Yawning to 3 points

Town’s routine victory over a neat and tidy but largely unthreatening Exeter City extended the hosts unbeaten run and the alarming dip in form appears well and truly consigned to the past.

Somewhat dull as a spectacle, the Terriers rarely looked in any trouble and coasted to a 3rd win in 4, with just 1 goal conceded in an impressive point gathering run which has hopefully restored confidence and created some momentum as winter approaches.

A first quarter of an hour bereft of incident at either end of the pitch livened up when the hard working Marshall and Ward combined to create danger in the visitors’ box, with the West Ham loanee eventually seeing his shot deflected over for a corner.

Wiles took the corner and delivered the ball on to the six yard line for Pearson to outjump everyone to power a header past Whitworth who, frankly, didn’t cover himself in glory with his attempt at a save, though it was at close range.

The sterility of the game didn’t particularly improve with the goal, not helped by the away side having little ambition to get forward despite being in arrears.

A delightful passing move which freed Ward to finish nicely only to be pulled up by an incorrect, if understandable, offside call was a rare shaft of light in a generally tedious affair. Perhaps the only person animated by proceedings was Exeter’s manager, who barely stopped arguing, pointing and cajoling, to no discernible effect.

Town controlled the half without needing to hit any heights as the Grecians’ passivity created a bloodless contest. Throughout the entirety of the game, only one challenge, on Lonwijk, brought a crowd reaction and was nowhere near enough to warrant a yellow card from the quite impressive referee. 

Within seconds of the restart, the Devon side missed a glorious chance to level, but an excellent cross was disappointingly glanced by Magennis and Chapman saved easily.

Perhaps an equaliser would have jolted the game in to life, but it slipped back into predictability with Town easily coping with a slightly more adventurous opponent who shaded the opening ten minutes of the second half until the hosts killed the game stone dead with a second.

Ben Wiles, who rightly edged man of the match for the Terriers, was picked out in a lot of space 25 yards out by Kane and the midfielder took a step or two forward before hitting a sweet shot past City’s keeper who, again, could possibly have done better given the distance the ball travelled, all be it at pace. The bounce just before it reached him was, perhaps, the key factor.

Exeter’s urgency increased to the level of slightly miffed as they stared defeat in the face and they had one more, glorious, chance to make a game of it when Magennis lifted the ball over the bar from a good position. There was a case for a foul on Wiles in the build up, but it would have been a soft decision even if given a lot more than not.

Substitute Healey found the net late on after good work from Kasumu, but was adjudged narrowly offside, and the bland encounter finished shortly afterwards.

Successful seasons involve straightforward, vanilla wins and this was undoubtedly a rather forgettable game which, nevertheless, keeps Town in the top 6 despite the alarming slump in form in September and they now look like the contenders they damn well should be.

Happy hour

At 3 up and cruising against very limited opposition, Town still managed to create tension among the supporters in a 10 minute spell where they tried their very best to hand lifelines to a woeful Bristol Rovers outfit.

It may seem churlish to begin with criticism after an eventually comfortable win, but the dip in performance contained endemic weaknesses which Duff and his team need to address.

Before tackling the issues between his players’ ears on relatively simple game management, Duff may also reflect on his own very slow reaction to his opposite number who, having nothing to lose, threw on fresh legs with the intent of turning up the gas. 

Town were rattled by the sudden switch from moribund lambs to the slaughter to a team finally prepared to commit and were unable to match the new level of energy which was almost immediately evident.

Mysteriously, and contrary to his usual use of substitutes, the manager didn’t react in any way for 15 minutes and once he did, the threat receded entirely.

The majority of teams in this division are better equipped offensively than The Gas, and will deal out the punishment the hesitancy and errors of those 10 minutes deserved.

As it was, Town conceded a goal, could have easily given a penalty away when Chapman tried to make amends for a poor punch and had to desperately scramble to recover from the otherwise impressive Miller being dispossessed facing his own goal showing the hesitancy suddenly ingrained in to the team.

It had taken the hosts some time to get in to the game and a dreary opening quarter of an hour lacked any creative spark against opponents carrying virtually no threat, but a Miller effort which deflected over the bar via 2 Rovers players signalled the start of a dominant spell which rather settled the destination of the 3 points.

Wiles, whose influence grew after a quiet opening, delivered two excellent corners to the back post in quick succession. The first saw Lees looping header cleared off the line while the second was volleyed home by Pearson as the ball dropped towards him after an aerial duel.

Prior to the opener, Wiles played a great ball into the box which a defender managed to reach before Radulovic and the striker also totally misread a situation after Marshall had a good effort comfortably saved. The ball fell to him but he got everything wrong and screwed the ball harmlessly wide.

5 minutes after the opener, a penetrating pass by Lonwijk in to the path of a possibly offside Marshall was excellently finished by the Irish youngster, for a two nil lead which didn’t flatter Town who had overwhelmed the visitors after that tentative opening.

On the hour, the Dutchman played an even better, positively sumptuous ball with the outside of his foot in to the path of Miller who turned the ball across for a tap in by Radulovic. The celebration which followed was a little startling in the context of him being in the right place, directly in front of goal and unmarked, to profit from excellent work elsewhere, but maybe the relief of finally scoring overwhelmed him. 

