go down awkwardly but recover after a few painful looking stretches of his right shoulder. It was just as well as he had to sprint out of his box seconds later to clear another relentless Spurs attack. Saville was in trouble for a cynical lunge which swiftly ended the next Spurs offensive with Lamella openly showing his displeasure at Stuart Attwell’s yellow card for George Saville and earning one for himself for dissent. The resulting free kick was sent straight through and aimlessly out for a Boro goal kick.

Four minutes remained and a rare Boro foray ended with a throw in on the right but Spence out dribbled himself giving away a goal kick by slipping and falling on his backside. Three minutes now left and Lamella drove through the middle of the Boro defence finding the advancing Aurier who skied his effort Assombalonga style much to the relief of the North Stand. Back in defence Tavernier headed away a cross for a late Spurs corner on eighty-eight minutes. As the ninetieth ticked over Lamella skipped past a series of Boro challenges but Mejias smothered the low cross with confident ease.

Four minutes of added time came up with Boro still sitting deep and by now holding on. After another embarrassing Spurs dive in the Boro box Nmecha carried the ball out from the middle of the pitch, advancing deep into Spurs territory while attracting the attentions of Eriksen, clipping his legs. McNair delivered the free kick but it was straight into the arms of Gazzaniga. A late run by Alli to chase a wasteful ball went out for Mejias to steadily take the goal kick and as it entered play crossing the half way line Stuart Attwell blew his whistle to signal a replay at the newest stadium in the Country, which is White Hart Lane except it’s no longer called White Hart Lane since its rebuild and is now called the Tottenham Stadium or as some may ponder “the unsponsored Premiership ground waiting for a multimillion offer Stadium”.

A defiant and proud display from a patched up Boro side against a team that were Champions League Finalists at the end of last season and who have regularly finished in the Premiership top four was an effort that incredibly took those recent West Brom and Preston performances to a different level. MOM was another difficult one between McNair, Howson and Fry. There were others who had done very well including Clayts and Saville and at the opposite end of the pitch the goal machine that is now Ashley Fletcher for his running and never say die endeavours. After a nervy and rusty start Mejias had also done extremely well and pulled off two great saves negating the need for any January spend on another back-up Keeper. Overall, I think McNair edged it along with captain for the day Jonny Howson coming a very close runner up.

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 22-23 discussion page

Preston 0 – 2 Boro

Pos. 9th (39pts) WEDNESDAY 1 JANUARY 2020 Pos. 16th (33pts)
Preston 0-2 Boro
65%
11(2)
6
4
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
35%
18(4)
3
18
Gestede (40)
Davies (62 og)

Rude awakenings!

Redcar Red reports on Boro’s fourth successive victory at Deepdale…

A trip across the Pennines for Boro after their heroics in Birmingham on Sunday had them facing Preston at Deepdale who like the Baggies had just suffered ignominy at the hands of a lower placed side. Losing 2-0 at home to Reading was definitely not something Alex Neil had planned as he plots to keep Preston in the play-off chase, especially after their credible one-all draw away to Leeds previously. Despite that Reading set back, Preston still had the best home record in the Championship having taken 29 points from their 13 home games and having lost only twice, albeit both coming in December. The last time Boro had lost at Deepdale was back in 1972 so there was the inevitability feel about today’s game.

Ex-Boro Striker David Nugent was rated doubtful after suffering a black eye with impaired vision. Darnell Fisher was available after returning from suspension to make the bench against Reading. Patrick Bauer had been down with the flu bug over Christmas so his fitness would be questionable especially over ninety minutes.

Boro meanwhile would be brimming with confidence and would also be “welcoming” back Browne and McNair after their thoughtless stupidity had for some raised questions about the real motives behind their sending-offs and Christmas suspensions. Their causes weren’t helped after another ex-Boro player Gary O’Neil espoused that he himself had once got himself deliberately carded so he could watch horse racing rather than be selected to play.

The Preston teamsheet revealed five changes after that Reading defeat with Darnell Fisher, Patrick Bauer and David Nugent all starting for the Lilywhites. Boro shuffled their pack too with Coulson and Wing on the bench alongside Paddy McNair and a surprise start for Gestede with Johnson also returning. Still no sign of Assombalonga, Shotton, Randolph or longer-term injury victims Friend and Dijksteel, there was no place for either Browne or Bola in the squad.

Boro started on fire with a Marvin Johnson cross evading Declan Rudd in the Preston goal and Spence nodding it on for someone to slot home but there were no red shirts available. Good solid early intent sending out all the right messages. Both sides looked to be steadily probing in what was a measured approach but it was Boro again who came close with Fletcher but he was adjudged to have fouled in the build-up. There was certainly nothing to suggest that Boro were facing this game with any trepidation of fear. The “free hit” mentality was maybe one explanation but in fairness Boro looked far more measured than that.

It was just short of ten minutes when Preston struck at Boro’s defence with Dani Ayala guilty of an error allowing Fisher in on Pears but the rapidly improving young keeper was more than a match as his confidence and reliability grows from game to game. Despite Boro’s early prowess the game was by no means a spectacle and at times untidy and very messy with neither side really getting a grip and controlling it. For a Boro side visiting the place of the best home Championship record it wasn’t up to them to put on a display to entertain neutrals, that said it was indeed Boro who were creating the better opportunities. It was once again the opponents with the lion’s share of the possession stats but with barely a quarter of an hour gone Fletcher had fed Johnson whose effort went wide and then Gestede and Tav had both come close to breaking the deadlock.

The lumbering injury prone and much derided Benin Striker looked to be hungry to make an impact in what was probably his best opening period in a Boro Shirt. The cynics of course would hold the view that he was now playing for his next contract but whatever the reason he was most certainly making a nuisance of himself.

On twenty minutes it was Fletcher again going close but it was just too tight to get his sights on target. As the game approached 30 minutes Pears had to be alert to save from Hughes but far worse was to follow when Dani Ayala went down and it didn’t look good. Clearly in some distress and discomfort he was helped up to his feet by the physio but struggled to put any weight on his ankle. Paddy McNair warmed up as the forlorn Spanish skipper was not going to be taking any further part. The returning Northern Ireland International slotted into the backline alongside Dael Fry with anxious looks from the Travelling Army, Dani didn’t look in a good way as he made his way off the pitch.

Preston sensed that this could be their moment to take advantage of the uncertainty and disruption in the Boro defence but McNair was steadfast while Fry stepped up to have his best game of the season repelling Gallagher and company on a few occasions to keep the scores level. Boro broke out of defence and won a free kick just over the half way line which McNair took charge off. He delivered an enticing ball into the Preston box which Fry nodded back under pressure from the edge of the six yard box where Saville managed an improvised half hooked challenge in the direction of Gestede who leaned back and hooked it himself overhead and into the net to open his account for the season and do the unthinkable, put Boro one up! Five minutes before half time and who would have put money on Boro going in front with Rudy Gestede scoring?

A minute later and the lively Djed Spence nearly doubled the lead but he just couldn’t get the ball to sit right. Preston raised their game and laid siege to the Boro half in the dying moments of the forty-five and the two added minutes but Ref Brooks’ whistle went to see Boro go down the tunnel with their lead intact and the home fans less than impressed, vociferous in letting their players know their frustrations for the second time in a few days.

Predictably Alex Neil made a change and flu sufferer Bauer was swapped for Huntingdon for the second half. Having already been forced into one substitution Woodgate stuck with those who had provided the slim advantage. Preston were determined to get back into the game and it was vital that Boro kept their shape and discipline, Spence showed he could defend as well as attack, Johnson was showing no nonsense and McNair was proving an able deputy but it was Fry who was marshalling and taking control in a return to the Dael we knew (or at least had hoped) was somewhere hiding within.

Ten minutes into the second half and it was Boro who came closest with Gestede again going close with another header from a well weighted Tav corner. The game was undoubtedly a scrappy affair and Preston had a header of their own sailing across the face of Pears’ net but he was unruffled and confident it was going wide. The game was dour in parts but not without the slick pacy moments of the West Brom match. Boro showed resilience but still retained that threat on the break as Preston struggled to break us down.

A darting run by Tav down the middle took him past three defenders with the ball breaking for Gestede who lashed in a shot only for Rudd to instinctively palm clear. A long goal kick from Pears travelled three-quarters of the length of the Deepdale pitch where it was nodded on by Gestede, out leaping the attentions of the Preston defender for Fletcher to chase and run onto it, harassing Davies forcing him to poke it back to Declan Rudd as Fletch closed him down but instead the panicked pass went past the helpless keeper and into the Preston goal. Two-nil up away from home for the second time in a few days and there was something very surreal but also very strangely convincing that Boro were about to grind out their second away victory of the season despite there being over twenty-five minutes of playing time remaining.

Two minutes after the restart Clayts picked up a yellow as the chance of bringing home all three points was becoming close to reality. Just before Boro’s second goal Browne had left the field for Jayden Stockley to join the fray and put a little more physicality into the Preston attack. Suffice to say yet again it hadn’t gone the way Alex Neil had planned. Just after the Clayts booking, Neil brought off Nugent and put on Josh Harrop to chase the game. A minute later it was Marvin Johnson earning a yellow as Boro looked determined to hold on to what they had deservedly earned.

Seventy minutes in and Coulson replaced Spence to conserve youthful energy levels and Howson had gone close as Boro were still threatening on the break with pace and guile. A mazy dribble by Fletcher with Tav acting as a decoy was headed back into the path of Gestede who lashed a left footed shot just wide. A clever corner routine between McNair and Clayts saw Paddy cut back a shot come cross towards the top left-hand corner of Rudd’s goal but he managed to tip it over the bar. An over-hit Howson cross was fed back in from the left by Tav retrieving the loose ball, met by Gestede rising above the defence to head straight at Rudd who again relied on reactionary instinct to punch clear at close range.

Preston kept testing but never looked like breaking us down and in contrast every time we attacked something happened and, on another day, we could have been four goals to the good. With five minutes of normal time remaining Gallagher sent a ball into the Boro box from a free-kick wide on the right, aimed at sub Stockley who won his duel in the middle of the Boro box but headed over, summing up the plight of Preston all afternoon.

With a minute of the ninety to go Preston had the ball over the line but the flag went up to save the turmoil of a nail biting final few minutes of added time. A minute into added time and Tav came off for Wing to run the clock down. The whistle finally went and Boro recorded a remarkable second straight away win, four wins in a row and impressively another clean sheet. MOM was Gestede who had his first start in however long and rewarded Woodgate’s trust in him by attacking everything thrown at him whilst also being dominant in his own box defending set pieces. Seven points from the play-off places and ten points clear of the relegation spots, are Boro about to make a late surge or will the curse of January come back to haunt us?

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 20-21 discussion page

 

West Brom 0 – 2 Boro

Pos. 2nd (51pts) SUNDAY 29 DECEMBER 2019 Pos. 16th (30pts)
West Brom 0-2 Boro
60%
11(5)
5
16
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
40%
15(10)
12
12
Ayala (17)
Fletcher (90+4)

Boing Boing Boro!

Redcar Red reports on Boro’s victory over the leaders at The Hawthorns…

An away trip to Birmingham just before the new year comes to end the old with what many of us predicted would result in a good thumping. There was the odd hope that we may escape with a plucky, undeserved draw but the Baggies seem to be on a relentless mission to return to the Premiership this season after their reorganisation following Tony Pulis’ departure.

With scant resources it was expected that Woodgate would go again with what he had available to him. It would be an unlikely scenario that any of those being wrapped in cotton wool would emerge from their winter hibernation for fear of being damaged in the sales. They hadn’t been missed in all reality with the youngsters showing far more hunger and desire that more than made up for any lack of experience. The worry was that a good thumping could psychologically damage them but in fairness the Leeds mauling was swiftly put aside and after two home wins in a week even the suicidal Swansea showing didn’t have any long-term hangover.

After being held to a draw in their last outing to Barnsley maybe there was some hope for the Travelling Army that the Baggies could once again be caught in a festive spirit. Albion midfielder Filip Krovinovic had told Baggie fans that they would be going all out to give them a win this afternoon so we were expecting a backlash.

Kieron Gibbs had been forced to limp off the pitch at Oakwell so would be 50/50 for today’s encounter. Nathan Ferguson Kyle Bartley and Grady Diangana were all rated as doubtful as like Woodgate, Bilic had his own injury list to contend with. Bad boy Ahmed Hegazi was also likely to be in the squad again after a supposed training ground spat last week.

