Monday, March 15, 2010

Me-Ow!

Millwall 4 Charlton Athletic 0

Even typing that score-line hurts, and mentally I simply haven’t wanted to write about the game, or read any reports, or watch the goals on TV either, much like other Addicks I suspect.

What seemed like a close game up till half time was turned by first a goal just before the break by ex-Addick Darren Ward – heading home unmarked from a corner in the 44th minute – and later by three goals in a torrid 8-minute spell toward the end of the match. The first of this batch of goals was scored into his own net by Christian Dailly, and much like the Colchester game where the match seemed to turn on an own goal, Charlton simply capitulated afterwards, allowing Morison to score twice.

It is easy to cast dispersions on the players and management who are ultimately responsible for the score-line, but that will not get the club anywhere this season; only a resounding positive response over the remaining ten matches will dull the memory of this thrashing to our near neighbours.

For some time I have been worried about the side not being able to up their collective game when it mattered and yet again the par for the team was simply not good enough. Individually, the players did not do too badly I believe, yet collectively and tactically, they were found very wanting. We do not have a player who is scoring goals for fun, as many other teams near the top of this league do, so we need the team to spread that responsibility; clearly that is not happening as several key and important players have to go back quite some way to find their name in the goal-scoring column. Similarly, the goals conceded stats show that we are bereft of clean sheets in all but two (home) games since early December – Brighton was the last away game where we failed to concede.

While the management may try to take some of the blame for this most recent performance, questions are being asked if they are now strong enough to see the season through while under pressure – both on and off the pitch. Phil Parkinson has tinkered with his team in an effort to find the right balance, but it is still very evident to supporters that we (and Parky) are not there yet. The problems with full backs aside, our forward line lacks confidence, and the midfield is being swapped and changed with every game; isn’t it about time that we (or more importantly someone at the club) knew what our best team was?

Rather than pick out any individual player – as they should all be asking themselves what they ultimately want from the back end of this season – we need to move on, pick ourselves up, dust ourselves down, and convince ourselves that the next ten games are there to be won, and that anything less will see the club in severe danger of failing to get out of this division at the first time of asking. We are told that the players are capable enough, now is the time to start proving this. Failure will hurt not only the club, but the players too, as many are unlikely to get a similar wage packet to that which they have now playing in League One next year.

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Sunday, December 20, 2009

Drawing Conclusions

Charlton Athletic 4 Millwall 4

A fascinating game that will long live in some people’s memory, though I’m sure both managers and their defences will want to forget this showing quickly enough. It was passionate throughout, and after the visitors took a two goal lead midway through the first half, Charlton battled back to equalise after the award of two penalties. The second award saw the sending off of Jimmy Abdou, but it hardly diminished Millwall’s style of play, and in the second half, they gave as good as they got to equalise twice, the last goal coming well into injury time.

It was Scott Wagstaff who was at fault for the first goal of the day, though both sides had seen chances go begging prior to the 12th minute opener. Wagstaff, tracking back, poked the ball past Sam Sodje 30 yards out and was then baulked by the big defender which allowed Morison to sneak in and slot past Rob Elliot. 12 minutes later it was 2-0, after a shot from a corner (that was harshly awarded) had come back off the woodwork, with Morison again poking home.

The stunned Valley awoke after 35 minutes when Dave Mooney chased a lost cause only to be brought down by Frampton (left). This foul tackle certainly prevented a goalscoring chance, but the blue shirted player was not even booked by the fussy referee. Deon Burton despatched the spot kick high into the corner of the net, and a few minutes later he had another chance from 12 yards after a clumsy challenge on Lloyd Sam. This came about after Mooney had once more closed down the ‘keeper and won the ball off him, only to see his swivel shot curl against the post and bounce out. As Sam was about to pounce, he was caught form behind, and Abdou saw red, though it was certainly no worse than the Frampton foul for the first penalty.

With the Addicks in the ascendancy on a bitterly cold afternoon, the half time whistle came, and most retreated to warmer areas of the stadium.

Hopefully everyone was back in their seats for the resumption, as good work down the right between Elliot Omozusi and Sam saw a good first time cross from the winger nodded back by Mooney for Nicky Bailey to smash an unstoppable volley high into the top corner of the net (left). When they come to do the goal of the season in a few months time, there will be only one winner - that is unless we see something better in the next 25 games.

