Trips to Nottingham
are usually a good day out for Rangers fans although
it's not the best hunting ground for our football
team. Hooters was the drinking place of choice for
QPR fans and even Stan Bowles seemed to be enjoying
the beer and the view which this unique bar had to
offer.
The game saw Ian
Holloway back in the dug out and he made two changes.
Marc Bircham missed out with flu so Marcus Bean got
his first start since the Wigan game. Holloway changed
the shape of the team to a 4-5-1 so Jamie Cureton
was the other man to be left out with Adam Miller
making his debut in midfield. And that's where my
version of the match report ends and someone else
takes over. (although Chris Day wins my man of the
match for keeping us in the game during the first
half)
Due to my job
that pays the rent being busy this week I've been
unable to find the time to write a report of the game.
Instead here is the report from excellent qprnet.com
website which has recently moved away from the Rivals
group to go it alone. I'm sure Ron Norris and Simon
Skinner will continue to make their new site a success
and here is what Simon had to say on Saturday's 2-1
defeat at Nottingham Forest.
RANGERS
BURNED BY FOREST'S FIRE
:by
Simon Skinner
As is usually
the case, Rangers came away from Nottingham Forest
with nothing after being on the end of a scandalous
penalty decision and a quite brilliant headed goal.
In truth a defeat was hard on the R’s but the fact
remains that we should really be going to teams in
the lower reaches and knocking them over.
As was mooted
in the week Olly tinkered with his formation and went
for a 4-5-1. Day was in goal behind Bignot, Santos,
Shittu and Padula. Bircham was missing with flu so the
midfield five lined up as Ainsworth, Bean, Gallen, debutant
Miller and Cook. Furlong was left ploughing a lonely
furrow up front. Youngster Ryan Johnson was on the bench
for the first time.
The game was a scrappy affair
from the off and was not being helped by referee Lee
Mason who seemed intent on blowing his whistle every
time two players came within a yard of one another.
Rangers had the first real effort on goal and it was
courtesy of debut boy Adam Miller. Having surged forward
on the right he flicked the ball over the head of Gregor
Robertson before lashing a left footed volley at goal
that was acrobatically turned away by Paul Gerrard.
From the corner Miller hammered another volley high
into the Trent End.
Forest then took the lead in
highly controversial circumstances. David Johnson
chased a through ball with Shittu and as soon as he
felt the lightest brush of Dan’s hand he threw himself
to the ground. Even as the ball came through I turned
to my mate and said, “pen”, as Johnson’s reputation
goes before him. He hits the deck more often than
a WWII Japanese kamikaze squadron and it was typical
of his performance that referee Mason fell for it.
Andy Reid took the spot kick
only too see Day plunge to his left to block it. The
ball fell back to Reid and he slotted the ball home.
In these days where encroachment is so harshly punished
if you don’t hold it you have no chance. The next
step is to just ask the goalie to stand aside and
let the taker have an unfettered path to goal.
The goal boosted the confidence
of this lowly Forest team and for the next twenty minutes
the Rangers penalty area resembled Rourke’s Drift as
wave after wave of Forest attackers poured forward.
Their game plan was clear, get the ball to the edge
of the box and wait for Johnson to go down. He failed
to win a second pen with another blatant dive and only
weak refereeing prevented him being cautioned.
Day saved at point blank range
from Forest’s best player on the day, Alan Rogers. From
the rebound former loan Ranger Gareth Taylor headed
over the gaping goal. Evans and Reid now took over with
a display of power packed shooting from dead ball situations.
First Reid hammered a shot through the wall that Day
did well to turn away then Evans sent a shot screaming
in that was once again repelled by the R’s stopper.
Rangers were fortunate to be
going in at the break only one goal down. Olly had
been forced to dispense with his new formation midway
through the half and pushed Gallen up alongside Furlong
as he was getting no change from Morgan and Hjelde.
It was from his more attacking position that Gallen
nearly equalised with the second half barely a minute
old.