Team news saw Bilic make four changes from Barnsley bringing in wingers Phillips and Edwards sensing that Boro could be undone by attacking the inexperienced Spence and Coulson. West Brom hadn’t lost at home all season for 18 games pre kick-off so this was going to be a massive Herculean task. Woodgate made one change, Clayts came in for Johnson which would indicate Fletcher battling up top relying on support from the midfield.

Boro won the toss which many of us thought may be the only thing we would win this afternoon. Dani Ayala decided that the sides would change ends as today’s match official Geoff Eltringham got things underway with the Baggies kicking off. It looked like Clayts and Saville were keeping things tight in front of our defence with Wing and Tav further up with Spence which hinted at a 4-2-3-1 or possibly even a 4-4-1-1.

The opening five minutes were fairly uneventful with Boro looking extremely comfortable. Seven minutes in and a feigned foul by Kanu led to a Boro free kick which was quickly despatched up to Spence who fizzed in a shot winning our first corner and an immediate second corner delivered to the near post was hurriedly cleared by Livermore. As they went up the pitch a blocked cross by Ayala gave the Baggies a throw in near the corner flag but the threat was easily contained by Howson who cleared the danger.

Hegazi was fortunate that the Linesman didn’t agree with Fletcher when he seemed to be brought down. Had Fletch perhaps been a little stronger he may have remained on his feet and I suspect the Assistant thought the same. Fourteen minutes had gone with Boro still looking anything like a Boro side this season and Dael Fry conceded the Baggies first corner. It was a near post effort but Boro cleared, broke with Wing, playing in Fletcher but Livermore read the intent and was there to prevent the final ball to Tavernier.

Quarter of an hour in and Boro so far had looked composed and a stranger would be hard pushed to tell which side was at the top of the Championship and which side was fighting relegation. Woodgate had his organisation, tactics and structure right for this one so far. Another low cross in from Spence led to Gareth Barry slicing it out for Boro’s third corner. As the corner was delivered in by Wing to the near post, up rose Ayala to head home past a feeble attempt from Sam Johnstone to put Boro ahead and deservedly so. Seventeen minutes gone and Boro had defied the odds and all logic with it.

Johnstone spared West Brom blushes from further embarrassment after a great move from Boro saw Fletcher shoot and then Saville testing the Baggies Keeper in quick succession who had to save with his feet. Fletcher came close again but was flagged offside as this Boro team looked to be unrecognisable to the side that played without any belief for the major part of the first half of the season. Boro then hit Johnstone’s post as the ball went out of play and the Baggie looked vulnerable. Ferguson won a Baggies corner off Spence and again they delivered in another short one but it went out for a Boro goal kick which was well defended and shielded by Coulson. It was probably the first time Pears had touched the ball in the game with over twenty-five minutes gone. Furlong then had a diving header from a cross from Pereira just over Pears’ crossbar as they came the closest, they had been and seemingly just waking up.

Livermore was once more engaged in defending as we attacked and won yet another corner which was almost repeated by Ayala but this time it wasn’t to be. The Travelling Army had appealed for a penalty with Livermore claiming it was his chest rather than his arm that had made contact with the ball. The lively Pereira again went close for the Baggies with Ayala clearing the danger. West Brom were noticeably gaining a foothold now. Phillips beat Coulson and found Pereira who volleyed his shot but Pears was equal to the effort. A minute later and Phillips once again beat Coulson but his final ball was to an imaginary colleague fortunately for Boro.

A poor clearance from a hurried Pears after Fry had sold him short led to Kanu winning a Baggies corner. West Brom were in control at this stage but we still had an outlet with Wing, Fletcher, Tav and Spence should we clear it out quickly, something which Boro had been missing for a huge part of this season. The tension in the Hawthorns was inflating rapidly with the Home fans growing in frustration the longer the game went on. Thirty-seven minutes gone and Clayton fed Saville who tested Johnstone again. Despite the home side winning all the possession stats that Saville effort was a warning to a very perplexed and angry looking Bilic. Spence then robbed Barry, putting in another quality cross with the table toppers looking very uncharacteristically susceptible to these Boro forays.

A top corner effort from Kanu after a one-two had us drawing breath but it went wide of the target. Wing took a free kick for a foul on Fletcher and as it came in it was Fletcher who attacked it but missed his opportunity. Howson then hit a thirty-yard screamer but it didn’t trouble Johnstone but the very fact that we were getting at the Baggies keeper had the home fans starting to whistle and jeer in frustration, contesting and complaining about every decision. A Coulson cross after Fletcher headed the ball down to him was put out for yet another Boro corner in the dying seconds of the half. Ayala headed it down but Livermore cleared, Wing returned it with interest and vengeance in equal measure winning our sixth corner of the game.

A cross from Ferguson found Kanu but his header was aimless and Coulson collected with ease. Another Baggies attack was cleared out by Fry to Fletcher but the creaking Barry cleared his lines, Howson read it and set Tav away with Boro still looking comfortable and delivering by far the best half of football in 2019.

No doubt Bilic would ring the changes at half time but so far there was nothing Woodgate needed to do apart from a few pats on the back as his players departed back down the tunnel. At the restart the youngster Ferguson was taken off and Townsend put on in his place along with Edwards being hooked for Austin. The half kicked off with Ayala again making a nuisance of himself this time at the back post.

Howson earned a yellow for blocking off Phillips as he tried to link with his new strike partner Austin in the first card of the game. A good punch from Pears denied Phillips and as Tav mis-controlled the ball it came back in requiring Pears to come off his line to collect and take the sting out of the Baggies impetus much to the chagrin of the Home fans as he made somewhat of a meal of it and let’s just say it wasn’t a ready meal.

West Brom were going for this now and pushing us back, we needed to be strong as the front two pairing had given them fresh impetus. A Perreira cross to Livermore saw Pears tip it over for a corner as the pressure kept growing. The ball came in from the corner but Hegazi put it wide with the game now approaching the fifty-five minute mark. Spence was brought down by Townsend just on the corner of the 18-yard box. Tav hit the resultant free kick in with pace and as Fletcher pouncing it was put out for a corner. Tav delivered it deep but it was over-hit giving Howson no chance at the far side.

Things erupted when Geoff Eltringham pulled play back for Coulson being laid out injured resulting in Livermore going mental with the Ref and lucky to just get a yellow card for his frustrations. A drop ball saw Gareth Barry hit it out and the ageing midfielder who looked a shadow of his former self made way as Bilic threw on his third and last substitute Krovinovic. A Boro free kick then had sub Austin getting feisty with Fry and close to completely losing it as the home fans and those in striped shirts became increasing incensed with the Ref.

A deep cross from Furlong reached Austin but Pears collected it with ease. Aynsley once again had to be alert and react quickly to Phillips and of course wound the home fans up further with his generous use of time in putting the ball back into play. The Hawthorns now was bouncing with feelings of unjust decision making and Boro time wasting. A Philips cross was deflected but Pears once again was equal to it. Phew, hanging on but defending with steel and vigour.

Perrera launched another free kick into the Boro box but Pears again reached up and collected. A bad back pass nearly allowed Wing in but he went too wide and as he cut it back the header from Fletcher was tipped over by Johnstone earning another Boro corner which was hoofed clear by Hegazi. Seventy minutes gone and Boro were not only holding on but threatening.

A coming together between Spence and Phillips saw a yellow card for both as Phillips appeared to have struck out at Spence. An attack from Boro saw Fletcher break and test Johnstone again who was relieved to put it behind for a corner from a tight angle. Austin headed the corner clear from which the ball came back at them with Tav went down for a weak penalty shout. As West Brom cleared Saville had went down with the aggressor Austin collecting a yellow for his offence on whatever had gone on between them.

Things were heating up and a red card seemed to be tantalisingly in the offing. A free kick as Clayton was clattered by Perreira allowed Boro to take a few more delaying seconds for breath with some leggy looking red shirts out there. A quarter of an hour remained and Boro still clung to that slender binary lead. Marvin Johnson was readied and Djed Spence came off via the far touchline as Geoff Eltringham endeavoured to show he was unbiased by making the exchange a little quicker than permitting the usual far side of the pitch walk of appreciation.

Johnson’s first activity was to lose the ball as the Baggies came straight back at Boro but Pears once again collected the ball, dawdled a little more as twelve whole minutes remained. Next up a Phillips header caught by Pears who dropped to the floor to ensure it didn’t spill of course, coughs loudly. Ten long minutes now remained with West Brom passing and probing but Boro suddenly broke with Coulson on a thirty yard burst but Furlong took him out before he could play in Fletcher. Wing lined up the free kick with a strange Boro wall alongside the Baggies wall but the delivery dipped just too late and evaded Johnstone’s top corner. Six minutes now remaining and it was still 1-0 to the Boro. Come on BORO!

A Gordon Banks class save from Pears defied Austin and saw Boro rush out with Tav to Fletcher then back to Tav then Marvin Johnson and then requiring Sam Johnstone putting it out for a Boro corner (lost count now). Claims for a handball from Coulson then ended with him “readjusting” to take out a Baggie attacker as the pace was merciless and intensity growing. A yellow card for Coulson amidst frustrated late claims for that “hand ball” that wasn’t given. I think had the Ref given a penalty the Hawthorns would have spontaneously combusted.

Wing then went off for Gestede to come on with a only a few minutes remaining. A Phillips cross was cleared by Howson then after a frantic few seconds of defending it went out for a West Brom Corner. Pereira’s delivery came in, evading Pears but it went out for a goal kick which Pears once again took his time to collect, set up, digging the turf with his boot Jonny Wilkinson style and meticulously readying his kick.

A half-cleared attempt by Fry saw Phillips trip over himself as fatigue was clearly taking its toll. Five agonising minutes was held up by the fourth official as Pears launched it up to Gestede, it was cleared but then Clayts took a kick for his troubles and went down earning a respite inducing free kick, taking his time getting to his feet with sixty seconds of added time consumed. Yet again a Phillips cross was met by Howson but the danger continued requiring Marvin to slide in to concede a throw in. A tete-a-tete between angry Austin and Pears played into our hands as another sixty seconds ebbed away. A series of head tennis from Coulson to Saville to Fletcher saw a ludicrous thirty-five-yard lob over Johnstone in the Baggies box and nestle into the back of the net to seal all three points, ensure our first away win and the Baggies first home defeat of the season. Fletch turned, sprinted three quarters the length of the pitch to celebrate with the travelling army behind Pears’ goal in jubilation. West Brom 0-2 Middlesbrough!

MOM was all of them, Pears was brilliant, Ayala immense, Howson incredible, Fry was solid and dependable, Spence and Coulson fantastic, Wing, Tav and Fletcher unbelievable, Saville and Clayton battled and scrapped in the middle. What an end to the year that only a few weeks ago looked impossible. Preston up next who will not be looking forward to a resurgent Boro. Congratulations and full marks to all those involved.

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 20-21 discussion page

Boro 1 – 0 Huddersfield

Pos. 18th= (27 pts) THURSDAY 26 DECEMBER 2019 Pos. 20th (25 pts)
Boro 1-0 Huddersfield
Spence (37) 37%
14(3)
5
12
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
63%
8(3)
4
7

Pearl of the day from Spence

Redcar Red reports on another crucial victory at the Riverside…

After his trip up to Teesside last Friday night for a spying mission, Danny Cowley returned this afternoon with his entire entourage to try and put some daylight between the Terriers and Boro in this survival dog fight. To boost his numbers, he was optimistic of maybe having all or some of Fraizer Campbell, Lewis O’Brien and Alex Pritchard back from injury. Having beaten Forest away in their last outing they arrived with an air of confidence as Cowley debated in his press conference about whether he would set up to face a Boro back four or a back five and a diamond. The diamond being Boro’s shape rather than that mercurial No.10 that we have all dreamt about and presumably Bevington failed to unearth.

Boro started the game just one point behind the visitors and two goals poorer on goal difference, so on paper this one had a draw written all over it. Woodgate still had Browne and McNair suspended and the seemingly endless injury doubts over Randolph, Assombalonga, Shotton, Dijksteel and Friend. Despite that, Boro were hoping to make it four wins on the bounce at the Riverside in front of their biggest crowd of the season in stark contrast to the probable but “officially” unconfirmed lowest turnout against Stoke. This was a big one for both sides but especially Boro who now face two tough away trips to Preston and West Brom after today’s encounter. A negative result could commence an unwanted Boro slide back down the Championship table.

