Tuesday, May 1st, 2012

City’s third defeat in quick succession and Stockport’s first-ever League win at Maine

July 28, 2010 by admin  
Filed under Entertainment

City’s third defeat in quick succession and Stockport’s first-ever League win at Maine Road came courtesy of Nicky Weaver’s wild dash from his goal and a Danny Granville push on Alan Bailey in the ensuing chaos.
The referee John Brandwood awarded the kick after consulting his assistant and Tony Dinning, threatened all night with an old-fashioned roasting by City’s left-winger, Mark Kennedy, stepped up to have the last laugh from the penalty spot.”I thought he was pushed, but I believe it might have been outside the area,” said Stockport’s delighted manager, Andy Kilner, as his team moved into a play-off position.Whether the push was inside or outside the penalty area was indeed open to question, but City should never have had to rely on such narrow margins.Playing with a surprising freedom and confidence after their defeat by Huddersfield and Wolves, they created an abundance of chances in the first- half, notably two headers from their new signing, Robert Taylor, that went wide of the target, a lunging shot by Ian Bishop that hit the bar and one from Granville that shaved the post.Stockport had shown enough on the break to suggest that they could pose problems of their own, but when City finally took the lead after 49 minutes it seemed that they were at last getting their promotion push back on track.The goal stemmed from a ball delivered by Kennedy, this time from a corner. Substitutes not used: Aljofree, Banks (gk).Referee: D Pugh (Bebington).. Kenna, Ostenstad, Dunn, Taylor, Filan (gk).Bolton Wanderers (4-4-2): Jaaskelainen; Phillips, Fish, Strong, Elliott (Holden, 79); Johansen (Hansen, 72), Jensen, Farrelly, Gardner; Taylor (Passi, 87), Gudjohnsen. “We’re a point from the top half-way through the season and I would have settled for that,” he said.Blackburn Rovers (4-4-2): Kelly; Grayson, Peacock, Dailly, Harkness; McAteer, Frandsen, Carsley, Wilcox; Blake, Ward Substitutes not used. “He made a mistake but he’s been magnificent and he’ll still play for England,” Royle said.He remains philosophical about his side’s faltering promotion campaign. Richard Jobson had the first attempt at forcing it in and his fellow defender, Gerard Wiekens, eventually fired it into the roof of the net.Stockport’s resilience was illustrated by the acrobatic save forced by Bailey immediately afterwards and, in the 65th minute, they were level.

Dinning hit a post and Bailey, once a City apprentice, latched on to the rebound to slot it past Weaver.The ebb and flow of a fascinating game continued with a sliced clearance that hit the Stockport woodwork, but it was the increasingly desperate search for a goal to restore their lead that left City fatally exposed at the back.Their manager, Joe Royle, said Weaver had apologised for his blunder after the game. Playing with a surprising freedom and confidence after their defeat by Huddersfield and Wolves, they created an abundance of chances in the first-half, notably two headers from their new signings, Robert Taylor that went wide of the target, a lunging shot by Ian Bishop that hit the bar and one from Granville that shaved the post.Stockport had shown enough on the break to suggest that they could pose problems of their own, but when City finally took the lead after 49 minutes it seemed that they were at last getting their promotion road show back on track.Not surprisingly, the goal stemmed from a ball delivered by Kennedy, this time from a corner. City’s third defeat in quick succession and Stockport’s first ever League win at Maine Road came courtesy of Nicky Weaver’s wild dash from his goal and a Danny Granville’s push on Alan Bailey in the ensuing chaos.
John Brandwood awarded the kick after consulting his assistant and Tony Dinning, threatened all night with an old-fashioned roasting by City’s left-winger, Mark Kennedy, stepped up to have the last laugh from the penalty spot.”I thought he was pushed, but I believe it might have been outside the area,” said Stockport’s delighted manager, Andy Kilner.City should never have had to rely on such narrow margins. Substitutes not used: Wilnis, Venus, Salmon.Referee: S Baines (Chesterfield).. WHEN DOES a blip become a slump? How about when you lose a game that should already have been comfortably won with a farcical and debatable penalty five minutes from time; that seems as good a way as any of turning a drama into a crisis.

Substitutes not used: Mautone, Kabba, Evans.Ipswich: (3-5-2): Wright; Mowbray, McGreal, Brown; Clapham, Stockwell (Wright, 70) Magilton, Holland, Croft; Scowcroft, Johnson (Axeldal, 52). This time Johnson latched on to Fan Zhiyi’s woeful back-pass and finished with aplomb from 15 yards, shooting high past Digby.But Palace, who had gone close through a Svensson overhead kick and McKenzie, who had a goal disallowed, deservedly drew level after 62 minutes when Mowbray attempted to clear Svensson’s flick-on only to send the ball arcing over Wright. As the Palace manager, Steve Coppell, said: “It was important to get something from this game.”Crystal Palace (4-4-2): Digby; Linighan, Zhiyi, Frampton (Rizzo, 80), Austin; Mullins, Foster, Martin (Woozley, 30) Rodger; Svensson, McKenzie. With 11 minutes gone, Johnson beat Andrew Frampton to the ball and crossed with such accuracy that Matt Holland’s close-range header was a formality.After 34 minutes Ipswich took a deserved lead.

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