Monday, May 14, 2007

Hope for the Future

Liverpool 2 Charlton Athletic 2

I wasn't there, didn't get a chance to listen on the radio (or internet), and haven't been able to watch Match of the Day yet, so I cannot make too valued a judgment on yesterdays great draw at Anfield.

Suffice to say that it was good to see that Matt Holland scored early on (left), and that Charlton held the lead for most of the game (around 75 minutes!). Liverpool did in fact equalise but Darren Bent then quickly restored the Addicks lead with possibly his last goal in a Charlton shirt (below).

Sadly, the obligatory home penalty levelled matters deep into injury time, and a share of the points was all that Alan Pardew could take away from the game.

Pardew was able to talk up the team afterwards, and a few more displays like this recently would undoubtedly have seen Charlton close to saving themselves from the drop.

Special mention must go to Darren Randolph, who made an excellent debut in goal according to reports, and to Lloyd Sam, who has brought a little enthusiasm back into the eleven, along with skill and effort.

Sadly, the team missed chances to win more comfortably, with Zheng Zhi failing when well placed once more; Song also missed a sitter apparently!

The season finishes though with a mere 34 points gained, and that is never (apart from one season in Premiership history) going to be enough to keep your dreams alive. I suppose it would be too much to ask the Premier League to demote West Ham for transfer irregularities, and also Sheffield United for taking them to court over the affair, so let's get used to where we will be playing football next year.

Moving forward then, a new signing in imminent according to Pards, although we at Charlton know not to count chickens before they've signed a contract and had the picture taken wearing the shirt. That new man could be Matt Jarvis of Gillingham, although there is much speculation that Scott Carson may be coaxed into signing too. Personally, I doubt if Carson would be happy with Championship football, or that the board could sanction between £4 and £6 million for his signature from Liverpool.

The club will hopefully move onwards, and with Pardew in charge, a new, preferably happy, era is upon us. I expect many of the clubs stalwart players to move on over the coming weeks, and for Pardew to replace those who leave with younger, more brighter prospects. We need a new Mark Kinsella, and new John Robinson, a new Dean Kiely, and a new Eddie Youds. The backbone is crucial for any successful team, and Randolph, Bougherra, Holland, and Marcus Bent just isn't strong enough on paper, even for the Championship (Compare to West Brom's mere play off team - Kiely, Davies, Koumas, Kamara/Phillips/Ellington!).

When 16500 of us bought season tickets for next year before the end of April, we knew that the club had to be relegated, then win promotion at the first attempt. Well, part one is complete, and now we want to see the second part of the deal handled well so that all 16500 of us fans get free Premiership season tickets in a couple of years time.

Let us all wish Alan Pardew success in finding those players who will represent Charlton in the red shirts next season, and re-new our love affair with the top division.

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Friday, May 11, 2007

The Last Dance...

Our final fling after seven seasons in the Premiership is an away game at Anfield. I’m sure some fans will take it as an opportunity to celebrate our relegation, much as we did back in 1990 at Old Trafford. A similar score (1-0 defeat) will be a good result.

We all, deep down, knew that things were looking bleak this season, especially after seven defeats in the first eight games (thanks Bolton by the way!). Spurs may have nailed the lid shut, but the coffin has been closed since Stead scored past Carson early in April...

Just as happened all those years ago, our opponents in the last game of the season have bigger and better things on their minds; not just a cup final against a Croydon-based team for the Scousers though. No, they are off to the Champions League final and a re-match with AC Milan.

Liverpool rested a lot of their team last week allowing Fulham the chance to get a win that kept them in the top league, so it will be interesting to see who Benitez puts out against us on Sunday. It may well be that his top stars need a game, as otherwise they would have gone three weeks between semi-final and final without breaking sweat.

Alan Pardew on the other hand has to decide who he should play – does he immediately look to the future and next season, or give a final game to many of those who won’t be hanging around for Championship football.

Definitely not playing is Scott Carson, who is not allowed under league rules to play against his contract holding team. This will allow either Darren Randolph to make his debut, or Thomas Myrhe to make a farewell in the goalkeepers shirt.

Also back and available will be Ben Thatcher, at left back, after his one game suspension through being sent off at Blackburn two weeks ago.