Cowley understandably stuck with the same eleven that had won at Forest with only Lewis O’Brien fit enough to make the bench with Pritchard and Campbell still out. For Boro there were two changes with Wing starting instead of Clayts and Johnson instead of Walker but still no sign of Assombalonga.

Darren England’s whistle got the game underway with Boro starting assertively with Spence attacking, getting a low cross in and Boro showing with a bit of early enterprise. Spence again was the catalyst as he won a throw in with Boro pressing and a resultant free kick on the left just inside the Terriers half with the big lads going up for it. The set piece was poorly executed but the early tempo continued and the visitors were clearly under pressure.

An inviting ball in from Johnson was missed by Tav with Coulson following in behind but skewed his shot high into the darkening skies. All good stuff from Boro in the opening five minutes, especially from Djed Spence. Then it was Coulson’s turn to break down the opposite wing only to be taken out by Hogg with Tav sending the free kick deep towards Ayala but he was under it and the ball went over Grabara’s crossbar.

Ten minutes in and Huddersfield hadn’t seriously threatened at all with Boro starting well and looking comfortable so far. Cowley’s game plan seemed to be to contain and keep things tight looking to his wide men to create openings. On the quarter-hour mark Johnson conceded a foul bringing down Bacuna who took the kick himself and earned a corner as the Terriers floated the ball in over everyone, past Pears’ goal and eventually going out for a goal kick via Mounie’s head.

Boro’s early exuberance had subsided as Huddersfield now settled into the game. A gift from Fry with an under-hit pass to Wing led to screams for a penalty from the packed away corner as Chalobah played in Grant who went down in the box in a warning to Boro to guard against complacency. Their midfield general Hogg inexplicably went down and looking in serious pain as Boro players took the opportunity to assemble near the touchline with a few obvious finger gestures from the Boro dugout as to who should have been doing what and where. Meanwhile Lewis O’Brien came on for Teessider Hogg as Huddersfield were forced into an early change.

The game now entered a disjointed mid-half phase as both sides were hitting balls that were failing to find targets. Spence was still looking the most likely to create something with Howson solid behind him. Half an hour gone now and both sides were dancing around the ring, jabbing but not landing any serious punches. Saville had to be alert to intercept quickly to prevent Bacuna getting a ball played into a pack of chasing Terriers.

Finding himself suddenly the centre of attention, Saville then set up Fletcher and after a series of passes it ended with Saville diving at a Spence-delivered ball to win our first corner. A melee’ in front of Grabara ended up with Fletcher being ticked off by Ref England, which made a change from it being Ayala. Tav then sent in a near post cross come mis-kick which was cleared disappointingly for Boro. After that energetic start from Djed Spence Boro had now lost their impetus whilst Huddersfield seemed content to have possession, hold us at bay and then try to pick us off.

Just as the game was looking to be 0-0 at half time, Tav broke through the middle of the pitch finding Fletcher out on his left, who ran into the 18 yard box and played a low cross evading everyone along the Huddersfield six yard box with Spence being perfectly placed to unleash a calm controlled strike to open his Boro account and put us 1-0 up on thirty-seven minutes. He took his opportunity extremely well and nobody deserved a goal this afternoon more than the youngster.

Huddersfield now had to come out and get at us and in doing so Bacuna and Howson ended up rolling around on the pitch after they wrestled for the ball with Bacuna seemingly determined to keep hold of Howson like a three-year-old having a pass the parcel tantrum for which he earned a yellow. Boro responded by ending the half the way they had started it by getting at a now clearly rattled Huddersfield defence. Saville earned a free kick which was headed clear by Schindler then Tav delivered it back in which was going out for a throw in and ended with Johnson having one of his needless niggles at a Blue shirt. The whistle ended the half with a less than impressive eccentric sliced kick from Liverpool loanee Grabara in the Terriers goal to earn a few jeers.

The teams came out unchanged for the second half with the Terriers kicking off. Almost immediately a switched ball from one side of the pitch to the other allowed Spence to get forward ending up with a Boro corner after a ball to Fletcher was put out by Kachunga. It was taken short by Wing with the cross coming in towards Ayala but his header was wide as Boro had started with tempo once again. Huddersfield were struggling to launch an attack, O’Brien at one stage was forced to break out to the halfway line then with no options impersonate new Dad and ex-Terrier Clayts by recycling it back towards his defenders.

Spence dinked inside the box, found Wing who played it to the back post but Coulson was adjudged to be offside. You could perceptively sense the fear every time Spence got on the ball from the away fans as the youngster was running the show. Huddersfield without doubt had all the possession but thus far had rarely troubled the home side; however, another goal for Boro at this stage of proceedings would have made the Boxing Day entertainment a little less stressful. Caught in two minds Ayala put a ball played back to him out to concede a corner unnecessarily as the Terriers loaded the Boro box on the 60th minute. Grant fizzed it in but the ball went just wide as Stankovic should have drawn the sides level as his header went over.

That effort woke up both sets of supporters in a game which so far hadn’t produced many efforts on target. With thirty minutes remaining the visitors knew there was still something to play for and equally Boro knew they could mess this up. Just at that time a deflection from Howson broke for Mounie in the six-yard box who incredibly missed his golden moment by slicing it.

Fletcher was then booked for not getting back from a free kick as Huddersfield took it quickly, which went straight to Tav yet Ref England halted proceedings and booked Fletcher. This was the Terriers best spell now as they were now making their possession count and gaining the upper hand in the contest with twenty-five minutes remaining. Boro were looking like strangers, struggling to piece moves together with Ayala in particular uncharacteristically looking the most likely to commit a fatal mistake. A parried Pears save from Bacuna was then played back into the box with Boro looking very rattled conceding too much space and looked to be at sixes and sevens. Seventy minutes in and Boro were looking like they had taken a few body blows and a swift uppercut leaving them staggering on their feet with the home fans getting twitchy at the lacklustre spell from Boro.

A quick break from Boro saw Spence set up Coulson at the far post but he hit his effort well wide. The visitors resumed pressure with Boro holding out (or holding on depending on perspective). Another breakout from Boro ended with Fletcher’s effort being pushed away by Grabara for a Boro corner. Lewis Wing delivered it in to the back post but to no avail as the Ref blew for a foul on the eccentric keeper. Bizarrely, Grabara illustrated the Terriers growing frustrations as he tried to drag Saville up onto his feet earning a yellow card for his excesses.

Gestede then came on for Johnson to allow a Plan B outlet for Boro and a new threat to give Danny Cowley something to reconsider in his game plan. Chalabah went down like a deck of cards theatrically climbing up from the turf as though he had been hit by a double-decker bus named Coulson. Substitute O’Brien then flew in on Fry near the dugouts earning himself a yellow card in the process as discipline and focus was starting to slip with Huddersfield. At this stage it was now a case of every man for himself as the result was now far more important than the methodology for both teams in the dying moments.

A drive from Bacuna after he had lost Spence had Pears reacting to concede a corner. After the corner was recycled by the Terriers it was Bacuna again who had another effort as Pears stood upright, confident it was going wide. A run from Fletcher playing in Gestede found Tav who burst forward earning a corner off O’Brien. The ensuing corner ball was cleared but Tav had another attempt but he hit over from outside the box with three long minutes remaining.

Bacuna was causing problems as he had done all game and after he started off on yet another foray Saville unceremoniously dragged him down. The free kick was headed backwards by Gestede but Coulson let it go out for a corner instead of clearing it as Boro nerves and judgements were jangling more than Santa’s sleigh bells. Coulson however almost immediately retrieved himself from the corner with a tackle on Mounie and as Boro broke Grant earned a yellow for a cynical foul.

Four minutes added time came up. And with pantomime season in full swing Grabara made another wayward clearance that earned more ironic cheers and then continued the farce with Fletcher eventually netting after Grabara had saved it, spun up and eventually it being declared null and void and offside. The impressive Bacuna chased a late loose ball with Coulson trying to clear, the ball was now all over the place with players almost terrified of touching it but a late cross to Mounie was the final act of the game. The afternoon ended with Djed Spence being the decider and the Man of the Match. The game was far from great but the result was a massive one for Boro in their fight for survival as they now go on the road with two fixtures that will be a real test. The important thing today was winning one of their winnable games.

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 20-21 discussion page

Boro 2 – 1 Stoke

os. 18th (24 pts) FRIDAY 20 DECEMBER 2019 Pos. 22nd (18 pts)
Boro 2-1 Stoke
Fletcher (57)
Wing (71)
41%
7(4)
4
15
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
59%
12(3)
2
15
Clucas (53)

From Red bull to Wing

Redcar Red reports on a rare come-back victory at the Riverside…

After speaking yesterday to an old friend who is a Stoke season ticket holder it had me less than looking forward to this one. The woes he spoke of down in the Potteries were almost as bad as the suffering we have endured this season. He told me he wouldn’t be making the trip up North because his appetite for watching dross was at saturation point and watching a double helping of it was more than he could stomach. Have to agree that I couldn’t argue with his logic. What was sad though was he said he “might catch it on the box” having now lost the will to avidly follow the club he had been with for almost four decades.

Two clubs with similar plights, well intentioned owners but somehow, somewhere things came badly off the rails. For some reason Sky thought that in footballing terms providing a match of Ebenezer Scrooge proportions was fitting in the build up to the festive season. Or perhaps they figured get the worst one out of the way and by comparison the rest will seem great!

Unfortunately for Stoke their Manager was ill with the dreaded flu virus that seems to have wiped out half the nation. With that in mind their preparation and stuttering recovery since his appointment may be curtailed giving Boro a slight edge although the Bookies didn’t seem to think so. That Swansea feeling was like a flu virus in itself hanging over the club all week prolonged by the faint hope that McNair’s sending off might somehow be rescinded, then again maybe more adults believe in Santa Claus than I thought.

There were hopes that Britt might be fit again to lead the line and the likelihood was that Lewis Wing would return after a brief respite to replace McNair with the defensive midfield duties being left with Clayts. With McClean and Ince likely to be plying their trade down the flanks that would pose a question mark as to whether Djed Spence would be risked or conversely his speed and threat may negate some of the opposing threat. Michael O’Neill had a right-back selection headache himself having juggled the position between a few players since his arrival with no strong claimants.

A miserable, wet and two thirds empty Riverside light show greeted the hardy few who turned up hopefully none of whom suffered epilepsy problems. Team news saw the experience of Tommy Smith given the RB shirt for Stoke tonight with Djed Spence restored in the same role for Boro. No Britt again giving young Stephen Walker his first start with Gestede on the bench along with Wing and Johnson. George Saville replaced his fellow countryman in the middle. Danny Batth was making a return to the Riverside and how we could do with him right now.

Oliver Langford’s whistle got proceedings underway as Boro kicked off with six academy players in the line-up. A curling Tom Ince effort cutting into the Boro Box required Dael Fry to get a head on it to put it out for a corner in the opening minutes which was slowly cleared but the visitors kept the pressure up as Boro struggled to get the ball out of their own half with Ince the catalyst for Stoke’s early possession stats. A fifth minute ball through for Walker to run onto was overhit but was somehow irrelevant as the crowd provided a poignant tribute to Leo Percovich two years on from the tragedy that cost him the lives of his two daughters.

A seventh minute free kick for a foul on Howson near the dug outs was passed backwards until eventually surrendering possession in what looked like a totally thoughtless set piece. Coulson won a throw-in level with the Stoke 18-yard box but again it was recycled backwards with an eventual aimless punt upfield to the safety of Jack Butland. Stoke were playing with a high backline and pushing Boro back but there were a few signs, albeit overhit ones, that Boro could catch them on the break with Walker in particular testing Batth’s agility. The quarter hour was marked with Boro attacking but once again passing the ball back into their own half only to hoof it up and surrender possession. A crossfield ball to Coulson saw him set Tav up but the ball went backwards again and those moans and groans were now becoming audible.

A free kick to Boro twenty-five yards out was floated in by Tavernier but it went out in the West Stand though in a positive light is was the lower half of the stand to leave Fry, Fletcher and Ayala dumbfounded. A comedic series of back passes played ourselves into trouble (again) but a break from Spence was ended with Ward taking him out (to presumably prevent him from passing it backwards). The free kick for Boro ironically ended by setting Ince away and unleashing a daisy cutter which went wide of Pears upright in the most riveting piece of action so far in the game.

