One point. Tuesday night’s results had left us that close to safety. Getting it last night was obviously always going to be a tough ask, with Ipswich desperate for a win to take them back above the Spanners into second. Could a team with no win in six, one still struggling to find effective combinations in midfield and attack, upset the odds as we had done at Portman Road? Well, it’s football, eleven against eleven etc. For sure to get something we would need the breaks to go our way, as they had done at their place. Overall they didn’t and we lost.
No shame in that and there were positives from the performance – Docherty was outstanding, Sichenje stood up well to a tough task, and Fevrier gave us the sort of attacking threat you expect from a wing-back. But positives count for nothing at this stage of the season and in any event they are outweighed by the fresh injuries. We may well go into Saturday’s game against Hull without Ramsay, Bell, Campbell and Godden. So, not the night we hoped for.
For the team/squad there were doubts pre-match in each area. Would Kaminski return after a couple of costly errors from Mannion? Would Ramsay be available and if not would Burke or Sichenje get the nod? Would Jones continue with Coady and Docherty to protect the defence or might Coventry or Rankin-Costello get a start? Might Knibbs (or Berry) give Carey a rest? And up top just which two from Dykes, Leaburn, Godden, Kelman and Campbell? In the event Jones came up with a fresh approach and made eight changes from the Sheff Wed game. Kaminski did return, Fevrier did come in for Clarke, Sichenje replaced Burke, while Bell was moved from left-side central to left wing-back, Chambers on the bench, with Gillesphey brought in to start. In midfield Coady dropped out, with Coventry returning to partner Docherty, while Rankin-Costello replaced Carey to stiffen midfield. Up front Campbell and Kelman started, with Dykes on the bench (where there was no place for Leaburn).
The changes looked like a mix of needs must and a changed gameplan, with TC and Kelman expected to harry their defence and make a nuisance of themselves, with Dykes and Godden presumably to be introduced as and when. And before we had any chance to assess the impact we had the dream start, taking the lead in the first minute. Sloppy play across the back by Ipswich (not for the first time this season it seems) saw a weak square pass read by Campbell, who was able to race through a flatfooted defence and into the box. It was a tight angle and his shot was parried, but only into the path of an advancing Docherty, who planted it into the net through defenders and their keeper.
That set the tone for an excellent opening spell, albeit one interrupted by a lengthy break for a face injury for Jones the Player, in which we pressed high, forcing more Ipswich errors, with Campbell and Fevrier prominent. It couldn’t last indefinitely and Ipswich did settle and start to dominate possession. But before they could take control we had a blow on 14 minutes as Bell pulled up and had to be replaced by Chambers. That left a Gillesphey/Chambers combination on our left side which might be exploited.
As Ipswich grew into the game, on 22 minutes they carved out their first real opening, and really should have equalised. Good hold-up play and movement on their right side/our left led to a low ball squared into the box, only for their guy to make a complete hash of a very presentable chance from close range. We did have a couple of half-chances after that, as first their keeper almost came a cropper trying to deal with a ball outside his box, Kelman almost getting in, then from a good break after a Sichenje interception Kelman had a shot from a narrow angle saved. But by now the pattern was set, Ipswich having the ball and working it around our box and us relying on some inspired play on the break.
The only surprise when they equalised on 35 minutes was that it came from a break of their own. Sichenje allowed their winger to cut inside into space and from then on we were never properly set. It was played square and ended at the feet of a guy central outside the box. We couldn’t get close enough to him and his low shot with the outside of the boot went through defenders and just beyond Kaminski’s dive into the corner of the net.
The only other event of the first half, aside from a yellow for Gillesphey and a Fevrier shot into the side-netting, was that at the end of seven minutes of stoppage time Campbell and their defender both went to ground and TC seemed to turn his ankle. He limped off and wouldn’t reappear for the second half, with our second enforced changed seeing Dykes replace him and implying a change in our attacking strategy.
Nevertheless, although Ipswich had enjoyed 69% first-half possession, with six attempts on goal from us (three on target) against seven (and two) for them and the scores level we were not despairing at half-time. After all, don’t concede a goal for a half and we would have our point.
We didn’t manage to do that, and perhaps worse in the second half we failed to muster a serious attempt on goal. The early switch to Dykes suited their defence better and after a lively opening from both sides the game settled into the pattern of the first half, the difference being that we had a less effective out strategy and the ball kept coming back rather quicker.
On 56 minutes we made the decisive error. A ball down the channel into our box and the run by their winger caught Gillesphey a little flat-footed and he instinctively put out an arm to hamper their guy’s progress. As he advanced and went to ground it was a pretty clear penalty. Even then Kaminski came so close to saving it. He guessed the right way and if the penalty had been cleanly struck he might have saved it. Instead a rather tame and poorly directed effort ended up going in under his diving body. First reaction was to say Kaminski should have saved it, but on reflection it was a good attempted save that didn’t work.
After that Carey was brought on for Kelman, presumably with the intention to drive forward with the ball from midfield (as he had done to good effect at Portman Road). But there was no real impact and on 63 minutes we almost fell further behind as their winger cut inside and his powerful shot was pushed away by Kaminski, who got up to save from the rebound.
On 77 minutes Godden and Knibbs came on for Rankin-Costello and Chambers, promising the now traditional final bombarding of the opposition’s box. But although balls went in nothing dropped and, especially as Godden almost immediately picked up an injury, one which left him hobbling (and we’d used up all of our subs) and unable to influence the game, Ipswich held on with no real alarms, even through eight minutes of stoppage time. They almost scored a third with the space they now had on the break, but it didn’t matter.
So, beaten and bloodied we move on to Saturday. We have no choice. It is still all in our hands. Get the point in the early kick-off and Oxford’s later game at home to Sheff Wed becomes irrelevant. Fail to do so and there’s every chance it will all go to the final game. Jones the Boss is calling for one more big performance and we so, so badly need that, whoever is fit and able.