Apart from that, Pards has a pretty open book, barring niggly injuries to Hreidarsson, El Karkouri, Thomas, Darren Bent, Marcus Bent, etc.

This is the team I think our manager will send out before the Kop –

Darren Randolph
Luke Young
Talal El Karkouri
Souleymane Diawara
Ben Thatcher
Zheng Zhi
Alexandre Song
Matt Holland
Darren Ambrose
Marcus Bent
Darren Bent

Subs from – Myrhe, Hreidarsson, Faye, Hasselbaink, Thomas, Hughes, Lisbie, Sam.

I cannot see Rommerdahl being included after his media outburst, and would rather see Lloyd Sam out wide than any of the others who may jump ship in the near future.

My one-to-watch this Sunday will be Darren Bent; Dazza will be playing his last game for Charlton in my opinion. If he can sign off with a goal or three that would be fantastic. It would also add a few quid to his transfer value! He may well be playing against his next club too, so what better way to introduce himself to the Anfield regulars than by knocking the ball into the back of the net at the Kop end!

Pedro45’s score forecast is yet another defeat, I’ll go for 1-0 this time, in a repeat of our 1990 Old Trafford party. It would be lovely to go to Anfield and turn Liverpool over, but I don’t think that is possible, especially as the may have a few first-teamers out on the pitch.

We have had a very good seven years in the Premiership; lots of great games (Man Utd 3-3), glory days (Chelsea and Arsenal 4-2’s), fantastic players turning out for us (di Canio, Parker, Dazza, Deano, Murphy, etc etc), and against us (Keane, van Nistelrooy, Fowler, Owen, Shearer, Cole, Giggs, Gerrard, Henry, Vierra, etc etc), plus plenty of fun (too many times to mention!). It’s all over after Sunday, but the memories will linger on.

Next season, we will hanker after what we are missing, and it will be up to the club – management, fans, and players – to ensure that we get back to the top level so we can start to enjoy it all over again.

Come on the Darren's; Up the Addicks!

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Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Paint it Black

Charlton Athletic 0
Tottenham Hotspur 2

The inevitable finally happened at the Valley last night, as Charlton were relegated following the 2-0 home defeat to Spurs. It wasn’t just last night that condemned Charlton, but a season-long trail of error, both on and off the pitch.

Fingers can be pointed at the board, for appointing Iain Dowie as Head Coach; following that mistake with the doom-laden Les Reed being put in charge; and the much heralded overseas coaching structure that was quickly put back in the cupboard when Alan Pardew came in to steady the sinking ship.

On the pitch, the failure started with Djimi Traore (remember him?) getting sent off while Charlton were winning at West Ham on the opening day of the season, and finished with Jermain Defoe smashing in the final goal ten minutes from time last night. In between, we have seen abject losses to Wycombe, Liverpool, Middlesboro, and Forest, and poor displays at various times from Thomas, Rommedahl, Diawara, Hreidarsson, Faye, Young, Hughes, Ambrose, Song, Carson, Marcus Bent, and Hasselbaink, amongst others.

Quite simply, Charlton were not good enough to stay in the Premier League this season.

Last nights game saw Berbatov score after seven minutes, out-muscling and outpacing Luke Young to score past Carson with aplomb. Darren Bent tried his best and got free three times – twice going past Robinson but ending up on the goal-line, and with team-mates failing to get anything on target from his subsequent crosses. On the middle occasion, Bent fired wide left-footed when under pressure. Very little else caused the Spurs backline any problems. When Defoe scored the second, the crowd turned the match into a relegation party, and showed that at least some of the people present cared.

This morning, the realisation will set in, but it isn’t all bad news. BBC has reported that a possible takeover is on the cards – this may be a good thing or a bad thing? The days when takeovers seemed to want to asset strip clubs are past (I hope), and no new owners would get planning permission from Greenwich Council to build homes on The Valley anyway, even if Charlton did move elsewhere. Hopefully, if it does happen, then the new owners will put money into the club and build it back up to be a force once more.

Personally, I can look forward to four extra home game next year, plus the chance to see Charlton play away at two new clubs – Preston and Scunthorpe – which is great as new teams don’t come along too often these days. That would also take me up to 84 football league clubs that I have seen Charlton play away at!

Charlton have one remaining Premiership match to play – away at European Cup Finalists Liverpool. I’m sure they will put up some sort of fight, but wouldn’t it be nice to go down with a win!?!