A Stoke free kick was comfortably dealt with in the air by Ayala but we lost the ball again and back came Stoke with twenty five minutes now gone. Boro were making very hard work of things, struggling to get out, relying on long balls and when we did have it fleetingly, we couldn’t hang onto it. Just as it looked like we would buckle it was Butland required to make the games first serious save from Fletcher. The resultant corner was blown up for a foul as Ayala had his arms around Batth’s neck surprisingly for the Spaniard. McClean was getting down our right side and getting away from the attentions of Spence and Howson with growing regularity.

Ten minutes of nothingness ensued and then a back pass to Pears on thirty-five minutes raised another chorus of moans with a few audible boos. A minute later a ball from the wing into Clucas should have saw Pears worked but as two red shirts stood off him the finishing of the Stoke strike force illustrated why they have been almost as woeful as Boro’s all season. A Stoke corner was hit to the far side of the Boro six-yard box which was met but went out feebly for a Boro goal kick. It was an horrendous spectacle to witness inside the miserably cold Stadium but it must have made Sky wonder why on Earth they picked a contest between two equally incompetent and inept clueless sides.

Jonny Howson tried to rescue another sideways ball played into danger ten yards outside of the “D” by Tavernier and earned a yellow for his late lunge. Fortunately, Ince tried a Ronaldo type free kick but with five per cent of the ability as it sailed harmlessly into the North Stand. The son of the ex-Boro midfielder managed a deflected shot a minute later through a packed Boro box with just half a minute of normal time remaining of the half. Ominously Clayts was down on all fours at this time needing some treatment but he was able to walk off and presumably it was only the sight of an attacking move that had him in a temporary state of paralysis. Thankfully the half-time whistle sounded to save our eyes from the horror show out on the pitch as Boro had produced the most ineffective, galling and dreary forty-five minutes of football in my memory of supporting them.

If there was a jury, they would have relegated both teams immediately for the sake of football. It wasn’t even bad or awful it was just pointless with zero skill, technique or tactics on show from either side although it has to be said that at least Stoke looked like they were trying to win it. Anyone considering a half season ticket would at least now be free to think about what else they could spend their Christmas money on. A game of guess the crowd was more of a talking point rather than any dubious refereeing decisions or the missed opportunities during the half time pints. Resigned indifference was rife. A few didn’t retake their seats after the break which was actually a positive because they could and probably should at this stage have vacated them after fifteen minutes.

What Woodgate would say to his players after that was anyone’s guess but the second half surely couldn’t be as bad as that first half footballing equivalent of diazepam.

No change in personnel for either side at the start of the second half but Boro looked to have changed to a back four. On forty-seven minutes a calamitous Stoke attack was only bettered by Boro’s efforts at defending in a very unconvincing manner, cue more boos. A break then by Spence left two Stoke players for dead and after being clattered by McLean we won a corner and then another in quick succession but that was it, all over just as were getting some hope. At least we actually had an attack and the ball did move in a forward trajectory. Obviously buoyed by attacking, Boro mounted another one and a deflected shot by Spence saw a claim for a penalty on Tav by Batth which the Ref waved away.

A long ball out of the Stoke defence down their right saw Dael Fry misjudge the bounce and allowed a cross to come in which was instinctively well saved by Pears with Howson trying to cut out the danger but the ball came out to Clucas who had sprinted from the half-way line leaving his marker Clayton in his wake with the goal at his mercy and couldn’t miss and didn’t. The deadlock was broken and Boro now trailed behind the visitors with the half now seven minutes old.

As Woodgate readied subs a simple lobbed ball from Howson over the back of the Stoke defence saw Fletcher read the intention and ghost in to head home unopposed and there it was 1-1. We were back on level terms out of nowhere. Wing then came on for Clayton and Getsede for Walker (to a chorus of more boos). A penalty claim by Clucas was dismissed as he went down between Howson and Saville earning a yellow for his trouble as the game now suddenly moved into first gear from neutral.

There were of course the predictable and obligatory boos for McClean throughout the game but I wasn’t counting those although the thought did cross my mind about what if McClean had a different skin tone rather than political persuasion, would the Ref be forced to take a different view?

Wing fed in Tav on sixty-two minutes as Boro now looked positively energetic after their setback (or kick up the backside). That quick response equaliser had clearly deflated Stoke’s brittle confidence and the arrival of Wing for Clayton saw a much more forward-thinking Player making an impact. Wing tried a rather adventurous volley on sixty-four minutes but he was under it instead of on top and sent it screaming into the North Stand night sky. O’Neill made a change on sixty-six minutes with McClean limping off and then remaining on the pitch (to more boos) and instead Ward went off for Nick Powell.

On sixty-eight minutes Saville managed to bring the ball out of defence, beat two Stoke players then pirouetted around himself instead of setting Spence free and managing to dispossess himself in a head scratching moment that won’t have impressed either of his two watching Managers. Pears did well to cleanly collect a cross from McClean and quickly setting up an attack by rolling the ball out to Tav who in turn left his marker, ran forwards instinctively finding Wing who took a few strides and then unleashed one of his long awaited rockets. Seventy minutes now gone and the atmosphere inside the Riverside had turned 180 degrees. Livelier, hungrier and sharper Boro now had Stoke reeling and an Ayala header from a free kick needed Butland at his best to prevent Boro from going three up.

Fifteen minutes remaining and O’Neill made a sub with the injured McClean going off for Vokes. As play recommenced Tavernier was dragged back by Smith as he had left Ince for dead with the Stoke defender entering the Ref’s book. Marvin Johnson came on for Spence in an effort to put a little more experience on out there to see the game out. A headed clearance by Fry repelled a Stoke onslaught as they mounted desperate attempt after attempt to pull themselves back into the game. A long cleared ball up to Gestede saw him flick it on but it was just too far for Fletcher to reach with ten minutes now remaining. Saville earned a yellow for dragging Ince back with Coulson caught upfield as the game evolved into defence versus attack.

An unchallenged Joe Allen run across the front of the Boro 18 yard box saw his shot just curling away from the intended target as the South Stand breathed a collective sigh of relief. Batth collided with Tavernier in a 50/50 leaving his mark on Boro’s MOM providing a few minutes breather. Two minutes later Cousins cynically took out Coulson as he caught the midfielder cold with his pace and started to sprint clear. In testimony to how well Coulson had done Ince was then subbed for Diouf as O’Neill threw down his last card with only three agonisingly long minutes remaining. Five minutes came up on the fourth officials board as Fletcher searingly ran back into his box reading Diouf’s cross and cutting out the danger with a determined hoofed clearance which fortuitously but deservedly found Johnson.

Bodies in red were now being thrown at the ball and at Stoke players generally just to hang on to that slender Wing wonder strike. Two minutes of added time remained and Boro were happy to let the ball go out for throw-ins and generally disrupt proceedings. Danny Batth went flying into Dael Fry to concede a foul in the dying seconds and as Pears despatched the resultant free kick down to the opposite end of the pitch the whistle sounded to end what was without doubt a game of two halves. That win was a massive psychological boost to Boro and a huge dent to Stoke with six points now separating the two sides. The second-half change in attitude and intent was nothing short of remarkable especially considering how many Academy products were still out there.

The first half was diabolical, easily and all too readily forgotten about but the second half saw Howson, Ayala and Coulson all put in great performances but for me Tav was the one that tipped it. He was the battler, the threat, the constant niggle and the provider for the winner. That quick equaliser sparked a complete mentality change in Boro who had gone from defeatists to believers in a few seconds. In fairness even Gestede won battles and made a nuisance of himself winning important duels when he came on.

These were two really bad sides but it was all about the result rather than the methodology. The tactical change at half time by Woodgate made a marked difference despite conceding as did the swapping of Clayton for Wing. As the saying goes its always darkest before the dawn and never truer than tonight.

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 20-21 discussion page

Swansea 3 – 1 Boro

Pos. 10th (34pts) SATURDAY 14 DECEMBER 2019 Pos. 20th (21pts)
Swansea 3-1 Boro
Ayew (22 pen, 71)
Surridge (73)
62%
10(7)
6
13
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
38%
8(3)
6
19
Tavernier (59)

Browne (63)
McNair (77)

Liabilities at the Liberty

Redcar Red reports on Boro’s nine-man defeat at Swansea…

For a change it was a relatively confident Boro making their way down to South Wales after collecting four points from six in their last two games and climbing up the form table while their opponents were heading down the same form table making this afternoons encounter a less fearful task than of a few weeks back.

Boro were hopeful of Britt being fit whilst many Boro fans hoped he wouldn’t be risked especially with both McNair and Johnson back from suspension. The Swans however had a few absentees of their own to be concerned about in Tom Carroll who was suspended and Joe Rodon, Jordon Garrick and Wayne Routledge all injured.

Rudy Gestede was back fit and in contention and may make the bench for reasons of experience if nothing else. There are still painful memories of that glaring headed miss down here a few seasons back. Maybe this could be the day that he laid that ghost to rest should he get a chance?

Swansea hadn’t won in their last six Championship games whereas Boro had only lost once albeit the demolition by Leeds. The BBC website revealed that five of Swansea’s last six Championship goals have come from corners and that they have scored nine goals from corners this season, more than any other side in the Championship. We hoped that our band of Coaches and defenders have been doing their homework on them in training this week at set pieces.

On a bright sunny but freezing afternoon in South Wales the team news for Boro looked like a back four with Howson at RB, Clayton in front of the four and with Johnson staring in place of Spence. Britt as we had expected wasn’t deemed fit to start. Spence was on the bench with Browne, Gestede and Wing all back from injury. Swansea had made one change, Dhanda for the suspended Carroll.

The game commenced with an early Boro free kick which McNair put into the Swans box but it was routinely cleared with Ayew chasing the out ball on the right and played in Byers who fired in a long-range effort which gave Pears a chance to handle the ball without being remotely bothered. McNair replied for Boro with a run of his own down the right forking the Swans to concede a throw in in what looked to be a confident start from Boro in the opening six minutes.

Ten minutes in and Boro hadn’t been under any pressure and we were looking assured albeit neither Keeper had been troubled which reflected the pre-season friendly atmosphere in the Liberty Stadium which probably suited Boro. Another McNair free kick was headed clear, Boro came back with a half volley from Jonny Howson on the edge of the box as there seemed little appetite to break out from Swansea and challenge the Boro defence.

A ball into the Boro box was cleared by Fry to Fletcher who set up a swift Boro attack which ended with McNair winning a corner from which Tav’s delivery was met by Ayala but it just evaded him as Boro looked by far the more comfortable side so far. You got the feeling that the longer this continued the more despondent and frustrated the Home fans would become and the greater the confidence would grow in the Boro camp.

Clayts clattered Dhanda for the second time and Ref Whitestone made it clear that he wouldn’t be accepting any more. The frustrations grew as the Swans then played the ball back to their Keeper but they then broke upfield with Dhanda playing in Roberts requiring Ayala to clear for a corner. Pears punched the incoming ball from Grimes out for another corner as the home side showed some determination. The second corner was wasted and eventually Fletcher cleared it for Boro as the game neared the twenty-minute mark. Pears was called into action again as Andre Ayew let fly another long range shot which went wide.

Celina released Ayew who fired in a shot which Pears parried and when going in for the rebound Fry challenged and Ref Whitestone blew for a penalty in what had looked like a blatant dive. Ayew stepped up, hit it straight down the centre and totally against the run of play Swansea found themselves one up. Clayts was dispossessed as they were clearing their heads and dawdling let Ayew rob him allowing Surridge then Byers shots on Pears in quick succession. The Boro keeper did well with both efforts, meanwhile Boro needed to sort themselves out because from having control they now looked susceptible with the Swans now flying.

The Home fans chorused their opinion of Boro by singing their shock of actually “winning at home”. The reply from Boro was a back-post ball from a Tavernier free kick went out off Bidwell for a Boro corner which Tav took and sent it into the box which was collected by the Keeper Woodman but then nicked by Saville with the Ref then booking Saville for an alleged absurd foul on Woodman.

Roberts got into the box and but for a desperate Coulson block Byers was about to put the Swans two up. Amazing the difference, a goal can make on a game. Pears collected the corner and Boro won a free kick on the half way line which eventually allowed Boro to build up but the end ball across to Fletcher from Howson went out for a goal kick. Ten minutes to half time and Boro had lost their early confidence whilst the Swans were building and growing into the game sensing that they could grab a second before half time.