All those months slumming it in Huddersfield finally paid off.

With the game ostensibly over, Rovers’ manager woke up and made the substitutions which threatened to upend Town’s procession while Duff’s belated subs calmed things down and Town collected a relatively easy 3 points.

Excellent in parts, worrying in that brief spell of complacency and peppered with good performances, the result was a little more satisfying than the game itself and more difficult challenges lay immediately ahead.

It should be mentioned that after so little football for so long, Turton was excellent throughout until rightly substituted when fatigued, all the back 3 had good games and Wiles showed his talents more expansively than usual. The midfield trio, with Kasumu providing masses of energy and Kane the creativity looks far more cohesive than Duff’s previous iterations.

On to Wales.

Palpable relief

It was a far from perfect performance which finally lifted the gloom surrounding Duff’s misfiring squad, but a deserved win against desperately poor opponents promises an upturn in fortunes which now must be delivered.

Recent home disasters, a careless defeat at Reading and luckily avoiding a mauling at St Andrews created a backdrop of nervous anxiety for a Yorkshire derby, as a season of promise was in danger of turning very sour, very early if it had not already done so.

Injuries, lack of form and a paucity of options up front demanded some creativity from Michael Duff, and his pairing of Kasumu and Hodge with Wiles playing further forward and more central was yet another stab at finding a harmonious midfield trio.

At the back, Lees’ recent form finally caught up with him and Pearson stepped in as the centre of a back 3 which, at long last, contained pace and at least a modicum of passing ability either side of the robust stand in skipper.

Chapman, who acquitted himself well in the two away defeats, kept out the returning Maxwell.

In the opening exchanges, Town flattered to deceive with nicely constructed approach play breaking down too easily in the final third and it was the visitors who threatened first, forcing a good save from Chapman from a free kick conceded by Hodge who was also booked for the foul from behind after he had lost possession.

After that scare, Town took a grip of the first half and should really have taken advantage of several good moves and periods of pressure which saw Slonina make good saves to deny Marshall and Kasumu, while his defenders blocked other attempts from Bojan and the lively Marshall, again.

While imperfect, and somewhat fragile, Town’s first half showing was encouraging and the shape of the side looked far more effective as Kasumu and Hodge’s energy allowed Wiles to find space and use the ball more effectively than in his too often anonymous performances of late. 

With the Reds’ goal leading a charmed life, however, the concern was that an improved display needed to be capped with a goal, and just before the break, a deflected cross looped to the back post gave Cosgrove a presentable opportunity. Spencer thwarted the big man with a well timed jump and block, but could have resulted in an unjust deficit.

Town had competently dealt with Barnsley’s physicality, restricting the South Yorkshire side to a one dimensional long ball game, and pinning them back for extended periods.

Down the flanks, Miller was a constant threat, while Sorensen showed some signs of a return to form with some good link up play down the right with Spencer and Wiles, creating one particular frantic spell where Town could have scored on three separate occasions but for the resilience of the visitors’ defence. He also set up Wiles for a very good chance, but the midfielder mistimed his shot which drifted over the bar.

There were mistakes, some hesitancy born of lack of confidence and a few too many misplaced passes, but it was still the best half of football for some time.

Soon after the break, Radulovic lobbed a decent chance over the bar after capitalising on Barnsley’s central defenders and goalkeeper’s hesitancy dealing with an awkward ball in from a good Sorensen header.

Miller continued to torment the full back opposing him but couldn’t find the right cross to undo a strong Barnsley defence, while Sorensen’s propensity for hitting the first defender while trying over intricate balls in to the box led to the hosts clocking up an unusually high number of corners.

Most of these were deliberately aimed towards Slonina, presumably to try and exploit a weakness, but the men in pink stood firm.

Barnsley then came in to the game more and they enjoyed a ten minute spell of pressure which led to a well worked chance for Cosgrove, only for the target man to shoot over.

The South Yorkshire outfit also looked capable of catching Town on the break and should have done much better when Humphries made a poor decision to make a simple pass inside rather than trying to find the unmarked Cosgrove in the box.

With a scoreless derby looking increasingly likely, Town substitutes Ladapo and Kane combined to release the latter who then found Wiles with an excellent ball at the edge of the box. Taking a touch, Wiles steadied himself and found the top corner with an unstoppable drive.

With just 7 minutes and injury time to see out, Town introduced Lees to shore up a defence which had played very well. 

With no further scares, Town wrapped up the points with a Kasumu strike which should probably have been saved but was nevertheless very well hit.

This was a massively important win for Duff and his misfiring squad. 

Wiles as a number 10 worked. The Kasumu/Hodges axis worked. Having defensive pace either side of rock solid Pearson worked. 

There is little doubt that the team lacks an instinctive striker, but Marshall’s work rate and energy could possibly dovetail with Radulovic, who doesn’t look as fragile as in his first appearances, and it is a duo which perhaps deserves a run.

Whether this was a corner turned or just steps in the right direction remains to be seen, but the team’s shape was more convincing and seemed to release rather than restrain the individuals who are capable of pushing Town towards the top 6. 

A little more calmness on the ball would be welcome, as would improved decision making in the final third, but the boosting of confidence from a deserved victory should help.