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Ipswich Town 2-1 Accrington Stanley - Match Report
Saturday, 22nd Jan 2022 17:05

Wes Burns and Conor Chaplin were on target as Town came from a goal down to beat Accrington Stanley 2-1 at Portman Road to climb to within eight points of the play-offs. Ethan Hamilton gave the visitors the lead on 15 but Burns hit back from a sublime Bersant Celina pass eight minutes later and Chaplin smashed home the winner in the 65th minute.

Town’s game against Accrington Stanley is level at 1-1 at the break, Wes Burns having equalised Ethan Hamilton’s opener for the visitors.

Celina, Chaplin and Kane Vincent-Young returned to the starting line-up XI with James Norwood dropping to the bench and Sone Aluko and Matt Penney dropping out of the 18.

Vincent-Young was at left wing-back, having replaced Penney in the second half at Bolton last week, with Celina and Chaplin behind and just behind central striker Macauley Bonne to the left and right respectively.

Lee Evans suffered a knock in the warm-up and so was replaced in the centre of the midfield by Tom Carroll.

Vaclav Hladky was missing from the bench with Tomas Holy, a target of Bradford and a number of other clubs, the substitute keeper.

Accrington made one enforced change with Jay Rich-Baghuelou replacing Ross Sykes, who was sent off in last week’s 1-1 home draw with Sunderland.

After a minute’s applause in tribute to the fans, former players and staff who died in 2021, both teams took a knee.

Accrington won two early corners and started the brighter of the two teams but without threatening Christian Walton, who joined the Blues on a permanent basis on Wednesday.

On eight, Michael Nottingham became the first player to get his name in referee Geoff Eltringham’s book for a foul on Samy Morsy just inside the Town half as the Town skipper sought to break away into the Accrington half with plenty of space in front of him.

Two minutes later, Rich-Baghuelou looped a header well wide from a Sean McConville cross following a corner.

In the 11th minute, as Town began to get their passing going after a slow start, Celina played in Vincent-Young on the left and the former Colchester man crossed for Bonne, who was unable to get any power on his header.

The Blues were starting to take control, but in the 15th minute the visitors went ahead. Following a long throw on the right, Harry Pell teed up Ethan Hamilton on the edge of the box from where the midfielder hit a low shot beyond Walton to his left and into the corner of the net.

Town had looked as if they were getting going just prior to the goal but they returned to their earlier sloppier selves having gone behind, although while finding space to break in the Stanley half.

On 20, Chaplin won a free-kick 25 yards out which Celina curled only just past visitors’ keeper Toby Savin’s right post.

Stanley might have been two in front in the 22nd minute when Matt Butcher hit a shot from inside the area which took a deflection and looped up on to the bar, Walton appearing to have got a touch on it.


And within seconds of almost being 2-0 behind, the Blues levelled. As Town broke forward, Celina checked, then played a superb pass into the path of Wes Burns bursting forward on the right and the Welshman deftly lifted the ball past Savin as the keeper advanced to claim his sixth goal of the season.

After a couple of stoppages for Accrington players going to ground and protests to the referee, Hamilton in particular making a meal out of what appeared to be an accidental collision with Morsy, Town started to dominate.

Just before the half hour, Celina crossed from the left and Chaplin looped a header over the bar.

John O’Sullivan scraped a shot well wide from the edge of the area in the 31st minute as the game continued in a stop-start manner with Accrington doing their best to keep it that way.

Shortly after Pell had left Carroll in a heap in midfield and had been lucky to avoid a yellow card, Nottingham headed over for Stanley from a McConville cross following a corner on the left.

On 41, the Stanley defender did much the same again from another flag-kick on the left with the Blues fortunate not to have conceded from at least one of them.

Just before the whistle, Celina worked himself space before hitting a low 30-yard effort which Savin bundled away.

Town had started the game very slowly but had started to get on top when Accrington scored their goal.

The Blues were fortunate not to find themselves two behind in the spell following Stanley’s goal but then created a superb leveller, Celina playing an inch-perfect pass for Burns to finish clinically.