Impetus was desperately needed from Boro, we needed Tav, Coulson or McNair to make a run, something to strike fear or create a serious attempt. It was all far too comfortable for Swansea and despite our early confidence Woodman hadn’t a serious save to make. We looked flat and needed a leader out there to wind the red shirts up. Saville played out to Johnson forcing ex Boro loanee Roberts to put it out for a corner. The corner came in but was headed down by Fry and easily cleared in what was a very poor routine corner with no guile or creativity whatsoever. How we needed a Grant Leadbitter out there clapping his hands and geeing them up.

Coulson broke down the left and won a corner after beating Ayew and won a corner off Roberts again. McNair took this one which sailed straight out of play with nobody going to the far post and clearly no plan or intention. Not good enough and a rocket needed to be fired up the Red shirts to wake them from their somnolence. A late Swansea Free Kick flew into the Boro box but was dealt with by Pears. In the dying seconds of added time a great Howson ball to Fletcher came into Saville who swung a boot but it went well wide.

As both teams walked off Steve Cooper will have been relieved to be a goal up while Woodgate needed to raise the roof and fire his charges up after a very pedestrian lacklustre showing. Wing and Spence where perhaps some options to alter the pace of the game. Clayton and Saville were solid but unspectacular. Woodgate needed to make sure we started the second half on fire to ensure Woodman in the Swansea goal broke sweat or at least had some soil on his elbows and backside.

As the sides ran out unchanged as the travelling army hoped to see a lot more from those in red. A near post header from Fry cleared Boro’s lines but back they came with Cabango late in on McNair as Boro looked to be even more lethargic. The centre-half earned a yellow card for the challenge. Ayew broke down the flank and caused even more consternation as we needed to wake up. Woodgate had enough and Clayton was taken off and Browne came on. Browne went down after Fletcher played him in and earned a booking for a dive. So as one yellow-carded Boro player went off the one replacing him took just 120 seconds to pick up one of his own.

Swansea immediately went down the Boro end and after a few nervy half clearances the ball went out for a Swansea throw to come straight back into the Boro box and as Dhanda went to meet an Ayew challenge he went down Browne style earning himself a yellow for simulation. Ten minutes into the second half and a McNair Boro Corner was whistled for a bit of a niggle in the box when it was delivered.

Coulson broke and was then pulled back but the Ref seemingly ignored it as frustrations were growing with the away side who were yet to make Woodman earn this week pay check. Tavernier intercepted, broke from midfield playing a long daisy cutting pass to Fletcher who held it up, played it back in to Tavernier who made up ground and walloped it low into the corner of Woodman’s net. 1-1 and game on!

Byers went off for Fulton as Swansea made their first change of the afternoon. Another Boro effort soon followed and just as we looked to be getting the upper hand in the game Marcus Browne goes into a reckless two footed challenge taking out van der Hoorn earning a straight red and we were down to ten men yet again. Another ridiculous sending off for Boro indicating that there is clearly a discipline and control issue within the Boro Coaching set up. It’s too many and too often now for it to be mere coincidence.

Marvin Johnson was then pulled back for a Boro free kick, McNair fizzed it in and was cleared away by Surridge for a Boro corner. McNair delivered the ball into the Swansea box but headed away by van der Hoorn. Barry McKay then came on for Dhanda as Steve Cooper sensed all three points. Then ten-man Boro left Andre Ayew unmarked who smashed Swansea back into the lead and Boro two-one down. The only excuse for Ayew being unmarked was perhaps the switch from five at the back to four.

Indiscipline seriously costing Boro once again and to compound things Grimes put a deep cross into the Boro box, nodded down by Bidwell into the path of Surridge who swivelled and stroked it past Pears into the bottom corner to kill off the contest.

Ashley Fletcher got in behind van der Hoorn but his shot went wide as Woodgate brought on Rudy Gestede with 15 minutes left to play and George Saville making way. As Tavernier was mysteriously laid out on the pitch a frustrated McNair charged in on Grimes in front of the Swansea dugout and the reaction from the home bench sealed his fate. Something had clearly incensed them; the Northern Irishman was promptly red carded for the challenge as Boro went down to nine men with just over ten minutes left to play.

Just as Woodgate had managed to get a few players back in his squad two of them managed to get themselves straight reds and three-game bans. Unbelievable how we had gone from unflustered and cruising to an unfortunate goal down, two sending’s off after pulling level and eventually going three behind. Marvin Johnson then went off for Lewis Wing presumably to get ten minutes playing time.

Wing collected a ball from Coulson and got his effort away and Gestede managed to make contact of sorts with the ball but unsurprisingly there was no net bulge. Swansea had a few attempts themselves but the game was now effectively over when Browne was sent off and when McNair received his marching orders it was the signal to head home for the travelling army as the rain poured down adding more atmospheric misery on the afternoon.

Five added minutes came up on the fourth Officials board as Boro’s nine men battled now hard to save face and keep the defeat to just the three goals. The meaningless, nothingness of the remainder after Paddy’s departure was just made all the more ridiculous as Gestede bizarrely headed the ball out for a corner to the Swans. He did at least defend the corner by getting his head onto it and as Swansea toyed with us thankfully the final whistle went on an afternoon which could and possibly should have initially yielded three points but as a minimum one carelessly thrown away by petulant ill-discipline. Those three summer signings have all been highly questionable. One seems marginally capable at this level; one would look out of place in a Sunday Pub side and one has ability but is clearly an unhinged damaged loose cannon and no wonder the Hammers jettisoned him.

Once Browne was booked Woodgate should have subbed his sub, bizarre as that would seem. Clayton was taken off because his yellow had restricted his effectiveness previously and there is nothing in Browne’s profile to trust and believe that he could control his own game, in fact the polar opposite. A hot-headed liability who needs to be jettisoned in January and written off as a budget bad gamble. All these continual sending’s off put me in mind of another leader this week who paid a humiliating price for failing to control his charges despite being deluded to the contrary.

Down to ten men and two goals behind, would putting on someone with a bit of pace and energy instead of Gestede when you are forced to sit deeper have made more sense? Surely having a zestful threatening outlet instead of a lumbering, immobile, injury prone, unfit, non scoring striker had to be a more logical decision?

Stoke up next at the Riverside in a six pointer and let’s hope for some discipline and control. There are now too many Players in this squad walking a tightrope with the fans which isn’t a great foundation for a side battling to survive in the Championship.

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 18-19 discussion page

Nottm Forest 1 – 1 Boro

Pos. 5th (34pts) TUESDAY 10 DECEMBER 2019 Pos. 20th (21pts)
Nottm Forest 1-1 Boro
Yates (63) 62%
9(3)
10
13
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
38%
9(3)
1
20
McNair (81 Pen)

Paddy stumps Forest

Redcar Red reports on Boro’s draw at the City Ground…

Resurgent after their second consecutive Home victory Boro travelled down to the Trent this evening to take on a side with serious play-off ambitions. Forest have been patchy and lacking consistency at times but sitting in fifth before Kick Off their fans were all too aware that they needed a win after drawing against Millwall and losing to Cardiff in their last two outings. If not, Bristol above could stretch the gap between them and fourth place to five points plus the chasing pack below had three teams that could leapfrog them. Boro on the other hand were now four points clear of the drop zone and knew that whatever happened they would still be clear of it come ten o’clock.

There was a degree of relief amongst the Trees fans that Bitt was crocked for this one with a fear of that returning old boy syndrome causing much anxiety. With a tendency to start slowly they have struggled to create first half chances which considering Boro’s patched up defence and the prospect of two youngsters on the flanks could offer some hope to those in the away dugout. Lewis Grabban is their main threat contributing ten of their twenty-six goals this season so if Ayala could stop him then Boro just may have a chance of getting something from this evenings encounter.

Team news saw just the one change with McNair coming in for Britt which meant that as we thought on here Tav would be pushed further up to work with Fletcher. The bench looked inexperienced to say the least with only Johnson having any “experience” at this level. Lewis Wing was once again absent.

Boro adorned in their white away kit got the game underway in wet and miserable wintry conditions. Grabban took on Ayala in the opening exchange but Spence was alert to put it out for a throw in. The resultant throw ended with a deflected cross going out for a corner to the Trees which in turn went out for another throw in off Clayts as Forest started with obvious intent.

McNair put Fletcher through on five minutes but his touch deserted him in what was Boro’s first serious threat of the evening. Joe Lolley responded for Forest and in an exchange with Silva he nearly exposed our defence but for Fry reading the move and clearing the danger. An in-swinging Forest corner in the tenth minute evaded Pears towards the back post but Ayala once again was equal to it and was fouled in the eyes of the Ref to ease some pressure. Back again came Forest as they were continually pushing our full-backs deep and earning another corner. In it came but Clayts cleared it this time as Woodgate surely needed to offer his full-backs a little more support to ease the onslaught.

Approaching the quarter-hour mark and another Forest corner was delivered this time into the near post, once again we cleared but Cash and Lolley came straight back at us with Lolley getting a shot off which Pears was thankfully equal to. Ameobi played in Cash who evaded Coulson and got a shot off with flashing warning signs growing that Boro needed to pick up players quicker and at the same time ease the pressure by attacking themselves.

As our struggles continued (or resilience depending on perspective) Lolley played in Grabban only for us to hold out again but this time Saville found a way to clear as the watch approached twenty minutes. Grabban again came close but the offside flag came to the rescue of the visiting white shirts. Ref Andy Woolmer had a word with Spence after he piled into Robinson and earned a soft yellow for his troubles which seemed a bit harsh considering it was the game’s first serious challenge. After the restart Ameobi and Yates nearly broke the deadlock as Boro’s defence creaked even further but somehow the home side made hard work of things to deny themselves. Up until this point Tav was a virtual spectator and Fletcher had been very limited, struggling with a lack of support or build up from his team mates.

McNair broke only to have Silva pull him back after Fletcher set him free for the Yellow card count to equalise at one apiece. Fletcher then had a header at Samba in goal for Forest which only poked the Trees with Grabban again coming close at the opposite end. Another rare Boro break with McNair was frustratingly pulled back by the Ref for a free kick who failed to see the opportunity in letting the game carry on. A speculative left-footed Howson drive from nearer the halfway line than the Forest box was dramatic but way off target.

A flurry of Boro activity ensued after a tactical switch with McNair and Tav now providing cover for the Full Backs saw Tav supported by Coulson ending up with a back post ball to Fletcher who met it putting it in the danger zone but there were no white shirts to take advantage. Ayala again had to be alert to block Grabban as Forest broke away conceding a corner which eventually went out for a goal kick as we entered the last ten minutes of the half. Throughout the game Forest seemed to be content sitting back and looking to pick Boro off down the flanks as we ventured forward.

Mejias then started warming up as worried glances were made in the direction of Pears who presumably had a niggle of some sort as the Boro injury curse seemingly was gathering momentum. Tavernier came more into the game after the switch and now started to influence a few moves and at the same time Coulson looked a little more comfortable. A Spence through pass led to Clayton going down just outside the Forest box after Fletcher played the ball into him with less than a minute of the forty five remaining.

Tav lined up the free kick as the Forest box was packed with bodies but his fiercely hit effort came off the wall for Boro’s first corner of the match. There was the usual pushing and shoving melee in the box as McNair floated the corner in but it was cleared all to easily but to his credit Spence recovered it and immediately delivered the ball back in for Ayala to put Dawson under pressure with the ball going out for another corner but the whistle went signalling the end of the half. It wasn’t a great half for Boro with Forest by far the better side but it was still 0-0 and that late Boro period of pressure may have altered the mindsets of both Managers during their respective team talks.

Lolley, Cash and Ameobi were causing us serious problems and Grabban had been a threat all through that half. Woodgate now had to find a way to stem the flow of Forest attacks and at the same time put them under some pressure. If the game continued in the same vein as the first half it would be a miracle if Boro managed to repel the attacks for another forty-five minutes. It would be an incredible feat but it was looking very unlikely. Somehow we needed to offer more of a threat in the second half but having already changed tactics and a sparse bench it was difficult to see how change could be made to any positive effect. Perhaps the only option would be to remove either Saville or Clayton in favour of Johnson to add a more attacking element and pushing Tav further up again.