Charlton annoyingly sat back after taking the lead, and even though they had a one man advantage it certainly didn’t look like it for long periods of that half. With both wingers closely marked and not able to settle on the ball, and with a couple of players having very poor games (Elliot and Grant Basey won’t want to look back on their performances with any pride, and Wagstaff and Christian Dailly also had indifferent afternoon’s), the away team took the game to Charlton. Most pressure was soaked up, and after Akpo Sodje came on for Mooney with 25 minutes left, breakwaways nearly took Charlton clear. The younger Sodje missed his kick when well placed, then saw a shot saved after bursting through the middle. It was a surprise then when Martin equalised with ten minutes left. Back came the Addicks though, and after a corner was won and flicked on at the near post, the unfortunate Morison completed his hat-trick of goals in front of the Jimmy Seed stand by letting the ball bounce off his forehead and in off the post to give Charlton the lead again.

Once more Charlton sat back, and once more Millwall scored in injury time as bad play saw Basey robbed on the edge of the area, and though Elliot saved the initial shot, Schofield buried the rebound. There was still time for Charlton to lose the game, but luckily they held on, and honours were even as the final whistle went.

I do think that the match as an event got to some of the local players – Elliot, Wagstaff and Basey - and they will all need to learn to let heads rule hearts in derby games. The problem elsewhere was the amount of time on the ball the team had, which was virtually nil, and they will need to learn to pass the ball better and quicker to counter the closing down that some teams exert. While the midfield had its moments, too often the balls forward from Jose Semedo and Bailey were just punts, and that left Burton and Mooney fighting for scraps.

The referee it should be noted will be vilified on Millwall message boards, but he hardly did Charlton any favours either, and was overly fussy and inconsistent throughout.

The draw maintains the Addicks unbeaten home record stretching back to March, and the club find themselves sitting nicely in second place in the table over Xmas. At the end of the season, this could be seen as a point won, rather than two dropped.

The other bad point to the day was finding out (ten minutes from the end of the match) that my wife had slipped on ice and that she has broken her elbow! That puts my Xmas plans into a state of flux, and with Lloyd Sam booked in this game, manager Phil Parkinson will now need to make an enforced change for the Boxing Day game against Swindon. This may well give one of the squad players a chance to stake their own claim for a place in the side, and competition can only be a good thing.

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Thursday, December 17, 2009

Old Friends

For some, a game against Millwall is a war to be won; for others, it is a chance to gloat at close friends expense if we win, and hide if we don’t. They are Charlton’s local-est rivals, and therefore the most important derby match, despite other teams being more hated by Addicks. I have several friends and acquaintances who support the Lions, including one of my best mates who has been a season ticket holder for years and years. I even changed another friend from a Lion to an Addick when he needed to take his son to a football match without the worry and risk of injury (or more likely that his son would get into trouble when he was older and wanted to go on his own). That was 13 years ago, and now my converted mate comes with me to nearly every match while his son dislikes watching football and is happier with a girl on his arm and a camera in his hand.

This game should, therefore, be a friendly derby, but the image that Millwall have is not a nice one, and their fans have (deservedly) had a reputation for years of causing trouble just when you least expect it, and often when you do. For this reason, Charlton have had to take a lot of precautionary measures to prevent trouble and maintain segregation at a possibly snow-bound Valley on Saturday. Gone are the days when the Millwall fans could walk around the ground and inhabit the Covered End looking for a fight, and gone are the days when Addicks like myself could stand on the halfway line at The Den and know that provided we didn’t act stupidly we would be left alone to cheer inwardly if, shock horror, we scored (though that didn’t happen all too often at that ground). One Millwall acquaintance asked me a couple of weeks ago if I could provide him (and his son and daughter) with tickets for the Valley game this weekend; of course I said no, and I reminded him of the reason why and the repercussions if I did. Despite this, he will be in the ground courtesy of, according to him, the provision of six match tickets for him and his family and friends by a local police inspector! If he was telling the truth, and he is in the posh seats and the away team score, I wonder who will ban the copper who got him the tickets from the Valley?!?

Enough about the fans – it may be important to those from both sides, but it is also a vitally important game for both teams and their managers.