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Monday, May 07, 2007

The Last Post

Not for me, but the trumpet strains of the first few bars have started at The Valley, prior to tonights game against Spurs.
Results over the weekend now make it all but impossible for Charlton to survive in the Premiership this season. 50 years after a similarly traumatic season that saw a change of management of a long period of solidity, the Addicks will go down once more. Hopefully, the future will hold a brighter option than on that occasion when it took another fifteen years to see Charlton leave the second tier, and then in the wrong direction!
Of course, wins tonight and on Sunday at Anfield would leave egg on this bloggers face, and I would love that to happen. But personally I will go along to The Valley tonight to wish a fond farewell to some players, and hopefully a quick return to the money-league in a years time with a new fresh looking squad.
All sixteen thousand plus Charlton supporters who have already bought season tickets would like nothing better than that!
This is the team I think Pardew will send out in the last home game of the season -
Scott Carson
Luke Young
Madjid Bougherra
Souleymane Diawara
Hermann Hreidarsson
Alexandre Song
Matt Holland
Zheng Zhi
Darren Ambrose
Dennis Rommedahl
Darren Bent

Subs from Randolph, Faye, Hughes, Lisbie, Hasselbaink, Thomas.
The starting eleven (and some of the subs) could, bar Bougherra, all realistically be making their last home appearances for Charlton. I expect some others will stay, but that will depend on how messrs Varney and Murray have added their sums up and what the real budget looks like for Championship football.
For Scott Carson, it will be the last time we see him in goal for us, as he will into be allowed to play against Liverpool (or hopefully Charlton!) next weekend.

Spurs still want to win each of their last three games to get as high up the league as they can, and also to ensure European qualification. After a brief challenge, I expect them to have a pretty easy night tonight.
Pedro45's score forecast is a resounding 4-1 defeat; I wish I could be optimistic, but I am more of a realist I'm afraid. I would love nothing more than Darren Bent to score a hattrick to make him to the top English scorer in the Premiership for the second season running (and add a few more quid to the transfer kitty), but even he must be starting to wonder what teams shirt he will pull on in August.

My ones to watch are all those who will be playing in front of the Valley faithful for the last time (in a home shirt):
Darren Bent - I will always remember the goals you scored, the effort you put in, how you played on when injured, and the loyalty you showed when all around (in the Premiership) jump ship at the first chance. You will always be welcome back at The Valley, and I can guarantee you will never be boo-ed.
Luke Young - Thanks for the effort, and for giving us quodos with the England call ups; what's that? Speak up Luke, we can't hear you! Was that a thank you for making you a half-decent player? No, thought not...

Scott Carson - Cheers Scotty; without you making a few saves, we would have been down ages ago. Good luck, and hopefully we can all come and watch you playing regularly for England in a couple of years time.

Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink - See ya Jimbo. I hope that the youngsters you have coached this season don't think they can play with a waistline as big as yours - do you have shares in shorts manufacturers?

Dennis Rommedahl - What a player! Any chance of home goal Dennis? It's your last chance you know...

And to the others, thanks for the good times, and I hope the fans of the next team that pays your salary finds they like you.

Come on you reds!



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Sunday, April 29, 2007

And so, the end is near…

Blackburn Rovers 4 Charlton Athletic 1

Reflections and thoughts on yesterday…

I was proud to see the directors checking in at Gatwick alongside the fans who were on the same flight. How many other clubs would that have occurred at?

The Monarch Airlines cabin staff were very efficient.

The take off at Gatwick was a little bit hairy!

Did the pilot really try to give the left hand side of the plane a view of the Valley (albeit twenty miles away)?

Flying slowly over Luton, Coventry, Stoke, and The Wirral. Coming into land over the Mersey…

The amount of police waiting for us at the airport! Luckily, they didn’t seem too bothered once they’d seen the passengers.

Why did people complain at having to walk 300 yards to the coaches at John Lennon Airport?

Why did people moan when we were held for five minutes on the edge of town while other coaches caught up? We were lucky that the police didn’t insist we couldn’t get to the ground before two pm as they usually instruct!

The Fernhurst did a sterling job in catering (booze-wise) for several thousand thirsty fans.

