Please log in or register. Registered visitors get fewer ads.
Reading 0-4 Ipswich Town - Match Report
Saturday, 28th Apr 2018 17:31

Four goals in the final 19 minutes - including two in stoppage time - saw Town to an emphatic 4-0 victory in their final away game of the season at Reading. Martyn Waghorn put the Blues ahead on 71 and Jordan Spence made it 2-0 eight minutes later, before sub Freddie Sears, ending his 38-game goal drought, and Callum Connolly added the third and fourth in injury time.

Luke Woolfenden and Ben Folami were handed their full Championship debuts and Adam Webster returned to the side after his hamstring injury, while Cole Skuse, Luke Hyam and Cameron Carter-Vickers missed out.

Skuse was considered a doubt going into the game due to illness, along with Hyam, who had suffered a knock. It’s understood Carter-Vickers picked up an injury in training on Friday.

Woolfenden was recalled from his loan spell at Bromley on Friday with his only previous Town appearances one start and one sub appearance in the Carabao Cup.

The 19-year-old started on the right of a back three with Webster and stand-in skipper Jonas Knudsen, with Spence at right wing-back and Myles Kenlock on the left.

Connolly and Tristan Nydam formed a midfield duo with 18-year-old Folami, who had made three previous sub appearances in the Championship, and Mustapha Carayol either side of Waghorn up front, the pair swapping flanks on a number of occasions during the first half. Ben Morris, Barry Cotter and Shane McLoughlin were among the subs.

For the Royals, who went into the game needing a point to confirm Championship survival, striker Yann Kermorgant replaced midfielder Joey van den Berg, whilst Omar Richards took over from the suspended Tyler Blackett at left-back.

Carayol struck the first shot of the game for Town, in their Magical Vegas-sponsored red away kit, in the second minute, the Gambian international using his pace to take him into the left of the area before hitting a strike across Vito Mannone which the Reading keeper palmed away.

Despite the early stages of the game being evenly balanced in terms of possession, the Blues were the ones creating the few opportunities.

On 14 Carayol burst into the right of the box following good work from Folami and cut across but the ball was cleared by Royals skipper Chris Gunter ahead of Waghorn and fell to a Reading player.

In the 18th minute Kenlock crossed from the left and Carayol, who had created the danger by turning his man on halfway when receiving a Webster pass, hit a well-timed effort which looked on its way into the net until it struck Folami.

Reading had their first serious chance of the match two minutes later, Sone Aluko’s corner eventually falling to Yann Kermorgant in a dangerous position inside the box but the Frenchman’s effort was deflected wide. On 22 Knudsen diverted Jon Dadi Bodvarsson’s effort from distance wide.

In the 24th minute after good work from Kenlock and Folami on the left Carayol, Town’s main attacking threat, unleashed a fearsome 30-yard strike which Mannone did very well to paw away from goal away to his left.

Despite Town having looked the more likely scorers up to that point, Reading should have gone ahead in the 29th minute.

Mo Barrow was sent away on the left by Kermorgant and cut the ball across for Bodvarsson, who came close to joining the Blues on loan last summer, but the Icelandic international somehow failed to get a touch on the edge of the six-yard box and the danger was cleared.

Town’s 14-goal top scorer Waghorn struck his first effort of the afternoon in the 35th minute, Carayol having caught a ponderous Reading defender in possession on the right of the box before rolling the ball behind him into the striker’s path. Mannone saved Waghorn’s strike from a tight angle.

The Blues, playing rather more football than has often been the case this season, continued to carve out more of the game’s chances. On 41 Spence’s cross from the right was unconvincingly palmed away by Mannone and fell to Folami beyond the far post but the Australian’s shot was blocked.


The Royals quickly broke to the other end and Aluko fed Barrow, who shot over. Soon after, the former Rangers and Hull striker curled a shot into Bartosz Bialkowski’s arms from the edge of the area.

Two minutes before the break the Blues lost their first-half danger man Carayol to what looked to be a pulled muscle, the former Boro and Forest man frustratedly making his way to the touchline as he was replaced by Freddie Sears.

Just before half-time, Kermorgant flicked a stooping header towards goal but was unable to trouble Bialkowski.

The Blues will have gone off pleased with their first-half display having created more of the game’s chances - although Bodvarsson spurned the only really clear-cut opportunity for Reading - and having been much better on the ball than has generally been the case.

