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Ipswich Town 2-2 Rotherham United - Match Report
Saturday, 29th Oct 2016 17:21

David McGoldrick netted a brilliant low drive deep in injury time to grab Town a last-gasp 2-2 draw against bottom club Rotherham United at Portman Road. Freddie Sears had put the Blues in front in the third minute but man of the match Danny Ward equalised four minutes later, then put the visitors in front three minutes after the break. Town rarely looked like getting back on terms in a lacklustre second half until McGoldrick’s late strike.

McGoldrick, Teddy Bishop, Cole Skuse and Myles Kenlock all returned to what was an unusually attacking Town starting line-up.

McGoldrick, who was making his first start since the opening day of the season, formed a a front two with Sears, while Bishop came back into the middle of midfield with Skuse, who was back after missing out at Newcastle with a toe injury.

Kenlock was handed his first appearance of the season at left-back in place of Jonas Knudsen, who suffered a back injury at Newcastle.

Conor Grant dropped to the bench, alongside ex-Millers striker Leon Best, and there was no place in the 18 for Jonathan Douglas.

Rotherham included former Town keeper Lewis Price among their subs, along with their new signing, veteran Nigerian international striker Peter Odemwingie.

The Blues started brightly with Sears and Tom Lawrence, playing wide on the left, both having early crosses blocked.

And in only the third minute Town went in front. Lawrence appeared to rather scuff his freekick in from the right but Sears reacted quickly to the miscue and turned the ball past Millers’ keeper Lee Camp at the near post to claim his second goal in three games following his long goal drought.

But the Blues’ lead lasted only four minutes. Centre-half Adam Webster cleared Joe Newell’s corner from the right to 18-yard line, Jon Taylor beat Bishop in the air and headed it back into edge of the six-yard box, and Danny Ward turned home his seventh goal of the season from close range.

On 10 Town keeper Bialkowski came off his line quickly to punch away from Dexter Blackstock as the former Forest striker chased a header from halfway down the middle. Blackstock required treatment having collided with Bialkowski but was eventually OK to carry on.

Blues strike pair Sears and McGoldrick combined to create an opportunity on 21, the former West Ham man eventually cutting the ball back from the right but behind the Irish international. Kenlock ran in from deep on the left and smashed a shot against a defender.

Town were starting to get on top and for a spell the visitors found themselves pinned back in their half following a corner on the left won by Lawrence, with the Blues passing the ball around with what has recently been uncharacteristic confidence.

However, it was Rotherham who created the next serious chance, a loose ball falling to scorer Ward in the box and Webster doing well to block his shot.

McGoldrick threatened for the first time on 26, the striker heading over from Lawrence’s freekick on the right with the on-loan Leicester man starting to find his range with his set pieces.


On 32 Will Vaulks shot wide off a Town defender after a long throw from the right had been cleared to the edge of the box.

A minute later, Bishop, who had had a quiet half up to that point, skipped his way past a number of Rotherham players and rode a couple of tackles as he broke into the area from the left but scraped his shot wide.

In the 35th minute the visitors were forced to swap ex-Colchester man Greg Halford, who had picked up a knock, for Dominic Ball.

Kenlock, who was enjoying an impressive first half, wasn’t too far away from putting the Blues back in front on 36 when he forced Camp to scramble away his far post header from Grant Ward’s looping cross from the right.

McGoldrick and Sears interchanged again in the 38th minute on the Town left, the latter eventually cutting the ball into the area but a defender cleared before it reached his strike partner.

In injury time Berra was caught in the head by a Rotherham boot following a Town corner but referee Darren Bond waved away the Blues’ penalty appeals. The loose ball fell to Webster but his snapshot flew out for a throw on the far side.

The final whistle was greeted by scattered applause from the home support, who will have been pleased with an enterprising first-half display from their side.

Having claimed the early lead Town will have been disappointed to concede the equaliser almost immediately with set pieces Rotherham’s main threat throughout the period.