Ainsworth was played in by
Furlong and he lashed the ball across goal. It was
neither a cross nor a shot and Gallen did all he could
to get hold of it, he slid into the six yard box but
his touch was not enough to deflect it on target.
The breakthrough was not long coming though and Rangers
were back on terms after 49 minutes.
Padula launched a long freekick
from just inside the Forest half and Shittu rose to
nod the ball down. Georges swooped in showing excellent
predatory instincts to send a shot in off both posts
for his fourth of the season. It was a lovely touch
from Dan and a sublime finish from his centre back partner.
I had visions of referee Mason dishing out a second
yellow for over celebrating but luckily he kept his
cards firmly in his pocket.
Rangers were fired up now and
Miller forced yet another fine save from Gerrard with
a powerfully struck shot that skimmed in low and seemed
destined for the bottom corner.
At the other end Forest were
still creating chances with Rogers giving Bignot a
torrid time. Crosses were coming in and Santos and
Shittu were not dealing with them, we were fortunate
that Johnson is almost entirely bereft of confidence
in front of goal or we could have been looking at
Elland Road MkII. Johnson headed wide but minutes
later Jack Lester had a similar chance and made no
mistake.
Rogers hared down the wind and
delivered an inch perfect ball into the box. Lester
was some way out when he met it but his header was right
into the top corner giving Day no chance at all. It
was a fabulous goal and one that you sensed Rangers
would struggle to hit back from.
Rangers were denied an advantage
when Jon Olav Hjelde hauled Furlong down as he powered
toward goal. It was hard to see whether it was inside
or outside the box but it was not hard to see the
blatant foul. Idiot Mason proved that theory wrong
though as he simply ignored it, I guarantee that if
a less honest player than Furlong, Johnson perhaps,
had been in that position the fall would have been
so theatrical as to make his mind up in an instant.
Rangers were rightly furious and
piled forward to try and grab an equaliser. All too
often though, it seemed that good balls into the box
were not being attacked. Miller put in a couple of beauties
having now been moved to the right side. Cureton and
McLeod were both on by now and neither of them seemed
to get up to the pace of the game. Cureton had a decent
shout for a penalty turned down when Morgan almost ripped
the shirt from his back as he turned sharply.
An even more blatant penalty was
turned down minutes before the end when Shittu went
up for a header at the far post. His shirt was being
pulled to such an extent that you could see the whole
of his back and the linesman must have been looking
straight at it. With a vociferous section of Forest
fans right behind him though he decided that being discreet
was the better option and he kept his flag by his side.
With almost the last kick of
the game Gallen shaved Gerrard’s right hand post with
a stinging drive but it was not to be Rangers’ day
and the City Ground erupted at the sound of Mason’s
whistle. This defeat made it five away defeats on
the bounce and something needs to be done to halt
what is a seriously poor run of form on the road.
Too many people failed to perform
at their best. Bignot was given the run around by
Rogers all day and Santos and Shittu seem confused
when crosses come into the box. Gallen did little
in midfield and Ainsworth and Cook were largely anonymous
as were their replacements Cureton and McLeod. Furlong
was isolated too often and certainly got no help from
the referee unlike his unbalanced opponent at the
other end.
Good points to come out of
the game were the performances of Day, Padula, Miller
and Bean. Day was simply outstanding, unlucky with
the first goal and helpless with the second.
Gino seems far more like his
old self and the confidence and swagger seems to be
returning. Bean and Miller in midfield were excellent
and you could be looking at our central pairing for
years to come if they both manage to develop and move
forward. If you didn’t know this was Miller’s debut
you would think that he was a seasoned pro such was
the confidence that flowed through his game.
A tough home game against Ipswich
awaits us now and I think that at HQ we are a match
for anyone.
The same cannot be said away
from home and Olly needs to think long and hard about
how he is going to arrest this alarming run of form.
Five games lost on the trot, fourteen conceded and
only five scored. We need to find a way of holding
onto the ball away from home and not inviting pressure
onto us as we seem to be cracking too easily.