However, Carayol’s loss just before the break was a blow with the January signing again putting in a dangerous display before succumbing to injury, the story of his time at Town.

Three minutes after the restart, with rain starting to fall heavily, Reading switched Richards for Tommy Elphick, back after a knee injury.

Two minutes later, one-time Blues trialist John Swift struck the second half’s first shot, Knudsen deflecting it behind.

From the flag-kick the home side went close, Bialkowski reacting superbly to toe the ball away from the line after Bodvarsson had flicked on Aluko’s corner at the near post after getting in front of Knudsen.

On 57 Aluko scuffed a low effort through to Bialkowski from the right of the box with the Royals having started the second half on top.

But a minute later the Blues worked the ball forward well and eventually Sears, without a goal in 38 games, scraped a shot through to Mannone from the edge of the box.

Reading worked themselves an opportunity in the 62nd minute, but Barrow shot over at Bialkowski’s right post having been found by Kermorgant’s chipped pass.

The Royals continued to dominate and might have gone in front in the 67th minute but Aluko scuffed badly when found in space on the right of the box, his shot bouncing harmlessly past the post.

Two minutes later, the home side went close again following a quick counter-attack after a Town corner. Bodvarsson crossed from the right to Swift, whose shot was brilliantly tipped over by Bialkowski.

Almost immediately Town went up the other end and scored their first. After Sears had done well done the right, the ball fell to Spence on the edge of the box and the wing-back played an inch-perfect pass into the path of Waghorn, who turned and hit home his 15th goal of the season from just outside the six-yard box.

As the Blues celebrated in front of their 1,233 travelling fans, Reading’s defenders appealed for offside and they may well have had a case.

Town swapped Nydam, who looks more comfortable at Championship level with every game, for Stephen Gleeson on 77 and two minutes later the Blues doubled their lead.

Folami sent Waghorn away on the right with a cross-field pass but the earlier scorer’s shot was blocked.

However, Town quickly got the ball back and after a quick interchange of passes Waghorn turned it into the path of Spence, who broke into the area on the right, feinted to cut back to the numerous team-mates waiting eagerly in the area but opted to shoot low through the legs of Mannone at the near post and into the net to claim his fourth goal of the season.

Reading switched Chris Martin for Bodvarsson and Sam Smith for Kermorgant as they went chasing goals in the final 10 minutes with results elsewhere meaning their Championship status remains in jeopardy ahead of their final week game at Cardiff.

The Royals continued to push but without too much intensity and with the Blues looking comfortable for the most part.

Folami, who like Woolfenden will have been pleased with his contribution in his first league start for the Blues, was replaced by Cotter for the final couple of minutes.

Knudsen, who again impressed at the heart of the backline, blocked a Liam Moore shot, then Sears’s long wait for a goal ended.

The striker, whose last goal came against Newcastle on April 17th last year, 38 matches previously, chased down Webster's clearance following a Reading corner.

Gunter headed poorly back towards Mannone and the Town sub blocked the on-rushing keeper’s clearance. The ball looped into the air and Sears nodded into the net from a couple of inches before celebrating in front of the Town fans along with all his team-mates, including keeper Bartosz Bialkowski, who ran the length of the pitch to join in.

Almost immediately, the Blues made it 4-0 and added to Reading’s relegation concerns with their goal difference now worse than Barnsley’s, one of the other sides they’ll be battling for a Championship place next week. Waghorn brought the ball into the area before feeding Connolly to his right and the on-loan Everton man stroked in his fourth of the season. The assist was Waghorn's 10th of the season in addition to his 15 goals.

The final whistle was greeted by loud boos from the home fans, many of whom had already left despite a post-match parade by their team, before the Blues ran over to show their appreciation to their supporters and Knudsen again took on fist-pump duties.

The victory was thoroughly deserved by a Blues side which showed the resolute defending of the McCarthy era but also a bit more guile going forward and on the ball, even if the margin flattered them and was in large part down to Reading’s late capitulation.

Town last won by four goals in February 2013 when they beat Middlesbrough 4-0 at home and most recently away when they defeated Doncaster 6-0 at the Keepmoat Stadium in February 2011.

They scored four times away on one previous occasion this season, at Millwall in the 4-3 win at the Den in August, and twice at home in 5-2 and 4-2 victories over Sunderland and Nottingham Forest respectively.

The Blues' away record from their 23 games on the road this season reads: won eight, drawn three, lost 12.

