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Ipswich Town 1 v 2 Maidstone United
FA Cup
Saturday, 27th January 2024 Kick-off 12:30
Ipswich Town 1-2 Maidstone United - Match Report
Saturday, 27th Jan 2024 14:40

Town’s FA Cup run came to an embarrassing end at the fourth round stage as National League South Maidstone United defeated the Blues 2-1 at Portman Road. The Kent side, 99 places and four divisions below Town, went in front via Lamar Reynolds’s goal two minutes prior to half-time, before the Blues levelled on 56 via Jeremy Sarmiento and from there looked set to go on to win it. But Portman Road was stunned once again by Sam Corne’s second for the Stones and Town huffed and puffed without being able to find another equaliser, and crashed out of the cup.

Boss Kieran McKenna made 10 changes with George Edmundson the only player remaining from Monday’s 1-1 Championship draw away against leaders Leicester City.

Christian Walton was in goal with Dominic Ball at right-back and Cameron Humphreys on the left with Axel Tuanzebe and Edmundson the centre-halves.

Skipper Sam Morsy returned in central midfielder alongside Jack Taylor with Omari Hutchinson and Sarmiento, making his full Town debut, the widemen with Sone Aluko in the middle and Nathan Broadhead the out-and-out striker.

Town named a strong bench but with young striker Gerrard Buabo and keeper Cieran Slicker joining the likes of Wes Burns, Conor Chaplin, Leif Davis and Luke Woolfenden.

For Maidstone, the lowest-ranked side still in the competition with 4,472 fans in the Cobbold Stand, forward Jacob Berkeley-Agyepong returned to the side for the first time since the 1-0 victory over League One Stevenage in the last round and new signing Manny Duku starts.

Former Town defender George Fowler was also in the XI, while one-time Blues trialist Reiss Greenidge was on the bench.

As was to be expected, the Blues dominated from the off and in the second minute Hutchinson crossed from the right, Humphreys knocked back at the far post and Broadhead turned it against Fowler, the ball cannoning off the Wales international and out for a goalkick.

Four minutes later, Sarmiento went very close to his first Portman Road goal, the on-loan Brighton man hitting a low effort from distance which beat Stones keeper Lucas Covolan and struck his right post. The ball bounced out to Hutchinson on the edge of the box to the right but the Chelsea loanee’s rebound was too close to Covolan, who claimed.

It continued to be all Town and in the eighth minute, the Blues hit the woodwork again. Hutchinson cut in from the right and hit a shot which deflected off Sam Corne, wrong-footing Covolan but this time hit the keeper’s left post.

Maidstone made heavy weather of getting the ball clear and Edmundson was able to pick it up on the edge of the area but shot across the face and wide.

Broadhead should have made 1-0 in the 12th minute, Aluko threading it through for the Welshman, who found himself one-on-one with Covolan, but was thwarted by the keeper’s outstretched left leg.

Three minutes later, Hutchinson curled an effort from the edge of the box, which Covolan palmed wide with the game still one-way traffic. From the corner, Edmundson headed over.

On 17, Morsy shot from distance and Covolan pawed wide at his right post with the ball destined for the corner of the net.

Four minutes later, Aluko sent Hutchinson away down the right and the winger cut in and hit another shot, this time a deflection off Paul Appiah diverting it wide.

From the corner, Edmundson should have scored. The defender was given a free header six yards out at the far post, but the ball scuffed off his head and well wide.

Maidstone subsequently had a period of respite and even had a couple of forays forward but without too much concern for Town, before Sarmiento shot over on the turn from 20 yards in the 29th minute. Soon after, Walton had the ball in his hands for the first time after coming off his line to claim a through ball.

Morsy curled over left-footed in the 32nd minute as the Blues continued to look for their opening goal.


Three minutes later, Sarmiento brought the ball forward from inside the Town half before hitting a 20-yard shot which deflected off Appiah and over.

As the game passed the 40-minute mark, Town had two more chances to go in front. First, Sarmiento played in Humphreys on the left of the area, the youngster sending over a low cross which Taylor seemed destined to turn in until Broadhead with his back to goal intervened and hit an effort on the turn which was blocked.