Forest kicked off and started straight away attacking Boro with no changes in personal by either manager but another switch from Woodgate now saw a back four with Howson, Ayala, Fry and Coulson with Spence pushed up on the right and Tav on the left with McNair pushed up just behind Fletcher leaving Clayton and Saville centrally. Another Forest Corner was flicked on towards the back post but fortunately nobody picked up on the move in a red shirt and we collectively exhaled again. That corner count grew again courtesy of Ameobi firing in a left footed rocket which Pears done well to put around for the corner. Clayts then was fortunate to avoid a booking which perhaps balanced up the harsh one issued in the first half to Spence.

A clever bit of play from McNair saw him win a free kick but the delivery from Howson was clearly not something that was ever rehearsed at Rockliffe. Samba then had to be alert as he palmed away an effort from McNair after a quick Boro throw in. The next Forest corner came off Clayton as the deflected ball spun up and over Pears’s net. The Lolley delivered corner found an unmarked red shirt who tee’d up Yates who smashed the ball into the turf and up it spun hitting the crossbar forcing Pears to punch clear.

Thirty minutes remained and the Boro goal had led a charmed life so far. Lolley lined up another Forest corner which was half cleared by Tav but it came straight back and a cross from the right saw Yates this time head home unopposed. Three Forest Players were left free in the build up in a repeat of the Hull game when we retreated so deep, we allowed our opponents unopposed space and freedom and paid the price. Marvin Johnson was readied in response as Boro now had to come out and try and get something from this game. Djed Spence made way with Johnson taking up the right-wing position. Marvin’s first involvement earned him a lecture from the Ref as he needlessly fouled in the opposition half and the thought was had he not learned from his Hull experience?

A Pears clearance saw Fletcher floored after being clattered into by Dawson but after a few rubs on the back of his head he staggered to his feet and was able to continue without the aid of the magic sponge. Speaking of magic, it was notably absent in the interplay between Tav, Fletcher and Johnson up till now. Carvalho was then brought on for ex Boro temp Ameobi with Walker warming up for Boro to come on for Clayton with fifteen minutes remaining. McNair dropped deeper as Walker took up the supporting role for Fletcher.

A nervy mix up between Fry and Ayala saw them both miss headers allowing Grabban to nip in but thankfully Pears was alert to the danger. Semedo then came on for Silva as Forest looked to shore things up by swapping a playmaker for a more solid and robust character. An over-hit Tav cross summed up Boro’s evening and then a minute later McNair attacked a blocked Tav shot but sliced his effort well wide.

Incredibly as Boro hopes were fading Johnson was brought down by Robinson chasing a long timed ball from Paddy McNair and a Penalty was awarded to the visitors. Red booted McNair took responsibility for the kick and slammed it Grant style into the top left corner to make it 1-1 giving Samba no chance and silencing the City Ground with just under ten minutes remaining. Forest came back at us and in doing so Semedo earned another Yellow as he took out Fletcher. Albert Adomah then came on for Yates in a late bid to get their noses in front again. Fletcher then increased the yellow card count as he apparently caught Dawson with a raised arm.

Tav came close to undoing Samba as Forest now started to throw everything forward. A minute later and Worrall took Tavernier out to prevent a Boro breakout and earning yet another yellow with just under five minutes remaining. A bit of late pressure involving Saville, Johnson and McNair saw Fletcher send an effort wide as Boro very nearly nicked all three points.

Dawson won another free kick against Fletcher but the Ref insisted it be taken exactly where the “offence” was committed allowing vital seconds to seep away. Four minutes came up on the board as Johnson took a knock and slowly dragged himself back to his feet. Saville cut out a late attempt for a throw in and the resulting long throw saw a nervy few moments in the Boro box but Pears was equal to it all and caught the ball confidentially. Ayala then handled to give away a free kick in the last minute of stoppage time on the edge of the box. Carvalho sent the ball into Pears’ near post but the young Keeper stood strong and unflappable catching it cleanly.

The final whistle went to a background of boos but certainly not from the travelling army. This was a game of many phases, Woodgate changed tactics several times and after a first half of desperately holding on then going behind Johnson made a marked difference when he arrived. A draw away from home especially at the City Ground has to be recorded as a good result for any Boro side. My MOM was Ayala for his first half defensive performance but Pears was also solid when called upon. Marvin Johnson made a big difference and Paddy took his penalty with aplomb and had also set Johnson free for the penalty so there were a few contenders. Four points from the last two games was as good as anyone could have hoped for especially after the Leeds drubbing made all the more remarkable by the limitations imposed by the squad. By no means a great game or performance from Boro but a great point and a very unexpected one from a scrappy but dogged display which hopefully will be carried onto Swansea.

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 18-19 discussion page

Boro 1 – 0 Charlton

Pos. 19th (20 pts) WEDNESDAY 28 NOVEMBER 2019 Pos. 17th (23 pts)
Boro 1-0 Charlton
Saville (1) 44%
23(3)
4
15
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
56%
5(2)
5
20

Saville strike suits Boro

Redcar Red reports on another welcome victory at the Riverside…

The Addicks arrived on Teesside with a few injury concerns of their own as two old mates went head to head in the dugout Championship survival stakes. Their list of sidelined players was as bad as Boro’s if not even worse but they did have some positive midweek news in that talismanic Striker Lyle Taylor and Chuks Aneke should both be available for this afternoons game if not as starters then certainly from the bench. Both are big 6ft plus lads so add a bit of height to the Addicks attack. Conor Gallagher would also be available for them after serving a suspension but they would still be without suspended Centre Back Tom Lockyer.

Boro’s injury list was eased slightly with the news that Browne and Gestede were close to being back and that Britt was sufficiently patched up to go again. There were however reports of several ill players after a virus had hit the Boro camp so the line up could have a very unfamiliar look to it or as some of the assembled in the concourses muttered, “getting the excuses in early”.

Despite being three places and six points ahead of Boro the Addicks were in terrible form prior to this afternoon’s game being bottom of the Championship Form table for the last ten games with just six points compared to Boro’s eight. This was a must win for Boro but also very winnable coming at an opportune time as the Club played down “fake” media speculation linking them with unemployed Managers.

The lunch time kick off saw Huddersfield lose to Leeds which was an early bonus for both these sides. Boro team news had a surprise with Clayts restored alongside Saville in midfield in place of McNair and Wing. Nineteen-year-old Djed Spence earned a debut for the injured Dijksteel and Coulson returned at the back with Bola making way. Wing presumably was suffering an illness as he wasn’t even on the bench. Five changes and a surprise debut for Charlton with the experienced Joe Ledley who had been without a club and only joined them this week.

The game commenced in a sparsely populated and quiet Riverside with very few Addicks travelling up for the game but that changed quickly when Clayton battled a series of midfield challenges to play in Spence who in turn fed Howson then after a deflected shot from Britt it came out to Fletcher whose follow up effort was smothered by Phillips with the ball breaking to Saville who struck calmly and cleanly to put Boro one up with less than a minute gone. The perfect start and probably far better than anyone had dared hope or wished for.

Charlton struggled for the next five minutes to clear their heads but Boro were looking lively with Spence now involved in a few good moves as Boro looked to put Charlton to the sword. Saville looked to add his second on eight minutes as he curled a low shot just wide of Phillips in the Charlton goal. A minute later and Fletcher played a ball across the goal mouth but there was nobody in a Red shirt to take advantage with Coulson conceding a free kick for his over exuberance on Ledley in trying to keep the move alive.

A very positive opening quarter of an hour from Boro with both Spence and Coulson very lively. Clayton was involved in the build up to the goal and the other boo boy Saville had put us in front. Britt and Fletcher were both looking hungry and over all we were good value for the lead. A cheeky shot from distance by Coulson just went over as Dillon Phillips was caught off his line. Boro were looking to keep pressing sensing that this Addicks defence looked vulnerable.

Ayala conceded a dubious free kick to Charlton which was sent into the Boro box by Ledley but sailed wide for a goal kick which Pears took his time over on twenty minutes. Spence again got down the flank and got his cross in towards Fletcher but Oshilaja went down in the Charlton box after a clash of heads. Coulson cut inside on twenty-six minutes and the ball spun to Clayts but he was adjudged to have handled as Charlton continued to look susceptible defensively. Spence once again turned Charlton defender Purrington as he robbed him to feed Britt. He got his shot off on twenty-eight minutes but was blocked and his follow up went flying over in typical Britt fashion. The half hour mark ticked over and Pears hadn’t a save to make as Boro looked comfortable and by far the more dominant side with both young wing backs having a great game.

Coulson played a ball into the danger zone but a challenge on Tavernier was just enough to put him off with his volleyed effort going wide. Seconds later Clayton crossed to Britt whose header missed the target as Boro were building momentum and looking dangerous. Saville went up for a header landing awkwardly on his back like a ton of bricks on the Riverside turf. Fortunately, he dusted himself down and got on with things after a few anxious moments.

A few minutes before half time there was a bit of concern again, this time for Clayts as he took a heavy knock from Gallagher but he wasn’t going to give up so easily after getting a start for the first time in ages. A handball from a prostrate Oshilaja was a nailed on yellow after first pulling Saville back but the Ref saw it differently and kept his cards in his pocket. Another run from Spence created an appreciative round of spontaneous applause, this time it was Doughty on the receiving end of the lively debutant. Applause broke out a minute later when Ref Stephen Martin’s whistle went for the end of the half which started well for Boro and continued in that vein but the margin despite being by far the better side was still just a solitary goal.

The half time team talk was probably the easiest one the Home dressing room had seen for a while after a better than average Boro display. Lee Bowyer on the other hand would have been extremely grateful that his side were still in this game after a very poor first half which illustrated clearly exactly why the visitors were sitting bottom of the form table.

Morgan and supposed ex Boro target Lyle Taylor came on for the Addicks at the restart giving Boro something different to worry about in the second half although “worry” was probably a tad generous as Charlton hadn’t remotely worried Boro at all in the first half. Joe Ledley had made way for Taylor and Purrington went off for Morgan. Taylor was instantly involved in the opening seconds clearly wanting to make his mark after an injury lay off. Spence won a throw in off Morgan who looked as though he was going to suffer just as difficult a second half as Purrington had endured in the first.

A Tavernier shot after Howson and Spence started a slick move via Saville went out for a corner four minutes into the half. Charlton responded by breaking down the left and won a corner of their own as Lee Bowyer had presumably rattled a few cages at half time. The early indication was that Charlton now looked far less lethargic. Advancing, Coulson skinned Pratley and crossed to Britt who was unlucky as his effort was deflected into the arms of Phillips. Ayala then had to concede a corner after an error from Fry allowed Taylor in. Coulson broke away from the clearance and was cynically taken out by Gallagher who blatantly blocked him off and in doing so earned the afternoon’s first yellow.

Britt was breaking clear and scythed down by Pratley to prevent Boro notching a second. Britt looked to be in serious pain and angry as he felt his ankle. Ref Stephen Martin reached for his second yellow and entered Pratley into his book. Tyrone O’Neill was asked to warm up as Britt received treatment, struggling to get back onto his feet and looking dejected as he hobbled off the pitch. Spence meanwhile sent a brilliant ball into Tavernier into the Charlton box who incredibly missed when scoring was easier. Britt made his way off the pitch giving an opinion to the Charlton bench en route as Stephen Walker came on to replace him.

Coulson won a free kick as he once again sizzled down the Charlton right flank. Tavernier delivered the kick in towards Ayala but Phillips caught the ball cleanly. Relentless Boro came back at Charlton as they tried in vain to clear their lines and it was Coulson again who was the object of some rough-house tactics from the visitors going down under the attentions of Leko who picked up the visitors third yellow.

The first real Charlton threat came from Gallagher whose shot went well wide on seventy minutes as Boro were reminded that their lead was a very slender one. That half time rollicking from Bowyer had an impact on the visitors as they were much more aggressive and looked to be trying to nick that elusive equaliser. A Boro free kick sent in towards Ayala was cleared but Boro recycled possession with Clayton and Coulson who won a corner on the left and after a scuffed effort it went out for a goal kick with fifteen minutes remaining and that second goal just wouldn’t come.

Another fee kick to Boro twenty yards out after Tavernier was brought down saw Tav take it himself but his effort cleared both the Charlton wall and Crossbar. Walker rescued a poor pass played behind him and then Saville and Fletcher combined well forcing Phillips into a save conceding a Boro corner. Fry met the corner but as Charlton cleared their lines Howson had to be alert to cut out the danger. Taylor then had a blocked shot from which Coulson set Boro away again on the attack with ten minutes remaining. Charlton won a corner after Leko hit the ball off Clayton as they mounted a late surge to rescue a point. Doughty’s corner was initially cleared by Ayala which came back straight in requiring Pears to be alert. Boro then broke away with Walker but with glory in his eyes he lost possession instead of feeding in the screaming Tavernier.