Today's win, Town's first at Reading since 2009 following six defeats on the trot, was the first under caretaker-boss Bryan Klug, who had been unlucky not to take something from the game at Forest a fortnight ago.

The temporary management team will hope to end the campaign on a winning note when Middlesbrough visit Portman Road next Sunday.

The Blues go into that match 13th in the table, one place and one point behind Norwich City, who are at Sheffield Wednesday on the final day, but with a better goal difference.

Reading: Mannone, Gunter (c), Richards (Elphick 48), Moore, Ilori, Swift, Kelly, Aluko, Barrow, Kermorgant (Smith 82), Bodvarsson (Martin 80). Unused: Jaakkola, Van den Berg, Rinomhota, Edwards.

Town: Bialkowski, Spence, Webster, Knudsen (c), Woolfenden, Connolly, Nydam (Gleeson 77), Kenlock, Carayol (Sears 44), Waghorn, Folami (Cotter 88). Unused: Celina, M Crowe, Morris, Cotter, McLoughlin. Referee: Keith Stroud (Hampshire). Att: 17,683 (Town: 1,233).


Photos: Pagepix



Please report offensive, libellous or inappropriate posts by using the links provided.



massivemole added 19:55 - Apr 28
Where's silly billy backstabber . #concerned
0

warktheline added 20:32 - Apr 28
Oh well that's that 'monkey' of the back! Town win without McCarthy! Shame the 'usual suspects' ( barring winding changing swn ) haven't 'doffed their caps' , never mind, them having 'a night off' isn't such a bad thing!!!!!
COYB!
2

Carberry added 20:44 - Apr 28
I remember going to Reading, was it three seasons ago? When McCarthy set out to play expansive football and we got battered and never saw those tactics again. How fitting Bryan Klug should go to the Madejski and show him how it should be done.
15

bugledog123 added 21:09 - Apr 28
Result! Well done boys. COYB!
7

positivity added 21:27 - Apr 28
youngest league starting side for almost 8 years, great effort lads!
13

Guthrum added 22:08 - Apr 28
What a cracking result. OK, we're not going to face many teams as fragile as Reading today, but we had to - and did - take advantage of that, having been very solid for the preceding 70 minutes.
12

BraveDave added 22:40 - Apr 28
What a great feeling. Especially pleased for Freddie - could this be the moment he returns to the player we know he can be. Optimistic for next season - suspect we might lose 5-4 one week, then win 6-3 the next. Interesting times ahead!
12

shakytown added 22:54 - Apr 28
No premier class Skusey or first on the sheet Chambo and we actually play well and win Hmmmnnnnn I wonder if this is the sign for the new season.
8

NITFC added 22:57 - Apr 28
Under MM we would not have lost 4-0 last week. That would never have happened when he was in charge

BUT.......we would never have won 4-0 away from home either.

Happy days
4

KiwiTractor added 23:29 - Apr 28
Get in!
5

Surco72 added 23:42 - Apr 28
Careful what you wish for ... I wished for more attacking line up with less defenders , with no Skuse , more youngsters being selected , a team set up to give it a go rather than try and stop the opposition at all costs . And guess what it wasn't bad was it .
Great result for all concerned , new era ahead for the blues
17

Minneapolis_ITFC added 02:29 - Apr 29
Strange occurrences at work, I do not recognize scores of this nature associated with this team - and then you realize the individual largely responsible is no longer in sight.

Can recall a year or two back a five goal loss at today's opposition, today we got some payback and then some. The difference between that occasion and now is epic. Not a score I was expecting but what were the players thinking ? Well done.
14

Steelmonkey added 06:52 - Apr 29
Well done you boys, superb result. Our last game against borough may be a stiffer challenge but some of the top six sides haven't looked that unbeatable at PR, a different emphasis on how we play is obviously making an impact albeit against a team in fighting for championship survival. It's good to see Webster back and the youngsters doing so well.
COYB's
10

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 07:11 - Apr 29
Firstly, great result! I'm not sure we need to get in many new additions for next season, although an out-and-out goal scorer is never to be sniffed at of course. But it seems as though the current bunch already have a great work ethic and togetherness - here we can at least acknowledge Mick's contribution - that a new manager can build on further, so perhaps we don't want to change the dynamic too much there. And the bright young players being introduced are very likely to get better, although this won't happen over night. I think that at the moment this team/squad will struggle a bit against the more experienced teams, but with a bit more bedding in they will be able to give them a game too. Boro' will be a bit of a litmus test, I suspect. In the longer run, I am optimistic we will continue to improve, not just jog along at the same level as we have been doing for too long now. I am not expecting instant success, but a brighter and more exciting future at least. Upwards and onwards. COYB!
13