The ball came out to Ball, who played a clever pass in for Aluko, who scuffed well wide from 10 yards out when the veteran should have scored.

Taylor hit another shot which deflected over in the 43rd minute and following the resultant flag-kick, the visitors went in front.

Maidstone broke quickly down the right and a superb ball from the right by Liam Sole played Lamar Reynolds in on goal with Town caught short of numbers at the back and the former Braintree man delicately clipped the ball over the advanced Walton to send the travelling support and bench wild, the players piling on top of one another on the touchline.

There was no time for Town to hit back before referee Anthony Taylor blew his whistle to a huge roar from the Stones fans.

The Blues had been hit by a sucker punch - Maidstone’s only serious attack of the game - having missed innumerable chances to go in front, although their attacks had lost something of their earlier impetus the near the game had got towards half-time.

Ball struck the first shot of the second half four minutes after the restart but hit Aluko and it looped wide.

Maidstone were next to threaten, Town failing to clear their lines on a couple of occasions and allowing an attack to reach the penalty area but Sam Bone’s effort from the area was easy for Walton.

On 52, Broadhead almost played in Hutchinson but the Wales international’s through ball was just too strong and Covolan was able to slide in and clutch it to his chest.

It had been a not entirely convincing opening to the half by the Blues but on 56 they levelled.

Appiah lost possession having brought the ball forward after what looked to be a foul on Aluko just outside the box. Taylor strode forward towards the area and fed Sarmiento to his left and the Ecuadorian international cut in and hit a low shot to Covolan’s right and into the corner of the net.

The on-loan Brighton man’s second goal in a week and first at Portman Road came as a great relief to a Portman Road which had begun to show signs of nervousness.

Town immediately made their first changes, Harry Clarke, Leif Davis and Conor Chaplin replacing Ball, Humphreys and Aluko.

Chaplin wasn’t far away from putting the Blues in front on the hour, Davis playing a now-familiar low corner from the left towards the penalty spot but the Town top scorer shot over.

The Blues continued to dominate and create chances, Sarmiento hitting a low cross from the right against his standing leg and wide, then scuffing another effort through to Covolan.

However, on 66, the non-league side restored their lead. Sarmiento lost possession in the middle of the pitch - with his shirt appearing to have been pulled - giving it to Reynolds on the left from where the earlier goalscorer played a ball inside for Corne, who took it into the box before clinically finishing past Walton. The away fans were again sent into delirium.

Town went about looking for a second equaliser, Wes Burns and Gerrard Buabo replacing Sarmiento and Hutchinson for the final 22 minutes.

Clarke hit a shot which Covolan gathered in the 72nd minute, then two minutes later Burns was fed in on the right of the box by the former Arsenal youngster, but shot across the face of goal and wide.

On 77 the Blues were denied the most stonewall of penalties, Edmundson going past Duku on the left of the box before being tripped. Referee Taylor failed to give the spot-kick and to add insult to injury booked Edmundson for diving. Video replays suggested it was a very poor decision from the Premier League official.

The game continued to played almost entirely in the Maidstone final third, the Blues prodding and probing and looking for openings but all too often finding Maidstone players in their way and Covolan saving from Chaplin.

As the game moved towards the final 10 minutes, Buabo sent a dangerous low ball across the edge of the six-yard box but with no teammate there to add the final touch.

Town almost levelled in 85th minute, Chaplin powering a header goalwards from a corner and Covolan palming into the air. The ball dropped and following an almighty scramble in which no one was able to get in a clean shot, the keeper gratefully dived on it. Play was subsequently delayed due to several Stones players feeling the effects of cramp.

The Blues continued to look for their second goal but without particularly convincing, however, in the final scheduled minute, as the fourth official indicated eight additional minutes, Burns headed goalwards from a Morsy cross and Covolan did well to get across to his top corner and palm over.

The Blues subsequently won a succession of corners but without being able to test the keeper further with the Maidstone defence remaining resolute.