Seconds later it was Walker again who broke behind the Charlton defence after Saville played him in but he fluffed his lines by putting it over when he seemed nailed-on as incredibly Boro once again missed another great opportunity. Clayton played in Saville who nearly broke through as the game was ebbing and flowing as Charlton came back with Morgan unleashing a fierce shot from outside the box at the South Stand goal but Pears got down and parried it clear.

That Pears save meant that Boro hearts were momentarily removed from mouths with a few heavy looking legs in Red Shirts. Fletcher clumsily caught Morgan with two minutes of normal time remaining to collect Boro’s first yellow. Charlton took advantage of the resulting set piece with Pears punching clear but it came straight back at Boro and Pears this time had to save from Gallagher with a minute remaining. Boro were looking weary and Charlton now sensing that equaliser. Boro broke with Spence and Tavernier took the ball out wide to try and soak up some time. Four minutes was held up as Charlton now threw everything at Boro, Spence blocked then Howson tried to clear it and won a free kick to allow some more deep gulps of air.

Pears went long with the free kick which was cleared and came straight back at us. Clayton won then lost a midfield scrap with Tav cleaning up with things out on the pitch looking chaotic. Clayton went long to clear as Boro tried once again to hold the ball up. Saville then found himself grappled winning a free kick as Boro took their time with it. Tavernier then stupidly conceded a free kick for handling the ball and as Charlton looked to get up the pitch once more the whistle went to end the suffering and give all three points to Boro.

After such a brilliant start to the game it had ended with nails bitten to the quick. MOM for me was Djed Spence, to come into the side and perform like that was a fairy tale. Hayden Coulson was equal on the other side and was worthy of the award himself but for me Spence just edged it by the very finest of margins. He added much needed pace and zest on the right and in doing so provided both an outlet and kept his opposing number back. Coulson had done the same on the opposite side. The pair were both instrumental in keeping pressure off our defence whilst being a serious creative force.

There were some other good performances, notably from Clayton, Saville, Howson, Tavernier and Ayala. There were plenty of opportunities to score a few more goals and we should have had at least two more but three points are three points when you are scrapping for survival. Reality is that it was against a side that looked very poor in the first half and after that great start we failed to kill the game off as a contest as we should have done by half time but considering where we are perhaps we shouldn’t be too greedy plus we witnessed the birth of what looks like an enterprising pair of Wing Backs.

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 18-19 discussion page

Leeds 4 – 0 Boro

Pos. 1st (40pts) SATURDAY 30 NOVEMBER 2019 Pos. 20th (17pts)
Leeds 4-0 Boro
Bamford (3)
Klich (45+3,  73)
Helder Costa (67)
69%
16(10)
4
11
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
39%
7(1)
1
19

Boro battered back to the future

Redcar Red reports on Boro’s heavy defeat at Elland Road…

After the aquatic display on Wednesday night and a much-needed victory Boro took the relatively short trip down the A1 to Leeds in a non-Derby Derby. Unfortunately for Boro their list of wounded and walking wounded grew significantly this week with Randolph, Gestede, Friend, Shotton and Browne ruled out already and Dijksteel seemingly requiring a cartilage operation. There were also fears that McNair and Assombalonga may be added along with the suspended Johnson. The good news was that Saville had served his suspension and was back available and as much as that news would undoubtedly split Boro supporters views a two legged professional with experience is worth its weight in Gold for Woodgate right now albeit maybe not £7m worth of Gold.

Whites Manager Bielsa had a few concerns of his own as they hoped to leap frog West Brom this afternoon to go back to the top of the Championship. Tyler Roberts was definitely out for the Dirties but with Helder Costa his likely replacement it was hard to feel sympathy especially when contrasted with the squad resources Gibson has left Woodgate to work with. Eddie Nketiah was also likely to miss out as he was reportedly just short of match fitness after an abdominal injury along with ex Boro man Forshaw with an ongoing hip problem.

The Ref for this afternoon’s encounter was a certain Keith Stroud, he who sent off Ayala at home to Preston last year and effectively punctured our Play Off ambitions. I use the word “ambitions” creatively because with Pulis in charge it certainly wouldn’t have been ambitious had we made it but who knows what could have happened over three games.

It was a bright, sunny but freezing Saturday and that was the only ray of pre kick off sunshine for Woodgate as news that Coulson had been added to the injury or at least missing list. Bola resumed the role for which he was PowerPointed for at LB and looking like we were perhaps going to go with a back four with Patrick Reading included on the bench. Saville returned from his enforced absence while McNair and Assombalonga were both fit enough to start although many of us had a degree of scepticism regarding just how fit they really were. Leeds had brought in Costa as suspected with Eddie Nketiah making their bench.

Boro actually lined up with three at the back with McNair on the right alongside Ayala and Fry with Howson and Bola as wing backs. Ayling tested the Boro defence advancing from RB and unleashed a shot that went past Pears going wide as an early warning in the opening seconds. Leeds then went down the left with Harrison playing in Bamford, his effort palmed away by Pears and then despite Bola’s attempt to clear it went straight to a white shirt and a cut back cross ended with a horizontal Paddy diving low and as we know he doesn’t miss with those chances. Oh, the irony of Harrison skinning Howson and setting up Bamford to put Leeds one up. Leeds had started at 100mph and looked to continue where they had left off after the restart. A Bola backwards pass played into the path of Bamford who unleashed a volley at Aynsley Pears. Less than five minutes had gone and Bola had already displayed those awareness and positional issues from earlier in the season.

Another left footed Ayling shot nearly put Leeds two up with white shirts everywhere and anywhere, moving with freedom and energetic passing with high tempo. Boro looked shell shocked and devoid of confidence, belief, formation, shape and tactics. Ayala tried to play a ball out and had to concede possession as there was nobody in a Red Shirt moving, running or creating openings for him. Just ten minutes gone and Boro had looked totally out of their depth. Kalvin Phillips was pulling strings for Leeds with nothing in reply. Saville started the first Boro assault on twelve minutes with Britt for support and then Lewis Wing doing what he has done all season now and ending the sortie by forlornly blasted it well wide of the target.

On fifteen minutes Boro won a Free Kick which was an opportunity to catch breath and maybe clear heads but in all likelihood we were out of this as a competition already, had it been in a Boxing ring the Ref would have stopped it such was the humiliating pummelling we were receiving with two of our cast offs the architects of our downfall. It was like a group of robed Hari Krishna bell ringers against a well drilled division of German Stormtroopers backed up with Panzers. This was reminiscent of the Murdoch and Maddren eras.

Twenty minutes had gone and Paddy blatantly handled to get past Pears and it seemed obvious to everyone in the LS11 Post Code but not to Keith Stroud. Three minutes later and the Ref did actually book Bamford, whether he saw anything or he had a message in his ear piece is questionable as it seemed a very long delay but my confirmation bias against the Official had made my mind up already. Another big decision happened immediately afterwards when Phillips then wiped out Dael Fry in what looked like a clear straight red but Stroud only showed him a yellow. These bookings showed the intent that Leeds had started with but with twenty-five minutes now gone was there feint hope that maybe Boro could see some cracks developing in the Leeds make up?

Paddy McNair was next to enter the Refs book for a challenge on twenty-eight minutes. Boro were starting to get back into the game but Leeds looked ruthless every time they went forward. Fry drove forward from defence with Bamford in close attention and was felled by Costa for a pressure relieving free kick to Boro. Tavernier launched it into the Leeds box but was dealt with by Ayling and Harrison broke for Leeds and the Boro were back defending just as they had been all game. The initial frantic intensity may have eased off but only marginally as Leeds still dominated possession. Yet another Leeds break was started by Fletcher limply losing the ball and somehow Boro managed to keep the Leeds attack out with some very desperate defending. Boro broke out, counter attacked but McNair ended any real threat with a ball that was more suitable for the sport with the egg-shaped ball.

With five minutes remaining of the first half Bamford was rolling around claiming that Ayala had elbowed him in the face in a pantomime act that has seemingly become part of his game plan since he arrived at Elland Road. No doubt one day he will be elbowed and with full force if he keeps this behaviour going as the travelling army made their opinions known about what they thought of him. That early Leeds swagger and domination was becoming a bit ugly but Boro were too busy orchestrating their own downfall, McNair and Wing had been wasteful, Bola looked a liability and Fletcher was back to being lightweight. Bamford again got in behind Bola and was unlucky not to add a second for Leeds and it again went out for a corner which was momentarily cleared and just as the danger was building once more it was Fletcher who tackled to win back possession but his ball to Bola failed to remotely make the intended target.

A Boro attack late on in the half was wasted as Tav lost possession which was an ongoing feature of the game for the visitors, too lightweight and soft with little grit and no endeavour. A minute later Tav lost out to Jack Harrison who he then tugged back to concede a free kick on the edge of the Leeds box in injury time. Bamford broke quickly after the restart collecting the long ball Free Kick cleverly squaring it to Klich and with Ayala closing down it deflected off him into the back of Pears’s net. It was no more than Leeds had deserved as they had simply destroyed us in the early stages and whenever we started to make some inroads, we were wasteful and lacked bravery, pulling out of tackles and just far too soft and consequently lacking belief and impetus.

No changes at Half time mainly because Leeds were winning with ease and Woodgate’s cupboard was bare. Two nil down and Boro looked to be in damage limitation mode with scant resources to offer any kind of threat as Steve Gibson’s new vision was exposed on the Elland Road turf with its new transition pants around its ankles.

A half volley from Harrison was destined to make it three after a cross wasn’t cut out but Pears was equal to it fortunately. A second later a side footed shot from Klich just went over the Boro Crossbar and so the second half had started the way the first half had finished with Leeds dominant, keeping possession and Boro just making up the numbers. In the fifty first minute we managed to get the ball up the pitch and we actually won a corner, our first corner, imagine that, so in it came but it was volleyed into somewhere near Wakefield by Dani Ayala, sighs all round, Typical Boro! The Home fans chorused an enquiry as to what exactly was that effort supposed to be.

Wing then gifted Hernandez feeding Bamford which McNair managed to cut out, more powder puff football from Boro cheaply giving away possession yet again. The Elland Road atmosphere had now entered Festival levels of celebrations as the Home fans sensed that this Boro side were a spent force with absolutely nothing to offer. The hope amongst the travelling army was for either a miracle or at best avoiding a cricket score as Bamford broke through (stop me if you’ve read that before in this report) after a Dallas ball had found him but McNair once again saved Boro blushes.

It was humiliating to watch so what it must have felt like to play in or observe from the bench was anybody’s guess and yet there were still thirty-five minutes left to play out. It could only get worse, resembling the Alamo, men against boys, attack v. defence, organised structure v. clueless chaos. A Boro Free Kick won by Fletcher needed a top class delivery and with it an aggressive Boro assault. McNair sent it in and Ayala went up but Ayling cleared which was the story of the afternoon. Leeds were now lining up to take pot shots, Dallas, Bamford, Hernandez all teasing, toying and playing with what comprised of a shabby, bedraggled patched up defensive back line. Our defence was reminiscent of those old black and white news reels from WWI with troops trudging wearily through muddy roads, bandaged, exhausted, many with bandaged heads, crutches and limbless comrades in carts.

How it was still two nil was only down to profligate finishing by Leeds and an almost indifferent attitude towards putting Boro to the sword not unlike a cat toying with a mouse just before the kill comes. Lewis Wing cheaply lost possession again and an almost comedic attack from Leeds saw Costa dance through a series of confused feeble challenges which would have been an insult to biscuit selling Brownies to blast the ball past Pears to make it three nil. Apologies to any offended Brownies reading this, I know you are made of stronger stuff.

In response Woodgate brought Ben Liddle on for a debut for no other reason than to let him get some game time. It would have been beyond ridiculous to have expected the lad to make any difference but he had absolutely nothing to lose. A Free Kick on the corner of the Leeds 18 yard box was accompanied by the Leeds fans asking Woody to give them a wave. The Free Kick was delivered in low by Tav for Casillas to simply and too easily drop onto it and smother the “threat”. That may have counted as our first attempt on target so it wasn’t all bad and at least Mrs Casillas won’t have to wash his kit for next week.