It was too packed for me (and knowing how many more fans were to arrive), so I headed for the Bear Hotel up the hill; for some reason, they were not expecting anyone, so the hundred plus fans who drank there watching the lunchtime football match on TV really made their day!

Leaving the bar with Manyoo 2-0 down; why can’t we score four goals in the last half hour to win?

Being remembered as one of “The Blackburn 12” by Paul Winton…

The meat and potato (or potato and meat as they call them up there…) pies were lovely!

The crowd were fantastic; even better than last year against Middlesboro, and better than the glory-hunters who went to Forest a few years back on freebies.

Who was the blonde woman on the pitch introduced to the crowd beforehand? Growllll…

When the teams walked out, the response from the Darwen End was tremendous and breath-taking.

The tickertape welcome...

Thinking Blackburn missed far too many chances that they should have scored from, and that the game had no chance of finishing scoreless...

Thatcher was booked for a late tackle, though he didn’t actually seem to touch the guy…intent anyone?

How long does it take Marcus Bent to go in a game before he starts to hold his hamstring? Answer - slightly more than a fitness test session obviously!
The ball was changed after half an hour; prior to that, it seemed to be made of lead, as both teams (and mainly our defence) seemed to have trouble kicking it more than twenty yards!

Why did Luke Young go off for thirty seconds and sit on the bench?

At half-time, we could still do it; although they had the better of the half, Charlton finished the stronger, and looked to have settled. A win was not impossible at that stage…

Matt Holland should have shot across Freidel when he had the chance early in the second half; he probably wouldn’t have scored, but at least he wouldn’t have been slagged off on MOTD for aiming at the near post (and hitting the side netting). Holland provided a good balance in the game, and was possibly our MOM.

What, apart from the customary shirt holding, was Hermann appealing for (left) when he let Roberts turn and run away from him prior to his shot?

Carson’s fumbling Roberts subsequent shot into the corner of the net; I don’t know who was more surprised – 6000 Charlton fans wondering what had happened, or 18000 Blackburn fans who didn’t expect him to score!

Thatcher getting mugged into a late tackle and getting sent off. The ref seemed to be happy with just the foul, but the rigorous flag waving from the lino suggested a foul worse than it was, so no surprise the cards followed. On TV, the forward actually falls over Thatcher’s leg, and he doesn’t even kick him…who’s the mug now Ben?

What did Warnock think he was doing heading the ball back toward his own goal? Dazza did great to finish the chance, which wasn’t as easy as it may have looked.

The euphoria that surrounded that goal – false hope, false optimism.

The shock of conceding just a couple of minutes later – having seen the goal on TV, El Karkouri deflected the cross onto Hermann’s thigh, and he had no chance.

Carson diving over the ball for Robert’s second goal, just minutes later. The real killer…

Carson thumping the ball straight upfield to a Blackburn defender, who’s header went to unmarked Derbyshire, and he finished clinically. He looks like he may be a very good player in a couple of years time…

El Kak wandering (limping) off injured to leave us with just nine players for the last ten minutes.
Dazza heading against the bar in injury time from an excellent Rommedahl cross…
The final whistle...

One fan chucking his Operation Ewood t-shirt off the top tier into oblivion (I doubt anyone picked it up and took it home as a souvenir…).

The chaos trying to find the right coach to get on afterwards! (Well done stewards!)

The chant that went up in the bar at Liverpool airport when a barman dropped a glass – “Are you Carson in disguise?”

Being ushered out of the airside bar on the promise that the last plane was going to leave early - it didn’t!

The man berating his wife for not noticing that they should have been on the first flight out, as she thought it was gate 5 which wasn’t boarding yet, when he was equally responsible! Luckily, they were fitted onto the last flight, as it had about twenty empty seats.

A quicker flight home in the twilight.

The directors asking my wife where the car parks were on exiting Gatwick…

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Sunday, April 22, 2007

Cut Down to Size...

Charlton Athletic 1 Sheffield United 1

What went wrong? This was a must win game for Charlton, but they failed, despite another thumping goal from Talal El Karouri (left). The draw leaves the club still rooted in the bottom three, and with just three matches to go, the signs are that Charlton may well find it impossible to drag themselves out of the relegation zone.

Should we be blaming anyone – fans, players, management, and/or the referee? Well that would be easy, and at times you could point fingers in any and every direction and say that what was going on wasn’t helping matters.