Buabo flicked a header which Covolan saved as time started to run out for an increasingly frustrated-looking Town side.

And with seconds left on the clock, Clarke stood up a cross from the right and Edmundson looped a header into Covolan’s arms.

But Taylor’s final whistle signalled that time had run out for Town and the visiting fans cheered a famous day for their club and a humbling one for the Blues.

The Maidstone players and fans continued their celebrations long after the final whistle, and deservedly so after continuing their remarkable cup run, which has now taken in defeats of sides from Leagues One and Two, and the Championship.

Town were left to rue failing to take the bagful of chances in the first half and then conceding counter-attacking goals, Maidstone’s only two real chances all afternoon.

The shots total of 38-2 illustrated the overall balance of the game but it was Maidstone who made their two count.

Having got back on terms, there seemed only one winner but the Blues for a second time allowed the Stones to break away and score.

From there, the visitors defended steadfastly with Covolan in goal handling confidently, while Town ran out of ideas and lacked a cutting edge, as they did in a number of Championship games over Christmas. A striker, ideally two, is a must before the transfer window closes next Thursday.

The Blues last lost to non-league opposition in 2017 when they were beaten 1-0 at Lincoln and most recently at home when they were defeated 3-2 by Peterborough in 1960.

Town are next in action in the Championship at Preston North End next Saturday afternoon.

Town: Walton, Ball (Clarke 57), Tuanzebe, Edmundson, Humphreys (Davis 57), Morsy (c), Taylor, Hutchinson (Burns 68), Aluko (Chaplin 57), Sarmiento ( Buabo 59), Broadhead. Unused: Slicker, Woolfenden, Travis, Harness.

Maidstone: Covolan, Hoyte (c), Fowler, Appiah, Berkeley-Agyepong (Gurung 63), Corne, Duku, Reynolds (Court 74), Kyprianou, Bone (Iandolo 74), Sole (Greenidge 59). Unused: Earle, Ezennolim, Court, Smith. Referee: Anthony Taylor (Cheshire). Att: 27,763 (4,472).


Photo: Lucy Copsey/Focus Images Ltd/Sipa USA via Reuters Connect



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Bezzer added 15:38 - Jan 27
I’d question our management team! Are they not good enough to coach the players how to create and breakdown defensive teams? Why make 10 changes, when our first 11 are struggling? Why can’t we sign decent permanent players in this transfer window? Why don’t they show some emotion on the touch line? Aluko, Jackson, Taylor, Broadhead, Walton, Clarke, Harness, Humphries and Ball are all league 1 players at best! Wake up and smell the stench of play off failure again people!
-8

HopefulBlue69 added 15:39 - Jan 27
Maidstone wanted it and who can blame them for amazing celebrations..
Time to face some difficult questions..
We have a pretty good solid first 11 but I'm trying to pick who they are at the moment.
Something has happened in the team that we don't know about, Brandon Williams gone with no real explanation, Broadhead off the boil. I wonder if there is some connection there.
Taylor has been poor since we brought him. Never seemed to have settled in the team. Will he make it or best to off load him.
Axel has no pace with Maidstone players making him look really ordinary. Is he committed or just picking up his money each week.
Davis not been the same since being humiliated at Leeds (who were his first big club). Does he need some support in terms of confidence building.
Freddie didn't want to be here so right to let him go. Should we have sold him though. Doubt he ever come back.
Should we cancel contracts of players that won't make it on the pitch and use the money for a striker- Aluko, Ball, Williams (think Jackson has earned the chance to see the season through).
Will we be in the play off positions.. I think yes but now is the time to spend big on a striker
6

tractorboybig added 15:44 - Jan 27
well we have witnessed the worse result and performance of itfc in its history
13

runaround added 15:46 - Jan 27
Well done to Maidstone players and fans. A day they will remember forever. ITFC were embarrassing and let themselves and everyone associated with the club down today.
I don’t want any of this “we go again nonsense “, today was unacceptable and they need to accept that and own it and feel the pain. They should issue an apology for the performance and double efforts to make sure it’s a long time before that type of performance happens again. It must not cause a hangover into league form
5