The Blues had kept the ball better than has often been the case recently and passed it around confidently in spells with Sears and McGoldrick combining well on a number of occasions.

However, aside from Kenlock’s header, Millers keeper Camp hadn’t been forced into making many saves with the visitors’ backline defending with greater solidity than has often been the case this season.

The second half got off to the worst possible start for Town with Rotherham taking the lead in only the 48th minute.

Webster and Berra got in one another’s way as Vaulks’s long throw came into the area from the right and Danny Ward turned a volley past Bialkowski, the striker’s eighth goal of the campaign.

A minute later, as Town looked to get back in the match, Grant Ward volleyed over from not far outside the area after a Lawrence corner had been cleared.

There was another scare for the Blues from a Rotherham long throw, this time from the left, in the 56th minute when Vaulks’s ball into the area avoided everyone until it reached Richard Wood beyond the far post but the Millers’ skipper shot wide.

At the other end, Grant Ward went well wide after Lawrence had brought the ball deep into the Rotherham half.

The goal had given the visitors confidence, however, and they were having most of the ball, while Vaulks’s long throws continued to cause problems.

McGoldrick rode a couple of tackles and shot over on 63 with the Blues still to really get going after the break.

Two minutes later, Ward crossed from the Town right, McGoldrick flicked on but Lawrence’s header was easy for Camp to claim.

Moments later, Town made two changes, Ward and Bishop making way for Leon Best and Jonny Williams with Sears moving to wide left and Lawrence to the right.

On 71 Williams crossed from the left towards Best but the ball was headed clear to McGoldrick, but the striker curled his shot well over.

With the Sir Bobby Robson Stand vocally complaining about Town’s style of football in no uncertain terms - “Mick McCarthy, your football is s–t” - Luke Varney took over from Kenlock, who will have been very happy with his display.

Rotherham looked to be seeing out four minutes of injury time until McGoldrick’s dramatic equaliser.

Webster crossed from the left, a defender headed the ball out to McGoldrick, who smashed a low drive through a crowd of players and past his old Forest team-mate Camp. The Rotherham players, who thought they had claimed their first away win of the season, collapsed to the floor.

There wasn’t time for any further action before referee Bond ended the game. Despite the late goal there were still boos on the final whistle and further frustrated chants aimed at manager McCarthy.

The Blues failed to capitalise on their early lead, giving away the first of two set-piece goals soon afterwards, and while they were on top and played well in spells in the first half, they created few chances.

Town struggled to get going in the second half after conceding Rotherham’s second goal so early on. They huffed and puffed but never created a clear-cut opportunity until McGoldrick - who looked out on his feet by that stage - hammered home his goal.

Despite the late equaliser, a home draw with the division’s bottom side - Rotherham had lost their last seven games, had lost all seven of their away games and were eight points from safety - is huge disappointment for Town and added to fans’ frustrations with manager McCarthy, as was evident from the chants from the terraces.

The point moves the Blues up to 15th in the table with a trip to Sheffield Wednesday, who lost 2-0 at Derby today, next week.

Town: Bialkowski, Chambers (c), Webster, Berra, Kenlock (Varney 84), Skuse, Lawrence, Bishop (Williams 66), G Ward (Best 66), Sears, McGoldrick. Unused: Gerken, Emmanuel, Bru, Grant.

Rotherham: Camp, Fisher (Odemwingie 80), Fry, Wood (c), Mattock, Taylor, Halford (Ball 35), Vaulks, Newell, D Ward, Blackstock. Unused: Price, Kelly, Forde, Forster-Caskey, Brown. Referee: Darren Bond (Lancashire). Attendance: 15,247 (Rotherham: 205).