Some of the supporters think that games against promoted clubs are easy games, and that Charlton have an automatic right to win such fixtures. It is a patronising idea borne out of the rule/expectation that Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal must be allowed to win all their games (except when they play each other); no team can or should expect to walk out onto the pitch with the fans knowing the result is a foregone conclusion. When goals don’t come easy, as they haven’t for Charlton over recent weeks, then fans moan and complain. This has added to the nervousness around the club that the players seem to have sensed. I totally accept that this season has been a hell of a lot more interesting than any of Curbs last few in charge, but we need to play (and support) with belief that we can prevail. The noise levels from supporters are fantastic (the clackers helped again…), but we must keep it going even when the play isn’t going quite so well.

The players did look a little nervous yesterday; obviously the disappointment of last weekends loss at Goodison hurt, but they did play well, and should have been confident as that was the first defeat in seven games. The team needed to take individual responsibility, but I do think we lacked some leaders on the pitch, and maybe one reason for that was a problem with communication? It is well publicised that Zheng Zhi cannot speak English, and with the French speaking contingent at the back (El Karkouri, Diawara, and Bougherra), sometimes you really could see that some players didn’t seem to know what the other was going to do. When “Magic” came on toward the end, he really did look nervous, and would not take the ball anywhere or do anything with it (other than pass sideways) in case he looked bad. And as for his foul throw in…I know the lino took ages to flag for it (maybe he was told about it by the fourth official via his earpiece?), it was so blatant it was embarrassing.

Alan Pardew picks the team, and he does so with the intention of getting the best result possible. I really don’t like to criticise him as he has worked wonders since arriving, but yesterday I thought he probably didn’t help matters much with his selections. In defence of his actions, he hasn’t been helped by injuries in preparation, or during the matches (for instance, Big Bent and Hreidarsson went off injured in the first half against Reading thereby leaving any tactical changes almost redundant). Yesterday, he chose to play threee “wingers”, which was bold, and could have worked, but when all three are quite, shall we say, lightweight, and not known for their tackling abilities, I wonder if this was the right move? Especially so when the side you are up against are a bunch of bruisers who will battle for every ball, and deny any space and time you may want. We had to be first to the second balls, and the team just didn’t have enough energy/skill/muscle to do that. I do think that Matt Holland (or even Amdy Faye) would have been a better option in midfield than Darren Ambrose (or ZZ) if the formation Pards wanted was to be maintained. In fact, Pardew wanted to switch things around when Charlton went in front – Holland and Hreidarsson where both stripped and waiting to come on – but he chose not to. The obvious reason for this was that both times he was ready to make the changes, Charlton were defending free kicks in and around their own penalty area. Do you switch then or not – damned if you do, and damned if you don’t! In the end, Holland never did make it onto the pitch, as Pards decided (probably quite rightly) that one of his centre backs was likely to be sent off with the pressure they were being put under, and he sacrificed Diawara for Bougherra in order to save him for next week.

Alan Wiley, the referee, has had a lot of plaudits this season, but I doubt many Charlton fans think much of him now… There were eight bookings – five for Charlton – and he did struggle at times to keep a lid on the match (Do clubs still get fined if they get five bookings in a Premiership match?). It has to be said that there were no punch-ups/handbags, no bad fouls, no elbowing (even though Warnock indicated to Wiley that there had been!), but this was a game where all the actions that can be termed “Professional” came out; lots of shirt-pulling, tripping, time-wasting, and all round negative play. Hey, be honest, both sides were guilty! Wiley didn’t help matters by making a rod for his own back; once he brandished a yellow card (second minute – for deliberate handball), he had to be consistent with his actions, and I actually thought he was. Sadly, that hurt Charlton more than it hurt the Blades. When you consider that of the three cautions handed out to the away team, one was handball, one time-wasting (Kenny; right at the very end), and the other for persistent fouling, then I think Charlton were a bit mugged in that area of the game. Oh, and for all those fans sat near me who lambasted the linesman for not giving Stead off-side (above), he didn’t because he wasn’t!

