by Ian Royal » 03 Feb 2013 18:58
by If you still hate Futcher » 03 Feb 2013 20:22
PieEater For the first time this season it looked like we could compete, too often this season we've just stood off teams and waited for them to score. The midfield looks much better without Karacan and Guthrie, Akpan looks like he'll be quite a star and Jobi suits playing the Giggs role to support the wingers or help the attack.
by BenReadingFC » 03 Feb 2013 21:41
2 world wars, 1 world cup
Agree thanks Ben
This sort of stuff is really appreciated by those who can't make some games.
by JC » 04 Feb 2013 00:43
by Royal91 » 04 Feb 2013 01:22
JC Sour grapes from Sunderland.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/footba ... ejski.html
In-form Reading were accused of being an aggressive, long-ball team after defeating Sunderland. That spiky verdict came from the visitors’ goalscorer, Craig Gardner.
Sunderland defender Craig Gardner criticises Reading's aggressive long-ball game
Something has clearly changed at Reading . At Christmas, they were bottom with a pitiful nine points from 18 games. Since then, they have hauled themselves out of the relegation zone by adding 14 points from seven matches.
Gardner, however, was scathing about how this latest victory was achieved after Jimmy Kebe headed in a late winner from an Ian Harte free-kick. “It was just a game they tried to turn into a fight,” the Sunderland defender said. “It wasn’t football; it was a fight.”
He added: “They were just hoofing everything – from the goalkeeper, from free-kicks. The whole time, everything was going into the box. We defended it brilliantly until the last 10 minutes. To concede d concede a goal like that, just deflates you.”
Coincidentally for Reading, their next game is against Stoke City, the masters of the physical game, and defender Alex Pearce is in no doubt they are ready for the battle. “It won’t be one for the faint-hearted,” Pearce said. “The form we are in, we can take on anyone.”
In the Stoke mould, Reading used set-pieces to cause danger here. While Stoke had Rory Delap’s throw-ins, Reading have free-kicks from Harte, who is reviving memories of his role at Leeds a decade ago.
“If you had a player with a left foot like Ian Harte and a right foot like David Beckham, that would be some player,”
Reading manager Brian McDermott said: “Ian’s a couple of years younger than Becks and showing no signs of not being able to play here still.”
Sunderland looked on course for a draw, courtesy of Gardner’s penalty, until Titus Bramble gave away the foul that allowed Harte to whip in the free-kick for Kebe to nod in.
by The Real Sandhurst Royal » 04 Feb 2013 08:29
long ball??
Well actually Gardner if you look at the stats
Reading- 14.4% of our passes were 'LONG BALL'
Sunderland'-17.7% of their passes were LONG BALL
Sunderland produced more fouls and more bookings!
What a dickhead.
SSN
by The bitter biscuit » 04 Feb 2013 10:03
by Ouroboros » 04 Feb 2013 10:55
The Real Sandhurst Royallong ball??
Well actually Gardner if you look at the stats
Reading- 14.4% of our passes were 'LONG BALL'
Sunderland'-17.7% of their passes were LONG BALL
Sunderland produced more fouls and more bookings!
What a dickhead.
SSN
+ 1
A player spouting his mouth of without knowing the facts to back it up.
That said I would not mind Gardiner at Reading!!
by Victor Meldrew » 04 Feb 2013 11:12
JC Sour grapes from Sunderland.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/footba ... ejski.html
In-form Reading were accused of being an aggressive, long-ball team after defeating Sunderland. That spiky verdict came from the visitors’ goalscorer, Craig Gardner.
Sunderland defender Craig Gardner criticises Reading's aggressive long-ball game
Something has clearly changed at Reading . At Christmas, they were bottom with a pitiful nine points from 18 games. Since then, they have hauled themselves out of the relegation zone by adding 14 points from seven matches.
Gardner, however, was scathing about how this latest victory was achieved after Jimmy Kebe headed in a late winner from an Ian Harte free-kick. “It was just a game they tried to turn into a fight,” the Sunderland defender said. “It wasn’t football; it was a fight.”
He added: “They were just hoofing everything – from the goalkeeper, from free-kicks. The whole time, everything was going into the box. We defended it brilliantly until the last 10 minutes. To concede d concede a goal like that, just deflates you.”
Coincidentally for Reading, their next game is against Stoke City, the masters of the physical game, and defender Alex Pearce is in no doubt they are ready for the battle. “It won’t be one for the faint-hearted,” Pearce said. “The form we are in, we can take on anyone.”
In the Stoke mould, Reading used set-pieces to cause danger here. While Stoke had Rory Delap’s throw-ins, Reading have free-kicks from Harte, who is reviving memories of his role at Leeds a decade ago.
“If you had a player with a left foot like Ian Harte and a right foot like David Beckham, that would be some player,”
Reading manager Brian McDermott said: “Ian’s a couple of years younger than Becks and showing no signs of not being able to play here still.”
Sunderland looked on course for a draw, courtesy of Gardner’s penalty, until Titus Bramble gave away the foul that allowed Harte to whip in the free-kick for Kebe to nod in.
by Jano » 04 Feb 2013 11:14
by Alexander Litvinenko » 04 Feb 2013 11:51
by Snowball » 04 Feb 2013 12:06
by melonhead » 04 Feb 2013 12:11
by melonhead » 04 Feb 2013 12:12
Snowball Just a thought but maybe Kebe is being asked to be more conservative for the first hour?
by 72 bus » 04 Feb 2013 12:17
melonhead the most comfortable ive been in a prem game this season. just thought we would win all the way through it.
fed 8
kelly 7
pearce 7
marriappa 8
harte 7
kebe 9
jobi 7
ledge 7
mcleary 8
pog 7
by melonhead » 04 Feb 2013 12:19
by Tony Le Mesmer » 04 Feb 2013 13:34
Alexander Litvinenko Just one thought ... that McDermott made a potential mistake/took a big gamble by switching to 4-4-2 and bringing on ALF after 65 minutes. For the first 20 minutes of the second half, even playing 4-5-1 we were well on top, and Sunderland were nowhere with virtually no possession.
Then we went 4-4-2 and allowed Sunderland lots more possession through the middle - this, coupled with Graham coming on, meant it could easily have gone either way.
Yes, Kebe rescued us close to the end, so BMc got away with the gamble - but it was a damn close run thing I'm convinced that if we'd stayed 4-5-1 we'd still have scored long before the end and we'd not have allowed Sunderland to get the chances they did have.
by Esteban » 04 Feb 2013 14:07
Alexander Litvinenko Just one thought ... that McDermott made a potential mistake/took a big gamble by switching to 4-4-2 and bringing on ALF after 65 minutes. For the first 20 minutes of the second half, even playing 4-5-1 we were well on top, and Sunderland were nowhere with virtually no possession.
Then we went 4-4-2 and allowed Sunderland lots more possession through the middle - this, coupled with Graham coming on, meant it could easily have gone either way.
Yes, Kebe rescued us close to the end, so BMc got away with the gamble - but it was a damn close run thing I'm convinced that if we'd stayed 4-5-1 we'd still have scored long before the end and we'd not have allowed Sunderland to get the chances they did have.
by Extended-Phenotype » 04 Feb 2013 14:59
by Cypry » 04 Feb 2013 15:03
Extended-Phenotype Still a bit worried that we look so vulnerable in a 4-4-2 but can't create shit in a 4-5-1.
Seems that we try and wear people out with 4-5-1 and then do 'em with the 4-4-2 with a quarter of the game to go - nothing wrong with this, but it'd be nice not to feel like vomiting by the end of a match.
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