Geddis78 added 08:59 - Apr 29
So nice to read all the positive comments without the usual sniping. Really hoping for a big 20,000+ crowd and a positive performance next Sunday to finish the season. COYB!
11

dirtydingusmagee added 09:24 - Apr 29
woooo woooooooo wooooooooooooooooo wooooooooooooooooo WELL DONE BOYS, WELL DONE TO MANAGEMENT TEAM. wiped the previous weeks slate clean, brilliant turnaround. Pleased Freddie got the monkey off his back, great day, shame Narridge won but wont let it spoil the day.
7

Cheshire_Blue added 09:37 - Apr 29
A good win but against a poor side battling relegation. This does not address the real problem. Is there anyone out there better than MM at managing a team on a shoestring budget and if there is why would he want to come to Ipswich with a section of supporters who show no respect?
Time will tell.
-11

Dissboyitfc added 09:46 - Apr 29
Cheshire_blue... let it go man! Under MM we played many sides battling relegation, never thrashed anyone 4-0, not ever! Cardiff would rather play a good team with nothing left to play for than a team fighting for survival in their last must win game, thats for sure!

I didnt get carried away when we lost 4-0 last week and i am not getting carried away now!

If there was ever a time when the supporters need to pull together, it is now!

What happened yesterday is what most supporters have been crying out for!
13

gunnerblue added 09:57 - Apr 29
For all of those who said "Be careful what you wish for"...... This is what we wished for.
5

dirtydingusmagee added 10:04 - Apr 29
Cheshire Blue, respect is earned, initially your idol MM ,had it, but he lost it with his attitude, stubborn ways ,arrogance, and latterly his,contempt for the fans. Had he remained at the club it would just have got worse. MOVE ON.
9

blueboy1981 added 12:50 - Apr 29
Cheshire Blue - you make it blatantly obvious that you are simply a McCarthy Fan - NOT an Ipswich Town FC fan.
3

ChrisFelix added 13:41 - Apr 29
In recent years I have left their ground wondering how we lost to them. I watched the 2 games on tv & felt that luck wasn't with town
Yesterday we got our revenge.
No way Mick would scored 4 goals to nil away from home or picked such a young team
I feel it's time for a few proper blokes to be on their way
4

H1960 added 14:36 - Apr 29
Well I have been carefully wishing for the last three years and it has finally come true! Here's to the future one and all, let's have lots more of what we had yesterday! COYB
4

Dog added 15:04 - Apr 29
Cheshire - you have to let it go. Yes he was good at managing on a shoestring but his time was run and his relationship with the fans was fractious to say the least.

Cracking result - that's all you have to say.

Now for a moan. Evans is a disgrace - one interview in 10 years and pretty much most of it was what i expected. No manager until the end of May - effing crazy. I can accept a low transfer budget but where does that leave us with attracting free agents - they will all have made plans by then. Does he not realise the transfer market finishes early??. This is not how you support a new manager.

People will not renew season tickets until they know who the manager is given his track record . That lack of revenue will also be unavailable to the manager.

Rant over. More of the same against Boro.
0

cat added 17:44 - Apr 29
Dog - “Evans is a disgrace” Mmmm surprised you ain't labelled him a “sex offender” (class that one pal) but that's a matter of opinion (Lol).
If you watched/listened to the interview last week he's choosing to wait until the season is finish to see if any other managers become available, coupled with the fact that some of the managers linked with us are at clubs with something still to play for.
Just in case your thinking I've had my head turned by the marvellous M.E interview, I've never actually had a problem with the guy (check history) for the following reasons 1/ club stability 2/ invests into the academy 3/ don't interfere with team affairs.

Maybe it's simply the case of you needing to “be a bit more ‘DOG” as they say (lol)

Btw - purchased an ST last week. £381 LN, sweet!!
Plenty in the tank, be seeing you 👌
4


You need to login in order to post your comments

Blogs 295 bloggers

Ipswich Town Polls

About Us Contact Us Terms & Conditions Privacy Cookies Advertising
© TWTD 1995-2024