Meantime Leeds had cleared it with Cooper back up the Boro end and in so doing, won a corner that was taken quickly and after a couple of unmarked one two’s, bang! It was four nil as Klich had laid out his beach towel, applied the sun lotion, placed the Ray Bans delicately on the end of his nose and teased the top far hand corner of the Boro net with a brilliant curved screamer from the edge of the Boro box. Howson took his frustrations out in a tackle to earn a yellow card but meanwhile Britt had seen enough and was sat Juninho style on the Leeds turf knowing his race was run and hobbled off for Tyrone O’Neil to make another Boro debut, from Darlo to Elland Road in just a few weeks.

Bamford then made way, his job truly and consummately done with just over ten minutes remaining for Nketiah to commence his injury comeback in the easiest of situations. The Leeds fans gave him a great ovation whilst the Travelling Army were more Pulisesque in their displeasure clearly siding with the spin of the time. Pears had to pull off a great save to limit the damage to a corner which ended with an Alioski (who had just come on for Costa) shot cleared by newbie Striker O’Neil back defending. Bielsa then made another Substitution which by now I had lost interest in who came on and who went off as the humiliation had now reached a level of total indifference not unlike that of our Chairman some time ago.

Five minutes remaining and it was difficult to watch, painful to bear and this time a George Saville shot earned three points or at least would have done had it been different shaped posts. Klich nearly added a fifth but for McNair getting in another desperate challenge. We, or at least some of us knew it was going to happen at some stage, the summer penny pinching with a cheap Coaching set up couldn’t compete at this level.

Woodgate brought on Walker for Fletcher with four minutes left just to run the clock down and I suspect a deliberate point aimed at his “supportive” Chairman and an anticipation of “Keyboard warrior” feedback. Finally, the purgatory was ended and the ritual stripping and exposure of Budget Boro was complete. Outclassed in every single department with very little to gain comfort or succour from. “It is what it is” as Mogga would have no doubt said as Steve Gibson now clearly marches us back from whence we came. There was no MOM, it was just a case of some were not as bad as others. There did however seem to be extra security around the Boro team bus in the car park I can only presume it was to ensure that Woodgate was not still under it.

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 16-17 discussion page

 

Boro 1 – 0 Barnsley

Pos. 20th (17 pts) WEDNESDAY 28 NOVEMBER 2019 Pos. 24th (9 pts)
Boro 1-0 Barnsley
Fletcher (54) 37%
12(5)
8
9
POSSESSION
SHOTS (on target)
CORNERS
FOULS
63%
14(2)
3
13

Rain soaked pain relief

Redcar Red reports on a long-awaited victory at the Riverside…

After the highs and lows on Sunday bottom side Barnsley visit the Riverside for a traditional bleak cold mid-week spectacle played out in front of a sparse crowd. Who can forget these games against the Blackpool’s or Rotherham’s of yore when official attendances seemingly had little relation to the swathes of red plastic on display. The most memorable aspect of recent duals between these two was the demise of Mogga who despite being a true Tee Tee Teessider of the very highest calibre was subjected to levels of abuse that to this day are still fresh in the memories of many for all the wrong reasons.

So here we are again, Boro struggling to keep their heads above water and with another Teesside ex Centre Back at the helm although with nowhere remotely near the revered cult status that Mogga had deservedly banked. As bad as things were back then not many of us would have foreseen that we would have come full circle so quickly. New Barnsley Manager Gerhard Struber would have seen this game as a possible win although the opening half hour of Boro’s game on Sunday may invoke a more cautious approach. For Woodgate a win is all that matters, with an 11% win rate in his new career another draw or perish the thought a defeat would just about finish things for him although his Chairman may see it from a different perspective.

Boro would be without Johnson and Saville after their last-ditch despairing game saving tackles in the middle of nowhere enforced their absence tonight. The Home side would literally pick itself although what shape they would take was subject to plenty of discussion especially after the Sunday second half fall from grace. Barnsley who were without a win since the opening day, would be without their promising young Finnish defender Aapo Halme after he went off with a head injury in Saturday’s 3-2 defeat at Blackburn.

Results last night could have been worse but Luton’s win saw Boro back in the bottom three, the pressure was well and truly on before Kick Off. No Randolph so Pears came back in between the sticks and there were not one but two Hayden’s involved, Coulson in for the suspended Johnson and Hackney on the bench which could prove useful should things go wrong in the miserable deluge the game was going to be played under. A sparse looking Riverside reminiscent of those floundering pre Karanka days welcomed the bottom feeders onto the pitch.

Oliver Langford’s whistle started the evening with Britt chasing down on Radlinger’s goal as Boro started the match at full tilt. Despite Boro’s energetic start Barnsley looked determined to play the ball around rather than hoof it upfield which considering the conditions was a bold move from Gerhard Struber’s men. Mowatt picked up on a moment of hesitancy from Wing which led to a throw in and a cross which saw a fierce shot on Pears goal which was blocked by Howson and earned the visitors the first corner of the evening.

Boro were being cut open down the right and this time an attack ended with chaos in the Boro box with Wing clearing the danger and Howson then setting up Assombalonga sprinting forward with Ben Williams sliding in to keep the scores level on the Barnsley goal line. The conditions obviously playing its part in the frenetic opening pace. Wing then slipped allowing Barnsley to break with Cavare and this time it was Tav doing enough to put the attacker off. In those last two minutes there could easily have been three or four goals and just ten minutes of the match had gone! The conditions were less than perfect with puddles everywhere, players slipping and sliding and the potential for the ball to be unintentionally held up so anything could happen.

A Paddy McNair corner saw the ball splash into the Barnsley box with water spinning off it as it rotated through the air illustrating how ridiculous the weather was. A few minutes later Dijksteel pulled up which may have been a continuation from Sunday when he had a period in the second half against Hull and looked to be struggling. The prognosis didn’t look good and surprisingly Bola was being warmed up as his replacement. For me I would have gone with Wood and pushed Howson back to his usual Right Wing Back role. We just hoped it wasn’t going to be another bizarre substitution from the Boro Coaching team that would bite us later on.

The game after a busy start had now descended into a clumsy affair as Barnsley came close with an effort from Thomas after Brown had left Bola in his wake Boro needing Howson to once again slide in to the rescue with twenty five minutes gone. If anything at this stage of the game Barnsley now looked to be adapting to the conditions better than Boro who may have been unsettled after Dijksteel’s injury and with Bola looking nervy playing on the right. A minute later it was Bahre’s turn to test Pears as Boro knew tonight was going to be a close contest.

A Coulson break saw Boro get into some positive action at the opposite end but the move spluttered out as Barnsley responded and came straight back and with it entering into some early Pantomime theatrics with Woodrow going down claiming he was fouled by Coulson and then rolled around like he was poleaxed. Brown then went down seconds later looking for delayed sympathy from Oliver Langford as Ayala did seem to actually make contact with his arm.

Bola picked Britt out with a great curved ball and as he was closing in on his target Britt’s control let him down and Radlinger came sliding out spread-eagled to tackle clearing the danger for the Tykes. It was Coulson again who got down the left flank forcing Cavare into giving away a corner which swung in from McNair forcing Keeper Radlinger to come out and totally misjudge the flight; it went out for another Boro corner from the opposite side but this time it going out aimlessly for a Barnsley goal kick.

Jonny Howson went into Langford’s book after letting Woodrow feel the effects of a real challenge just before half time. Meanwhile the rain just kept lashing down on a totally saturated playing surface. Woodrow was set up by Mowatt in a swashbuckling move but thankfully his effort from the edge of the box went flying over Pear’s goal. The half ended 0-0 with the weather undoubtedly having a huge impact on the nights play but after a sprightly start it was Barnsley who had adapted the better and Struber who will have been much the happier Manager during the break with the Tykes enjoying the freedom of the flanks. To make matters worse Britt looked to be suspiciously limping off the pitch.

A big second half coming up for both Managers, meanwhile the half time concourse conclusion was that the match had so far looked like a low to middling League One affair, hopefully it won’t be as prophetic as it was realistic from a Boro perspective. As the game had progressed Boro looked like a side in trouble with the youngsters from Barnsley growing into this game.

Both sides came out with the same personnel who had finished the first 45 as Boro tried an early attack once again but it was embarrassingly overhit. Cavare then tried to get past Coulson to get a cross in but Coulson stuck to his task albeit conceding a corner. Cavare missed an opportunity from the corner but it was Jacob Brown who struck Pear’s crossbar after the ball was cut back to him on the edge of the Boro box, his curved shot had left everyone in a Red shirt rooted.

A defensive header from Wing needed Ayala to clear as Barnsley came again at the home side but immediately Boro broke fortuitously thanks to a Terrier like Tav nicking the ball on the touchline, out muscling Cavare defending and cut the ball across finding Fletcher bursting forward into the Barnsley box, rounding the keeper and a slipping defender before sliding the ball into the open net from an ever acute angle that was starting to make the North Stand nervous. Fifty four minutes gone and Boro were one nil up!

Barnsley had to commit themselves and Boro now looked to be relieved momentarily at least playing with more purpose as another Boro attempt sailed over Radlinger’s crossbar. Fletcher’s goal seemed to take an eternity when he received Tav’s pass but in fairness the lad kept calm and his composure proved vital. Barnsley meanwhile had Ayala to curse for blocking a Woodrow effort and responding with Tav bursting down the middle but with no support he ran out of options.

Lewis Wing flew into a tackle and whilst it wasn’t as clear cut as Johnson’s on Sunday, we were relieved when it was only a Yellow flashed at him by Langford. A Coulson challenge on Dimitri Cavare saw another well-acted response winning a free kick from which Pears had to punch clear with Woodrow then connecting but slicing his effort much to our relief. Barnsley brought Bahre off for McGeehan in an effort to get themselves back into the game with twenty minutes remaining.

An Ayala clearance set up Britt who missed his opportunity as did Fletcher who couldn’t meet the follow up from Britt as Barnsley replied by breaking away towards the South Stand requiring Pears to be alert and collect. Worryingly Pears then rolled the ball out to allow treatment for Paddy McNair who was sat on the pitch looking disconsolate. Meanwhile Struber brought on Striker Schmidt for Thomas as Paddy McNair unconvincingly soldiered on. Pears then spilled a shot to concede a corner for the Tykes but a Tav clearance found Coulson whose effort went wide of Radlinger but the Keeper somehow got something on it keeping Barnsley’s hopes alive and Boro frustrated. The incoming corner went out immediately for another Wing taken corner which he hit short but the move ended up offside. Clayton then came on for McNair to a mixed reception but not as “mixed” as when the claimed attendance was announced a minute later. They may as well have said 75,000 as the claimed 18,000 judging by the hoots of derision and laughter.

Radlinger had to be alert once again as Tav advanced on him advancing from the right hand side with only ten minutes remaining. As the resultant corner was cleared a free kick was then awarded to Barnsley which was blocked by Bola from being taken quickly and received Boro’s third yellow of the night. The clock ticked down to five minutes remaining and for Boro it was all about hanging on while Barnsley had to try and push up for a desperate equaliser. Another Woodrow attempt was thwarted this time by Coulson as Tav was down needing treatment. The hope was that it was cramp or “professional” rather than a serious injury.

All eyes were now on the fourth official to see how much longer Boro had to hang on for to claim those precious and all too rare three points. Four minutes came up as Mowatt had just wasted a spell of Barnsley possession. Howson meanwhile tried to delay proceedings by hanging onto the ball but the Tykes regained it and Chaplin got a cross in as Tav half cleared and then Fry finally clearing the danger up to Fletcher who looked to be fouled, then Britt put it out wide for Tav who drew a challenge and in doing so ran down the clock. Britt rounded Radlinger only to see Williams again thwart him for a corner which was played short and went straight out of play again for a goal kick as the final whistle went and the night ending with a home win and three precious points for Boro.

The victory was anything but convincing but it was a ground out win which was by far the more important result. Playing well against Luton or for a half against Brentford or Hull is fine but its points that will keep Boro up and tonight it was all three and moving up to 20th. A better second half from Boro but by no means convincing, it does leave the table looking easier for the rest of the week. In our present predicament the end justifies the means and despite the visitors having the bulk of the possession we came away with three points. There were a few decent functional performances namely, Ayala, Fry and Britt but it was Tav who caught my eye and it was his determination not to give up that created Fletchers goal so he gets my MOM.

If you wish to leave a comment about Redcar Red’s match report please return to the Week 16-17 discussion page