From there, Town had spells where they played the football which has started to become their trademark since manager McKenna took charge but only fleetingly and the visitors might well have gone in front via their two late set pieces. The half had developed into a niggly affair with Accrington players spending an awful lot of time on the turf.

Blues keeper Walton had to earn his corn soon after the break, McConville hitting a deflected shot which wrong-footed the keeper, who superbly checked himself and saved down to his left.

Town began to take control and on 50 Burns was found in space on the right but hit a first time shot well over. Two minutes later Carroll was booked for a late challenge on Stanley skipper McConville.

Bishop was fortunate not to join him after catching Walton in the midriff with a boot after the keeper had slid in at his feet. The keeper indicated that he felt it had been deliberate.

The have had become scruffy and scrappy with spells of head tennis in midfield and regular stoppages.

On 55 Burns was found on the right of the box by Vincent-Young as he took the ball across field but the Welshman again slammed the ball deep into the Sir Bobby Robson Stand.

Three minutes later, Pell finally found his way into referee Eltringham’s book to loud cheers from the Town support for clipping Chaplin’s heels.

In the 61st minute, Walton punched McConville’s free-kick from the left behind off a Stanley head.

Carroll forced Savin to palm away his 25-yard shot on 63 as the Blues started to gain control of the game.

And two minutes later, Town took the lead. Morsy was fouled on the right and took the free-kick himself quickly, playing the ball to Donacien, who took it into the area and cut back to Chaplin, who touched on to his right foot and smashed into the roof of the net.

The former Barnsley man gleefully celebrated his eighth goal of the season having returned to the side as a child ran from the Cobbold Stand to join in with the celebrations.

Having gone in front, Town began to look a much more confident outfit and on 70 Celina threaded a pass through for Bonne but Savin was quickly off his line to claim at the striker’s feet. At the other end, Hamilton hit a low shot which Walton saved down to his left.

New signing Bakinson was handed his debut in the 72nd minute for Carroll, who made his way off to warm applause from the home support. Accrington switched McConville for Rosaire Longelo.

Four minutes later, Town swapped Bonne for Norwood and Stanley David Morgan for pantomime villain of the day Pell. On 79 Lewis Mansell took over from O’Sullivan for the visitors.

Longelo quickly found his way into referee Eltringham’s book for jumping into Donacien after the Town defender had reached an aerial ball first.

The game was petering out with the substitutions having stalled any momentum Town had previously had.

On 88 George Edmundson was adjudged to have fouled Hamilton just outside the area and was booked, the centre-half vehemently protesting that he had won the ball, which looked to have been the case. Stanley’s earlier scorer took the free-kick himself and curled it only just past Walton’s right post.

A minute later, Celina was booked for protests of his own after the ball had been won from a dallying Hamilton midway inside the Accrington half and with the Kosovan in a good position to break towards goal.

Kayden Jackson replaced Chaplin as the game moved into four minutes of injury time in which neither side threatened to change the scoreline.

Town deserved the three points from a hard-fought game against a determined Accrington side.

The Blues weren’t always at their dominant best in a stop-start often niggly game but eventually made their superiority tell with Morsy’s quick thinking from the free-kick leading to Donacien’s cut-back and Chaplin’s typically sharp finish.

The win sees Town climb to ninth, now only eight points from sixth ahead of a visit to sixth-bottom AFC Wimbledon on Tuesday.

Town: Walton, Donacien, Woolfenden, Edmundson, Burns, Celina, Carroll (Bakinson 73), Morsy (c), Vincent-Young, Bonne (Norwood 76), Chaplin (Jackson 90). Unused: Holy, Burgess, Edwards, Pigott.

Accrington: Savin, Rich-Baghuelou, Hamilton, Butcher, O’Sullivan (Mansell 79), Pell (Morgan 76), Bishop, McConville (Longelo 73) (c), Nottingham, Clark, Amankwah. Unused: Isherwood, Rodgers, Procter, Nolan. Referee: Geoff Eltringham (County Durham). Att: 20,126 (Accrington: 131).