Photo: TWTD



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GiveusaWave added 13:28 - Oct 30
Camblue

The ironic thing was it was us wasting the time!
2

midastouch added 13:39 - Oct 30
I think the last time TC was in charge for a game we scored 5! Mick was in hospital. The way we've been playing lately reminds me of casualty, total accident and emergency!
3

itfc94 added 16:00 - Oct 30
Reading Mick's comments summed it all up to me. Sheer stubbornness, arrogance and patronising towards the fans.

Yes, cannot fault that Mick finally played an attacking line up and to be fair was let down by some pretty shambles defending, but that does not steer away from the underlying issue that has been over us for probably a year now.

The standard and style of football is terrible. Mick is tactically inept where we neither can score goals by playing free flowing attractive football nor keep a steady clean sheet without relying on Bart to make some unbelievable saves.

Kenlock and Emmanuel play fantastic but will be dropped due to favouritism of players. Douglas and Skuse will never work, as neither are better than average championship players. Best is no replacement to Murphy and Sears has been brainwashed into playing a wide player!

Honestly, I think Mick has lost the dressing room. I don't doubt that there probably isn't a better manager to have to deal with lack of budget, but the club feels very stale and in need of a fresh change. Issue we face now is we are entering a relegation battle fast, so sacking Mick becomes more difficult as I don't think many could save us like he did.

A couple of wins and we could be back in the mix, but I don't see us better than mid table come May. I think my comments have come across more positive than I actually feel, and I'm not rushing to come watch until Mick has gone.
7

hancockingoal added 16:35 - Oct 30
We played a more attacking side yesterday but the fact is the players are not good enough! We are at least 4 / 5 players short of the quality needed to challenge for promotion. Bishop looked capable in the first half when the ball wasn't going over his head. What is Ward's role in the team? He is not a winger, nor a midfielder nor a striker? His hat-trick against Barnsley seems a long time ago! We scrapped into the playoffs 2 seasons ago by bullying teams and getting the odd goal wins. Since then teams know that they have to match us physically, they know that if they win the battle we don't have the quality to win the match! I was very much in the 'be careful what you wish for' camp, but now I believe that it is time for a change! I don't believe that there isn't a young hungry manager out there looking for an opportunity to prove himself?
6

Seasider added 17:39 - Oct 30
Agree with most on here today as usual,and the Mick apologists appear not to be posting anymore.
Even Pencil Pete,who thinks that the fans should not get on the players backs under any circumstances, is neutral on the McCarthy issue;and Swn98 admits its a shambles at present.
Mick had MADE AN IMPASSIONED PLEA FOR CONTINUED SUPPORT,at fans AGM;but also took the blame for present situation,and said quite correctly that it wasn't players fault.

Agree that he put out a more attacking line up yesterday;but feel that he is not capable of coaching attacking tactics successfully.

There was still quite a bit of hoof which usually landed on an opposition head.
There was more passing but this was mostly in our half with Rotherham just waiting for sideways Skues to make a forward pass.
A bit of attacking down the wings but crosses generally poor ie in goalkeepers gloves.
Have yet to encompass 'pass and move forward at pace',and on few occasions it came off without being blocked or pass going astray;still passed out to the wings when on edge of penalty box,instead of trying to penetrate defence that was bottom of the table.
Mick Mills suggested there should be discussion between players and manager through Captain,something he should know being former Captain of Ipswich and England which he doubted was happening.
Probably right as Mick has chosen players who don't' rock the boat'and are essentially 'Yes Men',and it would very difficult I imagine to change his mind anyway.

He is a Manager who considers he is doing a good job and will see out his contract;whilst at the same time only thinks its a very very small minority who disagree with him.
People who have a mindsets like this,traits that could be found in Trump,Adolf,Mussolini,and that North Korean bloke who likes cheese lol;generally surround themselves with sycophants;and those that disagree are usually disposed of,ie transferred in Micks case.

What happens now? From personal point of view,will continue to go as I have done for 55 years,enjoy the convivial company of fellow supporters in Legends;and hope things improve somehow.