OK, whinge over! It’s just the disappointment…

Rommedahl had one of his better games, and sadly nobody could get a header on target from one of the series of delightful crosses he put over in the first half (Ambrose the most guilty). Dazza was clearly not fit (maybe only 80%?), but that was nearly enough as he also came close on a couple of occasions. We still don’t know where ZZ is best, but as a midfield general it probably isn’t, as he does go to ground too easily (something noticed by Wiley…); it was a shame that we couldn’t switch him positionally with Ambrose at some stage, as he really could have caused damage playing just behind Dazza. Again, ZZ came close to scoring; he could have had a goal a game since Newcastle (and maybe should have…)!

El Karkouri (left) did shoot when we told him too, and it went in! Even though there was a slight deflection it might still have won our Goal of the Season had it not been too late to include! He also came close with a good free-kick that was obviously a benefit from work the training ground.

Carson continues to make good saves, and is now probably now a lot better keeper than he was when he arrived. It would be great to keep him if we could, but he will not be affordable to a Championship team.

Ultimately, and cruelly, one poor decision (by Ambrose in choosing to pass in the direction of Dazza rather than Rommers) may have cost the Addicks the game, as the ball went up the other end and Stead thumped in the equaliser.

Next week, we will arrive at Blackburn, and the team will be backed by well over 4,000 travelling fans. I hope that many more chose to give it a go, as it could be glorious, or it could be a swansong; I haven’t booked my ticket yet but plan to do so tomorrow. I want to be there, and I want the players to know that I and others want to see them win.

What other teams do really doesn’t matter; with teams at the bottom playing each other, we have to win a game and concentrate on getting above someone else, or maybe two, anyone will do – Fulham, Wigan, Sheffield United – I don’t care!

Charlton now have to approach the last three games as cup finals, as if they haven’t done so over the last few weeks! A win is vital, as not even three draws is likely to be enough to keep them up. With two tough away games, and another hard game at home, it is easy to say that we cannot do the impossible. But this is Charlton, and we never do things the easy way…

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Friday, April 20, 2007

Cutting it Fine!

It’s make or break time at The Valley tomorrow, as Charlton’s latest do or die game brings them face-to-face with Sheffield United.

We all know the permutations from whatever result comes from the game; suffice to say that anything less than a Charlton win will not go down too well in parts of south east London.

The Blades will come to the match with some confidence, having thumped West ham 3-0 last weekend. That confidence may not have been dented by the midweek loss to Manchester United, so Charlton will need to be on top of their collective game.

Injuries will play a part, as United have top scorer Rob Hulse missing with a broken leg. Charlton are not at full strength, but do have many key players available. Hermann Hreidarsson may make a quick return from injury, although it is more likely that Ben Thatcher will retain his place at left back. Marcus Bent may be fit but may not be ready to face another of his former clubs (he does seem to have the option to face one nearly every week these days!).

The scary news is that Darren Bent has a slight knock; without him, Charlton really would have problems up front…

This is the side I expect Alan Pardew to send into battle at 3pm tomorrow –

Scott Carson
Luke Young
Talal El Karkouri
Souleymane Diawara
Ben Thatcher
Alexandre Song
Matt Holland
Zheng Zhi
Darren Ambrose
Dennis Rommedahl
Darren Bent

Subs from Randolph, Sankofa, Hreidarsson, Faye, Hughes, Lisbie, Hasselbaink, Thomas.

If Jerome Thomas has recovered from his knee problem, then he may well play instead of Rommedahl.

I really don’t’ know if it is worth issuing a rallying cry, as all Addicks fans know how this game ranks with those we have seen this season and before: A win and we have a chance; a defeat and we are pretty much doomed.

My one-to-watch tomorrow is going to be Alan Pardew. Our manager has done a great job since he had that phone call on Christmas Eve, and we all love him to bits. He will be kicking every ball as he watches from the sideline, arms crossed, and if things do start to go pear-shaped, the players will need his experience, calmness, and thoughtful thinking to be evident. He has the tactical nous to know how to win this fixture; he just needs the players to put these ideas into practice.

Pedro45’s score prediction is a 2-0 home win. We need it more than them; it has to be a homer.

Alan Wiley is a strict but fair referee (famous last words!!!), and we need to be aware that they will come at us and try to bully a result from the fixture. No silly tackles or sticking heads where you shouldn't boys!

The players and fans will hopefully do their bit, and I really do think we can win this match.

Come on you reds!

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