Photo: Matchday Images



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Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 18:01 - Jan 22
Deserved win in the end. After a fairly even first half, we pretty much controlled the second - in retrospect, and there were some flashes of really good play. K McK's organisation is beginning to shine through. COYB!
7

Trimleytractor added 18:04 - Jan 22
Always lovely to win against a team who choose to play the way Accrington do.
6

cat added 18:14 - Jan 22
Good win, good performance and good goals against a tough, resilient and well organised team. Net result is Good, Good, Good!
10

Michael101 added 18:16 - Jan 22
Aluko didn't play cos his partners just had a baby,congratulations.
3 pts. Today double w hammie, where's that red wine?
5

Len_Brennan added 18:21 - Jan 22
Not perfect by any stretch, but good signs there & I always appreciate a side that can come from behind to win against tough opposition.
We are very unlikely to catch any of the top 4, but we have 2 sides that we 'only' have to make up 8 points on, and I absolutely believe that we can do that on at least 1 of them.
6

EssexTractor added 18:35 - Jan 22
Walton a fine keeper but his kicking needs improvement ..tends to slice ball too much
Donacien .what an improved player, calm and strong tackler
Vincent Young his skill was demonstrated ..a run in The team is deserved ..needing to play the final ball better
Wolfenden and Edmundson - up against tall geeky players ( I use the word players loosely) did well to overall nullify them
Carrroll slender but a cultured left foot and makes passes that others do not - must be equivalent to Evans for that midfield slot
Morsy …loves to get “ involved” but sometimes seems to get the ball stuck between his ankles
Burns great goal but sadly had other chances which looked easier to take ..a shame because twice he was in empty space but fluffed his lines
Celina, maybe played best defence splitting pas of season for Burns goal, opponents don't like him .
Bonne , now finding goalscoring chances diminishing but the crowds gpfavourite battles on
Chaplin- classy performance , twists , turns , passes and brilliantly hit winner
Opposition- dreadful to watch
Manager - calm and collected on sideline and in interview afterwards
9

Linkboy13 added 18:45 - Jan 22
Dispite our defishences no one can complain about the lack of entertainment at Portman road this season. When i saw the lineups i was a bit worried Accrington were making our boys look like midgets. Every time we conceded a set piece i thought we could concede. After a shaky start we settled down to play some lovely one touch football with Celina involved in most of it and it was no surprise when he supplied Burns with a beautiful pass to equalise ( luxury player don't make me laugh). We still need to improve our play when we haven't got the ball Accrington still looked dangerous at times and hit the woodwork twice. Man of the match for me Celina who's understanding with Burns a highlight for me.
5

jas0999 added 18:50 - Jan 22
Different type of performance, but effective. It's actually great to see us fight, not give up and win from a goal down. Well done all. Great result! Important win!
7

arc added 19:04 - Jan 22
So many changes under KMc, but my favourite is the transformation in Morsy–he's always pushing forward: driving with the ball or looking for forward passes. Under Cook he was driving me bananas, always passing backwards. He's such a good player when encouraged to be positive.
5

algarvefan added 19:09 - Jan 22
I think the tide is now turning and I see a side who have not just been physically prepared but mentally too. That's such an important side of the game and enabled us to see the game out today when 2-1 ahead.

Celina is pure class and i thought KVY did well too, but the stand out for me was Chaplin, who's work rate and touch were truly impressive, topped off with a goal.