That's all us regular fans can do unfortunately!
9

Seasider added 17:43 - Oct 30
hancock-seems that I have marked you up and down;so as agree with every word should just have been a plus
0

surgery added 18:18 - Oct 30
From the PR spin machine, wonder which fans favourite will be wheeled out tomorrow to inform us that the players know what they have to do to put things right? Don't think Barts been called up yet has he?
1

Cloddyseedbed added 18:21 - Oct 30
Just watched the 2nd half highlights as I had to go out at half time as my knee locked at 90 deg. Didn't seem to miss much as I expected but when I was told we salvaged a point out of a game we should have taken 3 I thought it was the gas and air mix making me go funny! Thanks to club stewards and paramedics in getting me out when they did!!!!
1

surgery added 18:28 - Oct 30
Cloddyseedbed.....sorry to hear that, sounds painful.But at least you know how Dougie felt last Saturday
1

wayway added 19:56 - Oct 30
If I hear this pathetic 'Be careful what you wish for' chant again I will scream or another post about how Boring Billy saved as from relegation four years ago as if he was the only person on the planet who could have done so. If we had anyone but the current dis interested absent owners he would have been out on his ear months ago. The final straw has come with him now treating the fans (the paying public) like clueless idiots.
This my way or no way theme smacks to me as a last desperate act. For God sake go and go now and lets have someone like Tim Sherwood but no, he wouldn't be any good, he is not a big enough name to be interviewed in front of the Marcus Evans logo. The PLC would probably go for Roy Hodgson!!!
4

Pencilpete added 20:35 - Oct 30
The whole point i have been trying to make is MM is part of the problem but he is not THE problem, Marcus Evans is part of the problem but he is not THE problem, the Players are part of the problem but are not THE problem and the fans (like it or not) are part of the problem but are not THE problem

THE problem is all the above collectively .

So we give Big Mick the elbow, then what ? I heard people on the Radio calling for Karl Robinson .. Really ? the same Karl Robinson who just got MK Dons Relegated and was sacked with them in a similar position to us in League 1 ??

What else is out there - Nigel Pearson ? spent alot of Money for not alot of reward at Derby, Tim Sherwood was a disaster at Villa. I don't think Paul Lambert would be a popular appointment for obvious reasons .....

Maybe we could appoint Sam Allardyce with his dodgy background in taking backhanders he would be the ideal front man for Marcus Evans next Olympic ticket venture !!

In all seriousness tho there isn't alot to choose from and if it was my call i'd give MM a month to improve things, if he didn't it gives any new man December and half a dozne games to have a look a things and plan for the January window (assuming the funds would still be available)
2

Elto added 20:49 - Oct 30
Guentchev

Why would we waste time when losing?
1

GiveusaWave added 20:57 - Oct 30
Exactly my point Elto. Glad you agree with me. Zero logical thinking on the part of MM.
1

warktheline added 21:55 - Oct 30
Some of us have long memories McCarthy, it wasn't so long ago that you arrogantly told US fans that we could FOXTROT OSCAR if we didn't like how things were, thus don't expect support when you can 'understand the fans frustration', in fact now the boot is on the other foot, so guess what, you FOXTROT OSCAR!!!!
5

Sospiri added 02:02 - Oct 31
Fans want their team to be; 1. Entertaining, and 2. Winning. At the moment, we are neither.
2

Sospiri added 05:29 - Oct 31
It was great to see a more attacking line-up out on saturday. But you can't expect them to play with confidence overnight. Mick needs to keep picking an attacking side and encourage them to play with ambition. It might take ten games, but it is still worth trying. The current strategy just isn't working.
1

Razor added 11:43 - Oct 31
One claear example of how the manager got it wrong is Williams---when he came on the whole dynamic of the game changed and we looked interested-----WHY DID HE NOT PLAY FROM THE START as he has intimated that he is now fully fit and ready for 90 mts?
1


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