joyousblue added 15:47 - Jan 27
Well said kentish tractor , yes its shocking shamefull but its gone , now the panick police are saying, it the will knock our form , what rubbish others are saying mckenna should have done this not that , you moaning part of our great support , make me sick , were not the first to be knocked out by a lower and wont be the last , nothing is wrong its a bad day at the office no more no less get over it
3

grubbyoik added 15:49 - Jan 27
i dont think Tuanzebe is all that.. he seems to be given alot of slack because he used to play for United..
Our defence got caught out twice..
At the other end of the pitch we were just really unlucky..
1

Saxonblue74 added 15:50 - Jan 27
How quickly it turns! Even one comment questioning our management team! And personally I don't see how Maidstone "wanted it more"? At no point did this look like a typical cup tie where the underdog came out and had a real go. They had two chances and they both went in, the only 2 attempts they had. At no point did they look like winning. They were outplayed from first to final whistle. It happens.
1

BlueWax added 15:51 - Jan 27
Could have, would have, should have.

Congrats Gorge and your team. You deserved the rub of the green, well done.

We tried but hey it wasn't our day, not embarrassed of my team and only would be if we had not tried....which we did. We are a great attacking side when not facing a defensive wall.

I actually think we will be wounded animals at PNE next week.

That said, 2 shots against and 2 goals conceded should not be happening.

COYB
5

grumpyoldman added 15:53 - Jan 27
I rarely comment on matches, I have a few queries.

Why did we continually slow the game down with pretty passing before shooting?

We had 38 shots, how many times did we actually test their keeper?

Why did we keep putting high balls into the area when none of our forwards are strong enough to battle for the ball?

I do not have any idea on these questions.

WELL DONE Maidstone, you seemed to want it more!!
9

SouthernTractors added 15:58 - Jan 27
Tuanzebe exposed again. If he was any good he'd still be in the Premiership. The most immobile lump of lard..

Result just proves we have no recognised striker.. Hutchinson and Sarmiento display a level of danger but need someone to aim at..

Club needs to put their hands in the wallet and spend.. Pointless looking at good League One strikers or average Championship ones.. Needs to be a fringe Premiereship player
8

SouthernTractors added 15:58 - Jan 27
Tuanzebe exposed again. If he was any good he'd still be in the Premiership. The most immobile lump of lard..

Result just proves we have no recognised striker.. Hutchinson and Sarmiento display a level of danger but need someone to aim at..

Club needs to put their hands in the wallet and spend.. Pointless looking at good League One strikers or average Championship ones.. Needs to be a fringe Premiereship player
0

Bezzer added 16:00 - Jan 27
I hope the players and manager (who let’s face it, has to take a lot of responsibility) are locked in those changing rooms all night! They all need to take a hard look at themselves and those that feel they’re too good to be here or not good enough need to walk! They should not receive their days earning for such an embarrassing display and put every penny to a local charity!
3

Pezzer added 16:01 - Jan 27
To concede 1 against a non league team, to concede 2 is defensively awful.
4

Flamencaman added 16:09 - Jan 27
Don’t you just love & Hate the FA cup in equal measure, David v Goliath we got undone today mugged as said hope they get a massive club away what a day for them and a miserable weekend for me
3

Gaznap added 16:12 - Jan 27
McKenna has to go, out club has been on downward spiral since he joined
-4

Saxonblue74 added 16:13 - Jan 27
Good grief! Tuanzebe a "lump of lard"? Broadhead and Clarke "league 1 players"? Thank god we're having such a great season and breaking club records!!!! Next home game will be down to 15k attendance no doubt!
-1

Ipswichbusiness added 16:14 - Jan 27
Well done Maidstone.

They defended in depth and hit us on the break twice; limited football, but very effective.

Our system needs a target man: Hirst is too injured, Aluko too old, Buabo too raw and Ladapo too on loan to another club. We need at least one signing.
5

ArnieM added 16:16 - Jan 27
gruggyoik: our defensive CB pairing today consisted of two players that have bare,y kicked a ball this season. WHY did McKenna decide to line up with two players struggling to get their mojo back?

