First off, I have to confess to still having a soft spot for West Brom. This dates back to early 1969 when, having brushed aside a certain team down the road in the third round of the FA Cup, we were drawn at Arsenal in the fourth. My father said we would watch the next round wherever it was if we made it through. We didn’t, but Arsenal came out of the hat with an away tie at the Hawthorns, close to where some of our relatives still lived. So we went anyway – and an adolescent youth was smitten by a distant cousin a few years older than me, in spite of the accent.
All a long time ago – and sorry to say it did nothing to stop me howling with joy and leaping out of my seat late last night back in Lyon. For it had been a long, hard game and a pretty tough watch. To have it rounded off in such fashion was, shall we say, most enjoyable. Like against Hull, Swansea etc, whether or not we deserved it on the balance of play and chances is irrelevant. We scored. End of. The game will live long in nobody’s memory, but the ending will.
I felt we went into last night’s game, while very happy with our placing in the league, with perhaps a little to prove after successive draws and having been second-best against Swansea on Saturday. That said, we were well aware that there would be necessary changes to the team given that Bell and Burke were presumably added to Edwards on the injured list. In the event those three were out and so was Kelman, depriving him of the opportunity to build on his first goal for the club.
The result was Ramsay joining Jones and Gillesphey in central defence, while Hernandez was to start as wing-back, along with Bree, although which would take which side remained to be seen. Midfield saw no changes, with Docherty, Coventry and Carey retained, while up front Leaburn came in for Kelman to partner Campbell. That all meant places on the bench, with Anderson, Fullah, and U21 captain Gough drafted in, alongside Rankin-Costello and Apter (both unable to get a look-in at the moment), Berry, Knibbs, and Olaofe as the only forward replacement. It all rather drove home the point that small squads are fine, have advantages, but sometimes you come a cropper – both Mitchells out on loan, as well as Kanu and Mbick, even Ahadme.
The first 30 minutes can be instantly written off, a horrible mix of misplaced passes and hopeless balls forward to static forwards, our only possession being a case of going sideways or back, while West Brom quickly got everyone behind the ball, leaving little or no space to work with. They had the only moments of danger, usually involving the returning Grant, including an early effort by a guy at the far post, who shot wildly, a break needing a very timely Jones block to end the danger, and then their guy on the right comprehensively beating Hernandez and fizzing in a low ball across the face of goal with nobody there to touch it home.
We had produced nothing in their half, then on 33 minutes out of nowhere we were handed the opportunity to go in front. Leaburn got his head to a ball into the box but there seemed no danger as their guy covered, only to use his hand. The ref was well placed to see it and pointed to the spot. It’s been a long time since anyone but Godden took a spot kick for us in the league at least and it was Docherty who stepped forward to take it. It was a poor effort. He shimmied and shuffled to try to second-guess their keeper, who stood his ground then dived left and made a comfortable save as the shot was neither powerful enough nor well enough placed, making it a 50-50. That said, Docherty took on the job when it seemed forwards were not interested. And that’s a bad sign. Killer was a mediocre penalty-taker but he always took them as he knew he was more likely to score than not.
Shortly after West Brom nearly went ahead instead. A ball through the middle found a guy who was surely offside, but no flag and he was in on goal, only to drag his shot wide. That miss ensured that West Brom ended the half with no efforts on target while we had one, the penalty.
The second half if anything got worse for us as West Brom for a period of time looked odds-on to score. Another shot wide from a good position, then a guy running through down the right, leading to a Kaminski save. Our spirits were briefly lifted by a well-struck effort from Carey, which drew a decent save from their keeper, and from the resulting corner Leaburn flicked on at the near post (the only time that happened all game, with Bree’s deliveries strangely disappointing) but with no Berry or Godden to read the situation it came to nothing.
It was time for some changes and, unlike against Swansea, they were to have a material impact on the game. On 72 minutes Knibbs and Fullah were introduced for Docherty and Hernandez and we changed shape, with those two operating either side of Leaburn. Immediately Fullah turned and fed Leaburn, which must have planted some doubt in the minds of previously untroubled defenders. A Gillesphey cross from the left was met by Leaburn, but his glancing header went wide. On 82 minutes Olaofe replaced Leaburn, but in the closing minutes West Brom did come close. A move down their right led to a ball in which Jones just managed to intercept before it reached their guy for a tap-in, then their sub cut into the box and flicked a shot which went just wide, might have beaten Kaminski if on target.
So as we entered five minutes of additional time it looked as though it would be a point apiece and both sides left to consider their shortcomings. Until we won a corner right at the death. It was another poor delivery headed out at the near post. It went behind Carey and he did have the easy and sensible option to lay it back to Coventry to put back into the box. Instead he turned with it – and for a horrible moment it looked as though he would have it nicked off him, in which case their guy might have had a clear run on goal, albeit from a long way out. Carey just made it in time and in space steadied himself, then just put his boot through the ball. It took a deflection and that seemed to deceive their keeper, who allowed it to go under him and into the net.
Cue pandemonium in SE7, Lyon, and no doubt many other places. There was barely time to restart after the mass celebrations before Jones the Boss was in front of the Covered End hailing another home win.
Let’s face it, stoppage time has been good to us. Apparently five of our 16 league goals have been after 90 minutes – and if you consider Berry’s Hull equaliser, the sitter that Swansea missed, and Carey’s winner, we could easily have been four points worse off than we are from the last three games. That said, the substitutions made last night did prove to be game-changers, we did end the game strongly (unlike on Saturday), and by pushing them back in the final stages perhaps encouraged West Brom to sit back and be content with a draw.
Teams we have played and neutrals may question how we are sitting in fifth. The answer to that is pretty obvious: 11 goals conceded in 14 games, only bettered by Stoke. And last night’s clean sheet was achieved without three defenders who would have been in the squad at least. So as a footballing spectacle last night may not have been in the top bracket, but we took the points and move on, nosebleed or not.