We can make a real mark with the games we have coming up and be there with a chance in the run in, I really fancy our chances if we make the play offs. Well done so far Mr McKenna.
4

BeattiesBackPocket added 19:31 - Jan 22
3 wins in last 4 games if we can keep that up till end of the season we will reach the playoffs and how many times over the past few years have we been very lightweight and lost games like this against big sides so fact we're now look like seeing these kind of games out is a plus.
Accrington played like an old Warnock side today, absolute sh!thousery from them whole game, big players feigning injury with the slightest of touches whilst some horrific tackles were going unnoticed, their players constantly trying to get ours cards which I absolutely hate from any teams so football won today. Great performers from Chaplin, Celina, Burns and Edmundson and Waltons save to stop it being 2-0 was world class. Onwards and upwards!
6

Barty added 19:37 - Jan 22
Great battling performance. Well done lads.
5

billlm added 19:41 - Jan 22
Edmundo, that's the problem celina's way above this lot,why he looks so ordinary, this league isn't good for flair players,his thinking passes are outside the box, league one is in a box,
1

Cakeman added 19:42 - Jan 22
Well done lads, a very welcome three points over a very physical team.
I was pleased to see our new signing come on to add some much needed height at a critical time of the game.
2

CornardBlue added 19:59 - Jan 22
Great against bunch of play acting thugs, thought Woolfie was outstanding.
3

RobsonWark added 20:09 - Jan 22
I thought we were excellent when we kept the ball on the deck. Our passing was accurate and we looked like an attacking threat when we passed it around. I thought we played too many long balls up field. Accrington had a lot of tall guys in their team - much taller than most of our players yet we kept hitting long balls. I don't mind a long ball now and again to take the pressure of defence but for me there were too many. Let's keep the ball on the deck. We outplayed them all the time when we passed it around. We have the players who are skilful enough to do that.
4

stormypetrel added 20:33 - Jan 22
Morsy's best game that I have seen…in terms of battling, drive and urging the team to get stuck in.. he wound the opposition right up..played Stanley at their own game..he was relentless and looked like the player I thought we had bought in the first instance….Woolfenden, calm, courageous and measured…Celina class ….full of energy and purpose…stood strong too…not Edmunsens best day …not poor just not his best…and despite his goal Wes looked a little off…but took his goal really well…second half was good but need to take chances when presented…the free kick at the end was too squeaky bum time for me!!…and loved it when James Norwood came on and limbered up like a boxer before getting stuck in within 30 seconds!!.. foolish if we sell him this January
4

Help added 08:18 - Jan 23
I know you cannot always play with the ball on the floor, but when you do to beat teams like this. So why early on in the first half did we continue to loft the ball in the air, surely knowing that we were never going to win a single battle, and in turn we never picked up a second ball. Making things so hard for ourselves. But we did get the equaliser that helped settle the team, from a superb pass form Celina and a well taken finish from Wes. Shame Wes blew to further chances in the second half.

Start of the second half was a bit like the beginning of the first, but we got on the ball earlier and started playing more into spaces, and players running onto through balls, which means defenders have to turn and we put them under pressure. A good goal from a a quickly taken free kick, which thankfully was allowed, as with the refs at this level I thought was going to be called back and well taken by Chaplin. Morsey looked like he could run all day especially with his late chase down in the at the end of the game.
2

Runner added 09:41 - Jan 23
My biggest worry is the refs at this level, just don't seem to control the games well.
Love it when we play the ball on the ground & pass the other team off the park.
0

Runner added 09:49 - Jan 23
Oh, and another thing, no way was that 20k, must have been a tax thing, 22k minimum.
0

dirtydingusmagee added 12:53 - Jan 23
wasnt a world beating performance but hell everyone did their bit and kept it up till final whistle, job to say who was my MoM , several players showed much improved performances, Carrol imo earned his place , pleased with the result, there was a time when conceeding an early goal saw players throw towel in. KM has made a big difference long may it last. Well done lads .
1

blueboy1981 added 22:02 - Jan 23
Such Teams as Accrington come with the mission to disrupt, niggle, work hard, foul, and close you down - that's their best chance of leaving with anything from the journey. They did their best at all of those, as they do.
Never easy to play against, but we managed the Win, and that is all that matters.
Sometimes points have to be ground out - and a couple of well taken goals.
Well Done all.
0

Razor added 10:17 - Jan 24
Woolfie man of match---dont think we would have won this game under the cheeky chappie
0


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