Yes w3 should able to deal with changes to the team but it’s the AMOUNT of changes that’s been our undoing. That “ team” today hasn’t played a single competitive match all season together and will be unlikely to play another for the rest of the season either, A “team” is based on familiarity, fluency and almost telepathic understanding between players in the various areas in the team. THATS what was missing today and you don’t just suddenly get it with “an 11” slung together 60 mins before the bloody game ko! . We got what we deserved frankly.
4

SpiritOfJohn added 16:17 - Jan 27
Firstly, credit to Maidstone for taking their two chances and for some resolute defending - especially their goalkeeper who was outstanding. As for Town, we squandered so many good opportunities in the first half an hour and then left the back door open TWICE - once was bad enough. The stats make this look like a freak result but we all know it's not a scoreline we can brush off as a blip and we definitely need a centre forward in the door ASAP.
As for the Premier League referee I can only believe that he has forgotten how to do his job without the back-up of VAR as a safety net for his shortcomings.
2

chepstowblue added 16:30 - Jan 27
Nothing wrong with the team selection. Most people would want Sarmiento and Hutchinson to start, Morsy to come back in, try Broadhead up top, see a bit more of Axel. We were wasteful early on and it became contagious. On another day we win 6-2. And for those who say it doesn't matter......that's just your way of trying to ignore the fact that you've been part of the most embarrassing result in the clubs history. I thought everybody would have the same feelings as myself. Astonished, stunned, embarrassed, and slightly sick. I love the cup, and if it weren't for 78 we'd have almost **** to sing about. The magic is still alive, but I didn't think our current group would be on the receiving end of it. A very dark day.
3

KMcBlue added 16:33 - Jan 27
Shooting practice this week lads...
2

Steve_ITFC_Sweden added 16:39 - Jan 27
When people are frustrated (as I am) they sometimes tend to talk a lot of nonsense. Of course we tried and showed them respect. We battered them for 20-30 minutes and were pretty unlucky not to take the lead. We were also not direct enough and looked sorely in need of that striker who we all hope will be coming in this week. The ref was pretty awful. Maidstone deserve credit for the way they defended and made it difficult for us. But these things happen. We move on and take the game to Preston, backed, I believe by 4000 + fans. Keep the faith. COYB!
6

budgieplucker added 16:40 - Jan 27
I don’t think it was necessarily down to the starting 11, Hutchison and Sarmiento probably the pick and arguably may not have started a league match.

I will get over the defeat with a great season so far compensating, but to be frank having 38 chances and scoring only one goal is nothing to do with bad luck. We consistently create a lot of chances at home but fail to convert enough to put a game to bed early. That hasn’t improved. The possession we had was pretty much off the scale, but with Maidstone playing a low block the allowed us to play our football, and whilst we may look to imitate Real Madrid at times, our play sometimes becomes too predictable and the final pass and attempt is often a weak tippy tippy effort, at times it looked like a training match which could have been mistaken as complacency or not showing enough respect.

We have used our momentum from Duvision 1 promotion brilliantly but the winter months can take its toll and teams will analyse us more for the second half of the season, Burns and Chaplin for me have become a bit too predictable and will be targeted to be stopped. We do need something a bit different and whilst we all hail Kieron we know the jigsaw puzzle is far from complete but the final bits to get us out of this league are probably not within our grasp at the moment. My concern is that we may not be able to handle the playoffs and easily be turned over. My concern today is the national amplification of our weaknesses for teams to try and take advantage of when they play us later in the season.
8

pragmatic added 16:46 - Jan 27
Dissapointing yes, will it define our season no!!!
1

ArnieM added 16:46 - Jan 27
Our ability to score goals has ALWAYS masked our poor ability to defend- especially against sides that sit back and then hit us on the break. Today a non league side beat us using that same tactic.

We CANT DEFEND!!!

And now we’ve lost Hirst our attack is also failing .

Which bit of that is untrue?
9


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