While Millwall sit just outside the play-off places after a very stop-start season, they will be hoping to get back into some sort of form that might move them up the league table over the next few months. They have had many injuries this year so far, and after a promising start, dropped back down the table when their squad was at its most stretched. They do have match winners, and an undeniable will to get results, with evidence of such from the many late goals they have scored that secured vital wins or draws – five goals in the 89th minute or later which have yielded an extra five points. Charlton must therefore be on guard if the game is level or close going into the last few minutes, as Millwall do tend to shoot from anywhere when they are behind. A lot will depend on who plays in the visiting team, as injuries are still rife, but if they play, Neil Harris is a threat, and James Henry needs to be watched. The guy with the mop hair is Jason Price, who used to go out with a work colleague of mine while with Hull, but it is just coincidence that when she moved to London he followed. Strangely, the Lions have no ex-Addicks in their ranks, and it is some time since a former Charlton player plied their trade at The New Den – Jamie Stuart and Kim Grant are the last couple I can think of…

For Charlton, the match is another important one from which to keep the pressure on Leeds who sit just two points above them, and Norwich and Colchester who sit directly below them in the league table albeit six points behind. Manager Phil Parkinson will have had a week to ponder his best side for this match, and also time to get some of our injured player’s fitter. The first choice full backs – Frazer Richardson and Kelly Youga – have both been out for the last few weeks (bar Richardson’s 45 minute abortive return at The Valley a couple of weeks ago), but there is a chance that one or both may be available for this game. Youga was apparently close last week, while Richardson cannot be too far away either unless he has had another problem; if either is fit then I expect them to play, with Elliot Omozusi likely to make way ahead of Grant Basey.

The rest of Charlton’s squad are fit, although Izale McLeod is unlikely to be risked against his former employers after a recent thigh problem, and the fact that they don’t like him. Centre backs Christian Dailly and Sam Sodje have looked very solid over recent matches, while the midfield is picking itself at present, with Jose Semedo, Nicky Bailey, Lloyd Sam, and Scott Wagstaff all putting in decent displays.

In attack, Parky actually has a choice this week, with Leon McKenzie and Akpo Sodje now fully fit and pushing Deon Burton and Dave Mooney for starting positions. Last week at Stockport, top scorer Burton got bogged down on the heavy pitch, while Mooney was fantastic bar his finishing, which could have netted him a bagful of goals had it been better. He doesn’t deserve to be dropped after that performance, but a quiet word about the need to take his chances would go down well.

Mentally, Parky will need to make the players aware of the local rivalry, and what sort of atmosphere to expect, but concerns about bookings should be ignored in favour of not getting anyone sent off. It's one thing to miss a game due to a fifth yellow card of the season, but another to get Xmas off due to some silly hands-raised incident which gets a three game ban (Carl Baker being a prime example!).

This is the side I think Park will put the gloves on this Saturday for the game against Millwall –

Rob Elliot
Kelly Youga
Christian Dailly
Sam Sodje
Grant Basey
Jose Semedo
Nicky Bailey
Lloyd Sam
Scott Wagstaff
Dave Mooney
Deon Burton

Subs from Randolph, Omozusi, Richardson, Llera, Spring, Racon, Holden, Shelvey, Tuna, McKenzie, McLeod, Sodje A.

Charlton need the win just as much as Millwall do, but that requirement must be transferred to the players minds, as we know that the visitors will be roared on by their fans, and they will play as if there is nothing to lose. It will be a close game I suspect, but Charlton have a little more quality if it is allowed to come out. Pedro45 worries though, and remembers other games when local teams put one over the Addicks at just the wrong time, and is therefore predicting a frustrating 2-1 defeat. It is 13 years since the clubs met, and they may just want it a little more than we do, though I sincerely hope not. Millwall haven’t lost a game this season when they have been winning at half-time and I suspect that hearts may rule heads allowing them to get in front early in the game, with Charlton chasing a losing cause late on. I do hope I'm wrong though!

My one-to-watch in this match is a Charlton fan, who will be desperate to win this derby game – Charlton's goalie Rob Elliot. The Charlton custodian will do well to concentrate all match, especially when protecting the Jimmy Seed end goal, and he must not let the supporters behind him get to him mentally (or physically!). He will be up for the game like no other player on the pitch I think, but the fixture must not be allowed to influence his performance (except positively). Credited with an own goal last week just as the Addicks were looking good for a third consecutive clean sheet, though it was no error of any kind, he will be very keen to keep the ball out of the net in this match, though I fancy he may have his work cut out to achieve that.

With both clubs taking a very positive stance on street crime for this match, it will be interesting to see if the game goes off without trouble (as it should); reputations are one thing, but there is no need for wanton violence on the streets around SE7 this (or any)weekend. Millwall themselves firmly believe that their club is victimised whenever there is violence around a football match involving them, so this game would be a good time for their fans to show that local derbies involving Millwall are not simply excuses to gang up and be bullies.

It will be a great atmosphere inside the Valley on Saturday, and hopefully the result will go the reds way – I certainly hope so!

Come on you Reds!

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